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  • Is it possible Eagles GM Howie Roseman’s career is both underrated and overrated? Let us explain

    Is it possible Eagles GM Howie Roseman’s career is both underrated and overrated? Let us explain

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    If you think you have a handle on which NFL coaches and general managers know what they’re doing, just wait a few months. Brian Daboll, the 2022 Coach of the Year, and the Giants lost eight of their first 10 games in 2023. The 2021 winner was Mike Vrabel, who was fired by the Titans after a 6-11 season in 2023. Kevin Stefanski took home the 2020 and 2023 awards, but his Browns went 15-19 in between, and there was a meaningful subset of Cleveland fans who wanted him fired. Judging coaches is difficult.

    Judging general managers might be even tougher. Leaving team owners such as Jerry Jones who can’t be fired aside, the median tenure for the league’s active GM is three years. One simple rule for new GMs entering their jobs is “three and one”: executives can probably expect to get three drafts and/or one change at quarterback. There are exceptions on both ends of the spectrum, but if a GM hasn’t shown signs of progress across three drafts or whiffs when changing the quarterback, it’s a surprise if he gets to keep his job.

    One general manager new hires might want to emulate — at least in terms of performance — is Howie Roseman. During his time as Eagles general manager and executive vice president of football operations, which began in 2010, his teams have been to two Super Bowls, winning one. They’ve made eight trips to the playoffs in 13 years. He landed a franchise quarterback in Carson Wentz, and even before that relationship went south, drafted another one in Jalen Hurts.

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    At other times, Roseman has been seen as a problem. In 2015, he was essentially fired from his role running personnel after losing a power struggle with coach Chip Kelly and moved to a different part of the Eagles building. Six years later, after a disastrous 2020 season and some curious decisions in the draft, many Philly fans called for Roseman to be fired. Two years after each of those flashpoints, his team was in the Super Bowl.

    Every long-standing executive has highs and lows, but Roseman has survived lower lows and achieved higher highs than most. And by lasting over a decade in his role, we’ve been able to get clear insight into how he functions as an NFL general manager. Those decisions don’t always work out, but simply observing how he has gone about his business tells us about how the Eagles approach their thinking.

    There’s a lot to be learned from what has gone on with Roseman that extends beyond the Eagles. The dramatic shifts in opinion about him from his most recent performances give us insight into how we should approach less experienced GMs and think about executives whose jobs might be on the line.

    On top of that, much like his former colleague Andy Reid did with the Eagles, we’ve seen the league emulate some of Roseman’s tactics. The league and the way its GMs operate have been influenced by his style and decision-making. Understanding him and where he has succeeded and failed can help us understand the broader NFL in 2024.

    Let’s start with the near-firings I mentioned. What do they tell us about how we evaluate NFL general managers?

    Jump to a section:
    How Roseman’s executive career almost ended early
    The disastrous 2020 season, and what happened next
    Is Roseman actually good at finding value in the draft?
    How the NFL has evolved in Roseman’s image
    So … is Roseman a great general manager?

    Chip Kelly and the takeover

    While Roseman was technically named general manager in 2010, the Florida graduate didn’t immediately have the sort of power he would wield later during his time with the organization. He was still underneath mentor and longtime Eagles executive Joe Banner during his first two years in charge. In 2012, Banner was moved into an advisory role before leaving the organization altogether.

    Ultimate control for personnel belonged to Reid in 2012, but after a disastrous 4-12 campaign, the Eagles fired their coach, a decision which many Philadelphia fans saw as the long-overdue departure of an out-of-touch coach who couldn’t win a Super Bowl. You know what happened with Reid in Kansas City.

    The Eagles gave Roseman personnel control and made a splashy hire in importing widely admired Oregon coach Chip Kelly from the college ranks. Kelly had nearly joined the Buccaneers the previous offseason before spending one more year with the Ducks, and his progressive approach toward sports science, tempo and offensive football seemed to appeal to an organization that already was comfortable thinking outside the box. The Eagles had been the most pass-happy team in the league before the Patriots took the NFL by storm in 2007, and in the nascent days of football analytics, Jeffrey Lurie was perhaps the only team owner in the league comfortable with both spending money on data analysis and discussing it publicly.

    Kelly quickly turned around the Eagles. They jumped from 4-12 in 2012 to 10-6, winning the NFC East in a de-facto playoff game with the Cowboys in Week 17. They lost a home wild-card playoff game to the Saints to end the season. Then, after starting 9-3 in 2014, a 1-3 finish cost Kelly’s team a playoff berth.

    The solution? More Kelly. After the season, the Eagles stripped Roseman of personnel control, giving him a new title while reassigning him to what amounted to a contract negotiation role. The organization even moved Roseman’s office from the football side of the facility to the business side. For all intents and purposes, he had been removed from his prior role in terms of making football decisions.

    At that time, it would be hard to say that this was a stunning move, especially from a public perspective. Roseman had been assigned at least some portion of the blame for the failure of the “Dream Team” Eagles at the end of the Reid era, with free agent cornerback signing Nnamdi Asomugha failing to live up to lofty expectations. With various explanations for why, the team had cut wildly popular wideout DeSean Jackson before the 2014 season, opening up more playing time for Riley Cooper, who Roseman had retained with a five-year, $25 million extension. Safety Malcolm Jenkins, a free agent addition in 2014, played well, but the Eagles still ranked 18th in DVOA against the pass and allowed the second-most passing yards in the league. (The latter figure owed something to the fact their offense played at the fastest rate of any team.)

    Most critically, though, it looked like Roseman was over his head when it came to the draft. In 2013, the Eagles hit an immediate standout on their No. 4 overall pick with right tackle Lane Johnson, but second-round pick Zach Ertz had been a part-time tight end before posting one big game late in December of his second season. Roseman used midround selections on defensive tackle Bennie Logan and quarterback Matt Barkley which didn’t move the needle through two seasons.

    More distressingly, 2014 seemed to be an instant disaster. First-round pick Marcus Smith, who was supposed to help Philly’s pass rush, played just 68 snaps over eight games as a rookie and was essentially a meme by the end of his rookie season. Second-rounder Jordan Matthews was more impressive as a slot receiver, but midround picks wideout Josh Huff and defensive back Jaylen Watkins weren’t regular contributors.

    At that time, it would have been entirely reasonable to presume Roseman simply wasn’t qualified to run a personnel department. He didn’t have a scouting background before joining the organization, nor had he played football at a high level. It was a talking point when he was promoted into a player personnel role in the first place, the idea that a cap guy would be an interloper and quickly found out as unfit for the role of evaluating football talent.

    And yet, given the helm, Kelly was infinitely worse. The coach prioritized adding former Oregon players with limited success, including the trade of running back LeSean McCoy for linebacker Kiko Alonso. He spent big on free agency with cornerback Byron Maxwell, swapped quarterback Nick Foles in a deal for Sam Bradford and seemed hell-bent on adding running backs to replace McCoy. The Eagles signed DeMarco Murray, thought they had added Frank Gore and then signed Ryan Mathews to replace Gore when the 49ers legend instead went to the Colts. Kelly used his first-round pick on wideout Nelson Agholor and traded up in the second round for cornerback Eric Rowe.

    It didn’t work. Kelly went 6-9 before being fired at the end of the 2015 season. Lurie could easily have appointed a new executive or someone more traditional for the role by suggesting that neither Roseman nor Kelly were suitable for running football operations. Instead, despite concerns from fans that Roseman wasn’t fit for the job, Lurie re-installed him in what amounted to the lead player personnel role. (It seems safe to assume he got his old office back, too.)

    As it turned out, Roseman was absolutely qualified for the role. His previous two drafts weren’t as bad as they seemed at the time. Ertz grew into a Pro Bowl-caliber tight end. Johnson became an elite tackle. Philly’s seventh-round pick in the 2013 draft didn’t stick around for long, but Jordan Poyer eventually emerged as a standout safety for the Bills. The 2014 draft was mostly a disappointment, but it was a bad draft, not proof he couldn’t have a good one.

    Roseman spent most of the 2016 offseason erasing Kelly’s decisions, trading away Murray and Maxwell for cap space and draft capital. The team kept Bradford around but then traded up to No. 2 in the draft to pick Wentz, who quickly became its franchise quarterback. Philly went 7-9 under new coach Doug Pederson in 2016, but it was much better that its record indicated. By the end of the 2017 season, a re-acquired Foles was leading the Eagles to an improbable Super Bowl victory.

    The takeaway: Two years of drafts don’t tell us whether anyone can pick good players.

    A premature read on Roseman’s first two drafts suggested he might be overmatched running personnel. Two years probably isn’t enough to judge the success or failure of those two drafts, let alone whether a GM will be able to pick well in the future.

    That goes both ways. Think about Kwesi Adofo-Mensah with the Vikings, whose early drafts haven’t been impressive. His four top-70 picks in the 2022 draft haven’t produced an average starter, while wideout Jordan Addison was the only player who made an impact from his 2023 class. Minnesota invested heavily to move up for quarterback J.J. McCarthy and edge rusher Dallas Turner in the 2024 draft, but if those two first-rounders turn into stars and someone such as guard Ed Ingram takes a step forward from the 2022 class, Adofo-Mensah will look far more competent selecting players.

    And on the flip side, consider Brad Holmes, who has rightfully been lauded for his work rebuilding the Lions. The GM’s 2021 class has to be considered a hit, given that he landed two stars in offensive tackle Penei Sewell and wide receiver Amon-Ra St. Brown. Pass-rusher Aidan Hutchinson took a big step forward in his second season and looks like a third hit. Will the trade up for wideout Jameson Williams go down as a colossal misstep? Second-rounder Josh Paschal hasn’t yet hit along the defensive line, and the decision to go for running back Jahmyr Gibbs and linebacker Jack Campbell in the first round of the 2023 draft as opposed to adding a much-needed second pass rusher or cornerback might age poorly. Of course, those moves could all still turn into huge hits, too.

    This is an incredibly small sample of draft picks. Judging any GM on two or three first-round picks is a brutal exercise. And yet, given the reality of how quickly executives are hired and fired in the NFL, there’s no alternative. It nearly cost Roseman his career as a personnel executive before it really began.


    The disaster of 2020

    After the Super Bowl win in 2017, Roseman was lauded as the PFWA’s Executive of the Year. Virtually every free agent signing and veteran acquisition he made that year hit, from running back LeGarette Blount and receiver Alshon Jeffery on offense to end Chris Long and cornerback Patrick Robinson on defense. The decision to sideline Roseman for Kelly felt like a moment of madness. With Wentz in the middle of his rookie deal and a talented roster around the young quarterback, it felt like the Eagles were in position to continue competing for Super Bowls.

    It didn’t happen. The Eagles went 9-7 each of the next two seasons, with injuries to Wentz compromising back-to-back playoff runs. He ended up throwing just four playoff passes in a Philadelphia uniform across three different postseason trips. His likely MVP season in 2017 was built upon an unsustainably hot performance on third downs and in the red zone, something he never managed to repeat.

    Roseman’s drafts were inconsistent. The Super Bowl class never took a leap forward, although cornerback Rasul Douglas has emerged as a success story after leaving Philadelphia. Lacking a first-round pick in 2018 after trading down in the Ravens’ move up for Lamar Jackson, Roseman had his best draft, landing four future starters in tight end Dallas Goedert, cornerback Avonte Maddox, edge rusher Josh Sweat and offensive tackle Jordan Mailata. In 2019, he appeared to land a pair of future starters in tackle Andre Dillard and running back Miles Sanders, although J.J. Arcega-Whiteside failed to emerge as an impactful wideout across his first two seasons in the league, and Dillard would eventually disappoint.

    The 2020 class quickly became a problem. Roseman used his first-round pick on receiver Jalen Reagor, one pick before the Vikings selected superstar Justin Jefferson. He then used a second-rounder on quarterback Jalen Hurts, a move which immediately unsettled Wentz and seemed more based around abstract ideas of value than building the best possible football team.

    Everything that could have gone wrong in 2020 then did. The Eagles were shredded by injuries, especially along the line of scrimmage, where every starter besides center Jason Kelce hit injured reserve. Wentz regressed, with his interception rate spiking and his relationship with Pederson falling apart. The coach benched his quarterback late in the season, leading the Eagles to turn to Hurts, who completed just 52% of his passes. The team then benched Hurts on national TV in Week 17 for Nate Sudfeld, whose performance helped push a division title to Washington and led the Giants to accuse their division rivals of tanking for a better playoff spot. They finished 4-11-1.

    In three years, the goodwill Roseman had inspired was gone. The same fans who had lauded him as a genius after the Super Bowl victory were chanting “Fire Howie” at the general manager when he showed up at a Phillies game in April. Lurie’s foresight to keep him after the Kelly firing was now being portrayed as a foolish dedication, especially when the Eagles fired Pederson, traded Wentz and kept Roseman for the 2021 season. Had the Eagles fired him, his Super Bowl season would have seemed like the ultimate aberration, a briefly brilliant stretch amid otherwise mediocre work.

    And again, from that point forward, just about everything Roseman touched over the next two offseasons seemed to turn to gold. The loss in Week 17 gave the Eagles the No. 6 overall pick, which they used to trade down before moving back up for wideout DeVonta Smith. A standout guard followed in Landon Dickerson. Again, despite the doom and gloom, they were one of the most likely teams to improve. When new coach Nick Sirianni shifted the offense toward the quarterback run game and Hurts began to click, they made an unexpected trip to the postseason.

    Roseman’s 2022 was even better. He landed wideout A.J. Brown and defensive back C.J. Gardner-Johnson in trades. He signed Haason Reddick in free agency and saw the edge rusher rack up 16 sacks as part of one of the most productive pass rushes in league history. Cornerback James Bradberry, added over the summer as a cap casualty, was a second-team All-Pro. In a prove-it year, Hurts continued to improve and was an MVP candidate before missing time in December. The Eagles went 14-3 and dominated in the postseason en route to the Super Bowl, where they came up just short against the Chiefs. Now, Philly fans were chanting “Howie!” at the team’s send-off party without any verbs attached. Instead, Roseman was the one (playfully) cursing out fans who were forgiving him.

    While acknowledging fans will be fans and react to the most recent season as what matters most … this seems wild, right? Roseman went from a Super Bowl to “Fire Howie” chants to Super Bowl in five seasons, turning over most of the roster in the process. This wasn’t just a Philly thing, either; he rightfully could have been regarded as one of the best general managers in the league or one of the worst at different times over that five-year span, depending on which moves you were willing to consider. He was the same person throughout that entire stretch, but the results were spectacularly different.

    Even that required some luck. The Eagles reportedly wanted to sign Allen Robinson before the 2022 season, but when the Rams didn’t sign Von Miller, L.A. swooped in with a deal it would immediately regret. Philly ended up trading for Brown instead, a player who wouldn’t have been available if the Titans had made smarter decisions. Nobody traded for Bradberry when he was available all spring as a salary dump, allowing Philadelphia to plug the biggest hole in its roster long after the initial wave of free agency had ended, a move it compounded when the Saints decided to move on from Gardner-Johnson just before the season began. Roseman deserves credit for being in position to pounce on those mistakes, but it would be naive to pretend that some good fortune wasn’t involved.

    The takeaway: NFL general managers aren’t as good as they look at their best and aren’t as bad as they look at their worst.

    This shouldn’t be shocking, but it’s something we lose track of as we focus so heavily on what each team has done lately. There’s no better example of those swings than Roseman and his performance with the Eagles over the last few years.

    We could apply this story to just about any general manager or personnel executive who has been in that role for a long amount of time; even the most legendary of football minds have been found wanting at times. Baltimore’s Ozzie Newsome traded up for quarterback Kyle Boller in 2003. Indianapolis’ Bill Polian used first-round picks on running back wideout Anthony Gonzalez (2007) and Donald Brown (2009).

    The guy who comes to mind for me now is Bill Belichick. The now-deposed Patriots coach was roundly (and rightfully) criticized for his last few drafts with New England, where the Pats failed to get offensive playmakers and weren’t able to land the next set of stars to replace the final players from the Tom Brady era. Throw in some questionable decisions with the coaching staff, and it probably wasn’t a surprise he and the Patriots parted ways.

    Do those struggles mean Belichick isn’t a good coach/executive and couldn’t do better somewhere else? I don’t believe so, with Roseman as a good example of the difference between a bad season and a bad personnel executive. Belichick unquestionably drafted well earlier in his tenure, and he still managed a fair number of hits later on, albeit mostly on the defensive side of the ball. Without his top pass rusher (Matthew Judon) and his best cornerback (Christian Gonzalez) and with the worst average starting field position of any defense, Belichick’s Patriots were the best defense in football by points allowed per drive and EPA per snap over the second half of 2023.


    Is Roseman actually a good drafter?

    With more than a decade of drafts under his belt now, probably the most accurate thing to say about Roseman is he isn’t a consistent drafter. He’s had successful drafts (2013, 2016, 2018 and 2021) mixed with dismal failures (2014, 2017 and 2019). It’s still too early to judge his most recent selections, which have seemingly been exclusively players from the University of Georgia. As bad as drafting Reagor before Jefferson looks with the benefit of hindsight, landing a franchise quarterback with his next selection turned out to be a masterstroke. Roseman is not the guy who foolishly drafted a replacement-level wideout over a future Hall of Famer or the genius who landed an MVP candidate on Day 2. He’s both.

    There’s another element to the draft beyond picking players: controlling the draft board. When evaluating general managers and what they do in the draft, both factors have to be considered. And frankly, given that virtually every study conducted on the draft shows us no team has been able to exhibit any sort of long-term ability to pick players who are more productive than what their draft slots would project year after year, the ability to create draft capital and make smart moves is a much more meaningful and sustainable product of a GM’s performance than who they actually pick with those selections.

    While some GMs create extra opportunities for themselves by repeatedly trading down during draft weekend, Roseman has been able to create meaningful draft capital by winning a handful of trades before the draft begins. While their times in Philadelphia didn’t end positively, both Bradford and Wentz netted first-round picks when they were traded to the Vikings and Colts, respectively. Roseman then turned the Colts pick into more draft capital in the spring of 2022, when he sent it to the Saints in a deal that essentially bet on New Orleans not being as good as it expected that season. He ended up landing pick Nos. 10, 18, 50 and 101 as the primary return while sending back Nos. 16 and 19. The Eagles also landed an extra first-rounder from the Dolphins in 2021 when they moved down from No. 6 to No. 12.

    Roseman also has developed a habit of trading up during the draft, especially when trying to sneak ahead of a rival for a specific player. Those sort of hyper-targeted moves have yielded dramatic results. In 2018, after trading down from No. 32, Roseman moved back up three spots in the second round and landed Dallas Goedert. While the Eagles were never going to draft Lamar Jackson with Wentz coming off an MVP campaign, landing their eventual starting tight end with a small move forward in Round 2 worked out well.

    Other similar moves have been hit-or-miss, and Jackson isn’t the only future star taken with a pick the Eagles have traded away. In 2019, they jumped up three spots to get ahead of the Texans for Dillard, who struggled at left tackle. That move was cushioned by another trade up in the seventh round to grab Jordan Mailata. In 2021, Roseman moved up two spots in Round 1 to land DeVonta Smith, although the Cowboys moved down in the deal and took edge rusher Micah Parsons. The following year, Roseman jumped two spots to beat the Ravens to a defensive tackle in Jordan Davis, with Baltimore instead settling for safety phenom Kyle Hamilton.

    The jury is still out on Davis, as it is for fellow Georgia tackle Jalen Carter, whom the Eagles moved up one spot to take in 2023. Roseman has made more conventional trades up over the last two years, sending a third-round pick to draft corner Kelee Ringo in the fourth round last year, then sending pick Nos. 50 and 53 as part of a package to grab the 40th selection and take defensive back Cooper DeJean this April. Of course, his biggest move was sending multiple first-rounders to the Browns to initially draft Wentz, a deal which indirectly led to the organization’s Super Bowl win.

    The takeaway: Roseman’s style is unique, and it has yielded inconsistent results.

    While nobody is ever going to fault a GM for going to get his guy in Round 1, I’m not sure those moves have necessarily worked out for the Eagles on the whole, especially as the teams that have traded down with them have landed multiple Hall of Famers. Instead, Roseman has done an excellent job of extracting value away from the draft weekend, often with trades involving veterans. And that leads to another element I find so interesting …


    How the NFL has evolved in Roseman’s (and the Eagles’) image

    Some of the things the Eagles have focused on during Roseman’s tenure — dating back to the work done by Reid and Banner when they were in charge — have come more heavily into vogue around the NFL over the past decade. Philadelphia isn’t the only team interested in these things, but under Roseman it has been more aggressive with certain elements of roster-building, and the league has paid attention. That includes:

    Trading for veterans. Trades that weren’t strict draft pick swaps or deals for players who wanted to leave their existing teams used to be rare in the NFL. Roseman has been the most aggressive GM when it comes to trading for veterans, both during the offseason and at the deadline during the season. Other teams have followed, but it’s a surprise when the Eagles don’t add at least one veteran to the mix via trade in a given season.

    The most notably positive scenario for this was the 2022 team, which added Brown in a draft-day trade with the Titans and Gardner-Johnson just before the start of the season from the Saints. The in-season trade for edge rusher Robert Quinn didn’t have the same impact and cost them a fourth-round pick, but the two pre-season trades were huge hits. That team also had cornerback Darius Slay, who was acquired for third- and fifth-round picks before the 2020 season.

    The Super Bowl-winning team also benefited from a pair of swaps, landing running back Jay Ajayi in a midseason trade with the Dolphins and corner Ronald Darby in an August trade that involved Jordan Matthews heading to the Bills. Defensive tackle Timmy Jernigan was added from the Ravens for a swap of picks, while the most significant trade addition dated back to the Reid era with Jason Peters, who was still locking down left tackle deep into his 30s.

    Other trades haven’t worked out. I’m not sure many people have fond memories of wideout Golden Tate‘s run with the Eagles. Swapping Dennis Kelly for Dorial Green-Beckham gave away a useful utility lineman for a wide receiver who couldn’t separate. Last October’s trade for Kevin Byard, like the addition of linebacker Shaq Leonard in free agency shortly thereafter, landed Philadelphia two players whose names were bigger than their level of play. Neither was able to make a difference as the defense collapsed during the second half of 2023. Overall, though, being aggressive in the trade market has generally benefited the Eagles under Roseman.

    Getting creative with voidable years and salary-cap manipulation. With recently departed deputy Jake Rosenberg, Roseman and the Eagles were on the forefront of structuring deals and using creative methods to free up as much room as possible. That dates back both to Roseman’s time overseeing the cap in Philadelphia during the Banner and Reid days, when they were aggressive in signing players to extensions early in their careers to keep their costs down and create more flexibility.

    This isn’t necessarily new. Organizations have been using voidable years since the 1990s. The Eagles were finding loopholes in the cap during the Reid era — ask your local NFL salary cap guy how Dan Klecko became their second-highest paid player on paper sometime in 2008 next time you see them — and teams like the Saints have also gone out of their way to maximize short-term space in the way Philly has at times under Roseman.

    The difference between a team like the Eagles and the Saints, instead, is how quickly the Eagles have transitioned based on what they want to accomplish. The Saints were all-in for years during the second half of Drew Brees‘ tenure in New Orleans and haven’t taken their foot off the gas in the years that followed, which has led to an old team trapped in mediocrity without much hope of competing for a Super Bowl.

    Some of the contracts Roseman handed out after the Super Bowl didn’t age well, and when he needed to trade Wentz and eat nearly $34 million in dead money, the franchise shifted course. Like the Rams last year, they were willing to spend a year getting their cap right, clearing out bloated salaries and doing what it took to be in a better position down the line. And like those Rams, they unexpectedly made the playoffs in the process.

    Those decisions and accounting have afforded the Eagles to build a very expensive roster. In 2024, they’ll field the most expensive offense in the history of football, as they have spent more than $213 million in cash on their offensive players. Roseman has players on significant contracts at quarterback (Hurts), running back (Saquon Barkley), wide receiver (Brown and Smith), tight end (Goedert) and at three of the five offensive line spots (Mailata, Dickerson and Johnson). And that’s without considering the addition of Gardner-Johnson alongside two expensive veterans in Bradberry and Slay in the secondary.

    Naturally, the Eagles have had to make cutbacks elsewhere. Cam Jurgens, a second-round pick in 2022, will replace the retired Kelce. Roseman’s much-vaunted defensive line added Bryce Huff this offseason, but he traded Reddick to the Jets, lost Fletcher Cox to retirement and will have four players in their defensive line rotation on rookie deals. With that being said, even being able to put together an offense this impressive requires some long-term vision and financial planning.

    An openness to analytics. Alongside the Browns, Ravens and more recently the Cowboys, the Eagles have long had a reputation as being one of the league’s most data-friendly teams. Every NFL franchise has data scientists or people with analytics in their title on staff at this point, but the Eagles have been aggressive in both actually using that data in their decision-making and empowering people comfortable with that information to be in key roles. Roseman would be considered one of those people.

    That has led to meaningful decisions in practice. If the Eagles aren’t comfortable with data, does Pederson feel sufficiently empowered to go for it on fourth-and-goal from the 1-yard line in the Super Bowl, let alone to call for the Philly Special while doing so? Do the Eagles take a swing on a player like Brown, whose metrics hinted at elite play even when Tennessee didn’t see him as that sort of player? Analytics aren’t foolproof — and the Eagles took swings on players such as quarterback Kevin Kolb and defensive end Daniel Te’o-Nesheim before Roseman’s tenure that didn’t necessarily pan out — but the league as a whole has moved toward Philadelphia’s position on data-based decision-making as part of its process.

    The takeaway: While Roseman’s career path is still uncommon for NFL GMs, it’s less of an outlier than it was a decade ago.

    Most teams are loathe to hire GMs who don’t have a significant scouting background or résumé as an NFL player. That’s less of a red flag now, in part because of Roseman’s success in Philadelphia. And while there will always be different ways to build an organization, even the more traditional GMs think and operate more like him than they would have before his tenure.


    So … is Roseman a great general manager?

    Sometimes? The most accurate thing to say is Roseman is a good general manager with spectacularly high peaks and low valleys. While he has undoubtedly learned from whatever mistakes or disappointments have occurred during his tenure, the same Roseman who came within a holding penalty of potentially winning two Super Bowls in five years is the one who was quasi-fired once and nearly fired a second time.

    It’s difficult to reconcile that the same guy did all of that, but it’s important to understand that as we think about the league and its coaches and general managers. It’s too easy and simplistic to rely on what we saw most recently as the only evidence of what a front office is capable of doing. One good (or bad) pick isn’t a great way to judge what a drafter is capable of producing. It’s easier to ride the wild mood swings of reacting to what just happened and regarding your favorite team’s coaches and executives as geniuses or failures with little in between, but it’s also an easy way to get fooled.

    I’d also argue the NFL is too aggressive in moving on from general managers. The feeling of having the wrong guy in one of the most important roles in an organization is discouraging, and it’s true that not every GM will turn into a Super Bowl winner given a longer times pan in the role, but progress isn’t linear and isn’t always quick. The Eagles likely would have regretted it if they had actually fired Roseman in 2015 or 2021. Instead, he has turned around their franchise twice.

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    Bill Barnwell

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  • Jesse Marsch finds coaching redemption in Canada’s Copa América run

    Jesse Marsch finds coaching redemption in Canada’s Copa América run

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    It’s good to be Jesse Marsch right now. Earlier this week, he got to drop some passive quotes about the performance of the United States, a year or so after he was denied an opportunity to manage his home country. Then, in Arlington on Friday night, he led his own team to the Copa América semifinals. After a 1-1 draw in regulation, Canada defeated Venezuela 4-3 in penalties, earning a rematch against Argentina. They are the third Concacaf team to advance to the semifinals in their Copa América debut, following Mexico in 1993 and Honduras in 2001.

    Both Canada and Venezuela played this match like they knew how important and rare the opportunity was. Both teams moved the ball with extreme verticality, quickly pushing it from one end of the pitch to the other. Venezuela played like there was a shot clock, attempting several long-range shots at the first opportunity; of their 16 shot attempts, only three were within eight meters of the goal, and none were worth more than 0.2 xG. Canada, meanwhile, continued a tournament-long issue, creating decent opportunities but sending them skyward. They attempted 16 shots worth 1.9 xG, but as they have all tournament, they struggled to finish. But Moïse Bombito, Ismaël Koné and stars Jonathan David and Alphonso Davies buried their penalty kicks in the shootout, and they’re advancing because of it.

    The 2024 Copa América has served as both a status check and a learning experience for ambitious North American squads. Mexico’s dire performance, scoring one goal on the way to a group stage exit, was the latest step in an ongoing downfall for CONCACAF’s once shining light. The United States’ own group stage exit reinforced a sense of stagnation following an encouraging World Cup performance in 2022.

    For Canada and Marsch, hired only in May, this result has enhanced optimism for what might lie on the horizon, but not a single second of this tournament has been easy. They were outshot, 36-24, in the group stage, and it took them until early in their fourth match of the tournament to score a goal while playing 11-versus-11. Jacob Shaffelburg scored in the 13th minute to give Canada the lead over Venezuela on Friday night.

    Still, as the match passed the 60-minute mark, they were nearly undone by a combination of deception and perfect counter-attacking. Venezuelan goalkeeper Rafael Romo was caught out of position, and physically prevented a quick throw-in that could have taken advantage; the act wasn’t yellow-carded, however, and after a brief delay, Venezuela needed just two touches to turn a loose ball deep in their end into a tying goal.

    Salomón Rondón caught goalkeeper Maxime Crépeau shockingly far away from his own goal and scored with a lob from 39 meters.

    The momentum continued to sway back and forth, and Venezuela was never punished for particularly physical play in the box. (For the match, they were called for only seven fouls with no yellow cards.) But Canada continued to create better scoring opportunities and eventually held their nerve to win in penalties.

    The chaos probably didn’t bother Marsch much. The former RB Salzburg, RB Leipzig and Leeds United manager is known for an up-tempo style, and Canada’s two wins in this tournament have now come in matches in which they had 104 (vs. Peru) and 117 (vs. Venezuela) possessions. (The tournament average: 85.0 possessions per match.) They’ve now averaged 94.0 possessions per match, second in the tournament to only Venezuela, and their direct speed (how quickly you’re moving the ball vertically in a given sequence) of 2.1 meters per second is easily the highest.

    This is, of course, a style Marsch could be implementing with the United States men’s national team at the moment. He was turned down for the job last summer when the U.S. elected to re-hire Gregg Berhalter, and he didn’t hide his disappointment.

    “I’m not going to go into it, but I wasn’t treated very well in the process,” Marsch told CBS’ “Call it What You Want” podcast. “And so, whatever man, that’s in the past now. […] It motivated me again to find the right people.”

    Marsch was somewhere between candid and catty earlier this week, when he shared his thoughts on the struggles of the U.S. in the Copa América. “Obviously I’m paying attention to the U.S. men’s national team as I always do, and like you, I’m sad,” he told Fox.

    “I’m disappointed with the performances, the lack of discipline.” His Canadian team lacked discipline at times on Friday night, too, but they got the job done. And their reward is a rematch with Argentina.

    Canada fell 2-0 to the world champions in the opening match of the tournament; Marsch attempted to keep things contained with a pretty conservative 4-4-2 formation, but Argentina nearly doubled their shot attempts (19 to 10) and tripled their xG totals (3.0 to 1.2). David and Larin were limited to just one shot each, and while it took until the 88th minute for Argentina to officially put the match away with a second goal, the outcome wasn’t in doubt. Argentina played their most vulnerable game of the tournament in the quarterfinals, needing penalties to eke out a win over Ecuador, but Canada still have a mountain to climb.

    Any hope of an upset will require something Canada haven’t been able to provide all tournament: good finishing. For the tournament, they have now attempted 40 shots worth a combined 5.9 xG, but they’ve scored only twice. David and Larin have combined to attempt 13 shots worth 2.5 xG but have scored just once, on David’s lightning-strike counter-attack against Peru, and the rest of the team has an even worse xG-to-actual-goals ratio. They had several opportunities to put Venezuela away before Rondón’s miracle goal. They’ll need some serious progression to the mean in this department because Argentina are very likely to create better overall opportunities.

    Still, it’s been a magnificent couple of weeks for Marsch and the Canadian national team. In their first opportunity they did something Venezuela have done only once in 20 tries — reach a semifinal — and they didn’t have to play their absolute best ball to do it. Marsch’s team have bought into the style he wants to implement, and at worst, Canada will match the United States’ best Copa América performance. No matter how “disappointed” he might be about his home country’s recent performances, he’s probably not losing much sleep about it at the moment.

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    Bill Connelly

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  • Rookie Drew Thorpe solid over 6 1/3 innings and White Sox beat Marlins 3-2

    Rookie Drew Thorpe solid over 6 1/3 innings and White Sox beat Marlins 3-2

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    MIAMI — Drew Thorpe threw 6 1/3 innings of one-run ball, Nicky López doubled twice and drove in two runs and the Chicago White Sox beat the Miami Marlins 3-2 on Friday night.

    Luis Robert Jr. had two hits, two walks and two stolen bases for the White Sox, who won their first opening game of a road series this season. They were 0-14 before Friday.

    “I thought we hit the ball extremely well,” White Sox manager Pedro Grifol said. “We had some good at-bats. They just made some pitches when they needed to keep the runs down. Good baseball game all the way around.”

    The Marlins lost their fifth straight and dropped to an NL worst 30-58.

    In his fifth major league start, Thorpe (3-1) pitched into the seventh for the first time since being promoted from the minor leagues June 11. The rookie scattered three hits, walked two and struck out five.

    “I felt everything was working, mixing the speeds,” Thorpe said. “I just stuck to the game plan and tried not to do too much.”

    Thorpe also considered it an important career milestone extending his outing into the seventh.

    “It means a lot,” Thorpe said. “We had a bullpen day the other day and you get to save them. I just tried to extend as much as possible. That’s what I needed to do coming in. I wanted to finish (the seventh), but it is what it is.”

    The White Sox struck quickly against Marlins starter Bryan Hoeing on López’s run-scoring double in the second.

    Martín Maldonado’s RBI double against reliever Roddery Muñoz in the fourth made it 2-0 before López hit another run-scoring double in the fifth.

    John Brebbia relieved Thorpe after Dane Myers’ one-out double in the seventh and allowed a run scoring single by Xavier Edwards. Miami loaded the bases against Brebbia with two out when center fielder Robert tracked down Bryan De La Cruz’s drive at the wall to end the threat.

    “Not many guys can make that play,” Grifol said. “I don’t know what the catch probability on that is.”

    The Marlins rallied against closer Michael Kopech in the ninth. Vidal Bruján reached on a fielder’s choice, advanced to third on Jazz Chisholm Jr.’s two-out single and scored on De La Cruz’s single. But Kopech retired Josh Bell on a groundout for his eighth save.

    “Tough day offensively,” Marlins manager Skip Schumaker said. “Thorpe was good. We couldn’t get to the changeup even when we sat on it. We couldn’t hit it. Just a lot of weak contact. I thought we had some really good at-bats against their bullpen.”

    Hoeing (0-1), recalled from Triple-A Jacksonville on Friday, gave up one run, five hits and struck out four in three innings.

    TRAINER’S ROOM

    White Sox: INF Yoán Moncada (left adductor strain) will be used as designated hitter in games at the club’s rookie complex in Arizona next week.

    Marlins: Optioned Kyle Tyler to Triple-A Jacksonville for Hoeing’s spot on the roster. …RHP Sixto Sánchez (right shoulder inflammation) threw a bullpen session at the club’s spring training complex in Jupiter.

    UP NEXT

    LHP Garrett Crochet (6-6, 3.02) will start for the White Sox on Saturday against Marlins’ RHP Yonny Chirinos (0-0, 3.77).

    ___

    AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/mlb

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  • Rivals.com  –  Four-star WR Jalen Cooper makes the call for SMU

    Rivals.com – Four-star WR Jalen Cooper makes the call for SMU

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    SMU continues a scorching hot start to the month of June as they have landed their third four-star prospect in as many days.

    The newest addition to the Mustang’s class comes in the form of four-star wide receiver Jalen Cooper out of Cibolo (Texas) Steele.

    This comes in the days after SMU reeled in the commitments of Rivals250 quarterback Ty Hawkins and Rivals250 offensive tackle Dramodd Odoms.

    Over the last several weeks, Cooper took a number of official visits, which focused around his top five of Kansas State, Kansas, Baylor, Texas A&M, and of course SMU.

    There was some buzz around the Kansas schools at various points of his process, but the Mustangs emerged as the frontrunner behind the scenes throughout his visits. Cooper talks about why he chose SMU.

    “[SMU] is obviously a good program, they won 11 games last year and they’re going into a new conference, playing bigger, better competition. They have a good school too, one of the top notch schools in the country.”

    The relationships built in Dallas as well as the opportunities presented being in the alumni network ultimately was the edge that pushed SMU to win his recruitment.

    “The coaching staff has always kept in touch with me and they always were interested in me calling me each day, asking how I’m doing. And the life after ball that they present, is unmatchable. There’s so many opportunities after college, that’s probably what won me over.”

    SMU is getting one of the most productive wideouts in the state of Texas. In 2023, he racked up 1,578 receiving yards and 23 touchdowns on 63 receptions. His yardage count was good for 10th best in the state.

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    Marshall Levenson, National Recruiting Analyst

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  • Celtic transfer news: Brendan Rodgers on Adam Idah and other targets this summer

    Celtic transfer news: Brendan Rodgers on Adam Idah and other targets this summer

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    Brendan Rodgers says Celtic have identified their transfer targets and calls for patience as he looks to strengthen his squad this summer.

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  • The secret to helping the Broncos’ offense and QB? Establishing more efficiency in the run game

    The secret to helping the Broncos’ offense and QB? Establishing more efficiency in the run game

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    ENGLEWOOD, Colo. — Denver Broncos coach Sean Payton has said one of the “greatest allies” and “friends” for a quarterback is a productive run game. And when the Broncos return for training camp later this month, the search for one will decidedly be on, as the offense tries to shake its scoring blahs of last season.

    “I think we can be that,” Broncos running back Javonte Williams said. “I’ve said, in our room, that’s one of the biggest priorities we have, helping whoever the quarterback is. Do more, help more … I think everybody has that approach with it.”

    It doesn’t necessarily mean the Broncos are set to return to the pound-it-out days of NFL yore. But it does mean that when Payton chooses to send the run plays through the headset, the Broncos will do more with them, especially inside the opponents’ 20-yard line and in goal-to-go situations. It’ll be especially important if rookie Bo Nix beats out Jarrett Stidham and Zach Wilson for the starting quarterback job after camp concludes.

    After the 2023 season, general manager George Paton said the offense’s identity was “physicality and ball control.” The Broncos were near the middle of the pack in run-game workload last season (ranked 18th in rushing attempts with 451), but they were 21st in yards per carry (4.0) and tied for 28th in rushing touchdowns (eight). Overall, their offense was 30th in scoring touchdowns in goal-to-go situations inside their opponents’ 10-yard line, converting 53.3% of the time.

    The Broncos also finished the 2023 regular season as one of seven teams without either a 1,000-yard rusher or at least one 1,000-yard receiver. Just two of those seven made the playoffs — Kansas City and Baltimore — but they also have two of the league’s best quarterbacks in Patrick Mahomes and Lamar Jackson, respectively.

    “You have to be efficient running the ball,” Payton said. “And there is a lot that goes into that … but you have to be efficient with it.”

    Things got worse over Denver’s 2-4 finish to the season, too, during which Payton benched quarterback Russell Wilson with two games to go. The Broncos were 31st in the league in yards per carry over those last six games (3.3) and converted 38.5% of their third-down rushing attempts (25th). That inefficiency impacted other parts of the offense, as just five other teams surrendered more sacks over those final six games than the Broncos’ 19.

    “Our tight red zone was awful,” Payton said at season’s end. “I have to look closely at my sequencing and what I’m doing and calling. What I mean by that is goal-to-go … Our opportunities, I think, were decent … [but] inside the 10, first-and-goal-to-go, that wasn’t good enough … That’s unusual, that bothered me a lot. Those are four-point swings, really, if you kick a field goal instead of scoring a touchdown.”

    Payton’s task now is to amp up those numbers for whoever is under center with largely the same cast as last season. The Broncos’ top three running backs from last season — Williams, Jaleel McLaughlin and Samaje Perine — are all still on the roster. They also used a Day 3 pick on Notre Dame running back Audric Estime, and undrafted rookie Blake Watson flashed at times during the offseason program.

    The key may be how the team mixes and matches in a tight competition for three or four roster spots at the RB position. And keep in mind that fullback Michael Burton is expected to be on the final 53-man roster with one of those spots because of his extensive special teams duties. Williams, McLaughlin, Perine, Estime and Watson will be in what Payton has already called “heavy competition.”

    Williams, who led the team in carries (217) and rushing yards (774) last season, will be in his second season since his 2022 knee injury that included multiple ligament tears. He appeared to fatigue some down the stretch last season after grinding through injury rehab last offseason just to get back on the field; he didn’t average even 4.0 yards per carry in any game after Week 7.

    “I think historically speaking, when you talk to the experts, they say that the complete heal finishes at two years,” Payton said. “Obviously you begin playing before then … I know that he’s looking forward to [this season]. The challenge last year was really when you think about it, even in training camp, it was still early enough in the process where it was hard for him to go full speed with confidence. And yet we were building and getting him where we all felt comfortable he could play.”

    Estime, meanwhile, participated in the team’s rookie minicamp and early OTAs but then missed much of the offseason program after having an arthroscopic procedure on his knee. Payton has said Estime will be ready to participate during training camp. He also called Estime an early-down runner, which has been Williams’ role in recent years.

    “[Estime] was one of the higher-graded backs after contact,” Payton said. “He’s a physical player … man, he is a first- and second-down runner who I think is strong.”

    Watson — one of two backs in the FBS to have at least 50 receptions last season — and McLaughlin are similar in skill set, providing support on passing downs. Payton said McLaughlin has made improving his role in the pass game a priority this offseason.

    “He’ll come up and wear me out asking for cut-ups and looking at certain routes,” Payton said. “… He’s here at 5:15 [in the morning], even in the offseason, first one here running in the weight room. By the time he’s at breakfast and most people are arriving, he’s put in a good hour and a half’s worth of work.”

    The blocking remains similar in 2024, too. The Broncos’ offensive line had the same five starters in 16 of 17 games last season (right tackle Mike McGlinchey missed the season finale with a rib injury), and though center Lloyd Cushenberry III left in free agency, the other four starters will be back this season.

    In the end, how efficient the run game can be will rely on how many times Payton actually sends those running plays through the headset, whether it’s rookie Nix or one of the veterans under center and how the RB depth chart shakes out.

    “We have to be better … across the board,” Payton said.

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    Jeff Legwold

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  • Bellingham avoids Euros ban for obscene gesture

    Bellingham avoids Euros ban for obscene gesture

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    England midfielder Jude Bellingham is available to face Switzerland in Saturday’s UEFA European Championship quarterfinal after being given a suspended one-match ban and a €30,000 fine by UEFA for a lewd gesture made in their dramatic round-of-16 win over Slovakia.

    Bellingham, 21, celebrated his stunning 95th-minute overhead kick, which forced extra time in Gelsenkirchen on Sunday, by kissing his hand and appearing to grab his crotch.

    Bellingham subsequently described the incident as “an inside-joke gesture towards some close friends who were at the game” but UEFA’s control, ethics and disciplinary body (CEDB) concluded an investigation on Friday by declaring the Real Madrid star had “violated the basic rules of decent conduct.”

    The CEDB said in a statement that they had decided “to fine the English Football Association (FA) player Jude Bellingham €30,000 and to suspend him for a total of one UEFA competition match for which he would be otherwise eligible for violating the basic rules of decent conduct.

    “Said suspension is not immediately enforced and is subject to a probationary period of one year, starting from the date of the present decision.”

    Sources told ESPN that the FA does not plan to appeal the decision.

    The verdict also included separate fines for the Football Association totalling €11,000 for what the CEDB described as “crowd disturbances” and the “lighting of fireworks.”

    Bellingham will now walk something of a disciplinary tightrope with UEFA on alert for any similar gestures over the next 12 months.

    Anything deemed a repeat in Dusseldorf would see him banned for a potential semifinal against either Turkey or the Netherlands.

    All 26 players trained in Blankenhain on Friday as Gareth Southgate’s side continued its preparations to face Switzerland.

    ESPN reported on Wednesday that England have been training with a back three this week as they consider a change of system after a series of disjointed displays despite reaching the last eight.

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    James Olley

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  • Palestinian soccer team plans to play World Cup qualifiers in the West Bank

    Palestinian soccer team plans to play World Cup qualifiers in the West Bank

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    After advancing further than ever in World Cup qualifying, the Palestinian soccer team is determined to host a game for a change.

    The football association has proposed playing games in the third stage of its Asian qualification campaign in the Israeli-occupied West Bank and already has support from a number of its opponents, starting against Jordan on Sept. 10.

    The Palestinian team progressed through the second round of continental qualifying for the first time in its history in June but, because of the Israel-Hamas war in the Gaza Strip, staged its “home” games in nearby Kuwait and Qatar.

    “Playing at a neutral venue isn’t permanent and was never meant to be so,” Susan Shabali, the PFA’s deputy president, told The Associated Press. “Faisal Al-Husseini is ready to host.”

    The 12,500-capacity Faisal Al-Husseini International Stadium is situated in the West Bank town of Al Ram. In 2019, it hosted the team’s last competitive home game, a World Cup qualifier against Saudi Arabia that ended 0-0.

    “We hope that all goes well,” Shalabi said, adding that there’d been “no objections” from FIFA, soccer’s international governing body, or the Asian Football Confederation.

    Israel launched a major offensive in Gaza in response to an Oct. 7 Hamas attack into southern Israel in which around 1,200 people were killed and another 250 people were abducted.

    The Israeli offensive has killed more than 38,000, according to health officials in Gaza, who don’t say how many were civilians or militants. The war has caused vast destruction across the territory, displaced most of Gaza’s population of 2.3 million — often multiple times — caused widespread hunger and raised fears of famine.

    The Palestinian team’s success has been remarkable during the war and the fact it has played dozens of games on the road since 2019, and the players have had to move for safety and seek overseas contracts.

    While there is little soccer currently being played in the territory, most players in the Palestinian roster belong to clubs in foreign leagues. The most recent roster saw coach Makram Daboub select players based in countries including Sweden, Belgium, Libya, Egypt, Qatar and Jordan.

    Mohammed Rashid, who plays club soccer for Bali United in Indonesia, told reporters in Perth last month ahead of the second-round finale against Australia that the hardest part of competing in international competition was not being able to play at home.

    On June 27, the Palestinian team, currently ranked No. 95 in the world, was drawn in Group B of the third round which contains South Korea, Iraq, Jordan, Oman and Kuwait.

    The top two from each of the three groups of six qualify automatically for the 2026 World Cup.

    After the opening game in South Korea on Sept. 5, the Palestinians return to West Asia to take on Jordan five days later.

    The Jordan Football Association issued a statement this week to “affirm its position in support of the Palestinian Football Association’s right to hold its home matches on its land and among its fans.”

    “Jordan is proud to be the first team to face our Palestinian brothers in the 2026 World Cup qualifiers on Palestinian territory,” the statement said.

    The Oman Football Association also said it supported the PFA’s “legitimate right to hold official national team matches in front of its fans on home soil.” Kuwait earlier issued its support.

    ___

    AP soccer: https://apnews.com/hub/soccer

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  • Rivals.com  –  Persistence pays off for Oregon with five-star Dakorien Moore

    Rivals.com – Persistence pays off for Oregon with five-star Dakorien Moore

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    Five-star receiver Dakorien Moore committed to Oregon over Texas and others on July 4.

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    Adam Gorney, National Recruiting Director

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  • What’s live on Sky Sports today? TV guide and listings plus how to watch on Sky Sports App and NOW

    What’s live on Sky Sports today? TV guide and listings plus how to watch on Sky Sports App and NOW

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    The Formula 1 cars will be on the track at Silverstone on Friday as the first two practice sessions for Sunday’s British Grand Prix take place live on Sky Sports F1.

    George Russell will be aiming to make it back-to-back victories after his surprise win at the Austrian Grand Prix, but all eyes will once again be on Max Verstappen and Lando Norris as they return to action following last week’s collision.

    Coverage of Practice One starts at midday, with the session beginning at 12.30pm, and Practice Two coverage kicks off at 3.45pm with the session commencing at 4pm. The practice sessions and qualifying for Formula 2 and Formula 3 will also be shown live from Silverstone.

    There is another golf triple-header with the BMW International Open, where Patrick Reed is one shot off the lead after the first round, live on Sky Sports Golf from 11.30pm, while the final round of the individual event at the Aramco Team Series at London’s Centurion Club is live from 12.30pm on Sky Sports Mix as Leona Maguire seeks to complete a wire-to-wire victory.

    The John Deere Classic in Illinois then takes centre stage from 5pm live on Sky Sports Golf.

    Ahead of a big weekend of international rugby union live on Sky there is an appetiser on Sky Sports Action from 1.55pm with live coverage of Griquas against Pumas which opens the Currie Cup season in South Africa.

    There is also live NRL action from Australia with Brisbane Broncos against Penrith Panthers live on Sky Sports Arena from 11am ahead of an evening triple-bill of Super League fixtures with Warrington Wolves vs Huddersfield Giants (Action), Wigan Warriors vs Leigh Leopards (Arena) and St Helens vs Castleford Tigers (Mix) all kicking off at 8pm.

    It’s top against bottom in the Vitality Blast South Group as leaders Surrey host Middlesex in a London derby at the Kia Oval, with the match live on Sky Sports Cricket from 6.15pm.

    On Sky Sports Racing, International Raceday Live from 10.30am includes action from France along with greyhound racing, with Raceday Live from 1.30pm concentrating on the Flat meeting at Doncaster and the jumps card at Newton Abbot.

    Sky Sports is your home of Premier League, EFL, Scottish Premiership and WSL football, every F1 race, all nine golf majors, every England home cricket match, tennis, darts, Super League, netball and much more.

    You can upgrade to Sky Sports here, and non-Sky subscribers can watch all the action with a NOW pass.

    Here’s what’s coming up live on Sky Sports over the next few days:

    Friday July 5

    8.35am – British GP: Formula 3 Practice – live on Sky Sports F1

    9.55am – British GP: Formula 2 Practice – live on Sky Sports F1

    10.30am – International Raceday Live – live on Sky Sports Racing

    11am – NRL: Brisbane Broncos vs Penrith Panthers – live on Sky Sports Arena

    11.30am – DP World Tour: BMW International Open – live on Sky Sports Golf

    12pm – British Grand Prix: Practice 1 – live on Sky Sports F1, session starts 12.30pm

    12.30pm – Ladies European Tour: Aramco Series London – live on Sky Sports Mix

    1.30pm – Raceday Live – live on Sky Sports Racing – Doncaster and Newton Abbot

    1.55pm – Currie Cup: Griquas vs Pumas – live on Sky Sports Action

    2.05pm – British GP: Formula 3 Qualifying – live on Sky Sports F1

    3pm – British GP: Formula 2 Qualifying – live on Sky Sports F1

    3.45pm – British Grand Prix: Practice 2 – live on Sky Sports F1, session starts 4pm

    5pm – PGA Tour: John Deere Classic – live on Sky Sports Golf

    6.15pm – Vitality Blast: Surrey vs Middlesex – live on Sky Sports Cricket

    7.30pm – Super League: Warrington Wolves vs Huddersfield Giants – live on Sky Sports Action, kick-off 8pm

    7.55pm – Super League: Wigan Warriors vs Leigh Leopards – live on Sky Sports Arena, kick-off 8pm

    7.55pm – Super League: St Helens vs Castleford Tigers – live on Sky Sports Mix, kick-off 8pm

    Saturday July 6

    7.30am – International Rugby Union First Test: New Zealand vs England – live on Sky Sports Action, kick-off 8.05am

    8.45am – International Raceday Live – live on Sky Sports Racing

    9.15am – British GP: Formula 3 Sprint – live on Sky Sports F1

    10.30am – International Rugby Union First Test: Australia vs Wales – live on Sky Sports Action, kick-off 10.45am

    10.30am – NRL: North Queensland Cowboys vs Manly Sea Eagles – live on Sky Sports Arena

    11.15am – British Grand Prix: Practice Three – live on Sky Sports F1, session starts 11.30am

    12.30pm – DP World Tour: BMW International Open – live on Sky Sports Golf

    1.10pm – British GP: Formula 2 Sprint – live on Sky Sports F1

    2pm – First Women’s T20I: England vs New Zealand – live on Sky Sports Cricket

    2.15pm – British Grand Prix Qualifying – live on Sky Sports F1, session starts 3pm

    2.55pm – Super League: Leeds Rhinos vs London Broncos – live on Sky Sports Arena

    3.30pm – International Rugby Union First Test: South Africa vs Ireland – live on Sky Sports Action, kick-off 4pm

    5pm – PGA Tour: John Deere Classic – live on Sky Sports Golf

    5pm – Super League: Hull KR vs Catalans Dragons – live on Sky Sports Arena, kick-off 5.30pm

    8pm – International Rugby Union First Test: Argentina vs France – live on Sky Sports Action

    Sunday July 7

    1am – Fight Night International: Shakur Stevenson vs Artem Harutyunyan – live on Sky Sports Action

    7am – NRL: Canberra Raiders vs Newcastle Knights – live on Sky Sports Arena

    8.15am – British GP: Formula 3 Feature Race – live on Sky Sports F1

    9.50am – British GP: Formula 2 Feature Race – live on Sky Sports F1

    10.30am – International Raceday Live – live on Sky Sports Racing

    12pm – DP World Tour: BMW International Open – live on Sky Sports Golf

    1.30pm – The British Grand Prix – live on Sky Sports F1, race starts 3pm

    2.25pm – Vitality Blast: Somerset vs Gloucester – live on Sky Sports Cricket

    2.55pm – Super League: Salford Red Devils vs Hull FC – live on Sky Sports Action, kick-off 3pm

    5pm – PGA Tour: John Deere Classic – live on Sky Sports Golf

    Monday July 8

    9.45am – International Raceday Live – live on Sky Sports Racing

    1.30pm – Raceday Live – live on Sky Sports Racing

    Tuesday July 9

    10.30am – International Raceday Live – live on Sky Sports Racing

    2pm – Raceday Live – live on Sky Sports Racing

    6pm – Second Women’s T20I: England vs New Zealand – live on Sky Sports Cricket

    Wednesday July 10

    10am – First Test: England vs West Indies – live on Sky Sports Cricket, first ball 11am

    10.30am – International Raceday Live – live on Sky Sports Racing

    2pm – Raceday Live – live on Sky Sports Racing

    Watch Sky Sports News live

    Sky Sports News brings you the latest sports news throughout the day on channel 409. Watch with a Sky Sports subscription or NOW pass.

    Live football on Sky

    Check out the full football fixture list, see the latest standings with our football tables and catch up with all the Premier League goals in 2023/24 with our free highlights.

    And get news and analysis from Sky Sports’ series of football podcasts including The Gary Neville Podcast, the Sky Sports Football Podcast, the Essential Football Podcast, Three Players and a Podcast, Sunday Supplement and Transfer Talk

    Live Formula 1 on Sky

    Formula 1 has a record schedule of 24 races for the first time and all race weekends will be live on Sky Sports F1.

    Check out the full F1 2024 calendar, results and TV schedule, see the latest world championship standings and watch the best F1 video from the season so far.

    And also stay up to date with the latest Sky Sports F1 Podcast.

    Live boxing on Sky

    There are a host of major boxing events coming up live on Sky Sports, while the Ringside Toe2Toe podcast welcomes the biggest names in the fight game.

    Live cricket on Sky

    Sky Sports brings you all the action from England Men’s upcoming cricket games including the T20 World Cup, two Test series against West Indies and Sri Lanka at home and Australia’s white-ball tour.

    Every game of the Men’s T20 World Cup in the West Indies and USA in June will be live on Sky Sports as England bid to defend their crown.

    England Women’s internationals against Pakistan and New Zealand will also be live on Sky Sports before the Women’s T20 World Cup in Bangladesh takes place in September and October.

    Cricket fans can also watch The IPL, The Hundred and much more this summer live on Sky and listen to the Sky Sports Cricket Podcast.

    Live golf on Sky

    Sky Sports is the home of the PGA Tour, DP World Tour and LPGA Tour while also showing all four men’s majors and all five women’s majors.

    You can stay up to date with the latest scores and tee times from around the world of golf with our leaderboards.

    Sky Sports will keep you up to date with all the latest golf news, review the week’s tournaments and look ahead to forthcoming events on the Sky Sports Golf Podcast.

    Live rugby league on Sky

    Sky Sports will show every game from the 2024 Betfred Super League season. Sky Sports will show all six matches in each Super League round live.

    Sky Sports also shows live matches from the NRL each week, while The Bench with Jenna and Jon brings you interviews with the big names from Super League and beyond.

    Live tennis on Sky

    Sky Sports is the new home for tennis in the UK and Ireland, with Sky Sports Tennis on Sky and NOW, making tennis content available all day, every day for fans.

    Sky Sports will broadcast more live tennis than anywhere else, bringing over 4,000 matches from more than 80 tournaments a year on the ATP and WTA Tours, as well as full coverage of the US Open, all exclusively live.

    Check out the full scores and schedule of the day’s play, see the latest world rankings, and get news, analysis and interviews on the Sky Sports Tennis Podcast.

    Live darts on Sky

    Follow the 2024 betMGM Premier League live on Sky Sports as Luke Littler, Michael van Gerwen and Luke Humphries headline each Thursday.

    Check out the latest standings from the Premier League Darts season, watch the best video from each week and keep up to date with the biggest news with the Love the Darts podcast.

    Live netball on Sky

    One Netball Super League game will be streamed each week in the Sky Sports App and Sky Sports website.

    Keep up to date with the latest standings in the 2024 Netball Super League as well as the netball fixtures and results.

    What are the 12 Sky Sports channels?

    401 – Sky Sports Main Event

    402 – Sky Sports Premier League

    403 – Sky Sports Football

    404 – Sky Sports Cricket

    405 – Sky Sports Golf

    406 – Sky Sports F1

    407 – Sky Sports Tennis

    408 – Sky Sports Action

    409 – Sky Sports News

    412 – Sky Sports Arena

    415 – Sky Sports Racing

    416 – Sky Sports Mix

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  • Defensive back Johnson III agrees with Rams

    Defensive back Johnson III agrees with Rams

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    The Los Angeles Rams have agreed to terms with defensive back John Johnson III, the team announced Thursday.

    Johnson, 28, returned to the Rams in 2023 after an initial four-year stint there followed by two seasons with the Cleveland Browns. He played in 17 games last season (eight starts) and made 42 tackles with two interceptions and six pass breakups.

    The Rams selected Johnson in the third round of the 2017 draft out of Boston College. He has 392 tackles, 10 interceptions, 38 pass breakups, eight tackles for loss and one forced fumble in 71 career regular-season games (56 starts) for the Rams.

    He also has played in seven playoff games (all starts) for Los Angeles and made 42 tackles with one interception.

    Johnson signed as a free agent with Cleveland in 2021 and he totaled 162 tackles, four interceptions, nine pass breakups, three forced fumbles, two fumble recoveries and five tackles for loss in 32 games (all starts) from 2021-22.

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  • Arteta on new Arsenal contract: ‘It will happen’

    Arteta on new Arsenal contract: ‘It will happen’

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    Mikel Arteta has dropped the strongest hint yet that he will sign a new contract at Arsenal by insisting he doesn’t “predict any issues happening” when talks take place.

    The 42-year-old’s existing deal expires in the summer of 2025 and it was initially expected that negotiations would be held at the end of last season.

    However, all parties have prioritised planning for the next campaign instead and Arteta has assembled nine players not involved in either Euro 2024 or the Copa América for a summer training camp in Marbella.

    Speaking to ESPN from the Spanish city in an exclusive interview, Arteta said: “There is no update [on his contract] at the moment. The thing that hasn’t changed is how happy I am and how valued I feel here and how much I love representing this club.

    “Things happen in a natural way and our relationship is that good that I don’t predict any issues happening. But things have to develop in the right way and it will happen.”

    Pushed on whether clarity over his future would help demonstrate stability for future signings, Arteta continued: “I understand that but the focus now is ‘OK, how we can improve things around the team, how we can improve now the things in the transfer window that we have.’ We have time to sit down and discuss that.”

    Arsenal are monitoring Bologna defender Riccardo Calafiori, sources have told ESPN, but are yet to make any fresh moves in the market.

    The north London club had been interested in Benjamin Sesko before the Slovenia striker signed a new contract to stay at RB Leipzig.

    When asked whether Arsenal were looking for another attacking player in the market, Arteta said: “We are looking to improve in every possible department. With the new regulations, there are certain things we have to respect and be conscious of and then obviously the Euros and Copa América are slowing everything down. Hopefully now it is going to pick up a little bit because we have things to go and we will try to provide that.

    “[How active do we expect to be?] I think both ways. There are things that we have to improve, that’s for sure and we are going to try to do. But the market is tricky. We have been very aggressive, we are very determined and we have a clear idea obviously of what we want to do. It will come down to finding the right agreements at the right time.”

    Arsenal will kick off their preseason against Bournemouth on July 24.

    Arteta’s side then head to Los Angeles later this month where they will take on Manchester United at SoFi Stadium on July 27 and then Liverpool in Philadelphia on July 31.

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    James Olley

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  • India cricketers feted in victory parade in Mumbai after winning Twenty20 World Cup

    India cricketers feted in victory parade in Mumbai after winning Twenty20 World Cup

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    NEW DELHI — Tens of thousands of jubilant fans poured onto Mumbai’s Marine Drive to cheer India’s new world cricket champions when they returned home on Thursday.

    India beat South Africa in a tight finish in the Twenty20 World Cup final last weekend in Barbados for their first world cricket title in 13 years.

    Skipper Rohit Sharma and Hardik Pandya held the coveted trophy in an open bus convoy to Wankhede stadium, where they were to participate in celebrations organized by the Board of Control for Cricket in India.

    Fans danced, waved the India flag, and flashed smartphone lights after waiting for hours to glimpse Sharma, Virat Kohli and the other cricket stars.

    The victorious squad landed in New Delhi early Thursday on a charter flight from Barbados. They met Prime Minister Narendra Modi at his residence and later left for Mumbai.

    Hundreds of supporters were gathered at New Delhi International Airport, many of them chanting “India, India” as the players came out and boarded a bus.

    There were hundreds more waiting at the hotel to continue the celebrations, which started on Saturday as soon as the final was won. Some of the players danced to drum beats when they reached their hotel.

    The team’s return from the Caribbean was delayed because of a shutdown in Barbados forced by Hurricane Beryl.

    “It’s a lifetime experience,” cricket official Arun Dhumal said.

    The T20 triumph was India’s first World Cup title since 2011, when it won the 50-over version.

    The BCCI has announced a cash bonus of 1.25 billion rupees ($15 million) for the winning squad.

    Soon after winning the title, Sharma, Kohli and Ravindra Jadeja announced their retirement from T20 internationals.

    ___

    AP cricket: https://apnews.com/hub/cricket

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  • Rivals.com  –  Rivals Five-Star: How Big 12 programs were impacted

    Rivals.com – Rivals Five-Star: How Big 12 programs were impacted

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    JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — The Rivals Five-Star is in the books and now it’s time to continue the analysis from the preeminent event of the offseason.

    There was a rather light presence of Big 12 representation at the Five-Star with just a couple of programs with connections. Here are the programs most impacted by the event.

    THIS SERIES: SEC impact | Big Ten impact

    Just before his two-day stay in Jacksonville, five-star quarterback and No. 1 overall prospect Julian Lewis, spent a weekend in Boulder, Colo., for an official visit with Deion Sanders and the Buffs. Colorado is one of the just two or three schools that are in legitimate contention to flip the top prospect away from USC.

    On top of the visits taking place directly before the event, the speculation was driven further as Lewis was sporting a Colorado towel competing in the Five-Star.

    The USC commit is being courted by others, but none seemingly as hard as Colorado, who had fans shouting for him in the streets of Boulder and even a restaurant that created a burger named after Lewis. They are going all out for him.

    Given that he is not committed to Colorado, there is not an immediate impact for them coming out of Five-Star. But to see Lewis rep the Buffs, even just by wearing a towel, it continues to add intrigue to what has become the potentially the top storyline of the 2025 cycle as the year moves closer to signing day.

    The UCF Knights, going into their second year in the Big 12, had a sprinkle of representation with one commit as well as some targets in attendance. The 6-foot-3, 300-pound Gavin Blanchard was maybe the only prospect currently ranked as a three-star in attendance, but nonetheless he shined. He got reps at both center and guard, excelling at initially slowing down powerful pass-rushers working from the inside. Blanchard’s stock certainly is shooting up coming out of the Five-Star and UCF has a good one headed its way.

    Across from Blanchard on the interior of the defensive line is one that the Knights would love to see in their class, but is going to be tough. That is four-star defensive lineman and longtime Auburn commit Malik Autry. With a massive body – 6-foot-6, 320 pounds – Autry is quite a task to slow down on the inside. A motor that keeps firing and a real sense for a pass rush, Autry is a rare blend of an interior defensive lineman. UCF hosted the Alabama native on an official visit this summer, but battles the likes of Ohio State to try and flip him away.

    Down the line on the perimeter was a 2026 target of the Knights, defensive end Jake Kreul. The IMG Academy prospect still has some growing to do, but already at 6-foot-3 and 225 pounds, you have to like what you see. A quick first step, an array of pass rush moves, and a fiery edge to his personality on the field make for a nuisance for all blockers across from him. UCF is one of many already in pursuit, which includes all the in-state powers.

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    Marshall Levenson, National Recruiting Analyst

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  • Lewis Hamilton’s Mission 44 charity formalises partnership with Formula 1 in continued push for change

    Lewis Hamilton’s Mission 44 charity formalises partnership with Formula 1 in continued push for change

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    Formula 1 has launched an official collaboration with Mission 44, the charity founded by Lewis Hamilton that advocates for greater diversity and inclusion in motorsport.

    Ahead of this weekend’s British Grand Prix, Formula 1 announced that the two organisations were formalising their relationship following years of successful collaboration.

    Hamilton, a seven-time world champion, founded Mission 44 in 2021 with the aim of achieving greater representation, diversity, and inclusion in motorsport to create meaningful change for young people facing social injustice through education, empowerment, and employment opportunities.

    Formula 1 head of environment, social and governance Ellen Jones said: “Over the last few years, it has been a pleasure to support Mission 44 in its efforts to make our sport more diverse and give students and young people their first taste of the world of F1 and motorsport.

    “We look forward to working with Mission 44 in this new capacity and seeing how many doors we can open together to inspire the next generation.”

    Formula 1 has worked closely with Mission 44 to address some of the challenges surrounding diversity and inclusion in the sport, supporting the charity in facilitating once-in-a-lifetime experiences for students from underrepresented groups and underserved communities to inspire them to consider careers in STEM and motorsport.

    In 2023, Mission 44 and Formula 1 delivered outreach programmes in Austin, Silverstone, and Sao Paulo, positively impacting more than 150 young people.

    As part of the official link-up, F1 will support Mission 44 in raising awareness of their work and connect the charity with organisations across motorsport to identify apprenticeships and similar opportunities for young people from underrepresented groups.

    At Silverstone this weekend, F1 and Mission 44 will host a first-of-its-kind networking event that will bring together scholars from the Formula 1 Engineering and Mission 44 MSc Motorsport Engineering scholarship programmes to knowledge share and help with the students’ professional development.

    Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

    Hamilton explains his mission to transform the lives of young people from underserved communities in the world of motorsport

    Both schemes offer students crucial financial and career support, with the objective of increasing opportunities in motorsport for students from underrepresented backgrounds.

    Mission 44 chief executive Jason Arthur said: “When Lewis Hamilton launched Mission 44 three years ago, it was with the ambition to create a fairer, more inclusive future for young people around the world.

    “Together with Formula 1, we will be able to increase awareness and access to motorsport career opportunities, so young people, no matter their background, can succeed.

    “Change requires collective action, and we’re excited to grow our partnership with Formula 1 to drive diversity in motorsport forward.”

    Sky Sports F1’s live British GP schedule (all F1 sessions on Sky Showcase)

    The British Grand Prix takes place this Sunday live on Sky Sports F1 and Sky Showcase
    Image:
    The British Grand Prix takes place this Sunday live on Sky Sports F1 and Sky Showcase

    Thursday July 4
    6pm: The F1 Show

    Friday July 5
    8.35am: F3 Practice
    9.55am: F2 Practice
    12pm: British GP Practice One (session starts at 12.30pm)
    2.05pm: F3 Qualifying
    3pm: F2 Qualifying
    3.45pm: British GP Practice Two (session starts at 4pm)

    Saturday July 6
    9.15am: F3 Sprint
    11.15am: British GP Practice Three (session starts at 11.30am)
    1.10pm: F2 Sprint
    2.15pm: British GP Qualifying build-up
    3pm: British GP Qualifying
    5pm: Ted’s Qualifying Notebook

    Sunday July 7
    8:15am: F3 Feature Race
    9:50am: F2 Feature Race
    11:50am: Porsche Supercup
    1:30pm: Grand Prix Sunday – British GP build-up
    3pm: The BRITISH GRAND PRIX
    5pm: Chequered Flag: British GP reaction
    6pm: Ted’s Notebook

    F1’s summer triple-header concludes with the big one, the British Grand Prix at Silverstone. Watch every session live on Sky Sports F1 and Sky Showcase, with Sunday’s race at 3pm. Stream every F1 race and more with a NOW Sports Month Membership – No contract, cancel anytime

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  • Three Phillies infielders headline All-Star starters

    Three Phillies infielders headline All-Star starters

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    The Philadelphia Phillies are sending three infielders to the MLB All-Star Game later this month, as Bryce Harper, Trea Turner and Alec Bohm were among the starters named for the Midsummer Classic on Wednesday evening.

    Turner won out over Los Angeles Dodgers star Mookie Betts in a close vote — although Betts wouldn’t be able to play in the game because of a broken left hand. Meanwhile, Bohm will be making his first All-Star start after having won 70% of the final voting over San Diego Padres third baseman Manny Machado.

    Harper, the National League’s leading vote-getter, is currently nursing a left hamstring injury but is expected to play in the game.

    “It’s great for the organization,” Phillies manager Rob Thomson said.

    The announcement of the All-Star starters came after phase 2 voting closed Wednesday afternoon. It featured the top two vote-getters at each position from phase 1 squaring off, with the loser relegated to potential reserve duty. All-Star reserves will be announced Sunday at 5:30 p.m. ET on ESPN.

    “Hopefully [second baseman Bryson] Stott makes it as well,” Thomson said. “Atlanta had it last year where all four of their infielders made it.”

    The New York Yankees, Houston Astros, Cleveland Guardians, Baltimore Orioles, Milwaukee Brewers and Padres each have two starters representing their respective teams.

    For the American League, the Yankees’ Aaron Judge and Juan Soto will start together in the outfield, along with the Guardians’ Steven Kwan, who is making his first All-Star appearance and the first for a Cleveland outfielder since Juan Gonzalez in 2001.

    The Toronto Blue JaysVladimir Guerrero Jr. will start at first base, with the Astros’ Jose Altuve at second, the Orioles’ Gunnar Henderson at shortstop and the Guardians’ Jose Ramirez at third. This is Altuve’s ninth selection, while Henderson becomes the third-youngest AL shortstop to win the fan voting behind Carlos Correa, who was 22 in 2017, and Alex Rodriguez, who started at 21 years old in 1997.

    The O’s Adley Rutschman won the voting behind the plate, and the Astros’ Yordan Alvarez did the same at designated hitter. Alvarez narrowly beat out Baltimore DH Ryan O’Hearn in final voting, 52% to 48%.

    For the NL, joining Harper, Turner and Bohm in the infield will be Arizona Diamondbacks second baseman Ketel Marte, while the Brewers’ Christian Yelich will start alongside Padres teammates Jurickson Profar and Fernando Tatis Jr. in the outfield.

    Profar and Tatis are the first Padres outfielders to earn election since Tony Gwynn in 1999. They also were involved in the closest phase 2 race, as they narrowly beat out Dodgers outfielder Teoscar Hernandez and Phillies outfielder Brandon Marsh for starting jobs.

    Brewers catcher William Contreras will start behind the plate, becoming the first Milwaukee catcher to earn election since Ted Simmons in 1983.

    Meanwhile, Dodgers star Shohei Ohtani gets the nod at designated hitter. It’s Ohtani’s fourth straight start at DH, becoming the first player to accomplish that feat.

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    Jesse Rogers

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  • Star WR Aiyuk ‘for sure’ wants to stay with 49ers

    Star WR Aiyuk ‘for sure’ wants to stay with 49ers

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    Star wide receiver Brandon Aiyuk said he wants to stay with the San Francisco 49ers this season despite his contract stalemate with the team.

    Aiyuk, who is entering the final season of his rookie deal, told TMZ Sports at Los Angeles International Airport on Friday that he’s ready to play for the 49ers although they have yet to agree on an extension.

    “For sure,” Aiyuk told TMZ Sports. “For sure!”

    Aiyuk added intrigue to his contract situation with the 49ers with a post to TikTok this month.

    In the video, Aiyuk is talking via FaceTime with Washington Commanders quarterback Jayden Daniels, his former Arizona State teammate.

    Aiyuk tells Daniels, “They said they don’t want me back.”

    Daniels responds, “That’s it?”

    “I swear,” Aiyuk said, prompting Daniels to shout, “My boy!”

    Aiyuk wrote in the caption of the post, “Im laughing but im crying fr.”

    It is unclear whether Aiyuk was implying the 49ers don’t want him back for this season or is saying the 49ers don’t want him beyond this season because they are unwilling to meet his demands on what would be a lucrative contract extension.

    ESPN’s Jeremy Fowler previously reported that talks between the 49ers and Aiyuk “have stalled a bit.”

    Aiyuk is entering the final year of his rookie contract and is slated to count $14.124 million against the salary cap in 2024. The wide receiver is coming off a 75-catch, 1,342-yard, seven-touchdown season.

    He didn’t participate in the 49ers’ offseason program and skipped the team’s mandatory minicamp. He is subject to fines in excess of $101,000 for boycotting the minicamp.

    49ers wide receiver Deebo Samuel said during the team’s minicamp that he has been in regular contact with Aiyuk throughout the offseason, offering his help when needed on how to navigate the contract situation. Samuel agreed to a three-year extension with the 49ers in 2022, but not before he demanded a trade due to the slow pace of his contract talks. His top piece of advice to Aiyuk has been to preach patience.

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  • Coco Gauff and Carlos Alcaraz advance at Wimbledon. Naomi Osaka loses

    Coco Gauff and Carlos Alcaraz advance at Wimbledon. Naomi Osaka loses

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    LONDON — Coco Gauff likes No. 1 Court at Wimbledon.

    It’s where she beat Venus Williams back in 2019 when Gauff made her Wimbledon debut at age 15.

    On Wednesday, Gauff beat qualifier Anca Todoni 6-2, 6-1 to advance to the third round at the All England Club.

    “This is the court where I first started here at Wimbledon. Court 1 is always a special place for me to play on,” the 20-year-old Gauff said in her on-court interview.

    The victory also allows Gauff, the No. 2 seed, to move another step away from last year’s first-round exit.

    “Overall, I just learned about life a lot,” the U.S. Open champion said when asked about putting that three-set loss to Sofia Kenin behind her.

    “I just realized that, yes, what I do I’m very passionate about, but it’s not ever that serious and sometimes the world can make you feel like there’s so much pressure, there’s so much expectation,” she said. “At the end of the (day), it’s a game. It’s sport.”

    The 19-year-old Todoni is from Romania and was making her Grand Slam debut.

    “I do think I could have played cleaner at some moments,” Gauff said.

    Five years ago, Gauff beat Williams — a five-time Wimbledon champion — 6-4, 6-4 in the first round and eventually reached the last 16, all in her Grand Slam debut.

    Defending champion Carlos Alcaraz trailed 6-5 in the first set Wednesday before coming back to beat Aleksander Vukic 7-6 (5), 6-2, 6-2, setting up a third-round meeting with No. 29 Frances Tiafoe after the American eliminated Borna Coric 7-6 (5), 6-1, 6-3.

    When told by the on-court interviewer that Tiafoe said he’s “coming after you,” the 21-year-old Spaniard replied with a smile: “I’m going for him.”

    “We played a really good match in the U.S. Open,” the No. 3 seed said of their 2022 semifinal that Alcaraz won at Flushing Meadows.

    In other results, four-time Grand Slam champion Naomi Osaka was eliminated in the second round by No. 19 Emma Navarro by a score of 6-4, 6-1, while No. 1 Jannik Sinner got past 2021 runner-up Matteo Berrettini 7-6 (3), 7-6 (4), 2-6, 7-6 (4) at Centre Court in an all-Italian contest.

    “I knew that I had to raise my level today,” Sinner said. “He is a grass-court specialist. … I’m very happy how I handled the situation.”

    No. 11 Danielle Collins completed her first-round match — a 6-3, 7-6 (4) win over Clara Tauson. It had been suspended Tuesday night at 4-4 in the second set.

    No. 20 Beatriz Haddad Maia advanced to the third round by beating Magdalena Frech 7-5, 6-3.

    ___

    AP tennis: https://apnews.com/hub/tennis

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  • Rivals.com  –  Ten prospects on five-star watch heading into next Rivals250 refresh

    Rivals.com – Ten prospects on five-star watch heading into next Rivals250 refresh

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    There are currently 18 five-stars in the 2025 Rivals250 and as we traverse our way to getting to about 32 there will inevitably be additions along the way. Here are 10 prospects who will be in the conversation – with no guarantees of it happening – as we re-rank the class in August:

    WR JAIME FFRENCH

    Jaime Ffrench

    One of the smoothest playmakers in the class, Ffrench has had a fantastic offseason and reminds us of Garrett Wilson at the same stage – everything looks great, effortless and unstoppable. Ffrench had moments at the Rivals Five-Star but he didn’t dominate the event like a five-star receiver should but in his whole body of work, how he plays the position and how he’s taken over events in the last few months, he’ll be in the five-star talk. Texas has had an edge in his recruitment with Tennessee, Miami and LSU right there.

    *****  

    DL JAVION HILSON

    Javion Hilson

    Javion Hilson (Nick Lucero/Rivals.com)

    The Florida State commit who closed down his recruitment recently after serious overtures from Texas, Hilson pulled out of the Rivals Five-Star at the last moment but his work over the last few months – and his dominant junior season – has him in the five-star talk. The Cocoa, Fla., standout is already the top-rated weakside defensive end in the class, he is elite coming off the edge and Michigan QB commit and Cocoa teammate Brady Hart said Hilson is one of the hardest workers he knows.

    SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS WITH FLORIDA FANS AT 1ST AND TEN FLORIDA

    *****  

    QB DEUCE KNIGHT

    Deuce Knight

    Deuce Knight

    When the ball comes out cleanly, Knight might have the nicest and smoothest delivery in the 2025 class and over the last few months his consistency and accuracy has been near perfect. At the Rivals Five-Star, the Notre Dame commit who Ole Miss is still trying to flip threw a beautiful deep ball and it looks effortless coming out. As time has gone on in high school, the Lucedale (Miss.) George County standout has looked better. If the comp is Michael Penix Jr. (the No. 8 overall pick in the 2024 NFL Draft) and we feel Knight is more advanced at the same stage, why shouldn’t he be discussed as a five-star?

    SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS WITH NOTRE DAME FANS AT INSIDENDSPORTS.COM

    *****  

    CB DIJON LEE JR.

    Dijon Lee Jr.

    Dijon Lee Jr.

    Ohio State commits Devin Sanchez and Na’eem Offord are basically no-brainer five-stars because of their elite size, length and instincts playing cornerback. So if Lee, a new Alabama commit, is basically the same player, and has the same size, length and playmaking ability, why should he not be in the discussion? Lee was phenomenal as a junior, is elite down the field against receivers and only two five-star cornerbacks seems light. We don’t want to fall in love with 6-foot-2 and over corners since the NFL has preferred more bulldog-type CBs lately but these guys are hard to pass up.

    SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS WITH ALABAMA FANS AT TIDEILLUSTRATED.COM

    *****  

    DB TREY MCNUTT

    Trey McNutt

    Trey McNutt

    There is a good chance Jonah Williams moves to outside linebacker at some point during this recruiting cycle because it’s probably where he will play over the long term so that could put McNutt as the top-ranked safety in the Rivals250. Not only would the Cleveland (Ohio) Shaker Heights standout move to No. 1 at the position but he’s had a phenomenal offseason as well. From length to intelligence in the secondary to trusting his instincts and making plays, McNutt is really special as Oregon might have an edge here but Ohio State and others are involved.

    *****  

    LB NATHANIEL OWUSU-BOATENG

    Nathaniel Owusu-Boateng

    Nathaniel Owusu-Boateng

    The Bradenton (Fla.) IMG Academy four-star linebacker is ranked No. 1 at his position and he came into Rivals Five-Star looking like an Adonis – physical, filled out and with an unmatched energy to compete and get after it. That intensity and spirit is contagious in a locker room and then on the field, Owusu-Boateng flies around, makes plays and almost cannot help himself from being physical. Notre Dame has an edge but Michigan, USC, Florida and Ohio State rounds out his top five.

    *****  

    LB RILEY PETTIJOHN

    Riley Pettijohn

    Riley Pettijohn

    Even before he stepped on the field, there was five-star talk around Pettijohn because he simply looks like a million bucks. The No. 1 inside linebacker from McKinney, Texas has size, length and looks the part of a future potential first-rounder. This is coming off having awesome film where he’s a thumper with speed and playmaking ability all over the field as well. It sure sounds like USC and Ohio State have emerged over Texas and Texas A&M in his recruitment and when we meet in August he’ll definitely be in the five-star talk.

    *****  

    QB KEELON RUSSELL

    Keelon Russell

    Keelon Russell

    After seeing him at the Elite 11 and then at the Rivals Five-Star along with other big events this offseason, Russell has certainly made the case to be the fourth five-star quarterback in the 2025 class along with Julian Lewis, Bryce Underwood and Tavien St. Clair. If the comp is Jayden Daniels (and Daniels was the second overall pick in the NFL Draft) then why are we waiting on giving the Alabama commit from Duncanville, Texas his due? Russell throws a beautiful ball, he’s smooth and he’s more physically developed than Daniels at the same stage.

    *****  

    DB HYLTON STUBBS

    Hylton Stubbs

    Hylton Stubbs

    Stubbs has all the physical tools and playmaking ability to become the No. 1 safety in the 2025 Rivals250 and he’s hungry – something that is instinctual and cannot be taught. The former USC commit who has Miami and Florida as his favorites with a July 4 commitment coming might have the best length at the position nationally (not counting DJ Pickett) and even when a receiver catches the ball on him in one-on-one situations, Stubbs makes it very difficult. He shined at the Rivals Five-Star among many other events this offseason.

    *****

    TE ELYISS WILLIAMS

    In three of the last four years and six of the last eight, there has been a tight end taken in the first round of the NFL Draft. If that’s the case and history stays true then the top-ranked tight end in the 2025 class should probably be a five-star and right now that distinction is held by Williams, a 6-foot-8, 230-pound specimen from Kingsland (Ga.) Camden County who’s committed to Georgia. The issue here is that Williams is going to have a fight on his hands for that No. 1 spot because new Kansas State commit Linkon Cure and new Oregon commit DaSaahn Brame are super special as well.

    SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS WITH GEORGIA FANS AT UGASPORTS.COM

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    Adam Gorney, National Recruiting Director

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  • Sir Mark Cavendish makes cycling history at Tour de France with record-breaking 35th stage win

    Sir Mark Cavendish makes cycling history at Tour de France with record-breaking 35th stage win

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    Sir Mark Cavendish has won a record-breaking 35th career Tour de France stage win with victory on stage five in Saint-Vulbas.

    Three years after matching Eddy Merckx on 34 during the 2021 Tour, Cavendish moved clear of the Belgian to stand alone in Tour history.

    The 39-year-old came off the wheel of Fabio Jakobsen in the finale and had the power to hold off Jasper Philipsen.

    Cavendish’s Astana-Qazaqstan bossed the front of the peloton for much of the final 30km of the 177km stage from Saint-Jean-de-Maurienne but in the finale the Manxman used his years of experience to surf the wheels before powering clear of his rivals.

    He left behind his lead-out man Michael Morkov and moved behind Philipsen and then Jakobsen, before spying space on the left-hand side of the road and bursting clear.

    “I’m in a little bit of disbelief,” Cavendish said. “I put a big gamble on this year to make sure we were here, at the Tour de France. It’s a big gamble for my boss [Astana Qazaqstan team manager Alexander Vinokourov] and the team to do. You have to go all-in. And we’ve done it.

    Image:
    Cavendish breaks the record previously held jointly with Belgian legend Eddy Merckx

    “How we built the team, what we’ve done with equipment, every little detail has been put towards specifically today. We didn’t nail it as a team as we wanted to do. But the boys improvised and got me in the best position and I was able to win.”

    How Cavendish bounced back to make history

    Cavendish postponed his planned retirement after crashing out of last year’s Tour, with his Astana-Qazaqstan team going all-in on ‘Project 35’ ahead of this year’s race.

    His victory comes just four days after Cavendish struggled mightily in the heat of a punishing opening stage out of Florence, vomiting on the bike in concerning scenes, and two days after he missed the opportunity to contest stage three after being caught behind a late crash in Turin.

    Cavendish’s four stage wins in 2021 counted as one of sport’s great comeback stories, his first victories at the Tour in five years after a period of time marked by illness and injury which contributed to a diagnosis of depression.

    Even since those wins three years ago, Cavendish has endured more difficulty, only signing a last-minute deal with Astana-Qazaqstan ahead of the 2023 season after the collapse of another move, then seeing last year’s Tour end abruptly on stage eight.

    Cavendish’s wife Peta and their children were waiting at the team bus and joined in exuberant celebrations.

    Britain's sprinter Mark Cavendish celebrates after winning a record 35th Tour de France stage win to break the record of Belgian legend Eddy Merckx during during the fifth stage of the Tour de France cycling race over 177.4 kilometers (110.2 miles) with start in Saint-Jean-de-Maurienne and finish in Saint-Vulbas, France, Wednesday, July 3, 2024. (Thomas Samson/Pool Photo via AP)
    Image:
    Cavendish celebrated with his family immediately after his victory

    His first Tour stage win came in 2008 on stage five, Cholet to Châteauroux and was quickly followed by three more wins in that year’s edition. Since then, Cavendish has continued to rack up wins over a total of 10 Tour de Frances.

    Cavendish ‘one of our greatest sportsmen’

    Great Britain Cycling Team Performance Director, Stephen Park CBE, said: “On behalf of British Cycling I would like to congratulate Sir Mark on a truly outstanding achievement.

    “It goes without saying that Mark is one of the greatest British riders of all time, and to cap off his final season of racing with another victory at the sport’s biggest race is a fitting final chapter in a glittering career.

    “We have been proud to support Mark from his early days on the Great Britain Cycling Team academy to his final Tour de France, and this is an incredibly special day for the coaches, support staff, fellow riders and fans who have all played a role in his journey.

    “Mark’s long and storied career, his passion for the sport and his tenacious pursuit for excellence make him a real inspiration for the next generation of bike riders looking to follow in his footsteps.

    “He is one of our country’s truly great sportsmen and sporting personalities, and it has been a privilege to have watched him reign supreme for all these years.”

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