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  • The Real Jurgen Klopp, part five: The manager who made Liverpool believe again

    The Real Jurgen Klopp, part five: The manager who made Liverpool believe again

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    After almost nine years in charge and seven major trophies, Jurgen Klopp is leaving Liverpool.

    He has been one of the most transformative managers in the club’s history and in English football’s modern era.

    To mark his departure, The Athletic is bringing you the Real Jurgen Klopp, a series of pieces building the definitive portrait of one of football’s most famous figures.

    For part five, James Pearce spoke to more than a dozen current and former players, staff members and executives to reveal his managerial secrets.

    Read the rest of the series here:


    Pep Lijnders takes his time as he ponders how best to sum up the scale of Klopp’s contribution to Liverpool.

    What a vantage point he’s had. The Dutchman was there to greet Klopp when he first arrived in 2015 and has been beside him almost every step of the way ever since on his coaching staff.

    “In the past 30 to 40 years, not many coaches have changed a club like Jurgen,” Lijnders tells The Athletic. “Louis van Gaal at Ajax, Johan Cruyff at Barca, Pep Guardiola at Barca, Arrigo Sacchi at Milan. Then, for me, Jurgen here.

    “Wherever we would have gone in the world, even if we had worn different colours, people would have recognised what they saw and said: ‘Ah, this is Liverpool Football Club’. As a coach, you cannot get a bigger compliment than that.”

    Ask the same question about Klopp’s impact at Anfield to Trent Alexander-Arnold and Andy Robertson, the dynamic full-backs who will forever be associated with his reign, and you get a similar answer: this was about far more than trophies.

    “Look at the stories that we’ve written, the journeys we’ve all been on,” Alexander-Arnold says. “He’s helped us all develop into what we’ve always dreamed of. He took us to the pinnacle.”

    Robertson, nodding in agreement beside him, agrees. “From the moment I walked in through the door, I could sense the belief everyone had in him. It’s been a fun ride. There’s always been excitement. He’s pretty decorated when it comes to silverware, but it’s more a story of how he got a club and fanbase believing again.”

    For owners Fenway Sports Group (FSG), there’s also a huge debt of gratitude. “He enthused the club with a competitive spirit that’s really quite unmatched,” says Liverpool chairman Tom Werner. “There’s something in his philosophy of life that bled into the storyline of Liverpool over the past nine years. Here is a man who is not even born in the UK, yet he’s become the Scouser we all love and admire.”


    No managerial appointment in Liverpool’s history had created such a sense of fervour.

    It was just after 5.30pm on Thursday, October 8, 2015, when Klopp arrived at the city’s Hope Street Hotel. After the Mercedes V-Class he was travelling in had battled past the supporters outside, he headed for The Sixth boardroom to sign a three-year contract alongside Werner, chief executive Ian Ayre and agent Marc Kosicke.

    A week earlier, Klopp had flown to New York to meet Liverpool’s owners at the New York offices of law firm Shearman & Sterling after deciding to cut short his sabbatical, five months after leaving Borussia Dortmund.

    Werner: “My first impression was that he uses humour in order to make people feel good. Obviously, the position was important to him, but he was also just enjoying a trip to New York City. You could sense his great love of life when we said goodbye.

    “After that first meeting, we turned to each other and said: ‘Forget his tactical strategy, he’s absolutely the right person for this club’. We had interviewed other coaches but he was just extraordinarily charismatic. He could be the CEO of any number of big companies outside of football. He has this remarkable ability to motivate people.”

    First-team development coach Lijnders, goalkeeping coach John Achterberg and academy director Alex Inglethorpe were among those invited to have dinner with Klopp at Hope Street Hotel after he had signed his contract.


    Klopp is unveiled as the new Liverpool manager with chairman Werner (left) and managing director Ayre (Paul Ellis/AFP via Getty Images)

    Achterberg: “The conversation just flowed. I felt like I’d known him for 10 years. I thought, ‘Yeah, I’m going to enjoy working for this guy’.”

    Inglethorpe: “The day after he came to watch the under-18s play Stoke at the academy. It was clear he had a genuine interest in what we do. An awful lot of managers talk about being committed to the development of young players but only some of them mean it. Jurgen’s commitment never wavered. He made our jobs easier by ensuring that pathway was always clear. I can’t think of another manager who has done it in quite the same way.”

    At his Anfield unveiling, Klopp described himself as “the normal one” and urged fans to “change from doubters to believers”.

    “If we want, this could be a very special day,” he said. “If you are prepared to work for it, if you are patient enough. If I’m sat here in four years, I think we will have won one title in this time. If not, the next one (job) may be in Switzerland.”

    Liverpool were 10th in the Premier League with 12 points from eight matches. They had won just a solitary League Cup since 2006 and had only qualified for the Champions League in one of the previous six seasons as Brendan Rodgers’ reign unravelled following the heartache of missing out on the title in 2013-14.

    Klopp waited until the club’s internationals had returned to their Melwood training base before assembling the squad in the media room. Each member of staff on site was asked to pass through and describe their role.

    Goalkeeper Simon Mignolet: “They all came through like a train. Jurgen said: ‘Who are all these people?’ Everyone said: ‘They’re the staff.’ He said: ‘No, we’re all one family: the Liverpool family. Everyone has to know everyone’s name. These people are here to help you perform.’ Jurgen’s point was that everyone is a part of the puzzle. That set the tone for everything that came after.”

    Melwood gateman Kenny Grimes: “There’s no doubt that the players’ attitude changed towards us. Previously, sometimes they used to drive straight past you but after that (meeting with Klopp), they started to let on a lot more. Everyone just seemed happier, more relaxed. There were never any airs and graces with Jurgen. The culture changed. He made you feel part of Liverpool FC to a much greater extent.”

    Klopp, who brought assistants Peter Krawietz and Zeljko Buvac with him, felt that the squad he inherited was talented but weighed down by expectation levels and pressure. He told them: “The only criticism which is really important is mine.”

    He brought in new rules about players eating together and reinforced that Melwood was a place of work, not for hangers-on. Time off was reduced as the training schedule became more intensive in order to adapt to his gegenpressing strategy.

    As he stood addressing his players, he wrote on the board:

    T – TERRIBLE
    E – ENTHUSIASTIC
    A – AMBITIOUS
    M – MENTALLY-STRONG MACHINES

    Mignolet: “I remember him saying that ‘terrible’ was how opponents were going to feel after going up against us for 90 minutes. He talked about how we were going to out-work and out-run teams.”

    The defining image from his first game in charge — a 0-0 draw at Tottenham — was the sight of a shattered Adam Lallana falling into his arms after being substituted.


    Lallana comes off exhausted during Klopp’s first match, at Tottenham, in 2015 (John Powell/Liverpool FC via Getty Images)

    Lijnders: “I loved his team talk before that game. He said that Tottenham’s confidence was like a little flower. He stood up and then started stamping his foot down on the floor! That was what he wanted the team to do to the flower! I thought: ‘It’s going to be fun working with this guy’.”

    Achterberg: “His force of personality quickly changed the mood around the place. What I liked early on was that Jurgen talked up the standard of the players he inherited. He knew the transfer window was shut and he couldn’t change anything. He immediately got a lot more out of players who had been struggling. He told everyone that everyone would have a fair chance.

    “The mantra was: ‘Don’t run forward if you can’t run back’. He said: ‘I’m responsible for the defeats, you boys are responsible for the wins’. He didn’t bulls*** anyone and he was demanding, but working for him was so rewarding. He trusted you to get on with your job and people were prepared to go into battle for him.”

    Defender Martin Skrtel: “There was something about the way he talked us as players, the way he motivated us. With Jurgen, he’s real. He’s not playing games. He’s not talking behind your back. That’s why players love him.”

    Striker Daniel Sturridge: “It was hearing his voice on the training pitch more than anything. The way he would give his messaging resonated with everyone. It’s hard to get players thinking they’d run through a brick wall for this guy, but he did that.

    “With every top manager, it’s teetering on the line of fear and respect. The players need to respect the boss — but the boss needs to command the respect of the players. You have to control the situations at big clubs, and he did that.”

    It wasn’t just on the field where Klopp had to alter the mindset. A month into his tenure, he declared he felt “pretty alone” as fans left early when Liverpool trailed Crystal Palace 2-1 at home.

    Achterberg: “He felt like the supporters were not fully behind the team. They didn’t really believe. He spoke a lot about that needing to change — how he needed everyone on board.

    “Gradually, Anfield became a lot more positive. Critics said Jurgen was celebrating a point when he got the players to hold hands in front of the Kop after Divock Origi got a late equaliser against West Brom, but they missed the point. That was his way of saying: ‘Thank you, this is what’s possible if we all stick together’. The first big example of that was the fightback against Dortmund (in the Europa League). That underlined how he had tapped into the power of Anfield.”

    Liverpool trailed 4-2 on aggregate in the second leg of the Europa League quarter-final with just 25 minutes to go but goals from Philippe Coutinho, Mamadou Sakho and Dejan Lovren stunned Klopp’s former club.

    Lijnders: “I believe that the character of the leader becomes the character of the team. You get a passionate guy coming in who really knows what he’s doing and why he’s doing it. He had the experience of knowing what works and came with new football ideas. People started seeing development and the people around him were able to express themselves freely.”

    In December 2015, the players had expected their Christmas party to be cancelled after a 3-0 defeat to Watford. Instead, they received a message from the manager that read: “Whatever we do together, we do as well as we can and tonight that means we party.” Nobody was allowed to leave Formby Hall, a golf resort and spa complex near Liverpool, until 1am.

    By the end of the season, Liverpool had competed in but lost two major finals: the League Cup to Manchester City (on penalties) and the Europa League to Unai Emery’s Sevilla.

    Determined to lift spirits at the post-match party in Basel’s Novotel, Klopp grabbed the microphone and said: “Two hours ago you all felt s***. But now, hopefully, you all feel better. This is just the start for us. We will play in many more finals.” He then launched into a defiant rendition of “We Are Liverpool”.


    Klopp wanted to share in his players’ celebrations — such as at Norwich in 2016 (Lindsey Parnaby/AFP via Getty Images)

    Achterberg: “Jurgen was adamant that the party should go ahead. He said sometimes you have to lose in order to learn how to win.”

    Midfielder Lucas Leiva: “OK, we lost both finals but just getting to them was a real sign of progress. Jurgen was building something special – you could see it, you could smell it. He always found positives in defeats. His man management was the best I ever had.”

    Little by little, Klopp was beginning to build a squad in his own image.

    Marko Grujic was the first signing of the Klopp era. Bought from Red Star Belgrade for £5.1million ($6.5m) in January 2016, the young midfielder stayed in Serbia on loan for the rest of the season before linking up with Liverpool in the summer. He made just 16 appearances for the club, but even he was shaped by Klopp’s philosophy.

    Grujic: “Going to such a huge club probably came too early for me, but I learned so much from Jurgen. The most difficult thing was the high press — so much sprinting and changing direction. It became the most famous thing about the team. It became the biggest weapon but so many hours on the training field went into getting that right.

    “Buvac would take a lot of the technical drills and he was a big help to me as he spoke my language, but Jurgen was such a good coach and also a nice guy. He would make everyone laugh with jokes and always had time for everyone — whether it was the ladies in the canteen or the kit guys.”

    Sadio Mane, Georginio Wijnaldum, Joel Matip and Loris Karius were also new additions to the squad in the summer of 2016, while Klopp boosted his backroom staff by recruiting head of fitness Andreas Kornmayer and nutritionist Mona Nemmer from Bayern Munich.

    It was made abundantly clear that indiscipline would not be tolerated. Sakho was sent home in disgrace from the pre-season tour of America after being late for the team flight to California and a team meal and then failing to turn up to a treatment session. “We have rules. If somebody doesn’t respect it or somebody gives me the feeling he is not respecting it, then I have to react,” Klopp said.

    The French defender had missed the end of the previous season following a failed UEFA drugs test. He was subsequently cleared but Klopp was furious that he had taken weight-loss supplements without the club’s knowledge. Sakho joined Crystal Palace, initially on loan the following January, and never played for Liverpool again.

    With Roberto Firmino, who had initially struggled under Rodgers after arriving from Hoffenheim, transformed after being moved into a central attacking role and Mane scoring freely, Liverpool returned to the Champions League as they beat Middlesbrough on the final day of the 2016-17 season. It was Lucas’ swansong after a decade of service.

    Lucas: “I had a year left on my contract but the team was evolving, I was playing less and less and I had a good offer from Lazio. It was hard to leave but I really appreciated how Jurgen handled it all. We had an honest talk and agreed it was best for myself and the club.”

    Nurturing young talent proved to be a theme of the Klopp era. Alexander-Arnold was handed his debut at the age of 18 in 2016-17 and the academy graduate soon established himself as the first-choice right-back.

    Alexander-Arnold: “Especially early on, as a young player coming through at such a big club, you go through a lot: the demands, the pressure, the expectation. Jurgen helped me so much. He put an arm around me and took the pressure off. He talked to me about managing my emotions. He knew when a bollocking was needed, or a little bit of love. He helped me go from being a young player breaking through to being a leader of this team. I owe him so much.”

    Shrewd recruitment ensured that momentum was maintained. In the summer of 2017, Mohamed Salah was signed from Roma for £43.9million. Klopp had initially wanted Bayer Leverkusen’s Julian Brandt, but sporting director Michael Edwards convinced him that the Egyptian attacker — who Chelsea had previously off-loaded — was the best option available.

    Signing players with a point to prove appealed to Klopp. Robertson arrived in the same window for £10million after being relegated with Hull City. Wijnaldum had suffered the same fate with Newcastle United.

    Robertson: “It’s pretty rare that a big club signs you off the back of something like that. The first time I met Jurgen, it was at Melwood; he had just flown back with the squad from Asia. He walked over, gave me a big hug and welcomed me to the club. He explained what he thought about me as a player, where he thought I could improve, how he wanted me to play. I believed in every word he said.

    “The club had just got back into the Champions League and it felt like the first steps of the journey. You could see how much belief everyone had in him. The whole club was connected. Before, from the outside looking in, it didn’t look that way. Part of that was signing good characters: people who could carry his messages within the changing room as his eyes can’t be everywhere.”

    Salah, Mane and Firmino netted 91 goals between them in 2017-18. Salah, who was crowned PFA Player of the Year and FWA Footballer of the Year, set a new best of 32 league goals over a 38-game season as he scored 44 times in all competitions.


    Mane, Firmino and Salah formed a formidable trio (Laurence Griffiths/POOL/AFP via Getty Images)

    When Coutinho belatedly got his wish and was sold to Barcelona for £142million in January 2018, there were concerns that Liverpool’s charge would be derailed but Klopp didn’t share them. He felt that too often team-mates looked to the Brazilian to provide the creative spark and that without him they would become more unpredictable.

    He was proved right. It helped that £75million of the fee was spent on the transformative signing of Virgil van Dijk from Southampton.

    Lijnders: “We could play a higher line with Virgil — more aggressive because of how he deals with space and longer balls.”

    With Van Dijk, Liverpool surpassed all expectations in reaching the Champions League final in Kyiv. Ahead of the game with Real Madrid, Klopp sought to relieve the tension in a team meeting by lifting up his top to reveal he was wearing Cristiano Ronaldo-branded boxer shorts.

    Wijnaldum: “Everyone was laughing their heads off. That really broke the ice. Usually in those situations, everyone is serious and concentrated. But he was relaxed. He is a father figure for players and a really special man for me. He really cares about the welfare of a player and wants to know you away from football.”

    The tears flowed in the Liverpool dressing room after the 3-1 defeat to Zinedine Zidane’s side. Karius sat with his head in his hands after gifting Madrid two goals with glaring errors. Salah was crestfallen after being forced off with a shoulder injury.

    Alexander-Arnold: “In terms of team talks, the biggest one for me was the messaging Jurgen gave us after Kyiv. He said: ‘This defeat is not going to define us. As a group, we are going to get back here. This is where we’re destined to be.’”

    When Klopp finally made it back to his house in Formby just after 6am, the beer flowed and he led a sing-song with old friends including Krawietz, Campino, the lead singer of German punk rock band Die Toten Hosen, and Johannes B Kerner, a well-known German TV personality.

    We saw the European Cup,
    Madrid had all the f***ing luck,
    We swear we’ll keep on being cool,
    We’ll bring it back to Liverpool!

    It was typical Klopp. No doom and gloom, no self-pity. Transfer plans were already well advanced. Naby Keita was arriving from RB Leipzig for £52.75million and, within two days of Kyiv, they had completed a £40million move for Monaco’s holding midfielder Fabinho.

    The big dilemma for the manager was the goalkeeper situation and how to handle a distraught Karius. His compassionate instinct was to wrap an arm around him and rehabilitate his Liverpool career rather than show him the door.

    Four days after the final, Klopp received a call from Germany legend Franz Beckenbauer, who alerted him to the possibility that Karius may have been concussed by a blow to the head from Madrid’s Sergio Ramos shortly before his first costly blunder of the final.

    Karius, who was on holiday in the U.S, was sent to see a specialist in Boston. Brain scans showed Karius had ‘visual-spatial dysfunction’, which can result in an inability to judge where objects are. “What the rest of the world is making of it, I don’t care. We don’t use it as an excuse: we use it as an explanation,” insisted Klopp, who branded Ramos “a brutal wrestler”.

    Publicly, Klopp talked about a fresh start for Karius but the ‘keeper was a bag of nerves the following pre-season. His confidence was shot to bits.

    Behind the scenes, Liverpool had been working on a replacement long before the Champions League final. Klopp didn’t have complete faith in either Mignolet or Karius, which created uncertainty and a degree of resentment between the two ’keepers.


    Loris Karius reflects on his traumatic Champions League final (Franck Fife/AFP via Getty Images)

    Achterberg: “It was a really hard situation for Jurgen and all of us to deal with. We played Chester away in the first friendly after Kyiv. I kicked the ball towards Loris during the warm-up and it went straight through his hands and legs and into the net. Someone filmed it and it went viral on social media. Then we played Tranmere and he dropped the ball and they scored.

    “I’d been watching Alisson’s development closely since (ex-Roma and Liverpool goalkeeper) Alexander Doni told me about this guy coming through at Internacional in Brazil. The problem was he didn’t have an EU passport, which meant we couldn’t have signed him when he went to Roma in 2016.

    “When we played against Ali in a pre-season friendly in the States (in August 2016), I told Jurgen: ‘This is the one I was telling you about’. I kept watching and writing reports on every game he played. I spoke to all the recruitment guys about him.

    “There was a meeting in January 2018 with Ali’s agent when we said how highly we rated him. That summer, the club were going to sign midfielder Nabil Fekir from Lyon but they backed out because he had a bad knee (a fee of £62million had been agreed).

    “If the Fekir deal had gone through, would we have had the money to sign Alisson? Things certainly turned out for the best. I told the boss that Ali was the one. We needed to move quick in mid-July because we knew Thibaut Courtois was leaving Chelsea (to join Madrid) and they needed a replacement.”

    Initially quoted £90million by Roma, Edwards negotiated a £65m deal for Alisson. It was the final piece in the jigsaw.

    In his first season at Anfield, he won the Premier League Golden Glove for most clean sheets (21) and was crowned goalkeeper of the year by both UEFA and FIFA. Klopp would walk around Melwood singing “All you need is Al-i-sson Beck-er” to the tune of Queen’s Radio Ga Ga.

    There was also a significant change among the backroom staff. Lijnders had left Liverpool in January 2018 to manage Dutch outfit NEC Nijmegen but he returned just four months later after Klopp offered him the assistant manager’s job. The vacancy had arisen following the exit of Buvac, who had become increasingly distant as relations strained with other staff members.

    Lijnders: “Jurgen gave me responsibility for the entire training process and that was very important to me. I wouldn’t have come back just for my old job. It meant I could continue with the things that I loved: planning training, delivering training, finding tactical and strategical plans. We challenged each other.

    “I’ve known him for nine years and he still surprises me every day. I always loved the meetings in Jurgen’s office the day before each game. That’s where you decide who starts, how we’re going to build the game, how we’re going to press them, what the messages to the players will be. Things become clear in our heads before we speak with the team.”


    Klopp and Lijnders have a close bond on and off the field (Clive Brunskill/Getty Images)

    Klopp then made some subtle changes to Liverpool’s blueprint. “We need more game management and control,” he explained. “Everyone talks about our intensity but sometimes when we run like devils, I have to say, ‘Come on, please cool down’.”

    Prior to 2018-19, he prioritised improving Liverpool’s output from set pieces. Lijnders and Krawietz were tasked with coming up with the routines to make them count. By the end of the season, Liverpool were top of the Premier League set-piece goals table with 29.

    Klopp the innovator was always seeking marginal gains. That summer, he recruited specialist throw-in coach Thomas Gronnemark after reading about his work in a German newspaper.

    Gronnemark: “Before I met Jurgen, it was frustrating. I had all this knowledge about how to keep possession from throw-ins and create chances, but people didn’t want to listen. They only wanted long throw-ins. The first club that took it all on board was Liverpool. That says a lot about the mentality and the culture Jurgen created at Liverpool.”


    Fast forward to May 7, 2019, and Liverpool went into the second leg of their Champions League semi-final with Barcelona at Anfield 3-0 down and needing a miracle to avoid finishing the season empty-handed.

    The previous night, title rivals Manchester City had beaten Leicester City courtesy of Vincent Kompany’s piledriver to remain masters of their own destiny. For the Barca game, Salah was sidelined by concussion and Firmino was injured.

    Robertson: “The morning of the Barcelona game really stands out for me. The way he spoke and addressed Kompany’s goal, which pretty much finished the title race. It was like: ‘Right, does anyone want to say anything about what happened last night? No, right, here we go’.

    “Then in the team meeting at the hotel, he said: ‘For anyone else, this is impossible, but because it’s you lot, there’s a chance.’ Belief built by the hour. You could sense it. You just couldn’t wait to get to Anfield. The changing room before the game was the loudest one I’ve ever been in.”

    Achterberg: “He said to the boys, ‘Close your eyes and imagine the best game you have ever played. Go out there and write a story to tell your grandkids one day’. The words were perfect. It was the greatest night ever at Anfield.”

    The 3-0 deficit had already been wiped out when Alexander-Arnold’s quickly taken corner caught Barcelona napping and Origi swept home Liverpool’s fourth goal.

    Alexander-Arnold: “That night epitomised what Jurgen had created. The mentality he had instilled in us that no matter what position we’re in, whoever we’re up against, we just believe that anything is possible. It’s happened so many times. All those fightbacks, all the late winners.”

    Werner: “I was watching the game with John Henry in Boston. It will be etched in our memories forever. The fourth goal was just crazy.

    “The sense of unity Jurgen had created was clear. I had the privilege of watching training one day and Jurgen got everyone in a circle to tell them it was Sadio Mane’s birthday. He got Sadio to sing ‘Happy Birthday’ in his native language and then turned to Virgil and said, ‘Why don’t you sing it in Dutch?’ Then he turned to Mo Salah and said ‘Why don’t you sing to Sadio in Arabic?’ On it went with everyone laughing. I just thought, ‘What a wonderful way to start the day.’”

    Despite achieving a club-record haul of 97 points and losing just one league match all season, the Premier League title eluded Liverpool on the final day as City finished one point clear. “That was our first chance to win it — not our last,” Klopp reassured his players.

    The three-week gap to the Champions League final in Madrid wasn’t ideal but a friendly was arranged with Benfica’s B team at Liverpool’s training camp in Marbella as their style and formation was deemed similar to opponents Tottenham.

    Klopp, who was bidding to end a run of six successive final defeats as a manager, was so relaxed he had a two-hour sleep in his hotel room on the afternoon of the final.

    Robertson: “The night before in the stadium, he got us all in a circle. He said: ‘This is where we become Champions League winners tomorrow night’. It made the hairs on the back of your neck stand up. You just thought, ‘Yeah, this is it’. From the heartbreak of the year before in Kyiv, the feeling was: ‘Get us to that game, let’s do our job and get our hands on that trophy.’”


    Klopp tells his players that this is where they will win the Champions League (Mohd Rasfan/AFP via Getty Images)

    “Let’s talk about six, baby,” beamed Klopp after Salah’s early penalty and Origi’s drilled finish late on sealed the club’s sixth European Cup. “Did you ever see a team like this, fighting, with no fuel in the tank? They suffer for me. They deserve it more than anybody.”

    The celebrations inside the club’s private party in Madrid’s Eurostars Hotel went on until dawn. There was a symbolic moment when Klopp and friends, including Campino, headed to a side room to record an impromptu follow-up to their song from a year earlier:

    We’re sending greetings from Madrid,
    Tonight we made it number six,
    We brought it back to Liverpool,
    Because we promised we would do.

    Around 750,000 people turned out in Liverpool for the homecoming parade. “If you could’ve put all the emotions, all the excitement, all the love in the air that day and bottled it up, the world would be a better place,” Klopp said.

    With captain Jordan Henderson and vice-captain James Milner around, there was never any danger of standards slipping.  The 2019-20 season was one of ruthless and relentless consistency. There was no title race, just a procession. Klopp’s men took 79 points out of the first 81 on offer and lifted the European Super Cup and Club World Cup along the way. Everyone played their part, but the full-backs were so influential with the quality they provided from wide areas.

    Robertson: “It was intense but the way the manager wanted us to play suited Trent and I in terms of trying to create. It was a massive part of our success, overloading the wide areas, having the three of us — myself, Gini and Sadio — more often on the left, and then Trent, Hendo and Mo on the right, trying to create overloads.

    “But we also had to be part of a strong defence. When Jurgen first came in, they were winning games 5-4 like the one at Norwich. That more often than not doesn’t win you titles. You have to be able to keep clean sheets.


    Robertson and Alexander-Arnold were key under Klopp (Paul Ellis/AFP via Getty Images)

    “There are lots of elements to his philosophy — like when we lose the ball, reacting quickly to win it back. That’s especially important against deeper-lying, low-block teams. That’s when spaces open up because maybe one of them is out of position. It was full throttle. You knew you needed to be at 100 per cent every game. It wasn’t as controlled as some other teams but you knew when you played against us, you had to outrun us and want it more than us to have a chance.”

    Lijnders: “If players feel inspired, if they feel like they’re improving, there’s nothing better. If you work for a long time with the same group, you need to dress up well. It’s the same if you’re in a marriage! You always need to find new ways to inspire. The reason why we were successful is our players had unbelievable character, potential and attitude. We created stability by keeping Jurgen, staff and players together, always doing the same type of work on the training pitch.

    “In the best games, it was our counter-pressing that made the big difference; not waiting for things to happen. When emotions become high, players forget the tactical plan. It’s the training and the repetition that makes the difference.”

    In the summer of 2019, Klopp recruited performance psychologist Lee Richardson. He also invited German big-wave surfer Sebastian Steudtner to speak to the players about managing stress and teaching them breathing techniques.

    Richardson: “Jurgen is the best communicator I’ve ever seen. The head psychologist at Liverpool is Jurgen in many ways. He’s the one who affects most people with everything he does — with every team talk he gives, every decision he makes. The role of the actual psychologist is about being a support for different things that the manager can’t always be dealing with.”


    Klopp perfected the art of the team talk (Paul Ellis/AFP via Getty Images)

    With Liverpool on the cusp of ending their 30-year title drought in March 2020, the season was suspended due to the Covid-19 pandemic. The players assembled in the canteen at Melwood when Klopp told them: “Don’t worry about football for now. You are the best team in England and the most worthy champions there has ever been.”

    The triumph was belatedly confirmed on June 25, 2020 after Manchester City lost to Chelsea. Liverpool were an unassailable 23 points clear of City with seven games remaining.

    Alexander-Arnold: “We knew there was a chance it could happen, so Jurgen got everyone together for a barbecue. You never grow up dreaming of becoming a Premier League champion sitting at Formby Hall in the middle of a global pandemic! You think about a last-minute winner that snatches it, a full house at Anfield, celebrating with the fans.

    “But it was still a special one for us. It was such a dominant season. We blew every team away. Looking back on that season, I don’t see how any team could have beaten us with the mentality that we had. We won games in so many different ways.”

    Klopp was reduced to tears as he went around hugging his players. His knack of making even those on the fringes of the squad feel important was underlined on the night Liverpool lifted the Premier League trophy after beating Chelsea at Anfield. Turning to his fourth-choice goalkeeper, he said: “Andy Lonergan, champion of England, champion of Europe, champion of the world. What a guy!”

    The players responded by chanting the name of someone who had not made a single appearance for the club.

    go-deeper

    GO DEEPER

    Liverpool’s 30 years of hurt


    Having scaled such heights, Liverpool fell quickly – despite the arrivals of Diogo Jota from Wolves and Thiago from Bayern Munich. For a team that fed off the emotional energy in the stands, playing behind closed doors during the pandemic was a hard, soulless slog.

    Klopp also had to deal with the personal anguish of losing his mother Elizabeth and not being able to travel home to Germany for the funeral due to travel restrictions. On the field, Liverpool had a centre-back crisis after Van Dijk, Joe Gomez and Matip all suffered season-ending injuries. Playing Henderson and Fabinho in the back line didn’t work as it weakened the midfield. Klopp turned to rookies Nat Phillips and Rhys Williams to help salvage their top-four hopes.

    Phillips: “I look back on that period with a lot of pride — it brings a smile to my face. I’d only played once for Liverpool before that season: the FA Cup tie against Everton the year before when Curtis Jones scored a brilliant winner. Jurgen placing his faith and trust in me was a huge boost. He was always providing reassurance. He was very complimentary about me in the press. He made me feel that I deserved to be there.

    “Before I was exposed to first-team football, I always had the impression there would be big personalities and big egos in there. But what struck me was that no one in that dressing room thought they were better than anyone else.”

    Lijnders: “We had to keep each other positive. The moment I became negative, Jurgen became positive. When he was negative, I stayed positive – that’s the best way to describe it. The mindset was always, ‘What do we have?’ Not, ‘What don’t we have?’”

    Robertson: “Even during the tough times, I don’t think anyone ever doubted the manager – you always felt he would find a way out of it. Of course, there were days when his energy wasn’t as high, results weren’t great, and times when we had to lift him.

    “At the start of that season, if you had said we would be relying on Nat and Rhys to get us into the Champions League I don’t think many would have believed you. But Jurgen found a way. After all the problems we faced, it felt like a massive achievement.”

    Liverpool took 26 points out of the last 30 on offer to finish third in 2020-21. The highlight of the run-in was Alisson’s headed winner at West Bromwich Albion in the last minute of stoppage time. He became the first goalkeeper to score a competitive goal in the club’s 129-year history.

    Achterberg: “I thought maybe Ali could be a nuisance in their box — but I wasn’t expecting that! There was a lot of passion on the bench because we were so desperate for that win. Ali’s part in the story is so big. Without the save he made late on against Napoli (to deny Arkadiusz Milik in the Champions League group stage in December 2018), there would have been no run to Madrid, no European Cup, no Super Cup or Club World Cup.

    “Jurgen joked that if he had known Ali was this good he would have paid double. With Caoimhin Kelleher, we created the best goalkeeper department the club has ever had.”


    Klopp on the podium with his players after the 2019 Champions League win (Erwin Spek/Soccrates/Getty Images)

    Liverpool are set to appoint Arne Slot as their new head coach — and The Athletic has every angle covered.


    Klopp’s “mentality monsters” kicked on during a breathless 2021-22. Both domestic cups were won on penalties against Chelsea at Wembley with the manager saluting the “incredible impact” of Neuro11, the German neuroscientists that had been recruited to work with the players on dead-ball situations. Liverpool scored 17 of their 18 spot-kicks across the two shootouts.

    Quadruple talk gathered pace but Liverpool missed out on the two biggest prizes by the finest of margins. Once again the title race went down to the final day. City’s late fightback from 2-0 down to beat Aston Villa 3-2 ensured they finished a point clear.

    Achterberg: “Jurgen never talked about City. His attitude was: ‘We only play them twice a season, so why worry?’ You can’t influence what they do. We knew that City had much greater resources but we were so close to winning the lot that year.”

    On the same night that Liverpool beat Villarreal to reach a third Champions League final under Klopp, on-loan Phillips was celebrating helping Bournemouth win promotion back to the top flight.

    Phillips: “My phone buzzed with a message from Jurgen. He thanked me and Rhys for the part we had played in getting them into the Champions League the season before. The fact he had us in his mind at that time says a lot about him.”

    The chaos outside Stade de France blighted the showpiece occasion in Paris. On the field, Liverpool were thwarted by the heroics of Real Madrid goalkeeper Courtois and Vinicius Junior’s goal.

    Werner: “We spent a lot of time with Jurgen in Paris after that defeat. It was so discouraging because we all felt we were the better team on the night. If we replayed that match 10 times, we probably win eight. But Jurgen was so optimistic about the future. He was far more cheerful than any of us.

    “He has such a unique perspective. There’s that famous quote that ‘football is the most important of the least important things in life’. Jurgen knows that football at its best is a real tonic for people. He appreciates the wins but keeps the losses in perspective. He articulates himself after a defeat in such a way that it soothes your pain. He carries that balance. It’s demonstrated in his relationship with the team, his staff, the supporters and the city. He always has a grasp of the bigger part.”


    Having built one great team, Klopp set about assembling another. The frontline evolved with the signings of Luis Diaz, Darwin Nunez and Cody Gakpo. But he over-estimated what some loyal servants had left in their legs after an energy-sapping 63-game campaign.

    The 2022-23 season was bleak as an ageing midfield was repeatedly over-run and injuries cut deep. The tactical tweak of moving Alexander-Arnold into the centre when Liverpool were in possession sparked a late revival but it was in vain as they missed out on a top-four finish.

    Henderson and Fabinho were lured away by Saudi Arabia’s riches, following the departures of Milner, Keita, Firmino and Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain as free agents. The midfield overhaul saw Alexis Mac Allister, Dominik Szoboszlai, Wataru Endo and Ryan Gravenberch recruited.

    go-deeper

    GO DEEPER

    Liverpool Reloaded: How an Ironman, Alisson deal and triple sessions sparked flying start

    Lijnders: “Jurgen and I had good talks last summer about the future. We said, ‘OK, let’s do one more year, see how it goes’. I said to all the guys at the start of pre-season: ‘The first one who is negative, I’ll punch in the face!’ We needed a reset with new players and that worked out well. It must have been late October or November that Jurgen and I had some good talks.

    “We both came to the conclusion that the right thing to do was to go at the end of the season. Jurgen had made his mind up and I was quite clear that it was the right time to make my own way. We wanted to leave the club with Champions League football and a team the next manager can really take care of. I think we did the right thing.”

    When Van Dijk’s extra-time header secured Carabao Cup glory against Chelsea at Wembley in February, Klopp described it as “easily the most special trophy I’ve ever won”. At the time, he was wrestling with an injury crisis and turned to youth. Harvey Elliott, Conor Bradley, Jarell Quansah, Bobby Clark, James McConnell and Jayden Danns all played their part.


    Who’s who on Team Klopp

    1 Michelle Hudson, masseur
    2 Motonori Watanabe, masseur/therapist
    3 Paul Small, masseur
    4 James French, opposition analyst
    5 Jonathan Power, club doctor
    6 Lee Nobes, head of physiotherapy
    7 Mona Nemmer, head of nutrition
    8 Chris Morgan, physiotherapist
    9 Jurgen Klopp, manager
    10 Ray Haughan, first-team operations manager
    11 John Achterberg, goalkeeping coach
    12 Vitor Matos, elite development coach
    13 Andreas Kornmayer, head of fitness and conditioning
    14 Joel Bonner, post-match analysis
    15 Jack Robinson, assistant goalkeeping coach
    16 Dr Conall Murtagh, first-team fitness coach
    17 Louise Dobson, senior first-team operations officer
    18 Lorna Butler, assistant nutritionist
    19 Connor Stewart, catering supervisor
    20 Pep Lijnders, assistant manager
    21 Daniel Spearritt, post-match and elite player development analyst

    Inglethorpe: “Jurgen believes that anything is possible, and puts young players at ease. I would have wanted to play for him. Whatever talent you have, he would get the best out of you; that’s a magical quality. He’s consistently given young players a stage to play on and when it’s been best for their career to move on, he’s done it with care and thought. He will have a seat at the top table when people talk about the all-time greats who have managed this club.”

    After Klopp publicly announced in late January his decision to stand down and take a break from football, there was a period when it looked like he would get the perfect farewell as Liverpool rode a wave of emotion. However, they couldn’t sustain it and their challenge for further honours wilted.

    But his status remains undimmed. What a ride it’s been, and what a legacy he’s leaving behind, one that will be celebrated at Anfield on Sunday by many of the people who shared in the journey.

    Alexander-Arnold: “It’s going to be a hard transition for us as players. It’s an emotional one. It’s going to be very difficult to say goodbye. It’s one that I’ll never be ready to do, to be honest. The only thing I can really say to him is ‘thank you’. Everything I’ve achieved is down to him and the opportunities he gave me. When I’m done with football, I’ll look back and think of the years we spent together as the most fun, the best and the most important.”

    Achterberg: “Look where Liverpool were when Jurgen arrived and where they are now. As well as the trophies, look at the new training ground and the redevelopment of Anfield. He won everything and fulfilled all our dreams. He created one of the best teams European football has ever seen and brought joy to so many people.”

    Werner: “It’s about far more than the trophies. Look at the number of young players from the academy who surpassed expectations. Jurgen is a very selfless man. Part of the love people have for him is that he really understands the club and the relationship the club has with the supporters. The idea of him ever coaching another Premier League team is absurd. It just wouldn’t happen. He’s got LFC tattooed on his heart.”

    Robertson: “Without him, what I’ve achieved in football wouldn’t have been possible. He gave us the best time of our lives. When my kids were born, he was one of the first to congratulate me and make sure my wife was OK. Those are the kinds of things you don’t forget. In the seven years I’ve been here, a lot has happened in my life and he’s been a key support throughout on and off the pitch. I will look back on it when I’m old and grey and think, ‘Without him, it wouldn’t have been possible’.”

    Lijnders: “‘Unforgettable’ is the word I would use. I feel really blessed that we could stay so long at a club and conquer so many major trophies. What an honour it’s been — to work with Jurgen Klopp, to be part of something so beautiful.”

    (Top photos: Getty Images; design: Eamonn Dalton)

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    The New York Times

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  • Today on Sky Sports Racing: Lockinge Stakes showdown the Newbury highlight as Big Rock takes on Inspiral

    Today on Sky Sports Racing: Lockinge Stakes showdown the Newbury highlight as Big Rock takes on Inspiral

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    Sky Sports Racing is the place to be for high-class live action on Saturday, with the Lockinge Stakes at Newbury topping the bill on a busy and varied day…

    3.35 Newbury – Inspiral headlines Lockinge Stakes

    Connections of six-time Group One winner Inspiral will hope the rain has not got into the Newbury ground ahead of the Al Shaqab Lockinge Stakes – although she did beat the reopposing Big Rock on good-to-soft ground last season. John and Thady Gosden pair the five-year-old with Kieran Shoemark, who replaces Frankie Dettori in the plate.

    Big Rock makes his first start for trainer Maurizio Guarnieri after leaving Christopher Head’s yard and was last seen demolishing a classy field in the Queen Elizabeth II Stakes at Ascot in October. The son of Rock Of Gibraltar boasts three wins from seven starts on turf and is well suited to the mile trip.

    Charyn and Poker Face renew their rivalry after their first and second places at Sandown last time out but will have to improve stepping up in class here.

    2.15 Auteuil – Mr Incredible clashes with Hewick in French Champion Hurdle

    Willie Mullins is no stranger to winning the Grande Course Haies d’Auteuil and saddles the very quirky Mr Incredible – one of five Irish challengers. The Closutton gelding still has his doubters after misfiring in the Grand National and at Ayr, but the attitude shown when second in the Midlands Grand National suggests there is still plenty to come.

    King George hero Hewick will be hoping Paris gets no more rain, but he did run well in the race last year and cannot be discounted. Shark Hanlon’s incredibly likeable entry ran a creditable third behind Fastorslow in the Punchestown Gold Cup, especially considering the calibre of opposition.

    Irish Point will not have State Man to worry about on this occasion and the step up to 3m 1f looks like it could suit, while Mahler Mission is likely to benefit stepping back down in trip from his last outing at Aintree in the Grand National.

    00.01 Pimlico – Mystik Dan chases second leg of Triple Crown

    The Kentucky Derby hero Mystik Dan came out on top in a very close finish at Churchill Downs and if that effort has not taken too much out of him, he could be very hard to beat again as he seeks the second leg of the Triple Crown in the Preakness Stakes.

    Seize The Grey arrives on the back of a Grade Two victory over a mile, and it looks like there could be more improvement to come back up two furlongs.

    Frankie Dettori will be wearing the Zenyatta colours on Imagination who has been very consistent and could be the each-way angle.

    Best of the rest

    Newbury is the venue for Desert Hero‘s Ashton Park Stakes tilt, where he will meet the likes of Middle Earth and Salt Bay in a competitive looking affair. Later on, Cloth Of Stars colt Brioni takes on King’s Gambit, with Chantilly waiting in the wings. At Uttoxeter, Diamand De Vindency is the one to watch for Robert Bevis, returning to action over hurdles after two promising efforts on the Flat.

    Sky Bet odds I Today’s races

    Watch every race from Newbury, Doncaster, Bangor and Uttoxeter on Sky Sports Racing on Saturday May 18.

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  • Rivals.com  –  Ranking The Contenders: Five-star WR Dakorien Moore

    Rivals.com – Ranking The Contenders: Five-star WR Dakorien Moore

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    Thursday night brought the recruiting industry possibly the biggest news so far in the 2025 cycle as five-star wide receiver Dakorien Moore backed off his pledge from LSU.

    The Duncanville, Texas, standout was committed to the Tigers since July of 2023. His decision means the No. 4 overall prospect in the country is back on the market.

    There are three programs remaining in the running to land Moore: Texas, Oregon, and Ohio State.

    Rivals ranks the contenders as the summer visit period approaches.

    1. Texas

    Texas is the easy choice for No. 1 as it stands right now. Moore has visited the Longhorns on numerous occasions, an easy trip for he and his family, just short of a three hour drive. The Texas offense under Steve Sarkisian fits Moore perfectly with his speed and natural playmaking ability. Texas is also able to sell the production and development of the wide receiver position as well as a trusted future in the quarterback room with former No. 1 overall prospect Arch Manning. Outside of football, the Longhorns also present very NIL upside, which Moore will certainly be able to take advantage of. Moore will take an official visit to Austin, Texas, in June.

    *****

    2. Oregon

    As it stands today, I see the Oregon Ducks as the No. 2 option. Oregon presents very similar upsides as Texas with wide receiver production and development, a deep quarterback future, and proven NIL strength. The Ducks will be able to roll out the red carpet for Moore in June, for what is expected to be his final official visit. On that visit, Moore will certainly hear the top pitch of what the Ducks have to offer in every aspect. Not only with Dan Lanning and Junior Adams, Oregon has one of the nation’s top recruiters in Ra’Shaad Samples, who is the son of Duncanville head coach Reginald Samples.

    *****

    3. Ohio State

    Ohio State falls in at three, but certainly not a distant three. When it comes to wide receivers, the Buckeyes are the cream of the crop in both recruiting and developing. There is a deep quarterback room for the stable of elite wide receivers Ohio State will roll out in the coming years. Ohio State has hosted Moore before and he will be back in Columbus later this month for an official visit. Offensive coordinator and wide receivers coach Brian Hartline is a master of recruiting the position and a visit spending several days with Hartline and Ryan Day could very easily help them move up the list of contenders.

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    Marshall Levenson, National Recruiting Analyst

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  • Could MLB nationalize its media rights? Why some clubs are pushing to end local TV deals

    Could MLB nationalize its media rights? Why some clubs are pushing to end local TV deals

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    Sixty years ago, baseball commissioner Ford Frick received a telegram from a Wisconsin congressman. Rep. Henry Reuss was worried the Milwaukee Braves would defect to Atlanta for the promise of a richer television contract, and proposed a fix: if all the Major League Baseball teams would share their television money, then the Braves might stay.

    According to the Associated Press, Frick replied in that summer of 1964 that “… a plan to pool all television receipts would not be feasible or acceptable at this time,” but would be “worthy of future consideration.”

    Now, in 2024, that conversation has arrived. Commissioner Rob Manfred and some of the sport’s owners are more seriously talking about nationalizing baseball’s TV rights than ever before. Not because of relocation, but because of cord-cutting, the failure of some traditional regional sports networks, and the simultaneous battle for streaming supremacy waged by Netflix, Amazon and other streamers that has left sports leagues and rights holders in a chaotic reformation.

    Some baseball owners and executives, mostly in smaller markets, believe the best way to grow media revenues over the long haul is to centralize the deal-making, and from there, to potentially sell all 30 teams’ regular-season broadcasts as one streaming package. Others in the game, particularly those whose teams make the most money, are vehemently opposed to surrendering their power over their rights.

    The hurdles to such a change are massive, but that it is even being contemplated is remarkable. The end of local media rights in baseball would be one of the most radical alterations imaginable in the tumultuous world of sports television. Unsurprisingly, the possibility is also controversial.

    “As the local media situation evolves, we will continue to evaluate the best model for us moving forward,” Manfred said in a statement to The Athletic. “Our course of action will be determined by the clubs, who are the ultimate decision makers under our constitution.”

    While MLB has long arranged various national media deals — including for the postseason, with networks such as FOX and TBS, and for Sunday night games during the regular season, with ESPN — individual teams have always controlled most of their regular-season inventory, as well as the choice of television stations they partner with inside their home markets. (The central office already controls each team’s “out-of-market” rights, which is why fans in New York can sign up for MLB.tv and watch any game besides the Mets’ or Yankees’.)

    Doing away with local rights could eliminate many of the blackout restrictions that frustrate fans. But not all clubs believe Manfred’s office could utilize the rights better than they do individually.

    The most divisive matter, though, is the dollars. Regardless of how a commissioner deployed the rights, the question would be: How is the revenue distributed, by equal split or otherwise? The New York Yankees received an estimated $143 million as a rights fee in 2022, much greater than a team like the Colorado Rockies, which received $57 million that same year, according to Forbes. It is ultimately, then, a rekindling of baseball’s classic drama, big market vs. small.

    “Everything is on the table for the future, because it’s so unknown,” Sam Kennedy, president of the big-market Boston Red Sox, said during spring training. “Look, there’s always issues that come up where large-market teams have a different view than the small-market teams. In the end, the greater good of the industry is what we have to also focus on.”

    A new era is just beginning in sports broadcasting, and the changes are happening quickly. On Wednesday, Netflix and the NFL announced that the streamer would newly carry Christmas Day games. Netflix is paying in the neighborhood of $75 million per game.

    Elsewhere Wednesday, the other three major men’s sports leagues in the U.S., MLB, the NBA and the NHL, were in court arguing that one of their most significant broadcast partners, Diamond Sports Group, was bumbling its way through bankruptcy and a carriage dispute with a prominent cable company, Comcast. This month, a dozen MLB teams carried on Diamond’s Bally-branded channels cannot be viewed by Comcast’s roughly 13.6 million television customers.


    The Diamond Sports Group bankruptcy has been an ongoing problem for MLB. (David Berding / Getty Images)

    Then on Thursday, FOX, Warner Bros. Discovery and Hulu announced the name of their upcoming sports package: “venu.”

    The prospect of a big payout from a streaming company is naturally alluring in baseball circles. Regional sports networks have traditionally committed a lot of money to teams upfront. Streamers might act differently, preferring a risk-reward model — the more people who flock to the content, the more money that is paid. But in the long run, as the streamers jockey for position, Manfred could bet that Amazon and its ilk will pay more in aggregate than the traditional RSNs do today for fragmented content.

    The heart of the discussion, then, is really whether baseball could thrive as a “national” sport. Ironically, the national pastime is often regarded as a local game.

    “Like almost everything in American life, it’s all about money,” former baseball commissioner Fay Vincent said in a phone interview. “The money is so enormously tilted locally. You know, trying to get yourself, if you’re living in New York, interested in a game where Seattle is flying to San Diego or something — it just doesn’t work.”

    MLB just sold a package of Sunday-morning games to Roku, which The Athletic reported Thursday was for $10 million per year. Previously, Peacock had paid $30 million per season for the same package. Roku, unlike Peacock, does not require a paid subscription, but MLB’s lessened fee was nonetheless discouraging to some officials.

    “It just goes to show, there’s no national package,” said an executive in the sport granted anonymity to speak candidly. “People want to pay only for the premium teams.”

    One sport has long thrived on a national rights model: the National Football League. At the time that Frick made his comments in 1964, the NFL was already negotiating deals as one entity.

    But the sports were in different places then, as they are now. The once-a-week NFL schedule has always delivered a much smaller number of games compared to baseball’s nightly cadence.

    “The local television contract in football simply never had that much value in the early days, because of the small inventory,” said James Walker, professor emeritus of communication at Saint Xavier University in Chicago, who has authored books about baseball’s broadcasting history. “What that meant is that the (football) teams, when they established their television policy, were much closer in parity. The notion of big-market team versus small-market team simply didn’t have the same meaning in the NFL, as it always did in Major League Baseball.”

    Football’s move to nationalize rights is an achievement often credited to a titan among sports commissioners, Pete Rozelle, who took over in 1960. Walker said that a predecessor of Rozelle’s, Bert Bell, actually deserves attention to that end as well.

    Whether Manfred wants to be remembered as the Rozelle of baseball, or the Bell, is one of the more interesting questions as Manfred marches toward his planned retirement in 2029.

    Manfred’s mission is likely simple: make the most money with the most certainty possible, be it by going into the local media business headlong or outsourcing it, as has long been the norm. But any substantive change is going to require him to corral his 30 bosses, and a rights-structure change might be a bridge too far.

    “In baseball, it’s very difficult for a commissioner to get owners to work for the collective good,” Walker said. “The idea that at this stage, the Yankees would suddenly agree to pool their local rights, in some kind of shared configuration — it’s not impossible that that could happen.

    “But it would basically mean you’d have to figure out a way that the Yankees receive what they consider to be their fair compensation. And you’d be going against the grain. If you go back to the radio era, you’re really talking about 90 years of history.”

    Existing contracts between teams and regional sports networks are a huge predicament. Some teams have deals with RSNs that run into the 2030s. These deals have often promised exclusivity to the RSN, such that MLB couldn’t just turn around and bundle the games as it saw fit with a simulcast.

    Hence, even if the teams agreed to nationalize local rights tomorrow, and assigned their current deals over to the league office, MLB would have to wait until some expire to use the rights in new ways — or it would have to otherwise negotiate an early end to those deals. The Dodgers’ TV contract, for example, goes through 2038.

    The league also might have to negotiate changes with the players’ union, because revenue sharing between teams is collectively bargained. That means the next CBA negotiations, in 2026, could bring these issues to a head. The MLBPA declined comment.

    Alternative theories exist as to the direction baseball or any sport should go. Perhaps greater revenue exists in developing packages grouped together by market, rather than by sport: a New York bundle across various leagues, and so forth.

    A three-quarters vote typically allows the owners to modify the sport’s constitution. But support anywhere short of 100 percent for a shift in the rights setup could leave MLB in perilous territory. If any owner felt the league was improperly assuming something of value, lawsuits could fly.

    In a nuanced distinction: MLB could launch some sort of smaller national streaming package, one with perhaps half the teams, without changing its actual rights system. Some teams today are not in exclusive deals with RSNs, freeing them up for the league to roll up into a bundle immediately. Manfred has expressed interest in doing this as soon as 2025, but he doesn’t have enough teams he could pool together at this point for a viable product. That could change later this year, however, if Diamond Sports Group fails to emerge from bankruptcy.

    Asked in February if the idea of moving away from local rights would have been unthinkable just a few years ago, Kennedy said, “The world is changing fast.”

    “Consumers need to have the ability to access our product, our games, whenever they want, wherever they want, quickly,” Kennedy said. “We can’t make it difficult.”

    (Top photo of Manfred: Mike Carlson / MLB Photos via Getty Images)

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    The New York Times

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  • Tyson Fury vs. Oleksandr Usyk offers something never before seen in boxing

    Tyson Fury vs. Oleksandr Usyk offers something never before seen in boxing

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    Given the years of acrimony between the Tyson Fury and Oleksandr Usyk camps — the most recent expression of which was an ill-fated headbutt that left Fury’s father, John, both bloodied and happily enraged — I am profoundly disappointed to find Fury on best behavior.

    He didn’t deride the three-belt heavyweight champion, Usyk, as a mere middleweight.

    Didn’t call him a “dosser,” British for “bum.” Didn’t even vow to knock out Usyk early, as Fury famously predicted in the lead-up to his second fight with Deontay Wilder in 2020.

    “What am I going to do?” Fury said. “I’ll do what I always do: Go out there and figure it out.”

    Sorry, but good manners and self-restraint don’t become Fury, the most interesting heavyweight champion since his namesake, Mike Tyson, and the most voluble since Muhammad Ali. But he’s not playing to the script here.

    “He’s done his training and I’ve done mine,” Fury told ESPN on Zoom from Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, where on Saturday (ESPN+ PPV, Noon ET) he’ll fight Usyk for a chance to become boxing’s first undisputed heavyweight champion in nearly a quarter of a century, and the first ever in the four-belt era. “We’ll find out who is the actor and who the killer is on that night. That’s it. There’s nothing more. No trash talk. The contracts are done, the fight’s on. Nothing more to sell. The fight of the century sells itself.”

    “Fight of the Century” is a term of art in boxing. It usually refers to a heavyweight bout that will determine rightful custody of the so-called lineal title. There have been three such fights in my lifetime, all between undefeated heavyweights: Ali-Frazier (1971), Tyson-Spinks (1988) and now this. Fury has the WBC belt. Usyk won the others — the IBF, WBO and WBA. The winner stands to become just the first undisputed heavyweight champion since April 2000, when Lennox Lewis lost his WBA strap, not in the ring of course, but — this is boxing, after all — in federal court.

    play

    2:06

    Fury vs. Usyk: The importance of an undisputed heavyweight champion

    It’s been 24 years since there’s been an undisputed heavyweight champion, when Tyson Fury and Oleksandr Usyk fight that will change with one boxer going down in history.

    Boxing indeed goes where the heavyweights lead. But while every other sport was routinely producing undisputed champions, boxing proliferated dispute itself — along with a series of forgettable “champions” (John Ruiz, Bermane Stiverne, Samuel Peter, etc.). It’s no coincidence that this fallow period in boxing coincided with the ascendance of the UFC, from an outlawed endeavor to hegemony in the world of combat sports. After all, whatever your preference — boxing or MMA — it’s not too much to expect a single champion per division.

    Still, Fury-Usyk is the rarest kind of fight, and the only kind that the UFC can’t yet replicate. Since 1997 when Mark Coleman won the inaugural UFC heavyweight title, the belt has changed hands 22 times. New champions defend their titles, on average, just once, and many not at all. Only one heavyweight — Stipe Miocic — has been able to mount three consecutive defenses.

    But boxing’s undisputed heavyweight champions — “Baddest Man” types — aren’t associated with single defenses so much as a particular decade. They’re still considered in dynastic terms. It’s said that the Roaring ’20s, for example, actually began in 1919 when Jack Dempsey knocked out Jess Willard. Along those same lines, Ali could have only come of age in the 1960s. Though boxing’s great heavyweight champions might have reigned in the previous millennium, their names still resonate: Joe Louis, Rocky Marciano, Jack Johnson and Sonny Liston.

    Not all of them belonged to a distinct cultural moment. Some were merely great fighters (Larry Holmes and Lennox Lewis, both terribly underappreciated, come to mind).

    You can argue that boxing has diminished, or certainly changed. The heavyweight division will never again be an American protectorate. But Fury-Usyk offers something never before seen. They’re not merely undefeated. They’re bigger, more experienced (or older, depending how you parse it), and more technically skilled than any previous heavyweight pairing.

    Usyk, a 37-year-old southpaw from Ukraine, has evolved from an Olympic gold medalist to an undisputed cruiserweight champion to a three-belt heavyweight champion. It’s not inaccurate to describe him as a heavyweight version of Vasiliy Lomachenko, his friend and former Olympic teammate. Even as Usyk moved up in weight, he has maintained a balletic control of his striking distance.

    “He’s a good boxer with excellent footwork,” Fury said. “What more does a fighter need?”

    Don’t call Usyk small, either. At 6-foot-3, usually weighing in a little over 220 pounds, he’s the same size as “Big” George Foreman when he fought Ali in Zaire, and bigger than the version of Evander Holyfield who beat Foreman in 1991. If Usyk is small, it’s only compared to today’s heavyweights — big, strong guys like Anthony Joshua, whose belts he took without much difficulty.

    “Where is he vulnerable?”

    “I’d say in his mind,” Fury said.

    It’s a curious answer, as Usyk and Lomachenko, each developed by Loma’s father, Anatoly, are famously tough-minded. Under “Papachenko’s” regimen, Usyk’s training preparation still includes 10-kilometer swims and underwater breath-holding sessions that have lasted as long as 4 minutes and 40 seconds.

    Fury, of course, claims not to be impressed: “All men can be broken mentally.”

    This is a subject of which he knows, having addressed his own mental health. Not long after Fury outboxed Wladimir Klitschko to win his first three heavyweight titles and recognition as the lineal champion in 2015, he began drinking and using drugs. He revved up his Ferrari up to 190 mph and came within seconds of driving it into a bridge. He attributes whatever it was that caused Fury to abort his suicide attempt and overcome his depression to God. He also became a better, more resilient fighter.

    Fury was 27 years old when he beat Klitschko, mostly by picking and poking. Like Usyk, he also had good footwork — but at 6-9 with an impossibly long 85-inch reach, boxing has never seen a man so big move so well. But now, at 35, Fury is heavier, more rugged and more powerful. He didn’t beat Wilder; he beat him up. And if you’re confusing the Fury who’ll face Usyk with the guy who fought in a close “exhibition” with former UFC champ Francis Ngannou, you’re making a big mistake.

    Fury comes from a long line of bare-knuckle fighters. “It took a thousand years to breed my son,” his father once told me.

    But like Mike Tyson, Tyson Fury is also a boxing nerd. “I admire all the champions, all the greats,” he said. “I’ve watched them all.”

    Among the peculiar personality traits of lineal champions is an ego so powerful it demands comparison, not merely with one’s contemporaries, but with the all-timers. It was Ali, after all, sick and tired of hearing about Louis and Marciano, who thought to proclaim himself “the greatest of all time” long before anyone heard of Floyd Mayweather. And it was Tyson, at just 18 years old and about to turn pro, who once wept while watching Liston beat Cleveland Williams.

    “I could never beat him,” Tyson said.

    “But you’ll never have to,” a friend of mine pointed out. “He’s dead.”

    “But I do all the time,” Tyson said, touching his temple with his index finger. “Up here. All the time.”

    Forty years hence, I asked Fury to whom he compares himself, which legend he imagines himself fighting.

    “I’ve never compared myself to other men,” he said. “The only person who can beat Tyson Fury is Tyson Fury.”

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    Mark Kriegel

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  • Why the Jets — yes, the Jets — will win the Super Bowl this season

    Why the Jets — yes, the Jets — will win the Super Bowl this season

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    It has been a minute, but the New York Jets are back. And by “back,” I mean legitimate Super Bowl contenders.

    And I know what you’re thinking: “Here we go again … every year, same story!” But it’s different this time.

    Last season, there was understandable hype. The defense was loaded after a terrific 2022 showing, and the offense now had Aaron Rodgers under center. Things didn’t go as planned — it doesn’t get much worse than losing your future Hall of Fame quarterback on his fourth snap of the season — but the defense still played elite ball and helped the Jets to a respectable (all things considered) 7-10 record.

    And on paper, the 2024 Jets are substantially better than the 2023 Jets. You’d be hard-pressed to compare this roster with those of the other 31 NFL teams and not come away thinking this is a legitimate title contender. So let’s take a look at what New York has built and lay out why the Jets will win Super Bowl LIX next February.

    Jump to:
    Defense | Offense | OL protection
    Rodgers | AFC East | SOS | The path

    An elite defense

    How did the Jets win seven games last season despite operating what was easily the league’s worst offense? Simple. They had an elite defense led by coach Robert Saleh and defensive coordinator Jeff Ulbrich.

    After guiding one of the league’s top D units in San Francisco from 2017 to 2020, Saleh took over as New York’s coach in 2021. It took him a year (the Jets were last in defensive EPA in 2021), but he quickly turned things around (they ranked fourth in 2022 and third in 2023). The Jets’ defense has delivered in all phases, including ranking among the top four in yardage allowed and finishing seventh in sacks in each of the past two seasons.

    The future looks bright for a unit that will return eight of its top nine participants (by snaps) from 2023. That list includes standout off-ball linebackers C.J. Mosley and Quincy Williams, an elite cornerback trio in Sauce Gardner, D.J. Reed and Michael Carter, and one of the league’s best defensive tackles in Quinnen Williams.

    The edge rusher room will have a slightly different look, but it might be better, with Haason Reddick (fourth in the league with 54 sacks over the past four seasons) in and John Franklin-Myers and Bryce Huff out. Reddick will join 2022 first-round pick Jermaine Johnson (7.5 sacks during a breakout 2023 campaign) as the team’s starting duo, with 2023 first-rounder Will McDonald IV — who was limited to 177 snaps as a rookie because of the team’s excellent depth at the position — set up for a leap forward in Year 2.

    Safety is a potential weak spot after the departure of Jordan Whitehead, though the savvy and cheap addition of Chuck Clark shouldn’t be overlooked. Clark missed all of 2023 with a torn ACL, but he posted 284 tackles (ninth most among safeties) with Baltimore over 2020-22. He provides a quality running mate for returning starter Tony Adams, who was solid on 845 snaps last season. Tackle depth behind Williams is probably the bigger concern for this defense, though putting experienced innings-eaters such as Javon Kinlaw, Solomon Thomas and Leki Fotu on the field shouldn’t prove overly detrimental.

    Simply put, the Jets’ defense remains elite on paper, and there’s little reason to expect a regression from the past two seasons.


    Much-improved offensive supporting cast

    All eyes were on Rodgers last offseason, which distracted from the fact that his offensive supporting cast wasn’t particularly good. Running back Breece Hall was recovering from a torn ACL, the wide receiver room was arguably the worst in the league behind Garrett Wilson and offensive tackle was a major concern.

    Things are in a much better spot entering 2024.

    Hall (understandably) started slow last season, but his usage increased progressively through the season. He had his lowest snap share in Week 1 and his highest in Week 18. The 2022 second-round pick overcame the team’s offensive struggles to finish second among all running backs in scrimmage yards (1,585), as well as first in targets (94), receptions (76) and receiving yardage (591). Hall, who turns 23 this summer, has already solidified himself as one of the game’s best running backs.

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    1:15

    Barnwell credits Jets for choosing the right players to deepen roster

    Bill Barnwell says the Jets are furthering their case to be legitimate contenders in the AFC East with their offseason acquisitions.

    At wide receiver, the Jets have an ace. Wilson is the real deal. The 2022 first-rounder is fourth in the league in targets (315) since he was drafted, trailing only Davante Adams, Tyreek Hill and CeeDee Lamb. Of course, he’s 14th in receptions (178), 19th in yards (2,145) and tied for 59th in touchdowns (7) during that span mainly because of the team’s dreadful quarterback play.

    During the offseason, the Jets signed big man Mike Williams and drafted short-range after-the-catch specialist Malachi Corley, which provides a big upgrade on last season’s secondary receivers Xavier Gipson, Allen Lazard, Jason Brownlee and Randall Cobb.

    Add in underrated tight end Tyler Conklin (one of four TEs with 58-plus receptions each of the past three seasons), and Rodgers has the support he needs to produce at a high level. That’s especially the case when you consider that he’ll also have the benefit of a solid line protecting him.


    Formidable offensive line

    Heading into the 2023 season, I wrote that New York’s offensive tackle situation was one of the league’s biggest X factors. Duane Brown and Mekhi Becton were wild cards, and neither panned out. Brown appeared in only two games because of various injuries, whereas Becton finally stayed upright but struggled and wasn’t re-signed. The team mixed and matched along the line all season long and ended up ranked 30th in pass block win rate and 29th in run block win rate.

    The line was clearly a big problem, and the Jets’ front office took action, moving on from tackles Becton, Brown and Billy Turner, as well as interior linemen Laken Tomlinson and Connor McGovern. The five players were responsible for 2,636 (or 50.3%) of the team’s offensive line snaps in 2023.

    The new-look line will have at least four new Week 1 starters. The lone potential returning starter is right guard Alijah Vera-Tucker, who has been an above-average producer when healthy since he was selected in the first round in 2021. Vera-Tucker tore an Achilles while being forced into right tackle duties in Week 5 last season, but is on track to return for the start of the season. He will be joined on the interior by veteran addition John Simpson (LG) and 2023 second-round pick Joe Tippmann (C). Neither was overly impressive in 2023, but Simpson was above-average as a pass-blocker on 1,191 snaps with Baltimore, and Tippmann is a good bet for a leap forward in his second pro season.

    Of course, that still leaves the extremely important tackle position. New York made one of its biggest moves of the offseason when it signed future Hall of Fame left tackle Tyron Smith away from Dallas. Injuries have been a problem for him in past years, but he played at a high level on 882 snaps last season, which suggests the 33-year-old still has plenty left in the tank. And if he were to miss time, the Jets have a fallback option.

    New York brought aboard its potential left tackle of the future when it used the 11th pick of April’s draft on Penn State’s Olu Fashanu. The rookie will at least provide insurance for Smith and the new right tackle, the underrated Morgan Moses, who has posted good-to-great marks in pass block win rate and run block win rate in each of the past two seasons. Projected starters aside, the Jets have seven additional linemen on the roster who played snaps last season, which gives them solid depth.

    Sure, progression for the youngsters and durability for the veterans are both going to be key elements here, but now that Smith, Simpson, Tippmann, Vera-Tucker, Moses and Fashanu are in the fold, few teams can compete with the raw talent and elite potential of the Jets’ offensive line.


    Aaron Rodgers is back!

    OK, this is the big one — and perhaps the toughest variable to sort out.

    Pick your lane:

    1. Future first-ballot Hall of Famer Aaron Rodgers is still the same guy who won back-to-back league MVPs in 2020 and 2021.

    2. Rodgers is well past his prime, having struggled in his final season in Green Bay and now recovering from a torn Achilles at 40 years old.

    3. Something in between those first two options.

    If you chose the first option, you agree the Jets are title contenders. If you’re leaning toward the second one, I’m surprised you’re still reading. And if you chose the final outcome — as most of you probably have — you’re likely on the right track.

    Yes, Rodgers was great as recently as 2021, but it’s fair to wonder if his career-worst showing in 2022 was a product of a decline in play or a Davante Adams-less wide receiver room led by Allen Lazard, Randall Cobb, Sammy Watkins and rookies Romeo Doubs and Christian Watson. He appeared in all 17 games and was top 10 in most counting stats that season, but he plummeted from first in QBR in both 2020 and 2021 to 26th (among 31 qualified quarterbacks) in 2022.

    It’s worth noting that we’ve seen blips like that from Rodgers in the past. After posting an average finish of seventh in QBR during his first 10 seasons as a starter (high of first, low of 14th), Rodgers dipped to 16th and 20th, respectively, during the 2018 and 2019 seasons, which had many wondering if his days as an elite quarterback were numbered. He quickly proved his critics wrong. After last offseason’s change of scenery, Rodgers was by all accounts his usual, elite self in Jets training camp and had the offense positioned well for a productive season (you know, prior to that torn Achilles deal).

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    0:41

    Aaron Rodgers expresses love for the Jets’ draft-day shuffle on ‘McAfee’

    Aaron Rodgers says offensive tackle wasn’t at the top of the Jets’ “needs” list, but that he likes the Jets trading back in the first round.

    Indeed this is the biggest piece of the puzzle and a hard one to decipher, but if we’re in a world where Rodgers is an average (or even slightly below average) NFL starter, that would still be a major upgrade for a team that posted the league’s worst QBR in 2023 (23.4). In fact, the Jets haven’t posted an above-average QBR since 2015 and have finished 28th or worst each of the past six seasons. Rodgers figures to end that streak, and even if he were to miss some time, having Tyrod Taylor in-house to hold down the fort is a much better situation than last season’s Zach Wilson debacle.

    If Rodgers remains elite, there’s no doubt that the Jets are Super Bowl contenders. But even if he’s just a competent starter, New York has the support system around him to contend for an AFC title.


    The state of the AFC East

    The Bills have Josh Allen, so they are still very much a threat in the AFC — but perhaps not as much of a threat after Allen’s supporting cast took a hit during the offseason. Top wideouts Stefon Diggs (Texans) and Gabe Davis (Jaguars) departed for AFC rivals and were replaced by Curtis Samuel and second-round rookie Keon Coleman. Starting center Mitch Morse left for Jacksonville.

    On defense, gone are Jordan Poyer (Dolphins), Micah Hyde (free agent), Leonard Floyd (49ers), Tyrel Dodson (Seahawks), Dane Jackson (Panthers) and Tre’Davious White (Rams). Those are some big names, especially in the secondary, and the departures leave question marks at various levels of the unit. Buffalo has defensive mastermind Sean McDermott calling the shots, but his defense already fell to eighth in EPA last season, and it’s fair to wonder if it could dip farther in 2024.

    It’s a similar sentiment for the Dolphins, who were a game away from a division title last season. Miami’s offense remains fast and explosive but needs to prove it can sustain a high level of play when the temperature drops. And the defense has its hands full dealing with a ton of offseason turnover, with the players responsible for over half of the team’s 2023 snaps no longer in town. Christian Wilkins, DeShon Elliott, Xavien Howard, Jerome Baker and Andrew Van Ginkel are among the departures, with Kendall Fuller, Poyer, Jordyn Brooks, Shaquil Barrett and first-round pick Chop Robinson being the key additions. The latter two could prove extremely important, as star edge rushers Bradley Chubb (ACL) and Jaelan Phillips (Achilles) both suffered major knee injuries in the second half of last season.

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    1:53

    Greeny exasperated after learning Jets open season on ‘Monday Night Football’

    Mike Greenberg doesn’t hide his feelings about how the Jets’ season is scheduled to start almost the same way as last season’s disastrous opener.

    An honest, objective comparison of the three teams reveals that the Jets have built arguably the best roster in the division. And even if you think it’s close, the Jets have the benefit of a tiebreaker here …


    Light strength of schedule

    Finishing third in the AFC East last season means New York should, in theory, have a slightly easier slate than Buffalo and Miami. Per my own team evaluations, that holds true, with the Jets checking in with the league’s ninth-easiest schedule (fourth easiest in the AFC), whereas the Dolphins sit at 19th, the Bills are 31st and the Patriots rank 32nd.

    The Jets’ unique games are against the Steelers, Vikings and Broncos — all teams in transition at quarterback and arguably worse overall on paper than in 2023. The Bills’ unique games come against the Chiefs, Ravens and Lions, while the Dolphins draw the Raiders, Browns and Packers and the Patriots play the Bengals, Chargers and Bears.


    Manageable road to the Lombardi Trophy

    So that’s the division, but the elephant in the AFC room is the reigning champion Kansas City Chiefs. Are the Jets truly better than them?

    That’s a bold claim to make when comparing any team to a Patrick Mahomes-led franchise that has been to four of the past five Super Bowls. However, we saw Kansas City’s offense hit some roadblocks last season (10th in EPA after finishing no lower than third each of the prior six years). And while the majority of the defense that carried the team for most of 2023 remains intact, top snap-getter and standout shadow corner L’Jarius Sneed was a major departure. (In fact, Sneed shadowed Garrett Wilson when these two teams met in Week 4 last season, and Wilson totaled only 60 yards on 14 targets in the 23-20 loss.)

    If the Jets manage to conquer the Chiefs, the work isn’t done. They’ll still need to beat whichever team escapes an improving NFC. The Lions, Cowboys and Eagles are among the top contenders, but in my opinion, the reigning conference champion 49ers are currently the Jets’ top competition for the “best team on paper” title.

    Though the Niners remain stacked, the roster isn’t without concern areas. The defense has the star power (Nick Bosa, Fred Warner and Javon Hargrave), but depth up front isn’t as strong as usual, and key contributors Dre Greenlaw (Achilles) and Talanoa Hufanga (ACL) are recovering from major injuries. An underwhelming offensive line behind Trent Williams wasn’t an issue in 2023 — the 49ers easily led the NFL in offensive EPA — but it’s nonetheless a situation to monitor.

    San Francisco’s offensive skill position players are easily the best in the league, so if you’re choosing between the Jets and 49ers, it really comes down to what you think of Brock Purdy. Statistically speaking, Purdy was the league’s best quarterback last season. He paced the position in QBR, yards per attempt, EPA and passer rating. Is he really that good, or was his performance inflated by the “Kyle Shanahan Effect.” It’s likely a mixture of both, which is why I’m rating Purdy as a top-10 quarterback but also a slightly inferior player to the much more proven Rodgers.

    This is a close call between two strong rosters, but the Jets have the firepower to come out on top. We’ll get an early look at how they stack up against one another when they face off on “Monday Night Football” in Week 1.


    The bottom line

    The Jets haven’t been to the Super Bowl since Joe Namath led them to a historic upset of the Colts in Super Bowl III. They haven’t put together a double-digit win season since 2015. And they haven’t been to the playoffs since Rex Ryan got them there in 2010.

    But things change quickly in the NFL, and this roster is built to compete for a title right now. If the Jets stay relatively healthy and Rodgers is something close to his old self, you can plan on hearing “J-E-T-S, JETS, JETS, JETS” chants echoing through New Orleans in February.

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    Mike Clay

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  • Messi napkin that sealed Barcelona move sells for $965,000 at auction

    Messi napkin that sealed Barcelona move sells for $965,000 at auction

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    LONDON — The famous napkin that linked a young Lionel Messi to Barcelona sold for 762,400 pounds ($965,000) on Friday, British auction house Bonhams said.

    An agreement in principle to sign the-then 13-year-old Messi was written on the napkin almost 25 years ago at a Barcelona tennis club. A more formal and detailed contract with the club followed soon after.

    An undisclosed percentage of the sale price pays administrative fees for the online auction, in what’s called the buyer’s premium.

    Bonhams said the auction was on behalf of Horacio Gaggioli, an agent from Messi’s home country of Argentina who was part of the deal.

    The contract language, written in blue ink, was intended to reassure the teenager’s father, Jorge Messi, that the deal would go through.

    Jorge Messi had threatened to take his son back to Argentina because negotiations with Barcelona had stalled.

    The napkin, containing the date Dec. 14, 2000, bears the signatures of Gaggioli, another agent, Josep Maria Minguella and Barcelona’s then-sporting director, Carles Rexach, who met at a tennis club.

    Rexach had asked a waiter for paper and was given a blank napkin.

    The starting price was 300,000 pounds ($379,000).

    Messi spent nearly two decades with Barcelona after arriving from Argentina at 13 to play in its youth squads. He made his first-team debut in 2004 and played 17 seasons with the main squad. He helped the club win every major trophy including the Champions League four times and the Spanish league 10 times.

    Messi left Barcelona for Paris Saint-Germain in the summer of 2021. He has since joined Inter Miami.

    ___

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

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  • Rivals.com  –  Midwest Spotlight: Four big rankings questions heading into the summer

    Rivals.com – Midwest Spotlight: Four big rankings questions heading into the summer

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    The post-spring rankings update is getting large on the horizon. Plenty of new information has come to light during the spring camp season and soon the rankings will be updated to reflect the national analyst team’s latest projections for the 2025 and 2026 classes.

    This week the national analyst team is examining its biggest questions heading into the upcoming rankings meetings. Next up is the Midwest region.

    RELATED: Four big rankings questions in the Mid-South | East Region | Southeast Region

    Will Tavien St. Clair move to five-star status?

    This might be the biggest question of all heading into our next rankings meetings. Tavien St. Clair has everything you look for in a quarterback, which is why Ohio State pushed for his commitment early. He’s got the size, arm strength, accuracy and athleticism to make plays throwing on the run.

    I was able to see him up close at the Elite 11 regional camp in Ohio. He had a great day and the ball just jumped out of his hand. St. Clair punched his ticket to the Elite 11 Finals that day. He’s steadily improved during his high school career and hasn’t hit his ceiling yet as a prospect.

    The discussion about bumping him to a five-star will surely happen. St. Clair has had a terrific offseason so far but will it be enough?

    SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS WITH OHIO STATE FANS AT DOTTINGTHEEYES.COM

    *****  

    Biggest Midwest riser that we saw in-person?

    Justin Hill (Nick Lucero/Rivals.com)

    The timing of this update will hit at the conclusion of the Rivals Camp Series regional events. We will have seen many prospects from coast to coast at those stops. At the same time there have been many other camps and 7-on-7 events to get fresh evaluations on players.

    Ohio outside linebacker Justin Hill is a terror off the edge and will be looked at for a bump. Wisconsin defensive back commit Jaimier Scott put on one of the best performances I’ve seen this offseason at defensive back. Ohio State linebacker commit Eli Lee will be in consideration for a huge bump, too.

    On the offensive side of the ball Illinois tight end Logan Ferrell is one to watch. He was good in 7-on-7 but is putting up explosive throwing numbers on the track. West Virginia quarterback commit Scotty Fox is a nice dual threat quarterback to watch as well.

    *****  

    Who is the top Midwest running back in 2025?

    Dierre Hill

    Dierre Hill (Nick Lucero/Rivals.com)

    When the last rankings update hit Ohio four-star running back Bo Jackson took over as the top running back in the region. But this remains an ongoing discussion and battle. Belleville (Ill.) Althoff running back Dierre Hill is right there with Jackson. The Oregon commit is an impressive between-the-tackles runner. Kentucky commit Marquise Davis was impressive in the camp setting and has improved his route running to round out his game.

    This will be an interesting question for a region that consistently produces productive college running backs.

    *****

    Will there be a new 2026 five-star in the Midwest?

    Corey Sadler

    Corey Sadler

    The most obvious choice here is offensive tackle Maxwell Riley as he’s right on the cusp of five-star status so it’s not out of the question.

    There are some potential risers to watch though.

    Corey Sadler is an elite two-way athlete out of Michigan. He will be intriguing to watch as we learn more about his game and what his best position is. Ohio defensive back Elbert Hill is a smooth corner who can run and cover. There’s a lot to like about his game.

    Defensive end Titan Davis out of St. Louis has been turning heads all offseason. His offer sheet has exploded with USC, LSU, Auburn and many others pursuing him hard.

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    Greg Smith, National Recruiting Analyst

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  • LIMBS! The best Premier League fan celebrations this season… does your club feature?

    LIMBS! The best Premier League fan celebrations this season… does your club feature?

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    Take a look at some of the best Premier League celebrations from this season by the fans, with plenty of late drama leading to ‘limbs’!

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  • Suspended Argos QB Kelly withdraws from camp

    Suspended Argos QB Kelly withdraws from camp

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    Suspended Toronto Argonauts quarterback Chad Kelly said he will withdraw from training camp and hopes to “learn, grow and better myself” through counseling after his suspension by the league.

    Kelly released a statement Thursday through his agent, Chris Lambiris, announcing his decision.

    The CFL suspended Kelly for at least nine regular-season games on May 7 following its investigation into a lawsuit filed by a former strength and conditioning coach against both the player and club.

    Kelly is also suspended for Toronto’s two preseason games for violating its gender-based violence policy.

    He will be required to undergo confidential assessments by an independent expert and attend mandatory counselling sessions conducted by a gender-based violence expert.

    Kelly said he “will take full advantage of this counselling opportunity to learn, grow and better myself.”

    “At the same time, I want to support the Argonauts organization as it prepares for the season and have made the decision to withdraw from training camp to minimize distractions for the team and to put in the work to earn both reinstatement in the CFL and everyone’s trust,” he said in the statement. “I look forward to getting back on the field soon.”

    Kelly, 30, was the CFL’s outstanding player last season after leading Toronto to a league-best and franchise-record 16-2 record.

    The Argos’ season ended with a 38-17 home loss to eventual Grey Cup champion Montreal in the East Division final.

    Kelly played in college at Clemson, East Mississippi Community College and Mississippi. He was the last pick in the 2017 NFL draft, selected by the Denver Broncos. The team released him in 2018 after he was arrested for criminal trespassing.

    “I have had to take time to process the findings from the CFL investigation released last week as they were not consistent with the person I am, nor the team and community leader I strive to be,” Kelly said in the statement. “I want to be the leader who brings people together and I strongly believe that all workplaces should be safe and healthy for every member of the team.”

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  • Goff cites ‘security,’ NTC as factors in new deal

    Goff cites ‘security,’ NTC as factors in new deal

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    ALLEN PARK, Mich. — Fresh off officially signing his new four-year, $212 million contract extension Thursday morning, Detroit Lions quarterback Jared Goff spent a couple of minutes thanking those close to him.

    Goff’s fiancée, Christen Harper, joined him at the Lions’ practice facility as he spoke to media members about the new deal and noted “security” and his no-trade clause as the biggest things he was considering during the process.

    The deal negotiated by Goff’s agent, Ryan Tollner of Excel Sports Management, also includes a $73 million signing bonus — the largest in NFL history.

    However, being signed through 2028, when Goff will turn 34, was just as intriguing.

    “It was mostly security. You can go back and forth on the numbers and whatnot, and that wasn’t really the thing that was ever something I was extremely concerned with,” Goff said. “It was the security and the no-trade clause and all of that stuff, knowing that all that was in there and feeling secure in knowing that I can finally put that behind me and be excited about what’s to come.”

    Goff, 29, led the Lions last season to an appearance in the NFC Championship Game for the first time since 1991. He has passed for 12,258 yards and 78 touchdowns with just 27 interceptions during his three years with Detroit, where he has revived his career since being acquired in a trade with the Los Angeles Rams for Matthew Stafford in 2021.

    Over the past two seasons, the 2016 No. 1 pick also ranks top four in the NFL in several categories, including passing yards with 9,013 (second); passing TDs with 59 (tied for third); touchdown-to-interception ratio (3.1), which ranks second; and first-down rate (38%), which ranks fourth.

    “It’s a good chapter closing of the last three years if you want to say,” Goff said. “Now, I’m more driven and more fired up than ever to go even harder and put the pedal to the medal even more to bring a Super Bowl to the city, and that’s what’s most important.”

    After signing an extension with the Rams in 2019, Goff called this second extension in Detroit “a lot more” satisfying because of the tough times he had to endure to reach this point.

    In Goff’s first year with the team in 2021, the Lions finished 3-13-1, but they improved to 9-8 in 2022. Detroit went 12-5 last season, when they tied the franchise record for single-season victories and won a division title for the first time in three decades.

    Goff said he understands the criticism that’ll come with reaching a massive extension, but feels he plays his best when he’s being doubted, so he’ll continue to find ways to stay motivated.

    “Those things are still there. Absolutely. I think all this does is give me the security of knowing where I’m going to be, but those things won’t ever die,” he said. “And there will be things that will come, I’m sure this year, that can add to that chip and continue to drive me, but I’m very internally motivated. I want to win a Super Bowl. I want to leave a legacy. I have a lot of personal goals, but I think most importantly it is hoisting that Lombardi.”

    Goff was the third big extension that Detroit handed out this offseason. The franchise extended star receiver Amon-Ra St. Brown and offensive lineman Penei Sewell, handing out over $444 million among the trio.

    Goff is set to receive $170 million in guaranteed money, which ranks eighth among quarterbacks, while St. Brown ($77 million) and Sewell ($70.7 million) ranked first at their respective positions. Goff said he feels that awarding players who are deserving could signify big-picture success for the organization.

    “I think that is important. The Lions, they recognize that upstairs to know that we have three players that are due for a new deal and took care of them,” Goff said. “I think that potential free agents see that and potential draft picks in the future see that and know that if you play well, you are taken care of.

    “Us three are three guys that are very motivated and driven to win a Super Bowl, and it’s not just us three, though. There’s 53 guys and 11 guys on offense for every snap. We plan to do our part, but it’s fun to know that I’ll be able to play with those guys for quite a bit longer.”

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  • Caitlin Clark fever overcomes Indy to overshadow Pacers and Indianapolis 500

    Caitlin Clark fever overcomes Indy to overshadow Pacers and Indianapolis 500

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    INDIANAPOLIS — Caitlin Clark had yet to even be drafted by the Indiana Fever before fans openly called for her to be given an honorary role at the Indianapolis 500.

    She’s been a resident of Indiana for just about a month and is already one of the biggest stars in the city.

    Her WNBA home debut with the Fever comes Thursday night, deep into preparations for Indianapolis’ truly big event, the 108th running of the Indy 500. Anticipation to see the No. 1 overall draft was so high that drivers were checking their daily schedules to see if there was room to see Clark play the New York Liberty at Gainbridge Fieldhouse.

    “Of course I know who Caitlin Clark is — everybody does. She’s like the most marketed woman in the world right now,” said driver Colton Herta, who is sponsored by Gainbridge. Clark in March signed with the company as a brand ambassador, and Gainbridge is the presenting sponsor of the May 26 Indy 500.

    Even though tickets still remained hours ahead of Thursday night’s game — secondary sales sites have seats that start around $5 but run over $1,000 — there were plenty of fans who wished they were going to see Clark.

    Calvary Lutheran, an Indianapolis private school which brought 42 students to the speedway Thursday on a field trip, screamed their answer in unison when asked if they’d rather be at the track for an Indy 500 practice day or Clark’s debut.

    “FEVER!” they shouted.

    A few of the students then raced to the concession stand to retrieve 11-year-old classmate Blessing Li, an aspiring basketball player and, per her classmates, an “obsessed Clark fan.” A few even accused Li of crying as she spoke of Clark’s inspiration for young female athletes.

    “Girl power!” Li exclaimed about Clark’s impact. “She’s just so great.”

    One of her peers seemed disappointed that his chaperone grandfather had left the speedway after lunch to prepare to moonlight for his job as an usher at Fever games. The student said he wanted to go with his grandfather — not as a slight to the Indy 500, but because he’s been to the speedway before and yet to see Clark play in person.

    Penske Entertainment, owner of the speedway, IndyCar and the Indy 500, has used Clark at series events before. She was a guest of Hy-Vee at the inaugural 2022 race at Iowa Speedway and returned last year as Grand Marshal.

    But getting her involved in the Indy 500 has proved to be a more difficult task.

    Series officials want nothing more than to include Indy’s newest star in the pageantry of “The Greatest Spectacle in Racing” but the Fever play in Los Angeles for next Friday’s “Carb Day” and then in Las Vegas the night before the race. The only gap in Clark’s WNBA schedule comes this Sunday, when the Indy 500 pole is decided.

    Clark’s first home game is being marked by a souvenir ticket that has the technology to save a photo on a QR code for a forever keepsake. The Fever planned a pregame party at Bicentennial Unity Plaza for ticket holders that would include a DJ, face-painting, games and caricature and balloon artists.

    Clark had 20 points while setting a record with 10 turnovers in a WNBA debut in the Fever’s season-opening loss to the Connecticut Sun. The game had record viewership with an average of 2.1 million viewers on ESPN2, ESPN+ and Disney+ to top ESPN’s previous mark of nearly 1.5 million viewers for a 2004 game between the Phoenix Mercury and Connecticut.

    In Clark’s lone preseason game in Indianapolis, the Fever set a preseason attendance record at 13,028 spectators. The Fever averaged just over 4,000 fans per game last season.

    Clark was excited to see the turnout against the Liberty.

    “Any time you can have a real home opener and have the support that we’ve had, our preseason game was tremendous and now we get to play for real,” Clark said. “I think it’s just going to be loud. We’re going to need to use the environment to our advantage and I think just learn to move on and get ready to play. Embrace it and enjoy it because it is special, too.”

    The vibe around Indianapolis is electric as the NBA’s Pacers remain in the playoffs during Indianapolis 500 preparations for the first time in a decade. Many current IndyCar drivers are regulars at Pacers games and Clark attended one of the games against the New York Knicks in a suite with her Fever teammates.

    The Pacers are down 3-2 headed into Friday night’s game in Indianapolis.

    But even the Pacers have taken a backseat to Clark’s arrival in Naptown. Indy native Conor Daly, one of IndyCar’s biggest ambassadors, is wearing an Indy-themed helmet in the Indy 500 that includes the Fever logo for the first time.

    When the Fever drafted Clark, Daly looked into becoming a season-ticket holder.

    “The whole city feels very sporty, that’s the best way to put it. The electricity, every time I turn on ESPN, there’s something about the Pacers or Caitlin Clark,” Daly said. “I keep waiting for a third segment about the Indy 500, but it’s just awesome to be from here right now.

    “I noticed that if you want season tickets for the Fever, they went up a lot,” he continued. “I did my research for about three weeks trying to get them. And every two days they’d message me and say ‘Now it’s this (higher) price.’ But we did do our research on becoming Fever season-ticket holders.”

    ___

    WNBA: https://apnews.com/hub/wnba-basketball

    ___

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  • Rivals.com  –  Top schools change for 2026 four-star WR Kayden Dixon-Wyatt

    Rivals.com – Top schools change for 2026 four-star WR Kayden Dixon-Wyatt

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    Top Schools Change For 2026 Four-star WR Kayden Dixon-Wyatt – Rivals.com














    SANTA ANA, Calif. – For months, Texas and Georgia were the two programs that have stood out to Kayden Dixon-Wyatt but there has been a significant change at the top for the 2026 four-star receiver….

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  • ‘No bums left on seats!’ | Jaime Chapman scores one of the great State of Origin tries

    ‘No bums left on seats!’ | Jaime Chapman scores one of the great State of Origin tries

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    Jaime Chapman scores an unbelievable solo try after a stunning 85m run that set NSW on their way to a 22-12 victory against Queensland in their Origin 1 series opener.

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  • Fury eager to put on show in ‘fight of the century’

    Fury eager to put on show in ‘fight of the century’

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    RIYADH, Saudi Arabia — Tyson Fury danced and sang along to some of his favorite hits during a light workout Wednesday evening, three days out from his undisputed heavyweight championship clash with Oleksandr Usyk.

    England’s Fury, 35, wrapped his hands to the tune of AC/DC’s anthem “You Shook Me All Night Long.” He glided around the ring with trainer SugarHill Steward and pumped his right fist to the beat of The Killer’s “Mr. Brightside.”

    “I’m having fun. I always do, don’t I?” Fury (34-0-1, 24 KOs) told ESPN following his 15-minute workout at the open-air entertainment hub Boulevard City. “All these fight weeks I enjoy.”

    But Saturday’s fight is a bit more special. The winner will be crowned boxing’s first undisputed heavyweight champion since November 1999, when Lennox Lewis defeated Evander Holyfield in a rematch.

    Lewis, who will be ringside Saturday, and Holyfield, are two all-time greats, and so are Fury and Usyk. It’s rare for any heavyweight to be recognized as one of the pound-for-pound best in the world. Usyk is No. 3 on ESPN’s list, and Fury is No. 10.

    “It’s the fight of the century,” said Fury, who suffered a cut in sparring that postponed this bout from its original Feb. 17 date. “[An undisputed heavyweight championship fight] has never happened this century before, and we’re looking forward to putting on a fantastic show.”

    Fury’s resume features a classic trilogy with Deontay Wilder that includes two wins and one draw, with the final bout named ESPN’s Fight of the Year and KO of the Year in 2021. Fury has been boxing’s lineal heavyweight champion since he upset Ukraine’s Wladimir Klitschko in 2015.

    Now, Fury will meet another Ukrainian in Usyk, who like Holyfield, is a former undisputed cruiserweight champion who went on to win the unified heavyweight championship. Usyk, 37, did so by defeating Anthony Joshua in a pair of bouts, spoiling plans for a Fury-Joshua bout that would have represented the biggest fight in U.K. history.

    Fury still hopes to meet Joshua next year but will first look toward a contracted rematch with Usyk (21-0, 14 KOs) later this year. Turki Alalshikh, the chairman of Saudi Arabia’s General Entertainment Authority, told ESPN last month the return bout is slated for Oct. 12 or 13. After that, if Fury wins at least one of the two bouts, there are plans for a matchup with Joshua next year.

    Joshua, the former unified champion, scored a second-round KO of former UFC heavyweight champion Francis Ngannou in March. Fury was floored by Ngannou in October in a shocking performance, struggling to win a split decision against a man making his boxing debut.

    Fury appeared well out of shape for that non-title bout, but on Wednesday, he seemed to be far more fit, pumping his jab while he bounced on his toes.

    “I’m always focused, up for a fight,” Fury said, “and it’s the reason I’ve been undefeated in 16 years.”

    But he has never faced a fighter quite like Usyk, one with a superb southpaw jab, excellent footwork and the ring acumen to match Fury. Usyk could concede as much as 40 pounds on fight night. However, he has proven in four heavyweight bouts that he can overcome his lack of size with superior boxing ability.

    Fury is the slight favorite at -120, according to ESPN BET, while Usyk is at even odds. If Fury can end Usyk’s undefeated run and grab his three titles, too, he should cement himself as the best heavyweight of his era.

    “I’m not really interested in all that,” Fury said as he walked off from the ring. “[It will] establish me as a mega, uber-rich heavyweight who can feed his family and give them whatever they want for breakfast, dinner and tea.”

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    Mike Coppinger

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  • 2024 NFL Week 1: Betting odds and lines for every game

    2024 NFL Week 1: Betting odds and lines for every game

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    The 2024 NFL schedule has been released and with that came the opening lines for the first week of the season.

    There are a number of standout games in the first week. The Kansas City Chiefs and Baltimore Ravens start the season on Sept. 5 with the defending champions opening at -3. The NFL then heads to Brazil for a game between the Green Bay Packers and Philadelphia Eagles on Sept 6.

    The Detroit Lions face the Los Angeles Rams in a rematch of their playoff game on Sept. 8 and Week 1 concludes with the likely return of Aaron Rodgers as the New York Jets face the San Francisco 49ers on Sept. 9.

    Here’s a look at all the Week 1 games. Odds current as of publication time. For most current odds go to ESPN BET

    2024 NFL Week 1 spreads, money line and totals


    Baltimore Ravens @ Kansas City Chiefs -3
    GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium, Kansas City, Missouri
    Sept. 5, 8:20 p.m. ET


    Money line: Ravens (+125); Chiefs (-145)
    Total: 47


    Green Bay Packers @ Philadelphia Eagles -2.5
    Corinthians Arena, Sao Paolo
    Sept. 6, 8:15 p.m. ET


    Money line: Packers (+105); Eagles (-125)
    Total: 48.5


    Pittsburgh Steelers @ Atlanta Falcons -2.5
    Mercedes-Benz Stadium, Atlanta
    Sept. 8, 1 p.m. ET


    Money line: Steelers (+120); Atlanta Falcons (-140)
    Total: 43.5


    Arizona Cardinals @ Buffalo Bills -7
    Highmark Stadium, Orchard Park, Buffalo, New York
    Sept. 8, 1 p.m. ET


    Money line: Cardinals (+280); Bills (-350)
    Total: 47.5


    Tennessee Titans @ Chicago Bears -4.5
    Soldier Field, Chicago
    Sept. 8, 1 p.m. ET


    Money line: Titans (+180); Bears (-215)
    Total: 43.5


    New England Patriots @ Cincinnati Bengals -8
    Paycor Stadium, Cincinnati
    Sept. 8, 1 p.m. ET


    Money line: Patriots (+340); Bengals (-425)
    Total: 42.5


    Houston Texans -1.5 @ Indianapolis Colts
    Lucas Oil Stadium, Indianapolis
    Sept. 8, 1 p.m. ET


    Money line: Texans (-120); Colts (+100)
    Total: 47.5


    Jacksonville Jaguars @ Miami Dolphins -3.5
    Hard Rock Stadium, Miami Gardens, Florida
    Sept. 8, 1 p.m. ET


    Money line: Jaguars (+140); Dolphins (-165)
    Total: 48.5


    Carolina Panthers @ New Orleans Saints -4.5
    Caesars Superdome, New Orleans
    Sept. 8, 1 p.m. ET


    Money line: Panthers (+175); Saints (-210)
    Total: 41.5


    Minnesota Vikings -1 @ New York Giants
    MetLife Stadium, East Rutherford, New Jersey
    Sept. 8, 1 p.m. ET


    Money line: Vikings (-110); Giants (-110)
    Total: 41


    Las Vegas Raiders @ Los Angeles Chargers -3
    SoFi Stadium, Inglewood, California
    Sept. 8, 4:05 p.m. ET


    Money line: Raiders (+130); Chargers (-150)
    Total: 43.5


    Denver Broncos @ Seattle Seahawks -4.5
    Lumen Field, Seattle
    Sept. 8, 4:25 p.m. ET


    Money line: Broncos (+170); Seahawks (-200)
    Total: 42.5


    Dallas Cowboys @ Cleveland Browns -1
    Cleveland Browns Stadium, Cleveland
    Sept. 8, 4:25 p.m. ET


    Money line: Cowboys (-110); Browns (-110)
    Total: 44


    Washington Commanders @ Tampa Bay Buccaneers -4
    Raymond James Stadium, Tampa, Florida
    Sept. 8, 4:25 p.m. ET


    Money line: Commanders (+160); Buccaneers (-190)
    Total: 41.5


    Los Angeles Rams @ Detroit Lions -3.5
    Ford Field, Detroit
    Sept. 8, 8:20 p.m. ET


    Money line: Los Angeles Rams (+140); Detroit Lions (-165)
    Total: 51.5


    New York Jets @ San Francisco 49ers -5.5
    Levi’s Stadium, Santa Clara, California
    Sept. 9, 8:15 p.m. ET


    Money line: Jets (+200); 49ers (-240)
    Total: 45.5

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  • A cricket World Cup is coming to NYC’s suburbs, where the sport thrives among immigrant communities

    A cricket World Cup is coming to NYC’s suburbs, where the sport thrives among immigrant communities

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    EAST MEADOW, N.Y. — A towering stadium boasting 34,000 seats and a precisely trimmed field of soft Kentucky bluegrass is rising in a suburban New York park that will host one of the world’s top cricket tournaments next month.

    But on a recent Saturday morning, on the other side of Long Island’s Eisenhower Park, budding young cricketers were already busy batting, bowling and fielding on a makeshift pitch.

    The T20 World Cup will be the first major international cricket competition in the U.S., but the centuries-old English game has been flourishing in the far-flung corners of metro New York for years, fueled by steady waves of South Asian and Caribbean immigration. Each spring, parks from the Bronx and Queens to Long Island and New Jersey come alive with recreational leagues hosting weekend competitions.

    American cricket organizers hope the June competition will take the sport’s popularity to the next level, providing the kind of lasting boost across generations and cultures that soccer enjoyed when the U.S. hosted its first FIFA World Cup in 1994. On Wednesday, retired Olympic sprinter Usain Bolt, an honorary ambassador of the T20 World Cup, visited the nearly complete Eisenhower stadium, along with members of the U.S. cricket squad and former New York football and basketball greats.

    Parmanand Sarju, founder of the Long Island Youth Cricket Academy that hosted Saturday’s practice, said he’s “beyond joyful” to see the new stadium rising atop the ball field where his youth academy began, a sign of how far things have come.

    “When we started more than a decade ago, there was no understanding of cricket, at least at the youth level,” said the Merrick resident, who started the academy to teach his two American-born children the sport he grew up playing in Guyana in South America. “Now they’re building a stadium here.”

    The sport originally took root in the outer boroughs of New York City but has gradually spread as immigrant families, like generations before, moved to the suburbs, transforming communities, said Ahmad Chohan, a Pakistan native who is the president of the New York Police Department’s cricket club, which also plays in Eisenhower as part of a statewide league with roughly 70 teams.

    The World Cup, he said, is a “historic moment.”

    Cricket is the second most-viewed sport in the world after soccer — India star Virat Kohli has 268 million Instagram followers — but it is only played by more than 200,000 Americans nationwide across more than 400 local leagues, according to USA Cricket, which oversees the men’s national cricket team.

    Major League Cricket launched last year in the U.S. with six professional T20 teams, including a New York franchise that, for now, plays some games at a Dallas-area stadium also hosting World Cup matches.

    Venu Pisike, the chairman of USA Cricket, believes the T20 World Cup — the first time the U.S. has competed in the tournament — will mark a turning point.

    The sport is among those slated for the 2028 summer Olympics in Los Angeles — its first appearance at the games in more than a century, he noted. The International Cricket Council, the sport’s governing body, has also committed to growing the U.S. market.

    “Cricket is predominantly viewed as an expat sport, but things will look very different in the next 10, 20 years,” said Pisike. “Americans will definitely change their mindset and approach in terms of developing cricket.”

    Both the Los Angeles games and the upcoming World Cup, which the U.S. is co-hosting with the West Indies, will feature a modern variant of the game known as “Twenty20” that lasts around three hours and is highlighted by aggressive batters swinging away for homerun-like “sixes.” It’s considered more approachable to casual fans than traditional formats, which can last one to five days when batters typically take a more cautious approach. Twenty20 is the format used in the hugely popular Indian Premier League.

    Eisenhower Park will host half the games played in the U.S., including a headlining clash of cricket titans Pakistan and India on June 9.

    Other matches in the 55-game, 20-nation tournament that kicks off June 1 will be played on existing cricket fields in Texas and Florida. Later rounds take place in Antigua, Trinidad and other Caribbean nations, with the final in Barbados on June 29.

    Cricket has a long history in the U.S. and New York, in particular.

    The sport was played by American troops during the Revolutionary War, and the first international match was held in Manhattan between the city’s St. George’s Cricket Club and Canada in 1844, according to Stephen Holroyd, a Philadelphia-area cricket historian.

    As late as 1855, New York newspapers were still devoting more coverage to cricket than baseball, but the sport remained stubbornly insular, with British-only cricket clubs hindering its growth just as baseball was taking off, he said.

    By the end of World War I, cricket had largely disappeared — until immigrants from India and other former British colonies helped revive it roughly half a century later.

    Anubhav Chopra, a co-founder of the Long Island Premier League, a nearly 15-year-old men’s league that plays in another local park, is among the more than 700,000 Indian Americans in the New York City area — by far the largest community of its kind in the country.

    The Babylon resident has never been to a professional cricket match but has tried to share his love for the game he played growing up in New Delhi with his three American children, including his 9-year-old son who takes cricket lessons.

    Chopra bought tickets to all nine games taking place at Eisenhower and is taking his wife, kids and grandparents to the June 3 match between Sri Lanka and South Africa.

    “For me, cricket is life,” he said. “This as a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity.”

    The dense latticework of metal rods and wood sheets that make up Eisenhower’s modular stadium will come down soon after the cup games end, but the cricket field will remain, minus the rectangular surface in the middle known as the pitch.

    Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman said what’s left lays a “world-class” foundation for local cricket teams — and perhaps a future home for a professional team.

    ___

    Follow Philip Marcelo at twitter.com/philmarcelo.

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  • Rivals.com  –  Wisconsin lands a commitment from Cameron Miller

    Rivals.com – Wisconsin lands a commitment from Cameron Miller

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    Wisconsin Lands A Commitment From Cameron Miller – Rivals.com














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  • Newcastle’s Anthony Gordon joins growing calls for VAR to be scrapped if technology does not improve

    Newcastle’s Anthony Gordon joins growing calls for VAR to be scrapped if technology does not improve

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    Anthony Gordon has questioned the purpose of VAR after being denied a penalty during Newcastle’s 3-2 defeat to Manchester United at Old Trafford.

    On the day it was announced that Wolves are campaigning to get VAR scrapped from the Premier League next season, the England forward felt aggrieved when referee Robert Jones and VAR Jarred Gillett ignored a strong penalty appeal after Sofyan Amrabat caught his heel in his attempt to recover from an error.

    Speaking to Sky Sports after the game, Gordon said: “[My ankle’s] really sore. Not sure how good my ankle will be.

    “I’ve watched it back and it’s a clear penalty. I don’t mind the referee getting the decision wrong on the pitch, but I don’t understand what the point of VAR is then. It is there to correct mistakes.

    What do other PL clubs think?

    Liverpool are among the clubs that would not support scrapping VAR, Sky Sports News understands..

    While a leading Premier League executive from a separate club has told Sky Sports News “VAR is here to stay”.

    There is a feeling among several top clubs that VAR is a help more than a hindrance, and that the focus should be on improving its application and communication with supporters, rather than scrapping it altogether.

    “Amrabat goes down my Achilles and then pushes me in the back. Casemiro gets the ball but there are two fouls before that. I just don’t see the point in [VAR].

    “I knew straight away, that’s why i didn’t appeal, because I didn’t mind the ref not giving it. It’s fast. But I’ll wait for the VAR to check. You can see me tell my team-mates it’s a clear penalty.

    “Then we carry on and I’ve got no sock left. How can that be possible?”

    Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

    Wayne Rooney felt Newcastle were unfortunate not to be awarded a penalty after Gordon was challenged by Amrabat

    Wolves have been on the end of several controversial refereeing decisions this season and believe the decision review system is “undermining the value of the Premier League brand”.

    They have submitted a resolution to trigger a vote at the league’s AGM in June and will need 13 of the other 19 clubs to agree with them. They are likely to canvas other clubs in order to gain support between now and next month’s meeting.

    Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

    Sky Sports chief reporter Kaveh Solhekol discusses why Wolves and other Premier League clubs have the vote to abolish VAR for next season

    The Premier League does not believe scrapping VAR is the right way forward.

    “It’s a big decision,” Gordon continued when the proposal was put to him. “I’m actually quite fond of [VAR], I’m fond of the idea. It should work, but it’s not.

    “There’s constantly too many mistakes. We missed too many chances to blame anything else, but we could go 1-0 up and the game changes.

    “It’s a clear and obvious mistake. I don’t know how you can get it wrong. Either get rid of it or get better, it’s simple.”

    More VAR drama dominates Chelsea win at Brighton

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    Watch highlights of the Premier League match between Brighton and Chelsea

    Mauricio Pochettino admitted Reece James’ late red card was “painful” after Chelsea moved to the verge of European qualification with a gripping 2-1 Premier League win at Brighton.

    Blues captain James was dismissed for the second time in an injury-plagued season for kicking out at Seagulls striker Joao Pedro in the 88th minute at the Amex Stadium after a lengthy VAR review.

    The England defender, who came on in the 69th minute for only his second appearance since December following hamstring surgery, faces a four-match ban and cannot play again before Gareth Southgate names his preliminary Euro 2024 squad.

    Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

    Mauricio Pochettino believes VAR can still be a big help in the Premier League, but thinks it needs to improve

    “It’s difficult to give my opinion because I didn’t have time to see the action,” Blues boss Pochettino said of James’ costly retaliation.

    “Maybe it’s the frustration of him. But, yes, painful. Painful because it was a fantastic night of football and he’s our captain and a really important player.

    “I’m disappointed because now he’s going to miss the next game and maybe a few games in next season.”

    By then, Chelsea had already seen the awarding of a penalty on the field by referee Michael Salisbury over-ruled by VAR official Peter Bankes, who deemed Facundo Buonanotte had played the ball in a challenge with Marc Cucurella.

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    Wayne Rooney, Roy Keane and Andy Cole react to the possibility of a VAR-free Premier League

    In another first-half flashpoint, Mykhailo Mudryk was forced off the pitch with a head injury after an off-the-ball incident with Tariq Lamptey that went unpunished.

    Premier League stats earlier this season showed correct decisions had increased from 82 to 96 per cent under VAR, with Tony Scholes, the Premier League’s chief football officer, telling Sky Sports in February: “VAR is, and remains, a very effective tool in supporting the match officials on the pitch.”

    However, Scholes did admit: “We are doing too many checks, we’re taking too long in doing them as well. It’s to a degree understandable, given the level of scrutiny these guys are under. But the reviews are taking too long and it’s affecting the flow of the game and we’re extremely aware of that and the need to improve that speed while always maintaining the accuracy.”

    Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

    The Ref Watch panel discuss why VAR disallowed Max Kilman’s goal against West Ham and assess Gary O’Neil’s strong comments on the decision

    Meanwhile, Premier League officials believe the proposal would seriously impact it reputationally as one of the elite leagues in world football and would mean no semi-automated offsides or in-stadium announcements to the crowd that the top flight is pushing hard for.

    A Premier League spokesperson said: “The Premier League can confirm it will facilitate a discussion on VAR with our clubs at the Annual General Meeting next month.

    “Clubs are entitled to put forward proposals at shareholders’ meetings and we acknowledge the concerns and issues around the use of VAR.

    Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

    Watch highlights from the Premier League match between Manchester United and Newcastle United

    “However, the League fully supports the use of VAR and remains committed, alongside PGMOL, to make continued improvements to the system for the benefit of the game and fans.”

    Wolves have been on the end of several controversial refereeing decisions this season and believe the decision review system is “undermining the value of the Premier League brand”.

    However, they will need 13 of the other 19 clubs to agree with them and are likely to canvas other clubs in order to gain support between now and next month’s meeting.

    How to book Fury vs Usyk on Sky Sports Box Office

    It’s one of the biggest sporting events in a generation. Tyson Fury and Oleksandr Usyk collide for the undisputed world heavyweight championship on Saturday May 18, live on Sky Sports Box Office. Book the fight now

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  • Hendrickson committed to Cincy after trade ask

    Hendrickson committed to Cincy after trade ask

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    CINCINNATI — Trey Hendrickson was all smiles after Tuesday’s offseason workout.

    After a tumultuous offseason that featured a trade request, the Cincinnati Bengals‘ star pass-rusher was firm in his desire to play for the team this season.

    “That’s a no-brainer,” Hendrickson said. “I mean, I love this team. I’m in great shape. It’s good to see the guys.”

    The three-time Pro Bowl selection rejoined the group this week for the team’s voluntary offseason workout program. Hendrickson, who was second in the NFL in sacks created last season and tied for second in total sacks (17.5), had asked for a trade after the Bengals declined to give him a long-term deal. Last summer, he added an extra year to his contract through the end of the 2025 season.

    The move netted him an extra $5 million in salary last year but didn’t have an impact on his 2024 salary or alleviate concerns about the future. Hendrickson said that when he and his agent, Harold Lewis, met with the Bengals to inquire about either a long-term deal or a trade, the answer from Cincinnati’s front office was “pretty firm.”

    “You kind of hope for the best,” Hendrickson said. “[In], football, you get what you earn in some ways and in other ways, there’s a business side of it.”

    The 29-year-old has been one of the league’s best edge rushers since the Bengals signed him in 2021 to a four-year deal worth $60 million. He has 40.5 sacks since, the fifth-highest total during that span, according to ESPN Stats & Information research.

    Bengals defensive tackle B.J. Hill said there were “no hard feelings” when Hendrickson tried to sort out the contract situation during the early portion of voluntary workouts.

    “You just can’t take it personally,” Hill said. “You got to remember there’s also the business side of it as well.”

    Hendrickson said that like others inside the building, coach Zac Taylor was supportive as he navigated the contract situation. He also said he understood why Cincinnati’s front office stood firm in keeping the current terms of his deal intact.

    And on his side of things, he had no regrets about taking the one-year extension last season.

    “My goal was to play here longer,” Hendrickson said. “So, when they offered me a chance to play for Cincinnati another year, I took it. I would take it again.

    “I’m not asking for a great business decision. I know that asking ownership, there’s not a lot of ways to cut it. I just know what I can do and how I can do it. And I think my tape has proven that over the last four years as a starter.”

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