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  • NBA officials to begin wearing sponsored patches

    NBA officials to begin wearing sponsored patches


    A little more than six years after NBA players began wearing sponsored patches on their jerseys, NBA referees will do the same for the first time.

    NBA officials will begin donning shirts with Emirates Airlines patches directly under the NBA logo on the left chest at the All-Star Game on Feb. 18, the league announced Thursday. Officials will continue wearing the Emirates patches when the NBA season resumes a few days later.

    Meanwhile, G League referees will begin wearing the patches to start the 2024-25 campaign, and WNBA officials will start in the league’s 2025 season.

    The referee patches were just a piece of the endorsement rollout for Emirates, based in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, which in a multiyear deal officially becomes the NBA’s global airline partner. Emirates will also sponsor the NBA in-season tournament, which will be rebranded as the Emirates NBA Cup.

    While NBA players started wearing sponsored patches during the 2017-18 campaign — a move that generated millions of dollars annually for each club — other sports such as soccer have long used player jerseys as high-priced advertising real estate. The move comes at a time when NBA viewership is up from last year on the major networks and at a time when the league’s referees are being shown on television far more than in the past.

    Television cameras generally zoom in on lead officials as they finalize their rulings over an in-arena microphone following coach’s challenges, where referees review replays of debatable calls — a process that often takes minutes at a time. The number of reviews has increased in recent years, as league stakeholders voted in 2023 to allow clubs a third challenge if a coach requests and is successful with his first two tries.

    During the 2019-20 regular season, when the league first implemented the coach’s challenges, referees deliberated on a total of 633 challenges, or 0.59 per regular-season game. Through Monday’s games, or about 60% of the way through the 2023-24 regular season, officials had already reviewed 765 coach’s challenges, or 1.03 challenges per game.



    Chris Herring

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  • Jaden Ivey scores a career-high 37 points to lead Pistons past Kings, 133-120

    Jaden Ivey scores a career-high 37 points to lead Pistons past Kings, 133-120


    SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Jaden Ivey scored 19 of his career-high 37 points in the fourth quarter and the Detroit Pistons, playing without their two top scorers, stunned the Sacramento Kings 133-120 on Wednesday night.

    Ivey added seven assists and six rebounds as Detroit improved to 3-20 on the road this season, 7-43 overall.

    “I talked to myself before the game, just focus in on the fourth quarter where I can attack and be aggressive,” Ivey said. “If I have my shot, just take it and be confident in it.”

    Alec Burks had 25 points and seven rebounds off the bench, and Jalen Duren had 20 points, 15 rebounds and six assists. Marcus Sasser added 18 points.

    “For (Ivey) and Sass and all of our young guys to make plays in moments like that on the road, that expands your capacity,” Detroit coach Monty Williams said. “You can only grow from these types of experiences.”

    The Pistons were without Cade Cunningham (left knee injury management) and Bojan Bogdanovic (left calf soreness), who both average more than 20 points per game.

    “Just a great game overall,” Ivey said. “I feel like everybody used their gifts to the best of their abilities and gave it all that they had with some guys out. I’m so proud of them.”

    Domantas Sabonis led Sacramento with 30 points and 12 rebounds for his 33rd consecutive double-double.

    Malik Monk added 23 points and 10 assists off the bench as the Kings heard boos from their fans throughout the game.

    “There’s nothing to change up (structurally on defense) right now because we’re not doing our job,” Sacramento coach Mike Brown said. “We didn’t do our job tonight, for sure.”

    The Pistons closed the first half on a 17-5 run, capped by Killian Hayes’ 3-pointer at the buzzer, to build a 70-63 lead. The 70 first-half points matched their season high.

    Detroit extended the lead to 87-72 midway through the third quarter, but the Kings responded with a 27-10 run to take a 99-97 lead into the fourth.

    The Pistons outscored Sacramento 36-21 in the final quarter and won despite losing the turnover battle.

    “That team can score in bunches on everybody in the league,” Williams said. “So for us to hold them to 21 points in the fourth quarter, that’s the difference.”

    Detroit shot a season-best 56% from the field and made 17 of 31 3-pointers. The Pistons were 22 of 22 at the free-throw line and outrebounded the Kings 48-33.

    Sacramento’s Kevin Huerter received consecutive technical fouls with 1:40 remaining and was ejected.

    TRADE ALERT

    Detroit made a pair of trades ahead of Thursday’s NBA trade deadline, according to an AP source. The Pistons acquired Simone Fontecchio from the Utah Jazz for a second-round draft pick and dealt Monte Morris to the Minnesota Timberwolves for Shake Milton, Troy Brown and a second-round selection.

    UP NEXT

    Pistons: At Portland on Thursday night.

    Kings: Host Denver on Friday night.

    —-

    AP NBA: https://apnews.com/hub/nba



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  • Brady ‘surprised’ Belichick wasn’t hired for HC job

    Brady ‘surprised’ Belichick wasn’t hired for HC job


    The NFL’s coaching carousel has stopped without Bill Belichick landing a head-coaching job, surprising many, including Tom Brady, his former star quarterback.

    “I don’t know the criteria for hiring coaches. I’ve never been a part of it,” Brady said this week on his “Let’s Go!” podcast. “I mean, I’m surprised that the greatest coach ever doesn’t have a job, absolutely. But I’m surprised [by] a lot of things in the NFL.”

    Belichick, who mutually parted ways with the New England Patriots after 24 seasons and six Super Bowl titles, had only two interviews during this year’s cycle — both with the Atlanta Falcons, who decided to hire Raheem Morris for the job instead.

    The last two of the seven head-coaching vacancies were filled last week when the Seattle Seahawks and Washington Commanders hired Mike Macdonald and Dan Quinn, respectively.

    If Belichick doesn’t take a job as an assistant coach, next season will be the first time since 1975 that he will not be coaching in the NFL.

    Belichick, 71, left New England with 333 career victories (including playoffs), second all-time behind Don Shula’s 347, and won six Super Bowls with Brady as his quarterback.

    Brady said he can relate in a way to Belichick not landing a job based on his experience in free agency when he left the Patriots after 20 seasons in 2020.

    “When I was a free agent, there [were] a lot of teams that didn’t want me,” Brady said on his podcast.

    Brady eventually signed with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and won a seventh Super Bowl in his first season with the Bucs, playing two more seasons in Tampa before retiring last year.



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  • ESPN experts pick Super Bowl LVIII and make their MVP predictions

    ESPN experts pick Super Bowl LVIII and make their MVP predictions


    Only one game remains in the 2023 NFL season. The San Francisco 49ers will face off against the reigning Super Bowl champion Kansas City Chiefs on Sunday at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas for Super Bowl LVIII. Which team will take home the Lombardi Trophy? Which player will win Super Bowl MVP?

    We asked ESPN’s NFL analysts, writers, commentators, columnists and pundits to make predictions for the big game. More than 60 experts picked the winner of 49ers-Chiefs, the final score of the game and who they think will earn the Super Bowl MVP Award.

    Here’s a breakdown of how they picked, plus betting odds from ESPN BET. Check out all of our Super Bowl preview content for more news and analysis ahead of the big game.

    The Chiefs have the advantage, 49-15

    Of the 64 experts who weighed in, the Chiefs were favored by 49 of them (76.6%), while the 49ers claimed 15 votes (23.4%).

    The most common predicted final scores were 27-24 (picked by eight of our experts) and 27-21 (seven). The lowest combined total was 37 (20-17). The highest was 64 (34-30). The largest margin of victory predicted was 20 points (34-14). And 52 experts said this game will be decided by a touchdown or less.

    Betting notes: ESPN BET currently favors San Francisco by 1.5 points. The over/under is 47.5 points at ESPN BET. Of the experts in this pool, 52 have the game going over that total, while 12 like the under.

    ESPN’s Football Power Index: The FPI likes the 49ers (59.4%) by an average of 3.1 points.

    Predicting a Chiefs win (49)

    Alaina Getzenberg, Bills reporter: 27-24
    Alden Gonzalez, writer: 31-27
    Ben Baby, Bengals reporter: 34-14
    Brooke Pryor, Steelers reporter: 27-24
    Courtney Cronin, Bears reporter: 31-28
    Dan Graziano, national NFL reporter: 20-17
    Dan Orlovsky, NFL analyst: 24-21
    David Newton, Panthers reporter: 32-27
    David Purdum, sports betting reporter: 31-23
    Elizabeth Merrill, senior writer: 31-28
    Eric Karabell, NFL fantasy analyst: 34-17
    Eric N. Moody, NFL fantasy analyst: 31-28
    Eric Woodyard, Lions reporter: 23-20
    Erin Dolan, sports betting analyst: 24-20
    Field Yates, NFL analyst: 27-24
    Jake Trotter, Browns reporter: 28-24
    Jason Reid, Andscape senior NFL writer: 34-17
    Jeff Legwold, Broncos reporter: 28-23
    Jenna Laine, Buccaneers reporter: 28-24
    John Buccigross, commentator: 29-28
    Jordan Raanan, Giants reporter: 23-17
    Jordan Reid, NFL draft analyst: 27-24
    Josh Weinfuss, Cardinals reporter: 33-24
    Kevin Seifert, Vikings reporter: 31-26
    Kris Rhim, Chargers reporter: 27-23
    Lindsey Thiry, national NFL reporter: 28-25
    Liz Loza, NFL fantasy analyst: 24-23
    Marcel Louis-Jacques, Dolphins reporter: 27-21
    Marcus Spears, NFL analyst: 28-24
    Matt Bowen, NFL analyst: 27-23
    Matt Miller, NFL draft analyst: 28-24
    Michael DiRocco, Jaguars reporter: 27-21
    Michael Rothstein, Falcons reporter: 27-23
    Mike Reiss, Patriots reporter: 31-21
    Mike Tannenbaum, NFL analyst: 31-21
    Mina Kimes, NFL analyst: 27-24
    Paul Gutierrez, Raiders reporter: 27-21
    Rex Ryan, NFL analyst: 31-24
    Rich Cimini, Jets reporter: 31-24
    Rob Demovsky, Packers reporter: 27-24
    Robert Griffin III, NFL analyst: 31-21
    Sal Paolantonio, national NFL reporter: 30-20
    Sarah Barshop, Rams reporter: 31-24
    Stephen Holder, Colts reporter: 24-21
    Tedy Bruschi, NFL analyst: 24-21
    Tim Hasselbeck, NFL analyst: 27-17
    Tim McManus, Eagles reporter: 34-30
    Tristan H. Cockcroft, NFL fantasy analyst: 27-21
    Turron Davenport, Titans reporter: 27-21

    Predicting a 49ers win (15)

    Brady Henderson, Seahawks reporter: 24-23
    Daniel Dopp, NFL fantasy analyst: 31-20
    DJ Bien-Aime, Texans reporter: 27-21
    Doug Greenberg, sports betting reporter: 27-20
    Jamison Hensley, Ravens reporter: 31-17
    Jeremy Fowler, national NFL reporter: 27-24
    John Keim, Commanders reporter: 20-17
    Katherine Terrell, Saints reporter: 28-21
    Michelle Beisner-Buck, NFL feature reporter: 27-24
    Mike Clay, NFL fantasy analyst: 25-23
    Seth Walder, analytics writer: 26-24
    Seth Wickersham, senior writer: 20-19
    Stephania Bell, NFL fantasy analyst: 27-21
    Tim Keown, senior writer: 28-24
    Todd Archer, Cowboys reporter: 28-26

    Super Bowl MVP

    Patrick Mahomes was the most common pick to win Super Bowl MVP, collecting 38 of the 64 votes (59.3%). Mahomes is looking to claim his third career Super Bowl MVP.

    Travis Kelce and Christian McCaffrey were next with nine votes each (14%). Brock Purdy received three votes (4.6%), and Fred Warner received two votes (3.1%). Chris Jones, Deebo Samuel and Isiah Pacheco received one vote each (1.5%).

    Odds below are from ESPN BET

    Patrick Mahomes, QB, Chiefs (+130): David Newton, Brooke Pryor, Dan Graziano, Turron Davenport, Sarah Barshop, Jordan Reid, Lindsey Thiry, Robert Griffin III, Mike Reiss, Mina Kimes, Field Yates, Tristan H. Cockcroft, John Buccigross, Tedy Bruschi, Kris Rhim, Alaina Getzenberg, Ben Baby, Stephen Holder, Courtney Cronin, Rich Cimini, Liz Loza, Eric N. Moody, Jordan Raanan, Marcel Louis-Jacques, Elizabeth Merrill, Matt Miller, David Purdum, Dan Orlovsky, Rex Ryan, Jason Reid, Eric Woodyard, Marcus Spears, Eric Karabell, Erin Dolan, Jenna Laine, Rob Demovsky, Jeff Legwold

    Travis Kelce, TE, Chiefs (+1400): Jake Trotter, Michael Rothstein, Mike Tannenbaum, Sal Paolantonio, Kevin Seifert, Michael DiRocco, Alden Gonzalez, Josh Weinfuss, Paul Gutierrez

    Christian McCaffrey, RB, 49ers (+450): Mike Clay, Jamison Hensley, Tim Keown, Brady Henderson, Michelle Beisner-Buck, John Keim, Doug Greenberg, Katherine Terrell, Jeremy Fowler

    Brock Purdy, QB, 49ers (+225): DJ Bien-Aime, Seth Walder, Stephania Bell

    Fred Warner, LB, 49ers (+15000): Seth Wickersham, Daniel Dopp

    Chris Jones, DT, Chiefs (+8000): Matt Bowen

    Deebo Samuel, WR, 49ers (+2000): Todd Archer

    Isiah Pacheco, RB, Chiefs (+3000): Tim Hasselbeck



    ESPN staff

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  • Back to work: Saban joining ESPN, ‘GameDay’

    Back to work: Saban joining ESPN, ‘GameDay’


    Nick Saban, who retired last month as head coach of the Alabama Crimson Tide after 17 seasons, is ready to go back to work.

    One of the most accomplished coaches in college football history with seven national championships, Saban will be joining ESPN, it was announced Wednesday.

    Saban, 72, will primarily serve as an analyst on ESPN’s “College GameDay” and also will lend his expertise across ESPN’s platforms to a variety of events, including the NFL draft and SEC media days.

    “ESPN and College GameDay have played such an important role in the growth of college football, and I’m honored to have the opportunity to join their team,” Saban said in a statement. “I’ll do my best to offer additional insights and perspectives to contribute to College GameDay, the ultimate Saturday tradition for college football fans.”

    Saban has appeared multiple times as a guest on “College GameDay” alongside new teammates Rece Davis, Lee Corso, Kirk Herbstreit, Desmond Howard and Pat McAfee.

    “Nick Saban is a singular, iconic presence in college football,” ESPN chairman Jimmy Pitaro said in a statement. “He is also an extremely gifted communicator, who will immediately add even more credibility, authority and entertainment value to ESPN, including our esteemed College GameDay show.”

    In his 17 campaigns with the Crimson Tide, Saban won 201 games — tied with Vince Dooley (Georgia) for the second-most wins at a single school in SEC history, behind only Bear Bryant, who won 232 games in his 25 seasons with Alabama.

    In addition to six national titles, Saban also won nine SEC championships at Alabama.

    In his 28 years as a college head coach — a career that included seven national titles, 12 conference championships (11 SEC, 1 MAC) and 19 bowl game wins — Saban never had a losing season. His worst seasons were at Michigan State in 1996 and 1998 when the Spartans finished .500.

    He made a two-year foray into the NFL to coach the Miami Dolphins before returning to college football to revive one of its most storied programs, which hadn’t won a national title in 15 years. He won more games in 17 seasons at Alabama (201) than the Crimson Tide had won in the 24 seasons between Bryant’s retirement and Saban’s hiring (171).

    Saban is 292-71-1 as a college coach, ranking him sixth all time in the FBS in wins and 12th in NCAA college football history regardless of division. He led Toledo to a MAC championship in 1990, his lone season as that program’s coach. He then worked as Bill Belichick’s defensive coordinator with the Cleveland Browns for four seasons before becoming the first Michigan State coach to lead his first three teams to bowl games then taking LSU to the 2003 national title.



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  • Divine intervention? Ivorians say God is on their team’s side after ‘miracles’ at Africa Cup

    Divine intervention? Ivorians say God is on their team’s side after ‘miracles’ at Africa Cup


    ABIDJAN, Ivory Coast — Ivory Coast’s unlikely — some would say miraculous — progression to the Africa Cup of Nations final has convinced locals that God is on their side.

    The host nation has survived several close shaves with elimination thanks to fortune with results in other games and scarcely believable comebacks.

    Late goals in remarkable wins in the knockout round against defending champion Senegal, then Mali, have no other explanation for devout locals other than being the will of God. They’re sure now he will guide Ivory Coast to its third Africa Cup title.

    “Inshallah, God will do it, no doubt,” Simion Diakité told The Associated Press. “It’s a miracle of God.”

    Sébastien Haller, cured after recovering from an ankle injury, fired the team into the final with a 1-0 win over Congo on Wednesday.

    At the Chapelle de l’externat Saint Paul for a service hours before the match, many worshippers wore the national team’s distinctive orange jersey. The preacher, Fr. Aristide Djedje, couldn’t let the service pass without mentioning the Elephants’ semifinal that evening.

    “The way the Elephants, the national team, have been advancing is only a miracle and only God can do that,” Ange Assamoi, one of the congregation, said after the service.

    Ivory Coast’s progression has been anything but typical. Its federation fired the team’s coach after a 4-0 loss to Equatorial Guinea left it on the verge of elimination, then unsuccessfully tried to hire another coach when results in other games meant Ivory Coast squeezed into the last 16 with the last available qualification spot.

    The win over Senegal came despite falling behind in the fourth minute. The win against Mali came despite playing with a player less for the entire second half and extra time. Oumar Diakité (no relation to Simion) scored in extra-time stoppage-time to send Ivory Coast to the semifinals.

    Assamoi said worshipers take their own personal hopes to church, “but today we also have the match in our prayers, that God will give us victory this evening. And God will give us victory this evening.”

    Assamoi’s confidence is shared among Ivorians of different faiths.

    Sy Modeste, one of the many yellow t-shirted security men in Abidjan, said both Muslims and Christians were praying for the same thing.

    “Everybody is praying to God to win the game, and the cup,” Modeste said. “We suppose that we live in Côte d’Ivoire by grace of God. God supports us.”

    Others agreed.

    “It’s thanks to God,” said Yama Cambera, a vendor selling water and refreshments at the side of the road in Treichville, Abidjan. “We’re going to win. Côte d’Ivoire will be having a party.”

    Ivory Coast was without four important players who were suspended against Congo. But the fans were not concerned — no setback is insurmountable anymore.

    “God is supporting us. Because when you’re Ivorian, when you love your country, you have to have confidence,” said Lionelle Kuakou. “We think that the trophy will stay here in Ivory Coast because this is a country of love, of joy, of peace. We welcome everyone here and God knows, so the cup stays here, it’s not going anywhere else, it stays here with us.”

    Mosques and churches never seem far away in Ivory Coast, where Islam and Christianity are together professed by just over 80% of the population, co-existing with those who have no religion, and those who follow the animism that pervaded pre-colonial societies in West Africa.

    The various faiths get along well together in Ivory Coast. The country’s constitution calls for tolerance of all spiritual perspectives and a separation of church and state.

    During games at the tournament, many fans use the halftime break to find a quiet corner or space at the back of the stands to lay down their prayer mats and pray. Supporters kneel with their heads bowed in the same direction.

    But Ivory Coast’s interim coach Emerse Faé is not putting his faith in miracles.

    “We’d rather rely on our mental strength and to tell ourselves that we are in the right spirit. Because it was our spirit that allowed us to achieve miracles like that. But we can’t relax and hide behind the fact that we progressed thanks to a miracle, that it is a sign of destiny,” Faé said before the semifinal.

    “If we want to bring the cup home, we ourselves will have to make the efforts for it. The miracle against Mali did not just fall from the sky — the miracle came because the players believed in it to the end.”

    Ivory Coast faces three-time champion Nigeria in Sunday’s final.

    ___

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



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  • Rivals.com  –  NSD Live: No. 1 prospect David Sanders Jr.

    Rivals.com – NSD Live: No. 1 prospect David Sanders Jr.










    NSD Live: No. 1 prospect David Sanders Jr. – Rivals.com















    Adam Gorney is joined by five-star offensive tackle David Sanders Jr. to get an update on his recruitment.

    Certain Data by Sportradar

    © 2024 Yahoo. All rights reserved.



    Dave Berry and Adam Gorney, Rivals.com Video

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  • Hibernian 1-2 Celtic | Scottish Premiership highlights

    Hibernian 1-2 Celtic | Scottish Premiership highlights

    Highlights from the Scottish Premiership match between Hibernian and Celtic.



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  • Rivals.com  –  NSD Live: Alabama signee Ryan Williams

    Rivals.com – NSD Live: Alabama signee Ryan Williams










    NSD Live: Alabama signee Ryan Williams – Rivals.com















    John Garcia Jr. checks in with five-star wide receiver Ryan Williams to break down his decision to sign with the Crimson Tide.

    Certain Data by Sportradar

    © 2024 Yahoo. All rights reserved.



    John Garcia Jr. and Dave Berry, Rivals.com Video

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  • Sebastien Haller scores unusual volley to give Ivory Coast crucial semi-final lead against DR Congo

    Sebastien Haller scores unusual volley to give Ivory Coast crucial semi-final lead against DR Congo

    Sebastien Haller gives Ivory Coast the lead against DR Congo in the semi-final of AFCON.



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  • Tracking down the people making thousands out of posting fake Man United news online

    Tracking down the people making thousands out of posting fake Man United news online


    Did you know Manchester United have agreements in place to sign superstars Kylian Mbappe and Vinicius Junior? Or that Sir Jim Ratcliffe, the man investing millions into the club, sensationally plans to bring Mason Greenwood back into the fold?

    No? Well, that is because these stories are, in fact, complete nonsense.

    But that has not stopped them gaining significant traction on social media in recent weeks.

    Stories about Manchester United go viral everyday and many of them are completely made up.

    As one of the world’s most-followed clubs, stories about them spread around the world in a way that is simply not the case with other teams.

    Huge social media accounts post or repost falsehoods, plagiarise journalists, and use pictures taken by professional photographers without credit or context, let alone payment — and social media makes it possible for people to make money by publishing this type of content.

    For some, fake news about Manchester United has become an income stream, and The Athletic has tracked down two people for whom this weird world constitutes a business opportunity, as well as two others who say they are losing out because football’s fake news frenzy is harming their livelihood of taking football photographs and selling them to media companies and image libraries.

    “I’ve seen my photos taken, my name taken off my work and false quotes put over my photos by these accounts,” said a photographer who asked to remain anonymous to protect their job. “I’ve challenged them and been blocked. You feel like you’ve been mugged by someone making money out of my stolen work.

    “They’re parasites.”


    ‘I create a clickbait related to the articles’

    Valentine Denoni is a 24-year-old computer science student studying at Federal Polytechnic Oko in Anambra State, south-eastern Nigeria. He admits some of the stories he runs about Manchester United could be false, even those which have been “liked” thousands of times on Facebook and shared to many different groups and pages across the social media site.

    He runs a page called FIFA 2022 WORLD CUP QATAR updates (United Pride), initially set up for the tournament but now regularly posting dubious United stories.

    Early stories were typical of classic football “aggregators”, reposting content from elsewhere on the web, often stripping out nuances and caveats, making the story more interesting and more likely to spread online.

    Often these have a tiny grain of truth in them.

    For example, United forward Marcus Rashford was recently criticised for going on a night out in Belfast and missing training. There have been rumours he may end up leaving the club, with Paris Saint-Germain, previously interested in Rashford, a possible destination.

    However, on the Facebook page, this has morphed into a typo-riddled story about PSG being set to pay a “huge fee” for the England star, something The Athletic’s plugged-in transfer experts have absolutely no reason to believe is well-founded.

    One post on the page which heavily distorts a true story says Anthony Martial is banished from training, claiming his manager, Erik ten Hag, has accused him of “letting the team down” because “he has not been performing well”.

    It is true Martial is out of training and unavailable for around 10 weeks — but the real reason is he is recovering from groin surgery.

    United fans will not see him in squads over the next couple of months but not because of any disciplinary issues, a false accusation that could lead to abuse being directed at him on social media.

    Social media does not just turn a blind eye to falsehoods, it actively encourages them, because fake transfer stories are by definition surprising, so are likely to get more likes and retweets than rehashed versions of truthful stories that can be read elsewhere.

    Denoni’s Facebook page also posts stories that have no truth whatsoever, such as a post saying Ratcliffe is lining up “the largest offer in history” to sign Kylian Mbappe.

    The Athletic tracked down Denoni and he agreed to speak to The Athletic on the phone.

    “I get my articles from many sources but create a clickbait related to the articles,” he said.

    Some are rehashing the genuine stories about Manchester United that crop up every day.

    When pressed, Denoni, who calls himself a “hardcore Manchester United fan”, is unrepentant.

    “Even though some of it’s fake, I just work for the views. Just like every other person out there.”

    Many of these stories all across social media are often accompanied by images taken by professional photographers but they do not receive a penny when their work is used.

    One says social media sites thrive off engagement and are incentivised to get more and more eyeballs on their product, which means things like copyright law can fall by the wayside.

    “Instagram needs photographers, photographers don’t need Instagram,” the photographer said. “It’s so frustrating.”

    Meta, the parent company of Facebook and Instagram, was contacted for comment but did not respond.


    ‘It is too late now to change or delete it’

    A more innocuous example of Manchester United fake news provides an insight into the mindset of the “aggregator accounts” which repurpose news reported by genuine journalists and pump out huge volumes of other content relating to the club to try to build a following.

    As well as breaking news, many of these accounts get engagement by constantly posting other club content like photos, memories of famous games and quotes from club legends.

    Recently, a quote went viral which purported to be from former United forward Robin van Persie, in which he not only praised United but criticised his previous club Arsenal.

    This particular tweet by ‘Manchester United Forever’ has been seen almost three million times, and has been republished many times beyond that across Twitter, Facebook, Instagram and doubtless in other places that journalists cannot see into, such as private WhatsApp groups.

    But the quote is fake. Van Persie never said those words.

    The Athletic asked ‘Manchester United Forever’ if they knew this.

    “We took it from one source online and posted it,” the account said. “We didn’t check if it was true or not but now we see that it is slightly different to what he said truthfully.

    “But we guess now is too late to change or delete it, we have to let that go…”

    This fits a pattern, with material being endlessly recirculated without it being verified and it is often the misinformation that goes viral.

    Many other stories are obviously fake, such as a rumour — spread by a different account — that has been widely read across Facebook that rising star Kobbie Mainoo was unavailable for an FA Cup tie because he had a maths exam.

    Having turned 18 in April, Mainoo has finished his academic studies, and besides, schoolchildren in the UK sit their formal exams in May and June, so this is demonstrably nonsense.


    ‘People are hustling’

    All of Denoni’s social media posts link to his blog, which runs adverts via the Google Ads platform. These ads generate cash and the more people who see them, the more he makes.

    Rehashing information that is already out there in credible outlets is not a great recipe for going viral. But breaking ‘news’, by simply making things up, generates more clicks.

    Although he acknowledges that not all the information he shares about the club he says he loves is accurate, he claims he has a good reason for doing this — making money for his family.

    “I need to push for more for my family,” he says, explaining that he is supporting his siblings following the death of a family member. Using his computer science expertise has enabled him to find a very lucrative niche.

    “I have no option,” he added. “It’s just to save up some funds. At least I am not a scammer.”

    He disputes the accusation his stories are fake, preferring the term “clickbait”, and says he carries out “research” before writing.

    He says recently he has been making about €2,000 (£1,700, $2,200) per month, far higher than the Nigerian average.

    “People here are suffering,” he says. “People are hustling too.”


    Fake news universe

    Denoni is far from the only person making money out of sharing dubious stories about Manchester United on social media.

    ‘Manchester United True fan club’, a page with almost 100,000 likes and followers, recently revealed the ‘BREAKING CONFIRMED NEWS’ that Real Madrid and Brazil forward Vinicius Junior will be joining Manchester United.

    This is nonsense and a bit of further digging reveals the social media post links to a page on a website called ‘365NewsInfo’. This is a larger and more sophisticated operation than Denoni’s Manchester United-focused blog.

    It looks a little more like a genuine news website, with pictures and a smattering of rewritten genuine news mixed in with the outright falsehoods.

    Like United, Arsenal have a huge global fanbase with an insatiable appetite for news, particularly transfer gossip. But neither signed a player in a January transfer window which was unusually quiet, as Premier League clubs grappled with the league’s Profit and Sustainability Rules.

    The website, though, has “broken” lots of fake Arsenal transfer stories about players including Jamal Musiala, Michael Olise and Jarrod Bowen.

    The site goes beyond football, seemingly happy to pump out content about any topic the internet is interested in, including the NBA, the NFL and Taylor Swift.

    In this case, it is not possible to work out who is behind it, although there are some indications it might lead back to Vietnam.


    Two million followers

    The Athletic spoke to another person making money posting dubious news about Manchester United — this time on a far larger scale.

    A page called ‘Manchester United fans’ is “liked” by 1.3 million people.

    This is not quite as absurd in its relentless falsehoods as some of the aforementioned sites and there are various rehashed credible news stories about United in there, as well as facts, photos and quotes.

    However, there is also a good deal of complete nonsense.

    Erling Haaland leaving Manchester City for their cross-city rivals would be one of the most sensational transfers in history if it actually happened — but there is absolutely no indication whatsoever the link is genuine.

    The amateurish post features a very old picture of Haaland when he had short hair, photoshopped onto a Manchester United shirt from many seasons ago.

    Often it can be hard to tell where these posts originate. They take on a life of their own and are shared in massive Facebook groups about the club, some of which have as many as a million members.

    The Haaland example falsely cites journalist Fabrizio Romano as breaking the story.

    Unlike other United pages, this one makes no effort to hide who is behind it. Listed in the ‘about’ section is an email address, giving the name of Irsen Ibi, an Albanian based in New York.

    In a brief phone conversation with The Athletic, Ibi confirmed he was behind the page.

    Pushed on the page’s falsehoods, he said he saw the Haaland post in another Facebook group — falsely citing Romano — and simply shared it again.

    Again, it is the same pattern, of these pages citing each other, or falsely attributing a story to a credible source.

    Ibi says he spends about 20 minutes a day updating the page and it is a valuable income stream.

    Rather than linking to a website running ads, he has a different business model — he encourages “collaboration” with brands that want to advertise through his huge page, though would not be drawn on which companies pay him, or how much they pay.

    Ibi runs another page called ‘Manchester United FC News Now’, which shares identical content and has a similar number of followers, meaning Ibi broadcasts directly to more than 2 million Facebook users.

    This means his pages have a combined reach far bigger than several Premier League clubs, despite the fact much of its content is false.

    But these sorts of pages are where a lot of fans around the world are getting information about their club.


    Does it matter?

    The pressure of being a Manchester United player can be intense, especially in the age of social media, when players are flooded with negativity after a bad performance. This is not helped when fans see stories about players that are fake.

    Social media companies seem to be doing little to stop it.

    Facebook does have rules against sharing misinformation but these generally apply to weightier issues like disputing the medical evidence on Covid-19 vaccines or the fact humans cause climate change.

    Football is rightly viewed as somewhat trivial compared to these issues, although the proliferation of fake news clearly has negative consequences for players, journalists and photographers.

    Manchester United want to address some of the issues involved and are set to launch a “social media community code” aimed at promoting positive and safe engagement online. This comes after a growing number of posts were identified as being abusive across their social media channels. Last year a total of 2.6 million posts were flagged as being racist, homophobic, abusive or discriminatory.

    “Players see what is written, not where it came from,” says former Manchester United assistant manager Mike Phelan. “Players need educating in understanding that false news exists, that someone might have it in for them.”

    The agent of one Manchester United player says the situation “will never change”.

    “Social media companies don’t care or they pretend they do but they don’t,” the agent added. “I don’t think they can actually stop and monitor the billions of people on the channels. It’s out of control and with AI (artificial intelligence) will only get worse. I fear for the next generation.”

    The agent was also sceptical that clubs will do much about the issue because they prioritise “engagement” on social media, even if much of that engagement is toxic or based on falsehoods.

    Although The Athletic managed to track down two of the people making money from fake news about Manchester United, there are many out there who are more careful about covering their tracks.

    For countless other accounts, it is impossible to know who is behind them, and who is pumping out fake Manchester United news every day and making a career out of it.

    (Top photos: Alex Dodd – CameraSport via Getty Images, Ash Donelon/Manchester United via Getty Images, Martin Rickett/PA Images via Getty Images; design: Eamonn Dalton)





    The New York Times

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  • The remote Swedish town that produced a generational NHL talent

    The remote Swedish town that produced a generational NHL talent


    LANDSBRO, Sweden – There are no signs for Landsbro on the long road from Stockholm.

    This village in southern Sweden is so remote, so small, I was told, I would pass it if I didn’t keep my head up.

    Not a single stop sign. Not a single red light. Small like that.

    I was told to take the train from Stockholm if I planned to visit, but, I was cautioned, no train stopped in Landsbro. I would need a rental car to make the last leg of the journey. Why not drive the full four and a half hours instead, I thought? What better way to get a sense for how far out this place really was than by coasting southwest from the largest city in Sweden, with a population of 1.5 million, a place that hums with people and activity, to this quaint village of 1,500 people?

    Trees practically swallowed the road as I zipped past farms and vast empty spaces, heading in the direction of nearby Vetlanda. It wasn’t until I was just outside of town that I came across any hint of Landsbro. There wasn’t a soul in sight as I passed a big white church, the only gas station around, and a barbershop that accepted walk-ins. Finally, after more than 200 miles, I came upon the place where the seeds for a historic NHL career were planted — though you would hardly know it.

    Nothing but the GPS told me I was in the right place.

    Not until, that is, I pulled into the parking lot of the hockey arena. Scrawled in white paint out front were two reserved spaces for local royalty: One for the No. 93 of Johan Franzén, the first player to make it to the NHL from these parts. The other features the No. 65 of Erik Karlsson, one of the greatest players of his generation, a three-time Norris Trophy winner, 15 seasons, 966 games, 795 points, and one of the best Swedes, period, to play in the NHL.

    The snow was starting to fall and darkness was creeping in as I waited for Erik’s younger brother, Pelle, to arrive and show me around. I had only one thought: How the heck did Karlsson make it all the way from here?

    It didn’t take me long to figure it out.


    This place — just two square kilometers — was tiny.

    There’s the pizza joint, Pizzeria Adonis, where the Karlssons still get their pies and which has been run by the same people for the last three decades. There’s the grocery store, the ICA, which closes at 8 every night of the week. Erik still recognizes the workers from when he was a boy.

    There’s a restaurant, Bykrogen, right next to the ICA, which closed after lunch.

    There was a bank when Erik was very young, but “it’s long gone now,” he says.

    “And at one point we did actually have a small café, too,” Erik tells me. “That didn’t last very long.”

    There’s the school, Landsbro Skola, which sits on the main road that winds its way through town, amid the dozens of cozy little bungalows. The school is attached to the arena. The soccer field, where Erik spent most of his time from April to September, sits just down the way.

    Around the corner from there, the lake where Erik, his buddies, and Pelle, would swim on long summer days, where they would nervously stand atop platforms in the water and pelt each other with tennis balls. To grow up in Landsbro was to be active. Swimming, hockey (indoors and outdoors), tennis, soccer, cross-country skiing. “It was never just one thing,” Erik says, adding that as a child of the ’90s, “TV wasn’t really a thing.”

    “I think back then, you gave us a ball and a stick or something and we could play with that for weeks because there wasn’t much else,” Erik says. “We didn’t have many toys. We didn’t have a toy store or anything like that.”

    It was all they knew.

    “It’s not like we were completely isolated,” Erik says, “but we didn’t really have anything (else) and obviously when you were younger you couldn’t really go anywhere on your own until you got a driver’s license. You were kinda confined to where you were.”

    Still, the possibilities felt endless as did the freedom.

    This was small-town Sweden. Nobody locked their doors. Keys were left in cars. Kids were free to walk to school with no supervision. All of Erik’s friends lived just around the corner.

    Everyone knew everyone in Landsbro, so Erik was free to stay out late, especially in the summer, when the sun hangs into the sky well into the night.

    “It just felt like whatever you wanted to do,” Erik says, “you could do.”


    The school that helped shape Erik Karlsson’s early years. (Jonas Siegel / The Athletic)

    Erik was born on the last day of May in 1990. The population in Landsbro that year was just over 1,600.

    That meant no crowds anywhere, ever.

    The arena, with roots in the community that stretch back more than 50 years, was almost always begging for action. Erik, his pals, and his brother were free to pop over for shinny just about any time they liked.

    The arena workers encouraged it. They would even flood the ice afterward.

    And because the arena was attached to the school, Erik and his buddies often zipped over with an hour between classes. Their gear was always waiting for them in wooden storage lockers in the arena’s underbelly.

    The boys would be back to skate some more when school let out. They would return again on weekends when the ice was free. Erik’s parents would often stop by with snacks. It was the kind of formative hockey experience that just wasn’t possible in a bigger place. Erik could get on the ice for upwards of 10 hours a week, some of that time structured through the various teams he played on, much of it not.

    “It was always open doors,” Erik said.

    There was no better place to be — nowhere else really to be — from October until March when the days are crushingly short, the “bad time” they call it.

    The seeds of that rink, where Erik Karlsson’s journey began, were laid in 1969. It was a wholly local effort, Pelle tells me as we sit and chat in an employee kitchen where jerseys and life-size pictures of Karlsson and Franzén line the walls. The locals, Pelle explains, assembled the arena piece by piece with wood donated from the nearby lumber mill where Erik’s dad, Jonas, would later work driving a forklift.

    They built it on nights and weekends. Spouses would stop by with home-cooked meals.

    “Most of the rinks in Sweden are made of concrete and steel. They’re so much colder,” Pelle says. “This is kinda warm because it’s made out of wood.”

    It’s still stunning all these years later, almost like a gigantic log cabin with ice in the middle.

    Hanging up top are two banners: One marking Franzén’s 2008 Stanley Cup with the Detroit Red Wings, the other bearing an especially large No. 65 for Erik.

    Pelle looks almost exactly like Erik and was even mistaken for his brother during a visit to Pittsburgh last fall.

    If Pelle was the good child, Erik was the troublemaker, the prankster always up to something. Erik was the “black sheep” of the Karlsson family, the one who frequently found himself in the kind of mischief Pelle would only hear later from the other kids.

    The famous swagger that would one day define a career that will eventually land him in the Hall of Fame, Erik had that from the start, Pelle says, which is odd, “because our parents are kind of modest and quiet.”

    Erik, he says, has “always believed in himself.”

    Pelle moved back to Landsbro with his wife and three kids after his playing career came to an end. He led me into the cafeteria, where the wooden walls are dotted with black and white photos of the people who constructed this rink decades ago along with Karlsson-related newspaper clippings from when he starred for the Senators and Team Sweden.

    Pelle seems to know everyone working in the arena — still. He played semi-pro for years across Sweden, a defenseman just like his older brother.

    These were mostly the same arena workers from when he and Erik were young boys. He led us into the dressing room where Jonas Karlsson once played, the first defenseman in the Karlsson clan, and where Erik and Pelle bopped around as kids.

    Jonas retired when the boys were born. A later comeback attempt was thwarted by injury.

    “I never really got to see him play, because he retired so he could have us,” Erik says of himself, Pelle, and their younger sister, Mikaela. “But he always brought us around and created the passion, I think, amongst me and my siblings. We lived an active lifestyle, I think, from day one.”


    The Karlssons, the early years: From left, Pelle, Mikaela, Erik and their dad, Jonas. (Courtesy Pelle Karlsson)

    Pelle chases down one of the arena workers to see if we can pop into the “gymnastics hall.” “Do you know what floorball is?” he asks. It was here, in a gymnasium with wooden ceilings and walls painted lime green, where the boys were free to play floorball (aka floor hockey) whenever they chose.

    There were 10, maybe 15 of them. They would stuff a Bandi Ball with plastic bags to weigh it down. Fights were frequent. Nobody was better than Erik.

    Hockey was ingrained in the culture of Landsbro and Erik’s extended family: Erik’s uncle, Thomas Nordh, another local legend, was famed for winning the SHL crown. Daniel Ljungkvist, a defenseman who had a long career in Sweden, was married to a cousin. Pelle still plays in the same beer league as Franzén.

    Most kids, if they dreamed of a future at all in hockey, dreamed of doing it in the Swedish Hockey League. “But you always knew you probably would end up a carpenter or a forklift guy,” Pelle says.


    For Karlsson, hockey was just one love among many. Something he enjoyed in the winter months. It wasn’t a dream of his to reach the NHL.

    In fact, for a long while, he thought he might actually pursue a career in soccer. “I was at the level where I had to make a decision,” Erik says. “Either I go down the soccer route or I go down the hockey route. My dad played hockey growing up. My brother played it and he was pretty good at it.

    “I think it was just more convenience than anything that I ended up picking hockey instead of soccer.”

    Pelle grins when he hears this, Erik becoming a professional footballer. “He says he was better than he was.”

    To this day, Erik considers himself “more of an athlete than just a hockey player.”

    NHL games were hardly ever on TV, and if they were, they were in the middle of the night. Erik and Pelle knew of the league and its stars almost entirely through video games and, of course, from Franzén, who didn’t make his NHL debut for Detroit until 2005 when Erik was already 15. (Which might explain Erik comparing his game to the hard-hitting Niklas Kronwall on draft day.)

    “I didn’t dedicate myself to hockey fully until I was 16, 17,” he says. “Hockey was just my occupation, or what I did, from October to March.

    “Once I became a teenager and started learning about the various options in life, there was a period of my time where I wasn’t really sure if hockey was what I wanted to pursue full time. Obviously, I’m lucky and I’m happy that I ended up choosing that path, but at the time, it wasn’t a given.”


    Everyone in Landsbro knew Erik was good, including Erik, but they didn’t really know how good. How could they when Erik was competing only locally?

    They found out for sure when Erik went out for the Swedish national team at 15. He was small and skinny, but played like no one else, as Victor Hedman, a teammate and future Norris Trophy winner himself, recalls.

    “You were in awe of his skill and the way he played the game,” says Hedman, the Tampa Bay Lightning defenseman. “He played the same way back then that he does to this day.”

    Erik was “very thin” but man, Hedman says, could he skate, make plays, and shoot the puck. Erik played boldly, even then. All that free time on the rink in Landsbro sowed the seeds for the kind of creativity that would one day lead Karlsson to stack up 101 points in a single NHL season, a number that’s been eclipsed among NHL defensemen by only Bobby Orr, Paul Coffey, Al MacInnis and Brian Leetch.

    Hedman remembers Erik as a funny kid with “a lot of tricks up his sleeve.” He was outgoing. He could brighten a room. And when they got on the ice, Erik was unafraid to take risks and make mistakes.

    “He trusted his talents and he believed in himself,” Hedman says.

    It was that swagger that couldn’t really be explained.

    “He has that perfect personality,” Hedman says, “when it comes to playing hockey.”

    It’s why, in Hedman’s estimation, Erik was a star almost from the day he entered the NHL with the Ottawa Senators, beating out Nicklas Lidstrom, Shea Weber and Zdeno Chara, among others, for his first Norris Trophy at age 21 in only his third season.

    Only Orr has done it younger.


    Erik Karlsson, accepting his third Norris Trophy last year in Nashville. (Jason Kempin / Getty Images )

    It’s why, as Pelle remembers it, Erik could score an overtime winner in his very first game for Frölunda, and why he always crushes it in the playoffs. (Erik has 34 points in his last 38 playoff games for the Senators and San Jose Sharks.)

    Though he hails from northern Sweden, Hedman can tell almost exactly where Erik is from by hearing him speak. “It’s different dialects in Sweden too,” Hedman says.

    Hedman had somehow heard of tiny Landsbro, but never visited. Of his hometown, Erik told him simply, “That it’s small, very small.”

    Which made it all the more special that day when Erik was officially welcomed into the NHL in June 2008.

    The Karlssons hosted a house party in celebration. It just happened to be the midsummer holiday, which commemorates the longest day of the year. In other words, two celebrations in one.

    They pulled up a livestream that night and crowded around the computer to watch as fellow Swede and Senators’ captain Daniel Alfredsson announced to the crowd in Ottawa that Erik — all 157 pounds of him — was the pick at 15th overall.

    “We had no idea who would pick him,” Pelle says.

    It was a big deal wherever he went.

    “The whole Landsbro, everyone roots for him,” Pelle says. “Obviously Johan, he kinda paved the way. And so everyone followed his journey and then Erik came. It obviously was huge.”

    Unlike Pelle, Erik isn’t moving back to Landsbro.

    He tries to make it home once every year to see his brother, see his parents, see everything just the way he left it. “It’s easy to come back home and walk in the grocery store and it’s the same family running it, the same people there,” Erik says. “Everybody’s just a little bit older.”

    Landsbro felt almost sealed in time that way. The Landsbro I visited almost identical to the Landsbro that made Erik Karlsson.

    Erik Karlsson was no longer here. But this was still home for him.

    “He’s proud of where he’s from,” says Hedman. “Home is always home. You’re always proud of where you come from.”

    I could feel that when Pelle finally led me out of the arena and back into the cold. It was 5:30, fully dark, and entirely quiet. How did Erik Karlsson make it from here? Driving back to Stockholm, I felt like I knew.

    (Illustration: Sean Reilly / The Athletic. Photos: Joe Sargent / NHLI via Getty Images, Jonas Siegel / The Athletic, Courtesy Pelle Eriksson)





    The New York Times

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  • 49ers’ Christian McCaffrey looks to follow his father’s Super Bowl-winning footsteps

    49ers’ Christian McCaffrey looks to follow his father’s Super Bowl-winning footsteps


    LAS VEGAS — Lisa McCaffrey is nervous as Super Bowl LVIII approaches on Sunday.

    “I’m trying to stay calm,” she said over coffee Monday in a hotel lobby on The Strip. “I’m trying to stay busy. I’m trying not to think about it until opening kickoff.”

    It’s a familiar feeling for McCaffrey. Her husband, Ed McCaffrey, won three titles as a wide receiver for the San Francisco 49ers and Denver Broncos. And now her son, Christian McCaffrey, is set to play a central role when the 49ers take on the Kansas City Chiefs for all the marbles Sunday.

    “I’m probably even more nervous this time because it’s one of my kids,” she said. “But I definitely was stressed out back then, too.”

    That past was immortalized in magazine form 25 years ago, right after Ed McCaffrey won his final Super Bowl with the Broncos in January 1999.

    Denver had beaten the Atlanta Falcons. That’s when a 2 1/2-year-old Christian McCaffrey, wearing Ed’s No. 87 jersey that was far too big for him, sprinted across layers of confetti on the field in Miami to produce an image that Sports Illustrated would feature as one of its full-spread lead photos.

    Her husband had won another championship, so that stress was gone. But Lisa suddenly faced another worry as her young son was weaving in and out of traffic on a busy post-Super Bowl football field.

    “I think I lost Christian at one point,” she said. “I remember being exasperated.”


    Christian McCaffrey and his older brother Max run on the field in Miami after the Broncos’ Super Bowl win in 1999. (Robert Beck / Sports Illustrated via Getty Images)

    The future NFL star was already a prodigious runner then.

    “He started walking around seven months, which was unusually early,” Lisa McCaffrey said. “I know that sounds bizarre, you can not believe me — but I swear that’s the truth. Ask his pediatrician. He was doing things his mind was not ready to do. It was like, ‘Please, don’t hang on the chandelier.’

    “Christian’s brain was moving at a normal rate, but his body was moving faster.”

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    He was also ready to play tackle football at an exceptionally young age, and one such game featuring his older brother, Max McCaffrey, and several other players’ children broke out on the Super Bowl field in Miami that night.

    Christian McCaffrey says he was too young to recall that night, but Kyle Shanahan remembers the postgame scenes of that era. The 49ers coach was a college freshman at the time and his dad, Mike Shanahan, was the Broncos coach who had just helped Denver to back-to-back Super Bowl titles.

    “I always loved Ed and I knew that he had a bunch of crazy boys,” Kyle Shanahan said. “They all just played tackle football outside the games together and killed each other all the time.”

    Two decades later, Ed and Christian McCaffrey have a chance to become just the second father-son duo to win a Super Bowl as players with the same team, joining Steve and Zak DeOssie for the New York Giants. And the chance to do so has the younger McCaffrey astounded by all the 49ers’ links to the past.

    “It’s surreal, man,” he said. “Not just with Kyle and Mike Shanahan. My dad played with (49ers QB coach) Brian Griese. He played with (49ers co-running backs coach) Anthony Lynn. A lot of Kubiak connections. Bobby Turner was the running backs coach when my dad was in Denver.

    “Even though I didn’t grow up in San Francisco, it feels like home to me. All the names that are in our building are the same names that I remember my dad would say, and it’s just the next generation of them. It is really cool to be able to go to work with all of those guys, knowing that we’re cut from the same cloth.”

    Perhaps it’s not surprising, then, that the current 49ers vividly remind the McCaffreys of the 1994 team that won the franchise’s most recent Super Bowl title.

    After the New York Giants cut Ed McCaffrey in 1994, he signed with the star-studded 49ers.

    “That’s when I really learned what great culture was all about,” McCaffrey said in Las Vegas on Tuesday. “We were welcomed by everyone on the team.”

    McCaffrey was unsure about his chances of making the 49ers’ roster. Center Bart Oates and his wife, Michelle, welcomed Ed, Lisa and their newborn son Max — the first of four McCaffrey boys, born in May 1994 — into their home so that the young couple wouldn’t have to buy or rent a house amid all that uncertainty.

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    McCaffrey ended up making the roster. He and Lisa experienced the entire season’s journey, from the early blowout loss to the Philadelphia Eagles to the monumental NFC Championship Game win over the Dallas Cowboys to Super Bowl XXIX, a blowout victory for the 49ers over the San Diego Chargers.

    “I remember that team feeling like it was a family,” Lisa McCaffrey said. “Everyone liked each other. They were kind to each other. There were team dinners that included all the wives. Even us — Ed was low man on the totem pole behind Jerry Rice. He barely sniffed the field, but they treated everybody really, really well — like they do now. I had never been part of an NFL team that was as warm and kind and open.”

    That openness carried forward into the decades ahead. Harris Barton, a fixture on the 49ers offensive line of that era, hosted many of those 1994 team dinners. Twenty years later, when Christian McCaffrey enrolled at Stanford, Barton and his wife, Megan — who still live in Palo Alto — opened their doors to the next generation.

    “When Christian would get sick at Stanford, he’d go over there and they’d take care of him,” Lisa McCaffrey said. “They really took him under their wing.”

    Said Ed McCaffrey: “From Steve Young right on down to every guy on the team, they welcomed us with open arms. It was a completely unselfish team where guys competed against each other, but rooted for each other at the same time and pushed each other to be the best. There was such a high standard and expectation as a player to perform well and live up to their standard.

    “A lot of those players, even though I was only there for about seven months, are dear friends to this day. It felt like we were there 10 years.”

    McCaffrey would follow Mike Shanahan, the offensive coordinator of that 49ers team, to Denver after Shanahan signed on to be the head coach of the Broncos in 1995. The era that followed saw Christian McCaffrey enter the world. It also saw the most important developmental years of Kyle Shanahan’s career as a player.

    The future 49ers coach, a high school wide receiver at the time, began idolizing Ed McCaffrey.

    “(Christian’s) dad was my hero,” Shanahan said. “I cut my shoes like him. I wore my shoulder pads like him.”

    Shanahan said he even shook his head after making catches in a way that resembled McCaffrey. His jersey number in high school and at college in Texas, 87, was also an homage to Ed.

    “I didn’t know that until after he had grown up,” Ed McCaffrey said, laughing. “I’m honored and flattered. If I had known he was emulating me, I would have behaved a little better.”


    Ed McCaffrey won three Super Bowls as a player — and his No. 87 was later worn by Kyle Shanahan during his high school and college playing career. (Allen Kee / Getty Images)

    Both Ed and Lisa McCaffrey were thrilled when the 49ers traded with the Carolina Panthers for their son last season.

    “We knew he was going to an incredible organization,” Lisa said. “There was a winning atmosphere that we were familiar with all those years ago. And you don’t have that on every winning team. You just don’t.”

    Christian McCaffrey, meanwhile, isn’t shy about expressing how much he’d enjoy sharing the title of Super Bowl champion with his father. He’s one win away from that.

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    “It would definitely would be cool,” he said. “We were fortunate enough to have a dad who won three Super Bowls, had a lot of success, played 13 years, but also did it the right way and was a great father. He taught all of us how to play the game and do it the right way. To be able to share that moment with him would be awesome.”

    It’s a moment that Kyle Shanahan would love to see, too. Like the McCaffreys, he’s been part of this 49ers fabric for a long time. And he therefore knows what a Super Bowl victory would mean, not just to the current team but also to the larger story of connection that underlies all of this.

    “It’s really special to think about it now and the history we have with all that stuff,” Shanahan said. “We’re back, and nothing’s really changed.”

    (Top photos: Cooper Neill / Getty Images and Robert Beck / Sports Illustrated via Getty Images)





    The New York Times

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  • New ESPN, Fox, Warner Bros. streaming venture won’t solve much — at least not yet

    New ESPN, Fox, Warner Bros. streaming venture won’t solve much — at least not yet


    LAS VEGAS — One day, the brilliant TV executives are all going to unite and put their programming under one roof. It will solve all your sports viewing problems. They will call it cable.

    This new ESPN, Fox, Warner Bros. Discovery venture is not it. At least not yet.

    There is still significance to three of the biggest brands in sports teaming up this fall to give fans another option. The Great Rebundling is upon us, but it is far from solved.

    For the consumer, you won’t need this venture-to-be-named later and, my initial bet is most of you will go with that option. The service will be owned equally by the three sides, but each partner will receive the same fee as they earn from cable or YouTubeTV, according to sources with knowledge of the agreement. Just ESPN, the singular network, receives around $12 per month from cable subscribers.

    So what does that mean for you? The estimated price for the new venture when you add ESPN, Fox and WBD Sports together likely will be around $40 to $50 per month. There probably are some sports fans who would like to save a little money with this arrangement, but it is hard to believe there are a lot.

    You already can watch nearly everything that this trio offers through places like YouTube TV for around $70 and change per month. If you want this option, it is already available, with even more channels to boot.

    After a year of talks between the three sides, there is weight in seeing these superpowers come together, and it is very understandable why they did it. It is no-risk, all-reward for them. This “sports skinny bundle” — as the cool media kids like to call it — is worth a go.

    Fox Sports moves into the sports subscription space for the first time with this baby step. They have been the ones to watch their competitors pour billions into subscription streaming as they stood on the sidelines patiently biding their time. Their executives have thought rebundling is the way to go, so this gives them an initial shot.

    ESPN has been planning to go direct-to-consumer with its entire product by 2025 with the possibility of 2024. Now, it will start this fall with tag-team partners.

    This new arrangement doesn’t deter ESPN’s previous plans. The network still intends to have a stand-alone ESPN direct-to-consumer product by next year. Plus, it still could forge ahead with an equity partnership with the NFL or other leagues and/or digital players.

    WBD Sports has an always-underrated menu of rights to bring to the new product, from the NBA and MLB playoffs to March Madness.


    The new sports streaming venture is a step toward rebundling sports rights, but an incomplete one. Sunday’s Super Bowl on CBS, for instance, would not be on the platform. (Ethan Miller / Getty Images)

    But the reason these entities don’t have anything complete here just yet is the exclusion of other major players — like CBS, for example.

    This “sports skinny bundle” is a little too skinny to include Patrick Mahomes, Christian McCaffrey and Taylor Swift this weekend, as CBS has the Super Bowl this year. More problematic when you compare this new product to YouTube: If you want to watch March Madness, the CBS games will not be on it. It will not be one-stop shopping.

    The significance of this deal could increase down the road, as the names on the press release suggested. The quotes were from the top — Disney’s Bob Iger, Fox’s Lachlan Murdoch and WBD’s David Zaslav.

    However, if they want to fight the nearly unlimited pockets of Amazon, Apple or Netflix, if those digital behemoths become even more serious about sports rights, Iger, Murdoch and Zaslav could have a stronger hand as a trio.

    The new entity will have its own CEO, and it is said it will operate independently. His or her bosses, though, will still be Iger, Murdoch and Zaslav, so how independent will it be? Where could it lead in the future? Will they be able to get along? If the questions can be answered positively, it could lead to something even bigger.

    For you, the fan, maybe this new CEO will find a way to put everything you want to watch under one simple service. Until then, this venture won’t change that much for most of you.

    go-deeper

    GO DEEPER

    Andrew Marchand: Sports media is my passion, and I can’t wait for what’s next

    (Photo of Fox Sports’ Michael Strahan interviewing the San Francisco 49ers’ Christian McCaffrey after last month’s NFC Championship Game: Kevin Sabitus / Getty Images)





    The New York Times

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  • What are the NFL’s gambling rules at the Super Bowl?

    What are the NFL’s gambling rules at the Super Bowl?


    The NFL’s rules on gambling have generated widespread criticism and questions leading up to the Super Bowl in Las Vegas, as the league aims to balance its sportsbook partnerships and policies preventing players from betting on games.

    Gambling was a major topic of NFL commissioner Roger Goodell’s annual Super Bowl news conference Monday, when he said the “integrity of the league” was the top priority.

    “We want to make sure that when people are watching NFL games, they know the action on the field is genuine and without any outside influence, ” Goodell said.

    With the marquee sports event days away in the U.S. betting hub, it’s worth revisiting the NFL’s policies for its players and how the league’s stance has changed over time.

    NFL rules on sports betting

    The league has long maintained that players are not allowed to bet on NFL events. Its 2023 gambling policy states that players can never place, solicit or facilitate a bet — either directly or through a third party — on “any NFL game, practice, or other event, such as the Combine or Draft.”

    Players are also not allowed to participate in anyone else’s NFL betting activities, such as asking someone to place an NFL-related bet on their behalf or allowing another person to use their account to place an NFL-related bet.

    Additionally, players may not enter a sportsbook during the NFL season (from the Hall of Fame Game through the Super Bowl) “except to access an area outside of a sportsbook,” the rules state. For example, a player can pass through a sportsbook “where necessary” to get to a separate part of an entertainment, casino or hotel complex.

    At the Super Bowl, the Kansas City Chiefs and San Francisco 49ers are both staying in Lake Las Vegas, about 25 miles east of the Strip.

    GO DEEPER

    Why the Chiefs and 49ers are staying in Lake Las Vegas, not on The Strip

    The league’s rules are also particular about when and where players may gamble.

    Players are prohibited from gambling in team or league facilities (such as practice facilities, stadiums and offices) or while traveling with their teams (such as on a team plane or in a team hotel) to participate in an NFL game or in-season team activity.

    Can NFL players bet on other sports?

    Players are allowed to bet on sports other than the NFL in states where betting is legal, subject to the NFL’s rules on entering a sportsbook and betting from the workplace.

    For example, a player may not place a bet from an NFL facility even if the bet is not on an NFL game. Detroit Lions receiver Jameson Williams and Tennessee Titans offensive tackle Nicholas Petit-Frere were disciplined this season for violating the rule. They originally received six-game suspensions, but the league updated its gambling policy in September, reducing the penalty from six games to four.

    Betting on non-NFL events in the workplace or while working now carries a two-game suspension for the first violation, six games for a second offense and at least one year for a third offense.

    What are the gambling rules for the Super Bowl?

    Members of the two Super Bowl teams, the Chiefs and 49ers, are prohibited from participating in any form of gambling, including casino games and betting on any sport.

    Players on the other 30 teams may engage in “legal gambling” — but not on the NFL, and they cannot go in a sportsbook until the Super Bowl is over, the league said.

    Jeff Miller, the NFL executive vice president of communications, public affairs and policy, said last week: “The rules are no different for the participating teams’ players and other personnel as they would be for any other game: When on business, there is no gambling, whether it be sports gambling or otherwise.

    “And any player, coach, personnel, yours truly, who would be caught or identified gambling at a casino would be eligible for the disciplinary process, and that would be addressed in the normal course of discipline as we would any player or other personnel who there was evidence that was violating the rules around gambling.”

    NFL’s disciplinary process for gambling violations

    Violations of the NFL’s gambling policy are decided by Goodell or his designee on a case-by-case basis, according to the 2023 rules.

    “Discipline may include, without limitation, a fine, suspension, termination of employment and/or banishment from the NFL for life,” the rules state.

    Below are the baseline suspensions for violations of the gambling policy, “with possible upward or downward adjustments,” according to the rules, which note: “Nothing in this policy precludes the commissioner from imposing more discipline for other types of prohibited conduct.”

    • Betting on NFL: Indefinite suspension, minimum of one year or minimum of two years if a player bets on an NFL game involving his team
    • Actual or attempted game fixing: Permanent banishment from the NFL
    • Inside information and tipping: Indefinite suspension, minimum of one year
    • Third-party or proxy betting: Indefinite suspension, minimum of one year
    • Betting (other than NFL) in the workplace or while working:
      • First violation: Two-game suspension without pay
      • Second violation: Six-game suspension without pay
      • Third violation: Suspension without pay for at least one year

    How has the NFL’s stance on gambling changed?

    The Athletic’s Mike Jones explained in a recent article how the NFL’s complicated relationship with sports betting has evolved:

    Since the legalization of sports gambling, the NFL has worked hard to walk a tightrope when it comes to partnering with companies such as Caesars, FanDuel and DraftKings and also ensuring that players avoid activities that would compromise the integrity of the game. The league has yet to release figures on how much revenue partnerships with gambling companies generate, but according to the American Gaming Association (AGA), the NFL brings in $2.3 billion per year in income because of those deals.

    League officials long frowned upon betting on NFL games and worried that involvement would lead to player involvement and questions about the temptation to fix games. But once the Supreme Court in 2018 overturned the Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act, they felt the need to evolve as well.

    “The relationship that the league has with sports gambling changed for one specific reason, and that is because the world changed,” Miller said on the league’s efforts to promote responsible sports betting practices. “The Supreme Court overturned (the Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act) back in 2018, five years and some odd months ago. As a result, we had to rethink how we engage with legalized sports gambling, and that’s what we’ve done. … And we’ll continue to look at and examine how we do that in the hopes that we can be the best we can to protect the integrity of the game in a world where the rules changed.”

    Required reading

    (Photo: Ethan Miller / Getty Images)





    The New York Times

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  • Why DraftKings and FanDuel are in a stalemate with Las Vegas

    Why DraftKings and FanDuel are in a stalemate with Las Vegas


    Before the NFL moved one of its teams to Las Vegas and well before it considered hosting a Super Bowl there, DraftKings and FanDuel were leaders in the emerging world of daily fantasy sports (DFS). That is, until May 14, 2018, when the Professional Sports and Amateur Protection Act of 1992 (PASPA) was repealed, clearing the way for individual states to legalize sports betting.

    Due to their yearslong investments in DFS, DraftKings and FanDuel not only had a huge foothold in the market for sports bettors, but also had the infrastructure to build the best sports betting apps.

    Years later, the big head start has allowed the two companies to dominate the American sports betting market: According to the most recent data from research firm Eilers & Krejcik Gaming, in November, FanDuel controlled 35.77% of gross gaming revenue, while DraftKings controlled 33.54% — a staggering 69.31% of the total sports betting market share.

    And yet, there’s one coveted legal betting state that the “Big Two” have yet to crack: the state where it all began.

    Nevada has had legal sports betting longer than any other state, establishing it in 1949 along with all other forms of gambling. The jurisdiction and its epicenter in Las Vegas have built up a robust in-person sportsbook network. However, the state’s law dictates that any bettor wishing to use an online or mobile sportsbook must first register in-person at a physical sportsbook.

    This makes it all but impossible for digital-age sportsbooks like DraftKings, FanDuel, ESPN BET and Fanatics to establish themselves in the Silver State without first investing millions of dollars in owning a resort casino there.

    Furthermore, DraftKings and FanDuel aren’t even able to offer DFS in the state after the Nevada Gaming Control Board ruled in 2015 that the subsection of fantasy sports is actually gambling, rather than a game of skill, and thus requires a full gaming license to operate there.

    While the NGCB would “not speculate on the future business plans of gaming licensees or potential applicants,” longtime residents of the Vegas’ sports betting scene seem to understand what is happening in the background.

    “We’re still a cowboy town that’s controlled by some very powerful people,” professional sports bettor Bill Krackomberger told ESPN. “I’m not against it, I love it. But they just don’t want that competition of the DraftKings and FanDuels taking over.”

    In-person sign-up requirements are not without precedent; Illinois and Iowa both had them in place during the early days of their legal sports betting experimentation, but dispatched with them in 2022 and 2021, respectively.

    However, clearing that hurdle in those states likely would have been more of a priority for the big online books, especially in the case of Illinois, which brought in $73 million in sports betting revenue in November, trailing only New York ($151M) and New Jersey ($96M) according to the American Gaming Association’s most recent report.

    Where did Nevada rank? Tenth, bringing in only $41 million in sports betting revenue for the month.

    “People think the sports betting capital of the world is here in Las Vegas. Far from the truth,” Krackomberger said. “New York is now the boss … It’s kind of a rite of passage to be from New York and be a sports bettor.”

    With Nevada accounting for 5% of national sports betting revenue and 1% of all online gambling revenue when including online casino games, being in Nevada “is not a must, not even close, for FanDuel and DraftKings,” said Eilers & Krejcik’s Chris Krafcik.

    Smaller operations — such as Splash Sports, which largely focuses on DFS and pools — simply don’t see the value in trying to make a name for themselves in the nation’s most famous betting market due to the exorbitant barriers to entry.

    “I don’t see the ability for even the largest incumbents to break through anytime soon,” said the company’s CMO Kyle Christensen. “And I don’t know that we need to. It would be nice to have, especially from a stance of having an experience. … But for the large part, I just don’t see anybody getting in anytime soon.”

    Christensen understands that the established Vegas casinos have “earned their time in the sun,” but the old-money mindset could be having a negative effect on a sports betting landscape that is increasingly adapting to the digital age.

    “You’ve always got to contend with the endemic local operators in a given market if you are pursuing access to that market from outside,” Gambling.com Group CEO Charles Gillespie told ESPN. “But this is fundamentally an issue of modernization of policies and regulations.”

    As any veteran sports bettor will say, shopping around the market for the best line is a must if one wants to be a long-term winner. While that’s technically still possible in Las Vegas and some smaller apps even exist there, 21st century bettors are surely more accustomed to the convenience of simply pulling out their phone to shop, rather than having to schlep themselves around The Strip to find the best deal.

    Krackomberger, for example, says he sometimes flies to other states to bet with DraftKings and FanDuel because he needs them “in [his] arsenal in order to be successful and have a higher ROI.” For avid sports bettors coming to Vegas for a long weekend with friends, not having the Big Two on the menu could be a disappointment.

    “Who’s the loser? It’s the people of Nevada and all the tourists that go to Las Vegas,” Gillespie said. “It is anti-consumer, at the end of the day, to not allow people to be able to use more than one sportsbook when they’re in the American capital of gambling.”

    In the meantime, the traditional and online sportsbooks alike will use the Super Bowl’s “obvious acquisition opportunity,” as Gillespie puts it, to gather more users into their empire: BetMGM and FanDuel are the only two sports betting companies confirmed to have ads during the big game.

    With so many casual and potential new bettors watching — and a record 67.8 million Americans expected to wager on the event, per the American Gaming Association — the stalemate can wait a little while longer from the books’ perspective.



    Doug Greenberg

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  • Chiefs’ Thuney (pec) still hopeful for SB return

    Chiefs’ Thuney (pec) still hopeful for SB return

    LAKE LAS VEGAS, Nevada — Kansas City Chiefs All-Pro left guard Joe Thuney is holding out dwindling hope he’ll be able to play in Super Bowl LVIII after missing the AFC Championship Game with a pectoral injury.

    “Feeling alright,” Thuney said Wednesday. “Just trying to control what I can control and I think we’ll know more as the game gets closer.”

    Chiefs head coach Andy Reid said Thuney’s chances to be active for the game are “slim.” Nick Allegretti is preparing to fill in for Thuney, a three-time Super Bowl champion, as he did in Kansas City’s victory at Baltimore two weeks ago.

    “Four Super Bowls in five years, it’s hard to fathom. Definitely emotional last week,” Allegretti said of his chance to start at Baltimore. “It definitely doesn’t get old.”

    Thuney said he was “so proud” of Allegretti’s performance and expects him to excel if he’s back in the starting role this week.

    “Not trying to think too much, do what I can each day,” Thuney said.

    Thuney, 31, started the first 18 games of the season, including the wild-card round against the Miami Dolphins. His injury typically requires a recovery of four to six weeks. He was injured in the divisional playoff win at Buffalo on Jan. 21.



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  • Ignitable cakes, sweatshirts and more. Travis Kelce, Taylor Swift gear flies off store shelves

    Ignitable cakes, sweatshirts and more. Travis Kelce, Taylor Swift gear flies off store shelves


    KANSAS CITY, Mo. — An ignitable cake burns away a Kansas City Chiefs logo to reveal pop superstar Taylor Swift ‘s image underneath. Prayer candles feature the Grammy winner and her star tight end boyfriend Travis Kelce. Sweatshirts are emblazoned with “Kelce’s Best Catch” and “Go Kansas City Swiftie.”

    With the Chiefs preparing to face off against the San Francisco 49ers in Kansas City’s fourth Super Bowl appearance in five years, stores can hardly keep in stock any of the caps, sweatshirts and other odds and ends (some odder than others) commemorating the sports and pop crossover romance.

    Highlights of their courting are featured in the merch. On tour in Buenos Aires, for instance, Swift changed a lyric in her song “Karma” from “Karma is the guy on the screen” to “Karma is the guy on the Chiefs.” Now Karma sweatshirts are proliferating, part of the surge of Chiefs merchandise hitting store shelves in Kansas City and far beyond.

    “I think it’s amazing,” said Katie Mabry van Dieren, owner of Shop Local KC, which sells merchandise made by local artists, including the Karma sweatshirts. “I have never shipped so many items from our stores to different states.”

    She said she thought the busiest weekend would be when Kansas City hosted the NFL draft in April. But she said Swift’s The Eras Tour concert stop at Arrowhead Stadium over the summer blew that away.

    The July concert also was what set the stage for the relationship. Kelce was thwarted in his effort to woo the superstar with a friendship bracelet. But the romantic gesture, and public admission of defeat on his “New Heights” podcast, caught Swift’s attention nonetheless. It also fueled a hot market for Chiefs-themed friendship bracelets.

    “I hope Taylor and Travis stay together forever,” van Dieren said. “That would be great for us.”

    About 73% of adults say they plan to watch the game this year, about 10% higher than in recent previous years. And the romance that has been dominating headlines throughout the NFL season might be helping drive interest.

    The “Taylor Bowl” is what Maddie Schmitz, owner of Something Sweet by Maddie Lou in the Minneapolis suburb of Coon Rapids, is calling this Sunday’s contest in Las Vegas.

    The self-described Swiftie is behind the ignitable, so-called burn-away cakes. She uses an edible image printer with edible inks to print the Chiefs- and Swift-themed images on two sheets of — you guessed it — edible paper.

    “A lot of women are ordering these, in secret and then bringing them to the Super Bowl party to surprise their husbands because it is a whole Chiefs-themed cake on the outside, but then on the inside reveals the Taylor Swift love that all of the females seem to have for her,” Schmitz said.

    She isn’t the only romance confectioner. Dolce Bakery, in the suburb of Prairie Village, Kansas, has an entire “Swiftie Collection” of heart-shaped cakes it is hawking.

    Pre-game news conferences are sprinkled with questions about the songstress.

    After Swift earned her fourth career Grammy for album of the year on Sunday, Kelce vowed that he has to “bring home some hardware.” Even NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell was asked a few times about Swift, who was front-and-center in the stands when Kelce scored a touchdown while leading the Chiefs to a 17-10 victory over the Baltimore Ravens in the AFC title game.

    Kansas City Mayor Quinton Lucas said the city has been lucky to have experienced the economy jolt. “She is welcome,” he said in a pre-playoff statement, “to stay forever.”

    Anything Swift wears is particularly hot. For instance, a ring bearing Kelce’s jersey No. 87 is backordered after it was spotted on Swift’s finger.

    The ring’s maker, Emily Bordner, from eb & Company, suspects that Donna Kelce bought the ring for her son’s star-studded sweetheart. The Kansas City store also gave the superstar of NFL moms (her oldest son, Jason Kelce, is a center for the Philadelphia Eagles) a pair of sold-out earrings bearing her youngest’s number on a Chiefs jersey. Swift has since been spotted wearing those, too.

    It’s been all hands on deck ever since, with Bordner’s husband, mother and all her friends enlisted to help out.

    “Bananas,” she said. “It’s been absolutely bananas. I don’t think I’ve ever worked this hard in my entire life, hands down. Absolutely not.”

    At Westside Storey, it all started when Swift placed an order last fall. She later was spotted wearing a hat and sweatshirt the Kansas City boutique sent her, recalled Chris Harrington, the store’s owner. He said he initially thought the flood of business would be short-lived, just a fun story to share when the mania ebbed.

    “People talk about the Taylor Swift effect, and you hear about it or read about it or whatever, but to like, personally experience it, you know, is is another level,” he said, adding that it is “almost becoming like an identity of the store.”

    The store generally does well when the Chiefs do, but this year is far busier than other recent Super Bowl years. Harrington credits the couple’s star power, saying it has elevated everything to a “global level.” Often, he added, customers are on a mission.

    “They were sent from their sister in Philadelphia to just buy a product in the store that Taylor shopped at,” he said. “So it’s crazy.”

    He acknowledges that “everybody has an opinion” on the romance. But, he adds: “I love it for a million reasons.”

    ___

    AP NFL: https://apnews.com/hub/nfl

    ___

    Vancleave reported from Coon Rapids, Minnesota.



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  • Rivals.com  –  NSD LIVE: News, interviews, analysis of Late Signing Period

    Rivals.com – NSD LIVE: News, interviews, analysis of Late Signing Period


    The Late Signing Period kicks off today and while it holds far less drama than the December signing day in football, we still will provide start-to-finish coverage with interviews, analysis and the news of the day. You can catch it all here for your one-stop-shopping National Signing Day hub.

    MORE NSD: Announcement Guide | What to watch on NSD | Five biggest storylines for this week | Four programs in the spotlight | Rivals Roundtable looks toward NSD

    *****

    CLASS OF 2024 RANKINGS: Rivals250 | Team | Position | State

    CLASS OF 2025 RANKINGS: Rivals250 | Team | Position | State

    CLASS OF 2026 RANKINGS: Rivals100

    TRANSFER PORTAL: Latest news | Transfer search | Transfer tracker/player ranking (football) | Transfer team ranking (football) | Transfer tracker/player ranking (basketball) | Transfer team ranking (basketball) | Rivals Portal Twitter

    *****

    *****

    Nebraska is putting the finishing touches on its 2024 recruiting class and the addition of Kahmir Prescott is a big step in the right direction. The versatile defensive back out Philadelphia (Pa.) Neumann-Goretti was previously committed to Wisconsin.

    Adam Friedman has the full story HERE.

    *****

    Dominic Raiola, a former Nebraska All-American and the father of Dylan Raiola, the No. 2 player in the 2024 class, joins the Rivals Studio Show. Raiola is expected to take over the starting QB role for the Huskers as a true freshman.

    SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS WITH NEBRASKA FANS AT INSIDENEBRASKA.COM

    *****

    Cameron Andersen, head coach of Burley (Idaho) High, joins the Rivals Studio Show to chat about Gatlin Bair, who committed to Oregon this week.

    SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS WITH OREGON FANS AT DUCKSPORTSAUTHORITY.COM

    *****

    Brett Goetz, founder of the South Florida Express, joins the Rivals Studio Show to talk about Jeremiah Smith, the No. 1 player in the 2024 class.

    SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS WITH OHIO STATE FANS AT DOTTINGTHEEYES.COM

    *****

    Five-star QB Julian Lewis, the No. 2 player in the 2025 class, joins the Rivals Studio Show to talk about his USC commitment and the push that Georgia is making to get him to flip.

    SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS WITH USC FANS AT TROJANSPORTS.COM

    *****

    INTERVIEWS FROM THE RIVALS NETWORK …

    Josh Henschke of Maize&Blue.com joins the Rivals Studio Show to talk about Michigan’s 2024 recruiting class and how it held together despite Jim Harbaugh‘s departure.

    SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS WITH MICHIGAN FANS AT MAIZEANDBLUEREVIEW.COM

    *****





    Staff, Rivals.com

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  • Alpine launch A524: Two liveries revealed for 2024 on ‘completely revised’ car for Esteban Ocon and Pierre Gasly

    Alpine launch A524: Two liveries revealed for 2024 on ‘completely revised’ car for Esteban Ocon and Pierre Gasly


    Alpine have revealed two liveries for their “completely revised” 2024 Formula 1 challenger.

    After a disappointing 2023 campaign for Esteban Ocon and Pierre Gasly, the team appear to have changed their design philosophy in an attempt to maximise the final two seasons of the generation of regulations.

    As the A524 was launched at the team’s Enstone factory by team principal Bruno Famin, who has been upgraded from interim to the permanent holder of the position, technical director Matt Harman explained the change in direction.

    “The A524 approach has been aggressive but deliberate in the fact we are creating a wider scope to add performance to the car,” he said. “We have really focused on learning and reacting to what we have learnt rather than on results.

    Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

    Esteban Ocon, Pierre Gasly and reserve driver Jack Doohan give their views on Alpine’s 2024 car, the A524.

    “The project has been bold where we have focused on realising concepts, which we aim to add to the car. We’ve built ourselves a strong platform to add performance when we can and we have set ourselves targets to deliver those.

    “We have pushed some elements to the limit and, in some cases, beyond that. That is all in line with our approach and exactly what we have set out to achieve in progressing this project to the best possible level.”

    Alpine A524 blue livery
    Alpine A524 blue livery
    Alpine A524 blue livery
    Alpine A524 blue livery

    The A524’s two liveries that will run across the record 24-race season both feature a black core and have been inspired by the team’s partnership with contemporary artist Felipe Pantone.

    The primary design, which will be seen at 16 races, features Alpine’s traditional blue colours along with the black. The alternative look, which will run at the other eight races, features pink in a nod to the team’s title sponsor BWT.

    Alpine pink livery
    Alpine pink livery
    Alpine pink livery
    Alpine A524 pink livery

    Ocon ‘excited’ as settled Gasly eyes improvement

    Both Ocon and Gasly expressed excitement at the prospect of driving the new model in pre-season testing later this month.

    “It goes without saying that I am super excited for the season and I cannot wait to jump back in the car and go racing again,” Ocon said. “This time of the year is exciting as it is the moment we see what the team has produced.

    “I have seen drawings, been on the simulator but, obviously, not yet seen or sampled the complete, real thing. That will wait until shakedown but it’s a nice moment for the team as it’s the culmination of thousands of hours of hard work.

    Alpine drivers Esteban Ocon and Pierre Gasly

    “As a driver, it’s a goosebumps moment when you jump in a new car for the first time and release the pit limiter. That time is close now with the A524 and I really cannot wait to get started.”

    Having ended his career-long association with Red Bull to join Alpine from AlphaTauri last season, Gasly is confident of producing a stronger second campaign with the team.

    “I would say that I am in a much better place right now than this time 12 months ago,” Gasly said. “I know exactly all the people I’m working with; I know all the processes and how to get the best out of those around me and out of myself.

    “It is nice to have continuity and building on the foundations that we created last year. I’m feeling confident with the team I have around me. We have all been developing over the last year. Now I am confident that I can attack the season straight away and maximise the full potential of the team.”

    Will Alpine bounce back after turbulent 2023?

    The past 12 months could not have gone much worse for Alpine, as they were left in a lonesome midfield wilderness having been leapfrogged by McLaren and Aston Martin.

    Alpine finished the season sixth, 160 points behind fifth-placed Aston Martin and 92 points ahead of seventh-placed Williams.

    Alpine in F1 2024

    Driver Esteban Ocon
    Driver Pierre Gasly
    Team boss (interim) Bruno Famin
    Car name A524
    Engine Renault/Alpine
    2023 championship finish 6th
    Best championship finish 4th (2022)
    Race wins 1
    Podiums 4

    Their unexpected fall away from challenging towards the front of the grid resulted in a mid-season culling of senior leadership as chief executive Laurent Rossi was replaced, before team principal Otmar Szafnauer and sporting director Alan Permane were sacked.

    While Famin, initially inserted as interim team principal, will remain at the helm of the Enstone outfit, instability at the top is not Alpine’s only concern.

    The team’s attempts to propose upgrades for their underperforming power-unit were abandoned amid a failure to gain the required support for ‘engine equalisation’ from rival teams.

    Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

    Alpine ambassador and Real Madrid manager Zinedine Zidane talks Formula 1 and the theory of winning as he tries his hand at kart racing

    Alpine are therefore locked into using this power unit, without upgrades, until the sport’s regulations change in 2026.

    While Gasly and Ocon represent a strong driver pairing, the rest of the package does not quite appear to be in place at the moment, which could result in a frustrating campaign for the French duo.

    When is F1 pre-season testing?

    Pre-season testing takes place from Wednesday February 21 to Friday February 23 at the Bahrain International Circuit with just three days for the teams to get prepared for the new season.

    When is the first F1 race?

    Just one week later, the opening race of the 2024 season will begin with the Bahrain Grand Prix from February 29 to March 2.

    Due to the Muslim holy period of Ramadan, the Bahrain and, seven days later, the Saudi Arabian Grand Prix, will be held on a Saturday.

    This means practice one and two will take place on Thursdays, with final practice and qualifying on Fridays.

    24 races in 2024! Watch every round of next season live on Sky Sports F1, starting with the Bahrain Grand Prix from February 29-March 2. Stream every F1 race and more with a NOW Sports Month Membership

    Get Sky Sports on WhatsApp!

    Sky Sports WhatsApp channel

    You can now start receiving messages and alerts for the latest breaking sports news, analysis, in-depth features and videos from our dedicated WhatsApp channel!

    Find out more here…



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