ReportWire

Category: Sports

Sports News | ReportWire publishes the latest breaking U.S. and world news, trending topics and developing stories from around globe.

  • AFCON 2023: Ryan Mendes’ 88th-minute penalty sees Cape Verde past Mauritania and into quarter-finals

    AFCON 2023: Ryan Mendes’ 88th-minute penalty sees Cape Verde past Mauritania and into quarter-finals

    [ad_1]

    Ryan Mendes converted a late penalty as Cape Verde beat Mauritania 1-0 in Abidjan to seal their place in the quarter-finals of the Africa Cup of Nations.

    Cape Verde captain Mendes struck the decisive spot kick in the 88th minute and the Blue Sharks will now face either Morocco or South Africa in the quarter-finals.

    Cape Verde, one of the surprise teams of the tournament after finishing unbeaten at the top of Group B ahead of Egypt and Ghana, were second best for most of the first half, but finished strongly to secure their passage.

    Image:
    Cape Verde’s Ryan Mendes (R) celebrates after scoring the winner in Abidjan

    Mauritania reached the tournament’s knockout stages for the first time by defeating two-time winners Algeria 1-0 in their final group game to progress as one of the best third-placed teams.

    The first-half action was end-to-end, but clear-cut chances were at a premium, while Mauritania were dealt a blow in the 35th minute when Omare Gassama was carried off on a stretcher and replaced by Guessouma Fofana.

    Mendes’ early effort for Cape Verde was deflected into the side-netting and Mauritania captain Mouhsine Bodda curled a 15th-minute free-kick just wide.

    Mauritania made all the early running in the second period and Souleymane Anne missed the game’s best chance from open play when firing wide after Sidi Amar’s surging run into the penalty area just before the hour mark.

    Cape Verde came on strongly in the closing stages with both Garry Rodrigues’ drive and Mendes’ header forcing Mauritania goalkeeper Babacar Niasse into excellent saves.

    The game’s decisive moment came in the 87th minute when Yassin El Welly’s misplaced headed back-pass was pounced on by substitute Gilson Benchimol, who was brought down by Niasse for a clear penalty.

    Mendes held his nerve, drilling his spot-kick down the middle and the Blue Sharks saw out 10 minutes of added time to seal their place in the last eight.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • South Carolina keeps grip on No. 1 in AP women’s poll as top teams stumble; Kansas State up to 2

    South Carolina keeps grip on No. 1 in AP women’s poll as top teams stumble; Kansas State up to 2

    [ad_1]

    South Carolina remained the clear No. 1 team in the country and No. 2 Kansas State matched its best ranking ever after a chaotic week that saw nearly half of the AP Top 25 lose at least one game.

    The Gamecocks received all 35 first-place votes Monday in the latest Associated Press women’s basketball poll after their 76-70 road victory over then-No. 9 LSU.

    While Dawn Staley’s team stayed unbeaten, many other top schools stumbled. LSU was one of five top 10 teams to lose a game last week. Overall, a dozen ranked teams had at least one defeat.

    Kansas State now has its highest ranking since Nov. 25, 2002. The Wildcats have won 15 straight games, the last few without star center Ayoka Lee. She is sidelined for a few more weeks with an ankle injury. Kansas State has a tough stretch ahead with games at Oklahoma and Texas.

    Iowa moved back up to third as Caitlin Clark moved closer to the all-time scoring record in women’s college basketbal. She is in fourth place with 3,389 points and could pass Jackie Stiles (3,393) and Kelsey Mitchell (3,402) in the Hawkeyes’ next game on Wednesday at Northwestern. She is 138 points behind Kelsey Plum’s record mark of 3,527.

    Stanford and North Carolina State followed Iowa in the poll. Colorado, which split a pair of games in Oregon, fell three spots to sixth. UCLA dropped five places to seventh after an overtime loss to Utah and a defeat at home to Washington State.

    Ohio State vaulted up four spots to eighth while LSU stayed put at nine. Indiana was 10th.

    UConn and Texas, which both were in the top 10 last week, lost to Notre Dame and Oklahoma, respectively. The Huskies dropped three places to 11 and Texas two spots to 12th.

    Princeton re-entered the poll at No. 25 while riding a 10-game winning streak. The Tigers, who were ranked for one week in November, are 15-3 on the season with losses to UCLA, Indiana and Rhode Island. Princeton plays at home against Yale and Brown this weekend. The Tigers replaced Florida State in the rankings. The Seminoles lost to Duke by 42 points.

    Oregon State jumped up seven spots to No. 18 after a stellar weekend with victories over Colorado and Utah. The Beavers, who had their first top-five win since 2019 in the victory over the then-No. 3 Buffaloes, have won five of their last six games. They play rival Oregon in their lone contest this week.

    ___

    Get poll alerts and updates on AP Top 25 basketball throughout the season. Sign up here AP women’s college basketball: https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-womens-college-basketball-poll and https://apnews.com/hub/womens-college-basketball

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • First look at 49ers-Chiefs: Early Super Bowl picks, big questions and matchups to know

    First look at 49ers-Chiefs: Early Super Bowl picks, big questions and matchups to know

    [ad_1]

    The San Francisco 49ers and the Kansas City Chiefs are officially headed to Super Bowl LVIII, which kicks off Sunday, Feb. 11, at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas.

    With two weeks until the big day, we’re taking an early look at what you can expect in the matchup. Stephen Holder sets it up with what to know, and our NFL Nation reporters Nick Wagoner and Adam Teicher look closer at each team. Seth Walder crunches the numbers to give you some key stats to know, Matt Bowen dives into the game plan with a key matchup and Eric Moody pulls out an X factor. Aaron Schatz answers big questions surrounding the final game of the season, and Jason Reid explores the quarterback matchup. And finally, we have early gut-reaction predictions from our experts. Let’s dive in.

    Note: Game lines are via ESPN BET. Predictions are from ESPN’s Football Power Index (FPI).

    Jump to:
    49ers | Chiefs | Key stats
    Matchup keys | Big questions
    Quarterbacks | Betting | Predictions

    When: Sunday, Feb. 11, 6:30 p.m. ET on CBS
    Where: Allegiant Stadium, Las Vegas | Tickets
    Opening line: SF -2.5 (O/U 47.5)
    FPI prediction: SF, 59% (by an average of 3.1 points)

    Few teams have become more synonymous with the Super Bowl than the Chiefs and 49ers. Kansas City is headed to its sixth Super Bowl, including a remarkable fourth in the past five seasons. If that isn’t a dynasty, what is? For the 49ers, they are making an eighth appearance in the Super Bowl, but have a chance to win their first since 1994.

    This matchup of Super Bowl LIV after the 2019 season, won by the Chiefs, provides a chance at immortality for all involved. But, more specifically, it gives the Chiefs the opportunity to continue a run that has been rarely seen in the NFL. Winning back-to-back Super Bowls has proved to be incredibly difficult, but the Chiefs can accomplish the feat for the first time since the 2003-04 Patriots did it nearly two decades ago. Quarterback Patrick Mahomes becomes the youngest quarterback to start his fourth Super Bowl, while coach Andy Reid prepares for his fifth Super Bowl, trailing only Bill Belichick (9) and Don Shula (6) in appearances.

    For the Niners, it’s a chance to finally break through after advancing to the NFL Championship Game seven times since 2011 without a single Super Bowl title. As great as the franchise has been, the reality is it has been 29 seasons since the 49ers last won a championship, with Steve Young winning MVP in Super Bowl XXIX. Brock Purdy is no Steve Young, but winning his first Super Bowl would be a big first step for the young 49ers quarterback. — Holder

    Regular season: 12-5 | NFC seed: No. 1

    Reason for hope: Experienced star power. No team in football has a bigger galaxy of stars than the Niners. They had a league-high nine players selected to the Pro Bowl, 12 more chosen as alternates and seven players who earned first or second-team All-Pro honors. What’s more, the Niners have plenty of players and coaches who have participated in deep playoff runs, including eight players who played meaningful snaps in Super Bowl LIV. When they’re rolling, the Niners look every bit the part of a juggernaut, winning their 12 regular-season games by an average of 19 points, second best in the league.

    Reason for concern: Recent history. The 49ers don’t exactly have fond memories of playing the Chiefs on a big stage. The Niners lost to the Chiefs in their last Super Bowl appearance four years ago. And while the Niners haven’t played the Chiefs since Oct. 23, 2022, they lost by three touchdowns that day and have not defeated Kansas City in a game with Mahomes at quarterback. None of that should prevent the Niners from turning the tables, but there’s something to be said for the idea that the Chiefs are simply a bad matchup for them. — Wagoner


    Regular season: 11-6 | AFC seed: No. 3

    Reason for hope: They have Mahomes and he plays at his best in the postseason. In his past six postseason games, Mahomes has completed 70% of his passes with a yards-per-attempt average of 7.0 and 11 touchdowns without throwing an interception. And the rest of the offense has shown signs of life recently. They’re getting more big plays and had a season-high eight plays of more than 20 yards in the divisional round win over the Bills.

    Reason for concern: Sloppy offensive play. The Chiefs during the regular season led the league in dropped passes, were second in offensive penalties and tied for seventh in turnovers. They have won in the playoffs despite their sloppiness. Inside the red zone alone in the wild-card win over the Dolphins, they dropped a pass, botched a shotgun snap and had a penalty that wiped out a TD on three different drives, leading them to kick field goals. Mecole Hardman Jr.’s goal-line fumble in the divisional round allowed the Bills to stay close. How much longer can the Chiefs continue to beat good teams by playing this way? — Teicher

    play

    1:52

    Chiefs top Ravens in AFC title game to earn spot in Super Bowl LVIII

    Patrick Mahomes leads the Chiefs to another AFC title, defeating the Ravens 17-10.

    Stats to know

    San Francisco’s plethora of playmakers is a huge reason why the team is not only in the Super Bowl, but has boasted the best offense all season. ESPN’s receiver tracking metrics show the domination, as each of their top targets leads their position in at least one category. Brandon Aiyuk leads all receivers in catch score (96) and overall score (98), Deebo Samuel leads all receivers in YAC score (83), George Kittle leads all tight ends in overall score (84) and Christian McCaffrey leads all running backs in catch score (99). Maybe a defense can take away one of them, but it’s almost impossible to stop them all.


    Mahomes had the worst statistical regular season of his career in 2023, ranking 19th in QBR on passing plays. So how did the Chiefs make it to the Super Bowl? Well, throwing is only part of the way Mahomes affects the offense. And in 2023, playing with the worst receiving corps in the league in terms of RTM’s catch score, it’s the other types of plays where Mahomes has excelled. He has avoided sacks (second-lowest sack rate behind Josh Allen) and scrambled incredibly well (second most scramble EPA, again behind Allen). Of course, a high-end Kansas City defense has made all of the difference, too. — Walder

    Inside the matchup

    Chiefs LB Nick Bolton vs. 49ers RB McCaffrey

    The run game is a foundational part of Kyle Shanahan’s offense, so I’m focusing on Bolton’s ability to limit McCaffrey in early-down situations. Bolton is quick to key and diagnose and has the play speed to scrape to the edges. That’s a critical element against a 49ers unit that will use formations and motion to gain number advantages to the play side. McCaffrey averaged 5.4 yards per carry this season with 44 rushes of 10 or more yards. He makes this offense go. — Bowen


    X factor: Isiah Pacheco, RB, Chiefs

    Pacheco has become the undisputed leader of the Chiefs’ backfield, and his workload reflects it. Over the course of six career postseason games, he has averaged 18.7 touches and 90.5 total yards. There is a perception that the 49ers’ defense is among the best in the league. But in their path to the Super Bowl, they have given up a lot of rushing yards to running backs such as Aaron Jones, David Montgomery and Jahmyr Gibbs. Pacheco is the second Chiefs player with a rushing touchdown in four consecutive playoff games. His streak could continue against the 49ers behind a Chiefs offensive line that has been superb this postseason. — Moody

    Answering big questions

    What’s the biggest difference with Steve Wilks as 49ers defensive coordinator?

    The difference for the 49ers’ defense this season has been a greater struggle with stopping the run. The 49ers ranked 15th in run defense DVOA during the regular season after ranking second and first in the previous two seasons.

    The biggest issue has been stopping runs that get downfield rather than stopping runs right up front. The 49ers’ run stop rate is the same as it was last season, 32%. But in 2022 the 49ers were the best defense in the NFL, preventing second-level runs (5-10 yards) and open-field runs (11 yards or more). This season, they rank seventh and 21st in those categories, respectively.

    Last season, the one place the 49ers had a problem against the run was short yardage. They allowed a 71% conversion rate on these runs (third down, fourth down or goal line with 1-2 yards to go). This season, they allowed a 79% conversion rate on these runs.


    Did Travis Kelce take a step back from his usual Hall of Fame play in the regular season?

    Yes, absolutely. But he hasn’t taken 20 steps back into the land of “average tight end.” He’s still one of the best in the business, even if he couldn’t match his previous awesome performances.

    This season, I introduced a new version of my receiving DYAR metric based on routes rather than targets. It does a better job of valuing the ability of receivers to get open and attract targets on a steady basis. Kelce led the NFL in 2022 at 642 yards above replacement. No other tight end was above 450. This season, Kelce led the league again, but only with 399 DYAR. Kittle was right behind him at 395.

    ESPN’s receiver tracking metrics tell a similar story of a lesser, but still strong, 2023 season. Last season, Kelce was second behind Kittle with a 75 RTM score. This season, Kelce dropped to seventh with a 58 RTM score. His open score and YAC score dropped slightly, and his catch score dropped significantly.

    We always had to expect some decline from Kelce this season. The man is 34 years old! He just set the record for receiving yards by a tight end at age 34 or higher with 984. Tony Gonzalez was the only other tight end to have at least 850 yards at this age. (He did it three times.)

    However, so far in the 2023 playoffs, Kelce has caught 16 of 17 targets for 191 yards and three touchdowns. That’s certainly better than his performance during the regular season. — Schatz

    Quarterback matchup

    Purdy vs. Mahomes

    Selected by the 49ers with the final pick of the 2022 NFL draft, Purdy was that draft’s Mr. Irrelevant. But Purdy has been anything but irrelevant to the 49ers. He has been highly efficient and at times spectacular while directing the offense. In only 26 career starts (including playoffs), Purdy has a record of 21-5. That’s a sparkling .808 winning percentage. By making sound decisions with the football, Purdy quickly earned the trust of Shanahan and the team’s many talented playmakers on offense. With the 49ers trailing the Lions by 17 points at halftime in the NFC Championship Game, Purdy stayed cool and led the 49ers’ impressive comeback victory that puts them back in the Super Bowl for the second time in five seasons.

    Already an all-time great, Mahomes will be vying to become only the fifth quarterback in NFL history to have at least three Super Bowl championships, following Tom Brady (six), Joe Montana (four), Terry Bradshaw (four) and Troy Aikman (three). Mahomes, Brady, Peyton Manning and Montana are the only QBs to have at least two Super Bowl championships and two Associated Press MVP awards. For the sixth consecutive season with Mahomes as their starting signal-caller, the Chiefs reached the AFC Championship Game. The only streak longer is the New England Patriots‘ remarkable run of eight in a row from 2011 to 2018. — Reid

    play

    2:01

    49ers rally past Lions to win NFC title, book trip to Super Bowl

    The 49ers overcome a 24-7 halftime deficit to defeat the Lions and set up a showdown with the Chiefs in Super Bowl LVIII.

    Betting nugget

    The Chiefs are the ninth team in the past 20 seasons to pull off upsets in the divisional round and conference championship. And according to ESPN Stats & Information, six of the previous eight went on to win the Super Bowl. Overall, the Chiefs are 12-8 against the spread this season, while the 49ers are 9-10. Since 2001, underdogs are 11-11 outright and 15-7 ATS in the Super Bowl.

    Gut reaction predictions

    Aaron Schatz, NFL analyst: Chiefs. Their defense is playing very well, while the 49ers’ defense has declined in recent weeks. Both running backs should have nice games, but only the Chiefs have Mahomes.

    Dan Graziano, NFL national reporter: Chiefs. Every time I don’t pick them, they seem to make me feel stupid. They keep finding ways to win.

    Dan Orlovsky, NFL analyst: Chiefs. Mahomes always gives them an edge, and the defense is excellent.

    Field Yates, NFL analyst: Chiefs. The Lions did a solid job of protecting Jared Goff in the NFC Championship Game, which I expect the Chiefs to be able to replicate. Even if they are unable to, Mahomes is undeterred by pressure and will lead the Chiefs to their third Super Bowl win in five years.

    Jordan Reid, NFL draft analyst: Chiefs. San Francisco is looking to avenge its loss to the Chiefs from Super Bowl LIV, but I think Kansas City will once again be too much for the 49ers as they go on to win back-to-back titles.

    Lindsey Thiry, NFL national reporter: Chiefs. You simply can’t pick against Mahomes.

    Marcus Spears, NFL analyst: Chiefs. Again, Mahomes is their QB …

    Matt Miller, NFL draft analyst: Chiefs. I like some of the situational matchups for San Francisco, but the playoffs are about the team with the best quarterback and head coach duo — and that’s Kansas City.

    Seth Walder, analytics writer: 49ers. San Francisco’s playmakers will be too overwhelming for Kansas City. There’s a reason the Niners were the best offense all year long — and they will be again on Super Bowl Sunday.

    Seth Wickersham, NFL writer: 49ers. Shanahan’s scars are finally healed.

    Stephania Bell, NFL injury analyst: 49ers. Shanahan will use the lessons learned from giving up a lead (as well as the confidence gained Sunday night that they can come back from behind) to pull out a win.

    [ad_2]

    ESPN staff

    Source link

  • How the 49ers pulled off their massive comeback: The key second-half plays that made the difference

    How the 49ers pulled off their massive comeback: The key second-half plays that made the difference

    [ad_1]

    SANTA CLARA, Calif. — There are the months of preparation, film study, game-planning, injuries, pain, work and sacrifice. All of it is essential if you want to get to the Super Bowl. But sometimes, even after all of that, you still need a funny-shaped ball to bounce your way.

    “Obviously, nobody wins without a little luck,” San Francisco 49ers left tackle Trent Williams said in the locker room, a couple of hours after his team’s 34-31 comeback victory over the Detroit Lions in the NFC Championship Game. “Tonight was just our time to get it.”

    The discussion was about one key third-quarter play — a 51-yard Brandon Aiyuk catch of a Brock Purdy throw that had every right to be an interception but instead became the play that turned the 49ers’ fortunes around. There was 6:29 left on the third-quarter clock, and the Lions led the 49ers 24-10. Moments earlier, San Francisco had stopped Detroit on a fourth-and-2 from the Niners’ 28-yard line. That seemed like a turning point, but the Niners still needed to make a big play or two on offense to cash in.

    A 17-yard pass to receiver Deebo Samuel moved the ball to the Niners’ 45-yard line. Purdy lined up in shotgun and called for the snap. Down the field, he saw the play unfold the way he wanted. Safety C.J. Gardner-Johnson picked up Samuel on a crossing route, leaving Aiyuk one-on-one with cornerback Kindle Vildor. That, 49ers coach Kyle Shanahan would explain later, meant Purdy was supposed to launch it downfield to Aiyuk.

    “We need an explosive play and BA is one-on-one? I’m going to take that [opportunity],” Purdy said. “I was giving my guy a shot.”

    What San Francisco didn’t count on was how well Vildor would cover, as the 2020 fifth-rounder stayed between Aiyuk and the goal line, putting himself in position to make an interception. But as he reached back to catch the ball, he tumbled, and the ball hit him in the chest and popped back up in the air.

    “I was surprised,” Aiyuk said. “I felt the look before, pre-snap, and that I had a chance to get the ball, but he just stayed on top. I don’t even know.”

    Being surprised didn’t cost Aiyuk, though. He saw the ball bounce up in the air off the defender, and he dove and caught it himself at the 4-yard line. Most of his team was about 50 yards upfield, so it was tough to know what happened. A flag was down. Aiyuk had rolled into the end zone with the ball. Was it a penalty? Was it a touchdown? Was it actually a catch? Could he possibly have caught it?

    “I saw the flag, but I couldn’t see much,” Purdy said. “Then I heard the stadium erupt, and it was like, ‘Oh my god, he caught that?’”

    “BA’s had a tremendous season making crazy plays for us,” defensive lineman Arik Armstead said. “But that one was really wild.”

    “Just the way we intended it to look!” tight end George Kittle deadpanned. “Off the guy’s face mask into BA’s hands, dang, Brock Purdy’s good at football.”

    play

    1:07

    Brandon Aiyuk follows up jaw-dropping catch with a TD

    Brandon Aiyuk catches the deflected Brock Purdy pass off a Lions player, and a few plays later, he hauls in a touchdown.

    “What can you say?” Williams said with a huge smile. “There’s no amount of coaching, no amount of film watching that can prepare him to make a catch like that. That’s just talent and will.”

    The Niners scored a touchdown three plays later, Purdy to Aiyuk appropriately enough. The stadium was pulsing. A 17-point halftime deficit was down to seven. The Niners kicked off, and on the very first play of the Lions’ possession, running back Jahmyr Gibbs fumbled and Armstead recovered.

    “Why do people in analytics say momentum isn’t real?” Kittle asked the assembled media in his postgame news conference. “That’s the biggest load of horse crap I’ve ever heard in my life.”

    It was impossible to be at Levi’s Stadium at that point and not feel like something had shifted. The Niners had the ball at the Detroit 24. Purdy threw one to Kittle on first down that lost a yard. Then on second down, the pocket broke down, and Purdy took off, scrambling for 21 yards to the Lions’ 4-yard line. It was the first of two 21-yard scrambles for Purdy — he had another on third-and-4 in the fourth quarter on the drive that ended up putting the 49ers up by 10 points with three minutes to go. He had not had a run of 20 yards all season prior to Sunday.

    “Brock is an athlete,” Williams said. “Obviously, his athleticism is underrated. People don’t look at him and think he might be tucking the ball and running with it like that. But he can do it. We see it in practice. He can run. So we needed him to run, and he ran. He’s been making plays for us all year, and he’s the reason we’re in the Super Bowl.”

    Sunday’s third quarter might be an even bigger reason. After allowing 148 rushing yards, 18 first downs and 24 points in the first half, the 49ers hit the halftime locker room still feeling OK about their situation. Shanahan said the feeling at halftime was, “We’re not going out like this,” and the players believed things would turn around.

    Entering the postseason, the Niners were 0-30 under Shanahan when trailing by seven or more points entering the fourth quarter, per ESPN Stats & Information. They snapped that streak last week against the Green Bay Packers, scoring 10 points in the fourth quarter in the divisional round win. They were also 0-19 under Shanahan when trailing by 17 or more points in the second half. They snapped that one this week. Per Elias Sports Bureau, the Niners joined the 1994 Chargers as the only teams with multiple seven-point second-half comebacks in the playoffs prior to reaching the Super Bowl. (That Chargers team lost to San Francisco in the Super Bowl.)

    “We were confident, actually,” Williams said. “Knowing we were going to get the ball first, especially. The plays were there, we just weren’t making them. We have Aiyuk, Deebo, we know they’re eventually going to put their stamp on a game like this. Plus, [the Lions] threw their best punches in the first half. Trick plays, flea-flickers, all that. You knew eventually all that stuff would slow down and we’d be OK.”

    They were right. The Niners outscored the Lions 17-0 and outgained them 170 yards to 42 in the third quarter. But the Lions also fumbled and dropped key passes on third and fourth downs.

    “Just got to wait it out,” Williams said. “You play long enough, you stick to your plan, you do it the right way, things eventually turn your way.”

    And then, in the 21st week of the season, after everything you’ve done to put yourself in position to get to the Super Bowl, a ball bounces off the defender and into your receiver’s hands, and that’s what it took to cash in a year’s worth of work. The 49ers are back in the Super Bowl for the second time in five seasons, and it took a little bit of everything in an epic, unforgettable third quarter to get them there.

    [ad_2]

    Dan Graziano

    Source link

  • Jones: Ravens strayed from their identity against Chiefs, and paid the price

    Jones: Ravens strayed from their identity against Chiefs, and paid the price

    [ad_1]

    BALTIMORE — Andy Reid and the Kansas City Chiefs put their championship-caliber mettle on display once again Sunday, knocking off the top-seeded Baltimore Ravens 17-10 in the AFC title game.

    Reid, Patrick Mahomes and company are headed for their fourth Super Bowl in six seasons not because they boasted a prolific offensive attack or breathtaking fireworks display. No, they punched their ticket to Las Vegas because Reid and his staff won their chess match with John Harbaugh and his Ravens assistants and positioned their squad to pull off the grittiest victory of this budding dynasty’s history.

    The Chiefs, long known for lighting up scoreboards with dizzying and dazzling heroics from Mahomes, didn’t even score in Sunday’s second half. Instead, they drew heavily on experience and also leaned on the most dominant defense Kansas City has fielded in the last six seasons. That defense delivered a performance that largely neutralized presumed NFL MVP Lamar Jackson and one of the league’s most imposing offensive attacks of the 2023 season.

    But as a whole, the Ravens found themselves on the losing end after succumbing to pressure early and failing to overcome crippling mistakes late.

    Well aware of how the Ravens are constructed and how they like to attack offensively (with a strong run game that ensures balance and paves the way for an improved passing attack), the Chiefs understood the importance of a fast start. They brought the pressure early to force Baltimore into a quick three-and-out and then delivered as impressive an offensive display as they have all postseason: a 10-play, 86-yard scoring drive, capped by a 19-yard Mahomes pass to Travis Kelce. With that, the Chiefs extended their streak of game-opening touchdown drives to eight straight playoff contests.

    GO DEEPER

    Kelce sets record for most postseason receptions in NFL history

    The Ravens did respond with a touchdown of their own — a highlight-worthy Jackson escape and 30-yard strike to Zay Flowers. But the Chiefs came right back with a methodical 16-play, 75-yard drive that gobbled up 9:02 of clock.

    Mahomes couldn’t miss, completing 11 straight passes to start the game. Kelce was as unguardable as ever. And that Chiefs defense that this season morphed from serviceable to dominant kept the pressure coming and delivered a strip-sack and recovery at the Baltimore 33-yard line.

    And just like that, the Ravens found themselves on high alert.

    Punt, touchdown, fumble was not the desired tone setter for Baltimore early in the first half. The Ravens’ defense had yielded game-opening touchdown drives only twice in its last 26 games, and until Kelce’s touchdown catch, Baltimore’s second-year star safety Kyle Hamilton had never surrendered a touchdown to a tight end as a pro.

    The scoreboard may have read 14-7, but as Baltimore found itself in unfamiliar territory, the deficit felt far larger. And that’s when the Ravens committed their mortal sin.

    Overwhelmed by the ease with which the Chiefs had scored, they went into panic mode. On defense, they momentarily lost their poise while committing life-giving personal fouls. And offensively, they got suckered into believing they had slipped into a far larger hole than they were actually in. As a result, they abandoned their bread-and-butter and tried to adapt a style of play for which they are not built.

    After dominating on the ground all season long, the Ravens opted for a pass-heavy attack far too early.

    For the rest of the second quarter, the Ravens ran the ball just twice (once on an off-schedule play by Jackson). For the remainder of the game, they ran the ball only seven more times. The league’s leading rushing team — a unit that averaged 156.5 rushing yards per game while boasting the most balanced offense in the NFL — turned one-dimensional and finished with only 81 ground yards, never regaining control in a very winnable game.

    go-deeper

    GO DEEPER

    Super Bowl LVIII projections: Chiefs meet 49ers in rematch of 2020 game

    The Ravens trailed only 17-7 at halftime. Yet they came out in the second half with the same frantic feel and approach as if they trailed by a heftier margin. They kept gunning even though their defense was keeping them in the game and the Chiefs off the scoreboard.

    “It was just that kind of a game, I’d say,” Harbaugh said of the season-low 16 rushing attempts. “That’s just how it played out.”

    The absence of a run game meant Baltimore’s offense never regained the rhythm that carried it so often this season. And the lack of balance eased pressure on the Chiefs’ defense because it allowed Kansas City’s pass-rushers to pin back their ears and come after Jackson. Meanwhile, when the quarterback wasn’t getting hit, a familiar problem — a lack of consistency in the receiving department — cropped up for the Ravens.

    Again and again, Jackson dropped back to throw, but struggled to find an open receiver. Aside from Flowers, who finished the game with five catches on eight targets for 115 yards and a touchdown, Baltimore’s receivers struggled greatly to get any separation. Running back Justice Hill was the second-leading receiver with four catches, and not until the fourth quarter did Odell Beckham Jr. manage to get involved (three catches for 22 yards).

    “We could’ve ran the ball,” Jackson said. “But we were just down and just trying to get the ball downfield. You’ve got to make something happen.”


    Zay Flowers had a touchdown catch Sunday but also a costly fumble. (Geoff Burke / USA Today)

    Even while one-dimensional, the Ravens did have a chance. To open the fourth quarter, they reached the shadow of the Kansas City goal line on a five-play, 78-yard drive highlighted by a 54-yard throw to Flowers. But that possession painfully ended with a fumble as Kansas City’s L’Jarius Sneed punched the ball from Flowers’ grasp as the receiver dove for the end zone after an 8-yard catch.

    And on the next possession, after reaching the Kansas City 25, Jackson threw an interception into triple coverage while trying to connect with tight end Isaiah Likely.

    A Justin Tucker 43-yard field goal with 2:38 left cut the deficit to a touchdown, but the Ravens came no closer.

    The Chiefs didn’t score in the second half, but they didn’t really have to. They did just enough offensively to spell their dominant defense and run precious minutes off the clock: five minutes here, two minutes there, another four there. By game’s end, they had won the time of possession battle 37:30 to 22:30.

    The defeat represents a lost opportunity for the Ravens, even though the game never felt as close as the score might indicate. Jackson and his teammates lamented that they managed just one touchdown, and they’ll spend the offseason replaying costly miscues. It’s impossible to avoid wondering if a more patient approach would have better benefitted the Ravens while helping them find a better offensive flow throughout the game.

    “You would like to use the saying of ‘I would love to have this back or have this play back,’ but you can’t get those plays back,” right tackle Morgan Moses said. “You have to learn from them and move forward. And you know, it’s not over. Anytime you have a quarterback like Lamar, you have the opportunity to play in games like this again.”

    This one will sting for a while, however, especially because of how it ended.

    The 2023 season was a year of change and growth in Baltimore, and perhaps the Ravens can build on that. But Sunday, as they aimed for their ultimate goal, they strayed from their identity when pressure reached its highest point and never recovered.

    (Top photo: Rob Carr / Getty Images)



    [ad_2]

    The New York Times

    Source link

  • LeBron James vs. Stephen Curry is still the NBA’s best theater

    LeBron James vs. Stephen Curry is still the NBA’s best theater

    [ad_1]

    SAN FRANCISCO — The frustration seethed in Stephen Curry. Until it boiled to the surface. Until he let out a roar. Until he ripped his jersey from the collar to the 30.

    He’d scored 46 points on 35 shots, getting the benefit of just three free throws in his 43 minutes. He hit the game-tying layup at the end of regulation. Inside the final minute of the first overtime, he forced a turnover and then hit a massive corner 3, setting up the game-tying 3 from Klay Thompson that kept the Warriors alive. Then in the second overtime, Curry’s final points of the night came on a 26-footer from the top with 4.7 seconds remaining, putting the Warriors up a point.

    He left his follow-through in the air as he backpedaled. Too spent for a more elaborate celebration. The NBA’s leader in clutch points delivered 19 more in this double-overtime affair, including 10 in the second overtime. On most nights, it would’ve been enough.

    But on the other team was Curry’s partner in magnificence. His most validating and valiant foe. LeBron James. They’ve exchanged heartbreaks and hugs over the years. James, whose Lakers eliminated Curry’s Warriors from the playoffs last year, had more heartbreak to hand Curry.

    The 39-year-old James beat a rookie nearly half his age off the dribble, blew past another young, spry athlete and powered up for a strong attack on the rim. He drew the foul and, punctuating his spectacular night, swished a pair of free throws to give the Lakers the win, 145-144. James’ 36 points, 20 rebounds and 12 assists in nearly 48 minutes indicted his birth certificate for fraud.

    They aren’t winning like they’re used to, both needing all they have just to stay in the race, both hoping to find crucial help to get them back to the realm of the contenders. But Saturday showed Curry and LeBron are still captivating. It will be a decade this coming February since LeBron’s buzzer-beating 3 against the Warriors at Oracle in Oakland debuted “The Silencer” celebration and sparked this duo into must-watch theater. All these years later, when they share a court, it’s still the NBA’s best theater.

    “It’s something that you will truly take all in when you’re done playing,” LeBron James said during his on-court interview, “and be able to watch with your grandkids and say that I played against one of the best players ever to play this game. Steph, after the game, came to me and said, ‘How does it keep getting better? How do we keep getting better?’ I think it’s just a true testament to us putting the work in in the game, being true to the game, and the game just continues to give back to us.” 

    James, and D’Angelo Russell, made sure another close game slipped through the hands of the Warriors. But this time, it wasn’t so much about what the Warriors didn’t do. This loss wasn’t because of a head-scratching turnover, as was the gut-wrenching loss to Sacramento two nights earlier. Or a questionable coaching decision. Or because they fell apart against an onslaught. Or even because of missed shots.

    Still, one of their best efforts counts as but a near-win. A tease. The Warriors are now 15-13 in clutch games with Curry (0-4 without him). They’re five games below .500 and still on the outside of the postseason field. They can play as well as anyone but not win as frequently as the better teams.

    “Our whole season,” Curry said, “we’ve had some tough breaks, some self-inflicted wounds. Some games that obviously you should have won and there’s disappointment walking off the floor. … We fought the whole way. Stayed in it even when things weren’t going our way, gave ourselves an opportunity. It goes down to the last possession three or four times in regulation, both overtimes. It just shows that we really want it. We’re playing with a little bit of desperation trying to change the tide of our season and just don’t have nothing to show for it right now.”


    LeBron James and Stephen Curry combined for 82 points on 60 shots and plenty of highlights in Saturday’s double-overtime thriller in San Francisco. (Ezra Shaw / Getty Images)

    But their peak is still high enough to get intoxicated. Saturday was a gallery of their best.

    Curry, obviously. Draymond Green was every bit the difference maker he’s always been, on both ends, and the combustible will that often burns him on this night kept the Warriors firing. Thompson was vintage in the second half after a brutal first half. His defense on LeBron, his shot-making, his competitive spirit. Jonathan Kuminga was ready and impactful. His 22 points and nine rebounds in 43 minutes showed he can play at this level. He should even have a larger role in the offense.

    Head coach Steve Kerr is certain a run is coming. His Warriors are ready for a breakthrough. They’ve got one more game on this homestand, against Philadelphia, before a road trip that starts with three losing teams.

    It’s only possible if the Warriors’ resolve is stronger than their jersey fabric.

    “Our guys were amazing, they were amazing,” Kerr said. “The way they battled, competed, and stayed in the game. Made so many plays. Just felt like we deserved to win that game the way the guys fought. So many plays that could have gone either way. That just felt like a game that we deserved to win. As long as we keep playing the way we played tonight, then I think we’re going to turn this around and have a great season. I really believe that.”

    The Lakers are in the same situation, though a little closer to where they want to be than the Warriors thanks to a more stable foundation with James and an elite version of Anthony Davis. Their best, too, looks worthy. The Warriors seem to bring that out of them.

    But playing their best in moments, in games, isn’t their problem. It’s sustainability. It’s the consistency and versatility of their greatness that’s lacking. They can’t seem to do it every night. They can’t seem to summon it in multiple ways.

    The Lakers and the Warriors.

    Saturday conspired to conjure the greatness from both teams. A prime-time game. One of great importance to both middling squads. The Hall of Fame presence all over the floor. The appreciation for the stage, the moment, and to still be on it.

    They delivered a thriller. They lived up to their names. Multiple times, Curry took matters into his own hands and delivered like a superstar. But this night, LeBron James had the ball last.

    So Curry left the court overcome with frustration. With his jersey in his own hands.

    “Actually makes it worse,” Curry said. “Makes, misses or whatever, there’s an energy about what we’re trying to do. So the good news is if we can keep doing that, you would like to think that you could build momentum, and that’s that’s what our hope is. But it’s just a tough … back-to-back games at home that you play well enough to win and just don’t get it done.”

    go-deeper

    GO DEEPER

    Warriors are spiraling but may have finally found a lineup to drag them out of it

    go-deeper

    GO DEEPER

    ‘I was lost’: Ricky Rubio reflects on his NBA career and the dark days that occurred

    (Top photo of LeBron James and Stephen Curry after Saturday’s game: Ezra Shaw / Getty Images)



    [ad_2]

    The New York Times

    Source link

  • Adam Johnson: Coroner suspends investigation into death of former NHL player

    Adam Johnson: Coroner suspends investigation into death of former NHL player

    [ad_1]

    A senior coroner probing the death of former NHL and Nottingham Panthers player Adam Johnson has suspended her investigation as police enquiries continue.

    Johnson, 29, died after being cut in the neck by a skate during a Challenge Cup match against the Sheffield Steelers on October 28, with the Nottingham Panthers labelling it as a “freak accident”.

    South Yorkshire Police (SYP) opened an investigation and a man was arrested in November on suspicion of manslaughter following Johnson’s death. He has since been bailed.

    Tanyka Rawden, a senior coroner at Sheffield Coroner’s Court, has decided to suspend her examination of the evidence until July 26, although it will be resumed before then if South Yorkshire Police (SYP) concludes their investigation and the man is not charged.

    Rawden held a desktop review — in private — of the progress of the investigation on January 26.

    “HM Senior Coroner has reviewed the progress of the investigation into the death of Adam Johnson,” a statement read.

    “Since the opening of the inquest on November 3 2023, detectives from South Yorkshire Police have arrested and questioned a man on suspicion of manslaughter.

    “The suspect has been released on police bail while the investigation continues.

    “In light of the fact a person may be charged with a homicide offence involving the death of the deceased, HM Senior Coroner has suspended her investigation into Mr Johnson’s death under Paragraph 1(2)(a) of Schedule 1 to the Coroners and Justice Act 2009.

    “If South Yorkshire Police determine before July 26 2024 that no person will be charged with a homicide offence involving the death of the deceased, the coroner will resume her investigation upon receiving notification of that decision.”

    GO DEEPER

    ‘Unprecedented and distressing’: Adam Johnson’s death and uncharted waters for British sport

    On November 14, SYP detective chief superintendent Becs Horsfall had shed light on some detail as to the exact nature of the force’s enquiries.

    “Our investigation launched immediately following this tragedy and we have been carrying out extensive enquiries ever since to piece together the events that led to the loss of Adam in these unprecedented circumstances,” she said, in a statement published on the SYP website.

    “We have been speaking to highly specialised experts in their field to assist in our enquiries and continue to work closely with the health and safety department at Sheffield City Council, which is supporting our ongoing investigation.

    “Adam’s death has sent shockwaves through many communities, from residents here to ice hockey fans across the world.”

    go-deeper

    GO DEEPER

    ‘A loving day and a loving night’ in Nottingham as Adam Johnson’s team-mates return to the ice

    (Jeanine Leech/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)



    [ad_2]

    The New York Times

    Source link

  • How Taylor Swift could get to the Super Bowl from her Eras Tour

    How Taylor Swift could get to the Super Bowl from her Eras Tour

    [ad_1]

    Taylor Swift has already logged plenty of miles traveling the world on her record-breaking Eras Tour, and she could soon add over 5,500 more on a one-way trip.

    That’s assuming the pop star makes the journey from the stage in Tokyo, where she’ll be performing on Feb. 10, to Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas to watch boyfriend Travis Kelce and the Kansas City Chiefs play in the Super Bowl the following day.

    With the Chiefs taking down the Baltimore Ravens in the AFC Championship Game on Sunday, Kansas City will be making its fourth Super Bowl appearance in five years. The Chiefs will face the San Francisco 49ers in the marquee matchup at 6:30 p.m. ET on Feb. 11.

    It’s fair to figure Swift will try to attend, considering she’s been a regular presence at Kelce’s games since the two debuted their relationship in the fall. But the travel schedule to catch the season finale will be a grind.

    With a nighttime show to close four days in Japan, Swift will have to hustle to get across the Pacific Ocean and back to the states in time for kickoff.

    So, can she make it?

    In short, yes. The 17-hour time difference works in her favor and means Swift could get to Las Vegas with plenty of time to spare.

    But there are considerations, such as weather patterns and the crowded Las Vegas airports on Super Bowl weekend, that could factor in.

    Here’s how it might work.

    Swift performs four shows at the Tokyo Dome in Japan on consecutive nights from Feb. 7-10 before heading to Australia for shows starting Feb. 16. Doors open at 4 p.m. local time for her Tokyo concert, with the show starting at 6 p.m. She typically opens her set about two hours after the scheduled start time. However, no openers have been announced for her Tokyo tour dates, meaning she could go on close to 6 p.m.

    Assuming that’s the case, and with her concerts lasting roughly three and a half hours, she would wrap the show around 9:30 p.m.

    If she leaves from Haneda Airport, which is the closest airport to the Tokyo Dome at a roughly 25-minute drive, with additional time to account for concert traffic and flight check-in, Swift could then be wheels up to Las Vegas an hour later.

    According to Business Insider, Swift has two multimillion-dollar private jets — a Dassault Falcon 7X and a Dassault Falcon 900 — that were heavily used during the U.S. leg of her Eras Tour.

    Falcon lists its 900LX model as having a range of 4,750 nautical miles. The 7X model has a longer range of 5,906 nautical miles. The distance between Haneda Airport and Las Vegas’ Harry Reid International Airport, located near Allegiant Stadium, is 4,821 nautical miles (5,548 miles). So, for this exercise, it would make sense for Swift to opt for the 7X.

    An account manager at Paramount Business Jets — which offers worldwide private jet charter flights, including on the 7X, but is not affiliated with Swift’s plans — estimated the trip from Haneda Airport to Harry Reid International Airport would take about 10 to 10 1/2 hours on that aircraft.

    That means Swift could leave at 10:30 p.m. in Tokyo and, because of the time change, arrive around 4 p.m. in Las Vegas on Feb. 10, a full day before the game.

    However, the account manager, who asked not to be named because they were not authorized to speak publicly, said that as of Friday, there were no slots available to land in Las Vegas during Super Bowl weekend.

    “I have four clients who wanted to fly in for the Super Bowl and we had to cancel their trips because nobody is able to get the proper times to land in Las Vegas,” the account manager said.

    “The way that I got it explained by operators is that (they) don’t have any more availability at any of the Las Vegas airports that can receive a jet, whether it’s private or whether it’s commercial. When I say commercial, that’s someone renting an airplane to fly,” the account manager continued.

    The Paramount Business Jets account manager said the plans would have to have been in place “potentially a couple of months ago” to ensure the slots to land or depart in Las Vegas that weekend.

    “We know it’s going to be busy,” Harry Reid International Airport spokesperson Melissa DeFrank said. “We’ve been preparing for it for quite a while now, but … Super Bowl weekend is always busy in Las Vegas. We’re pretty well-prepared to handle a lot of traffic.”

    Airlines are also preparing for a surge in demand. American Airlines even coded their flights in honor of the Chiefs and Swift. American added seven direct flights from Feb. 8-13 arriving at either Harry Reid International Airport or Kansas City International Airport. Three of those are No. 15, named for Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes, who wears jersey No. 15. Two are No. 1989, a nod to Swift’s chart-topping album. One is No. 87 — Kelce’s jersey number — and another is 1521, a combination of Mahomes and safety Mike Edwards’ jersey numbers.

    “The excitement surrounding this year’s sporting events has never been greater,” American Airlines said in a statement. “You could say that after (Sunday’s) games, we are in our football era, and we are thrilled to provide direct flights from Kansas City to Las Vegas. To our customers who are huge sports fans, look what you made us do.”

    It’s unclear whether Swift would still be able to land in Las Vegas. An email to her publicist regarding the plans was not immediately returned.

    Even if Swift is unable to land in Las Vegas, however, she could fly into Los Angeles — to either LAX or Van Nuys Airport — and drive the rest of the way.

    In that scenario, the flight would be roughly 45 minutes shorter to Los Angeles, meaning a flight of about 9 hours and 45 minutes. So Swift could theoretically make it to L.A. and through customs around 3:30 p.m. local time.

    A drive from LAX to Allegiant Stadium takes four to five hours, depending on stops and traffic. In that scenario, she’d still get to Vegas by 8:30 p.m. on Feb. 10, with lots of time for pregame activities.

    Or much-needed sleep.

    go-deeper

    GO DEEPER

    As regular season slog gives way to Super Bowl run, Patrick Mahomes remains inevitable

    Required reading

    (Photo: Patrick Smith / Getty Images)



    [ad_2]

    The New York Times

    Source link

  • Xavi’s Barcelona resignation: The full story behind his decision to step down in June

    Xavi’s Barcelona resignation: The full story behind his decision to step down in June

    [ad_1]

    “President, I’d like to speak with you.”

    Barcelona’s traumatic 5-3 home defeat against Villarreal prompted an agitated evening behind the scenes at their temporary home ground on Montjuic on Saturday.

    Club executives immediately held an urgent meeting after the final whistle at the Estadi Olimpic Lluis Companys, just next to the VIP boxes, where other board members were still having dinner.

    Alongside Barca president Joan Laporta was vice-president Rafa Yuste, sporting director Deco, director Enric Masip and Laporta’s closest confidant, Alejandro Echevarria. The topic of discussion was Xavi’s position. At that meeting, Laporta decided he had to stay true to the convictions he had held over the past few weeks and keep Xavi as manager.

    Suddenly, as the meeting came to an end, he felt his phone buzzing.

    Xavi’s message to Laporta asking to speak prompted a dramatic turn of events. Top executives feared the manager had decided to abandon his role that very same night, leaving Barcelona in a tough position. The decision had already been made not to sack him, partly because it would have been hard to bring in a replacement due to the financial state of the club. Barca are over La Liga’s limit on salary spending, which makes it tough to register new players; the rules apply to managers’ wages, too.

    One of the executives present at that meeting even texted Xavi back, asking him not to “take final decisions in heated moments” and to “let the situation cool down”.

    But Barcelona’s legendary former midfielder, who led them to the Spanish league title in his first full season in charge last term, had made his mind up. He could not keep carrying the same amount of pressure and needed to tell the board.

    Well-placed Barca sources — who, like all those cited here, preferred to speak anonymously to protect their positions — told The Athletic that Laporta was very surprised by how well Xavi articulated his message when they eventually spoke and that he quickly understood this was a decision he had deeply considered.

    The manager’s wish to step down not now but at the end of the season would also give them some time to make plans and Laporta accepted his request.

    In this piece, we explain:

    • How Barcelona’s toxicity ended up wearing down Xavi, a man who knows the club as well as anyone but who could still not escape its unique pressures and saw his family affected
    • When Xavi made his decision and why it ended up being revealed so abruptly, with players hearing the news through social media
    • How the dressing room reacted, with some relationships with the manager deteriorating and others open to seeing him staying
    • What went wrong from last season and why, despite being a man of the club in tough times, players and executives believed Xavi ended up underperforming

    “Xavi slept better tonight than he had in a long time,” sources close to him told The Athletic on Sunday morning. They said he felt liberated after making known his decision to leave the club on June 30 — and so did his entourage.

    The coach had been mulling over the decision for months, but it was only after the 4-1 defeat against Real Madrid in the Supercopa de Espana final that he made it known to those closest to him: his brother and assistant manager Oscar Hernandez, his wife Nuria Cunillera and a few most trusted members of his staff. Not many knew.

    They had devised a plan to make his decision public, with the idea to tell the players at a training session the day before a match over the upcoming weeks. He would then give a press conference with the board to explain it to the media. Instead, everything came to a head after Saturday’s game with Villarreal.

    Barca lost the match despite coming back from two goals down to lead 3-2, suffering a 3-5 defeat that leaves them fourth in the table, 11 points off surprise La Liga leaders Girona (on whom they have a game in hand) and 10 points behind rivals Real Madrid.

    go-deeper

    GO DEEPER

    Barcelona’s thin, injury-plagued squad will not be fixed by Xavi leaving

    The defeat essentially saw them say goodbye to a third competition in 15 days. First, the Supercopa de Espana, then the Copa del Rey (Athletic Bilbao knocked them out last week), now an almost definitive farewell to the league title they were defending.

    After the final whistle, Xavi did several flash interviews with broadcasters and nobody could have guessed what was going to happen next.

    After Xavi wrote the message to Laporta, he communicated to the board that he was leaving the position. According to sources close to the coach, he then went to find the players in the dressing room, hoping to tell them himself before they heard it elsewhere.

    In their own post-match interviews, Frenkie de Jong, Joao Cancelo and Ronald Araujo had all strongly defended the coach, with De Jong saying: “It’s our fault, not the coach’s.”

    Xavi wanted to talk to them, but by the time he was in a position to, over an hour after the final whistle, they had all left the stadium already.


    Barcelona conceded two late goals against Villarreal (David Ramos/Getty Images)

    Xavi had already said several times at recent press conferences that if he ever became “a problem” for the club, he would leave.

    There were several reasons behind the decision.

    After suffering another defeat, Xavi could see a week of polls in the media coming, asking whether Laporta should sack him or not — a turbulent week in which Barca had to play two games that were now key to keeping up the pace in the race for Spain’s Champions League spots.

    He wanted to calm the waters and face the end of the season without the extra tension and uncertainty. He felt the club needed a change and the best thing to do was to make it clear that he would be leaving.

    But there was also another reason. According to sources close to Xavi, he was fed up. The toxicity of being in the Barca environment not only affected his mood but also had consequences for his closest family.

    Club sources saw him as being overwhelmed. These sources also said that some Barca board members had been calling for his head for some time and that this also affected him, even though Laporta had defended him. He felt this only added pressure to an already critical environment.

    go-deeper

    GO DEEPER

    Xavi is not blameless but Barcelona’s problems run far deeper

    When Xavi left his meeting with the board after Saturday’s game, his only concern was how the players were going to take it. He felt bad that he had not spoken to them earlier. His announcement took the squad by total surprise.

    When the manager and players did finally get a chance to speak at training the following morning, several club sources told The Athletic that the group was affectionate towards him. Some of them approached Xavi at the end of the session to ask him if there was anything they could do to make him reconsider and stay.


    Xavi and Lewandowski embrace during Saturday’s defeat (Alex Caparros/Getty Images)

    It might be surprising to hear that Xavi, a man who spent half his life at Barcelona and knows the ins and outs of the institution better than possibly anyone else, just could not deal with its unique demands. But this was actually a major factor behind his decision to step down.

    “Over the last weeks, you could see that he was not going through a good time,” a club source said. “He was not enjoying his work and he was especially affected by the fact all the pressure was not just impacting him, but his family.”

    The club’s hierarchy expected Xavi to deal with the demands of the job in a more healthy way given his background. Xavi played for Barcelona for 17 years, making 767 appearances (only Lionel Messi has more, with 782) and winning 25 trophies.

    Pressure has grown on him since the start of his tenure in November 2021. He arrived at a difficult time for the club, amid financial struggles and with a weakened squad, but as the years went by and patience levels were tested, Xavi began to face the kind of criticism any manager deemed to be underperforming will be subjected to at Barca. This became a problem for him.

    “He focused too much on knowing everything that was said around him and even followed daily radio programmes and TV shows,” a club source said. “He also read the press too much, and it didn’t do Xavi any favours.”

    Those who have worked with Xavi on his backroom staff point to the pressure of the merciless Barcelona ‘entorno’ as the main reason for the manager’s downfall.

    go-deeper

    GO DEEPER

    Xavi’s position at Barcelona: From winning La Liga to fighting for his future

    The Spanish word ‘entorno’, literally translated as environment or surroundings, was coined by Barca legend Johan Cruyff when he was the manager in 1992 to describe the noise that is constantly generated around the club: the media, the fans, the politics of its executive board, or other major figures across the city and wider Catalonia region.

    “Here, everyone belongs to one side or ideology,” a club source said. “Every journalist, media outlet or person who can give an opinion has their own agenda and uses whatever happens on the pitch to turn the tide to their favour. There were constant attacks on Xavi and barely ever a will to build on and help the project.”

    But it’s not only in the media where Xavi felt left out and mistreated: he’s been progressively isolated within the club as well.

    Xavi was aware that multiple Barcelona executives have been criticising the team’s performances for months, as well as an alleged lack of intensity in the training sessions his staff led. Some were even pushing for president Laporta to sack him after the Supercopa de Espana final.

    Looking back to the end of last season, just after Barca won La Liga, there were signs of Xavi’s influence being eroded. The day after the bus parade through the city, where the Spanish league title was celebrated with fans, then-sporting director Jordi Cruyff announced he would be leaving.

    go-deeper

    GO DEEPER

    Jordi Cruyff explains his Barcelona departure – and what’s next

    Cruyff and Xavi had established a close bond. The Dutchman was an ally to the Catalan’s vision of how the squad should be assembled and defended it to the board of directors. But Barcelona’s senior management was already working on the arrival of Deco in the sporting direction department and Cruyff eventually felt there was no space left for him.

    Just a few months later, Cruyff’s partner in the role, Mateu Alemany, also left. Despite initially not being as close to Xavi as his colleague, during the last months of his tenure, they had worked together in planning for the future.

    When Alemany departed in August and Deco stepped up as the main leader in the sporting direction department, it left the latter and Laporta as the two most active voices in shaping the squad.

    Xavi has publicly stated his relationship with former team-mate Deco is perfectly fine, but last summer’s transfer activity simply reveals how his position has been weakened.

    The biggest investment Barca made during the off-season was in 18-year-old Brazilian striker Vitor Roque, for whom the club paid €30million (£25.5m; $32.5m), plus a potential €31m more in add-ons. Roque has played 86 minutes in five matches since arriving this winter, not starting a single game. In the manager’s eyes, he has been behind 18-year-old La Masia graduate Marc Guiu in the pecking order.

    Xavi’s biggest priority last summer was the addition of a new holding midfielder to replace club legend Sergio Busquets, who left to join Inter Miami. While the manager put the names of Martin Zubimendi, Joshua Kimmich or Marcelo Brozovic as his three priorities, Barcelona were only able to bring in Oriol Romeu, whose impact has been disappointing, to say the least.

    Further evidence of Xavi’s waning power within the club came in the build-up to the final game of the Champions League group stage this season, away at Royal Antwerp, which they lost 3-2. With Barcelona practically qualified, the club’s board interfered in the manager’s squad selection, pushing him to make all the team’s top guns travel instead of giving them a rest, as had been his intention.

    All this does not exempt Xavi from a share of responsibility over what has undoubtedly been a disappointing follow-up campaign to the success of 2022-23. In terms of recruitment, he has still been a part of the club and has sanctioned the moves that have taken place. He could, and perhaps should, have raised his voice as soon as his authority began to come under threat. When you spot problems inside the club but do not stand in their way in some manner, you might as well be considered part of it.


    Xavi alongside his brother and assistant coach Oscar Hernandez (Gongora/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

    It should also be noted that Xavi was heavily backed in the market during Barca’s infamous ‘summer of levers’, when, back in 2022, the club made a series of future asset sales to finance a transformative spend in the transfer market.

    None of those signings (Ferran Torres, Andreas Christensen, Franck Kessie, Robert Lewandowski, Raphinha and Jules Kounde) can be, right now, deemed as a successful deal.

    All of them have been heavily exposed and contrasted by the brilliance of several emerging La Masia talents, with 16-year-old Lamine Yamal (who made his debut aged 15 last season) the biggest attacking threat for the club in recent weeks. Pau Cubarsi has just turned 17 and has impressed more at centre-back in two games than Christensen or Kounde have all season.

    A few months into the 2023-24 campaign, coaching staff sources complained about last summer’s signings and assessed their attacking line as being far from the best in the country, but there’s a brutal reality in Xavi’s tenure: he’s been unable to make the team progress despite having been financially supported with transfers.

    “He has not shown his players that he has the tactical level to be considered a top-level coach,” said a source close to one of the current Barcelona players. The fact Xavi’s only managerial experience before landing at Camp Nou was in Qatar also played a part in their assessment.

    However, Xavi’s trust in the youngsters from La Masia can’t go unnoticed. Fermin Lopez, Yamal, Cubarsi and Hector Fort are all names that many now believe are capable of playing at the club for years. With other managers, they might have struggled to find a pathway to the first team.

    go-deeper

    GO DEEPER

    Lamine Yamal: Barcelona’s teenage superstar ‘who can define an era’

    But equally, Barca’s manager has also had to deal with the deterioration of the dressing room’s harmony under his watch, with several examples already reported by The Athletic recently.

    Before the start of the season, Kounde told Xavi he didn’t enjoy being played as a right-back and that he would prefer to be used in his natural central defensive position. This saw club captain Araujo being relocated as a right-back more regularly, but he has ended up complaining about this, too. Christensen has become disgruntled over consistently being the first player to be dropped when everyone in defence is fit despite never complaining and performing well last term.

    There’s also the case of Lewandowski, arguably the club’s key senior player, who has seen his position at the club, and relationship with the manager, change significantly throughout the past year.

    The 35-year-old has devolved from a dressing room role model to an expendable asset in the eyes of the coaching staff. According to sources close to the player’s camp, the striker’s dip in form since the World Cup break for Qatar 2022 owes more to a change in system that didn’t benefit him, although they admit he’s been far from his best. Lewandowski himself spoke to The Athletic about such concerns during Barca’s pre-season tour of the United States.

    go-deeper

    GO DEEPER

    Robert Lewandowski exclusive interview: ‘Barcelona is still the place to be’

    In many ways, much of this is all part of the normal running of an elite football club. Nobody can expect top athletes to be happy when things aren’t going the way they planned and some of the examples mentioned above are now thought to have been dealt with. Others have not been tackled in time.

    There is still a part of the dressing room that truly believes in the manager, especially players who broke into the first team thanks to him or ones who were given a second chance.

    Some 20 minutes after Xavi revealed his decision on Saturday night, Gavi posted a picture with the manager on social media with a caption that read: “Always backing you, boss.” Local radio station Cadena SER Barcelona reported that, on Sunday morning, club captain Sergi Roberto told Xavi in front of the whole dressing room that he’d support him if changed his mind and decided to stay.

    The bottom line, though, is that Xavi himself does not believe he can turn the situation around.


    Joan Laporta and Xavi on the day the Barca legend was presented as manager in 2021 (Lluis Gene/AFP via Getty Images)

    Xavi said he could not understand why his team lost in the Copa del Rey against Athletic Bilbao. He also believed they deserved to win against Villarreal and especially against Girona in December’s La Liga meeting — a defeat that badly damaged him in the eyes of Barca’s hierarchy.

    There was also a sense that Xavi failed in attempts to improve the narrative with his words in press conferences. He went from protecting players to then calling them out by admitting they were not following what he practised in training. He also described attitude problems after struggling to beat bottom-side Almeria at the end of December and promised fans his team would never replicate that. Three weeks later, Barca were being outplayed and outrun by Real Madrid in Saudi Arabia.


    So, what now?

    There is still the possibility of Xavi not lasting the rest of the season if he does not manage to reverse the team’s dynamic in the four months remaining. The board has taken the decision to wait and see. Club sources told The Athletic that the manager has already written off any salary related to next season.

    Barcelona’s board are already looking for a new manager. During his campaign for the Barcelona presidential elections back in 2021, Laporta said his preference was to bring in a German coach at a time when Thomas Tuchel, Jurgen Klopp and Julian Nagelsmann were at their peak.

    However, there are sections of the board that are very hesitant to bring in a coach who does not speak Spanish as they believe it would make the situation more difficult. They want to see how the players react; if they fight to climb the table and go as far as possible in the Champions League.

    Xavi tried everything and nothing worked. Sacrificing himself was his last desperate move; one to ease the pressure around the players and protect his legacy at the club.

    At the same time, it pushes Joan Laporta and his board to spot further problems inside Barcelona and decide who has to lead the club’s new project for the foreseeable future.

    (Top photo: Aitor Alcalde Colomer/Getty Images; design: Eamonn Dalton)



    [ad_2]

    The New York Times

    Source link

  • Rivals.com  –  Rivals250 DL Isaiah Campbell commits to Clemson

    Rivals.com – Rivals250 DL Isaiah Campbell commits to Clemson

    [ad_1]









    Rivals250 DL Isaiah Campbell commits to Clemson – Rivals.com















    Clemson‘s elite junior day was a massive success. The Tigers picked up commitments from Brayden Jacobs and Jaylan Beckley on Sunday and now Isaiah Campbell has gone public with his commitment. The Rivals250 defensive lineman out of Durham (N.C.) Southern Durham broke down his commitment to Clemson with Rivals.com in the video above.

    Certain Data by Sportradar

    © 2024 Yahoo. All rights reserved.

    [ad_2]

    Adam Friedman, National Recruiting Analyst

    Source link

  • Ilia Malinin lands quad axel while winning second straight US figure skating title

    Ilia Malinin lands quad axel while winning second straight US figure skating title

    [ad_1]

    Ilia Malinin established such a big lead after his peerless short program at the U.S. Figure Skating Championships that the phenom’s free skate Sunday was less a competition and more a coronation.

    Even though kings sometimes fall down.

    After starting his program with a textbook quad axel — a jump only Malinin has landed in competition — he doubled a planned quad loop, fell on a quad lutz and doubled another planned quad. But even with those miscues, the 19-year-old “Quad God” was still nearly 30 points better than the rest of the competition, cruising to his second consecutive national championship.

    “Even though it wasn’t what I wished for,” he said, “it was a fun experience. I enjoyed having the crowd with me every step.”

    Malinin finished with 294.35 points, well below the world-leading score of 314.66 points he had at the Grand Prix Final in December. But it was well ahead of Jason Brown in second with 264.50 points, while Camden Pulkinen soared from fifth after his short program into the bronze-medal position with 262.33 points.

    Malinin had been bothered coming into nationals by a boot problem, and he resorted to wearing an old pair that he used at the Grand Prix Final. And with that issue still in the back of his mind, he wasn’t sure whether he would try the quad axel.

    He did. And he landed it in spectacular fashion.

    The opening pass to his free skate, set to music from the HBO hit series “Succession,” had a base value of 12.5 points, but it was so well done that he scored more than 16 points on that element alone. He followed with a perfect quad lutz before a mistake on his planned quad loop, which he turned into a double that appeared to slow down his momentum.

    Malinin recovered to land a quad salchow before falling on his quad lutz. And after doubling his planned quad toe loop, he came back to land a triple lutz-triple axel-triple toe sequence that scored 21-plus points and ended his program on a high note.

    Still, the perfectionist in Malinin was evident the moment he stepped off the ice inside Nationwide Arena in Columbus, Ohio, and began discussing the miscues with his father, Roman Skorniakov, a former Uzbekistani national champion.

    Malinin, who won Skate America and was second at Grand Prix de France, was planning to use nationals as a warmup for the world championships in March. He finished third a year ago and will be considered among the favorites in Montreal.

    “I definitely noticed a lot of improvement of just looking at the audience, having that connection between my own program and the audience,” he said, “and adding those cleaner lines and making everything neater — that’s the next step going to worlds.”

    The biggest drama on the final day of the U.S. championships was who would take silver and bronze.

    The 29-year-old Brown, performing his “The Impossible Dream” program from last year, opened with two brilliant triple axels — one in sequence with a double — after missing the same jump during his short program. He struggled with a combination later in the program, and he singled a planned double axel, but the fan favorite was still pleased with his performance.

    “Grit over perfection,” he told his coach, Tracy Wilson, after stepping off the ice.

    “This was very special,” Brown added later. “The crowd was awesome, and just the support and energy helped that much more.”

    Brown earned the silver medal ahead of the 23-year-old Pulkinen, who performed his free skate to works by Giacomo Puccini and earned the best finish at senior nationals of his career. Pulkinen earned big points with a huge opening quad toe loop, and he had a strong triple axel later in his program that helped him land the bronze medal.

    “I knew after the short it was a tight race,” Pulkinen said. “That’s what the audience likes to see: a tight race.”

    U.S. Figure Skating announced later Sunday that Malinin, Brown and Pulkinen would be on the team it sends to worlds, while the duos of Emily Chan and Spencer Howe, national champs Ellie Kam and Danny O’Shea, and Valentina Plazas and Maximiliano Fernandez would take part in the pairs event. Chan and Howe, who won the short program at nationals, made the team despite withdrawing before the free skate so that Howe could continue his recovery from shoulder surgery.

    Ice dancers Madison Chock and Evan Bates will try to defend their world title while competing alongside the American teams of Christina Carreira and Anthony Ponomarenko and Emily Bratti and Ian Somerville.

    Amber Glenn and Isabeau Levito, who went 1-2 in the women’s competition at nationals, also will compete in Montreal.

    ___

    AP Sports: https://apnews.com/sports

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Tyrrell Hatton set to sign for LIV: All you need to know as he links up with Jon Rahm

    Tyrrell Hatton set to sign for LIV: All you need to know as he links up with Jon Rahm

    [ad_1]

    Tyrrell Hatton is expected to become the latest player to sign a deal to join the LIV Golf Tour as he links up with Ryder Cup team-mate Jon Rahm.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Bengals’ biggest decisions include Tee Higgins, Joe Mixon

    Bengals’ biggest decisions include Tee Higgins, Joe Mixon

    [ad_1]

    CINCINNATI — One day after the Cincinnati Bengals‘ season officially ended, scenes inside their locker room offered reminders about the team’s upcoming reality.

    Players traded jerseys with personalized messages, a tradition generally observed after games between players from opposing teams who are friends. Others bagged or boxed up their belongings and said their goodbyes before leaving town. And some offered words about an uncertain future.

    One of them was defensive tackle DJ Reader, a cornerstone of Cincinnati’s rebuild. A right quad injury in Week 15 ended Reader’s fourth season with the Bengals and the final one under his current contract. Standing on crutches, Reader pondered the end of this current iteration of the Bengals and what free agency might look like for him.

    And he had no idea.

    “It’s kind of interesting,” Reader said Jan. 8. “I’m in the middle of [the COVID-19 pandemic] last time. This time, I’ll be in the middle of this [injury situation]. You never know. I don’t know how it’ll be.”

    When free agency begins March 11, Reader will be one of a few key Bengals who could sign with a new club. According to OverTheCap.com, the Bengals will have a little less than $60 million in cap space.

    And Cincinnati will have some important decisions to make ahead of a pivotal 2024 season.

    DJ Reader

    Position: Defensive tackle

    Age: 29

    2023 stats: 14 games, 20 tackles, one sack

    Outlook: Don’t be fooled by the numbers. Reader was the first player the Bengals signed in 2020 free agency, a couple of months before drafting quarterback Joe Burrow with the No. 1 overall pick. Reader signed a four-year deal worth $53 million in what was then the most the Bengals had ever given to an external free agent.

    Quad injuries ended his 2020 and 2023 seasons. But when he was healthy, he was a massive piece of Cincinnati’s success.

    “He’s just such a leader, such a consistent force on the defensive line,” Bengals coach Zac Taylor said after Reader’s season-ending injury.

    Reader carried a $15.6 million cap charge in 2023, according to Roster Management System. It’s unclear what kind of market he will have coming off the injury. With Cincinnati incurring steep costs to maintain its offensive core, the Bengals will have to decide whether they can afford to have Reader back.


    Position: Wide receiver

    Age: 25

    2023 stats: 12 games, 42 catches, 656 receiving yards, five receiving touchdowns

    Outlook: Multiple factors led to Higgins’ least productive year with the Bengals. He battled a couple of serious injuries — a fractured rib in a Week 4 loss to the Tennessee Titans and a hamstring injury he suffered in a practice later in the season.

    He also had to contend with not getting a long-term deal done before the start of the season.

    Higgins caught 54.5% of his targets, the lowest catch rate of his career, according to ESPN Stats & Information. But his value was underscored in a Week 15 win over the Minnesota Vikings. With star wide receiver Ja’Marr Chase leaving the end of the game because of a shoulder injury, Higgins stepped up and had four catches for 61 yards and two touchdowns, including an acrobatic 21-yard reception that was one of the top catches of the year.

    Higgins is a prime candidate to receive the franchise tag, which the Bengals have used in two of the past three offseasons. In 2020, Cincinnati receiver A.J. Green played on the tag. Two years later, safety Jessie Bates III played on the tag and cashed in 2023, when he signed a four-year deal worth $64 million with the Atlanta Falcons.

    Even with Chase in line for a massive contract extension soon, the Bengals can give Higgins a tag that is estimated to be worth $21.7 million by OverTheCap. Chase will be in the final year of his rookie contract in 2024, and Burrow’s cap charge doesn’t balloon until 2025. Burrow has already stated his desire to have Higgins back for at least one more season.

    “I expect him to be back,” Burrow said Jan. 8. “I know everybody in the locker room wants him back.”


    Position: Running back

    Age: 27

    2023 stats: 17 games, 257 carries, 1,034 rushing yards, nine rushing touchdowns

    The outlook: Mixon faces an uncertain offseason for the second straight year. In 2023, Mixon accepted a renegotiated contract that lowered his salary cap charge to $8.4 million. The new deal featured a couple of important incentives, and he cashed in at the end of the season. He scored 12 total touchdowns, earning $350,000.

    And by the numbers, he was certainly productive. Mixon amassed 1,410 scrimmage yards. Since 2015, that is the eighth-highest total posted by a running back in his seventh NFL season or later, according to ESPN Stats & Information.

    But Mixon lacks the explosiveness that Cincinnati needs to punish opponents who are defending against Burrow and the Bengals’ passing game. Among running backs with at least 100 carries, Mixon ranked 15th on runs of 10 or more yards against light defensive boxes (six or fewer defenders).

    That remains a point of emphasis for the Bengals this offseason. The Bengals will have to decide on Mixon’s contract early. He is due a $3 million roster bonus on March 18, the fifth day of the new league year. If the Bengals cut him before then, they will gain $5.8 million in cap savings.

    While Mixon has been productive, Cincinnati is looking for more big plays on the ground in 2024, which could play a role in whether Mixon returns for his eighth season with the Bengals.

    “I think this offseason we’ll be able to take a step,” Burrow said.

    [ad_2]

    Ben Baby

    Source link

  • Travis Kelce, defense lead Chiefs past Ravens, back to Super Bowl

    Travis Kelce, defense lead Chiefs past Ravens, back to Super Bowl

    [ad_1]

    BALTIMORE — Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson is expected to be named MVP for his incredible regular season, but Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes has saved his best work for the playoffs.

    Teaming up with All-Pro tight end Travis Kelce on Sunday, Mahomes won his second straight postseason game on the road with a 17-10 AFC Championship Game victory over the top-seeded Ravens. The defending champion Chiefs return to the Super Bowl for the fourth time since 2019, looking for their third title.

    After giving up a touchdown on Baltimore’s second possession, the Chiefs’ defense led the way, as it has done much of the season. No play was more important than L’Jarius Sneed‘s fumble recovery in the end zone early in the fourth quarter.


    Kansas City Chiefs

    The Chiefs, who for most of this regular season looked more vulnerable than at any time since Mahomes became their starting quarterback in 2018, are going back to the Super Bowl.

    The Chiefs scored touchdowns on their first two possessions and then used a superb defensive game plan to beat the Ravens.

    Describe the game in two words: Kelce dominates. Kelce, who said during the week he wanted to win this AFC Championship Game “more than I’ve ever wanted one in my life,” played like it. Kelce caught 11 passes, including the Chiefs’ first touchdown, for 116 yards. He set an NFL record for postseason catches with 152, breaking the mark held by Jerry Rice.

    QB breakdown: Mahomes was on point. He was content to take mostly shorter throws but was able to make them work. Mahomes was 30-of-39 for 241 yards and a touchdown. Throwing just to Kelce, he was 11-of-11.

    Pivotal play: Coach Andy Reid had the Chiefs try to convert on fourth-and-2 from the Baltimore 41 on their first drive of the game, and Mahomes completed a 13-yard pass to Kelce to keep the drive alive. The Chiefs went on to score the game’s first touchdown — and never trailed. — Adam Teicher

    Next game: vs. San Francisco 49ers in Super Bowl LVIII, Feb. 11 (6:30 p.m. ET, CBS)


    Baltimore Ravens

    Jackson will have to wait another year until he can deliver on his draft-day promise to bring a Super Bowl to the Ravens.

    Jackson and the Ravens offense melted down with three turnovers, which ended the season for the AFC’s No. 1 seed and caused the first home AFC Championship Game in Ravens history to end in bitter disappointment. The Ravens have not reached the Super Bowl since winning it in 2012.

    The Ravens are 0-8 in team history when committing three or more turnovers in the postseason.

    Jackson punctuated the struggles of the Ravens offense when he slammed his helmet into the ground after throwing into triple coverage and getting intercepted in the end zone in the fourth quarter. The Ravens also turned the ball over on Jackson getting stripped from behind in the first half and wide receiver Zay Flowers fumbling near the goal line. The only other time Baltimore had turned the ball over three times was Week 5 in a loss to the Steelers.

    The NFL MVP favorite, Jackson finished 20-of-37 for 272 yards, a TD and interception as Baltimore tied a season-low with 10 points.

    QB breakdown: Jackson struggled the most in extending drives. He was 1-of-6 for 7 yards and two sacks on third downs. This was a reversal of fortune for the Ravens, who converted 42% of their third downs in the regular season, which ranked No. 9 in the NFL.

    Pivotal play: Flowers’ fumble near the goal line in the fourth quarter. With Baltimore down 17-7, Flowers dove toward the end zone with what looked to be a touchdown but then got the ball punched out by Sneed. It marked the first fumble of the season for Flowers, a 2023 first-rounder who was visibly distraught on the sideline. It was also an uncharacteristic mistake by Baltimore as a team. This was the Ravens’ first red zone turnover since Week 5.

    Troubling trend: Jackson trailed by double digits for only the fifth time in his six-year career, but it’s the third time this has happened against the Chiefs.

    It was a bad time for Jackson and the Baltimore offense to produce their slowest start of the season. Excluding the season finale (when Jackson didn’t play), the Ravens totaled first-half lows of points (seven), yards (110) and completions (five).

    It wasn’t just the offense that struggled. The Baltimore defense allowed touchdowns on the first two drives for the first time since 2021 against the Vikings.

    Eye-popping stat: Jackson delivered the most unique highlight of the game in the second quarter, when he caught his own pass. The 13-yard Jackson-to-Jackson connection was the longest completion by a player to himself in the postseason in the Super Bowl era.

    On second-and-5 at his own 18-yard line, Jackson had his pass tipped at the line by safety Justin Reid, which deflected the ball high in the air. He ran downfield to pull in the pass, which was the longest completion by a player to himself since Kent Graham in 1998 with the New York Giants.

    But four plays later, the Ravens ended up punting — which was a theme for the game. — Jamison Hensley

    [ad_2]

    Adam Teicher and Jamison Hensley

    Source link

  • Eberle has 2 goals and an assist as Kraken beat Blue Jackets 4-2

    Eberle has 2 goals and an assist as Kraken beat Blue Jackets 4-2

    [ad_1]

    SEATTLE — Jordan Eberle had two goals and an assist in Seattle’s three-goal first period, and the Kraken beat the Columbus Blue Jackets 4-2 on Sunday night.

    Jared McCann had a goal and an assist, Brandon Tanev also scored, and Oliver Bjorkstrand had two assists as Seattle extended its point streak to three games (2-0-1). Joey Daccord stopped 30 shots.

    “We were disappointed to lose the point the other night,” Kraken coach Dave Hakstol said of Friday’s 4-3 overtime loss to St. Louis when the Blues rallied from a 3-1 deficit. “But we came back and got the two points tonight that were critical.

    “We have one game left before a long break, so we have to get our heads completely focused on that job, make sure we’re ready to go for a real competitive 60 minutes.”

    Yegor Chinakhov scored twice in the third period for Columbus, and Daniil Tarasov had 23 saves. The Blue Jackets have lost seven of their last nine games (2-5-2).

    With Columbus’ Dmitri Voronkov off for holding, Bjorkstrand fired a hard shot from just beyond the top of the right circle. Eberle got just enough stick on it in front of the net to deflect it past Tarasov to open the scoring with 7:20 left in the first period.

    McCann made it 2-0 with just under 4 minutes remaining in the period, breaking up the left side for a pass from Eberle and a shot from the middle of the left circle.

    Eberle needed just 14 seconds of the Kraken’s second power-play opportunity to make it 3-0. McCann took a hard shot from the left circle, which Tarasov saved, but was unable to grab onto. With the puck loose in the crease, Eberle came in from Tarasov’s right and swept it into the far side with 2:02 left in the first.

    Eberle became the first Kraken player with multiple power-play goals in a game, and Bjorkstrand got his second assist on the play to increase his team-leading points total to 40.

    “The first one, we broke in well, had a couple good looks at it, and it went off their guy, off the stick, and went in,” Eberle ssaid. “The second one, we found a way to get back, created some movement, and made a play, and Jared found the puck.

    “We haven’t done a lot of that this year – we’ve had some shots from the side and we’ve burying it that way, so it was nice to find different ways to put it in,” added

    Chinakhov got the Blue Jackets on the scoreboard with a backhander at 7:12 of the third period. He then pulled them within one on a breakaway with 4:02 remaining.

    Tanev clinched it for the Kraken with an empty-netter with 13 seconds left.

    “We didn’t have much to start the game, but found a way to push ourselves,” Columbus coach Pascal Vincent said. “Early on, their transition game really hurt us – they’re really good at that. They were connecting on breakouts in their neutral zone groups, then we got better at closing the gap and putting pressure on their guys. I thought we created more turnovers. In the second period, we started to move, then in the third period, we were going pretty well.”

    UP NEXT

    Blue Jackets: At St. Louis on Tuesday night.

    Kraken: At San Jose on Tuesday night.

    ___

    AP NHL: https://www.apnews.com/hub/NHL

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Today on Sky Sports Racing: Chindit’s half-sibling makes racecourse debut at Wolverhampton

    Today on Sky Sports Racing: Chindit’s half-sibling makes racecourse debut at Wolverhampton

    [ad_1]

    Today’s afternoon racing comes from two exciting jumps cards at Plumpton and Hereford; later Wolverhampton hosts a thrilling eight-race card including Listed Race winner Chindit’s half-sibling all live on Sky Sports Racing.

    6.00 Wolverhampton – Listed race winner Chindit’s half sibling makes debut

    Charlie Appleby’s Aurora’s Beauty makes her course debut in the Boost Your Acca At BetMGM Fillies’ Novice Stakes (6.00). This filly is half-siblings to Listed race winner Chindit and cost £600,000. Her breeding looks something special as a daughter of Bated Breath and she could well cause a splash here.

    Appleby also has Race The Wind in this, who won a nice race at Newmarket in July last year. She needs to have steady hands which is something top jockey James Doyle will do. Spiritual Pursuit will be looking to go one better than last time as she finished second at Beverley. To achieve this, she will need to be quicker out of the stalls.

    3.20 Plumpton – For Gina bids for double

    For Gina bids for a double in the highly competitive feature the Blue Bell Emsworth Gilos 40th Birthday Handicap Hurdle.

    This Lucy Wadham-trained mare hasn’t been out of the first three on her last seven starts and her win at Fakenham was resound. She will need to defy a 8lb rise but could do so in this consistent form.

    Lassue has also been very consistent in recent runs and is dropping in class here. Trainer Fergal O’Brien is in great form and could well cause an upset. The six-year-old Doughmore Bay struggled last time out at Cheltenham but this should be a more straightforward race.

    7.00 Wolverhampton – in-form pair Inverlochy and Intoxicata clash

    The in-form duo of Inverlochy and Intoxicata clash in the Bet Racing Odds Guaranteed At BetMGM Fillies’ Handicap (7.00).

    Inverlochy seeks a double here after fending off Landlordtothestars at Lingfield in his most recent run. This win comes after a narrow defeat and two other wins and should go well here with the same jockey Harry Davies.

    Intoxicata won at Newcastle last month, only just getting up at the post. She will be wanting to come through horses again which may cause problems. Tom Marquand’s mount Bluebottle Blue is lightly raced and is trying to get off the mark here. She missed out by a head last time at Newcastle and could well get one better.

    Sky Bet odds I Today’s cards

    Watch all the action from Plumpton, Hereford and Wolverhampton live on Sky Sports Racing on Monday January 29.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Purdy, 49ers rally from 17 down to beat Lions, reach Super Bowl

    Purdy, 49ers rally from 17 down to beat Lions, reach Super Bowl

    [ad_1]

    SANTA CLARA, Calif. — The San Francisco 49ers are still alive in their quest for a sixth Lombardi Trophy. Barely.

    The 49ers overcame a 17-point halftime deficit to the Detroit Lions, as third-quarter heroics by wide receiver Brandon Aiyuk and quarterback Brock Purdy helped San Francisco rally to a 34-31 victory over Detroit in the NFC Championship Game on Sunday, denying the Lions their first Super Bowl appearance.

    Christian McCaffrey scored twice for the 49ers, who will play the Kansas City Chiefs in Super Bowl LVIII on Feb. 11 at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas in a rematch of their Super Bowl showdown four years ago.


    San Francisco 49ers

    For most of the season, the 49ers were the perfect front-runners. They often raced out to big leads, forced opponents to throw the entire second half and put games away.

    That approach left many wondering if the Niners were made of the right stuff when the game was on the line. If last week’s win against the Green Bay Packers wasn’t enough evidence, the 49ers left no doubt Sunday against the Lions.

    The 49ers entered halftime trailing by 17 with seemingly little chance of getting back into it. But these veteran-led Niners never relented, rattling off 27 straight points to forge a tie with the 2012 version of the 49ers for the biggest comeback in NFC Championship Game history.

    And now, after a series of near misses and devastating losses before the Super Bowl, the Niners will get their long-awaited shot at the franchise’s sixth Lombardi Trophy. In a fitting twist, they’ll do it against the Chiefs, who erased their own deficit in Super Bowl LIV to send the Niners on their four-year journey to get back to the league’s biggest stage.

    QB breakdown: After a rough first half in which he was under pressure often and threw his first career postseason interception, Purdy decimated the Lions with his arm and his legs. Purdy had a pair of 21-yard scrambles in key moments, finishing with 48 yards on five carries and completing 20 of 31 passes for 267 yards and a touchdown with the interception.

    While Purdy didn’t wait until the final drive of the fourth quarter this week, he did save his best for last to help the Niners move on.

    Biggest hole in the game plan: How the Niners’ defense would hold up against Detroit’s running game was the biggest question facing San Francisco this week. And while much of the Lions’ success was the result of flat-out physical dominance, Niners defensive coordinator Steve Wilks didn’t offer much in the way of adjustments to slow it down.

    At various points in the season, the Niners dabbled with five-man fronts to change it up and give opposing offenses something to think about. Aside from a third-quarter surge, the Niners struggled to stop the run as Detroit finished with 182 yards on 29 attempts.

    Describe the game in two words: Comeback kids. So much was made this season of the Niners’ inability to author comebacks, but apparently they were saving it for the postseason, as they erased a second-half deficit for the second week in a row to advance to Super Bowl LVIII. The Niners join the 1994 Chargers as the only teams with multiple seven-point, second-half playoff comebacks prior to reaching the Super Bowl. That Chargers team lost to San Francisco in Super Bowl XXIX (49-26). — Nick Wagoner

    Next game: vs. Kansas City Chiefs in Super Bowl LVIII, Feb. 11 (6:30 p.m. ET, CBS)

    Detroit Lions

    So close, but so far.

    It was a tale of two halves for the Lions as they blew a 17-point lead at halftime, falling one game short of the first Super Bowl appearance in franchise history. The third quarter was the game-changer, as the Lions were outscored 17-0 to cough up a 24-7 halftime lead thanks to a circus catch by Aiyuk and a costly fumble by Jahmyr Gibbs.

    Detroit has now lost 12 straight playoff games on the road, extending its mark for the longest postseason road losing streak in NFL history.

    Describe the game in two words: Questionable decisions. Lions head coach Dan Campbell is known for being aggressive and made some tough calls, notably failing twice on fourth down in the second half, which could have changed things down the stretch.

    Troubling trend: Third-quarter woes. Not only were the Lions held scoreless coming out of the first half, but they were outgained 170-42, which was their second-worst yards differential in a quarter this season. Gibbs’ lost fumble was their first turnover of the postseason, and they dropped two passes on third and fourth downs, which was tied for their most in a game this season.

    QB breakdown: Jared Goff didn’t have to have his greatest performance in the air, with the Lions running so well in the first half, but he continued his playoff streak of no interceptions. Goff passed for 273 yards while going 25-for-41, but he didn’t throw a touchdown pass until the waning moments of the game. He nearly reached a Super Bowl with his second team, where he would have joined Tom Brady, Peyton Manning, Kurt Warner and Craig Morton as the only QBs to start a Super Bowl with multiple teams. — Eric Woodyard

    [ad_2]

    Nick Wagoner and Eric Woodyard

    Source link

  • Rivals.com  –  Clemson hits all the right notes for Rivals250 DL Isaiah Campbell

    Rivals.com – Clemson hits all the right notes for Rivals250 DL Isaiah Campbell

    [ad_1]









    Clemson hits all the right notes for Rivals250 DL Isaiah Campbell – Rivals.com














    Rivals250 defensive lineman Isaiah Campbell returned to Clemson this weekend for their elite junior day and things appear to be trending in the right direction for the Tigers. The Durham (N.C.) Southern Durham standout had plenty of good things to say about his latest trip.

    You must be a member to read the full article. Subscribe now for instant access to all premium content.


    • icn-check-mark Created with Sketch.

      Members-only forums


    • icn-check-mark Created with Sketch.

      Predict prospect commits with FanFutureCast


    • icn-check-mark Created with Sketch.

      Exclusive highlights and interviews


    • icn-check-mark Created with Sketch.

      Exclusive coverage of Rivals Camp Series


    • icn-check-mark Created with Sketch.

      Breaking recruiting news

    Certain Data by Sportradar

    © 2024 Yahoo. All rights reserved.

    [ad_2]

    Adam Friedman, National Recruiting Analyst

    Source link

  • 49ers flip script in 2nd half to land in Super Bowl

    49ers flip script in 2nd half to land in Super Bowl

    [ad_1]

    SANTA CLARA, Calif. — As the seconds ticked away in the San Francisco 49ers‘ Super Bowl LIV loss to the Kansas City Chiefs, tight end George Kittle was filmed on the sideline vowing to return to the NFL’s biggest stage. It took four years and a historic comeback Sunday, but the Niners finally made good on Kittle’s promise.

    With their stunning, 34-31 come-from-behind win against the Detroit Lions in the NFC Championship Game, the 49ers are not only returning to the Super Bowl but will get a chance to avenge that loss to the Chiefs on Feb. 11 at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas.

    To get there, the Niners needed to overcome a 24-7 deficit after a first half in which the Lions were the clear aggressor, running the ball at will and pressuring San Francisco quarterback Brock Purdy on nearly 60% of his dropbacks.

    But the veteran-laden Niners didn’t bow out, sparked by receiver Brandon Aiyuk‘s 51-yard catch off a deflection off Lions cornerback Kindle Vildor‘s helmet, and rattled off 17 points in an eight-minute span to tie the game. The Niners took their first lead with 9:52 left on a 33-yard field goal from kicker Jake Moody to make it 27-24.

    To ice the victory, the Niners got a fourth-down stop in their territory (their second of the game), a 3-yard touchdown run from back Elijah Mitchell to make it 34-24, and an onside kick recovery from Kittle. It was tied for the biggest comeback in an NFC Championship Game, matching the 2012 Niners who came back from down 17 to beat the Atlanta Falcons.

    It also was a bit of revenge for the 1957 Niners, who, coincidentally, had a 24-7 halftime lead and went up 27-7 against the Lions in the 1957 Western Conference playoffs, only to lose 31-27.

    With the victory, the Niners sit alone in NFL history for most playoff wins with 38, surpassing the New England Patriots and Green Bay Packers. Coach Kyle Shanahan improved to 8-3 in playoff games, which ties him with Tom Flores for the second-best playoff win percentage among coaches with at least 10 games, and it puts him behind only Kansas City’s Andy Reid (14) in playoff wins since Shanahan became a head coach in 2017.

    Making their third consecutive NFC Championship Game appearance and fourth in five years, the Niners arrived at Sunday’s game with memories of last year’s loss to the Philadelphia Eagles fresh in their minds.

    That loss, in which Purdy suffered a torn ulnar collateral ligament in his right elbow during the first quarter, left the Niners lamenting a missed opportunity, not just because they believed they could beat Philadelphia, but because they know as well as anyone this side of Kansas City how difficult it is to climb the mountain to get back to this point of the postseason.

    On Thursday, left tackle Trent Williams laid out just how difficult it is.

    “If you’ve been there, you know what it takes to get back there,” Williams said. “We’ve been there obviously last two years. You kind of got to have control, too, because you want to get it all back in one day. You want to win a championship the first day at OTAs. You’ve got to have patience and understand this is a marathon, it’s not a sprint.”

    The 49ers’ marathon isn’t finished but they are entering the home stretch. That they will get a chance to atone for the loss to Kansas City in their last Super Bowl appearance is the icing on top. The Niners led that game by 10 and had the ball with 8:53 to go but fell 31-20 as the Chiefs rattled off the game’s final 21 points.

    Kansas City has since been back to the Super Bowl two previous times, winning one of those, and will enter this one as the defending champions. The 49ers opened as 2.5-point favorites at ESPN BET, but the lined dipped to -1.5 within 20 minutes after being posted and was as low as -1 at some sportsbooks Sunday night. The total opened at 47.5.

    For the Niners, this will be their eighth Super Bowl appearance, tied for second most all time with the Pittsburgh Steelers and Dallas Cowboys. A win against the Chiefs would give San Francisco its long-awaited sixth Lombardi Trophy, which would tie the Steelers and Patriots for the most all time.

    [ad_2]

    Nick Wagoner

    Source link

  • Saddiq Bey’s last-second dunk gives Hawks 126-125 win over Raptors

    Saddiq Bey’s last-second dunk gives Hawks 126-125 win over Raptors

    [ad_1]

    ATLANTA — Saddiq Bey dunked in a Trae Young miss with 1.1 seconds left to lift the Atlanta Hawks to a 126-125 win over the Toronto Raptors on Sunday night.

    It was the fifth straight loss was for the short-handed Raptors.

    The Raptors had taken a one-point lead when a Young turnover in the backcourt led to a Scottie Barnes dunk with seven seconds remaining.

    Bey finished with a season-high 26 points and he also grabbed 13 rebounds. Young had 30 points and 12 assists as the Hawks overcame a night where they shot just 6 for 27 (22%) from 3.

    Clint Capela finished with 19 points and 14 rebounds for Atlanta and Jalen Johnson had 17 points and 12 rebounds.

    The Raptors were without three double-digit scorers in RJ Barrett (knee swelling , 19.2 ppg), Immanuel Quickley (quadriceps contusion, 15.5 ppg) and Jakob Poeltl (ankle sprain, 10.6 ppg).

    The absence of the 7-foot-1 Poeltl was particularly felt early, as the Hawks had five dunks in the first quarter and attacked the lane regularly. Atlanta finished with a 76-52 advantage in points in the paint and outrebounded the Raptors 51-46.

    Jordan Nwora had 24 points, nine rebounds and six assists off the bench for the Raptors in his third game since being acquired in a trade with the Pacers. He only scored three points in his first two games with the Raptors.

    Scottie Barnes had 24 points and eight assists for Toronto and Gary Trent Jr. added 16.

    Hawks guard Dejounte Murray was ruled out with hamstring soreness shortly before tipoff. The former All-Star who is averaging a career-high 21.2 points per game has been the subjects of trade talks. He had started all 45 games prior to Sunday.

    UP NEXT

    Raptors: Visit the Bulls on Tuesday for the second of a six-game road trip.

    Hawks: Host the Lakers on Tuesday.

    ___

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

    [ad_2]

    Source link