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  • Carroll: Wasn’t ‘football people’ who decided fate

    Carroll: Wasn’t ‘football people’ who decided fate

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    SEATTLE — Pete Carroll’s 14-year run as Seahawks coach ended Wednesday when team owner Jody Allen announced that he was transitioning into an advisory role with the organization, but not before Carroll fought hard to keep his job.

    The challenge in making his case to ownership, according to Carroll, was that “they’re not football people.”

    Carroll shared details of his end-of-season meetings with Allen when he appeared on Seattle Sports 710 AM for the final installment of his weekly radio show. He said the first objective was to get to the bottom of what happened this past season as the Seahawks finished 9-8 and missed the playoffs for the second time in three years.

    “And then, OK, what is the essence of the adjustments that are necessary?” Carroll said in a conversation that aired Friday. “That’s where maybe we don’t see eye to eye on, because I see it one way and I think I’ve got a way to fix it and I’m not going to kind of halfway fix it; I’m trying to fix it so it’s perfect. I’ve got real precise and specific thoughts, and they may not see it that way, they may not agree with it, they may not see that that’s the right answer or that’s not the answer that makes them feel good.

    “The difficult part is, if you guys could know, it’s really hard because they’re not football people. They’re not coaches, and so to get to the real details of it is really difficult for other people.”

    It’s not clear who aside from Allen and Carroll took part in those end-of-season meetings, though Bert Kolde is the Seahawks’ vice chair under Allen, who assumed control of the team after her brother, Paul Allen, died in October 2018.

    Asked if he had an idea that the meetings would go the way they did, Carroll said he knew he would be challenged.

    “Every year it feels like that, that you’re going to be challenged by opinions that are kind of media opinions, because what else do people have when you’re outside of the game?” he said. “How could you know other than what you guys talk about on the radios and what the articles say and what the pundits are drawing conclusions on? That’s why you have to go in realizing that that’s what you’re dealing with and then try to talk through to get to the essence of stuff. That’s always going to be a challenge because when you don’t have legitimate dyed-in-the-wool football people calling the shots, then you have to try to make sense of it, just like we try to make sense of it for your audience, it’s no different.”

    General manager John Schneider is leading the search to replace Carroll, who exits as the winningest coach in franchise history and the only one to lead the Seahawks to a Super Bowl title. Including playoffs, his 181 wins are tied for 13th most in NFL history.

    Carroll said he has received hundreds of texts and phone calls in the wake of Wednesday’s news, the sources ranging from Hall of Fame coach Bill Parcells to political commentator Rachel Maddow.

    “I can’t catch up with it all, but I’m working at it,” he said. “It’s really nice and flattering and warm to feel that there’s that much response.”

    Carroll said during his farewell news conference Wednesday that the particulars of his advisory role have yet to be discussed. He also made it clear that, at 72 years old, he still believes he has what it takes to coach, a point he reiterated on his radio show when asked whether he sees himself coaching again.

    “I don’t know that,” Carroll said. “I’ve got plenty of energy for it and thought and willingness, but I can’t imagine there’s a place, the right one. I don’t know. I’m open to everything, but I’m not holding my breath on that. There’s a lot of world out here that I’m excited about challenging and going after. So if that happens, it happens. We’ll see. I really don’t know what to tell you about that yet.”

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    Brady Henderson

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  • Naomi Osaka, The Comeback Interview: A tale of pregnancy, fear and a ballerina

    Naomi Osaka, The Comeback Interview: A tale of pregnancy, fear and a ballerina

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    It was late September when Naomi Osaka, the four-time Grand Slam champion and transcendent star of her sport, finally got on the phone with her former coach to talk about her next comeback. 

    Wim Fissette is a cerebral Belgian who thinks long and hard before taking on a player, even one with a resume like Osaka’s. He had one, very serious question.

    Is it going to be different this time?

    There was then another conversation, with Florian Zitzelsberger, a 34-year-old German who is one of the most respected strength and conditioning coaches in the world. Zitzelsberger had worked with Osaka before, too. He asked her the same question, and another important one, too. 

    Why?

    World-class tennis players worth hundreds of millions of dollars are not used to pushback like this. They get what they ask for, when they ask for it, and don’t get a lot of questions about it. 

    But Fissette and Zitzelsberger had been down this road with Osaka, 26, who is maybe the most naturally talented and athletic player on Earth. She also has a complicated relationship with the sport that made her a generational, global star unlike anything women’s tennis had ever seen. She staged comebacks after extended breaks in 2021, and then again in 2022. Both got cut short because of injuries, struggles with mental health and, in the case of this latest one, the birth of Osaka’s first child, Shai, a daughter, in July.


    Osaka returned to competition in Australia last week (Patrick Hamilton/AFP via Getty Images)

    Everyone asks Osaka these questions. Osaka, a walking billboard for intentionality, has answers. Do not mistake that soft, sing-songy, often quizzical voice for a lack of fortitude.

    This a woman who, as a barely known and shy 20-year-old, thumped Serena Williams in the U.S. Open final in 2018, even as the match descended into chaos, with the greatest player in the history of women’s tennis and a teeming crowd of 23,000 doing everything in their power to topple her. 

    Osaka brought tennis to a halt amid continuing police violence against Black people in August 2020. Then she brought seven masks adorned with the names of victims of police violence to the U.S. Open that year — one for each match she intended to play, and did, as she won the title. In 2021, she forced a conversation about mental health by skipping her news conference at the French Open. When officials threatened to toss her from the competition, she withdrew, and made them look foolish for their overreach and lack of empathy. 


    Excited about the Australian Open? Then follow The Athletic’s tennis coverage here


    So of course she had answers for Fissette, for Zitzelsberger and for anyone else who wanted to know.

    “At the core of everything, I want to show my daughter everything in the world, and I also want her to remember me playing tennis for as long as I can play tennis, because this is such an important part of my life,” Osaka says one brilliantly sunny California morning last month beside the practice court in Sherman Oaks that became her main place of work early in the fall. “I know the athlete’s lifespan isn’t that long. I probably won’t be able to play past when she’s, like, 14 or something like that. But I do want her to have a memory of me playing.”

    She has another reason, too. The last time Osaka had been on a competitive tennis court, she withdrew from the Toray Pan Pacific Open in her native Japan with abdominal pain. She was not going to let that be her walk-off. 

    “I don’t want people to remember me like that,” she said.

    go-deeper

    For the final three months of 2023, that private court at a sprawling home in the heart of the San Fernando Valley that her team has rented was the headquarters of Osaka 2.0, or maybe it’s 3.0. She is calling everything that came before this “Chapter 1”. What comes next is “Chapter 2”. 

    This December morning, she is smashing through a practice set with Andrew Rogers, a former star at Pepperdine University and the University of Tennessee, who is part of a rotating cast of male practice partners that Fissette has brought in. Osaka’s skin glistens in the sun as she chases down balls in the corners, defending with a new energy that hasn’t always been there. 

    On a changeover, Fissette tells her to find that balance between rushing a point and being too passive. Maybe it takes hitting two balls to get the point where you want it to go, he tells her as she stares out at the court rather than at him. 

    Moments later, she blasts her serve, once one of the game’s most potent weapons, sending Rogers way wide. She jumps into forehand returns. She charges into the court to take backhands early. And, of course, because she is Osaka, she makes sure to say, “Nice serve,” when Rogers aces her.

    Rogers is a sweaty mess when he chases down the last of her low flat balls.  

    “She’s very much like a guy off the ground,” he says, his breathing slightly labored several minutes after they finish. “And her wide serve to the deuce court (right side)… that’s a lot.”

    Naomi Osaka and her team


    Naomi Osaka with practice partner Andrew Rogers (far left) and coaches Wim Fissette (holding racket) and Florian Zitzelsberger (far right) (Matt Futterman/The Athletic)

    But will it be enough? Is there a version of Osaka that is good enough to compete with the best of the best in the women’s game — the power of Iga Swiatek, Elena Rybakina, and Aryna Sabalenka, the savvy and relentless defense of Coco Gauff, the guile and athleticism of Marketa Vondrousova, the grit of Jessica Pegula? How soon can she find it? Will she want it too much?

    “Wim and Flo (Zitzelsberger), they constantly tell me to be proud of myself because there are moments where I do get a little down or a little frustrated because I’m constantly chasing this ‘me of the past’, if that makes sense,” she says pensively. “I know that’s not realistic, because in my head the ‘me in the past’ was like a perfect player, which I know I’m not, looking at like old tapes of myself, and I know that right now I’m actually doing a couple of things better than I was doing before.”

    Women’s tennis has evolved since Osaka last ruled it. Fissette and Zitzelsberger are assuming that what she was will not be good enough. Last month, they even brought in a ballet dancer who has worked with Zitzelsberger’s other athletes to help Osaka improve her movement and raise her game to the place where Fissette always thought she could go — if her mind was fully committed to the task.

    “Everyone who is here believes she never reached her full potential,” Fissette says. “We had three nice years, we won two slams, and it was really good. But I was, in some ways, disappointed.”

    go-deeper

    Osaka could have never played a competitive match again and still likely made the International Tennis Hall of Fame. She could have walked away as one of the wealthiest women in the history of sports. At her peak, when she was winning championships and lighting the Olympic flame in Tokyo, she had as many as 15 sponsors and was taking in an estimated $50 million a year in endorsements and prize money for multiple years. Handled properly, that is generational wealth.

    Two years ago, she and her agent, Stuart Duguid, were waiting in a lounge at a Tokyo airport getting ready to fly back from the Olympics when their conversation turned to empire building in the fashion of Osaka’s friends and mentors — Kobe Bryant, LeBron James, Kevin Durant. Both remember the conversation like it was yesterday. 

    “All these male athletes have platforms and production companies, why does no female athlete have that?” Duguid asked one evening last month at an Adweek conference in Los Angeles, where he and Osaka were featured speakers. 


    Osaka with the Australian Open trophy in 2019 (Julian Finney/Getty Images)

    Together, they have embarked on creating their own empire. She and Duguid launched an agency, Evolve, which is now working with other athletes and also golf’s LPGA and soccer’s NWSL. They began investing in companies. They founded a production company, Hana Kuma, her version of James’ Uninterrupted. 

    Osaka knows that playing tennis and winning championships will help build her empire. But returning to tennis wasn’t simply a business decision or a way to make her daughter proud. It was something visceral.

    Last January, in her fourth month of pregnancy, she didn’t watch the year’s first Grand Slam

    “I avoided watching the Australian Open because I knew it would make me feel very upset,” she says.

    She also limited how much she watched the rest of the year. 

    “It always makes me very competitive and very hungry,” she says. “Whenever I see someone play I always want to play, too.”

    Anyone who caught a glimpse of Osaka watching the U.S. Open, from the front row of Arthur Ashe Stadium, her face a combination of bitter and blank, could see she was not content being an observer. Zitzelsberger said Osaka’s goals go far beyond participation.


    Osaka and coach Fissette work in Brisbane last week (Patrick Hamilton/AFP via Getty Images)

    “She wants to be the world No 1 again,” he says after practice one day a few weeks ago. “She saw all the players and everything that was going on the last one and a half years when she was not there. And this just gave her a feeling, ‘I have to get back to here. I want to have it again’.”

    Osaka says she first stepped back onto a tennis court in mid-August, a little more than a month after giving birth on July 3. It was just a casual hit, but even after so many months away, her feel for the ball was still there, an overwhelming relief. 

    Rediscovering her movement was trickier. 

    “Some of my muscles were gone and also my core was completely destroyed,” she says.

    She wanted to get back to training as soon as she could realistically pursue it. She knew her main priority was mothering Shai, something she was still learning how to do. 

    It wasn’t easy. There were a lot of sleepless nights, when she would pad around her Los Angeles home sad and insecure and frustrated. She had been the best in the world in tennis. How could she be bad at the most natural thing, something women have been doing for thousands of years and that everyone else made look so easy? 


    Osaka at the Lone Pine Koala Sanctuary in Brisbane just after Christmas (Bradley Kanaris/Getty Images)

    “Towards the tail end of pregnancy, I was very scared, there were always thoughts in my head: ‘Am I going be a good mom? How will I know if she appreciates how I parent?’ Things like that,” she adds. “I am still a little bit nervous but, I don’t know, the more I talk to moms, the more I realize that everyone goes through that,” she says. “It’s OK to have those feelings because that’s how much you love your baby, and that’s how much you want to do good by them.”

    Fissette said Duguid called him in mid-August, looking for advice on hiring a coach. At the time, Fissette was in his first months of coaching Zheng Qinwen, a rising star from China. He was still trying to get to know her and click in the way he had with Osaka and Victoria Azarenka. 

    He and Duguid met again at the U.S. Open in September, where Zheng made her first Grand Slam quarter-final and Osaka appeared with swimmer Michael Phelps and Vivek Murthy, the surgeon general, to speak about mental health. It was there that she affirmed her intention to play in 2024. By the end of the month, Fissette had quit coaching Zheng and announced he would coach Osaka.

    Zheng said she was blindsided and heartbroken. Fissette said he was going to stop coaching Zheng regardless of Osaka. He has nothing but praise for Zheng — “a super nice girl” who always worked hard — but they simply did not click.

    “I’ve worked with a few players where I thought it was the ideal coach-player relationship,” he said. “Great communication, always great energy. I always felt like I had an impact with my coaching.”

    Then it was time to sit down with Osaka for an honest talk. She told him there was nothing whimsical about this next tennis venture. It wasn’t about playing the next year. It was about the next five or seven years, enough so she could compete for the most important titles with Shai watching.

    “Since I came here, I felt those words every single day,” Fissette said. “She’s like the happy kid on the court.”


    Given the grueling and largely monastic life that Osaka has embraced to become the version of herself that can compete with Swiatek and Co, happiness is no small thing.

    She and Shai are up by 7 a.m. Like most babies, Shai is at her best in the morning. So Osaka likes to play with her for an hour and a half before she leaves for training, though there are mornings when Zitzelsberger will want her to do a cardio workout before breakfast to improve her metabolism. Her diet has consisted of a combination of lean meats (she has always loved sushi, which helps), fruits and vegetables and protein shakes. She and Zitzelsberger kept an eye on the clock, too, since she was, at times, “interval fasting”, which necessitates eating healthfully and plentifully within an eight-hour window, and fasting for the other 16 hours of the day. Normally, she was at the Sherman Oaks house that serves as her training center by 9am.

    Zitzelsberger has worked with postpartum athletes before. The initial work, he said, focuses on rebuilding the core, which has softened for childbirth.

    Osaka was no different. The power of a tennis shot starts with a push from the toes, rises through the ankle, loads through the pelvis, hips and trunk and travels through the shoulder and into the arm. The hand is merely a whip. But to function properly, every link in that kinetic chain has to be optimized. 


    Osaka alongside Murthy and Phelps at a mental health forum at the U.S. Open in September (Timothy A Clary/AFP via Getty Images)

    Osaka’s daily preparation for her comeback started with an osteopathic treatment to align her body. That treatment lasted 30-45 minutes. Then she endured another 30-45 minutes of dynamic stretching and drills that accentuated change of direction, jumping, sprints, acceleration, deceleration and stopping. That helped to prepare every joint and made sure they were functioning optimally for tennis. She then spent roughly two and a half hours on the court. A 60-minute strength and movement workout followed. 

    Zitzelsberger prefers free weights, which he said improve balance. Osaka did rep after rep of lightweight (for her) deadlifts, squats, and lunges with kettlebells, though sometimes Zitzelsberger asked for two quick reps with maximum weight to build explosive power. There was a post-training treatment, and Osaka headed home around 3pm. 

    There, she napped if Shai was napping, but otherwise, she played and cared for her until about 7.30pm. She put Shai to sleep, and then headed to bed shortly after. (Shai didn’t make the trip to Australia, because of the long flight, but Osaka plans to take her with her the rest of the season.)

    Zitzelsberger and Fissette stood close to each other through nearly every practice, always trying to figure out how to better train Osaka’s body to support the player she needs to be. She and her team have accepted that the serve-forehand version of Osaka that topped the rankings four years ago would not be able to bully the competition around the court the way she used to. 

    go-deeper

    Players are moving so much better now, Fissette says. Even the most offensive players, like Swiatek, are phenomenal defenders — Osaka had been good defensively, not great. She needs drop shots to make opponents move as she never has to before, and volleys to close out points in the front of the court.

    In mid-December, they were focused on making her legs and core strong enough to hit an open-stance backhand with power, something only a few players in the world — Novak Djokovic, Jannik Sinner, Carlos Alcaraz, Swiatek — can do. It’s a defensive shot that a select few can use offensively. The open stance allows for a quicker recovery. But the trick is being able to bend and generate power from an extremely awkward position.

    Enter Simone Elliott, a ballet dancer from Seattle who spent much of the past three decades dancing with companies in Switzerland, Austria and Germany. Lately, she has been working with skiers, tennis players, soccer players and other athletes to refine their movements. Fans of German team Borussia Dortmund have Elliott to thank every time goalkeeper Alexander Meyer dives to deflect a shot with the tips of his fingers. 

    Elliott, 36, said she feels a special kinship with tennis players. Like many of them, she left home at 15 to fly overseas and pursue her career. In December, at the request of Fissette and Zitzelsberger, Elliott began helping Osaka learn how best to reach those deep positions she needed to get into while chasing down balls and how to explode out from them. 


    Osaka hits a backhand in Brisbane (Patrick Hamilton/AFP via Getty Images)

    “It’s about getting hungry or curious about the movement that you are doing every day, investing yourself into each movement, understanding your body, understanding your breath and being present with the entire experience, and then finding that freedom within your game,” Elliott says after watching Osaka practice during her first week in California. 

    Elliott then rises from her seat and, in a split second, assumes the lowest open-stance backhand position and bursts out of it effortlessly. 

    “She’s a beautiful mover,” Elliott says of Osaka. 

    Could she have been a ballet dancer?

    If she worked with that discipline and that focus,” Elliott says, “she could do whatever she put her mind to.”


    Tennis is an impatient place, especially for a former world No. 1.

    A baseball player coming back from more than a year away from the sport might spend a couple of months climbing through the minor leagues. Osaka headed to Australia knowing that her second tournament would be one of the five most important events of the year. Given that she has had little success on the clay of Roland Garros or the grass of Wimbledon, it’s probably the second most important one for her, behind only the U.S. Open. 

    Fissette has tried to play down the importance of Osaka’s initial results. He described Australia as “a big test for us to see where we are at, but Australia is just the beginning”.

    The goal, he said, is to have Osaka rounding into top form during the summer hard court swing in North America. He is sure that can happen, “as long as she can really stay in this mindset where she wants to just grow every day”.

    In her last stint on the tour, Osaka struggled with the inevitable losses and stumbles that happen to even the best tennis players. At her first tournament back in Brisbane, where she won her opening match against Tamara Korpatsch of Germany, Osaka spoke of searching for ways to draw energy from the hubbub that will surround her, taking off her headphones to give back some of the love she has long received in a way that never came naturally for a woman who, as a girl, was painfully shy. She said that she imagined her daughter watching her as she played and as she signed autographs, she envisioned Shai being one of the kids reaching out to her with a Sharpie. 

    She wants to leave the sport better than how she found it. Players have thanked her for bringing to light the mental strain that news conferences can cause. That meant a lot. 

    She wants the next gifted girl who comes to the sport from cracked public courts to have an easier time than she and her sister did, to not get dissed by the potential sponsor that blew off her family because, even after the Williams sisters, how could girls coming from an environment like that reach the top of the game?

    “They knew that we were good enough, but it was just like the circumstances of what we were in,” she says. “A lot of kids that we probably don’t even see are so amazing and talented, but since they aren’t given the grants or the opportunities, we just never see them to their full potential.”

    That’s what she’s going after now — her full potential, off the court and on it, too, where she is convinced the best Naomi is yet to come.

    “I’m actually, like, striking a really great backhand now,” she says.

    (Lead graphic: John Bradford; Photos: Chris Hyde, Getty)

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    The New York Times

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  • After years of American growth, has F1's U.S. fandom plateaued?

    After years of American growth, has F1's U.S. fandom plateaued?

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    As Donny Osmond sang the opening notes of “Star-Spangled Banner,” wearing a Las Vegas Grand Prix letterman jacket, the Sphere illuminated red, white and blue against the night sky.

    Formula One was minutes away from its third race of the year in the United States, following Miami and Austin. As Osmond’s voice built to a crescendo, the sport’s powerbrokers stood proudly at the front of the starting grid, the 20 cars and hundreds of VIP guests behind them.

    Not long ago, the sport’s future in the United States had looked bleak; even one race a year seemed a stretch for a market that F1 had tried repeatedly and failed to crack. Now it was about to race down the Las Vegas Strip.

    “I couldn’t fully understand when I went to NFL and NBA games, seeing how passionate the Americans are about sport, how they hadn’t yet caught the bug,” Lewis Hamilton, the seven-time world champion, said.

    “It’s been really, really amazing to see a large portion of the country is now speaking about it.”

    F1 has rocketed in the United States over the last five years. It has three American races, an American driver and an American team. For the city of Las Vegas to invest so heavily — and tolerate so much disruption — to host a grand prix is indicative of F1’s heightened relevance.

    But as F1 bet big on America for 2023 and beyond, there were signs that growth has plateaued.


    Prior to Liberty Media’s acquisition of F1 in 2017, the sport’s history in the United States had not been an especially happy one. It made repeated attempts to capture the sports-mad market, establishing races in Watkins Glen, N.Y., Phoenix, Long Beach, Calif., and even the parking lot of Caesars Palace in Las Vegas. Each time, it failed to take hold. Fans were passionate but small in number, never reaching heights that could be sustained. Even races at the heart of American motorsport, the Indianapolis Motor Speedway between 2000-07, couldn’t offer the long-term home F1 craved.

    And when F1 appeared to secure that footing from 2012, with its first permanent U.S. facility at the Circuit of The Americas (COTA) in Austin, Texas, uncertainty grew with funding cuts and dropping attendance. By the mid-2010s, an America-free F1 calendar was a very real prospect.

    From 2017, things quickly changed. Liberty, an American company that also owns MLB’s Atlanta Braves, placed a fresh focus on growth. Netflix’s “Drive to Survive” fueled a renewed hunger for F1 in the United States. When the Austin race returned in 2021 after two years away due to Covid-19, COTA drew a record crowd of 400,000 amid the height of Hamilton’s title fight against Max Verstappen. That grew to 440,000 in 2022.


    The three U.S. races now have solid foundations and their own identities and are locked in for the long term. (Mark Thompson / Getty Images)

    “Even just going to your son’s football practice or your nephew’s baseball game, people are actually talking about F1 now in the stands, as if it’s another American sport,” said Renee Wilm, the CEO of the Las Vegas Grand Prix.

    “Five or 10 years ago, I don’t know that your average sports fan in America could have named three drivers in F1,” added Tom Garfinkel, the CEO of the Miami Dolphins and managing partner of the Miami Grand Prix.

    “What’s most exciting about it to me is there are a lot of young people in the United States falling in love with the sport. That’s very positive for the future of the sport in America.”

    But Wilm said F1 had to maintain a balance, “creating that newfound loyalty between our new fans while also continuing to embrace our legacy fans. Because I don’t want our legacy fans to get lost in this new narrative that we’re building around North America.”

    Las Vegas in particular, the first race to be promoted and organized by F1 itself, drew criticism for high ticket prices that effectively limited access to the wealthy. Fans who attended Thursday night’s sessions were left with a sour taste when they were forced to leave before the delayed second practice had begun, in some cases spending over $1,000 on a ticket to see only eight minutes of action. They received a $200 merchandise voucher as compensation.


    While attendance at live events stayed relatively strong in 2023, American TV ratings tumbled a bit. According to ESPN, which broadcasts the races, 2023 ended as the second most-watched F1 season on U.S. TV, drawing in an average of 1.1 million viewers over the 22 races. While that’s almost double the 554,000 average recorded in 2018, the final season before “Drive to Survive” debuted in spring 2019, it marked a 9.1 percent drop from 2022.

    The US Grand Prix at COTA also recorded a small fall in the attendance, from 440,000 to 432,000. Miami reported an increase from 240,000 to 270,000 over its weekend after increasing its capacity, claiming both races sold out. It plans another small rise for the 2024 race as a result. Las Vegas reported a crowd of 315,000 over four days, including the opening ceremony.

    A plausible explanation for that apparent drop in interest was the lack of competition at the front of the grid. Verstappen’s record-breaking domination, winning 19 out of 22 races, while spectacular, was an understandable source of frustration for fans. Those who fell in love with F1 through 2021, a championship that went down to the final lap of the final race, haven’t experienced anything close to that since.

    By emphasizing driver personalities over the details of what happened on the track, “Drive to Survive” helped American fans connect with a European-heavy sport in a way that doesn’t rely on fantastic racing action. It has also led to more diverse F1 fan demographics, far younger and more female than ever before. A 2021 global survey of F1 fans reported that more than 18 percent of respondents were women, up from 10 percent in 2017.

    “We have, more than ever, fans of the drivers themselves and the personalities, all the way down the grid,” said Bobby Epstein, COTA’s chairman.

    But no matter how invested fans are in the people, they still want a good sporting show. “We have to continue to work on making sure we’re having close racing,” said Hamilton, once Verstappen’s title rival. “Because I think you’ve seen the social engagement drop a huge amount this year. It’s obviously heavily impacted (by) competition. People want to see that.”

    LAS VEGAS, NEVADA - NOVEMBER 18: A general view of the national anthem prior to the F1 Grand Prix of Las Vegas at Las Vegas Strip Circuit on November 18, 2023 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Alex Bierens de Haan/Getty Images for Heineken)


    The Las Vegas Grand Prix capped off a banner year for F1 in the U.S. (Alex Bierens de Haan / Getty Images for Heineken)

    Domination is commonplace in F1. Between 2014-20, Hamilton won six titles in seven years for Mercedes. Before that, Sebastian Vettel won four straight championships for Red Bull. In the early 2000s, Michael Schumacher and Ferrari swept five straight years.

    But what sets Verstappen’s domination apart (along with the record-breaking numbers) is that it was not supposed to be possible.

    F1 has made big changes to its rulebook in recent years to create closer competition between teams, including the $145 million cost cap introduced in 2021 and the car design changes for 2022. While there was intense competition through the rest of the grid — six teams finished a race in the top three last year, and Mercedes and Ferrari’s battle for second went down to the final race — Verstappen’s strength gave each weekend an air of inevitability.

    Toto Wolff, Mercedes’ team principal, thought F1’s viewership numbers were still “strong” and pointed to most races being sold out. But he acknowledged the importance of competition at the front to stop fans turning away, and said the onus was on Red Bull’s rivals to make it happen.

    “If the spectacle is not good, our fans are going to follow us less,” Wolff said. “Of course, there is the risk that people are going to say, ‘Well, I know the result anyway,’ like it happened to us with Lewis. We’ve just got to do a better job.”

    Red Bull doesn’t expect to have a clear run for too long. Its chief, Christian Horner, warned the team already has “diminishing returns” with its car design going into 2024, and said its 2023 success will not be repeated in our lifetimes.

    “History dictates that with stable regulations, there will be convergence,” Horner said. “And we’re acutely aware of that.”


    Even if Mercedes, Ferrari and others make the gains to create an open, compelling championship fight, replicating the staggering rise in interest since Liberty’s takeover will be difficult. It was growth borne of a unique set of conditions: “Drive to Survive” was new and novel. Covid-19 kept everyone indoors, allowing curious fans to binge the show and get hungry for the real thing. When fans could finally return to the races, F1 delivered one of the closest title battles in its history.

    “We’re already at a good point, so a plateau would be great,” said Epstein. “A rise above (each) year would be even better. But I don’t think you’re going to see the meteoric growth continue until you have a couple more ingredients. I think one would be, certainly, a track battle with an American driver vying for first.”

    Americans love a winner. And while there is now an American driver on the grid in Williams Racing’s Logan Sargeant, he scored just one point last year and finished 21st in the championship. An American has not won an F1 grand prix since Mario Andretti at the 1978 Dutch Grand Prix.

    To have a leading American fighting for podiums, wins and championships could be a big evolutionary moment for F1. While the personality-led fandom has worked so far, marrying that with success on the track could be a major breakthrough.

    MIAMI GARDENS, FL - MAY 08: Fans occupy the track near the podium after the first running of the Crypto.com Miami Grand Prix on May 8, 2022 at the Miami International Autodrome in Miami Gardens, Florida. (Photo by David J. Griffin/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)


    The Miami GP in May marked the start of Max Verstappen’s record streak of 10 straight victories. (David J. Griffin / Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

    “Americans — and maybe it’s like that anywhere, but more so in this sport — you’re going to root for your guy to win,” said Epstein. “You don’t build the same excitement and passion around not being competitive, simply because he’s from this country.”

    Garfinkel was less certain what a winning American would do for F1. “It would certainly be a great thing, (but) I don’t know that it’s paramount to the success or the fandom,” he said. “The fandom has grown substantially without that, and there’s a lot of compelling stories.”

    One thing he thought could spike interest in the U.S. would be a greater manufacturer presence. In 2026, Ford will return to F1 in a new partnership with Red Bull, whose power units will carry the blue oval badge. GM’s Cadillac also plans to build its own engine starting in 2028. “It’s certainly great that those companies are investing in F1 and see the value,” Garfinkel said.

    Cadillac’s F1 plan hinges on another legendary name in American motorsports. Michael Andretti — Mario’s son — plans to form an all-American F1 team, joining the grid in either 2025 or 2026 with at least one American driver. Andretti’s entry bid has already been approved by the FIA, but requires a green light from F1 to go ahead. Thus far, the reception from F1 and the existing 10 teams has been lukewarm. They claim expansion could destabilize the current grid, and also question whether Andretti would boost F1 in America, given Haas already races under the American flag.


    The buzz of the Las Vegas race, even after a rough start, gave F1 the mainstream reach it has long coveted with coverage in Vogue, a skit on Jimmy Kimmel, and even a story in The New York Times’ wedding section. The race itself drew an average of 1.3 million viewers on ESPN — 130,000 more than Austin — despite the 1 a.m. Eastern start time.

    Zak Brown, McLaren’s CEO, said F1 has “a lot of room for growth” in the United States. He believes Las Vegas works globally and said the upcoming Apple film starring Brad Pitt, which is being filmed at grand prix weekends, should “have a big impact” in North America.

    “I don’t see any reasons why the sport can’t just go from strength to strength,” Brown said. “If you look at the size of our TV ratings compared to the major sports in North America, there’s a lot of room for growth. So I’m quite bullish on Formula One globally, and specifically in North America.”

    Hamilton is heavily involved in the writing and production of the Pitt movie, and F1 helped by setting up an 11th garage for the fictional team while allowing the car to complete laps during the race weekend.

    “We do have to continue to grow, and I think the movie particularly is going to help do that,” Hamilton said.

    A dip in TV ratings and a leveling off of grand prix attendance is far removed from F1’s previous boom-and-bust relationship with the United States. All three races have solid foundations and their own identities and are locked in for the long term: COTA until 2026, Miami until 2031, and Las Vegas for the next decade.

    “If F1 wants to grow in the United States, you have to invest in it, which (Liberty is) doing,” Garfinkel said. “I would expect that investment to continue, which means I would expect (the growth) to continue.”

    (Lead image: Getty; Dan Istitene-F1, Mark Thompson, Clive Rose / Getty Images; Design: John Bradford / The Athletic)

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  • Inside Bill Belichick's downfall after 24 years, six titles with the Patriots

    Inside Bill Belichick's downfall after 24 years, six titles with the Patriots

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    Robert Kraft hoped things would end differently.

    He’d spent the final years of a dying dynasty patching together a fraying relationship between Tom Brady and Bill Belichick, but in early 2020, it was all over. Separate conversations with his head coach and quarterback had kept the pair together long enough to win a sixth Super Bowl, a record-setting run. But both sides wanted a fresh start, so Kraft reluctantly watched Brady flee New England and win a Super Bowl in his first year with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

    Kraft had landed Belichick in 2000 following a one-day stint with the New York Jets. He was impressed by Belichick’s football prowess in 1996, when Belichick was an assistant under Bill Parcells with the Patriots. Kraft knew Belichick wasn’t as jovial or charismatic as his former boss, but the owner loved Belichick’s passion for the game and knowledge of it.

    Their time together delivered unparalleled success. That’s why Kraft was content to stick with Belichick in 2020 as Brady went to the Bucs.

    He knew the team was going to reset with Cam Newton at quarterback. He was excited the following year when Belichick drafted Mac Jones with the No. 15 pick, then watched as Jones’ rookie season ended with 10 wins and a playoff berth.

    He thought the franchise was on an upward trajectory, a quick turnaround after watching the greatest quarterback leave. He thought Belichick had figured things out post-Brady and would remain the team’s coach until he chose to retire. Maybe it would come after Belichick broke Don Shula’s all-time wins record, or maybe it would come several years later. It seemed Belichick would have the Patriots job for as long as he wanted.

    But since then, the Patriots have fallen apart.

    That’s why on Thursday, Kraft made arguably the biggest decision in his 30 years of owning the team, deciding to split with Belichick after a 4-13 season. Since Brady left, the Patriots are 29-38, a spiraling team that’s been without direction in recent years.

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    Kraft and Belichick met in recent days to discuss how they wanted to proceed. They had cordial and professional conversations, but they left the two men under the same impression. Change was needed. Belichick, 71, gets to reset and find a new landing spot to chase Shula’s record, needing 15 more wins to surpass him. Kraft, 82, now seeks a new coach to usher the Patriots into a new era with eyes on modernizing the franchise and welcoming more collaboration.

    Even if it ended amid a downturn, Belichick exits as the most successful head coach in NFL history, a winner of six Super Bowls and owner of a 333-178 record (including the playoffs) over 24 seasons with the Patriots, a run of dominance that may never be matched. One day, there will probably be a statue of the coach outside Gillette Stadium and a shrine to him inside it.

    But for now, the Patriots are left to grapple with the reality of today, that they’ve just parted with the best coach of all time. The Athletic spoke with multiple team and league sources to piece together how it got to the point where Kraft and the Patriots felt their best course of action was to end one of the most successful coaching tenures in pro sports history.


    Kraft and Belichick never had a rosy relationship, but they complemented each other well. Kraft is an extrovert, a people pleaser who enjoys chatting with everyone in the room. Belichick is the opposite. Kraft often balanced out Belichick, someone who could provide a pick-me-up to players and staff during the toughest days working for Belichick. That included the greatest quarterback of all time.

    During his final years in New England, Brady was sick of being antagonized by his head coach. Belichick was quick to critique Brady, often doing so in front of the entire team. That’s part of how he got so much success out of Brady, who was at his best when he played with a chip on his shoulder. That relationship yielded three MVP awards and nine Super Bowl appearances.

    But day after day, month after month, year after year, that lack of recognition wore on Brady, who vented to Kraft. At one point in his final season with the Patriots, Brady bemoaned that he was, “the most miserable 8-0 quarterback in league history.”

    But the relationship between Kraft and Belichick wasn’t always positive either. Like he did with many people, according to a team source, Belichick would walk past Kraft in the halls of Gillette Stadium without saying a word. They only chatted when necessary for work reasons. Belichick seemed to go out of his way to needle his boss.

    In March, Kraft unveiled a $25 million campaign to fight antisemitism called “Stand Up To Jewish Hate.” He did so while at the league meetings in Arizona. He passed out little blue square lapels to raise awareness. Several prominent people within the NFL wore them. Before a 30-minute sitdown with reporters, Belichick was handed one of the squares. He placed it at the bottom of his button-down shirt where it couldn’t be seen by cameras.

    During the interview, Belichick was lobbed a softball question about the pin he was wearing. “It’s Mr. Kraft’s initiative,” he said, a four-word response to a question that could’ve easily led to a compliment about what his boss was doing away from football. When asked a follow-up question, Belichick only said, “I support it.”

    According to several team and league sources, Belichick felt Kraft didn’t show him enough gratitude and offered veiled shots about the team’s dated facility, while seldom mentioning Patriots ownership by name. Kraft, meanwhile, felt he had given Belichick everything he had asked for, including full control over the roster, unlimited spending power and the most lucrative coaching contract in NFL history — but Belichick offered no public appreciation in return.


    Patriots owner Robert Kraft greets coach Bill Belichick before the start of a 2020 game. (David Butler II / USA Today)

    Kraft expected the Pats to be competitive after two seasons of lower expectations post-Brady. But 2022 was a mess. Belichick trusted his offense with a former defensive coordinator (Matt Patricia) and former special teams coordinator (Joe Judge). The result was predictable. Jones and the Patriots offense regressed across the board, the biggest culprit for their 8-9 record, which saw them miss the playoffs.

    After the season, Kraft made his frustration known. He stressed publicly that he wanted the Patriots to be back in the playoffs and back to competing for division and conference titles.

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    Belichick got the message. He hired a new and legitimate offensive coordinator in Bill O’Brien and molded the defense as he saw fit, using his top three draft picks on that side of the ball. He figured he’d zig while the rest of the league zagged, choosing to focus on stopping the run and special teams in a league that emphasized the passing game.

    That’s why Belichick allocated so few resources to the offense while dedicating seven full-time players to special teams. The first offensive player he drafted last spring was a guard with the 107th pick who played 13 offensive snaps this season. The only meaningful free-agent signing on that side of the ball was wide receiver JuJu Smith-Schuster, a veteran slot receiver who came with injury concerns. Smith-Schuster struggled from the very start of training camp. After posting only 260 receiving yards in 11 games in the first year of a contract that saw him earn $16 million guaranteed, he’ll go down as one of Belichick’s biggest whiffs.

    Perhaps most maddening was that Belichick had several chances to improve the offense. The Patriots hosted free-agent receiver DeAndre Hopkins for a visit in June. But Belichick didn’t offer Hopkins the $13 million per season the Titans did, so Hopkins went to Tennessee and posted another 1,000-yard season. Meanwhile, no Patriots receiver has reached 1,000 yards since Julian Edelman in 2019.

    Belichick didn’t think Hopkins was worth the money. He knew the Patriots’ offensive roster wasn’t as good as some others around the league, but he thought his team could avoid mistakes, play a fundamentally sound game and win on the margins. Perhaps all of that would be enough to compete for a division title. Instead, Belichick failed in both his roster construction and in his assessment of whether his coaching could make up for the team’s deficiencies.

    The way the New England defense played down the stretch of a lost season showed Belichick can still coach. He has an unrivaled knowledge of the game, and his defensive game plans, even in a horrible 2023 season, continue to thwart opposing offenses.

    But Belichick long thought he could win with simply average quarterback play, even after working with Brady for so long. If the QB avoided major mistakes, Belichick figured the team would be good enough on defense and special teams to contend. But Belichick’s most costly blunder came at the game’s most important position.

    After an impressive rookie campaign from Jones that saw him earn a Pro Bowl nod, Belichick had to make some changes following offensive coordinator Josh McDaniels’ departure to Las Vegas. Belichick made Judge the quarterbacks coach but used Patrcia as the primary offensive play caller.

    Under their tutelage, Jones fell apart. His confidence took a hit as his numbers dipped, dropping from 7.3 yards per attempt and 22 touchdowns in 2021 to 6.8 yards per attempt and just 14 touchdowns in 2022. He was frustrated with the coaching he was getting and sought outside opinions, something that angered Belichick.

    In the offseason, Belichick wasn’t willing to bury the hatchet. Instead of building up his young quarterback for a bounceback, the coach went out of his way to avoid any positive remarks about Jones. Belichick was upset that, in his eyes, Jones had disrespected his coaching that year by seeking opinions from outside the building and complaining openly on the field.

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    So Belichick didn’t commit to him publicly. He let Jones’ top wide receiver, Jakobi Meyers, leave in free agency so he could sign Smith-Schuster. When asked specifically in March if Jones was the starting quarterback, Belichick only said, “Everybody will get a chance to play.”

    The move confused many within the building. They’d used a first-round pick on Jones. Then, just two years later, Belichick couldn’t be bothered to confirm Jones was the quarterback?

    Instead of motivating Jones, the move knocked the confidence of an already-shaken quarterback. Coupled with a shaky offensive line and wide receivers who struggled to create separation, Jones was a mess. His mechanics fell apart. He didn’t trust his reads and he panicked under pressure. He finished 2023 with 6.1 yards per attempt, 10 touchdowns and 12 interceptions and now seems likely to head elsewhere this offseason, a remarkable downfall from the promise of his rookie season.


    Belichick’s 2022 appointment of Matt Patricia, second from left, as the Patriots’ offensive play caller negatively impacted quarterback Mac Jones. (Eric Canha / USA Today)

    The walls leading into the football department at Gillette Stadium are adorned with photos of the major moments from the franchise’s 64-year existence. There’s John Hannah and Steve Grogan from the early days, Andre Tippett from the 1980s and all the major figures from this century: Tom Brady, Ty Law, Richard Seymour, Rodney Harrison, Vince Wilfork, Mike Vrabel, Julian Edelman and on and on.

    But one notable player is missing: Wes Welker.

    With the Patriots, Welker became one of the best receivers in the NFL, leading the league in receptions three times. He’s the franchise’s all-time leader in receptions and ranks third in receiving yards.

    But Welker left the Patriots amid a contract dispute in 2013 to go to the AFC-rival Denver Broncos. He didn’t feel appreciated by Belichick. The coach, in turn, felt Welker should’ve shown more deference to the organization that turned him into a star and accepted the lower contract offers the Patriots made.

    The two have yet to mend fences. Welker is now the wide receivers coach for the division-rival Miami Dolphins. When the Patriots needed an offensive coordinator last year, Welker wasn’t considered. Welker was back in Foxboro in September for a Week 2 game against the Patriots. During warmups, Welker and Belichick were on the field at the same time. They avoided eye contact.

    The way Belichick has visibly scrubbed Welker from Patriots history helps explain why there is fear within the organization of crossing the head coach. Belichick is slow to trust and holds grudges. It’s part of why many believe Belichick will seek another coaching job: so he can chase Don Shula’s all-time coaching wins record after Shula said the Patriots’ 2007 Spygate controversy “diminished” what they accomplished.

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    Under Belichick, very few in the organization had the sway to make even small suggestions to the head coach. Scouts spent years getting to know prospects but were quickly overruled by Belichick once he began his draft prep.

    It’s also part of why Belichick kept his coaching staff so small. He employed only eight assistant coaches on offense this season, the fewest in the league. That was especially problematic this season when two coaches left midseason — offensive line coach Adrian Klemm due to a health matter and wide receivers coach Ross Douglas for the same job at Syracuse.

    Many of Belichick’s most trusted advisors also left or retired in recent years. McDaniels, Brian Flores, Dante Scarnecchia, Ivan Fears, Ernie Adams, Nick Caserio, Dave Ziegler and Monti Ossenfort took with them 132 years of collective experience with Belichick.

    Between that and the organizational structure — with Belichick in charge of all football matters — there were very few in the building capable of pushing back on him. An already reclusive coach became even more siloed. For so long, Belichick didn’t need much pushback. He was almost always right, and when he wasn’t, Brady covered up the warts. But without Brady, Belichick’s missteps were amplified.

    He also struggled to relate to the young players joining the team. Belichick is notoriously faint with praise. He grew up in a military environment and gives orders, not explanations. Recognition comes via a paycheck, not a shout-out or a pat on the back. It also didn’t help that with each passing year, there were fewer connections in the locker room to the Super Bowl-winning teams, which meant fewer players to vouch for the fact that all the tough moments with Belichick would be worth it.


    Belichick watches from the sideline during a 6-0 home loss to the Chargers on Dec. 3. (David Butler II / USA Today)

    That leadership style has flown in the face of what NFL owners have sought in recent years. The 49ers, Chiefs, Bengals and Rams, for example, have all promoted collaboration, with players often working with coaches rather than for them.

    Most inside the Patriots organization believe the game has not passed Belichick by. He still knows how to coach, still loves to teach and still knows how to build a game plan as well as anyone. It’s that the organizational structure, his roster construction and his leadership methods are outdated and have allowed the rest of the league to overtake the Patriots. Belichick was always willing to change on the football field, trying different schemes and styles. But he hasn’t changed who he is or how he functions.

    Belichick first arrived in New England 25 years ago, fresh off a resignation from the Jets he scrawled on a napkin. It’ll go down as the best decision Kraft ever made.

    If all goes as Kraft hopes, Belichick will return in the coming years for celebrations of the greatness over which he presided. But Kraft couldn’t avoid the downward spiral the Patriots have been on since getting blown out 47-14 in the wild-card round of the 2021 playoffs. They’re 12-22 since then. They finished the 2023 season ranked tied for last in points scored.

    Kraft once hoped Belichick would find enough success in the post-Brady years that he’d stick with the Patriots until he wanted to hang up the whistle, content then to retire to his compound on Nantucket.

    But the Patriots have collapsed into one of the worst teams in the NFL. Kraft decided he could no longer wait around and let Belichick keep his job as a lifetime achievement award.

    The Patriots, Kraft decided, are so badly in need of a fresh start and a new voice that it’s worth saying goodbye to the most productive coach in league history.

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    (Illustration: John Bradford / The Athletic; photos: Winslow Townson, Maddie Meyer and Elsa / Getty Images)


    “The Football 100,” the definitive ranking of the NFL’s best 100 players of all time, is on sale now. Order it here.

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  • Brian Daboll vs. Wink Martindale: Inside the Giants coaches' messy divorce

    Brian Daboll vs. Wink Martindale: Inside the Giants coaches' messy divorce

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    The relationship between New York Giants coach Brian Daboll and defensive coordinator Wink Martindale came to an explosive end Monday, less than 24 hours after the team finished a disappointing 6-11 season.

    Neither side looked good as details emerged about the final hours of their partnership, with Daboll’s firing of Martindale’s two most trusted assistants, Kevin and Drew Wilkins, and Martindale’s responding by saying, “F— you” and storming out of the room, according to team sources granted anonymity by The Athletic because they are not authorized to discuss the situation publicly. The Giants announced Wednesday the sides had “mutually agreed to part ways.”

    Even in a decade full of dysfunction, the Martindale blowup stands out as a low point for the Giants. Such an ugly departure leads to an obvious question: How could a relationship that appeared so promising dissolve into such acrimony?


    Martindale was available for Daboll to hire in 2022 after a surprising departure from the Baltimore Ravens after 10 years as an assistant, including a top-three scoring defense in three of four seasons as defensive coordinator. A contractual stalemate and a desire for a fresh start led to Martindale’s exit from Baltimore.

    Martindale had options, but he was drawn to the Giants due to his fondness for ownership after interviewing for the team’s head-coaching vacancy in 2020. The 60-year-old Martindale has made no secret of his desire to become a head coach, and he saw success in New York as a pathway to reaching that goal.

    Daboll and Martindale didn’t have a pre-existing relationship beyond squaring off as coordinators. That competition created a mutual respect, and they found they had similar personalities when they started working together.

    “I’ve always respected him,” Martindale said last January. “I think we’re very similar personality-wise. You know that when you meet somebody.”


    Landing a lauded defensive coordinator like Wink Martindale in 2022 was a coup for Brian Daboll, a first-time head coach. (Rich Graessle / Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

    Despite similar wiring as hyper-competitive football lifers, Daboll and Martindale brought different temperaments to the sideline. And it didn’t take long for those differences to surface, with tension starting to build during their first training camp together.

    “You could probably see it building a little bit,” a team source said. “Like the defense is getting installed and you might have 12 guys on the field and Dabes is losing it, and he’s calling out coaches, and he’s making it personal.”

    Martindale presents a brash persona, cultivated with his standard attire — sunglasses, long-sleeve white compression shirt and basketball sneakers — that makes him look like a WWE rendition of a football coach. But he prides himself on his composure.

    Though it’s not uncommon for NFL head coaches to lose their cool, multiple team sources said Daboll goes overboard, particularly during games.

    “On game day, he’s a madman,” one team source said. “It’s just brutal.”

    That shouldn’t come as a revelation to fans who have witnessed Daboll’s red-faced tirades directed at players for mistakes during games. And it has rankled assistants to have to endure Daboll’s rants while they’re trying to coach.

    “It’s to the point where you’ve got to take your headsets off or take one ear off,” another team source said. “He’s just constantly screaming. It’s like, ‘Jeez, I can’t even think.’”

    Martindale spent the previous decade working for Ravens coach John Harbaugh, who has a much calmer sideline demeanor. Martindale didn’t appreciate the change to Daboll’s style.

    “Wink didn’t like that at all,” a team source said. “The stares and how he just kind of looks at you, Wink couldn’t stand it.”

    Martindale’s philosophical differences were hiding in plain sight to outsiders as early as October 2022. His comments in a news conference now read like thinly veiled criticisms of Daboll’s sideline outbursts.

    “What I tell the players all the time is, ‘What I owe you during the game is my composure,’” Martindale said. “There’s some people telling me I need to be more animated on the sidelines. You’re not going to be animated if you’re thinking about the next play, what you’re going to call next.”

    Martindale was more overt about his displeasure with Daboll’s eruptions behind the scenes.

    “Wink would just walk in (to a coaches’ meeting) and say something like, ‘When such and such did this, I stayed calm. I just went onto the next play,’” a team source said. “He’d throw stuff out there and see if he could get (Daboll) riled up. Dabes knows it. Dabes isn’t stupid. It would just float on by in the meeting, and nobody would say anything.”

    As evidenced by his explosive departure, Martindale isn’t the type to quietly endure something he doesn’t like. So there were the snide comments in meetings and the public allusions to his preferred coaching style.

    “His personality kind of fits his style of defense — blitz zero, man coverage,” a team source said. “He’s not a loose cannon. He’s very calculated. But he just doesn’t give a s—.”

    The rift was minimized last season by the ultimate salve: winning. The Giants unexpectedly raced out to a 6-1 start, with Martindale’s blitz-happy scheme contributing to victories over former MVP quarterbacks Baltimore’s Lamar Jackson — a particularly sweet win over Martindale’s former team — and Green Bay’s Aaron Rodgers.

    The Giants made the postseason and won their first playoff game since Super Bowl 46 in 2012. No one outside of the team had any reason to suspect dissension between Daboll and Martindale.

    “When it’s going good, you put up with it,” a team source said. “When it’s not going good, it compounds.”


    Most observers believed the Giants’ misery this season started with their 40-0 Week 1 loss to the Dallas Cowboys in front of a national audience on “Sunday Night Football.” But a team source said there was an extraordinary amount of tension on the sideline during the Giants’ preseason opener in Detroit.

    Even with most of the starters resting, Daboll was incensed by mistakes made by players who wouldn’t make the roster. The TV broadcast captured Daboll giving special teams coordinator Thomas McGaughey, who was fired Monday, a death stare after the Giants allowed a 95-yard punt return for a touchdown in the third quarter of the 21-16 loss. The entire staff felt Daboll’s wrath during that exhibition game.

    “That kind of set the tempo for the year,” a team source said.

    The Giants never recovered from a disastrous 1-5 start. The offense, which drew much more of Daboll’s attention, was a mess. But the defense wasn’t much better during the rocky opening stretch. The Giants allowed 441 yards in a 30-12 loss to the San Francisco 49ers in Week 3 and 524 yards in a 31-16 loss to the Miami Dolphins in Week 5.

    The season bottomed out with a 30-6 loss to the Las Vegas Raiders in Week 9. Quarterback Daniel Jones tore his ACL in the game, but drama from the defense surprisingly drew the spotlight.

    Safety Xavier McKinney told ESPN of the coaches, “I don’t think they’ve done a great job of letting the leaders lead and listening to the leaders and the captains.” Consistent with how he handles any hint of controversy, Daboll downplayed McKinney’s comments the next day. McKinney said “everything is good” two days later.

    The story could have ended there. But during his news conference later that week, Martindale spoke extensively about how hurt he was by McKinney’s comments, creating another cycle of headlines. It was the opposite of Daboll’s approach.

    The growing tension boiled over during a 49-17 loss to the Cowboys the next week. With undrafted rookie quarterback Tommy DeVito’s making his first career start, the Giants were steamrolled by the Cowboys. Dallas gained 640 yards as the Giants’ record dropped to 2-8.

    Fox sideline reporter Tom Rinaldi noted on the broadcast that Daboll and Martindale engaged in a lengthy discussion that started at the end of the first half and continued as they came out of the locker room for the second half. Tensions were running high as the Giants got destroyed by their rival for the second time in two months, with numerous “animated discussions” on the sideline between players and coaches.

    All of the simmering discord came pouring onto the surface before the Giants’ Week 12 game against the New England Patriots when Fox’s Jay Glazer reported that the relationship between Daboll and Martindale was in such a “bad place” that a split was expected. After a dominant defensive performance sparked a 10-7 win over the Patriots later that day, Daboll gave Martindale a game ball in the locker room in a presentation that was viewed as performative by team sources who knew the relationship was fractured.

     

    Impressively, Daboll and Martindale managed to mostly shield the players from their feud. That was important to keeping the team together during a surprising 4-3 finish with DeVito and veteran backup Tyrod Taylor at quarterback.

    Players view Daboll as a players’ coach, even though they can be on the receiving end of his sideline explosions. A veteran player said the outbursts are mostly an accepted part of playing for Daboll, even though they can be counterproductive in situations when emotions are already running high.

    Players complained that Daboll’s predecessor, Joe Judge, worked them too hard in practice and held excessively long meetings. Daboll seems to have a better sense of how to manage players, with lighter practices and shorter meetings. The Giants held a rare Wednesday walk-through in Week 18 and then delivered a spirited effort in a 27-10 season-ending win over the Philadelphia Eagles.

    “He does a good job of keeping everybody together and feeling the pulse of the team,” a team source said.

    That touch will be needed now more than ever with his staff. Daboll must find a new defensive coordinator and fill a handful of other assistant jobs that were opened during a mini-housecleaning Monday.

    The problem with Martindale has been eliminated, as the veteran coach is free to seek employment from any team after agreeing to sacrifice the $3 million remaining on his contract with the Giants, a league source said. But as Daboll embarks on a pivotal offseason, it will be interesting to see whether the dynamics that led to the ugly divorce with his most prominent assistant cause him to make any changes.

    “I’m confident in what we do, how we do things,” Daboll said Monday, hours before everything blew up. “Certainly, there’s a lot of things that we can improve. That’s what the offseason is for, really, in every aspect.”

    (Illustration: John Bradford / The Athletic; photos of Brian Daboll and Wink Martindale: Kevin Sabitus, Stephen Maturen / Getty Images)

    “The Football 100,” the definitive ranking of the NFL’s best 100 players of all time, is on sale now. Order it here.

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  • ESPN used fake names to secure Emmys for 'College GameDay' stars

    ESPN used fake names to secure Emmys for 'College GameDay' stars

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    In March 2023, Shelley Smith, who worked 26 years as an on-air reporter for ESPN, received a call from Stephanie Druley, then the network’s head of studio and event production. Druley said she wanted to talk about something “serious” that needed to stay between the two of them, Smith recalled. She then told Smith that Smith needed to return two sports Emmy statuettes that she had been given more than a decade earlier.

    That request was one of many ESPN made of some of its biggest stars last year after the National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences (NATAS), the organization that administers the Emmys, uncovered a scheme that the network used to acquire more than 30 of the coveted statuettes for on-air talent ineligible to receive them. Since at least 2010, ESPN inserted fake names in Emmy entries, then took the awards won by some of those imaginary individuals, had them re-engraved and gave them to on-air personalities.

    Kirk Herbstreit, Lee Corso, Chris Fowler, Desmond Howard and Samantha Ponder, among others, were given the ill-gotten Emmys, according to a source briefed on the matter, who was granted anonymity because the individual is not authorized to discuss it publicly. There is no evidence that the on-air individuals were aware the Emmys given to them were improperly obtained.

    “I think it was really crummy what they did to me and others,” said Smith, who worked at ESPN from 1997 until her contract expired last July.

    The fraud was discovered by NATAS, which prompted an investigation by that organization and later by ESPN. Those probes resulted in sanctions beyond the return of the trophies. While it is not known who orchestrated the scheme, Craig Lazarus, vice president and executive producer of original content and features, and Lee Fitting, a senior vice president of production who oversaw “College GameDay” and other properties, were among the ESPN employees NATAS ruled ineligible from future participation in the Emmys.

    In a statement, ESPN said: “Some members of our team were clearly wrong in submitting certain names that may go back to 1997 in Emmy categories where they were not eligible for recognition or statuettes. This was a misguided attempt to recognize on-air individuals who were important members of our production team. Once current leadership was made aware, we apologized to NATAS for violating guidelines and worked closely with them to completely overhaul our submission process to safeguard against anything like this happening again.

    “We brought in outside counsel to conduct a full and thorough investigation and individuals found to be responsible were disciplined by ESPN.”

    Adam Sharp, of NATAS, said in an email: “NATAS identified a number of fictitious credits submitted by ESPN to multiple Sports Emmys competitions. When brought to the attention of ESPN senior management, the network took steps to take responsibility for the actions of its personnel, to investigate thoroughly, and to course correct. These steps have included the return by ESPN of statuettes issued to fictitious individuals and commitments to implement further internal accountability and procedural changes at the network.”

    An ESPN spokesperson said Lazarus declined to comment, and Lazarus didn’t respond to an email seeking comment. Fitting was let go by ESPN in August after 25 years at the company. He did not respond to voice and text messages.

    The nexus of the scheme was “College GameDay,” the show that Fitting helped turn into a cultural phenomenon and a revenue machine. From 2008-18, it nabbed eight Emmys for outstanding weekly studio show. But on-air talent was, until 2023, prohibited by NATAS guidelines from being included in a credit list in that category. Hosts, analysts and reporters on “College GameDay” could win individual awards, such as outstanding host, studio analyst or emerging on-air talent, and they could win for an individual feature. But they were not eligible to take home a trophy for a win by the show. That rule was meant to prevent front-facing talent from winning two awards for the same work (termed “double-dipping” in the NATAS rulebook).

    ESPN circumvented the rule by inserting fake names into the credit list it submitted to NATAS for “College GameDay.” The Athletic reviewed the credit lists for the years the show won: 2010, 2011, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017 and 2018. In each one of those seven years, names similar to the names of on-air personalities – and with identical initials – were listed all under the title of “associate producers.”

    Kirk Henry (Kirk Herbstreit), Lee Clark (Lee Corso), Dirk Howard (Desmond Howard), and Tim Richard (Tom Rinaldi) appeared in all seven years. Steven Ponder (Sam Ponder) and Gene Wilson (Gene Wojciechowski) appeared in five from 2014-18. Chris Fulton (Chris Fowler) appeared in 2010, 2011, 2014 and 2015. Shelley Saunders (Shelley Smith) appeared in the 2010 credit list. Smith was also given an Emmy for the show’s win in 2008, though it is unclear how that statuette was obtained; Shelley Saunders was not listed in the 2008 credit list viewed by The Athletic. However, networks are allowed to modify a credit list after a show is announced as a winner.

    While reviewing the 2010 and 2011 credit lists, The Athletic found three additional names that could not be verified that also closely resemble the names of “College GameDay” talent: Erik Andrews (Erin Andrews) in 2011; Wendy Nickson (Wendi Nix) and Jenn Brownsmith (Jenn Brown) in 2010. Nix confirmed that she was given an Emmy around 2010 and said she had no idea it was improperly obtained; it just arrived in the mail one day. She was not contacted about returning it before or after she left ESPN in August 2023. Brown, who left ESPN in 2013, confirmed she also was given one and didn’t know it was ill-gotten. She said: “This is all news to me and kind of unfortunate because you’ve got people who believe they rightfully had one. There are rules for a reason … it’s unfortunate (those were) abused and for so many years, too.” Brown said she has not been contacted by ESPN about returning it. Andrews, who left ESPN in 2012, declined to comment through a spokesperson.

    When asked why people at the network would scheme to secure trophies for on-air talent, one person involved in the ESPN Emmy submission process in recent years said: “You have to remember that those personalities are so important, and they have egos.” Smith, for one, pushed back at that and remarked how some executives lined their office shelves with statuettes. One executive interviewed during ESPN’s probe said that some company leaders were obsessed with the Emmys, using the numbers of wins each year to prove their dominance over competitors: “It’s very important to the people who go (to the ceremony) and the old-school television guys.” Additionally, many at ESPN thought the rule preventing on-air personalities from getting statuettes for a win by the show was stupid. They may have just decided to do something about it, the rules be damned.

    NATAS strengthened its credit verification process in 2022, and sometime in that year ESPN was asked to verify certain names. The network eventually admitted they were bogus. In its 2022 transparency report, NATAS referenced the scheme: During credit vetting, Sports Administration identified one network’s use of fabricated identities in association with one or more submissions. The matter was referred to counsel and remains pending.

    Fake names appeared in ESPN’s Emmy submission for “College GameDay” as recently as 2020 – a year the show did not win – but were not in the 2022 entry. (The Athletic does not have access to the show’s 2021 credit list.)

    “College GameDay” on-air-personalities may not have been the only ones to have been given statuettes they were ineligible to receive. In November 2023, Linda Cohn, a “SportsCenter” anchor since 1992, posted a photo on Instagram of four Emmy awards and wrote: “My Fab 4. The latest delivered today. Still grateful.” In the foreground of the photo is an Emmy for outstanding daily studio show from 2023. Because of the rule change, Cohn was eligible to receive that award. She is listed under “host” in the credit list and that word is engraved on the statuette’s base. As for the three Emmys in the background of the photo, one reads:

    STUDIO SHOWS
    ESPN SPORTSCENTER
    LINDA COHN

    The two others read:

    OUTSTANDING STUDIO SHOW – DAILY
    “SPORTSCENTER”
    ESPN
    LINDA COHN

    Under NATAS rules, Cohn was ineligible to receive a statuette as an on-air personality for any “SportsCenter” wins in the category of daily studio show before 2023, and NATAS confirmed Cohn has won only one Emmy. Cohn referred all questions to an ESPN spokesperson.

    According to a recent version of the Emmys rulebook, credit fabrication can result in a disqualification and the required return of trophies. According to NATAS, 37 ill-gotten trophies have been returned thus far. Smith gave back the 2008 award but not the one from 2010, which she had gifted to a relative. Wojciechowski, who exited ESPN last summer, declined an interview request. Rinaldi, who left ESPN for Fox in 2020, was contacted on Wednesday but said he did not have time to talk. He then didn’t respond to multiple text messages.

    Fitting, Lazarus and Drew Gallagher, a coordinating producer on “College GameDay,” were ruled ineligible from future Emmy participation. Druley was not ruled ineligible for future Emmys; she won a 2023 Emmy as an executive producer for “Monday Night Football.” But she was replaced on an Emmy steering committee by another ESPN executive.

    Gallagher and Druley declined to comment through an ESPN spokesperson.

    The names of Lazarus, Fitting and Gallagher were absent from the credit lists published in the program for the 44th Annual Sports Emmys ceremony, held on May 22, 2023 in New York. A year earlier, Lazarus’ name had appeared in various show credits, as an executive producer eight times and as a supervising producer once. Fitting was listed as an executive producer nominee six times. Drew Gallagher was listed as a coordinating producer twice. One year later, they were not listed at all.

    “College GameDay’s” credit list for the 2023 awards also did not include credits for executive producers, senior coordinating producers or coordinating producers. “Among the sanctions resulting from the investigation was a one-year disqualification from statuette eligibility for the senior leadership of ‘College GameDay,’” NATAS said in an email.

    Shortly after Smith’s call with Druley last March, a courier arrived at her California home, wrapped the 2008 statuette in a white plastic bag and took it away. But Smith still has the Emmy she won in 2018 for a story for the program “E:60.”

    “I was happy to win the (2018) one,” Smith said. “But the other times (the trophy) would just show up and I wouldn’t even know I was supposed to get one.”

    (Illustration: John Bradford / The Athletic, photos: Cooper Neill, Ronald Martinez, Michael Buckner / Getty Images; headshot photos: Getty Images)

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  • Chiefs-Dolphins could approach NFL record for coldest game. Bills-Steelers postponed due to snow

    Chiefs-Dolphins could approach NFL record for coldest game. Bills-Steelers postponed due to snow

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    KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The Kansas City Chiefs and Miami Dolphins were set to play one of the coldest games in NFL history on Saturday night, yet that didn’t stop hundreds of fans from lining up outside the parking lots of Arrowhead Stadium more than 12 hours before kickoff.

    At least they made it to the stadium.

    The NFL was concerned that nobody could make it the Bills’ game against the Pittsburgh Steelers on Sunday in Buffalo, where up to a couple of feet of snow was expected overnight. So, the league and New York state officials decided to postpone the wild-card playoff game until Monday, when the brunt of the snow is expected to have ended.

    “We want our Bills to win,” Erie County Executive Mark Poloncarz said at a news conference in suburban Buffalo, “but we don’t want 60,000 to 70,000 people traveling to the game in what’s going to be horrible conditions.”

    The snow wasn’t the problem in Kansas City, where more that fell Saturday morning tapered off before kickoff. Rather, the concern was what the National Weather Service called “dangerously cold” wind chills, which were expected to make a forecasted temperature of minus-2 degrees Fahrenheit (minus-18 degrees Celsius) at kickoff feel like minus-24.

    “The spectators need to be prepared. Think cold ski trip or ice fishing,” said Dr. Sarah Spelsberg, who teaches in Northeastern University’s Graduate Program in Extreme Medicine. “If it’s me, I’m wearing ski goggles, too. There would not be a millimeter of my skin showing in these temperatures. I had frostbite one time and I never wanted to have it again.”

    There have been only four postseason games played in subzero temperatures in NFL history, the most recent the 2007 NFC title game between the Giants and Packers, when it was minus-3 at kickoff. New York won 23-20 at Lambeau Field in a game perhaps best remembered for the images of Giants coach Tom Coughlin’s frozen face on the sideline.

    The coldest game in league history remains minus-13 for the 1967 NFL championship, when the Packers beat the Cowboys at Lambeau Field in a game that came to be known as the Ice Bowl. The wind chill that day was minus-48 degrees.

    “We definitely had that initial shock when we looked at the forecast,” said Chiefs season ticket-holder Keaton Schlatter, who was coming from West Des Moines, Iowa, for Saturday night’s game. “We thought about maybe posting our tickets for sale and if they don’t sell, then we would go. But we decided that it’s all part of the experience.”

    About six hours before kickoff, stadium workers were plowing snow from the tarp covering the field, then scooping it into trucks and driving it from the stadium. The field itself is heated, though, and should not be a problem for the players.

    As for the fans, the Chiefs had numerous warming stations throughout the stadium, and they bent some of their rules to help them deal with the weather. Fans were allowed to carry in blankets, provided they had no zippers or compartments, and could use portable chargers to power the kind of heated apparel that Schlatter was bringing to the game.

    Fans also could bring cardboard to put under their feet, a useful tip that Chiefs safety Justin Reid passed along this week.

    “Trying to figure out what to wear that will be the warmest has been the concerning part,” said Lauren Bays, a Chiefs fan from Smithville, Missouri. “I’ve been thinking of ways to add warmth all week and did find a pair of ski goggles that I plan to wear.”

    Not every fan is such a diehard. The prices for tickets on the secondary market plummeted throughout the week as fans tried to unload their seats. The price to get in was less than $30 by Saturday, or about 10% of what it would normally cost.

    The weather almost certainly will put a chill into the Dolphins, whose loss to Buffalo last week cost them an opportunity to host a home playoff game this weekend. They practiced all week in warm Miami, and it was 86 degrees on Friday, when they stepped on the plane to Kansas City. It was 10 degrees with a wind chill of minus-6 when they arrived, an almost 100-degree difference.

    “You can’t prepare for a game like that with that kind of weather, so it’ll be new,” said Dolphins quarterback Tua Tagovailoa, who grew up in Hawaii and played his college in the relative warmth of Alabama.

    The coldest game ever played at Arrowhead Stadium was 1 degree at kickoff, set during a game against the Denver Broncos on Dec. 18, 1983, and matched during a game against the Tennessee Titans on Dec. 18, 2016.

    Just about every forecast called for that record to be broken Saturday night.

    “Cold’s cold. For you, me — it’s cold,” Chiefs coach Andy Reid said. “But you go do your thing. That’s how you go play.”

    ___

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

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  • Ivory Coast 2-0 Guinea-Bissau: Hosts open Africa Cup of Nations with convincing victory in Abidjan

    Ivory Coast 2-0 Guinea-Bissau: Hosts open Africa Cup of Nations with convincing victory in Abidjan

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    Match report and free highlights as hosts Ivory Coast open Africa Cup of Nations 2023 by beating Guinea-Bissau; Seko Fofana opened scoring in the fourth minute before Jean-Philippe Krasso doubled the lead 13 minutes into the second half; both sides return to Group A action on January 18

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  • Eagles WR Brown (knee) ruled out vs. Bucs

    Eagles WR Brown (knee) ruled out vs. Bucs

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    PHILADELPHIA — Philadelphia Eagles wide receiver A.J. Brown will miss Monday night’s playoff game against Tampa Bay with a knee injury.

    Brown was hurt in the first quarter of last week’s loss to the New York Giants after a short reception. Cornerback Nick McCloud punched the ball out of Brown’s hands for a fumble, and the two went to the turf at MetLife Stadium. Brown lay on the field for a couple of minutes, walked gingerly to the medical tent favoring his right knee and then went to the Eagles’ locker room.

    “It was going to be a stretch for A.J. to play,” coach Nick Sirianni said Saturday. “He did everything he possibly could to get himself ready. He fought like crazy to try and do everything he could do.”

    Brown finished the regular season with 106 receptions for 1,456 yards and seven touchdowns. He had nine catches for 131 yards in the Eagles’ September win over the Buccaneers.

    Brown didn’t practice at all this week.

    “Unfortunately, he won’t be able to rip it this week,” Sirianni said.

    Brown has made enough progress that, if the Eagles advance, he could return for the divisional playoff, sources told ESPN’s Adam Schefter.

    Quarterback Jalen Hurts is scheduled to play after a light throwing week because of an injured middle finger on his right hand.

    “Everyone’s going to be fighting through things,” Sirianni said. “He’s fighting through the finger injury. But he had a good practice [Friday].”

    Sirianni said he didn’t second-guess his decision to play the starters in a mostly meaningless game. The defending NFC champion Eagles opened the season 10-1 before a 1-5 finish knocked them to the No. 5 seed.

    Information from the Associated Press was used in this report.

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  • Fans’ guide for Rangers-Capitals: Key matchups, stats, how to watch

    Fans’ guide for Rangers-Capitals: Key matchups, stats, how to watch

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    Having passed the midway mark of the 2023-24 NHL regular season, we have our eyes on the standings as the playoff races heat up during the cold winter months.

    Saturday’s schedule is packed, with all 32 teams in action. The first matchup of the day sees the New York Rangers (currently first in the Metropolitan Division) visiting the Washington Capitals (three points back of the second Eastern wild card) at 1 p.m. ET on ABC and ESPN+.

    Here are the key players to watch, along with other intel courtesy of ESPN Stats & Information:


    New York
    Rangers
    vs.

    Washington
    Capitals

    Saturday, 1 p.m. ET | ABC/ESPN+
    Capital One Arena (Washington, DC)

    Rangers

    Power Rankings position: 6
    Leading scorer: Artemi Panarin: 26 G | 32 A
    Record: 26-12-2 (54 points)

    • The Rangers have the best power play in the league at 30.0%, which would be their highest in a season since the stat was first tracked in 1977-78. Their highest current mark is 28.8%, set in that 1977-78 season. The Rangers last had the best power play in a season in 1996-97 (22.0%). They have had the best power play three times since the stat was tracked, (1990-91, 1993-94, and 1996-97).

    • The Rangers’ penalty kill ranks top six in the NHL, at 84.4%. Its 18 power-play goals allowed are tied for the second fewest in the NHL with the Philadelphia Flyers, only behind the Los Angeles Kings (14). The Rangers are one of two teams that rank top six in both power play and penalty kill, along with the Boston Bruins.

    • New York has scored first in 23 games this season, tied for the fourth most in the NHL. The Vancouver Canucks lead the NHL with 27 games scoring first. Of those 23 games, the Rangers have won 18 of them.

    • Artemi Panarin currently leads all Rangers players in goals (26), assists (32) and points (58) this season and his 1.45 points per game rate is sixth best in the NHL. His 57 points and 32 assists through his team’s first 40 games of the season is the most he’s had in his career.

    • Chris Kreider currently has 285 goals in his career, which is the third most in Rangers franchise history, trailing Rod Gilbert (406) and Jean Ratelle (336). Kreider is signed through the 2026-27 season, and at his current goals pace for his career (0.37), he would pass Ratelle in 141 games (early part of the 2025-26 season). However, he wouldn’t break Gilbert’s record by the time his contract ran out (current pace is 330 games, which would be the 2027-28 season).

    • Igor Shesterkin was named to the 2024 All-Star Game in Toronto as the Rangers representative. He has won six of his last eight starts, and has allowed two or fewer goals in five of those.


    Capitals

    Power Rankings position: 16
    Leading scorer: Alex Ovechkin: 8 G | 19 A
    Record: 19-14-6 (44 points)

    • The Capitals started the season with a 12-6-2 record (.650 points percentage) which was the eighth-best points percentage in the NHL through Nov. 30. Since the start of December, Washington is 7-7-4, with its .500 points percentage in that time tied for 22nd in the NHL with the Vegas Golden Knights and Calgary Flames. Washington is 2-4-1 since the return to action after Christmas, allowing the second-most goals per game in that span (4.29). Only the San Jose Sharks are worse (4.43).

    • Most of the struggles for this team revolve around generating offense — the Capitals are averaging 2.39 goals per game this season, the third-lowest mark in the NHL with only the Sharks (1.98) and Chicago Blackhawks being worse (2.32). The Capitals’ 2.39 goals per game is on track to be their third worst in a season in franchise history, after 1974-75 (2.26) and 2003-04 (2.27). The franchise selected Alex Ovechkin first overall in the 2004 NHL draft following that 2003-04 campaign (he didn’t make his debut until 2005-06 due to NHL lockout in 2004-05).

    • It’s been a struggle in every period for the Capitals this season, as the team has been outscored in the first period (minus-4 goal differential), second period (-7), and third period (-12). Washington is one of five teams in the NHL that have been outscored in the first, second, and third period this season, alongside the Montreal Canadiens, Anaheim Ducks, Blackhawks, and Sharks.

    • Alex Ovechkin has eight goals in 38 games played this season, his fewest goals in his first 38 games of a season in his NHL career. His fewest goals through the first 40 games of a season is 14 in the 2010-11 season. Ovechkin’s shooting percentage is 6.0%, which would be the lowest rate of his career (current season low is 8.7% in 2010-11). His eight goals are tied for last among the 43 forwards who have played at least 20 games and are averaging at least 3.0 shots on goal per game this season.

    • The Capitals have seven goals and 59 points from their defensemen, the second-fewest in the NHL this season respectively (Blackhawks have six goals from blueliners, Sharks have 55 points from rearguards). John Carlson leads the team’s defensemen with 23 points this season, and he’s the only Caps defenseman with more than two points on the power play (nine).

    • Goaltender Charlie Lindgren was activated off injured reserve on Jan. 9. Among goaltenders to make at least 15 appearances this season, Lindgren has the second best save percentage (.928), behind Vegas’ Adin Hill (.933). Lindgren also has a 2.27 goals-against average, fourth best among goaltenders with at least 15 appearances.

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  • Rivals.com  –  Mid-South Spotlight: Five big rankings questions entering final 2024 update

    Rivals.com – Mid-South Spotlight: Five big rankings questions entering final 2024 update

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    Now that the all-star games are in the books, it’s time to start thinking about final Rivals rankings for the 2024 class. Let’s take a look at some of the top Mid-South region questions on my mind heading into the meetings.

    THIS SERIES: Five big Midwest rankings questions entering final 2024 update | East rankings questions | Southeast rankings questions

    *****

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

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

    CLASS OF 2026 RANKINGS: Rivals100

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

    *****

    Where should Lagway land in the final rankings?

    DJ Lagway (Karyna Aguilar/Rivals.com)

    Florida signee DJ Lagway had a phenomenal senior season and was moved up to five-star status. That was only right since he threw for 4,604 yards with 58 touchdowns and eight interceptions, and also rushed for 957 yards and 16 more scores.

    Those numbers are off the charts as Lagway had an incredible showing week-in and week-out but rankings are more than just stats, and all-star game performance has to also play a key role in the final ranking.

    Lagway has all the size and physical tools in the world but he did not light it up at the Under Armour Game. Few quarterbacks ever do. There is no timing and chemistry with receivers. It’s a new playbook and one that’s usually watered down. Quarterbacks generally sit in the pocket and throw so they don’t take big hits.

    To Lagway’s credit, he was the only five-star quarterback in the 2024 class to compete at all-star event. Dylan Raiola (Nebraska), Julian Sayin (Alabama) and Air Noland (Ohio State) skipped them. There is five-star talent and production when it comes to Lagway but it will be a rankings debate in the closing weeks whether he did enough to move up within the position.

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

    *****

    Are there any other five-stars in Texas?

    Xavier Filsaime

    Xavier Filsaime

    There are already five five-stars in the Texas state rankings with WR Micah Hudson (Texas Tech), DE Colin Simmons (Texas), LB Justin Williams (Georgia), QB DJ Lagway (Florida) and ATH Terry Bussey (Texas A&M commit) leading the way. But after strong performances from in-state players at both the Under Armour Game and the All-American Bowl there could be more names added to the list.

    The ones most under consideration include Texas safety signee Xavier Filsaime, who covered like a cornerback in Orlando, Texas cornerback signee Kobe Black, who has incredible length and cover skills, Joseph Jonah-Ajonye, the Georgia defensive end signee who was one of the best-looking prospects at either event and Oregon safety signee Aaron Flowers, who was awesome in space and has a big argument to move up.

    Others will be in the conversation but it looks likely that there could be other five-stars coming out of Texas.

    *****

    Who’s the top player in Louisiana?

    Dominick McKinley

    Dominick McKinley (Parker Thune)

    LSU tight end signee Trey’Dez Green is the current top player in the state of Louisiana and rightfully so. The 6-foot-7, 230-pound four-star prospect is an elite athlete who stars in both football and basketball, and someone with his size and playmaking ability could be a star in Baton Rouge.

    But Green decided not to attend any all-star event and Lafayette (La.) Acadiana four-star defensive tackle Dominick McKinley did – and he dominated.

    The LSU commit is all of 6-foot-6 and 270 pounds, and while he’s soft-spoken off the field, McKinley turns the dial up once he gets between the lines, pushes elite offensive linemen around and he looked like arguably the best defensive tackle in the country at the Under Armour Game.

    Either way, LSU will win out here as Green is already signed and McKinley flipped to the Tigers from Texas A&M on Jan. 1. The debate over who is the best prospect in Louisiana will continue to the end.

    SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS WITH LSU FANS AT DEATHVALLEYINSIDER.COM

    *****

    Should Terry Bussey be moved to the WR rankings?

    Terry Bussey

    Terry Bussey (Karyna Aguilar/Rivals.com)

    Listed as a five-star athlete, Bussey played exclusively at wide receiver during the Under Armour week and excelled there. The word is that most schools other than Alabama want the Timpson, Texas, standout to play defensive back once he gets to college but after shining at receiver, that could be rethought in the coming months.

    Bussey remains committed to Texas A&M but Alabama, Georgia, LSU and others are trying to flip him in the closing weeks before signing day in February. After playing quarterback and defensive back in high school mainly, Bussey shined as a receiver at the Under Armour game using his speed and playmaking ability all over the field.

    The Timpson standout would be a five-star strictly as a receiver but as an athlete, it will be hard to move someone ahead of him at No. 1 in the position rankings.

    SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS WITH TEXAS A&M FANS AT AGGIEYELL.COM

    *****

    Are the Mississippi rankings right?

    Braylon Burnside

    Braylon Burnside (Karyna Aguilar/Rivals.com)

    The tough part about determining whether the Mississippi state rankings are exactly how we want them is that some of the top players there decided against playing in the all-star events.

    The lone five-star, Ole Miss signee Kamarion Franklin, was busy watching the Rebels in their bowl game and missed the Under Armour week. Four-star linebacker Jamonta Waller no-showed the event as well.

    One discussion that needs to be had is whether JJ Harrell or Braylon Burnside is the top receiver in the state. Both signed with Mississippi State and while Harrell didn’t go to an all-star game, Burnside was very impressive in Orlando. It looks like first-year coach Jeff Lebby will have some superstars to throw the ball to in the coming years.

    SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS WITH MISSISSIPPI STATE FANS AT BULLDOGBLITZ.COM

    SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS WITH OLE MISS FANS AT REBELGROVE.COM

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    Adam Gorney, National Recruiting Director

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  • Tumultuous week leaves Washington trying to rebuild after title game loss, coach departure

    Tumultuous week leaves Washington trying to rebuild after title game loss, coach departure

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    SEATTLE — In five days, Washington went from the precipice of its first national title in more than three decades to a program in shambles.

    The championship game — lost to Michigan.

    Its head coach — gone to Alabama.

    Its roster — many players headed to the NFL draft, others already saying they’re headed to the transfer portal, including the presumptive next quarterback.

    What was as a devastating week for Washington came to a conclusion on Friday when Kalen DeBoer left the school to take the head job at Alabama and the chance at being Nick Saban’s replacement with the Crimson Tide.

    DeBoer walked away from the potential of a massive new contract with the Huskies for the opportunity of leading one of the premier programs in the country with resources and cachet that new Washington athletic director Troy Dannen couldn’t match.

    But by doing so, DeBoer left a program facing an uncertain future and major challenges headed to the Big Ten starting next season with a roster that could be picked apart by the time a new coach is in place.

    As edge rusher Zion Tuputola-Fetui posted on social media on Friday, “Sometimes we have to be reminded it’s all a business.”

    “We are sad to see him leave and we did all that we could to keep Kalen at UW,” Dannen said in a statement Friday night.

    It’s hard to find the downside in a 14-1 season that ended with playing for a national title. Even into the early moments of the fourth quarter of Monday’s 34-13 loss to Michigan, there were hopes that Washington could put together one more comeback and win the school’s first title since 1991.

    But the success of the season raised DeBoer’s profile to the point of being on Alabama’s short list when Saban decided to step away. Throw in that Dannen is new in Seattle — he was hired in October — and it created a circumstance where DeBoer leaving for a premier job was a possibility.

    None of that could have been expected when DeBoer was hired by former AD Jen Cohen and inherited a 4-8 program. The sudden turnaround of the past two years created rabid optimism from fans who hoped that DeBoer would be the next version of Don James, who regularly would have Washington in the national conversation.

    Instead, he’s headed for the Southeastern Conference, and Washington’s pending move to the Big Ten appears to be facing massive tests for whoever takes over next.

    The exodus after Washington played for a national title was going to include countless players with pro futures. And it has with the likes of Rome Odunze, Jalen McMillan, Bralen Trice and Dillon Johnson all declaring for the NFL draft. The Huskies won’t have Michael Penix Jr., their Heisman Trophy runner-up quarterback, either.

    It didn’t take long after the DeBoer news broke for some important pieces to Washington’s success this season to announce their plans to enter the transfer portal. And some of Washington’s future is now unknown, with expected reinforcements from the portal saying their commitment is now reopened. That includes quarterback Will Rogers, who was expected to take over for Penix, linebacker Ethan Barr and tight end Tre Watson.

    The easiest way for Washington to stop any potential flood of departures or decommitments and attempt to build on this season would be rapidly filling the opening. The likes of Arizona’s Jedd Fisch, Iowa State’s Matt Campbell and Kansas’ Lance Leipold will be floated as external options. Ryan Grubb will be an obvious in-house choice if he doesn’t follow DeBoer. JaMarcus Shephard should get similar consideration.

    But less than a week removed, it’s a far different place from where Washington expected to be when walking off the field in Houston.

    “We have one of the best head coaching jobs in all of college football, with our recent success, our upcoming entry into the premier intercollegiate athletics conference, the Big Ten, our passionate supporters and fanbase, and a world-class university,” Dannen said.

    It just won’t be under DeBoer’s watch. ___ AP college football: https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-football-poll and https://apnews.com/hub/college-football

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  • Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall nets Leicester opener | Bobby Thomas concedes clumsy penalty

    Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall nets Leicester opener | Bobby Thomas concedes clumsy penalty

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    Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall converted a composed spotkick after Bobby Thomas had caught him in the penalty area with a reckless lunge.

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  • Jerod Mayo replaces Bill Belichick: What’s next for Patriots, including the NFL draft

    Jerod Mayo replaces Bill Belichick: What’s next for Patriots, including the NFL draft

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    The New England Patriots are hiring Jerod Mayo as the 15th head coach in franchise history, sources tell ESPN’s Adam Schefter, transitioning quickly after parting ways with Bill Belichick on Thursday.

    Mayo, who turns 38 on Feb. 23, becomes the youngest head coach in the NFL and had been identified as a top target by Patriots owner Robert Kraft for some time.

    Taking a closer look, Patriots reporter Mike Reiss answers four big questions about the Mayo hiring, including what comes next. National reporter Jeremy Fowler dishes on what he’s hearing about the hire, and draft analyst Jordan Reid spins it forward to the draft. Finally, front office analyst Mike Tannenbaum grades the hire.

    Let’s get to it.

    Who is Jerod Mayo and what makes him a good fit?

    Reiss: Mayo is a former Patriots linebacker (2008-15) whose leadership was evident when he was elected a captain in his second season — a rare feat in New England. He worked in finance upon his retirement from football before being recruited back to the coaching staff under Belichick in 2019 to coach linebackers.

    Some teammates used to refer to him as “Bill Jr.” because his combination of football intelligence and long hours reminded them of Belichick. His head-coaching candidacy had notable support among defensive players in the locker room, and he previously interviewed with the Eagles and Broncos. The Panthers had requested an interview last year, but Mayo elected to stay in New England.

    How did this hire happen so quickly?

    Reiss: When the Patriots signed Mayo to a contract extension last offseason, they wrote succession plans into the contract that allows them to forgo a traditional NFL coaching search. Sources said the projected plan was for that to happen after the 2024 season, but the Patriots’ 4-13 campaign accelerated the timeline.

    This has similarities to what the Ravens did in their general manager transition from Ozzie Newsome to Eric DeCosta in 2019, the Indianapolis Colts in their head-coaching transition from Tony Dungy to Jim Caldwell in 2008 and the Seattle Seahawks in their head-coaching transition from Mike Holmgren to Jim Mora in 2008.

    What are the biggest changes we can expect moving from Belichick to Mayo?

    Reiss: Mayo said his approach is to “coach out of love” because “once you build that relationship with a guy, you can be tough on the players.” That projected culture would be a notable shift from Belichick, who developed strong relations with players through a bottom-line-business approach. Also, Belichick had retained final say on personnel for most of his tenure. It is unlikely the Patriots will give Mayo final say on personnel.

    Will the Patriots hire a general manager to work with Mayo?

    Reiss: Yes, and the search is likely to include internal candidates. The current structure has director of player personnel Matt Groh, director of scouting Eliot Wolf, senior personnel advisor Patrick Stewart, college scouting coordinator Camren Williams, and director of pro scouting Steve Cargile in leading roles.

    What are you hearing around the league on the hire?

    Fowler: This is not a shocking move, since the Patriots dropped a major hint last offseason when announcing a new contract for Mayo. Rarely do the Patriots announce an assistant coaching extension. But this one, it turns out, was a special case, with the groundwork for a succession plan.

    Mike Vrabel was the natural external fit, but he was more the shiny new toy than an actual candidate, as it turns out. I’ve heard from a few coaches this morning who would have liked to see the Patriots run a broad search. But since the NFL’s revamped hiring practices are designed to provide more opportunities for minority candidates, this is a good one for Mayo, whom many league execs have circled as head-coach material for a while now.

    Are the Patriots definitely drafting a new quarterback for Mayo at No. 3? Would the signal-callers available there be immediate upgrades over Mac Jones and Bailey Zappe?

    Reid: The options at No. 3 become even more interesting with Mayo getting the New England job. The Pats are right in the middle of the quarterback hunt and in position to add one of Caleb Williams (USC), Drake Maye (North Carolina) or Jayden Daniels (LSU). Any of them would be an immediate upgrade over the Pats’ current personnel under center. The Patriots were 31st in QBR this season at 31.5, so it’s the biggest need.

    But entertaining a trade-back scenario is also possible, with teams like the Giants, Falcons, Vikings and Raiders all outside the top five and in need of quarterback help. I could see a scenario where the Patriots trade back and pivot to adding a veteran quarterback via free agency — or drafting Michael Penix Jr. (Washington) or Bo Nix (Oregon) on Day 2.

    New England also lacks talent at the skill positions and could take advantage of a deep WR class. Both starting tackles (Trent Brown and Mike Onwenu) are set to become free agents, which also makes offensive tackle an early-round possibility.

    How would you grade this hire?

    Tannenbaum: B. I like it from the standpoint that they’ve gotten to know Mayo over the years, much the same way they got to know Belichick during the 1996 season (he was the defensive backs coach there) before eventually hiring him as their head coach in 2000. But it’s really important that Mayo now hires an experienced staff — and ideally a former head coach as the offensive coordinator. Arthur Smith would fit that bill.

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    ESPN NFL Reporters

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  • Laura Robson column: Good to see Emma Raducanu smiling, her results almost don’t matter at Australian Open

    Laura Robson column: Good to see Emma Raducanu smiling, her results almost don’t matter at Australian Open

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    In her first Sky Sports column, Laura Robson looks ahead to the prospect of Emma Raducanu taking on Katie Boulter at the Australian Open, super Jack Draper joining the elite, Coco Gauff’s hopes and Novak Djokovic chasing history…

    The tennis world has descended on Australia, but I’ve already been here for a few weeks as I have family here.

    I saw my niece and nephew a lot and it’s lovely because they’re at an age where they know what Christmas is but they aren’t quite sure what time of year it is, so when I arrive it’s just as exciting as Santa because we come so close together!

    So Auntie Laura comes and brings presents. Santa also comes and brings presents, It’s a win-win for them!

    I also went down to the Twelve Apostles for the first time, which considering I was born here and my parents have lived here for a long time, it was nice to tick that off the bucket list.

    We also did the annual Boxing Day Test at the MSG, which is the Robson tradition and then I flew to Sydney the next day for the United Cup so it works out as a long stint but it’s been really good.

    Now it’s time to get down to business and look ahead to the Australian Open…

    Results almost don’t matter for Emma Raducanu yet

    Image:
    Raducanu attended a press conference in Melbourne on Friday where she was all smiles

    I’m so happy to see Emma Raducanu back on court. I know how hard she’s been working over the last six, seven months and I just think she’s got some of that joy back of playing tennis the way she used to back in the day, when you first picked up a racket and you just want to crack the ball. That’s what she does best.

    I think you can tell from the smile on her face she’s absolutely gunning to be out there. She’s got the support of Ian Bates, who has done the majority of the work over the last few months with her, and then Nick Cavaday has come out here for extra support and a bit more guidance.

    I know she is big on doing a lot of the research herself before she faces someone, but it’s always handy to have someone with you.

    It’s a good test to play someone like Shelby Rogers who’s a fairly big hitter from the back of the court because Emma likes that power coming on to her and I was impressed with how she played in Auckland against Elina Svitolina.

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    The best of the action from Emma Raducanu’s match against Elina Svitolina at the ASB Classic in Auckland

    From what I’ve seen and heard of her practising in Melbourne, she’s striking the ball so cleanly, really trying to play it as aggressive as possible. Hopefully, that’s a good outcome.

    But at the same time the results almost don’t matter for her at the moment. It’s about getting back on court as much as possible in match situations and trying to stay as healthy as possible.

    There is the tantalising prospect of a potential Battle of the Brits between Raducanu and Katie Boulter, but could it actually happen?

    I’d love it if she ends up playing Boulter in the third round of the Australian Open.

    Both of them would be very happy to play each other if it came down to that and if Emma’s back in the third round in only her second tournament back from injury then that would be unreal.

    You couldn’t ask for a better start to the season after being so far out of the game.

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    Katie Boulter says a shift in perspective has helped her to become British No 1

    Fellow lefty Jack Draper is up there with the best

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    The best of the action from Jack Draper against Alexander Bublik in the semi-finals of the Adelaide International

    Jack Draper came to Australia a week later than the rest and watching him play over the last few days in Adelaide you can see the work that he’s done in the off-season,

    He looks really strong and physically as fit as I’ve ever seen him because the men’s game is getting more and more physical. Everyone is a great athlete and everyone is fast and strong.

    He’s up there with some of the best players in the world and anyone who has seen Jack play in real life knows he has the game because he’s got such a big serve. I’m buzzing for Jack and hopefully he won’t be too tired for the major in Melbourne.

    It’s also great to see a true lefty out there, we have to stick together!

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    Draper explains the impact Andy Murray has had on his career, describing him as an inspiration

    A big three has emerged – can Coco make it a big four?

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    Highlights of the US Open final between Coco Gauff against Aryna Sabalenka at Flushing Meadows

    There’s definitely a big three emerging in the women’s game with Iga Swiatek, Aryna Sabalenka and Elena Rybakina.

    For me, Coco Gauff is ever so slightly behind – but not really behind because she’s got so many things she’s working on in her game right now

    I feel in another year you’ll see the best of Coco even though she’s already won a Slam so it’s a good problem to have.

    Having the same players in the latter stages of tournaments is a great sign of consistency and you kind of back them now whereas a few years ago the top players could still lose in the early rounds and I just never feel that way about those four players.

    Iga’s changed the technique of her serve during the off-season. She’s getting more power on her second serve and adding pace on her backhand which has been evident recently.

    Getting that number one spot back at the WTA Finals mentally would have changed a lot for her because she put too much pressure on her shoulders. Just playing so freely to win it back unlocked a lot for her.

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    The best of the action from the ASB Classic Final from Auckland between Gauff and Elina Svitolina

    You won’t be surprised by my prediction in the men’s draw

    It’s hard to bet against Novak Djokovic. He is already the GOAT and I’d give him that title happily.

    It’s hard to image what motivates him to this point and that’s the most fascinating thing about hearing him talk. A 25th Grand Slam takes him past Margaret Court. It was be amazing for tennis for someone to hit those numbers.

    I would throw Grigor Dimitrov in the mix as well. I always believe in him until it gets to a quarter-final or semi-final in best-of-five but he’s hitting the ball better than I’ve ever seen him.

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    The best of the action from the Men’s Brisbane International final between Grigor Dimitrov and Holger Rune

    Everyone knows he’s super talented and has all the strokes, all the boxes ticked, but he hasn’t put it together over the last few years.

    I’d love him to do well because I’ve worked with his coach Jamie Delgado at Wimbledon so to see his progress over the past few months has been great.

    He’s not a dark horse but after watching Carlos Alcaraz, he’s been playing well and he’s hitting the ball huge, while Alexande Zverev is also playing well.

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    Highlights of the US Open final between Daniil Medvedev and Djokovic at Flushing Meadows

    The Australian Open has such a different vibe to the other three Grand Slams that it’s more relaxed and to see 10,000 people show up for a practice match – I can’t think of many other places where that would be the case.

    They love sport here but it will be a battle to see who will handle the conditions best.

    Laura Robson was speaking to Sky Sports’ Raz Mirza from Melbourne. Watch the WTA and ATP Tours throughout 2024 on Sky Sports. Stream tennis and more with a NOW Sports Month Membership

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  • Thompson scores 30, lifting Warriors to 140-131 win over Bulls

    Thompson scores 30, lifting Warriors to 140-131 win over Bulls

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    CHICAGO — Klay Thompson scored 30 points and Stephen Curry scored 15 of his 27 points in the fourth quarter as the Golden State Warriors used a big second-half turnaround to beat the Chicago Bulls 140-131 on Friday night.

    Thompson and Curry started slow, missing a combined 10 of their first 11 shots from the field. But the tide turned at halftime, with Thompson making five 3-pointers and scoring 17 as the Warriors pulled to a 16-point lead entering the fourth.

    “It’s nice to win a game like that where I know individually I can shoot the ball better but we won a game collectively,” Curry said. “We have a standard that we want to live up to for ourselves. The disappointment is you know you can play better. It doesn’t mean we’re going to win every game, but you just want to play better. I think we did that tonight.”

    Curry finished 8 of 24 from the field, but had nine assists as the Warriors needed just over five minutes in the third quarter to erase a 13-point halftime deficit. Andrew Wiggins finished with 17 points and eight assists for Golden State, who had dropped their last two games at home. Jonathan Kuminga chipped in 24 points off the bench.

    “This was a game we felt we had to win, especially with the upcoming road trip,” Thompson said. “When our spirit is right, things tend to go our way.”

    DeMar DeRozan scored 39 points to lead the Bulls, who lost while shooting a 58.1% from the field. Only one team gives the ball away less often than the Bulls on average, yet the Warriors won the turnover battle 12-3. Zach LaVine scored 25 points with eight rebounds and seven assists in the first game the Bulls have lost since he returned from injury.

    Coby White scored 21 of his 25 points in the first half, including a 29-foot jumper with 1.1 seconds remaining to send the Bulls into halftime ahead 75-62, their highest-scoring half of the season.

    White’s driving layup with 2:57 left in the game drew the Bulls within four, but they got no closer.

    “They did a great job adjusting, coming out changing up the game plan,” DeRozan said of the Warriors. “You can never count them out no matter how big of a lead we have.”

    The Bulls recognized 13 franchise luminaries as well as the 1995-96 championship team during a Ring of Honor ceremony at halftime. But the affair was marred by United Center fans booing former general manager Jerry Krause, leaving his widow, Thelma, visibly upset.

    The Warriors played without four regulars, with guard Moses Moody expected to miss the entire four-game road trip with a left calf strain. Chris Paul is out with a left hand fracture, Gary Payton II is recovering from a left hamstring strain, and Draymond Green is still ramping up conditioning after his suspension.

    “I can’t wait until Draymond is back,” Thompson said. “We’re not the Warriors without him. Hopefully within these next couple of games, maybe Memphis or Utah would be great. I think he makes the biggest impact defensively.”

    UP NEXT

    Warriors: Continue a four-game road trip in Milwaukee on Saturday night.

    Bulls: Facing the Spurs at San Antonio on Saturday night.

    ___

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

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  • Alabama hires Washington’s Kalen DeBoer

    Alabama hires Washington’s Kalen DeBoer

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    By Christopher Kamrani, Bruce Feldman, Kennington Smith III and Chris Vannini

    The man chosen to succeed the greatest college football coach in the history of the sport is from rural South Dakota, who certainly some Crimson Tide fanatics have never heard of. At least until the last 72 hours.

    Kalen DeBoer, known within the industry as both a program builder and excavator, told his staff at Washington he’s accepting an offer from Alabama for Nick Saban’s former coaching job, team sources confirmed Friday. DeBoer met with his Washington team Friday afternoon to explain why he’s making the move, the sources said.

    News of the hire was officially announced by Alabama on Friday evening.

    “Following coach Saban is an honor,” DeBoer said in a school statement. “He has been the standard for college football, and his success is unprecedented. I would not have left Washington for just any school. The chance to lead the football program at the University of Alabama is the opportunity of a lifetime.”

    DeBoer, 49, went 25-3 in two years at Washington, leading the Huskies out of the frustrations of a 4-8 campaign under a previous coaching regime in 2021. Saban, who won six national championships while in charge of the program, shocked the sporting world Wednesday afternoon when it was announced he was retiring at the age of 72.

    DeBoer, Washington and its revitalized fan base were not even 48 hours removed from the heartbreak of a 34-13 loss to Michigan in the College Football Playoff national championship Monday night in Houston.

    “Kalen DeBoer has been an outstanding leader of our football program and what he accomplished in two seasons on Montlake will forever be a part of our storied history,” Washington athletic director Troy Dannen said. “We are sad to see him leave and we did all that we could to keep Kalen at UW.”

    While the pool of candidates to replace Saban ranged from former trusted assistants like Texas’ Steve Sarkisian to those groomed under him like Oregon’s Dan Lanning, the list was slowly whittled down throughout the swift process undertaken by Alabama athletic director Greg Byrne.

    On Thursday morning, Lanning — a former graduate assistant under Saban — announced on social media he was staying in Eugene. Sarkisian is close to finalizing a contract extension to stay with Texas.

    GO DEEPER

    Mandel: Kalen DeBoer is ideal replacement for Nick Saban facing near-impossible position

    Eventually, it came down to DeBoer, Florida State head coach Mike Norvell and Alabama offensive coordinator Tommy Rees. Earlier Friday, Norvell and FSU agreed to a new deal.

    In DeBoer, Byrne went with what some might perceive to be an unconventional hire, a man who has never coached in the SEC. At some point this fall, DeBoer hired college football coaching superagent Jimmy Sexton who represents a majority of coaches in the SEC, including Saban.

    “Coach DeBoer has proven he is a winner and has done an incredible job as a head coach at each of his stops,” Byrne said Friday. “One of the things I told our team the other day is we are going to get someone who is not only a great coach with the Xs and Os, but also someone who cares about his players and someone I’d want my sons to play for, just like I would have wanted them to play for Coach Saban. We got that in Coach DeBoer.”

    As seen in the last two days, several dominoes needed to tip in the direction of Byrne going all the way to Seattle to find his Saban successor.

    There will be no rebuild or extraction from the depths for DeBoer in Tuscaloosa. This is strictly a contend-for-and-win national titles every single year operation he faces. At Washington, DeBoer installed an offense that became the most entertaining in the sport in 2023, highlighted by a Heisman Trophy finalist quarterback in Michael Penix Jr., three future NFL wideouts and the best offensive line in the country.

    go-deeper

    GO DEEPER

    UW football coaching job pluses, minuses and candidates after Kalen DeBoer

    “I think it goes to how he’s wired,” former Washington coach Chris Petersen said last month when asked what makes DeBoer such a great coach.

    “Kalen is strong in his convictions. He knows what he wants to do. He’s calm. He’s poised. ‘So-and-so just got hurt. So-and-so is gonna transfer.’ I know it bothers him. But it’s not the end of the world, and he’s fluid,” Petersen continued. “Like how do we keep adjusting and adapting? Those are the things that really jump out to me. Yes, he’s a really good offensive mind. Yeah, he’s a good organizer. That is lower on the totem pole of what makes him special, in my opinion.”

    DeBoer was hired in November 2021 after two years at the helm at Fresno State, where he went 12-6 and tutored future NFL quarterback Jake Haener. From 2005 to 2009, he won three NAIA national titles with Sioux Falls and had the program in the title game all five years in charge. From 2010 to 2019, DeBoer bounced around the country at various levels as an offensive coordinator from Southern Illinois (2010-2013), Eastern Michigan (2014-2016), Fresno State (2017-2018) and Indiana (2019).

    At each stop, DeBoer’s offensive philosophy predicated on capitalizing on open space for playmakers and freedom for the quarterback has been among the top in the country.

    “I think there’s a foundation of what the system is, but it’s got a lot of flexibility to be able to grow and evolve. It’s always going to be around our personnel. It’s going to be quarterback-driven,” DeBoer told The Athletic before the Sugar Bowl win over Texas. “The quarterback is going to be able to take us as far as he can with what his skills are and his understanding of the offense. But in the end, it’s going to work around the players that we have. We’ve done it with the strength of our team being the tight ends, we’ve done it with the strength of our team being the running backs, the receivers, we’ve had success in a lot of different ways.”

    go-deeper

    GO DEEPER

    Who will replace Kalen DeBoer at Washington? Ryan Grubb, Lance Leipold and more candidates

    Over the past two years, the Huskies went 10-1 versus Top 25 teams. DeBoer is 12-2 all-time against ranked opponents. He’s also been dominant against his contemporaries in the sport and some who were in the mix for the Alabama job. He was 3-0 against Lanning, 2-0 against Sarkisian and 1-0 against USC’s Lincoln Riley.

    Washington was the No. 1 passing offense in the country in 2023 and 12th overall in total offense. Despite Alabama also qualifying for the College Football Playoff, the Crimson Tide offense was not what it had been in recent years. It ranked 56th in total offense and 68th in passing offense.

    Before the national title game, Washington defensive lineman Faatui Tuitele told The Athletic that DeBoer fixed a broken locker room.

    “Our culture was really damaged during that time, but then coach DeBoer came,” he said. “Everything has been so amazing. He really changed our culture for the better.”

    At Alabama, the culture has been Nick Saban and contending for titles since 2007. But those who know DeBoer well believe he is uniquely made up for such circumstances.

    “Kalen has a humble swagger to him,” said a former Washington staffer who spoke under condition of anonymity. “His temperament is very unique. He doesn’t swear. He stays very steady all the time.”

    What will Alabama look like under DeBoer?

    Recruiting and retention of Alabama’s roster is of the highest priority, as evidenced by wide receiver Isaiah Bond entering the transfer portal Friday. The best way for DeBoer to do that is to assemble his coaching staff with the same urgency that the head coaching search had.

    The first question is which of Alabama’s current coaches will DeBoer retain? Offensive coordinator Tommy Rees, who interviewed for the head coaching position this week, is of particular interest and secondary coach Travaris Robinson, a valuable assistant and recruiter within the Southern footprint is likely a high-priority coach for DeBoer to keep on staff.

    Three assistant coaching positions are vacant: wide receivers, outside linebackers and defensive coordinator. The wide receiver position is perhaps the most important position to fill, as securing that position as soon as possible will help Alabama’s chances of regaining the commitment of 2024 five-star Ryan Williams, who decommitted from Alabama amid Saban’s retirement and is signing during late signing day in February.

    Overall, finalizing the coaching staff and mobilizing to retain the current roster and start recruiting the 2025 class is DeBoer’s first major assignment as Alabama’s coach.

    What’s next for Washington?

    Regarding what’s in store for Washington, it remains to be seen if DeBoer is going to bring offensive coordinator and longtime coaching partner Ryan Grubb with him to Tuscaloosa. Ironically, Saban offered Grubb the offensive coordinator position last offseason, but Grubb turned it down to see how far the 2023 Huskies could go.

    Regardless of whether Grubb moves on, Washington will be a different team next season. A slew of stars are departing, including Penix and wide receiver Rome Odunze, though former Mississippi State quarterback Will Rogers has transferred in. UW is also heading to the Big Ten, where the competition will be tougher and the Huskies will be at a financial disadvantage, not receiving a full conference share.

    Grubb would be an easy internal promotion. Potential outside names could include Iowa State head coach Matt Campbell, Arizona head coach Jedd Fisch, Kansas head coach Lance Leipold, Texas defensive coordinator Pete Kwiatkowski, BYU head coach Kalani Sitake, Cal head coach Justin Wilcox, San Jose State head coach Brent Brennan, Washington State head coach Jake Dickert, former Auburn/Boise State head coach Bryan Harsin and New Mexico head coach Bronco Mendenhall.

    But new athletic director Troy Dannen just got to Seattle from Tulane in October, meaning this search could go in numerous directions.

    Required reading

    (Photo: Alika Jenner / Getty Images)

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    The New York Times

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  • Elina Svitolina: Ukraine's unbreakable spirit is a big motivation for me

    Elina Svitolina: Ukraine's unbreakable spirit is a big motivation for me

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    By now, nearly two years after the Russian invasion of Ukraine, there is a familiar rhythm to Elina Svitolina’s days.

    The missile attacks from Russia generally happen overnight, so in the morning, just after she opens her eyes, she grabs her phone to see where the bombs have fallen. There is a call to her grandmother in Odessa. No matter how many times Svitolina has asked, her grandmother has refused to leave her home and her cat.

    There is time with her 15-month-old daughter, Skai. There are many hours of training. There are phone calls related to her own business, and many more related to fundraising and relief efforts for Ukraine, through her work with United24, Ukraine’s main war relief fundraising organization, the one her country’s president called to request her help with. Sometimes these stretch into the night and don’t finish until after she has put Skai to bed and had dinner with her husband, the French tennis player Gael Monfils. 

    It’s a lot, and yet Svitolina, the comeback player of the year in women’s tennis in 2023, insists she is lucky. She has her parents and her in-laws helping with Skai, and many others helping with the relief efforts and her other pursuits. And then there are all the soldiers, people she grew up with, doing the really hard work.

    “I have a lot of friends, male friends, and they’re all at the front line,” the 29-year-old Svitolina says during a video interview from Monaco, where she was getting ready for the 2024 season. 

    There are tennis players who won more matches and earned more money in 2023 than Svitolina, and players who achieved more acclaim. But it’s hard to imagine a player having a more shocking and impactful year, a stunning ride from the minor leagues back to Centre Court at Wimbledon during which both tennis fans and those who paid little attention to the sport blanketed her with unique and unbridled adulation. 


    Svitolina was hugely popular at Wimbledon (Julian Finney/Getty Images)

    Were the roars for Carlos Alcaraz, the men’s Wimbledon champion, as loud as those for Svitolina during her run to the semi-finals at the All England Club, or to the quarter-finals of the French Open at Roland Garros weeks earlier? Definitely not.

    Here was a different Svitolina, maybe even a better one than the Svitolina who rose to No 3 in the world in 2017 and won the WTA Tour finals the next year. That Svitolina didn’t have the steeliness, or the drive, or the purpose of this one, because during those few days last July, when Svitolina was the biggest story in the sport, or maybe in any sport, there was a new surety to those forehands and backhands she lasered down the lines in the tightest moments against the Grand Slam champions Victoria Azarenka and Iga Swiatek, the world No 1. There was a kind of serenity about her as she floated from one match and moment to the next.

    “This whole motivation around me, with different kinds of projects with my foundation, with United24, with all the people behind me, I got enormous support from Ukrainians, but also around the world and it really motivated me to go for more, to really push myself,” she says. “I found myself in the quarter-final of Roland Garros, then in the semi-final of Wimbledon, playing great tennis and being super motivated and with a fresh mind and fresh energy.”

    No one saw this coming. Here was a player coming back from giving birth, with so much of her attention focused on motherhood and on the trauma that her family and country were enduring. No one in the sport envisioned Svitolina shooting up the rankings so quickly, if ever.  


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    Well, actually, that’s not completely true.

    Last January, three months after Skai was born, Svitolina reached out to Raemon Sluiter, a well-regarded Dutch tennis coach, to see if he would consider taking her on. Where others might have seen the challenges of a postpartum comeback, Sluiter saw an opportunity. There was no question about Svitolina’s raw talent. No one rises to No 3 in the world and wins the season-ending championship by accident. But there was another dynamic at play that made working with Svitolina so enticing for Sluiter. 

    With the tennis off-season so brief, players rarely get a chunk of time to really train and practise, to consider making changes to how they play. 

    “If you really want to change something, you have to cut your season short,” Sluiter said during a recent interview. 

    At the time of the initial call, Svitolina did not plan on returning to competition for another three months. Sluiter saw this as a golden chance for her to evolve. He told her not to worry about her busy life off the court. All she needed, he said, was to be dedicated and focused on tennis when she was training.

    “I would take 30 minutes of quality training over two hours of just going through the motions,” Sluiter said. “It’s about being intentional and very present.”

    If Svitolina was tired, or feeling overwhelmed, he told her to take the day off. Given everything else going on in Svitolina’s life, Sluiter knew this was a player and a person unlike any other. 

    Flash forward a few more months. It’s October and Svitolina’s 2023 tennis ride has come to an end. The pain from a stress fracture in her ankle, which began during the French Open, intensified during Wimbledon and became debilitating during the North American hardcourt swing, forced her to end her season after the U.S. Open. 


    Svitolina celebrates winning match point against Darya Kasatkina at Roland Garros (Julian Finney/Getty Images)

    This is when Svitolina told Monfils she wanted to visit Ukraine. Understandably protective, her husband was scared and wary. “Even though it’s my homeland, it’s still tough for him to realize that I want to go back, I want to go to the country where the war is,” she says.

    Monfils ultimately understood and, in November, Svitolina took the arduous trip involving the 10-hour train rides to Ukraine for 10 days, first to see her grandmother in Odessa, then to Kyiv and Dnipro, where she met with government officials and caught up with old friends, then to Kharkiv, which is just 20km (around 12 miles) from the Russian border.

    Svitolina moved there when she was 12 to train and pursue her career as a pro tennis player. She went to see her old coaches and the club where she played her first tournaments and to be with the kids who are training there now and continuing with their lives amid the war. 

    “It’s such a big motivation for me to see that in Ukraine life continues; they are having this unbreakable spirit that nothing can really bother them, nothing can break their spirit,” she said.

    “This is really a huge motivation for me when I am playing a tough match. When I’m facing tough moments in my life, I always remind myself of the people that have to deal with war, that have to deal with the loss of their homes and, you know, just trying to really survive, to live a normal life. And of course, the soldiers, the men and women who are defending our country, who took the weapons in their hands.”

    After she returned home, and as her ankle healed, Svitolina got back to work. Once more, Sluiter saw the injury as something of an opportunity, giving Svitolina an extended off-season to refine and develop her game without the pressure to return to competition. 

    Sluiter didn’t prescribe anything radical, rather, merely doing what she began to do last year to an even greater degree. 

    “She can approach matches with a more aggressive mindset and try to control matches more and play them more on her terms than on the opponent’s terms,” he said. 


    Monfils and Svitolina are married (Pascal Le Segretain/SC Pool – Corbis/Corbis via Getty Images)

    By mid-December, Svitolina was able to play “90 per cent pain-free”, though she remained concerned about how her ankle would feel on the hard courts of Auckland’s ASB Classic, her main tuneup before the Australian Open, and how sharp she might be. Coming back from childbirth, she largely struggled to win during the first six weeks. She found her form in late May in Strasbourg, the week before the French Open.

    So far, so good. 

    With Skai in tow for her first big tennis road trip, Svitolina won her first four matches in Auckland, two against former Grand Slam champions, Carolina Wozniacki and Emma Raducanu, before losing a tight final to Coco Gauff, winner of the most recent Grand Slam event, who won 6-7(4), 6-3, 6-3. 

    “I’m playing more freely,” Svitolina said last month. “Before, I was a tennis player from Ukraine. But right now, it’s very different. Different motivation, different goals. And for me, it’s important every single day to take the opportunity, to give 100 per cent on each practice, each match, and do everything that is in my power.”

    (Top photo: Hannah Peters/Getty Images)

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  • The footballers who escaped one of the most dangerous countries on Earth

    The footballers who escaped one of the most dangerous countries on Earth

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    “We see potential spies and enemies everywhere,” says David. “It can be at border control or it can be in a cafe. The other day, a guy was looking at me strangely, so I left without finishing my breakfast, and jumped in a taxi — asking the driver to take me to the wrong address.”

    David is an Eritrean footballer, a refugee who thinks government agents are still watching him even though he fled the country a long time ago and is now thousands of miles away.

    Though he has claimed asylum abroad, his fears mean that he often sleeps with a chair pressed against the door of his bedroom. Sometimes he will have nightmares about a group of men armed with weapons bursting in and taking him away. 

    He lives with the memory of 18 months of training at the Sawa military camp in Eritrea, where, from the age of 15, he was awoken each morning before sunrise and beaten if he did not carry out the orders of his superiors to their liking. There were day-long hikes without food or water and he saw unspeakable violence to women and girls, some of it sexual.

    He felt like his future was being stolen from him yet insists he was one of the lucky ones. 

    While military service can be an unending indenture of slavery in Eritrea, he was released, he believes, because he had already started to prove his talent as a footballer. Yet there was always the threat of being sent back, even after being called up to play for the Eritrean national team.

    After Sawa, he could not stop thinking about getting out of Eritrea, a country that was ranked as the least free state in the world in the 2021 Reporters Without Borders Press Freedom Index, behind North Korea and other countries known for oppressing and jailing journalists.

    David says escape became an “obsession”. 

    Levels of repression inside the country were getting worse but those trying to leave via its borders were risking indefinite detention. He had heard about underground prisons and a torture chamber known as ‘the oven’ because of the sweltering conditions.

    That is why, when he one day travelled abroad to play for Eritrea, he decided to make his move: leaving the team hotel in the middle of the day ostensibly to go shopping for souvenirs. He did not return. He is one of as many as 80 footballers to abscond from the country while in other nations since 2007.

    David, whose name has been changed at his request to protect his identity, describes himself as a “patriot” and he insists that he will never experience a greater honour than representing Eritrea as a footballer.

    But he thinks he can never go back. 

    He will not disclose his name publicly because of the perceived threat to his freedom, nor will he confirm where in the world he has resettled, or whether anyone else from the squad escaped with him while on international duty. He says Eritreans are conditioned to distrust journalists because a free press does not exist in their country and anyone who tries to tell the truth is oppressed.

    Though he recognises the importance of telling at least part of his story, he is thin on detail at times because the conversation makes him feel nervous.

    When he speaks to The Athletic, he talks quietly. 

    He does not want anyone to hear what he is saying.

    go-deeper

    When the latest Africa Cup of Nations (AFCON) starts in the Ivory Coast on Saturday, a team from Eritrea will not be there.

    Eritrea have never qualified for a major international tournament but, on this occasion, did not even enter the process after the Confederation of African Football (CAF) confirmed the country did not have a stadium that fulfilled its safety requirements to host home matches.

    Nor are Eritrea competing to reach the 2026 World Cup. 

    In November, the Eritrean National Football Federation (ENFF) withdrew its entry via a short statement issued by world football’s governing body FIFA and CAF, which said simply that “all of Eritrea’s matches have been cancelled”.


    Eritrea, in green, playing against Rwanda in 2012 (AFP via Getty Images)

    This decision came after talk of an agreement being reached between ENFF and the Royal Moroccan Football Federation (RMFF) to use that country’s training facilities, which meet CAF standards, before all matches. David interprets Eritrea’s most recent retreat as a reaction from the government fearful of geography, given Morocco’s proximity to Europe and the increased likelihood of more players using the agreement as an opportunity to flee.

    “It then becomes an international incident,” says David. “Eritrea does not want the world talking about its problems.”

    go-deeper

    The last time Eritrea played a competitive, FIFA-recognised game of football, in 2019, they tumbled out of the 2022 World Cup at the qualifying stages after losing over two legs to Namibia. In the same month, four members of the nation’s under-20 side sought asylum in Uganda.

    In a sporting sense, the timing of this defection was significant. 

    Eritrea had trounced Zanzibar to reach the semi-finals of the CECAFA Under-20 Championship — consisting of national teams from east and central African nations  — when, amid the celebrations and platitudes from government officials back home, the players made their move. This escape involved convincing the ‘minders’ watching over the squad that they had earned the opportunity to go for a walk without unwanted companionship.

    Three months later, another seven players from the senior national team absconded in the same country. 

    Six of those players have since claimed they were underage when they were forcibly conscripted into the army.


    On five occasions since 2009, Eritrean footballers have used the opportunity to seek refuge elsewhere rather than return to a country that is often referred to by Western media as the “North Korea” of Africa.

    Permanently mobilised conscripts have been instrumental to the rule of Eritrea’s president, Isaias Afwerki, since the start of the 1990s, when the country gained independence from southern neighbour Ethiopia following a war that lasted 30 years.

    Though he initially presented himself as a man of the people, Eritrea has become an authoritarian state under Afwerki, with no national assembly, no constitution or independent judiciary. According to a report produced by the UN Human Rights Council, nearly 40,000 Eritreans tried to cross the Mediterranean Sea to reach Europe in 2014 alone.


    A man holds a copy of a newspaper, carrying a report on Eritrean footballers who disappeared from a hotel in 2012 (Isaac Kasamani/AFP via Getty Images)

    Two years later, the UN claimed that crimes against humanity had been committed in Eritrea in a “widespread and systematic manner”.

    The same report said: “Crimes of enslavement, imprisonment, enforced disappearances, torture, persecution, rape, murder, and other inhumane acts have been committed as part of a campaign to instil fear in, deter opposition from, and, ultimately, to control the Eritrean civilian population.”

    By 2018, a peace deal between Eritrea and Ethiopia led to its borders opening and 5,000 people a day leaving the country.

    That year, half a million Eritreans fled — a tenth of its population.

    Yet footballer David, along with other Eritrean sources who have discussed their experiences with The Athletic on the condition of anonymity, has spoken about the “paranoia” there, where people are sceptical of old international alliances and are, in some cases, thankful to Afwerki for maintaining the country’s sovereignty.

    The president retains the support of a mainly older generation having successfully created an image of himself as a besieged leader, successfully combating threatening external forces in the name of independence, while maintaining its key strategic position on the Horn of Africa.

    This means that some refugees remain loyal to him, even after resettling following tremendous hardship in their journeys. They say they have not sought a future elsewhere because of Afwerki but because of the actions of other countries, including landlocked Ethiopia, which is threatening to establish a port on Eritrean soil.

    Afwerki has informed Eritrean behaviours to such an extent that within expat communities abroad, it is dangerous to discuss politics wherever you happen to live. 

    David knows people who have been verbally and physically abused on the street for telling their stories publicly. 

    “You never know who is reading, who is listening, what they think, and what they will do with that information,” he says.


    The last time Eritrea played a competitive game of football, Mohammed Saeid made his international debut.

    Unlike the other footballers featured in this article, he is willing to talk on the record because none of his relatives or friends still live in Eritrea.

    His mother and father fled during the country’s war of independence with Ethiopia, which started in 1962.

    Saeid was born in Sweden in 1990. His parents initially crossed the Red Sea, to Jeddah in Saudi Arabia, joining thousands of Eritreans in camps. Eventually, they would make it to Norway, before settling in Orebro, a 200-kilometre (124-mile) drive west of Stockholm, the Swedish capital.

    He meets The Athletic in a cafe in Birmingham, England’s second-biggest city, where his family relocated almost 20 years ago because of his football talent. 

    Saeid joined nearby West Bromwich Albion — thanks largely to the encouragement of Dan Ashworth, who later became a director of elite development with the English Football Association before a hugely successful spell at Brighton & Hove Albion as sporting director, which led to a move to Newcastle United, where he holds the same role.


    Saeid talking to The Athletic in Birmingham (Simon Hughes/The Athletic)

    Yet Saeid’s entire professional career has been spent away from the country he now calls home. After being released by West Brom, he returned to Sweden, where his performances in midfield for Orebro earned him a deal in 2015 with Major League Soccer’s Columbus Crew.

    A first approach to represent Eritrea came around this time. The contact, however, was not from an Eritrean football official. Henok Goitom’s parents were also Eritrean and, aged 31, he was coming towards the end of a playing career which had involved five years in Spain with Murcia, Valladolid and Almeria.

    Saeid knew all about Goitom because he was the most famous Eritrean footballer in Sweden, where he’d already played 13 times for the under-21 side. Yet Saeid had never met him, so it was a surprise when suddenly, Goitom started messaging on social media, enquiring whether he would be interested in representing a country he’d never visited. 

    In the second game of his international career with Eritrea, Goitom scored in a 3-1 away defeat in Botswana, which ended involvement in the qualifying rounds for the 2018 World Cup.

    Goitom was on the plane which returned to Eritrea’s capital Asmara following that match but 10 domestic players did not board, deciding instead to seek refuge in the closest Red Cross centre in Francistown.

    Local reports suggested the players were worried about the prospect of military service. It was also reported that the players seeking political asylum had suddenly decided not to work with the lawyers provided by the Eritrean Movement for Democracy and Human Rights (EMDHR) following intimidation from agents representing the Botswana government, which allegedly threatened the footballers by claiming they risked rotting in a camp for illegal immigrants if they accepted the invitation by EMDHR to take their case to court.

    After being contacted by The Athletic, EMDHR confirmed that the players had been sent to a remote refugee camp where they were not able to work and their movement was restricted. “It was a big shock to them and they struggled to cope,” a spokesman wrote in an email. 

    The resettlement to a different country took years to materialise due to the high refugee influx at the time to Europe, mainly from Syria. This led to three of the footballers giving up hope in the process, instead choosing to move to South Africa where refugees are relatively free to move and work in informal small businesses.


    Children playing in Asmara, Eritrea (Christophe Calais/Corbis via Getty Images)

    EMDHR confirmed that marriage allowed one of the three to move to Canada, the country six of the seven who stayed in Botswana also eventually settled in. Another went to Australia after getting married.

    With Eritrea losing 10 of their best domestic players, they sought solutions in the country’s worldwide diaspora, but only because of the determination of notable figures such as Goitom.

    Except, on that occasion, Saeid decided not to join them.

    When he saw the travel arrangements, he had started to think twice. The training camp before a run of competitive fixtures lasted a couple of months and would conflict with his professional commitments in MLS.

    Though it might have been possible to arrive closer to those games, the journey still involved four flights — more than 50 hours and a couple of days of flying time each way. He accepted it was going to be a tiring trip but the fatigue concerned him. Would he be able to train and then perform to the expected levels after travelling from Columbus in the Midwestern state of Ohio to New York, to Frankfurt in Germany, to Addis Ababa in Ethiopia, and then to Asmara? 

    The layovers between some of these flights were tight as well, so he was counting on lots of things falling into place. “When you do your job, you want to do it to the fullest.”


    By 2019, Saeid was back in Sweden with a team called Sirius, where he was in contact with more players of Eritrean descent. They communicated on social media and in WhatsApp groups. Lots of them were talking about the prospect of representing their country. Goitom again acted as a conduit, telling the Eritrean federation that as many as 10 Scandinavian-based Eritreans were interested. 

    Saeid was getting older, realising that such an opportunity might not come around again. He had never set foot in Eritrea, but he says he acted as a sort of foreman for the country’s football diaspora, encouraging others to join him — even though he did not know what to expect himself. “I did start to ask, ‘Is this actually my job?’.”

    This time, the logistical challenge was far simpler: Stockholm to Addis Ababa, then on to Asmara. After landing in Eritrea, he joined a group of players who had been in camp together for several months. He says the sight of so many unfamiliar faces at what was, to them, the late stage of preparations appeared to confuse the domestic Eritrean players, who have limited access to the internet due to government restrictions.

    It was clear to Saeid nobody had explained to them that commitments in Europe dictated that clubs only released players for a fortnight at a time under FIFA rules. They began to understand, but it was up to newcomers such as Saeid to try to explain why, rather than any coach or official.

    Integration time with new team-mates, however, was limited. Could this have been a deliberate strategy, to keep domestic Eritreans away from their countrymen living abroad, to prevent them from hearing about the supposed riches of Europe? 

    Saeid says he will never know but over the week that followed, he spent much of it sitting around for hours in hallways of different government buildings, waiting for this document to be stamped, then another one.

    He was there for seven days but it felt like two weeks because of all the waiting, though others travelling from Sweden were grilled more intensely than him. One player had claimed to have a relative still living in Eritrea and this led to the police driving out to a village in the countryside hours away and bringing that person back to Asmara to validate his status.


    Eritrea line up for a 2018 match against Botswana (Monirul Bhuiyan/AFP via Getty Images)

    Quite why some of the easier details to establish were not dealt with before his trip was never explained. Saeid knows for certain, however, that all of this paperwork was not helpful as he tried to prepare for a vital World Cup qualifier with Namibia. 

    His father had recommended he visit one of the old cinemas of Asmara and eat gelato: pastimes from the country’s old Italian colonial days. Yet there was very little time for Saeid to see the country because of the amount of bureaucracy to get through.

    Across seven days, he took part in just two training sessions. Confirmation of Saeid’s eligibility only arrived on the day of the game. Of all the players to travel from Stockholm, only he was permitted to feature in the tie’s first leg, but he remained on the substitutes’ bench, watching Eritrea lose 2-1. Though he was disappointed not to get on, he says he did not feel ready to play anyway because the week had been so draining. 

    Throughout all of this, nobody from the federation had introduced themselves to him. There had not been a team meeting to go over tactics either. 

    For the second leg in Namibia, it has been claimed by the Human Rights Concern group for Eritrea that domestic players had to pay bonds of £5,600 ($7,100) to leave the country.

    Though the mood was generally more relaxed, Saeid says he only found out he was making his international debut when some of his team-mates started gossiping during the warm-up. Confirmation came when the FIFA officials in charge of the match inadvertently revealed the team by checking all of the players were wearing the correct shirts. 

    “I don’t know why the coach wasn’t involved,” he says. “I’m still not sure whether this is just the culture in Eritrea. It was never explained. We just put on our shirts and went out and played.”

    Another defeat meant Eritrea were not going to the World Cup. Yet Saeid was encouraged by the level of ability in the squad and he was excited that his international career had finally started. Yet in the months that followed, 11 of their players claimed asylum in Uganda and the country have not played competitively at any level since. 

    Eritrea have no FIFA ranking because they haven’t played a fixture within the governing body’s parameter of 48 months. It is now more than four years since that trip to Namibia and in that time, Saeid says nobody from the federation has contacted him to explain what is going on. 

    When it was announced that Eritrea would not compete to qualify for the 2026 World Cup, Saeid found out on social media.

    Now aged 33, his most recent club were Trelleborg in the Swedish second division. He says he would love to represent his country again but feels his international career is over.

    He remains in a WhatsApp chat group with hundreds of Eritrean footballers based across the world.

    “The appetite is there,” he insists. Yet when players ask him about the next steps in terms of contacting the country, he does not know where to send them. “Eritrea has potential, there’s a lot of talent growing, but we are going to lose all of these players because we don’t have a foundation to build from.”


    For any Eritrean wanting to escape the country, the only option is the illegal route: risking the border crossing into Ethiopia or Sudan, to the west, before travelling north, trying to reach the Mediterranean via Libya, where the EU has committed close to €100million (£86.3m; $109.5m) on funding the country’s coastguard.

    This investment helped circumnavigate international law that states people cannot be returned to countries if their lives are at risk. Instead, after being caught at sea, refugees are taken back to Libya where, between 2017 and 2022, more than 100,000 men, women and children have been locked up, essentially for being there illegally — albeit without any official charges or trials to contest their imprisonment.

    Hermon considers himself in the “lucky” category, despite the hardship he has experienced.

    To ensure the safety of a small number of family members he left behind in Eritrea, he permits The Athletic to use only his first name and he asks for certain details in the story that follows to be changed to protect the identities of other people connected to him.

    Hermon was not an international footballer but his journey illustrates what many people in his country have had to go through in attempting to get out. He was, however, an aspiring footballer, and dreamed of playing in England because of his admiration for Wayne Rooney. He says that was never going to happen if he remained in Eritrea. 

    From the age of seven, he worked on a farm and by 13, he faced the prospect of conscription into the army, which, in his words, only considered boys according to whether they were “strong enough to hold a gun”.

    He lived in a market town close to the Ethiopian border. His decision to leave was spontaneous: fuelled by a conversation with five friends one night while they were playing football. The town’s population was plummeting and Hermon says that watching his friends go without him would have felt like abandonment, leaving him only with an unending future in the army to contemplate. 

    One of his brothers had already left Eritrea, resettling in the Middle East. His success as a businessman acted as a reference point when the going got really tough back home in the subsequent weeks, months and years.

    None of the boys told their parents about what they were going to do, and none of them really knew where they were heading. It was an eight-hour walk to the border and Hermon remembers the pangs of excitement and dread when he reached the Tekeze River, which acts as a barrier between Eritrea and Ethiopia. 

    His impression of the Ethiopian army was a brutal one because of the country’s relationship with Eritrea. Yet he says they gave him everything he needed: food, water and a place to sleep.

    For three months, he was moved between refugee camps. One of them was riddled with malaria, which he contracted. This made him consider returning to Eritrea but his brother’s financial support allowed him to reach Sudan, after paying a smuggler £2,000, half in advance and half on arrival. He says he knows other refugees who lied about the depth of their finances and ended up paying with body parts.

    In Sudan, he felt especially vulnerable. There was the threat of Daesh and other armed militant groups. As a Christian, Hermon knew that if Daesh found him, he’d have to convert to Islam or face death. Refugees like him were also targeted by the police for extortion.

    go-deeper

    GO DEEPER

    Retracing Mohamed Salah’s unlikely road to superstardom… starting on a microbus in Nagrig

    The journey over the desert to the Libyan border took three weeks. There was barely anything to eat or drink and there was no protection from the scorching sun. People died in front of him, of thirst and starvation. The back of the truck he travelled in was packed and if someone fell off, the driver did not stop.

    He says he was fortunate that his stay in Libya lasted just a week. In a holding camp outside Tripoli, the capital, some of the refugees were suicidal after years of detention. Many of the men had been beaten, while women were raped and children were tortured. 

    The refugees came from all over Africa. Some of them had made it onto a boat, only for it to be seized at sea, and sent back to Libya. Some had been on this demoralising journey more than once. Everyone he met appeared shot psychologically. 

    Hermon spent his 14th birthday surrounded by people he did not know, uncertain of where he was heading and when the next leg of that journey would start.

    Without his brother’s financial support, he thinks he’d have never made it out of Libya — certainly not as quickly as he did. Within a week, he was on an overcrowded, patched-together vessel drifting across the Mediterranean at night. It took 12 hours to reach the Italian island of Sicily. 

    He arrived in the Sicilian city of Catania freezing cold and wet through. In the Cara Mineo refugee camp there, he was told he’d have to stay until he was old enough to leave. Potentially, that would have meant a four-year detention. He decided to break out, paying a Nigerian gang to cut a hole in a fence in the middle of the night. With two other refugees, they rushed north, using taxis, buses and trains to get to the mainland. In Rome, a restaurant owner took pity on him and paid for the travel to Paris.

    He had heard of ‘The Jungle’ outside Calais. There, he paid smugglers to take him to Britain by lorry but five months later he was still waiting. He thought of travelling instead to Germany. When the French government started dismantling the camp, he was identified as being underage and this led to him being taken along with around 30 other children to another facility in the south of France, near Toulouse.

    At the back of his mind, Hermon still dreamed about becoming a footballer. After three months, he broke out of the camp again in the middle of the night, travelling east to Marseille. He took a train back up to Calais, by which point nearly all of the refugees had left. He hoped that smugglers might still operate from the town of Berck-sur-Mer but no one appeared to be there either. 

    As he tried to figure out what to do, a lorry pulled up and parked in front of a bar. He saw an Italian registration number and decided there and then, wherever it took him, he would try and reach England. Since leaving Eritrea, he had always carried a knife with him for protection. This time, he used it to cut through the tarpaulin on the roof of the vehicle, before climbing into a machine, along with two other refugees. 

    The journey that followed lasted 14 hours. He could hear he was on a ship. During an inspection, he was able to conceal himself in a footwell. When the back door of the lorry opened, Hermon did not have a clue where he was but he ran, escaping from the confused-looking driver. He arrived in a city, and started looking for Eritrean people. It was clear he was in the United Kingdom but he did not speak the language or even understand the alphabet. 

    One of his travelling companions had the phone number of a relative in Manchester and after he communicated with an unsuspecting passerby on the phone, the relative was able to establish he was in Liverpool. Hermon could not believe his fortune. He knew all about Liverpool because of Rooney.

    He walked into a Home Office building in the city’s business district loaded only with a few words of English. 

    “I am new,” he said, again and again.


    In deciding to leave Ethiopia for Sudan, Hermon had left his friends behind. While one of them has remained in that country, two have settled in Egypt and Switzerland. The other boy decided to return to Eritrea and no one has heard from him since.

    In Liverpool, Hermon demonstrated enough ability to enrol at a football academy, where he played matches against the youth teams of some of the most famous clubs in England’s north west. Having claimed political asylum, he now combines studying for a degree in business management with a full-time job at a warehouse.

    He also now speaks English — with a Scouse accent. 

    “Talent is not the problem in Eritrea,” he stresses. “We’d make it into the top 100 in the world if everything made sense. But nothing makes sense.”

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

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