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Tag: 2025 season

  • Houston Texans 2025 Problems Go Back to 2024 – Houston Press

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    After what felt like a 15 day eternity, the Houston Texans returned to action on Monday night, and as many of you saw, the long wait was not worth it. Not worth it at all. The same slew of silly mistakes and haphazard football that marked the first three games of the season, all losses, was back on display in the team’s 27-19 loss in Seattle. 

    The game was technically a one score game, but anyone with a brain and working set of eyes could tell which team on that field will be going to the playoffs this season. (Hint: NOT the Texans.) This is as angry as I’ve been with the team in three years, and to be clear, I rarely get angry. 

    The Texans now sit at 2-4, with the same number of wins as the Browns and the Raiders, two teams that expect to blow things up, to some degree, at the end of the season. The problem, though, isn’t the 2-4 record in 2025. The problem is the 6-9 record since Week 8 of last season. 

    Six games to start a season is a small enough sample size to rationalize things, and explain things away, oftentimes validly. However, 15 games of the same mess, with a full offseason to make changes in the middle (which means its old faces and new faces messing up) is systemic, and with every passing game, harder from which to extricate the franchise. 

    For the Texans, it’s not just the six wins and the nine losses, but it’s the nature of them. You don’t have to peel the onion layers back too far to see that the six wins are highly unimpressive and the nine losses are largely disastrous. Let’s examine, first the six wins

    ‘24 Week 11 – at Dallas

    ‘24 Week 13 – at Jacksonville

    ‘24 Week 15 – at Miami

    ‘24 Week 18 – at Tennessee

    ‘25 Week 4 – vs Tennessee

    ‘25 Week 5 – at Baltimore

    So if you’re keeping score at home, that’s two wins over Cooper Rush, one win over Trevor Lawrence (until Azeez Al-Shaair murdered him), one win over Tua Tagovailoa, and two wins over the Titans. If this were college football, those six wins would get you laughed out of the playoff committee selection room. Nothing impressive there. 

    Conversely (or similarly, perhaps?), the Texans’ nine losses since the 6-2 start last season:

    ‘24 Week 9 – at New York Jets *

    ‘24 Week 10 – vs Detroit * 

    ‘24 Week 12 – vs Tennessee

    ‘24 Week 16 – at Kansas City *

    ‘24 Week 17 – vs Baltimore *

    ‘25 Week 1 – at Los Angeles Rams

    ‘25 Week 2 – vs Tampa Bay *

    ‘25 Week 3 – at Jacksonville

    ‘25 Week 7 – at Seattle *

    So SIX of the nine losses were on standalone nationally televised games. SIX! Those are denoted above with an asterisk. The other three losses — a home loss to Will Levis, a road loss to Trevor Lawrence, and a loss to the Rams where they had four months to prepare. 

    If you’re wondering why nobody in the national media respects the Texans, perhaps it’s because they’ve ruined at least six football watching days over the last year with horrific football, including a 31-2 loss to the Ravens on Christmas. 

    So now the Niners come to town, and the Texans will likely be without Nico Collins, their best offensive player. This is shaping up to be a long season, and we’re not even halfway there yet. 

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    Sean Pendergast

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  • 2025 Houston Astros MVP Ballot, The Winner Is…. – Houston Press

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    If you feel a palpable void in your social schedule, or perhaps your very soul, it’s probably because October is here, and for the previous eight Octobers (hell, even an October in the middle of a pandemic), we have had playoff baseball in the city of Houston. This year, thanks to enough injuries to fill a small hospital and an offense that appeared to be using toothpicks to hit, the Astros are off for the month of October. 

    The baseball gods have screamed, in classic Seinfeld Soup Nazi style, “Houston! NO PLAYOFF BASEBALL FOR YOU!” Sure, the injuries can be partially to blame, but at times down the stretch, when the schedule looked pretty easy, and the lineup was near full strength, the Astros wilted, sometimes in cataclysmic fashion. Losing six games to the A’s by a combined score of 43-8 is just one glaring example. 

    So now comes the unpredictable part, because we’ve never seen owner Jim Crane operate under these conditions — determine how to move forward with a team he most assuredly sees as a World Series contender, but having missed the playoffs entirely. To be clear, the Astros have missed the playoffs on Crane’s watch, most recently in 2016 before this past weekend. They’ve never missed the playoffs with a top tier payroll, and high expectations. 

    Nobody is safe. If I had to bet, I’d bet my life savings, at a minimum, hitting coaches Alex Cintrón and Troy Snitker will be fired. Joe Espada, who was being. Touted as a Manager of the Year candidate a month ago, is on thin ice. It’s one thing to miss the playoffs, but it’s another to collapse entirely. GM Dana Brown shouldn’t get too comfy either. Jim Crane let the previous GM, James Click, go four days after wining a World Series in 2022.

    Espada and Brown meet with the media late Tuesday morning, assuming both are still in their roles, so the answers in this press conference could be fascinating, especially considering that Dana Brown didn’t really answer whether Espada would be back, when asked over the weekend

    “As far as I’m concerned, Joe is under contract,” Brown said from his suite at Angel Stadium. “We’re going to take a complete look at all of our operations. As far as I’m concerned, Joe worked hard through this season. We had to battle through a ton of injuries, and I really think the injuries (are) what caused us not to get to the postseason.”

    On the one hand, bringing back Espada because of how he managed a practically unmanageable injury situation would be logical. On the other hand, it’s hard not to believe that Crane sees some other managerial prospects out there with a bit more juice, guys who can win a few more games on the margin with some good chess moves. 

    For now, we close the books on the strangest season of Astros baseball I can remember. Somehow, they managed to go over their Vegas preseason win total of 86.5. Perhaps the easiest way to encapsulate how odd this season was would be to try to put together a classic MVP style ballot, 10 names, from 1st to 10th place, for the MVP of the Astros. 

    In fact, let’s workshop this:

    1. HUNTER BROWN, starting pitcher
    Brown is the no brainer MVP of the 2025 Houston Astros. With a 12-9 record, a 2.43 ERA, and a team leading 6.1 Wins Above Replacement (WAR), Brown will likely finish in the top 3 for the AL Cy Young. With any run support in the second half of the season, he likely wins 16 to 18 games. He’s the one Astro who answered the bell at a high level all season long. 

    Okay on to second place…..

    Here is where the ointment is besieged by flies. There isn’t a single player that you can find that falls into Brown’s category of “season long stalwart.” The rest of the roster is made up of high level players who missed vast chunks of the season with injury (Yordan Alvarez, Jeremy Pena, Josh Hader), guys who were healthy all season but disappointed (Yainer Diaz, Christian Walker, Framber Valdez), and Jose Altuve, whose season is more complicated than we want to believe. 

    So, for what it’s worth, here is what the rest of the ballot would like, and as you read this, just know that it may not be as simple as “fire Espada” or “we just need to get healthy!” 

    2. JEREMY PENA, shortstop
    3. JOSH HADER, closer
    4. ISAAC PAREDES, third baseman 
    These are the other three Astro All Stars in 2025. All three of them missed significant time with injuries, but I’d rather have 120 games (or in the case of Hader, 40 or so) of these guys than 162 of some of the others on the team. 

    5. FRAMBER VALDEZ, starting pitcher
    Framber was a nightmare in the final two months of the season, but when the Astros were at their most injured in the first four months, Valdez’s 13 straight starts in which the Astros won vaulted this team to the top of the division. He will be missed in 2026. 

    6. JOSE ALTUVE, second base/left field/DH 
    His 0.5 bWAR was lower than Zach Cole’s 0.6, but he’s the best player in the history of the franchise. I can’t have him languishing with the scrubs. I’ll plunk him at sixth. 

    7. BRYAN ABREU, relief pitcher
    8. JAKE MEYERS, center fielder
    9. YAINER DIAZ, catcher 
    10. JASON ALEXANDER, starting pitcher 

    Man, it was hard to round out this ballot. Abreu was your second most impactful relief pitcher behind Hader. MEYERS was a borderline All Star before suffering a calf injury. Diaz was second in bWAR among everyday players. Finally, Alexander was your second best starter behind Brown for the final two months of the season. 

    Countdown is on to March 26, 2026, Opening Day, and hopefully the beginning of a redemption season for our hometown team. 

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    Sean Pendergast

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  • Buffs to open 2025 season with new-look roster, growing expectations in third year under Coach Prime

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    BOULDER — Colorado opens the season Friday night at Folsom Field with a new-look roster and growing expectations in the third year under head coach Deion “Coach Prime” Sanders.

    Senior Kaidon Salter has been named the starting quarterback and will lead a reshaped Buffs offense against a fast, physical Georgia Tech team.

    “Kaidon has a ton of experience; he’s a dual and can throw the heck out of the ball, as well,” Coach Prime said. “He’s the guy at this point. We’re hoping that you can see some JuJu Lewis periodically through the game, as well. We would like to get him some reps.”

    College Sports

    Deion Sanders picks experience over youth at QB for Colorado’s season opener

    Pat Graham, AP Sports Writer

    Colorado plans to run the ball more and spread the workload. Sophomore receiver Dre’lon Miller has even taken snaps at running back.

    “He just told me, ‘Be ready,’” Miller said. “Wherever he puts me, I’m ready to roll with it.”

    Miller praised Salter’s presence and communication.

    “He’s just a great leader,” he said. “He’s really blunt as a quarterback. He lets us know, like, ‘Get open, I’m coming to you on this play.’ And that’s what I love about him.”

    College Sports

    Good for the athletes and the environment: A look at Folsom Field’s new turf

    The Buffs’ defense faces a major early test from Georgia Tech, led by quarterback Haynes King and running back Jamal Haynes.

    “As long as the ball is in his (King’s) hands, they have a chance,” Sanders said. “We’ve got to do everything we can, all hands on deck, to prevent him from being successful.”

    Still, Coach Prime believes this is the strongest Colorado team yet.

    “We don’t think we lost, we think we gained,” he said. “Sure, there’s a couple athletes that were phenomenal, but I’ve been saying this, we have a better team.”

    Kickoff is 6 p.m. Friday at Folsom Field, as Colorado looks to make a statement in its season opener.

    Denver7

    Denver7 | Your Voice: Get in touch with Bradey King

    Denver7’s Bradey King reports on the entire sports landscape in Colorado, including Denver’s pro teams, but is always looking for stories off the field and in the non-professional ranks. If you’d like to get in touch with Bradey, fill out the form below to send her an email.

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    Bradey King

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  • Orlando Ballet announces lineup for upcoming performance season, including ‘The Nutcracker,’ ‘Peter Pan’ and more

    Orlando Ballet announces lineup for upcoming performance season, including ‘The Nutcracker,’ ‘Peter Pan’ and more

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    click to enlarge

    Courtesy photo

    Orlando Ballet spills the beans on their 2024-2025 season

    Orlando Ballet announced the lineup for their 2024/2025 season Wednesday, and it’s chock full of crowd-pleasers.

    The season, running from Oct. 17 through May 4, 2025,  kicks off this autumn with Romeo & Juliet, from there segueing into holiday tradition The Nutcracker and then Peter Pan in early 2025.

    Here’s the full rundown:
    Romeo & Juliet: Oct, 17-20
    The Nutcracker: Dec. 6-22
    Peter Pan: Feb. 20-23, 2025
    Balanchine, Graham, Pires: (as in George, Martha and Alysa) March 27-30, 2025
    Giselle: May 1-4, 2025

    The Ballet’s behind-the-curtain series, Uncorked,  happens three times in the midst of this season: Sept. 26, Nov. 7 and Jan. 23, 2025.

    Single tickets for these productions go on sale Tuesday, May 28, through Orlando Ballet.

    Additionally, Casanova, the final act of the 2023-2024 season, runs May 16-19 at Steinmetz Hall at the Dr. Phillips Center. It’s an 18+ production. (Spicy!)

    Event Details

    “Casanova”

    Thu., May 16, 7:30 p.m., Fri., May 17, 7:30 p.m., Sat., May 18, 2 & 7:30 p.m. and Sun., May 19, 2 p.m.


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    Matthew Moyer

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