Connect with us
DAPA Banner
DAPA Coin
DAPA
COIN PAYMENT ASSET
PRIVACY · BLOCKDAG · HOMOMORPHIC ENCRYPTION · RUST
ElGamal Encrypted MINE DAPA
🚫 GENESIS SOLD OUT
DAPAPAY COMING

Sports

LIVE: Alex Eala vs Jasmine Paolini

Published

on

LIVE UPDATES Alex Eala vs Jasmine Paolini

PHOTOS: AP / Brian Inganga and Kin Cheung

  • Alex Eala’s dream run continues against Jasmine Paolini in the Wimbledon round of 16 on Monday, July 6, at Centre Court.

July 6, Monday – Centre Court

  • 8:30. p.m. – Alex Eala vs Jasmine Paolini
Alex Eala vs Jasmine Paolini Wimbledon round of 16

Italy’s Jasmine Paolini is congratulated by Philippines’ Alex Eala after winning their women’s singles round of 16 tennis match on the eighth day of the 2026 Wimbledon Championships at The All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club in Wimbledon, southwest London, on July 6, 2026. (Photo by Adrian Dennis / AFP)

Jasmine Paolini reached her first Grand Slam quarterfinal in two years, edging out Alex Eala in a tense last 16 match at Wimbledon on Monday.

Italian 13th seed Paolini ended the run of Iga Swiatek’s conqueror Eala with a gritty 6-4, 4-6, 6-3 victory on Centre Court.

“I feel so lucky to have this opportunity and so lucky to get the win,” said Paolini, before addressing the watching Roger Federer in the royal box.

Advertisement

“He’s my idol and during the match I was like please stay focused and don’t think about him (Federer) being here… It’s an amazing feeling to be here right now with the win.”

Alex Eala vs Jasmine Paolini Wimbledon 2026 round of 16

Alex Eala of the Philippines blows kisses to the crowd after losing the women’s singles fourth round match against Jasmine Paolini of Italy at the Wimbledon Tennis Championships in London, Monday, July 6, 2026.(AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth)

MANILA, Philippines–Alex Eala’s golden run at Wimbledon hit the end of the road on Monday night.

Eala went down swinging before falling to Italian world No. 13 and former finalist Jasmine Paolini, 4-6, 6-4, 3-6, in the round of 16 in front of a star-studded crowd at Centre Court that included Roger Federer seated in the Royal Box.

The loss did not diminish the 21-year-old Eala’s historic campaign on tennis’ most grandiose stage.

Advertisement

LIVE UPDATES: Alex Eala vs Jasmine Paolini – Wimbledon round of 16

  • Refresh this page for live updates.
  • FINAL: Alex Eala’s dream run at Wimbledon ends at the hands of Jasmine Paolini, 4-6, 6-4, 3-6, in the round of 16.
  • Eala forehand out. Paolini 40-30
  • Paolini 30-30
  • Paolini ace, Eala 30-15
  • Paolini serving for the match
  • Eala out, Paolini breaks, 5-3
  • Eala double fault, Paolini adv
  • Paolini short on the return, deuce
  • Eala forehand wide, Paolini advantage
  • Eala lob goes out, deuce
  • Eala 40-30
  • Eala overhead 30-15
  • Eala ace, 15-15
  • Paolini leads again, 4-3
  • Another big serve by Eala, 3-3
  • Eala goes big on the serve, 40-30
  • Paolini rallies from 0-30, hits the service winner, 3-2
  • Eala service winner, 2-2
  • Eala soft touch, 30-30
  • Paolini sends it to the other side, 30-15
  • Eala forehand passing shot
  • Paolini clean game for a 2-1 edge
  • Eala hits the net. Paolini 40-0
  • Paolini service winner, 30-0
  • Eala evens, 1-1
  • Paolini out, Eala 40-30
  • Eala out, 30-30
  • Paolini pounces on a second serve by Eala, 15-30
  • Set 3: Paolini gets the headstart, 1-0
  • Eala forces a deciding set, 6-4
  • Paolini couldn’t get one across. Eala set point, 40-15
  • Paolini scrambles for the point, 15-30
  • Eala jumps to a 30-0 lead
  • Eala serving for the set
  • Paolini gets back into it, 4-5
  • Eala wins five consecutive games to steal the eighth game and lead, 5-3
  • Unforced errors piling up for Paolini in the 2nd set
  • Eala 40-40
  • Paolini off to the races, break point, 40-0
  • Eala breaks again and reclaims the lead, 4-3
  • Eala short, Paolini advantage
  • Eala big forehand return, deuce
  • Paolini ace, advantage
  • Paolini error, deuce
  • Paolini volley, 40-30
  • Eala slice just hits the line, 3-3
  • Paolini hustles for the lob and gets rewarded, 15-0
  • Eala out. Paolini retakes the lead, 3-2
  • Eala overhits on the forehand. Paolini service winner, 30-30
  • Paolini gets one back, 15-30
  • Eala backhand return, 30-0
  • Eala drop shot, 15-0
  • Paolini responds, breaks back, 2-2
  • Paolini outwits Eala on the exchange 40-30
  • Eala volley to the open space, 30-30
  • Eala service winner, 15-15
  • Eala holds on to get the break, grabs the upper hand, 2-1
  • Eala backhand return, break point, 40-15
  • Eala does it to knot it up 1-1
  • Eala again up 40-0 but can she close it out
  • Paolini survives, 1-0
  • Eala errors. Paolini advantage
  • Paolini two straight, 30-40
  • Eala break point, 40-0
  • Paolini winning 75 percent of second-serve points in the opener
  • Eala wide. Paolini claims the first set, 6-4.
  • Match resumes. Paolini takes a 30-15 lead
  • Match momentarily stops as a spectator receives medical assistance
  • Eala breaks, serving for a chance to tie the opening set
  • Paolini unforced error, Eala advantage
  • Eala crosscourt backhand finds the line
  • Eala wins the rally, break point, 40-30
  • Eala drop shot, 30-15
  • Paolini well-placed lob, 15-15
  • Eala cuts the deficit, 3-5.
  • Eala ace, 40-30
  • Paolini baseline winner after overcoming a tough effort by Eala, 5-2
  • Paolini forehand passing shot to retake the advantage
  • Paolini advantage
  • Eala break point
  • Eala starting to find her rhythm, 40-40
  • Eala fights back and pulls within, 2-4
  • Paolini playing nearly perfect tennis so far
  • Paolini overhits off an Eala serve.
  • Paolini attacks the net, takes a commanding 4-1 lead.
  • Paolini breaks for a 3-1 lead.
  • Paolini serves to love, 2-1
  • Eala levels, 1-1, after Paolini struggles to return the Filipino’s serves
  • Eala working the baseline. 15-30
  • Eala double fault, slice goes out
  • Paolini takes the first game, 1-0.
  • Eala ties it up 30-30
  • Match is underway. Paolini 30-0 after two straight Eala errors.
  • Eala and Paolini, a finalist at All England Club in 2024, warming up
  • Paolini wins the toss and opts to serve first
  • Alex Eala, Jasmine Paolini receiving the final instructions.
Alex Eala vs Jasmine Paolini Wimbledon 2026 round of 16

The Philippines’ Alex Eala celebrates beating Poland’s Iga Swiatek during their women’s singles third round tennis match on the sixth day of the 2026 Wimbledon Championships at The All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club in Wimbledon, southwest London, on July 4, 2026. (Photo by Henry Nicholls / AFP)

Filipinos can catch Alex Eala’s Wimbledon round of 16 match against Jasmine Paolini in a public watch party at Philsports Arena in Pasig City on Monday.

Advertisement

The watchalong, hosted by the Philippine Sports Commission (PSC) and Metropolitan Manila Development Authority (MMDA), is free and can accommodate up to 8,000 fans on a first-come, first-served basis.

Gates open at 5:30 p.m., while the match, which takes place at Centre Court in London, is set at 8:30 p.m.

Alex Eala vs Jasmine Paolini Wimbledon 2026 last 16

PHOTO: AP / Brian Inganga and Maja Smiejkowska

MANILA, Philippines — Alex Eala guns for her first-ever Grand Slam quarterfinal appearance, facing Italian Jasmine Paolini in the Wimbledon round of 16 on Monday (Philippine time).

Advertisement

Eala hopes to make it 2-0 against the world No. 17 Paolini following her 6-1, 7-6(5) win in their first and only duel in the round of 32 of the Dubai Open early this year.

The 21-year-old Eala dethroned defending champion Iga Swiatek of Poland, 7-6(9), 6-2, to continue her best Grand Slam run yet.

Eala seeks to become the first Filipino to reach a Grand Slam quarterfinal after Felicisimo Ampon pulled off the feat at the 1953 French Open.

READ: Alex Eala emotional as little kid from PH reached Wimbledon last 16

Paolini, 30, advanced to the Wimbledon last 16 with a 6-1, 6-2 sweep of Greece’s Maria Sakkari.

Advertisement
Alex Eala vs Jasmine Paolini for Wimbledon quarterfinals Alexandra Eala

The Philippines’ Alex Eala reacts as she plays against Poland’s Iga Swiatek during their women’s singles third round tennis match on the sixth day of the 2026 Wimbledon Championships at The All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club in Wimbledon, southwest London, on July 4, 2026. (Photo by Henry Nicholls / AFP)

Alex Eala bids to extend her dream Wimbledon run into the quarterfinals when she faces Jasmine Paolini on Monday.

Eala stunned reigning champion Iga Swiatek with a brilliant straight-sets victory on Centre Court in the third round and now faces the task of backing up that breakthrough triumph against former Wimbledon finalist Paolini.

The 21-year-old has been tipped to become a star of the women’s game since defeating Swiatek to reach the Miami Open semifinals last year.

Advertisement
Alexandra Eala of the Philippines celebrates winning the third round women's singles match against Iga Swiatek of Poland at the Wimbledon Tennis Championships in London, Saturday, July 4, 2026.(AP Photo/Maja Smiejkowska)

Alex Eala of the Philippines celebrates winning the third round women’s singles match against Iga Swiatek of Poland at the Wimbledon Tennis Championships in London, Saturday, July 4, 2026.(AP Photo/Maja Smiejkowska)

In a three-minute, 33-second post match interview that she started as an emotional wreck, Alex Eala let the world know what the path that got her this far was all about.

And what making the round of 16 of a Grand Slam event after dethroning Wimbledon women’s singles champion Iga Swiatek means to the now 21-year-old from the Philippines who is taking the tennis world by the proverbial storm.

She first rattled off the names of the Williams sisters and also the gracious Swiatek, who all “have so many Slams,” saying that making the fourth round of Wimbledon “may seem small (to them).”

Advertisement


Your subscription could not be saved. Please try again.


Your subscription has been successful.

Advertisement


Read Next

Advertisement

Advertisement

Don’t miss out on the latest news and information.

Subscribe to INQUIRER PLUS to get access to The Philippine Daily Inquirer & other 70+ titles, share up to 5 gadgets, listen to the news, download as early as 4am & share articles on social media. Call 896 6000.

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Click to comment

You must be logged in to post a comment Login

Leave a Reply

Sports

How Spencer Miles became a Rule 5 steal for Blue Jays

Published

on

SAN FRANCISCO – In the midst of the winter meetings frenzy last December, the Toronto Blue Jays’ baseball operations department gathered in a team suite to consider their pro scouting group’s annual Rule 5 draft presentation.

Coming off a World Series appearance and determined to make another run, the notion that they would select and carry a pick all season long seemed far-fetched. The club had plenty on the go, too, between signing Dylan Cease and Cody Ponce, working through health concerns for Shane Bieber and Jose Berrios, and the pursuits of Tyler Rogers and Kazuma Okamoto, while also monitoring the Kyle Tucker and Bo Bichette markets.

Still, their scouts were so intrigued by Spencer Miles during the Arizona Fall League that they pushed for his implausible selection. Despite just 10 games and 14.2 innings since the San Francisco Giants made him a fourth-round pick in 2022, they argued that he was ready to get outs in the majors.

“It’s the job of scouting and baseball operations to present opportunities, no matter what’s going on with the roster. Miles was that,” said Ryan Mittleman, the club’s vice-president, pro scouting. “The raw stuff was impressive to us. … We had multiple looks, multiple scouts to say, ‘Hey, the raw data is good, but also, he’s carrying it out into a pretty good league.’ We didn’t let the lack of innings be an impediment. We believed in the stuff. And it carried him to the top of our list.”

Advertisement

Manager John Schneider was in the room for the presentation and remembers “looking at his numbers and I was like, ‘He has how many innings? And what are we doing? And huh?’ They were like his sinker can do this, we think he can develop a slider. I think I said, ‘This guy better be pretty (expletive) good.”

The Blue Jays made Miles the 10th pick of the Rule 5 draft on Dec. 10 and it turns out that he is indeed pretty, ahem, good, emerging into a pitcher that, in Mittleman’s words, “has been huge for us.”

Originally envisioned as an occasional mop-up man at the very end of the bullpen, the 25-year-old has steadily earned more trust in a variety of roles, including eight starts/bulk outings, a needed solution in what’s been a season filled with problems.

His next outing comes Tuesday, when he’ll be the featured arm, possibly the starter, for the Blue Jays in San Francisco, facing the Giants team that helped him through the back and shoulder surgeries that sidelined him for nearly all of the last three years. Some staffers who were close to him are trying to make it out to watch.

Advertisement

“It’s super exciting, but it’s not any different than any other outing,” said Miles laughing when asked if he hears from Giants people wondering how he got away. “Frequently, but that’s OK. Here we are and this org is awesome. So it’s worked out.”

Far more than the Blue Jays imagined, prompting them to again consider building him up with the rotation in continued flux as Max Scherzer continues to rehab from a back issue and Patrick Corbin works out of the bullpen, leaving them short a starter.

How much work Miles can reasonably handle given his lack of volume in recent years – his career high for innings is 77 in 2022 between Missouri and rookie ball – is the Blue Jays’ constant conundrum. There’s no real baseline for the player and no case studies on similar pitchers to draw from, leaving them to feel their way through in the dark. 

Given that he’s already at 54 innings in 24 games and has become someone the club feels grow into a viable option for the 2027 rotation, when they project to have several openings with Kevin Gausman, Bieber and Scherzer all pending free agents, the stakes are suddenly higher given what he may become.

Advertisement

Miles, however, shows no signs of slowing down.

Physically, he said he’s holding up and during his last outing, he set a personal best hitting 99.4 m.p.h. against the New York Mets. He threw a season-high 73 pitches June 6 against Baltimore and has pitched 4.1 innings three times. Where he goes from here isn’t uncertain but even with Scherzer on track to be an option after the all-star break, the Blue Jays want to keep Miles going.

Without an objective measure of what is too much, part of the approach is avoiding too much, too fast, both in innings and in velocity.

“I got up to 73 pitches and then kind of deloaded, so I think that, in a way, gave me a new floor. I don’t think we really know what the ceiling is, but we’re just going to keep pushing it and find out,” said Miles. “My volume has reached a certain point now where my body is starting to accept the force. In years past, 98ish has been my peak. But with a new floor, your body adapts.

Advertisement

“So now your brain and your body are like, ‘OK, I can settle in here. I know what that feels like, I can accept the force.’ Then your body’s saying like, ‘Alright, maybe we can go one step above that and break a chain off that prior peak in exertion of force.’ I don’t really know what the limit is. I think there’s still another one or two ticks in a volume floor that we can get to. So, maybe there’s more in there.”

That any of this is in play at all underlines how significant a Rule 5 pick Miles has turned out to be, against the odds.

“Whenever you’re coming off a World Series, you’re usually not taking a Rule 5 pick. You’re usually pretty set. But with the uncertainty of (Yimi) Garcia, some of our starters, it was like, OK, let’s take a chance, bring him into camp and see,” said Schneider. “It’s an amazing job of scouting and trying to predict upside. A lot of that comes into the person, too, not just the stuff. Can this dude handle this? The way it’s worked out has been remarkable, really.”

In setting up 40-man rosters ahead of the Rule 5 draft, teams try to measure the likelihood of other clubs being willing to select and carry a player for a full season in order to lock in their rights.

Advertisement

The Blue Jays in recent years have taken off-the-board swings in the Rule 5 draft, selecting Elvis Luciano out of rookie ball in the Kansas City Royals system in 2018 and carrying him all season, and a post-Tommy-John Angel Bastardo from the Boston Red Sox in 2024. Luciano is now pitching with Yomiuri in Japan, while the Blue Jays returned Bastardo to the Red Sox in April, after Miles beat him out for a roster spot in spring training.

No pick required as much imagination as Miles, given where the Blue Jays had come from and all the other markets they were involved in. But Mittleman credited GM Ross Atkins for being willing to consider all avenues, when “it can be tougher to make a Rule 5 pick when there’s not as much open road for opportunity.”

“He, obviously, hadn’t pitched a ton and was pitching well in Arizona Fall League,” Mittleman continued. “So it was really just a case of our entire group of scouting, R-and-D putting the pieces together and in the end, it was really Ross trusting the process that moved Miles to the top of the list. …

“Really happy the way it’s turned out so far.”

Advertisement

Source link

Continue Reading

Sports

4 Contenders Worth Watching at Royal Birkdale

Published

on

Royal Birkdale returns to the spotlight as the world’s finest golfers gather for another edition of The Open Championship.

Renowned for demanding precision, patience, and adaptability, the famous links venue consistently rewards complete players capable of handling changing weather and strategic shot-making.

Several established stars arrive with compelling credentials, while recent performances have reshaped expectations ahead of the season’s final major. Four contenders, in particular, stand out as leading names capable of lifting the Claret Jug.

Scottie Scheffler Enters as the Odds Favourite

2026 Open Odds: +500

Scottie Scheffler arrives at Royal Birkdale as the leading name in The Open 2026 odds, reflecting both his position atop the world rankings and another remarkably consistent campaign. Few players have matched his week-to-week reliability, with regular contention across the PGA Tour reinforcing why bookmakers continue to place him ahead of the field.

Advertisement

His recent form includes multiple victories and high finishes against elite competition, extending a run that has already produced an impressive collection of major championship performances. Scheffler’s résumé now includes multiple major victories alongside countless appearances near the top of leaderboards, highlighting his ability to thrive under the greatest pressure. That consistency remains one of his defining strengths.

Royal Birkdale demands disciplined golf rather than constant aggression, making Scheffler’s exceptional ball-striking particularly valuable. He ranks strongly across key areas such as driving accuracy, greens in regulation, strokes gained approach, and scoring average. His thoughtful course management also minimises costly mistakes, a quality that has repeatedly separated Open champions from the chasing pack.

Compared with the other favourites, Scheffler offers perhaps the highest combination of consistency and statistical excellence. While several rivals possess comparable talent, few maintain such a high baseline every tournament. A victory at Royal Birkdale would further strengthen his standing among golf’s modern greats while adding another Open Championship to an already outstanding major championship legacy.

Rory McIlroy Chases Links Glory

2026 Open Odds: +800

Advertisement

Rory McIlroy once again enters The Open among the leading contenders after producing another strong season across golf’s biggest tournaments. His major championship form has remained competitive, and his combination of experience and proven ability on links courses continues to attract significant attention.

McIlroy’s history with The Open Championship includes memorable victories, close calls, and several weekends spent challenging for a top-10 finish. Growing up playing links golf has given him an instinctive understanding of how to control ball flight, adapt to unpredictable winds, and embrace the unique demands that distinguish this championship from every other major.

Recent tournament performances suggest McIlroy arrives with positive momentum. His combination of length from the tee and exceptional shot-shaping ability allows him to attack difficult holes while remaining flexible when weather conditions change throughout the week. Those strengths have repeatedly translated into success on links layouts that reward creativity alongside technical excellence.

Broader Golf narratives point out that the pursuit of another Claret Jug adds historical significance for one of Northern Ireland’s greatest sporting figures. Public interest inevitably follows McIlroy wherever he competes, but success at Royal Birkdale will depend on disciplined strategy rather than emotion. Limiting mistakes, controlling trajectory in challenging conditions, and capitalising on scoring opportunities remain the tactical ingredients required to stay firmly in contention through Sunday’s closing round.

Advertisement

Justin Rose Brings Experience and Consistency

2026 Open Odds: +2,700

Justin Rose enters Royal Birkdale backed by years of elite-level consistency and an impressive record across golf’s biggest championships. Although younger rivals often dominate pre-tournament headlines, Rose continues to demonstrate the qualities that make experienced competitors dangerous whenever major championships demand patience and strategic execution.

Throughout his career, Rose has regularly featured near the top of Open Championship leaderboards while building one of the strongest major championship résumés of his generation. His experience handling pressure over four demanding rounds gives him an important advantage, particularly on a links course where composure often proves just as valuable as raw power.

Royal Birkdale rewards precise iron play, intelligent decision-making, and disciplined course management, all longstanding strengths of Rose’s game. Recent tournament performances indicate that his swing remains dependable, while his ability to adapt to varying weather conditions keeps him competitive throughout championship week.

Advertisement

A strong performance would also resonate with British supporters, who have followed Rose throughout an accomplished international career. Remaining patient during difficult stretches and positioning himself within striking distance entering the weekend could once again place him firmly in contention. Capturing the Claret Jug would represent another defining achievement, adding one of golf’s most prestigious titles to an already distinguished career.

Jordan Spieth Returns With Open Pedigree

2026 Open Odds: +4,500

Jordan Spieth returns to Royal Birkdale carrying one of the tournament’s most compelling storylines. While his recent form has fluctuated compared with earlier stages of his career, his proven success on this course continues to influence expectations. Few players in the field possess stronger memories of Royal Birkdale than the American.

His unforgettable 2017 Open Championship victory remains one of golf’s greatest major triumphs. Spieth closed with a final-round 69 to secure a three-shot victory after surviving one of the most dramatic championship rounds in modern Open history. The performance demonstrated resilience, imagination, and an ability to respond under extraordinary pressure.

Advertisement

Early in that final round, Spieth surrendered a three-shot advantage before producing the tournament’s defining moment at the 13th hole. Following a wayward drive, officials spent nearly twenty minutes determining relief options before Spieth played his remarkable recovery from a driving range adjacent to the course. A gritty bogey preserved his hopes when disaster seemed likely.

While Spieth may be a longshot for this year’s Open Championship, what followed in 2017 became Open Championship folklore. Spieth nearly aced the 14th, rolled in a spectacular 50-foot eagle putt on the 15th, then added consecutive birdies at the 16th and 17th holes to seize complete control. That extraordinary finish remains central to his Royal Birkdale legacy and continues to shape his standing among the leading contenders as he returns to this historic venue.

Four Players, One Historic Championship

Royal Birkdale promises another demanding examination of every aspect of championship golf. Scottie Scheffler, Rory McIlroy, Justin Rose, and Jordan Spieth each arrive with unique strengths, compelling storylines, and realistic ambitions of lifting the Claret Jug.

Whether through recent dominance, proven links expertise, unforgettable history, or veteran consistency, each contender has earned serious consideration. As tournament week unfolds, their performances will help define another memorable chapter in one of golf’s most celebrated major championships.

Advertisement

Content reflects information available as of 2026/07/06; subject to change.


LiveScores Now Available at IrishScores.com

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Sports

NFL analyst sounds alarm for Lamar Jackson ahead of training camp

Published

on

ESPN released its 2026 roster rankings this week, grading every team’s strengths and weaknesses. Analyst Seth Walder covered the Ravens’ offense and had a take on their quarterback, Lamar Jackson.

The rankings, published Monday, named Baltimore’s interior offensive line as the team’s biggest weakness. It’s the same issue the Ravens had last season, when they won the AFC North but lost in the wild-card round.

“Interior offensive line. The coaching staff is new, but this is the same weakness the Ravens had in the previous two seasons,” Walder wrote.

Looking to predict NFL playoff Scenarios? Try our NFL Playoff Predictor for real-time simulations and stay ahead of the game!

Baltimore could start three new players on the interior line this year. That’s because center Tyler Linderbaum left in free agency and signed with the Las Vegas Raiders. Danny Pinter, who has played just 264 snaps over the past three seasons, is set to replace him.

Advertisement

The Ravens also signed guard John Simpson, a small upgrade over Andrew Vorhees. Rookie Olaivavega Ioane will compete at the other guard spot.

Read more: “Would you say same about Josh Allen”: Cam Newton makes feelings known on Lamar Jackson being labeled ‘coach killer’

Read more: “Chasing Lamar Jackson’s a*s around”: Myles Garrett reveals favorite QB he sacked after historic 2025 NFL record

Receivers could help take the pressure off for Lamar Jackson

NFL: Baltimore Ravens at Pittsburgh Steelers - Source: ImagnNFL: Baltimore Ravens at Pittsburgh Steelers - Source: Imagn
NFL: Baltimore Ravens at Pittsburgh Steelers – Source: Imagn

Walder also flagged the receiver room. Zay Flowers is the clear No. 1 option, with Rashod Bateman listed as the No. 2 receiver.

“X factors for 2026: WRs Devontez Walker, Ja’Kobi Lane and Elijah Sarratt. It’s hard to get too excited about the receivers room behind Zay Flowers (Rashod Bateman is the team’s No. 2 WR on paper),” Walder wrote.

Walker is entering his second season. Lane and Sarratt are rookies trying to earn playing time under new coordinator Declan Doyle.

Advertisement

If one of them breaks out, it would give Lamar Jackson more targets beyond Flowers and Bateman. That would help Doyle build a more effective passing game after Baltimore missed the playoffs last season.