College football has always been a sport driven by outrageous numbers, but entering the 2026 season, several statistical realities across the country feel almost impossible to comprehend. In an era shaped by NIL, the transfer portal and expanded playoff expectations, roster continuity and returning production have become more important than ever — and some programs are entering the fall with noticeable advantages over the rest of the sport.
From national title contenders returning nearly their entire offensive lines to bluebloods replacing a heavy chunk of meaningful snaps from a year ago, the numbers paint a fascinating picture ahead of the 2026 season. Several playoff hopefuls rank among the nation’s leaders in returning production, while others are attempting to reload after massive roster turnover.
There are also individual player trends, historic streaks and program-defining stats that show just how dramatically college football continues to evolve as it enters another season.
Whether it’s an SEC heavyweight bringing back nearly every offensive contributor, a Big Ten threat returning unprecedented experience or a powerhouse facing alarming regression signs, these numbers help explain why preseason expectations across the country are soaring — or crumbling.
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Here are 26 of the most mind-blowing stats entering the 2026 college football season.
1. Kirby Smart has more first-round picks (21) than losses at Georgia (20). Former Bulldogs offensive tackle Monroe Freeling became Smart’s 21st first-rounder in April, surpassing the number of total losses he’s had between the hedges during an illustrious tenure that includes two national titles. Many wondered whether Georgia would suffer a setback in 2025 after losing three Day 1 defensive picks, but the Bulldogs fielded a top-15 defense nationally and won their fourth SEC title under Smart.
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2. Indiana hasn’t lost a home game under Curt Cignetti (15-0). Guess who holds the nation’s longest home winning streak entering the 2026 season? Indiana has become a terror to beat in Bloomington under Cignetti, clobbering nine Big Ten opponents by an average of 33.3 points per game. The Hoosiers went 14-17 at Memorial Stadium over the previous five years combined prior to Cignetti’s arrival. The only ranked opponent Indiana has toppled at home during this unbeaten run was No. 9 Illinois last season — so the schedule’s been considerably favorable relative to Big Ten standards.
3. Kalen DeBoer is college football’s winningest active coach against top 25 opponents (20-6, .769). Alabama’s third-year leader has always gotten the most out of his players against the best teams on his schedule. He won four straight games against ranked opponents last season prior to a 1-3 slip down the stretch, including a blowout loss to Indiana in the CFP. Smart at 42-17 (.711) and Ohio State’s Ryan Day (27-11, .710) are close behind.
4. Kirk Ferentz has more wins (209) and NFL Draft picks (101) than any active coach. Success leads to longevity, and Ferentz has led a successful program at Iowa since the turn of the century. After producing seven draft picks last month, he surpassed 100 career NFL selections, making him the only active coach with that number. After leaving the Baltimore Ravens as their associate head coach in 1998, Ferentz has two Big Ten titles with the Hawkeyes and has been named conference coach of the year four times.
5. Dabo Swinney’s four national championship game appearances are more than any active coach. Swinney’s run at Clemson will never be forgotten, even as the NIL and transfer portal era has leveled the playing field a bit in recent years. At one point in Clemson’s climb, the Tigers won 12 or more games for five consecutive seasons and finished inside the top four of the final rankings every year from 2015 through the 2020 campaign. Both of Swinney’s national championships came against Saban and Alabama. It was a stretch that rivaled the ACC’s best ever, previously displayed by Bobby Bowden at Florida State from 1992 to 2000.
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6. Bill Belichick is the nation’s oldest coach (74) and could join elite company with a historic season. Florida State legend Bobby Bowden is the only coach at 75 or older to win a Power Five conference title, doing so in 2005 before retiring a few years later following a 7-6 finish. Entering his second campaign at North Carolina, Belichick hopes to bring the Tar Heels their first ACC championship since 1980 and would produce another feather in the cap if he does so after winning six Super Bowls as a head coach at the NFL level with the New England Patriots. Florida Atlantic’s Zach Kittley is college football’s youngest coach. He’ll turn 35 three weeks before the Owls’ opener this season at Florida.
Alabama’s Kalen DeBoer is college football’s winningest active coach against AP Top 25 competition.
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Team success
7. In the AP poll era, 9 SEC and 9 Big Ten programs have won conference titles. Competitive balance abounds. However, since the CFP began in 2014, each of these leagues has a clear top tier, followed by teams in contention, with the middle and bottom filling out the schedule. Alabama or Georgia has won 11 of the last 12 SEC championships, with LSU (2019) being the only outlier. There’s been a bit more parity in the Big Ten over that stretch, thanks to the recent surge from Oregon and Indiana. Six programs have won league titles in the CFP era, led by Ohio State’s six crowns and Michigan’s three.
8. Georgia has won 48 straight against unranked opponents, the most nationally by a long shot. Since losing in double overtime to South Carolina in 2019 in Athens, the Bulldogs haven’t lost a game against an unranked team. However, they have a long way to go to beat the SEC record — 100 by Alabama under Saban. The next closest Power Four program is Oregon. The Ducks are sitting on 33 straight wins over teams outside the top 25 under Dan Lanning.
9. Chances are high we see another first-time playoff participant in 2026. After numerous first-timers — including SMU, Arizona State, Texas Tech, Texas A&M and Miami — made the 12-team bracket in each of its first two seasons, let’s summon more parity this fall. UNLV, Memphis, Louisville, BYU, Houston and Utah are just a few of the programs with rosters competitive enough to get there in 2026 with a couple breaks. Thank you, revenue share and NIL spending for making rosters a bit more comparable for many.
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Dubious distinctions
10. Matt Rhule is 0-9 against top 25 opponents at Nebraska. After losing three games last fall to ranked teams with the Huskers, Rhule is now 2-25 overall in his career against top 25 opponents. Despite a winless mark in the category at Nebraska, Rhule signed a two-year extension in October amid worries he could leave for the Penn State vacancy. If you include retention bonuses, Rhule’s salary over the entire contract has an AAV of over $11.7 million. Rhule’s last victory over a ranked team came against Navy on Dec. 3, 2016, during his tenure at Temple.
11. The Big 12 is 1-8 all-time in the playoff, including TCU’s 58-point loss to end the 2022 season. One of Texas Tech’s best seasons in program history ended with a thud last fall in the form of a shutout loss to Oregon, the Big Ten’s third-best team, in the CFP quarterfinals. That was the Big 12’s third straight playoff setback dating back to the Horned Frogs’ loss to Georgia in the 2023 title game. That TCU team outlasted Michigan in the semifinals for the league’s first CFP win. The Big 12’s worst in CFP action had been Oklahoma. The Sooners were 0-4 under Lincoln Riley, including a couple of blowout losses.
12. Only one preseason No. 1 since 2005 has won the national championship. Nick Saban won six titles at Alabama, but his 2017 team was the only squad to go front-to-back as America’s best. Seven of the 20 teams ranked No. 1 over the last two decades finished outside of the top 5, including Texas last season at No. 12 and 2012 USC, which was unranked. Teams vying for this year’s preseason No. 1 in August include Ohio State, Texas, Georgia and Notre Dame. The Buckeyes’ last preseason top billing came in 2015 before Ryan Day’s tenure.
13. Over the Group of Six’s four all-time playoff games, the average margin of defeat is 21.5 points. Those requesting more CFP entries from the non-Power Four ranks, beware. Talent discrepancies between the haves and have-nots are noticeable in the postseason, which started with Cincinnati’s 27-6 loss to Alabama in the 2021 playoff and culminated in blowout losses by James Madison and Tulane last fall in the first round. Oregon jumped out to a 31-point lead on the Dukes last season and pushed ahead 48-13 midway through the third quarter before Bob Chesney’s Sun Belt champions trimmed the gap and made it somewhat respectable.
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14. Will James Franklin overcome ranked opponent woes at Virginia Tech? Franklin was fired at Penn State for not beating enough quality opponents. His loss to Oregon last season at home was the Nittany Lions’ 15th straight defeat to a team inside the AP poll’s top 6, and his career mark of 2-21 against such opponents is the second-worst by any FBS head coach all time (minimum 20 contests). Later, Penn State became the first FBS team since 1978 to drop consecutive games as a 20-plus-point favorite, leading to his immediate exit. At Virginia Tech, previous coach and current defensive coordinator Brent Pry was 0-6 against ranked opponents over his three-plus-year tenure.
15. If history repeats, nearly half of the preseason AP Top 25 will find themselves struggling in November. According to numbers from The New York Times, an average of 9.5 teams ranked in the preseason have finished unranked in each of the AP polls since the rankings expanded to 25 teams in 1989. Last season, 11 teams capsized and were not included in the final AP rankings: Clemson, Penn State, Illinois, LSU, SMU, South Carolina, Florida, Kansas State, Iowa State, Boise State and Tennessee. Until the preseason poll drops in August, you can check out our post-spring top 25 for an early glimpse.
Matt Rhule is 2-25 in his coaching career against AP Top 25 opponents, and 0-8 at Nebraska.
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Roster quirks
16. USC returns more offensive starters (nine) than 93 FBS programs return total starters. With a nation-leading 15 returning starters this season, the Trojans should have their most complete team under Lincoln Riley. Jayden Maiava is the star at quarterback, and he can breathe easy knowing USC’s offense is loaded along the front lines and backfield with Waymond Jordan and King Miller back. Miller rushed for 972 yards and eight touchdowns while Jordan averaged 6.5 yards per carry last fall. Early-round wideouts Makai Lemon and Ja’Kobi Lane are the only two starters not returning on offense.
17. Iowa State and North Texas return zero starters from last season’s bowl teams. Nearly all of the Cyclones’ impact players followed Matt Campbell to Penn State, while North Texas was gutted of its talent after Eric Morris bolted for the Oklahoma State vacancy. The Cowboys signed an FBS-leading 55 transfers this cycle to finish with a top-15 haul, highlighted by 17 former Mean Green players, including standouts Drew Mestemaker (quarterback), Caleb Hawkins (running back) and Wyatt Young (wide receiver).
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18. Notre Dame leads the nation in returning snap percentage. No team brings back more experience than the Fighting Irish, with 66% of their returning snaps back at their respective positions, including a staggering 73% of defensive snaps under Marcus Freeman. Leonard Moore, Christian Gray and others are back in a loaded secondary that also features Colorado transfer D.J. McKinney. Considering Notre Dame replaces two first-round picks — Jeremiyah Love and Jadarian Price — at the running back position, it’s quite surprising the Fighting Irish can still flex enhanced experience on that side of the football.
19. Three different schools have signed three No. 1-rated transfers at various positions in a single cycle. LSU has pushed all of its 2026 roster resources toward the center of the table this offseason after coming to terms with quarterback Sam Leavitt, edge rusher Princewill Umanmielen and offensive tackle Jordan Seaton as portal five-stars. During the 2024 portal cycle, Ohio State landed top-ranked safety Caleb Downs, No. 1 quarterback Julian Sayin and No. 1 running back Quinshon Judkins before riding that star-driven roster — along with Will Howard — to a national championship. Lane Kiffin hopes to do the same in Baton Rouge. In 2021, Georgia signed Arik Gilbert (tight end), Derion Kendrick (cornerback) and Tykee Smith (safety) as three of the top-10 prospects that cycle and each No. 1 at their positions.
20. The Power Four’s turnover margin leader has played in the national title game three straight years. Indiana’s plus-22 turnover margin last season was the best in FBS and bested the Power Four’s top team in each of the previous two seasons (Notre Dame in 2024 at plus-18 and Michigan in 2023 at plus-19). Takeaways are not something you can coach, but Hoosiers defensive coordinator Bryant Haines and staffs with the Fighting Irish and Wolverines did stress going after the football and bringing the pain. Those three also keyed on not coughing it up, too.
Individual accolades
21. Jeremiah Smith needs 20 touchdown receptions to set the all-time Power Four mark. Ohio State’s unstoppable junior would become the most potent wideout in Power Four history by reaching the end zone 20 times, a feat that’s only been done twice since 2019. Former Alabama Heisman winner DeVonta Smith ranks fifth in FBS history in scoring catches (46) behind four standouts from the Group of Six — Jarett Dillard, Corey Davis, Troy Edwards and Darius Watts. Jeremiah Smith is the Power Four’s active leader in touchdown receptions with 27 entering what is likely his final campaign. DeVonta Smith’s 23 touchdown catches in 2020 and 20 from Ja’Marr Chase at LSU in 2019 are the highest marks in a single campaign.
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22. The last four Heisman winners have been transfers. Sign of the times, right? Fernando Mendoza (Indiana, 2025), Travis Hunter (Colorado, 2024), Jayden Daniels (LSU, 2023) and Caleb Williams (USC, 2022) all struck gold at different programs from where they originally signed, which is great news for the quarterbacks at Ohio State, Oregon, Indiana, Miami and LSU, should history repeat itself. Three of those elites added new signal callers this offseason, while returning starters Julian Sayin and Dante Moore for the Buckeyes and Ducks, respectively, were once transfers themselves.
23. Why is Missouri’s rushing prowess so often overlooked? Since Eli Drinkwitz brought his outside zone run game to the Tigers in 2020, Missouri has seen three of its running backs surpass 1,600 yards rushing in a single season — the most by any FBS program during that time. Tyler Badie (1,604 yards in 2021), Cody Schrader (1,627 in 2023) and Ahmad Hardy (1,649) last season all led the SEC in rushing, and all were underrated recruits. Badie signed with the Tigers as a three-star, Schrader as an unranked Division II All-American transfer and Hardy out of Louisiana-Monroe. Ole Miss All-America running back Kewan Lacy, who ranked third nationally in rushing yards with 1,464 yards and 23 touchdowns last fall, originally signed with Missouri in 2024 and appeared in six games as a reserve. That’s how adept this coaching staff is at identifying top-flight talent in the backfield.
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24. Julian Sayin is gunning for the all-time quarterback efficiency honor. During his first season as Ohio State’s QB1 last fall, the former Alabama transfer led the nation in completion percentage (78.4%) and passing efficiency (182.05). His current completion percentage prior to going 22-of-35 against Miami in the CFP was better than the all-time NCAA record of 77.4% by Oregon’s Bo Nix (2023) and Alabama’s Mac Jones (2020). However, Sayin’s final outing pushed him to 77% for the season, so Nix stayed on top. Putting Sayin’s numbers further in perspective, new Ohio State offensive coordinator Arthur Smith is under pressure to ensure Sayin’s second year as the starter tops his first.
25. ‘The Big House Streak’ will continue under Kyle Whittingham. Official “sellouts” aren’t tracked at Michigan. However, the Wolverines have announced an attendance of 100,000-plus at 329 consecutive home games since 1975. Nebraska has sold out 410 consecutive home games entering the 2026 season, which is believed to be the longest streak in college football. Oklahoma has a recognized sellout streak of 161 games, which includes last fall’s CFP first-round loss to Alabama. In 2019, Notre Dame’s home sellout streak of 273 ended against Navy.
26. On-field play this fall means more than any 2027 NFL mock draft evaluation can provide. By now, you’ve likely digested your share of various first-round mocks for next cycle. And as a fan of those, you know there’s nothing set in stone with 12 (or more) games’ worth of sample size upcoming for scouts and evaluators to dissect prior to the combine. Before falling in love with a projected Day 1 quarterback, left tackle or elite edge rusher, let things play out. Garrett Nussmeier and Drew Allar were locks to go early this time last summer, and look what happened to those two quarterbacks, along with the emergence of Fernando Mendoza. Will Arch Manning, Dante Moore, LaNorris Sellers and others deliver, or will we see another in-season whiff from the game’s perceived best under center? This is what makes this time of year so difficult to project — and exciting — across the sport.
The 2026 RBC Canadian Open continues on Friday with the second round at TPC Toronto. You can find full RBC Canadian Open tee times for Friday’s second round at the bottom of this post.
RBC Canadian Open tee times: What to know
Justin Rose may be 45 years old, but he’s certainly playing like he’s much younger so far in 2026.
Rose won the Farmers Insurance Open in January for his 13th career PGA Tour title. Despite switching to all-new McLaren Golf irons mid-season, he’s continued to play well.
The former U.S. Open champion finished T3 at the 2026 Masters, T10 at the PGA Championship and T12 at last week’s Memorial Tournament. Now he’s hoping to build momentum in Canada for a run at his second U.S. Open title next week.
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After starting the RBC Canadian Open early on Thursday, Rose will switch to an afternoon tee time for Round 2.
Rose will tee off for the second round on at 12:48 p.m. ET alongside Collin Morikawa and Aaron Rai.
You can watch Friday’s second round of the 2026 RBC Canadian Open from 3-6 p.m. ET on Golf Channel. PGA Tour Live on ESPN+ will provide exclusive early streaming coverage starting on Friday at 7 a.m. ET, in addition to featured group and featured hole coverage.
Check out the complete Round 2 tee times and groupings for the RBC Canadian Open below.
With an ESPN+ subscription, you gain access to PGA Tour Live, where you can stream the best PGA Tour events live from wherever you want.
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2026 RBC Canadian Open tee times for Friday: Round 2 (ET)
Tee No. 1
7:00 a.m. – Seamus Power, Chad Ramey, Vince Whaley 7:11 a.m. – Andrew Putnam, Ben Martin, Christiaan Bezuidenhout 7:22 a.m. – Nick Dunlap, Tom Hoge, Rico Hoey 7:33 a.m. – Brian Campbell, Cam Davis, Alex Noren 7:44 a.m. – Steven Fisk, Jhonattan Vegas, Max Homa 7:55 a.m. – Adam Schenk, Aldrich Potgieter, Harry Hall 8:06 a.m. – Joel Dahmen, Mark Hubbard, Johnny Keefer 8:17 a.m. – Austin Eckroat, Tom Kim, Jordan Smith 8:28 a.m. – Jackson Suber, Neal Shipley, Ben James 8:39 a.m. – Trace Crowe, Keita Nakajima, Dawson Lew -a 8:50 a.m. – Rasmus Neergaard-Petersen, Davis Chatfield, Jeevan Sihota 9:01 a.m. – Sean O’Hair, Jeffrey Kang, Christo Lamprecht 9:12 a.m. – Jesper Svensson, John VanDerLaan, Matthew Anderson 12:15 p.m. – Keith Mitchell, Kevin Roy, Dylan Wu 12:26 p.m. – Austin Smotherman, Danny Walker, Roger Sloan 12:37 p.m. – Peter Malnati, Matt Wallace, Takumi Kanaya 12:48 p.m. – Aaron Rai, Collin Morikawa, Justin Rose 12:59 p.m. – Tommy Fleetwood, Sahith Theegala, Corey Conners 1:10 p.m. – Matt Fitzpatrick, Viktor Hovland, Sudarshan Yellamaraju 1:21 p.m. – Jacob Bridgeman, Taylor Pendrith, Stephan Jaeger 1:32 p.m. – Denny McCarthy, Bud Cauley, Max Greyserman 1:43 p.m. – Matthieu Pavon, Adam Svensson, Thorbjørn Olesen 1:54 p.m. – David Skinns, Dan Brown, Eric Zhao -a 2:05 p.m. – Hayden Springer, Kensei Hirata, Yohann Benson 2:16 p.m. – Kris Ventura, Zecheng Dou, Ashton McCulloch
Tee No. 10
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7:00 a.m. – Erik van Rooyen, Emiliano Grillo, Padraig Harrington 7:11 a.m. – Mackenzie Hughes, Adam Hadwin, Mike Weir 7:22 a.m. – Eric Cole, Michael Thorbjornsen, Chandler Phillips 7:33 a.m. – Ryan Fox, Nick Taylor, Brooks Koepka 7:44 a.m. – Wyndham Clark, Kristoffer Reitan, Sam Burns 7:55 a.m. – Alex Fitzpatrick, Robert MacIntyre, Shane Lowry 8:06 a.m. – Kevin Yu, Davis Riley, Nicolai Højgaard 8:17 a.m. – Patton Kizzire, Doug Ghim, David Lipsky 8:28 a.m. – John Parry, Marcelo Rozo, Declan O’Donovan 8:39 a.m. – Haotong Li, Chandler Blanchet, Justin Matthews -a 8:50 a.m. – Alejandro Tosti, Adrien Dumont de Chassart, Vince Covello 9:01 a.m. – Patrick Fishburn, Paul Peterson, Drew Nesbitt 12:15 p.m. – Ben Silverman, Matti Schmid, Mac Meissner 12:26 p.m. – Danny Willett, Justin Lower, Hank Lebioda 12:37 p.m. – Rafael Campos, Sam Ryder, Max McGreevy 12:48 p.m. – Michael Brennan, Garrick Higgo, Tony Finau 12:59 p.m. – William Mouw, Karl Vilips, Charley Hoffman 1:10 p.m. – Davis Thompson, Billy Horschel, Chris Kirk 1:21 p.m. – Ricky Castillo, Joe Highsmith, Lucas Glover 1:32 p.m. – Camilo Villegas, Taylor Moore, Lanto Griffin 1:43 p.m. – Brice Garnett, Lee Hodges, Beau Hossler 1:54 p.m. – Zach Bauchou, Paul Waring, Laurent Desmarchais 2:05 p.m. – A.J. Ewart, Luke Clanton, Joey Savoie 2:16 p.m. – Jimmy Stanger, Pontus Nyholm, Calen Sanderson
Ninja Stadium will play host to Sunday’s
Round 14 AFL game between Richmond Tigers and
Brisbane Lions. The game kicks off at 1:10 pm with Brisbane Lions heading into the game as favourites with the bookmakers. Continue reading for our in-depth preview of the Richmond Tigers vs.
Brisbane Lions
game and give you our free tips and bets.
Brisbane heads to Hobart on Sunday aiming to strengthen its top-four push against a Richmond side still searching for answers. The Lions returned to form with an emphatic QClash victory over Gold Coast, highlighted by Logan Morris’ seven-goal haul and another dominant midfield display from Lachie Neale. Richmond, meanwhile, enters the match after a bye that followed a heavy defeat to Sydney. The Tigers have struggled against the competition’s elite sides and now face another stern challenge against a Brisbane outfit boasting one of the most potent attacks in the league. Recent history favours the Lions, who have enjoyed success against Richmond in recent meetings. Anything less than a convincing Brisbane performance would come as a surprise.
Iran’s footballers took to the training pitch in front of journalists Thursday at their base camp in Mexico, giving the world its first glimpse of a team whose participation in the World Cup has been overshadowed by war with the United States.
After having moved their training camp to Tijuana from the planned base in Arizona, the squad has said very little since arriving for the tournament last Sunday.
For Thursday’s training session, journalists were given fifteen minutes to see a small group of players as they ran through warm-up exercises.
Of the 26 members of “Team Melli,” only a dozen players were present, with star striker Mehdi Taremi among those who did not show.
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Dressed in green jerseys, the players did some light jogging on the training pitch of the Xolos, Tijuana’s local club.
They then performed stretching and core-strengthening exercises on foam mats.
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Cover image: Se instalan parches de césped para usarse como parte del campo del SoFi Stadium, antes del torneo de fútbol de la Copa Mundial de la FIFA, en Inglewood, California. 13 de mayo de 2026. REUTERS – Caroline Brehman
Iran is scheduled to play its first match on Monday in Los Angeles against New Zealand.
A team official confirmed to AFP that the squad is set to enter the United States on Sunday and spend the night there ahead of the match.
Last week, Iran’s ambassador to Mexico told journalists the squad would only be allowed into the US on the day of their games and would have to leave straight afterwards.
Iran‘s participation in the tournament, which is being jointly hosted by the United States, Mexico and Canada, comes three months after the US and Israel launched attacks on the country of around 93 million people, setting off hostilities that saw a large swathe of the Middle East drawn in, and the global economy shaken.
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Thursday’s open practice came as US President Donald Trump announced what he said was a “great settlement” to end the war with Iran, saying he expected a deal to be signed in Europe as soon as this weekend.
May 11, 2026; Saint Paul, Minnesota, USA; Colorado Avalanche defenseman Cale Makar (8) looks on during the second period in game four of the second round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs against the Minnesota Wild at Grand Casino Arena. Mandatory Credit: Matt Krohn-Imagn Images
The Colorado Avalanche want to sign star defenseman Cale Makar to a contract extension so he completes his career with the team, president of hockey operations and general manager Joe Sakic said on Thursday.
Makar, 27, is eligible to sign an extension on July 1 to his six-year, $54 million contract that runs through the 2026-27 season. He has played his entire career with the Avalanche, who selected him fourth overall in the 2017 NHL Draft.
“Cale is going to finish his career here,” Sakic said. “We’re already talking to his agent, so we’re confident that something’s going to get worked out at some point. I mean, he’s got another year, but this summer we expect to have him signed.”
A two-time winner of the Norris Trophy as the NHL’s top defenseman, Makar totaled 79 points (20 goals, 59 assists) and a plus-32 rating in 75 games this season. He was a finalist for the sixth consecutive year and fell just short on Tuesday to first-time winner Zach Werenski of the Columbus Blue Jackets.
Makar added five points (four goals, one assist) and a plus-5 rating in 11 playoff games while dealing with an upper-body injury.
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He has 507 career points (136 goals, 371 assists), a plus-168 rating, 134 penalty minutes, 664 blocks and 377 hits in 470 regular-season games. He has 26 goals and 90 points with a plus-28 rating, 24 penalty minutes, 147 blocks and 100 hits in 90 playoff games.
Makar was awarded the Conn Smythe Trophy as most valuable player of the Stanley Cup playoffs in the 2021-22 season.
A three-time All-Star, Makar was Calder Memorial Trophy winner as NHL Rookie of the Year in 2019-20 and top defenseman in 2021-22 and 2024-25.
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The Avalanche won the Presidents’ Trophy this season with the league’s best record (55-16-11, 121 points), then eliminated the Los Angeles Kings in four games and the Minnesota Wild in five before getting swept by the Vegas Golden Knights in the Western Conference finals.
Sakic, who previously had served as Avalanche general manager before becoming president of hockey operations, took over as GM earlier this month when Chris MacFarland became president and GM of the Nashville Predators.
Sakic on Thursday said the coaching staff is staying intact, including head coach Jared Bednar, who is going into the final season of his contract. Bednar, 54, has coached the team for 10 regular seasons (445-262-75) and nine playoff runs (60-41), including capturing the Stanley Cup in 2022.
“He’s got the confidence from the players,” Sakic said. “It’s clear from everybody, from players, the staff, that he’s the right guy. They respect him, they love playing for him, and that’s a big thing. And when we look at it for this group, he’s the best coach. He’s the best coach for the group, and we’re confident in that decision.
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“He’s not just the coach, I mean, he’s the voice of the of the organization, and, like I said, the players really believe in him, and I’m going with the players.”
Malaysian MMA fighter Jihin Radzuan and Canadian standout Anastasia Nikolakakos will cross paths on the global stage of ONE Championship on Friday, July 17.
The duo lock horns in an atomweight MMA tiff, which will be part of ONE Fight Night 45: Lessei vs. Rabah on Prime Video in the legendary Lumpinee Stadium in Bangkok, Thailand.
ONE Championship confirmed the bout on its official website earlier today.
This American primetime card will mark Jihin Radzuan’s 15th promotional appearance and an opportunity for ‘Shadow Cat’ to register a second straight triumph in ONE Championship.
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Get the latest updates on One Championship Rankings at Sportskeeda and more
The victory earned the Foxgloves Fight Gym and Fairtex Training Center affiliate an 11th win after back-to-back losses to Macarena Aragon of Argentina and Japan’s Chihiro Sawada.
Before that, the Malaysian warrior racked up an impressive 8-3 slate in the world’s largest martial arts organization, two of her losses coming against eventual ONE women’s atomweight MMA world champions — Stamp Fairtex and Denice Zamboanga.
Her list of victims, meanwhile, includes former ONE world title challenger Mei Yamaguchi, Itsuki Hirata, Jenelyn Olsim, Bi Nguyen, and Jomary Torres.
Jihin brings a dangerous world-class arsenal, and she’s equally good on the canvas and in the striking department. She’s displayed her wide array of weapons in all facets of the discipline, and this trait should be her trump card against someone who moves as efficiently as Nikolakakos.
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The undefeated Canadian returns just three months after a successful debut outing in ONE Championship.
At ONE Fight Night 41 this past March, she authored a first-round finish of Victoria Souza inside the Lumpinee Stadium, using her savage hands en route to a ground-and-pound win.
The 36-year-old moved to 6-0 with the win, and it should give her the confidence needed to overcome someone of Jihin Radzuan’s caliber.
Fans can expect an intriguing battle when these two collide in this high-stakes atomweight MMA showdown at ONE Fight Night 45 next month.
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Jihin Radzuan vs. Anastasia Nikolakakos and all the fights confirmed for ONE Fight Night 45 so far
Luke Lessei vs. Mohamed Younes Rabah (Muay Thai – featherweight)
Suablack Tor Pran49 vs. Stephen Irvine (Muay Thai – flyweight)
Black Panther vs. Sean Climaco (Muay Thai – flyweight)
Bokang Masunyane vs. Lee Seung Cheol (MMA – strawweight)
The World Cup opening ceremony took off at the Estadio Azteca in Mexico City on Thursday, marking the countdown to the opening group game between Mexico and South Africa.
Latin music and dance numbers gravitated around a massive model of the World Cup trophy in the center of the pitch, ahead of 104 matches over the next 39 days, building to the final at MetLife Stadium in New Jersey on July 19.
The Estadio Azteca, or technically ‘Mexico City Stadium’ for this competition, has a rich World Cup history, as the venue for the 1970 and 1986 World Cup finalsImage: David Leah/firo Sportphoto/picture alliance
In the highlight of the ceremony, Colombian star Shakira and Nigerian singer Burna Boy performed “Dai Dai” — an Italian slang term meaning “come on” or “give it your all” — the official song of the tournament, bringing roars from the crowd.
Shakira, Burna Boy and a troupe of dancers took center stage in the ceremonyImage: Kai Pfaffenbach/REUTERS
The game ended with Mexico beating South Africa 2-0.
South Africa’s coach Hugo Broos warned his team ahead of the game that they would have to tune out a raucous and passionate Mexico City crowd in the opening gameImage: Torbjorn Tande/DeFodi Images/picture alliance
Police were out in force in the Mexican capital, not least around the outdoor viewing area in the city center, where there were reports of scuffles as people tried to funnel into the crowded site in the run-up to the game.
Police were out in numbers trying to keep the peace and stop local fans’ excitement from overflowingImage: Ginnette Riquelme/AP Photo/picture alliance
The teams came onto the pitch to cheers from the sellout crowd almost an hour before kickoff was scheduled.
FIFA President Gianni Infantino struck an optimistic note ahead of the opening game, even amid a host of problems ranging from ticket prices and tournament expansion to geopolitical issues like the war in Iran and the exclusion of a Somali referee by US immigration authoritiesImage: Ismael Rosas/Eyepix Group/ABACA/picture alliance
Football World Cup kicks off surrounded by controversy
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Mexico’s Julian Quinones celebrates after scoring the opening goal. (AP Photo)
Not many players have managed to outscore Cristiano Ronaldo in the Saudi Pro League. Julian Quinones did exactly that in the 2025-26 season. And on Thursday night, the Mexican striker carried that form onto football’s biggest stage, scripting a piece of FIFA World Cup history.The 29-year-old forward, who netted 33 goals in 31 league games for Al Qadsiah — five more than Ronaldo’s tally of 28 goals in 30 matches for Al Nassr — scored the opening goal of the FIFA World Cup 2026 as Mexico defeated South Africa 2-0 in front of a packed Estadio Azteca.More significantly, Quinones became the first player from a CONCACAF nation to score the opening goal of a World Cup tournament.
Historic strike sparks Azteca celebrations
With 80,000 fans creating a deafening atmosphere in Mexico City, the co-hosts struck in just the ninth minute. South African goalkeeper Ronwen Williams attempted to play out from the back, but a misplaced pass and poor control from Sithole allowed Erik Lira to win possession and feed Quinones.The Al Qadsiah star needed no second invitation. From the edge of the box, he unleashed a powerful effort that squeezed through Williams’ legs and into the net, sending the iconic stadium into raptures.It was the earliest opening goal of a World Cup since Philipp Lahm scored for Germany after six minutes against Costa Rica in 2006.While France’s Lucien Laurent remains the first player to score in a World Cup match, having done so against Mexico in 1930, Quinones added his own chapter to the tournament’s rich history. In the previous edition in Qatar in 2022, Ecuador captain Enner Valencia had scored the competition’s first goal against hosts Qatar.
Mexico overpower South Africa
Quinones remained Mexico’s biggest threat throughout the opening half, even striking the post, before veteran striker Raul Jimenez doubled the advantage in the 67th minute with a powerful header in his fourth World Cup appearance.South Africa’s task became increasingly difficult after Sithole was sent off early in the second half. Matters worsened when Zwane received another red card in the 83rd minute, reducing the visitors to nine men. Mexico also had a player dismissed in stoppage time, making it a match that produced three red cards.The victory extended Mexico’s remarkable dominance over African opposition to 22 consecutive wins across all competitions, with their last defeat against an African side coming against the same opponents in the 2005 Gold Cup.It was also the 20th World Cup match hosted at the iconic Estadio Azteca — the most by any stadium in tournament history — and Mexico ensured the famous venue witnessed yet another memorable night.For Quinones, though, this was a stage worthy of his growing reputation. First, he finished above Cristiano Ronaldo in the Saudi scoring charts. Now, he has become the man who opened the scoring at the 2026 FIFA World Cup — a feat no player from the CONCACAF region had ever achieved before.
Marvel Stadium will play host to Sunday’s
Round 14 AFL game between St Kilda Saints and
GWS Giants. The game kicks off at 3:15 pm with St Kilda Saints heading into the game as favourites with the bookmakers. Continue reading for our in-depth preview of the St Kilda Saints vs.
GWS Giants
game and give you our free tips and bets.
A pivotal clash in the finals race awaits when St Kilda and GWS meet at Marvel Stadium on Sunday afternoon. Just one win separates the two clubs on the ladder, adding extra significance to an already intriguing matchup. The Saints let a golden opportunity slip last week, surrendering a 33-point lead in a heartbreaking loss to Sydney. GWS arrives fresh from the bye and full of confidence after a commanding victory over Melbourne before the break. Finn Callaghan continues to emerge as one of the competition’s premier midfielders, while Toby Greene remains a constant threat in attack. St Kilda won the earlier meeting between the sides this season, but current form favours the Giants, who have won three of their past four matches.
Real Madrid is bringing back Jose Mourinho for a second stint some 13 years after he left the club, the Spanish powerhouse said Thursday. The Portuguese coach joins on a three-year contract and will officially take charge on July 13, when the preseason starts, the club said. Mourinho left no one in Spain indifferent to his abrasive, yet undeniably successful, managerial style when he first coached Madrid from 2010 to 2013. During his first run, he led Madrid to a Spanish league title and a Copa del Rey crown. Yet he is more remembered for his confrontational personality that ended up splitting his own squad and alienating all but the most hardcore fans, as well as a large part of the local media.
He will now inherit an underachieving team and rejoin a club in disarray.
Madrid hasn’t won a major title in two years with superstar striker Kylian Mbappe onboard. The club went through two coaches in Xabi Alonso and Alvaro Arbeloa this season.
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The record 15-time European Cup winners have furthermore been embarrassed by series of unseemly events. There was a fight between players, fans jeering the team, and players questioning Arbeloa’s decisions.
Club president Florentino Pérez added to the sense of a club in crisis by giving a press conference to announce he would call early elections, which he then won, while blasting the media for what he considered a campaign to force him to quit.
Pérez’s re-election paved the way for Mourinho’s return.
Mourinho famously proclaimed himself as “a special one” over two decades ago when he was introduced as Chelsea’s coach, having led FC Porto to a surprising Champions League title in 2004.
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He lived up that boastful claim, making Chelsea a Premier League champion before he steered Inter Milan to the 2010 Champions League title, beating a seemingly unstoppable Barcelona en route to the final.
That convinced Pérez that Mourinho was the ideal coach to topple a Barcelona led by Pep Guardiola and Lionel Messi in La Liga.
The rivalry between Mourinho and Guardiola took the contests between their clubs to new heights.
Following a 2011 defeat to Barcelona, Mourinho outraged Barcelona supporters, and many neutral ones, by saying he “would be ashamed” to win a Champions League like Guardiola did, claiming Barcelona was favored by the referees. Mourinho even got physical, poking an assistant coach of Guardiola in the eye during a scuffle between their teams later that year.
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But after winning the 2012 La Liga title, Madrid and Mourinho parted ways in 2013 with three years left on his contract. That followed a shock loss in the Copa del Rey final to Atletico Madrid and with media reports of him falling out with some of his players like fan favorite Iker Casillas.
Now 63, Mourinho has lost his status of being a serial champion who only coaches the elite clubs.
His brilliant career has dimmed after a frustrating spell at Manchester United from 2016-2018. Since then, he has coached at Tottenham, Roma, Fenerbahce, and, last season, Benfica.
His only trophy since leaving United was the 2022 Conference League, Europe’s third-tier competition, won with Roma.
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But it seems that Pérez believes Mourinho’s experience and his strong personality are just what Madrid needs to take on a Barcelona side that is once again dominant thanks to its new talisman, Lamine Yamal.
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The people hoping Henry Ruggs III could be paroled on Thursday were adamant he’s improved as a person, is remorseful about the accident that killed a woman in a 2021 car crash, and is ready to re-enter society. It was not good enough for the Nevada Board of Parole Commissioners.
The board denied the parole request by Ruggs, and he may not get out until 2027 when a mandatory parole release date is set.
Former Raiders player Henry Ruggs waits in court for a hearing at the Regional Justice Center in Las Vegas on May 2, 2023. Attorneys announced a plea agreement on felony DUI charges related to a deadly 2021 crash.(K.M. Cannon/Las Vegas Review-Journal)
It has been nearly five years since Ruggs, a 2020 first-round draft pick for the Las Vegas Raiders, drove his sports car at speeds of up to 156 mph and slammed into a vehicle driven by Tina Tintor.
Tintor, 23, and her dog, Max, were killed as their car burst violently into flames.
Prosecutors at the time said that Ruggs was legally drunk. He had a blood alcohol level of 0.16, which is twice the legal limit, in a test taken within the required two hours after the crash.
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Ruggs spent the evening of Nov. 2, 2021, at Topgolf, a sports entertainment venue in Las Vegas, according to prosecutors.
Las Vegas Raiders wide receiver Henry Ruggs III stands next to a Chevrolet Corvette involved in a fatal accident in Las Vegas, Nev., on Nov. 2, 2021. Police said Ruggs was driving the Corvette when it hit another vehicle, killing a woman. He will be charged with DUI resulting in death.(Ethan Miller/Getty Images)
Ruggs pleaded guilty in May 2023 to felony DUI causing death and misdemeanor vehicular manslaughter. He was sentenced in August 2023 to a three-to-10-year prison sentence.
The prison sentence effectively ended Ruggs’ NFL career, although there have been whispers he’d like to attempt a comeback when he eventually is released. He would be 28 years old if he gets out before the 2027 NFL season.
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Ruggs, in the meantime, completed his bachelor’s degree at the University of Alabama, participated in prison work and trustee programs, including a stint working at the Nevada governor’s mansion under a state inmate work program, and expressed his remorse about the incident.
Former Las Vegas Raiders player Henry Ruggs III appears in court at the Regional Justice Center in Las Vegas, Nevada, on Nov. 22, 2021. He was ordered to wear an ankle monitor to measure his alcohol level after missing a court-ordered test. Ruggs faces DUI charges following a fatal car crash.(Bizuayehu Tesfaye-Pool/Getty Images)
That apparently was not enough for the Board.
The Associated Press reported Ruggs will go before the parole board again three months before his Aug. 24, 2027, mandatory parole release date, according to Kathi Baker, executive director of the Nevada Board of Parole Commissioners.
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