Last year during the Florida Swing, Berger finished T25, T15 and T20 in his three starts in The Sunshine State. And after tying for 32nd in a decent showing at the Cognizant Classic last week, he’s off to another (even better) start this week, as he lit up Bay Hill Club & Lodge for a nine-under 63 at the Arnold Palmer Invitational on Thursday, good for a three-shot lead after Day 1.
The secret for the Florida kid and Florida resident? Easy.
“I get to drive my own car up here, slept in my own bed last week,” said Berger, who lives two hours down the road in the Jupiter, Fla., area. “This is a place I played many times. There’s many years in the past where I’ve skipped a couple of those West Coast Swing events, and this year being in the elevated events you don’t have that opportunity. So yeah, it’s just nice to be in Florida. I love it.”
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He also loves the fact he’s injury-free.
Berger injured his right ring finger at the BMW Championship in August (on one swing on the 14th hole, though he’s unsure exactly what happened) and thought it would get better on its own. It did not — not that day, nor the next. He withdrew, and the broken finger was in a splint for two months. He went nearly three months without swinging a club and didn’t return until the RSM Classic in late November, where he tied for 51st.
“Just one of those things, like the finger that I broke and where I broke it actually ended up being more of a pain in the butt than I thought it was going to be,” he said Thursday. “I thought it would be just like four, five weeks and it turned out to be three months.”
It was an unfortunate way to end what had been a strong bounce-back season. After missing all of 2023 with a back injury, Berger struggled to find his form when he got back on the course and finished 140th in the FedEx Cup standings in 2024. Last year, it started to come together, as he made 18 of 22 cuts and had strong showings at the WM Phoenix Open (T2) and RBC Heritage (T3) to finish inside the top 70 and retain his PGA Tour card.
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He opened 2026 with a T6 in Hawaii and has missed just one cut, at the Genesis Invitational, so far this season.
“When you come back you’re just kind of getting back into the flow of things and getting into your routine,” he said. “I’ve played not really that poorly, just haven’t had the results. So you just kind of keep doing the same things and good things will come.”
On Thursday, Berger never made a bogey and was six under on the back nine. His 63 was also just one shy of the tournament record, which has been recorded four times. He led the field in Strokes Gained: Tee to Green (5.088) and was second in putting (3.718).
He begins his second round at 11:55 a.m. ET on Friday alongside Alex Noren. He knows he still has 54 holes left though.
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“It’s going to be an incredibly difficult and challenging week,” he said. “The greens are like white. So a little bit of wind, a little bit less moisture, and it’s just going to be like a U.S. Open. I think when you come to Bay Hill to play this event you know what you’re getting, and so it doesn’t shock me. You’re ready for it.”
For the New York Islanders and Utah Mammoth, becoming 2026 trade deadline winners was rooted — at least partially — in decisions made one year ago ahead of the 2025 NHL swap shutoff.
As we approached this year’s 3 p.m. ET / noon PT deadline on Friday, the Islanders struck out and acquired Brayden Schenn from the St. Louis Blues. This has been a surprisingly strong season on Long Island in the first year under GM Mathieu Darche’s stewardship and the spell of rookie Matthew Schaefer’s incredible play.
Now Schenn arrives to provide some more playoff experience to a club that already acquired Ondrej Palat — like Schenn, a Cup winner — from the New Jersey Devils before the Olympic break.
One of the pieces used to acquire Schenn was the first-round pick the Isles got last year when they moved franchise mainstay Brock Nelson to the Colorado Avalanche. New York was actually only four points out of a playoff spot when it made that deal — executed by former GM Lou Lamoriello — one day ahead of the 2025 deadline, but the hard decision to move on from Nelson was the right one given it netted that pick and prospect Calum Ritchie.
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Now, with his team’s own first-rounder still in hand, Darche felt comfortable putting that extra pick in play to help this year’s edition of the squad become a team that could not only make the playoffs, but perhaps win a first-round series. Let’s face it, dealing away a first-rounder is always more palatable when it wasn’t yours to begin with, especially if the team it comes from — in this case, the league-leading Avs — could make it the 31st overall pick by advancing to the Final or the 32nd selection by winning the Cup.
As for Utah, the Mammoth swung a huge swap for defenceman MacKenzie Weegar on Wednesday for, among other things, three second-round picks. (This is a good time to note that every year, for the purpose of our winners and losers piece, we consider not only what happened on deadline day itself, but the trade deadline season that’s essentially a six-week run-up to the actual final day of dealing.)
The pieces for that swap were the result of asset-building when the Mammoth were still the Arizona Coyotes. That said, Utah GM Bill Armstrong also drew an important line in the sand last year when he signed pending-UFA Karel Vejmelka to an extension two days before the deadline.
Like the Islanders, Utah was right on the edge of a playoff spot — closer, even, at three points out — but instead of gathering yet more future assets by flipping Vejmelka — who could have returned something tasty in an always-thin goalie market — Armstrong arrived at a pressure point and opted to keep a valuable player.
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Now, Weegar — one of the best players to move in the 2026 deadline season — arrives on a Utah squad that could secure home-ice advantage thanks in large part to Vejmelka’s league-best 29 wins.
The Mammoth and Islanders must be happy with where their teams sit today relative to 12 months ago. With that in mind, here are some other winners — and a few losers — from trade deadline season, 2026.
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They made us wait for it, but the long-rumoured reunion with Nazem Kadri finally happened and Colorado ultimately convinced the Flames to retain some of the player’s salary for the next three seasons. You win Cups with strength down the middle and the Avalanche are now rocking Nathan MacKinnon, Brock Nelson, Nazem Kadri and Nicolas Roy at centre for at least this season and next.
For all the names we bandied about leading up to the deadline, very few people imagined veteran John Carlson being moved by the Washington Capitals. However, after 1,143 games in D.C. — and a franchise-best 771 points by a D-man — Carlson is headed west to the Ducks.
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Anaheim’s power play ranks 23rd in the NHL right now and Carlson, even at 36 years old, can certainly help with that. The right-shot blue-liner can become a UFA on July 1.
While the Blues didn’t ultimately deal any of their prime assets — namely Robert Thomas, Colton Parayko and Jordan Kyrou — they returned two 2026 first-round picks by parting with captain Brayden Schenn and defenceman Justin Faulk. Some sort of page-turning had to happen in St. Louis and this was a good start.
The Blues can now re-visit talks for Thomas, Parayko and Kyrou around the NHL Draft, assuming they want to keep going down that path. They’ll also have the flexibility of spending two additional first-rounders how they see fit, whether that’s taking home-run swings on talented prospects or possibly packaging those picks to target a young player.
Sometimes it’s more about the overall feel of things than the granular details of a deal. If you’re a Wings fan, you’re just happy to see the organization back in a place where it can justify spending a first-round pick on a needle-moving defenceman like righty Justin Faulk.
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Faulk has another season left on his deal and gives coach Todd McLellan another puck-mover after the top pair anchored by stud Moritz Seider.
It’s a real tough day in Washington, as Alex Ovechkin and Tom Wilson acknowledged. That said, credit GM Chris Patrick for leaning in during a season where his club — one year after finishing with the top record in the East — is likely to miss the playoffs. Making the hard decision to send John Carlson to Anaheim for a first (assuming the Ducks make the playoffs) one day after netting a second-rounder from Vegas for fourth-line centre Nic Dowd is pretty tidy work.
Washington can regroup in the summer and, in all likelihood, re-invest some of that draft capital into making the squad better for next September.
Going to chase a Cup with your little bro in Minny? Who made out better than Nick Foligno today?
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Asking on behalf of NHL fans and media everywhere: How long does it take and how many lawyers do we need to immediately re-insert a clause in the CBA that allows for double-retention?
The late Kadri bomb couldn’t save what was undeniably a dull deadline day. The new CBA constraints — a playoff salary cap, the inability for middle-man teams to step in an absorb some salary for a sweetener — definitely took some of the starch out of squads’ big-swap dreams.
We get the playoff cap, but why stop teams willing to step in as a third party and eat some money?
It’s not that the Leafs utterly face-planted. It just feels painfully poignant that, one year after giving up a first-rounder and decent prospect for Scott Laughton, all Toronto could re-coup for the centre — who, granted, is now only four months from free agency — was a conditional third-rounder from L.A. That pick becomes a second if the Kings make the playoffs, which is skewing unlikely at the moment.
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It’s going to be fascinating to see what unfolds with this club in the next four months, but you already knew that.
Let’s be clear, you could adopt a point of view where the Sabres are winners based on how quickly GM Jarmo Kekalainen pivoted out of the disappointment of Colton Parayko nixing a trade to Western New York on Wednesday and into a move for back-end defence help with big bodies Logan Stanley and Luke Schenn from Winnipeg. (By the way, we’re intrigued by the Isak Rosen get for the Jets in that swap).
There’s nary a bad vibe to be found in Buffalo these days, but it still had to be disappointing to think an Olympic-calibre defenceman in Parayko was coming your way, only to find out you were going to be Luke Schenn’s 10th NHL team.
The way the Sabres are going, they’ll just use this as more fuel to keep ripping through the league.
Chelsea head coach Liam Rosenior says striker Joao Pedro belongs in the same “category” as world‑class forwards Erling Haaland, Harry Kane and Kylian Mbappe.
The 24‑year‑old Brazil international scored a hat‑trick in Wednesday’s 4-1 win at Aston Villa, taking his tally to 17 goals in all competitions this season.
None of his 14 Premier League goals this season have come from the penalty spot and only Haaland, with 19, has scored more non‑penalty goals in England’s top flight this season, while across Europe’s top five leagues Kane leads the way on that basis with 20 for Bayern Munich, and Mbappe has 15 for Real Madrid.
Asked whether Joao Pedro is operating at such a level, Rosenior told reporters: “Joao is in that category now. In the two months I’ve been here, he has consistently shown he is a world‑class striker.
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“I talk about my players; it’s disrespectful to Erling to compare them. I don’t know Erling very well, but from the outside he looks a magnificent, world‑class striker.
“I wouldn’t swap Joao for anyone at this moment – he is showing all the qualities and attributes I want to see.
“The great thing for Joao is his age – he can still improve, and I’ve already noticed several areas where he can get better. But the level he’s operating at now is world class, and it’s my job, the club’s job and his job to keep him there.”
Chelsea, who face Wrexham in the FA Cup fifth round on Saturday, are looking for Joao Pedro to become their first out-and-out striker to reach 20 goals in a season since Diego Costa in 2016-17.
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They have had two players reach that tally in the intervening years, with deep-lying forward Cole Palmer scoring 25 in the 2023-24 season, five years after Eden Hazard hit 21 as a winger.
Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola spoke about expectations for his team over the coming weeks and months
Pep Guardiola is backing Manchester City to be better next season – even if they beat Arsenal to the Premier League in May. While many of City’s rivals hoped that they had seen the last of the title-winning machine when they scrambled to third place last year, their manager is confident that the new side that has emerged is here to stay.
And despite the speculation that this could be the Catalan’s last year at City, Guardiola has a contract until 2027 and is already thinking about the team for next season – one that he expects will be challenging for more trophies. They could yet have cause to celebrate in the coming weeks and months with four trophies still up for grabs.
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As well as facing Arsenal in the Carabao Cup final, they are in the knockout rounds of the FA Cup and Champions League and are second in the Premier League. Wednesday’s 2-2 draw with Nottingham Forest was disappointing, yet Guardiola thinks they could still put that behind them if they respond well enough.
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“We have the ability to forget quick. It’s another competition, I would say. It’s a final. Of course, they were a little bit disappointed. But, you know, we did in everything much, much more than them,” he said.
“That game is like that. We could not win. So expected goals, 2-15 against 0.7, and we draw. But that is football. So we have to defend better in some departments.
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“We are not a complete team to compete to, you know, to be solid. That is the reality. But we are in the process of many changes. If we can learn quicker, that still is nothing lost, we can [be] quicker to arrive in the last month with the chances. But I’m pretty sure next season will be better, and the next season will be better. I don’t have doubts about that.”
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Pop culture commentator Zack Peter slammed Sheriff Chris Nanos for reportedly declining help from the United Cajun Navy in the search for Nancy Guthrie. The 84-year-old mother of Savannah Guthrie has been missing since February 1 from her Arizona home. Amid the ongoing investigation, several third parties volunteered to help search for Nancy Guthrie.
According to media reports, the non-profit organization United Cajun Navy, which specializes in disaster relief, expressed interest in helping with the investigation into Guthrie’s disappearance. Journalist Brian Entin reported that the organization had sent a 41-page operational plan to Sheriff Nanos. However, the Cajun Navy reportedly did not receive approval from the sheriff.
Zack Peter, who has remained critical of Chris Nanos, slammed the sheriff for not accepting help. In a March 5 video posted on X, Peter reported that the nonprofit organization based in Louisiana has resources to find a “missing body.” He noted that the Cajun Navy said that they have canines, drones, and a detailed plan of action.
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“Sheriff Nanos ignored them. He left them unread. He didn’t respond. He, like, swiped left and didn’t give them an answer or a reason as to why. Sheriff Nanos is clearly incapable. Nana Nana Nanos is incapable of leading this investigation,” Peter commented.
Zack Peter alleged that President Trump sent the FBI, but Nanos “refused to work with them.” He argued that in the absence of proof that Nancy Guthrie was taken beyond the state line, the FBI couldn’t intervene on its own. Peter said it was all in the hands of Sheriff Nanos. The podcaster wondered why a professional group like the United Cajun Navy was not allowed to help.
“I understand he doesn’t want private search parties, right, but you have a dedicated team like the United Cajun Navy who is volunteering to come out here and help you solve this case with all of the resources that they have because clearly you and your team are a bunch of bozos that haven’t been able to figure this out after over a month,” Peter added.
According to local news outlet KVOA.com, the Sheriff’s Department issued a statement. Without naming any group, the PCSD, in a statement, said that Nancy Guthrie’s investigation “is best left to professionals.”
Savannah Guthrie returns to Today’s studio while Nancy Guthrie remains missing
Savannah Guthrie Greeted TODAY Staff in Studio, Is Planning to Return to Show
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Over a month after her mother’s disappearance, Savannah Guthrie visited the Today studio on March 5. She met the staff and thanked them for their support. Savannah Guthrie had previously said that she feared that her mother “may already be gone.” However, during her Thursday visit to the Today studio, she expressed optimism about finding Nancy Guthrie.
“I wanted you to know that I’m still standing, and I still have hope, and I’m still me. And I don’t know what version of me that will be, but it will be. I’m holding onto my faith. I still believe. And as my mom would say, ‘Where else would I go?’” Savannah Guthrie stated.
Reports suggested that Savannah Guthrie would soon join Today show. On Thursday, the media personality confirmed her intention to return to the show. However, she added, “I don’t know how to come back.”
Last week, Savannah Guthrie announced a $1 million reward for information leading to Nancy Guthrie’s recovery.
West Indies spinner Akeal Hosein took to social media to express frustration over the team’s delayed return from India after their exit from the 2026 T20 World Cup, even jokingly asking football star Cristiano Ronaldo to “rescue” him. International travel has been disrupted since tensions escalated following the conflict involving the USA, Israel and Iran, leading to flight cancellations and heightened alerts at several airports in West Asia.After their T20 World Cup campaign ended in the subcontinent, the West Indies players and support staff have faced difficulties travelling back home because of cancelled flights linked to the situation in West Asia. The development came despite Cricket West Indies (CWI) stating on Thursday that it was working to arrange a charter flight for the squad that could take them home within 24 hours.“At this point, I’m better off asking Cristiano Ronaldo to send the jet and come rescue me, yes?” Hosein said on X.
The Caribbean side has been in Kolkata since their tournament ended with a five-wicket defeat to India at Eden Gardens last Sunday. Earlier on Thursday, West Indies head coach Darren Sammy also sought clarity from the International Cricket Council (ICC) regarding the team’s travel plans.Soon after, CWI issued a statement confirming that efforts were underway to arrange the team’s return.“During a high-level call earlier today involving CWI, ICC officials, a representative of team management, and a representative of the players, it was confirmed that a charter flight is currently being arranged for the team’s departure from India, with the expected departure scheduled within the next 24 hours,” the CWI said in a statement. The departure time remains subject to final air traffic approvals. The team remains safe and well as arrangements continue to be finalized,” the governing body added.“CWI has remained in constant dialogue with the players, team management, and the International Cricket Council (ICC) since their last match against India. While the situation remains complex and fluid due to international airspace restrictions arising from security concerns in the Gulf region, CWI assures the public that every precaution is being taken to ensure the safe return of the team to the Caribbean,” said CWI.There is also a possibility that several players may not travel back immediately and could stay in India to join their respective franchises for the upcoming Indian Premier League.
New Delhi: Team India head coach Gautam Gambhir had once famously shared his strong belief that batting orders are very overrated in white-ball cricket, drawing scrutiny. While the mentality has resulted in mixed results on other occasions, it certainly paid off handsomely in India’s T20 World Cup 2026 semi-final against England. The visitors were caught by surprise after Shivam Dube walked in at number four following Ishan Kishan‘s dismissal instead of Suryakumar Yadav or Tilak Varma. Spinner Adil Rashid was one of the top wicket-takers (11 dismissals) going into the knockout match and had tasted blood after sending Kishan back to the pavilion.
India in T20 World Cup final: Small contributions which had HUGE impact
The Indian innings was dominating proceedings at 117/2 in 9.3 overs, enjoying the pace on offer with small boundary dimensions. However, Rashid’s slow and wide deliveries, aimed at making the batters reach out, would have proved quite challenging in these conditions, holding the key to an English comeback. However, in stepped Dube when the team needed a hero, masterfully negotiating the English spinner, combining intent with risk-free gameplay. The good balls were tucked away for singles, while the deliveries bowled right in the arc found their way into the stands. ‘Shivam Dube 2.0 makes presence felt’ “Rohit Sharma gave Shivam a lot of inputs regarding the manner in which he should approach his innings. Earlier, he used to come in and simply slog. However, this is Shivam 2.0, who plays according to the situation. The maturity he obtained from the chat changed everything. Shivam now focuses on singles off good deliveries rather than simply hitting sixes, which helps him convert a quick-fire 25 into crucial 40s or 50s,” said Mumbai batter Siddhesh Lad during an exclusive interaction with TimesofIndia.com. “There was a focus on taking singles while facing Rashid rather than simply attempting to slog every delivery. That is an indication of the newfound maturity Shivam enjoys, which proved crucial against England,” he added. Dube smashed Rashid for two sixes in his third over, reducing the pressure on Sanju Samson and giving the former no scope to settle and pull off a comeback. India were well placed on a dominant scoreline of 190/4 in 16 overs at the end of the English spinner’s spell (2/41), providing the perfect platform to finish strongly in a game decided by fine margins. Captain Harry Brook was left with no choice but to bring Jofra Archer and Sam Curran into the action, playing into Team India’s hands. ‘Dube’s intent puts spinners under pressure’ “It was tougher to play strokes when the ball was coming on slowly to the bat, which is where Dube proved to be a game-changer. When Shivam comes to bat, there is pressure on the spinners because of the intent with which he takes them on,” shared Dube’s childhood coach Satish Samant. Shivam was eventually dismissed due to a miscommunication with Hardik Pandya, leaving a lasting impact with his 25-ball 43 that helped India post a mammoth total of 253. The all-rounder has been a game-changer under pressure, scoring crucial boundaries against the West Indies, and will certainly have a vital role to play in the final.
Feb 21, 2026; Syracuse, New York, USA; North Carolina Tar Heels forward Caleb Wilson (8) shoots prior to the game against the Syracuse Orange at the JMA Wireless Dome. Mandatory Credit: Rich Barnes-Imagn Images
North Carolina freshman Caleb Wilson will miss the rest of the season with a broken right thumb.
The Tar Heels confirmed on Friday that Wilson is done for the campaign following his non-contact injury during a drill in Thursday’s practice. Wilson was nearing a return from a six-game absence. He was on the court and pushing to be cleared to return for Saturday’s rematch with No. 1 Duke when the latest injury occurred.
The team’s leading scorer and rebounder at 19.8 points and 9.4 rebounds per game, Wilson had 20 or more points 17 times this season. He’s projected to be a lottery pick in the 2026 NBA Draft.
He fractured his non-shooting hand Feb. 10 against Miami.
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While he was not yet cleared for 5-on-5 work in practice according to head coach Hubert Davis, Wilson was on pace to play no later than next week’s ACC tournament.
Real Madrid’s Vinicius Junior reacts during a Spanish La Liga football match between Real Madrid and Getafe in Madrid, Spain, Monday, March 2, 2026. (AP Photo)
UEFA has fined Spanish football club Real Madrid 15,000 euros ($17,000) after one of the club’s supporters made a Nazi salute before a recent UEFA Champions League match against Benfica. The governing body also imposed a partial stadium closure of 500 seats at the Santiago Bernabéu, suspended for one year.UEFA said the action was taken after an incident before the second leg of the play-off round between the two sides on February 25. The disciplinary board punished Madrid “for the racist and/or discriminatory behaviour of its supporters,” according to a statement issued by the European football body.The incident took place before Real Madrid’s Champions League match against Benfica. The Spanish club later said the supporter involved had been identified and removed from the stadium.“Real Madrid condemns this type of gesture and expression that incites violence and hatred in sports and society,” the club said at the time.A week before the incident at the Bernabéu, Madrid forward Vinícius Júnior alleged that he was racially abused by Benfica player Gianluca Prestianni. Prestianni has denied the allegation.Real Madrid also removed the supporter who was caught on camera making the Nazi salute before the match began. The first leg of the tie had also seen the alleged racism incident involving Vinicius and Prestianni.Real Madrid advanced to the round of 16 of the Champions League, where they will face Manchester City.
Minnesota Vikings fans react from the stands during a home game against the Detroit Lions at U.S. Bank Stadium in Minneapolis. The NFC North matchup on Oct. 20, 2024, featured a lively crowd dressed in purple and gold as supporters responded to the action on the field during a pivotal divisional contest. Mandatory Credit: Jeffrey Becker-Imagn Images.
Don’t expect fireworks from Minnesota Vikings’ free agency next week; they’ve already gone that route in the last two offseasons, and 2026 will be much quieter, according to interim general manager Rob Brzezinski.
The Vikings appear headed for a lower-cost plan, shifting the spotlight from splashy deals to roster discipline and draft improvement.
The club doesn’t have the funds to splash this go-round and is not interested in spending future salary caps to make 2026 more eventful.
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A Quieter March Puts More Pressure on Minnesota’s Draft Table
Minnesota Vikings executive Rob Brzezinski speaks during a sit-down interview with Vikings.com’s Gabe Henderson about the team’s organizational structure and leadership direction. The discussion on Feb. 17, 2022, covered Minnesota’s football operations philosophy, front-office decision making, and the hiring of head coach Kevin O’Connell. Mandatory Credit: YouTube.
Brzezinski: We Have the Core in Place
Compared to the expectation from some casual fans, next week’s free agency period will be quiet for Minnesota.
Brzezinski told ESPN: “We’ve spent a lot of money the last two years in free agency. And so our goal is going to be to keep our core in place, and that’s going to involve making some difficult decisions on some players, which you deal with on a daily basis.”
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“But I think for the most part, our goal is going to be to draft and develop and to retain our core, and supplement with free agency. It just makes logical sense that that bill’s coming due. We do have to navigate it, and navigate it responsibly.”
In theory, Minnesota could backload existing veterans’ contracts and mortgage the future. But that doesn’t seem to be a viable option this time.
Brzezinski continued, “A big part of that is balancing what we’re doing in 2026 versus the future. It’s just inherent in my role. I feel like that’s a critical part of when I talk about the guardrails and the vision and the philosophy.”
“To make sure maybe if we’re veering a little bit, to try to make a decision that maybe is not the best for the long term, maybe we can come back to what we talked about originally and say, ‘Hey, remember we talked about this is the way we’re going to do things? This is our philosophy.’ I think we can just lean on that and go from there.”
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The Bonanza in 2025
One year ago, ex-general manager Kwesi Adofo-Mensah, who was fired five weeks ago, swung for the fences in free agency, signing guard Will Fries, cornerback Isaiah Rodgers, linebacker Eric Wilson, and defensive tackles Jonathan Allen and Javon Hargrave, among others.
Rodgers and Wilson emphatically worked out, but those were the affordable signings. The big-ticket acquisitions flopped, or in Fries’s case, the first year didn’t pan out so hot.
In fact, one year later, Allen and Hargrave are scheduled to be released. Minnesota signed up for mid-tier DT performance at a high price and is ready to end the experiment after one season. Per Brzezinski, the Vikings were permitted to spend big in the last two offseasons. This go-round is about scaling back — evidently.
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Must Nail the Draft
The draft should be the cornerstone of roster building. It’s the only avenue in professional sports where teams can acquire high-caliber talent without paying market value. Free agency should play a supporting role, used to fill gaps, add veteran leadership, and bolster depth once a young core is established.
The previous regime in Minnesota strayed from this philosophy, sadly. Each offseason, there was a tacit understanding from fans that free agency would have to compensate for a draft that rarely produced any contributors, inverting the traditional team-building model. That’s not how it’s supposed to be.
This inversion manifested in decisions like the 2025 3rd-Round selection of wide receiver Tai Felton, a player whose primary value was on special teams. Special teams contributors can typically be found in undrafted free agency, while 3rd-Round picks should be reserved for players with the potential to develop into starters or impactful rotational players.
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With Adofo-Mensah’s departure, the organization has an opportunity to reset. Vikings fans can now perhaps shift away from expecting draft-related disappointment, as Minnesota can reestablish the draft as the primary driver of roster construction.
Minnesota Vikings owner Zygi Wilf speaks with NFL commissioner Roger Goodell along the sideline during a playoff game at U.S. Bank Stadium in Minneapolis. The Wild Card matchup on Jan. 15, 2023, featured the two conversing during the second quarter while the stadium crowd watched postseason action unfold. Mandatory Credit: Matt Krohn-USA TODAY Sports.
Beginning with the 2025 class, Brzezinski and the front office must capitalize on productive drafts. Multiple successful draft classes are needed to replenish the roster and address the talent + age deficit.
There’s no better time to get back on track in the draft than a quiet free agency period.
Bargain-Bin Players?
Of course, free agency remains a key factor in Minnesota. It won’t be ignored or forgotten.
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During the Kirk Cousins era (2018-2023), the Vikings routinely faced familiar financial constraints each offseason, needing to create cap space to acquire new players or retain key veterans. Each year, the front office successfully generated the necessary flexibility to maintain a competitive team.
Minnesota Vikings head coach Kevin O’Connell introduces defensive coordinator Brian Flores during a media session at the TCO Performance Center in Eagan. The press event on Feb. 15, 2023, marked Flores’ arrival after previous coaching stops with the New England Patriots, Miami Dolphins, and Pittsburgh Steelers. Mandatory Credit: YouTube.
Brzezinski is usually central to this process. The long-tenured executive, with 27 years of experience with the franchise, possesses extensive knowledge of navigating cap situations and identifies viable financial solutions when the roster requires reinforcements.
This approach will likely guide Minnesota’s strategy again. Rather than pursuing the most expensive players, the Vikings can seek value-based options that address specific roster needs. For example, you may not have the money for running back Kenneth Walker III, but how about Kenneth Gainwell from free agency and a mid-round halfback in the draft?
Vikings quarterback J.J. McCarthy drops back and delivers a first-quarter throw at U.S. Bank Stadium, Jan 4, 2026, in Minneapolis against the Green Bay Packers. The snapshot captured McCarthy operating within the structure of the offense early, as Minnesota looked to establish rhythm and tempo during a high-stakes divisional matchup. Mandatory Credit: Jeffrey Becker-Imagn Images.
Accordingly, Minnesota is soon to enhance the passer competition. Anything less than a minimum of one competent passer would be football malpractice. Good chance, though, that the Vikings opt for two quarterbacks. Kevin O’Connell is hoping that direct, head-to-head competition gets the best out of the kid who was drafted at No. 10 in the 2024 NFL Draft. Minnesota’s top coach acknowledged as much while articulating where Mr. McCarthy needs to go in a recent interview with Paul Allen and Pete Bercich.
J.J. McCarthy Gets Next Steps from KOC
Over on the team website, Craig Peters discusses the matter while relaying the words from O’Connell and Rob Brzezinski (the full interview is on YouTube).
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First, note Coach O’Connell’s acknowledgement that McCarthy is “hungry” and that he’s working through a “big offseason.” Basically, bland football lingo that seldom means much; except, of course, that they happen to be true for McCarthy.
Minnesota Vikings quarterback J.J. McCarthy (9) scrambles during first-half action against the Dallas Cowboys at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas, Dec. 14, 2025. McCarthy moved outside the pocket to extend the play as Minnesota searched for rhythm on the road in the early stages of the matchup. Mandatory Credit: Raymond Carlin III-Imagn Images.
There’s then some clarity about what J.J. McCarthy is doing.
The word: “He’s out in California right now working with John Beck and some of the guys that he worked with pre-draft, very detailed in what he wanted to decompress after the season and go through layer by layer: ‘What do I need to individually work on to make sure I come back ready to roll in April?’ He’s working on those things.”
Some more insight: “His continued growth in our offense and schemes will be a natural thing. He’s a really smart player. I think he’s going to be able to use a lot of that experience of those 10 games in the journey so far to get himself in position to have the best 2026 he can. We’ve talked about it, we want him to be in a competitive situation because of some of that time lost.”
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Another thought before extracting some ideas: “We’ve really got to push the gas pedal down and not replace development and coaching and teaching with anything but really enhance it with a really competitive situation that I think our whole team will benefit from. [We’re] pretty early in that process, but I’m excited about it.”
Dec 14, 2025; Arlington, Texas, USA; Minnesota Vikings quarterback J.J. McCarthy (9) slaps hands with Minnesota Vikings head coach Kevin O’Connell after a made field goal against the Dallas Cowboys during the second half at AT&T Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Raymond Carlin III-Imagn Images.
Digest what’s being said.
J.J. McCarthy hasn’t been good enough but he now has ten games of NFL experience. As a result, there’s a foundation to build on as it relates to his development. See what worked and continue doing those things; see what didn’t and find a solution. Mastering the scheme will result from more time chipping away.
On a literal level of where he is, McCarthy is in California working with a private quarterback coach. Think back to the in-season chatter about sanding off the rough edges of McCarthy’s mechanics. Consider, as well, the chatter about the kid developing his pitching arsenal beyond just a nice four-seam fastball. Gotta assume those same items are being addressed.
Likewise, there’s great merit in the idea that Coach O’Connell expresses: competition in the quarterback room not about replacing J.J. McCarthy. Rather, inserting high-end competition is being seen as a key component of developing the passer. The possibility — threat? — of replacement should push the quarterback to be better.
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Minnesota Vikings quarterback J.J. McCarthy drops back to pass at U.S. Bank Stadium as the offense sets during the second quarter, with the pocket forming around him and receivers working downfield. The scene unfolded on Nov. 9, 2025 in Minneapolis during Minnesota’s matchup with Baltimore, capturing McCarthy mid-read in live game action. Mandatory Credit: Brad Rempel-Imagn Images.
So, here is what is being told to J.J. McCarthy, more or less:
The beginning of your career hasn’t gone as anyone hoped. A major part of the issue has been injury, which is unfortunate. Take these comings months to build your body as you work away with a respected quarterback coach. Get better. Learn how to layer throws. Fix your mechanics. Be accurate.
When you come back, you’ll be sharing the room with someone who is coming for your starting job. Understand that we see the intensity of the competition as the next step in your development as we guard against what happened last year. We still believe in you and want you to be our long-term passer. Accept the challenge for what it is as you elevate.
Prove us right.
J.J. McCarthy, 23, is a great athlete who can zip the ball. Even better, he’s a leader who works hard and who has some charisma. There’s fire in him that will help him in the upcoming competition.
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McCarthy, in short, has much to work with as he marches toward being under center in Week 1 of the 2026 season.