Jan 4, 2026; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA; Pittsburgh Steelers running back Kenneth Gainwell (14)reacts after rushing for a touchdown against the Baltimore Ravens during the second half at Acrisure Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Barry Reeger-Imagn Images
The Minnesota Vikings may or may not pursue a different running back in free agency four weeks from now; the club has Aaron Jones and Jordan Mason under contract. Jones will turn 32 next season, and some believe he could be released sooner rather than later. If so, these are the worthwhile replacement options on the open market.
The Vikings are tight against the cap, yet a narrow group of free agent RBS could still align with the roster and scheme.
The Vikings also don’t have much cap space as of early February, so they’ll have to get creative with some cap magic.
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From Good to Best: Vikings RB Fits
These are the top RB options for Minnesota in free agency.
Pittsburgh Steelers running back Kenneth Gainwell breaks free for a first-half touchdown at M&T Bank Stadium, with December 7, 2025 embedded mid-paragraph during a road matchup in Baltimore. The burst through traffic highlights Gainwell’s acceleration and vision as Pittsburgh struck early against the Ravens in a tightly contested divisional game. Mandatory Credit: Mitch Stringer-Imagn Images
5. Kenneth Gainwell
Believe it or not, Gainwell tabulated 1,023 yards from scrimmage in 2025, along with 8 touchdowns. The guy was a miniature machine.
He also torched the Vikings in Dublin — in a game when purple fans thought “they got away with one” after learning of Jaylen Warren’s injury. Instead, Gainwell played even more efficiently than Warren.
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Warren would be a smart fit for the Vikings if a) the team releases Jones b) it views Mason as an RB1. His next contract should fetch about $5 million per season.
4. Javonte Williams
Williams totally revitalized his career in Dallas this season.
Many chalked him up as mid due to never popping off as the Denver Broncos’ RB1 despite fancy 2nd-Round draft stock in 2021. As it turns out, the Broncos just didn’t feature him enough.
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Williams logged 1,338 yards from scrimmage in 2025, complete with 13 touchdowns. He helped fantasy managers win championships across the country. The veteran tailback turns 26 on draft weekend and will probably command about $10 milion per year in free agency.
3. Kenneth Walker
This guy has earned millions in the last few weeks.
Walker turned on the jets during the Seahawks’ sprint to Super Bowl LX, and truth be told, might even be more valuable than Sam Darnold on offense, mainly because Walker is playing like a Top 3 NFL tailback during the playoffs.
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There are only two knocks on Walker: he’s not the most durable runner ever, and he experiences vanishing acts.
Perhaps his next team will feed him the rock at the same level as Seattle in the 2025 postseason.
2. Travis Etienne
Etienne just turned 27, meaning he has about two years left of his physical prime. He played so well in 2025 that Jacksonville may not let him leave. In the event that Jaguars hand the baton to Bhayshul Tuten, though, Etienne will need a new home.
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He totaled 1,399 yards from scrimmage in 2025, with 13 scores. He’s basically AFC Javonte Williams.
Jacksonville Jaguars quarterback Trevor Lawrence executes a late-game handoff to Travis Etienne Jr. at NRG Stadium, with September 29, 2024 appearing mid-paragraph as fourth-quarter action unfolded in Houston. The exchange captures Jacksonville leaning on its ground game while managing tempo against the Texans in a closely fought AFC South matchup. Mandatory Credit: Troy Taormina-Imagn Images
One thing separates Etienne from the rest on this list: he’s the best pass-blocking halfback, and it’s not close. For the Vikings, that characteristic often feels like a prerequisite.
1. Breece Hall
New Vikings offensive line coach Keith Carter’s connection to Hall predates his arrival in Minnesota. Before joining the Vikings in 2025, Carter operated as the Jets’ run game coordinator, putting him directly alongside Hall during the most productive stretch of the running back’s young career. From a coaching perspective, there aren’t many closer reference points than that.
Carter’s resume hasn’t been without friction. Former Titans players took aim at his methods on social media years ago, yet the Vikings still brought him in as an assistant offensive line coach last offseason. When Kevin O’Connell chose not to retain Chris Kuper ahead of the 2026 offseason, Carter’s internal standing became clearer. The promotion followed soon after, and Carter officially took over Minnesota’s offensive line room last week.
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The timing matters for free agency, at least in theory. Carter oversaw the Jets’ rushing operation from 2022 through 2023, with Hall serving as the centerpiece. Now, as 2026 free agency approaches, Hall is set to hit the market with expectations in the $10–12 million range.
Minnesota wouldn’t be pitching Hall on a whim. Carter knows how Hall is wired, how he runs, and how to structure a rushing offense around his strengths. Provided any lingering frustration from Carter’s demanding style hasn’t closed the door, the Vikings present a wise second chapter for Hall.
New York Jets running back Breece Hall celebrates with teammates after finding the end zone, with January 5, 2025 placed mid-paragraph during a fourth-quarter scoring sequence in East Rutherford. The sideline celebration reflects Hall’s impact late in the game as New York closed the season with an emphatic offensive moment. Mandatory Credit: Kevin R. Wexler-NorthJersey.com / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images
Our Janik Eckardt on the idea of Hall to Minnesota: “Hall to Minnesota isn’t unrealistic, but it would take O’Connell’s commitment to feature the running game in 2026 and beyond. Furthermore, the Jets would have to allow him to leave in free agency. In the Twin Cities, Jones would be the first domino to fall if the Vikings indeed want to adjust their top RB duo.”
“The running back position will be a position to watch for the Minnesota Vikings in March and April.”
O’Connell and Carter would immediately put Hall to use: 1,415 yards from scrimmage in 2024.
Oleksandr Usyk is taking Rico Verhoeven seriously, perhaps because he is looking ahead to a bigger challenge afterwards.
The elite southpaw faces kickboxing icon Verhoeven in Egypt on May 23 in a fight that focuses on spectacle after years of hard-fought wins on the road. Despite straying away from his usual matchmaking, Usyk has now assured fans that they can expect a return to top level championship boxing thereafter.
Speaking on DAZN’s Inside the Ring show, Usyk revealed that he will target becoming undisputed champion in the heavyweight division for a third time after the fight, his sights set firmly on either Daniel Dubois or Fabio Wardley.
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“For me, it’s a real fight. Yes, Rico is not a good boxer, okay fun fight, no problem, but I want my next fight [against the] winner of Daniel Dubois and Wardley.”
Wardley was promoted from interim to full WBO champion when the Ukrainian vacated the belt rather than face him as mandatory challenger. His first defence against Dubois, set for May 9 in Manchester, is a dangerous one.
It is a legacy-driven strategy Usyk has employed in the past, dropping the IBF belt to allow Dubois to be elevated, defend against Anthony Joshua, and then face him to regain the strap. Should ‘DDD’ beat Wardley, he could be looking at a trilogy, but fan interest may dwindle given how the first two fights played out.
The head of anti-discrimination body Kick It Out says that initial proposals by English football’s independent regulator “put equality, diversity and inclusion on the subs bench”.
The watchdog for the top five tiers of the men’s game is devising a new code of governance, with clubs having to show what they are doing to tackle under-representation of minorities in order to be granted a licence.
In correspondence sent to the independent football regulator (IFR) as part of a consultation process – and seen by BBC Sport – Kick It Out claims that the proposed measures are “inadequate”.
“[It] doesn’t go far enough in addressing the stubborn challenges that the game currently sees,” said Kick It Out chief executive Samuel Okafor.
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“We’ve been really clear with the regulator in terms of the gap that currently exists. And the gap is significant.
“We’re really concerned that what we’ve seen in the first proposal, in essence, puts EDI [equality, diversity and inclusion] on the subs bench, [and] maintains the status quo.
“It’s really important that the regulator uses the powers that it has to drive the change that we all want to see.”
Among a series of recommendations, Kick It Out says it wants annual publication of clubs’ workforce diversity data, and every club to have board-level accountability for EDI.
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Last month, police confirmed they were investigating after four Premier League players experienced online racial abuse over the course of one weekend, and Okafor said the spate of incidents showed why change was required.
“It should send a message to the regulators [over] the importance of why EDI really matters, why they need to prioritise it, why they need to take it seriously,” he said.
In response, an IFR spokesperson said that it will shortly be launching a second consultation on its licensing policy, “and so it is premature to assert deficiencies in our approach to EDI”.
Former South Africa opener Gary Kirsten has been appointed as the new head coach of the Sri Lanka national cricket team, with Sri Lanka Cricket confirming that he will officially assume the role from April 15, 2026.Kirsten has signed a two-year contract and succeeds former Sri Lanka captain Sanath Jayasuriya, who stepped down from the position following Sri Lanka’s Super Eight exit at the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2026. During the same tournament, Kirsten had been working with the Namibia national cricket team in a consultancy role.
Ahmedabad erupts as Team India arrive at hotel after T20 World Cup win
The 56-year-old brings extensive international experience to the job. As a player, Kirsten represented South Africa national cricket team in 101 Tests and 185 One-Day Internationals. His coaching credentials are equally impressive, most notably leading the India national cricket team to victory in the 2011 Cricket World Cup and guiding the side to the top of the ICC Test rankings during his tenure.After his successful stint with India, Kirsten went on to coach South Africa for two years. In April 2024, he was appointed as the white-ball head coach of the Pakistan national cricket team, although that partnership ended early when he resigned due to differences with the board and players.Kirsten has also been actively involved in franchise cricket. He worked with Royal Challengers Bengaluru and later with Gujarat Titans in the Indian Premier League, serving as batting coach when the Titans secured the title in their debut season in 2022.A key assignment during his tenure with Sri Lanka will be the upcoming ICC Men’s Cricket World Cup scheduled to take place next year in South Africa, Zimbabwe and Namibia. Sri Lanka will aim to secure direct qualification for the global event.Kirsten’s appointment follows another recent coaching announcement by SLC, which named Jamie Siddons as the head coach of the Sri Lanka women’s national team earlier this week.
Watch highlights as West Ham reach the quarter-finals of the FA Cup for the first time in 10 years by defeating London rivals Brentford 5-3 on penalties.
Australia has granted asylum to five members of the Iranian women’s football team who were visiting the country for a tournament when the Iran war began, Australia’s Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke said Tuesday. The women were transported from their hotel in Gold Coast, Australia “to a safe location” by Australian federal police officers in the early hours of Tuesday morning local time. There, they met with Burke and the processing of their humanitarian visas was finalized, the minister told reporters in Brisbane hours later.
“I say to the other members of the team the same opportunity is there,” Burke said. “Australia has taken the Iranian women’s soccer team into our hearts.”
Local news outlets reported that the squad numbered about 20 women. Burke didn’t detail what threats the players faced if they returned to Iran, but the asylum bids followed urging by Iranian groups in Australia and by U.S. President Donald Trump for the Australian government to offer help to the woman.
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The Iranian team arrived in Australia for the Women’s Asian Cup last month, before the Iran war began. The team was knocked out of the tournament over the weekend and was facing the prospect of returning to a country under bombardment. Iran’s head coach Marziyeh Jafari on Sunday said the players “want to come back to Iran as soon as we can,” according to Australia’s national news agency, AAP.
During the tournament, the players have mostly declined to comment on the situation at home, although Iran forward Sara Didar choked back tears in a news conference on Wednesday as she shared their concerns for their families, friends and all Iranians during the conflict.
The team’s silence during the anthem before an opening loss to South Korea last week was viewed by some as an act of resistance and others as a show of mourning. The team hasn’t clarified. They later sang and saluted during the anthem before their remaining two matches.
“These women are tremendously popular in Australia, but we realize they are in a terribly difficult situation with the decisions that they’re making,” Burke said. “The opportunity will continue to be there for them to talk to Australian officials if they wish to.”
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Burke’s announcement came after Trump on Monday in Washington called on Australia to grant asylum to any team member who wanted it. Earlier that day, Trump had blasted Australia on social media, saying Australia was “making a terrible humanitarian mistake by allowing the … team to be forced back to Iran, where they will most likely be killed.” Trump called on Australia to grant the team asylum, adding: “The U.S. will take them if you won’t.”
Less than two hours later, in another social media post, Trump praised Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, saying, “He’s on it! Five have already been taken care of, and the rest are on their way.”
Trump also said that some players “feel they must go back because they are worried about the safety of their families, including threats to those family members if they don’t return.”
Trump’s offer of asylum represented something of a change for the president, whose administration has sought to limit the number of immigrants who can receive asylum for political purposes
My season prep with Maja Stark started a little later this year. And while we made some solid gains and good adjustments, there was still one shot that bothered her with the scoring irons: a kind of high, floaty shot that leaked a bit to the right. It lacked authority, and made setting up birdies consistently a challenge.
When I watched her warm up in Orlando during the week of the LPGA Tournament of Champions, something caught my eye. She kept fiddling with her left-hand grip, trying to get it comfortable on the club. Obviously, that affects everything — the takeaway started to feel wonky and impact wasn’t what she wanted on a consistent basis. When those pieces aren’t right, her confidence starts to dip.
Between shots, Maja would chat and casually make some half-swings with her left hand only on the club. And every time she did, the grip looked perfect. So I kept watching, and it kept happening. (I might’ve even stretched out our conversations a bit to catch her in those moments when the grip went on just right.)
After a while, Maja asked if I had ever heard of the interlocking grip. I told her some guy named Jack Nicklaus did pretty well with it.
She smiled and said, “I’m going to try a couple shots with that.”
From the very first swing, her left-hand grip was fixed. I watched her left hand settle onto the club properly — turned slightly to the right of center, with the butt end of the club under the heel pad of her left hand, not off to the side of it. As she started hitting shots, I knew we’d solved that pesky floaty right miss.
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In Maja’s words: “The takeaway felt so much simpler. Impact was solid, and the clubface felt way more under control.”
Of course, there was a quick conversation about whether this was really the right time in the season to make a grip change, but Maja said yes. And once I saw her left hand going on the club properly and consistently, without all the angst and adjustments, I became a believer.
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Funny enough, a grip change is usually reserved as a last resort for pros. But in this case, it was exactly what the doctor ordered. It allowed Maja to get the left hand on the club properly with little to no fuss. Sometimes the simplest change makes the biggest difference.
Even when it comes to the swing of a major champion.
Manchester City will find out their FA Cup quarter final opponents in Monday night’s draw with Arsenal, Liverpool and Chelsea among the potential opponents
Former FC Barcelona coach Xavi Hernández has revealed why Lionel Messi did not return to the Spanish club, saying club president Joan Laporta blocked the move despite an agreement.
In an interview with La Vanguardia, Xavi claimed that plans were already in place for Messi to rejoin Barcelona after the forward won the 2022 FIFA World Cup with Argentina national football team.
According to Xavi, he began discussions with Messi in January 2023 and the player was excited about the idea of returning to the club where he became a legend.
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“We talked for months and everything was ready. I saw it as a good move from a football perspective,” Xavi said.
However, the former midfielder alleged that Laporta later stopped the deal. Xavi claimed the Barcelona president told him that allowing Messi to return could create serious problems at the club.
Xavi also accused the club leadership of launching a media campaign against him before his exit and claimed that people within the club spoke to players suggesting he wanted to sell them.
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The Barcelona legend, who has already declared support for presidential candidate Víctor Font ahead of the club’s upcoming elections, said he does not expect to return to Barcelona again after serving the club as both a player and coach.
The 28-year-old is coming off his best campaign in the majors, recording a 3.92 ERA with 216 strikeouts and 57 walks in 183.2 innings pitched spread across 32 starts.
In his first season with the two-time defending NL East division-winning Phillies, Luzardo featured prominently as the team’s No. 2 starter.
He first arrived in Philadelphia in a trade in December, 2024, after spending about three-and-a-half seasons with the Miami Marlins.
Luzardo was set to become an unrestricted free agent in 2027.
NEW DELHI: Hardik Pandya reflected on his journey from battling personal struggles to lifting back-to-back T20 World Cup trophies for India. The star all-rounder said winning the 2026 title in Ahmedabad was a validation of a promise he made to himself — to play every tournament with the aim of winning trophies for India.Pandya had earlier spoken about seeking redemption during the 2024 T20 World Cup, when he staged a strong comeback and helped India end a 17-year wait for the title.
Ahmedabad erupts as Team India arrive at hotel after T20 World Cup win
“When we won the T20 World Cup in 2024, I was facing a lot of difficulties personally. Many things had happened before that tournament, and things were not going my way. Before the 2024 World Cup started, I had made up my mind that I was going for redemption. I wanted to make a dominating comeback. I did that and helped my team win the trophy after 17 years. Coming to this T20 World Cup victory in Ahmedabad, this is something I have always lived for. I play cricket to do well for my country and win trophies. I want to win all the trophies for India,” Hardik Pandya said on JioStar.“After the win in Barbados, I promised myself that whichever tournament I play, I will play to win, and I will lift the trophy. This win against New Zealand in Ahmedabad is a validation that the promise I made to myself has become a reality. And this is just the start,” he added.India defeated the Mitchell Santner-led New Zealand national cricket team by a massive 96-run margin to successfully defend their T20 World Cup title. With the victory, India became the first team to win the T20 World Cup on home soil, the first to win it back-to-back after triumphing in the 2024 edition, and the first team to lift the trophy three times — in 2007, 2024 and 2026.Pandya enjoyed an impressive campaign in the 2026 tournament. The 32-year-old scored 217 runs in nine innings at an average of 27.12 and a strike rate of 160.74, including two half-centuries. He also contributed with the ball, picking up nine wickets in nine matches, with best figures of 2/16.