Honda Racing Corporation President Koji Watanabe has addressed the company’s relationship with Fernando Alonso amid a disastrous start to its partnership with Aston Martin. The new Honda power units are reportedly neither reliable nor as powerful as those of the four rival engine manufacturers: Ford, Ferrari, Mercedes, and Audi.
They got into early and persistent trouble during the preseason tests in Bahrain. Lance Stroll complained that Aston Martin’s 2026 car was “four seconds slower” than rivals, and Fernando Alonso reportedly lost his cool in the garage, throwing his gloves after getting out of the car.
Moreover, the Honda power units couldn’t last the longer runs and broke down several times on the track. The theories were that either the engines were indeed inferior or that Adrian Newey’s radical design of the AMR26 forced Honda into a precarious position.
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Either way, for Alonso, this produced a terrible déjà vu of the McLaren-Honda partnership from 2015 to 2017. The Japanese manufacturer’s inferior engines had drawn the wrath of the two-time F1 champion, who produced the “GP2 engines” rant.
This time around, HRC’s Koji Watanabe assures that they have a terrific relationship with Alonso despite the poor performance of the 2026 engines. In an interview with Spanish publication AS, Watanabe said:
“He’s an absolute competitor with an endless motivation to win. He’s a fierce competitor, and we’re happy and proud to be competing with Fernando. We know the start of the season hasn’t been what we wanted for either of us. But we want to write a good next chapter with Fernando.”
Despite the many issues, Alonso had kept a positive attitude heading into the season, which begins with the Australian GP this weekend from March 6 to 8.
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Fernando Alonso’s Australian GP could end within a few laps because of Honda’s lack of reliability
Fernando Alonso – Formula 1 Aramco Pre-Season Testing 1 2026 – Source: Getty
A concerning report came out earlier this week that claimed Fernando Alonso and Lance Stroll would be in for a bad time at the Australian GP. Motorsport Italy claimed that because of the lack of reliability of Honda engines, Aston Martin was considering withdrawing from the season opener.
However, the idea was dropped because of the disastrous consequences that the decision would produce on and off the track. Instead, the team decided that it would be business as usual in the practice sessions and qualifying, but the race would entail a different plan.
The report stated that Aston Martin would let its drivers run some laps in the race before asking them to bring the cars back to the garage and retire them. If that were to happen, it means that Honda’s power units are in a very dire state.
It would be impossible for them to turn things around even by the end of the season. Considering Fernando Alonso, at 44, is in the twilight of his F1 career, that would mean tragedy.
The collective bargaining agreement (CBA) of the women’s national basketball association (WNBA) in the United States is a seismic moment in sports history.
The deal, agreed in mid-March 2026 after 17 months of negotiations, reportedly includes a salary cap increase, significantly higher minimum salaries, revenue sharing, and charter flights. It is considered a huge step in the right direction for player empowerment and league growth.
More than that, though, it is the headline of a wider movement in women’s sports that is empowering players to push for better pay, conditions and a greater share of the revenue they help generate.
Sotiriadou, an associate professor at Griffith University in Australia, is an expert in the business of women’s sport. She believes the WNBA deal reflects the commercial maturity of women’s sport, that investing in stars is a precondition for commercial growth, and that there is enormous power in coordinated collective action.
“The structural shift to a revenue-sharing model that directly links player compensation to the commercial growth of the league is amazing. In essence, players are now economic co-owners of the league’s growth trajectory, not salaried employees of a static enterprise,” she said.
“This shows a formal recognition by a professional women’s league that player value is the primary driver of commercial value. That represents a shift in philosophy, not merely in dollars.”
Fans have been supportive of the players and their push for better payImage: Thurman James/ZUMA Press Wire/IMAGO
Women’s football ready to benefit
Women’s football also looks well-placed to benefit from this deal.
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“We know women’s football has a solidarity mindset, and that extends beyond football. What the [WNBA’s] CBA does is connect women’s athletes all over the world to recognize their value, to fight for that value,” Alex Culvin, the director of women’s football at the international football players’ union FIFPRO, told DW.
Culvin believes the WNBA has benefited from seizing upon momentum since its inception in 1996. Women’s football is now in the midst of that, and Culvin believes now is the time to make sure plans are in place to strike.
“When we get to 2027, we have a World Cup in Brazil, probably the most iconic place in the world to have a World Cup. The boom is going to be inevitable, so the mindset for everybody around the sport, players, unions, stakeholders is how do we capitalize on it? And I think the WNBA’s CBA has almost shone a light on that before we get to the World Cup. It’s created a seismic shift on value,” Culvin said.
Equal pay in football- just a crazy dream?
Impacts are already being felt, and they are going to be made too. The deal hands professional women’s football in the US (NWSL, the top league) a perfect opportunity to take the next step.
“The NWSL’s 2026 minimum salary of $50,500 (€43.600) sits against the WNBA’s new floor of $270,000-$300,000. That gap will be very hard for NWSL ownership to defend publicly. With a performance-based reopener built into the current agreement, and a full renegotiation due in 2030, the WNBA deal hands NWSL players a powerful reference point,” Sotiriadou said.
“The WNBA deal demonstrates what organized players and a commercially mature league can achieve together.”
While a global CBA is unlikely in football, both the WNBA’s action and the CBA’s policies can be highly impactful tools for women’s sports moving forward. Shared revenue is the obvious headline, but also improving minimum salaries, covering and improving travel, and protecting players through policies like no-release or -trade clauses during pregnancy can make an enormous difference. Culvin believes even the non-tangible impact of this deal, such as its use as a reference in pitches, should not be underestimated.
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“The question for our unions and players who are members of those unions is what is the role of the unions and as custodians of the game to ensure that the revenue that’s generated is fairly distributed. You can obviously be micro and cherry-pick, saying this clause is amazing or this article is amazing. And then you can kind of be macro and ask, ‘What does this say to football as an industry?’” Culvin said.
Megan Rapinoe used her position in the US women’s football national team to push for better pay and better working conditions as a professional playerImage: Evan Vucci/AP Photo/picture alliance
What happens next?
Billie Jean King, Flor Isava-Fonseca, the Williams sisters, Allyson Felix, Simone Biles, Kathrine Switzer, Megan Rapinoe the list of people who have changed women’s sports is storied. Each one has moved the needle, and reminded the next generation of what has been done before.
“You’ve got a responsibility to ensure that you maximize that opportunity and push for everything that you’re worth,” Culvin said.
Sotiriadou sees other sports, such as women’s tennis, golf and emerging rugby competitions as possible benefactors of the deal.
“In each case, the WNBA deal now stands as the benchmark: proof that a professional women’s league, at commercial scale, can sustain a revenue-linked pay model,” Sotiriadou said.
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For Culvin and FIFPRO, it’s all about creating the conditions to capitalize on the growing wave of momentum in women’s football.
Perhaps most tellingly of all, though, is what this deal tells us. This is certainly about women’s sport being good and smart business, but it is also about the message. The women of the WNBA recognized their value, organized themselves and worked tirelessly to seize on long-developed momentum to get paid what they deserved. The deal is bound to change their sport forever. It will likely be remembered as a watershed moment in all of women’s sports, many of which will be asking the same questions as Culvin.
“It’s about lighting that spark a little bit more,” she said. “We’re here. What got us here won’t get us there. Where do we want to go to next?”
There will be 48 teams at the 2026 World Cup, and travel distances will vary depending on group location and knockout pathways.
While Fifa has regionalised some group-stage fixtures to limit coast-to-coast journeys, deep runs into the knockout rounds are likely to generate travel distances well beyond 12,000 miles for some fanbases.
The biggest group-stage travel burden will fall on the Uefa play-off qualifier in Group B, which could be Wales or Northern Ireland. Fans travelling to all three group games – in Toronto, Inglewood and Seattle – face clocking up more than 3,140 miles.
When return flights from the competing country are included, South Africafans face the largest travel burden – both for the group stage and an admittedly unlikely run to the final:
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Group stage – at least 21,090 miles
Win group, reach final – at least 22,764 miles
Runner-up route, reach final – at least 26,834 miles
The associated emissions for those flights are 4.7 tonnes CO2e per fan for the group stage, rising to as much as 5.9 tonnes CO2e per fan in the group-runner-up-to-final scenario.
The average South African’s expected CO2 emission for a whole year is 5.8 tonnes CO2e, according to the International Energy Agency.
The seeded team with the greatest projected travel burden for fans is Germany:
Win group, reach final – at least 17,935 miles (3.2 tonnes CO2e)
Runner-up route, reach final – at least 19,770 miles (3.5 tonnes CO2e)
At the other end of the scale, France’s group travel – excluding international flights – is estimated at just 370 miles,and train travel is possible between two of their host cities.
Tiger Woods says he is “trying to play” in next month’s Masters after returning to action for the first time in more than a year as his team lost in the final round of the TGL season.
The 50-year-old, who has had a series of operations in the last two years, had been sidelined since having an operation in October to replace a disc in his back.
Woods’ previous appearance was also in TGL – an indoor team league his company co-founded – in February 2025.
His Jupiter Links team lost 9-2 against Los Angeles Golf Club in his return to competitive action.
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The 15-time major-winner looked in good physical shape as he hit a couple of drives more than 300 yards and he said playing in the Masters will depend on how his body recovers.
The tournament, which Woods has won five times, begins on 9 April at Augusta National.
“I’ve been trying, this body doesn’t recover like it did when I was 24, 25,” said Woods.
“It doesn’t mean I’m not trying; I’ve been trying for a while. I’ve had a couple of bad injuries last year that I’ve had to fight through and has taken some time. I keep trying – I want to play.
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“I’ve loved the Masters tournament, I’ve loved being there since I was 19 years old, so it’s meant a lot to me and my family over the years and I’m going to be there either way.”
Woods has held a non-playing role with Jupiter Links GC throughout the 2026 TGL season, the PGA Tour-backed league that uses a huge screen in a purpose-built venue in Florida.
Woods’ side beat Rory McIlroy’s Boston Common in last week’s semi-final to set up a meeting with Los Angeles in the best-of-three final.
Los Angeles, featuring England’s Justin Rose and Tommy Fleetwood, won the opening match, before Woods replaced Kevin Kisner for Tuesday’s season finale.
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Jupiter Links, which also has Max Homa and Tom Kim in the team, went 2-0 up in the second game of the finals but Woods missed a three-foot putt on the seventh hole and the momentum switched to Los Angeles.
They made three eagles in a row before Jupiter conceded the match and the tournament on the 10th hole.
“It was fine physically,” added Woods.
“We got our ass kicked at the end. Three eagles in a row, we didn’t respond. I missed a short one to kind of get it started and give them momentum and we never got it back.”
Mar 24, 2026; Phoenix, Arizona, USA; Denver Nuggets center Nikola Jokic (15) reacts against the Phoenix Suns in the second half at Mortgage Matchup Center. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images
Nikola Jokic scored 23 points in his second consecutive triple-double, and his jumper with 11.5 seconds remaining broke a tie and pushed the Denver Nuggets to a 125-123 victory over the host Phoenix Suns on Tuesday.
Jokic added 17 rebounds and tied a season high with 17 assists for his 29th triple-double of the season. He reached the plateau 11 seconds into the second half, when his 10th assist set up Aaron Gordon’s dunk.
Jamal Murray scored 11 of his 21 points in the fourth quarter as the Nuggets (45-28) ran their winning streak to three games.
Devin Booker amassed 22 points and eight assists while Jalen Green and Grayson Allen scored 21 apiece for the Suns (40-33), who have lost six of seven.
Hornets 134, Kings 90
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Charlotte matched a franchise record by making 26 3-pointers, including Coby White’s 6-for-8 performance off the bench, and the red-hot Hornets blasted visiting Sacramento.
The Hornets earned its fourth consecutive win — all of which have come by double digits — and their 12th victory in the past 15 games behind its long-range barrage. White, who led all scorers with 27 points, was one of eight Hornets to hit at least one 3-pointer. Seven made multiple triples, including LaMelo Ball, who went 6 of 13 from deep on his way to 20 points.
Sacramento, opening a five-game Eastern Conference road swing, took their third loss in four games. The 90 points equaled the Kings’ second-lowest performance of the season. Daeqwon Plowden scored a team-high 22 points.
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Cavaliers 136, Magic 131
Donovan Mitchell scored 16 of his 42 points in the third quarter and James Harden added 26 points and seven assists, lifting Cleveland to a victory over visiting Orlando.
Evan Mobley made all eight of his field-goal attempts and finished with 19 points, nine rebounds and six assists for the Cavaliers, who have won four consecutive games.
Paolo Banchero had 36 points, going 13-for-15 from the foul line, and Tristan da Silva scored 10 of his 18 points in the fourth quarter for the Magic. Orlando lost its sixth in a row — immediately after winning seven straight — to fall into a tie for eighth in the East.
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Knicks 121, Pelicans 116
Jalen Brunson scored 32 points, Karl-Anthony Towns produced a double-double and New York won its seventh consecutive game, defeating visiting New Orleans.
Towns finished with 21 points and 14 rebounds for the Knicks, and OG Anunoby also scored 21 points.
Zion Williamson scored 22, Jeremiah Fears put up 21 and Saddiq Bey had 18 for the Pelicans, who have lost two in a row after a 5-1 run.
Moses Itauma v Jermaine Franklin, Deontay Wilder v Derek Chisora and Fabio Wardley v Daniel Dubois will all be broadcast live on BBC Radio 5 Live and BBC Sounds.
Itauma’s fight with Franklin on Saturday in Manchester will kick off the heavyweight streak on BBC Radio 5 Live.
The American has just two defeats on his record – to Dillian Whyte and Anthony Joshua – and comes into the contest off the back of a big upset win over Ivan Dychko in September.
Wilder v Chisora at the O2 Arena is part of a packed weekend of boxing action on the BBC, with Lauren Price defending her welterweight world titles against Stephanie Pineiro in Wales on BBC Two and BBC iPlayer.
The main events for both fight nights will not clash, and you will be able to follow all the action from both events on the BBC Sport website and app.
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Wilder and Chisora are both fighting in their 50th bout and, despite promising to retire before, Chisora has insisted he will hang up his gloves whether he wins or loses.
Wardley and Dubois bring an all-British world title fight to Manchester’s Co-op Live arena.
Londoner Dubois is aiming to become a two-time heavyweight world champion while Ipswich’s Wardley remains unbeaten in 21 bouts.
Americain dominated both races in 2010, Dunaden lined up in the Prix Kergorlay in 2011 before conquering the Melbourne Cup.
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Protectionist, trained in Germany, followed suit by winning the pair in 2014.
Victoria Racing Club Chief Executive Kylie Rogers highlighted the France Galop tie-up as a nod to two of racing’s greatest countries.
“France has a storied history and connection with the Melbourne Cup, and we are delighted to formalise our partnership with France Galop by introducing the Prix Kergorlay as a Golden Ticket race,” Rogers said in a statement.
“The Melbourne Cup attracts the best stayers from across the world, and this new partnership both incentivises and ensures that the strongest international contenders are competing on the first Tuesday in November.
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“We look forward to building on this partnership and the long-shared bond between our two racing nations.”
Saturday’s Flemington card launches the quest for Melbourne Cup berths, with the Roy Higgins (2600m) providing exemption to its champion.
Michael Carrick has lost just one of his 10 games in charge at Man Utd and there is a reason he is now the odds-on favourite to get the job permanently.
What started out in January as a long list of potential Manchester United head coaches for next season should have shrunk considerably over the previous three months, thanks to the man currently sitting in the hot seat.
Michael Carrick’s run of 23 points from a possible 30, with just one defeat in his 10 games in charge, has significantly strengthened his own candidacy to the extent that it should have ruled plenty of others out.
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When Carrick was handed the reins until the end of the season just over two months ago, there were numerous potential targets and several current Premier League bosses in the frame.
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Now, it feels like Carrick has seen off those potential challengers. Oliver Glasner remains second or third favourite with most bookmakers, but his time at Crystal Palace isn’t ending particularly positively. He has already been beaten by Carrick, and his back-three system is an obvious sticking point.
So impressive has Carrick’s reign been, featuring wins over potential rivals for the job in Glasner, Marco Silva and Unai Emery and a draw with Andoni Iraola, that it’s difficult to see the sense in promoting someone from a mid-ranking Premier League club now.
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Thomas Frank’s experiences at Tottenham show how difficult it is to make the leap from an upwardly mobile but ultimately under-the-radar club to one of the league’s supposed elite. At least Carrick has shown he can deal with the Old Trafford pressures, has the players on his side and can get results.
That counts for an awful lot when there are so many unknowns about other potential candidates, such as Glasner and Iraola, or even Gareth Southgate, who somehow still features highly in the betting.
Carrick has stabilised United and has them on course for a return to the Champions League. His approach to the job has delivered a sense of calm to Old Trafford that has been absent for an awful long time and that will count for a lot among the club’s executives.
Old Trafford insiders continue to insist that the process to recruit a new head coach will be a thorough one and that there is no rush to make a decision. Although United have only seven games remaining, there is plenty of time left in the season and there isn’t likely to be an early coronation of the kind bestowed on Ole Gunnar Solskjaer seven years ago.
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United have been impressed with the work Carrick has done. While there is no guarantee he will get the job, it now feels like it’s either Carrick or one of the very few elite managers the club might be able to attract to Old Trafford.
Top of that list will be Luis Enrique, the Paris St-Germain boss who has a glittering CV and an attractive style of play. He has previously expressed an interest in working in the Premier League and speaks excellent English. The question is whether the rebuilding project at United would be attractive enough to Enrique, whose PSG side look to be coming to the boil at the perfect time again this season.
Another ‘elite-level’ contender is Julian Nagelsmann. He is leading Germany into the World Cup this summer and has a contract with the German Football Association that runs until 2028, which would make it a difficult appointment, but he has a long-standing relationship with the director of recruitment, Christopher Vivell, and experience managing a super club in Bayern Munich.
For many, the choice of head coach is now down to these three. There could be more twists and turns to come, but with every passing week, Carrick is doing his bit to rule others out.
Mar 24, 2026; Salt Lake City, Utah, USA; Edmonton Oilers center Connor McDavid (97) celebrates a goal against the Utah Mammoth during the second period at Delta Center. Mandatory Credit: Rob Gray-Imagn Images
Connor McDavid scored his 400th and 401st career goals, the first of which gave the Edmonton Oilers the lead for good in a 5-2 win against the Utah Mammoth on Tuesday in Salt Lake City.
Eight seconds after Utah’s Lawson Crouse tied the game 2-2 at 11:59 of the second period, McDavid caught a break on a 2-on-1 and put the puck off the crossbar and in to put the Oilers back on top.
Jack Roslovic also scored twice and Evan Bouchard had three assists for the Oilers (35-28-9, 79 points), who had lost two consecutive games but passed the Vegas Golden Knights for second place in the Pacific Division. Matt Savoie added a goal, and Tristan Jarry made 16 saves.
Alexander Kerfoot scored for the Mammoth (37-29-6, 80 points), who had won three of their previous four games. They still hold the first Western Conference wild-card spot. Vitek Vanecek stopped all 10 shots he faced in relief of Karel Vejmelka, who allowed four goals on 15 shots over the first two periods.
Kerfoot put Utah ahead 1-0 at 11:12 of the first period. Sean Durzi set Kerfoot up with a no-look drop pass, and the center’s snap shot deflected off of Edmonton defenseman Connor Murphy before it coasted over Jarry’s shoulder.
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Roslovic tied it 1-1 at 14:27 of the first when Jake Walman set him up on the rush for a wrist shot that went in off the bar. The Oilers outshot the Mammoth 8-3 in the opening frame.
Edmonton grabbed its first lead at 11:24 of the second period. The Oilers were on the penalty kill when Bouchard set Savoie up for a short-handed goal.
Crouse responded to tie the game at 35 seconds later. He received Michael Carcone’s pass off the boards before the power play expired to make it 2-2.
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Following McDavid’s goal, Roslovic extended the lead to 4-2 at 15:04 of the middle frame. Zach Hyman’s shot ricocheted off the post, and Roslovic collected the puck to score on the rebound.
McDavid scored into an empty net with eight seconds left in the third period.
Tulsa and New Mexico both advanced to the NIT semifinals with victories Tuesday and will face each other on April 2 at Hinkle Fieldhouse.
No. 1 seed Tulsa advanced with an 83-79 win over Wichita State behind a standout performance from guard Tylen Riley. He finished with 21 points, six rebounds and six assists in the win over the Shockers.
No. 1 seed New Mexico moved on to the semifinals after defeating Saint Joseph’s 84-69 behind 27 points from Tomislav Bulijan.
Wednesday will see the other side of the bracket get filled out. No. 1 seed Auburn hosts No. 2 seed Nevada, while No. 2 seed Dayton will face No. 4 seed Illinois State. Auburn, the only remaining high-major team in the field, has never reached the semifinals of the NIT. The Tigers’ last appearance in the NIT came in 2009, when they lost to Baylor in the quarterfinals.
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Only four power conference teams are competing in the NIT this year: Auburn, Cal, Wake Forest and Oklahoma State. Multiple programs — such as Seton Hall, Virginia Tech, Belmont and San Diego State — declined an invitation to the NIT after missing out on the NCAA Tournament.
Here is a look at the full bracket.
2026 NIT schedule
Games in the first three rounds to be played at the higher-seeded team’s home arena. All times ET
Feb 6, 2026; San Francisco, CA, USA; Kirk Cousins on the Opening Drive show at the SiriusXM NFL radio set at the Super Bowl LX media center at the Moscone Center. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-Imagn Images.
The Pittsburgh Steelers are unofficially being held hostage by Aaron Rodgers’s gruesomely unpunctual decision-making, and if Rodgers ultimately decides to retire, Kirk Cousins could be the Steelers’ fallback plan.
Pittsburgh may need a contingency plan, and Cousins is firmly in the conversation.
That’s the word recently from NFL insider Jason La Canfora, who claimed that Cousins is Pittsburgh’s current insurance policy.
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The Steelers Continue Weighing Cousins as a Backup Plan
Cousins could start after all in 2026.
Atlanta Falcons quarterback Kirk Cousins (18) walks off following a tough road loss, with frustration visible as Denver controlled the game late at Empower Field at Mile High, Nov 17, 2024, in Denver, Colorado, USA. Cousins and the Falcons struggled to find consistency against a disciplined Broncos defense throughout the contest. Mandatory Credit: Ron Chenoy-Imagn Images.
La Canfora: Steelers Keeping an Eye on Cousins
In article explaining that Cousins may not find a new team until after the NFL draft, La Canfora mentioned, “While several GMs told me they believe the Falcons would have been far better off keeping Cousins as their starter for this season, Atlanta did not attempt to bring him back, the sources said, and at this point it might make the most sense for him to wait until inevitable injuries occur, rather than make a decision now.”
“Cousins is not going to be signing anywhere for the veteran minimum, and there are fewer options available to him now. Pittsburgh is monitoring Cousins and view him as a viable alternative if Aaron Rodgers opts to retire.”
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If not Cousins as the contingency plan, the Steelers are down to Joe Flacco, Russell Wilson, and Jimmy Garoppolo from free agency, in addition to their incumbent second-year passer, Will Howard.
Rodgers’s Cringeworthy Delay
Before the 2025 regular season began, reporters naturally asked Rodgers if the campaign was his final, and he hinted affirmatively. The first year in Pittsburgh lined up as his final season in the pros, per his lips.
Then, after the Steelers lost in Round 1 of the postseason, he told the media that he wouldn’t make a rushed decision about his future, waiting for the raw emotion to burn off before locking in his return or retirement. That was 2.5 months ago.
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Fast forward to late March, and Rodgers continues to lollygag, refusing to notify the public of his plans, despite fearlessness over appearing on national programming like ESPN’s The Pat McAfee Show. It’s also worth noting that Rodgers and his predecessor for the Green Bay Packers, Brett Favre, are the only two NFLers to do this — get to the offseason for multiple years during their career twilight and then just have everyone guess about what they might do.
It’s utterly bizarre.
Raiders as a Bridge Spot for Kirk
On Cousins, suppose Rodgers returns, postponing retirement and guaranteeing the 2027 offseason brings another “Will he or won’t he?” regarding retirement. Cousins would look for a new landing spot, and the Las Vegas Raiders might make sense if probable first overall pick Fernando Mendoza isn’t quite ready to start Week 1.
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Atlanta Falcons quarterback Kirk Cousins (18) takes the field during pregame introductions, returning to a familiar venue as fans looked on ahead of kickoff at U.S. Bank Stadium, Dec 8, 2024, in Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA. Cousins faced his former team in a matchup that carried added attention across both sidelines. Mandatory Credit: Jeffrey Becker-Imagn Images.
La Canfora noted on Vegas an option for Cousins, “Las Vegas is still looking for a more established quarterback to buy them time if they need it, if presumptive first-overall pick Fernando Mendoza is not ready to start Week 1.”
The Raiders’ new skipper is Klint Kubiak, and he crossed paths with Cousins in Minnesota. The only quarterback — at all — on Las Vegas’s roster at this very moment is Aidan O’Connell. The Raiders traded Geno Smith to the New York Jets. Some teams, like the Vikings, have four quarterbacks in March. The Raiders have one.
The Other Teams?
If it’s not the Steelers or Raiders, Cousins might be down this list of destinations:
Arizona Cardinals
Cleveland Browns
Indianapolis Colts
San Francisco 49ers
The Cardinals have Jacoby Brissett and Gardner Minshew ready to do battle for the QB1 job this summer — not an ideal combo unless a team is outwardly tanking. The Browns have three quarterbacks — which means they could have none in a practical sense — in Shedeur Sanders, Deshaun Watson, and Dillon Gabriel.
Colts quarterback and former Viking Daniel Jones is recovering from a busted Achilles, and Indianapolis may trade Anthony Richardson to a team like the Green Bay Packers. The San Francisco 49ers? Why not trade Mac Jones to a team like the Arizona Cardinals for a 2nd-Rounder and sign Cousins for cheap as the QB2?
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Minnesota Vikings quarterback Kirk Cousins greets attendees and poses for photos during a community event that brought together local athletes and fans, highlighting his connection to the region, May 11, 2019, at the Sanford Pentagon in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, USA. The Argus Leader Sports Awards ceremony featured prominent figures from across the state. Mandatory Credit: Michael G. Brown-Argus Leader.
La Canfora on the 49ers and Los Angeles Rams as landing spots for Cousins: “Several executives have noted Cousins’s past ties to head coach Kyle Shanahan (San Francisco) and Sean McVay (Los Angeles Rams), and believe Cousins could be a welcome addition as a back-up there (or perhaps with Andy Reid in Kansas City), but at this point it seems unlikely Cousins would go that route without exhausting any opportunity to start.”
Cousins will turn 38 in August and ranked as the NFL’s 10th-worst quarterback last season per EPA/Play.
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