With the Mumbai Indians enduring a disappointing IPL 2026 campaign, former India all-rounder Ravichandran Ashwin has come to the defence of captain Hardik Pandya, stating that the team’s poor performances should not be pinned on him alone. MI, who have won just four of their 12 matches this season, were the second team to be eliminated from playoff contention, with their captain struggling with form and injury. “I wouldn’t review his captaincy this year at all. Honestly, when you have seasons like this, to pin the blame on the captain is quite unfair. Nobody has turned up. The team has failed to turn up and for Hardik to take the blame on himself is… you’re asking him to do a little too much,” Ashwin told ESPNcricinfo.
Ashwin highlighted the context of Pandya’s return to MI in 2024 after a successful stint with the Gujarat Titans, where he led the franchise to a title and a runners-up finish.
“He was there at Gujarat Titans. Had two fabulous seasons (one title and one runners-up finish). So clearly, as a leader, he did something right there. And when he returned to Mumbai Indians, he had to deal with quite a bit. It’s not easy to replace an incumbent Indian captain, white-ball captain, such as Rohit Sharma. Five (six) titles in the IPL. He’s won a T20 World Cup. And Hardik comes and replaces him. You’ve got a lot of fandom going around in the country. You should have a thick skin to survive the social media these days,” Ashwin added.
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Ashwin also stressed that captaincy is not solely responsible for a team’s failures as he said, “I wouldn’t judge his captaincy much because the bowling has also leaked (runs in) every direction. Every single time an over is bowled for six or seven runs, in comes a 15-run over. So what do you do as a captain? And sure, he’s made some calls that have been debatable. (But) captaincy is the result of how your team is making you look. So which is why I believe when you have a good season, don’t give too much credit to a captain. When you have a bad season, don’t pin it on him. And similar with the coach; the coach sends the players out. So you can’t blame him too much.”
This season, Pandya’s struggles have been stark. Since returning to MI as captain in 2024, he has yet to win a trophy for the franchise. In IPL 2026, he scored just 146 runs from eight innings at a strike rate of 136.44, with a best of 40, and took only four wickets at an economy of 11.90.
Beyond leadership, Ashwin expressed concern about Pandya’s batting, noting unusual timing issues, stating, “With his (Hardik’s) batting, I found something quite interesting and strange, which is how late he’s been on the ball. Is he going through something physically? We wouldn’t be able to know that if there is something, then maybe that physical aspect will bring him back. And if he gets better, he’ll come back to it. But he’s been late on the hard-length deliveries.”
“He’s not someone who’s going to miss hard-length deliveries. He hits it 15 rows back. That’s a bit of a concern for me, whether he’s suffering something physically from a back issue or hands, or does he have a tennis elbow? Is his bat heavier (than it should be)? Does he need to recalibrate that? Those are things that I would want to know,” he added.
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The team has also struggled collectively, with other stars like Suryakumar Yadav and Jasprit Bumrah having similarly modest campaigns. Pandya has additionally been sidelined due to a reported back issue, missing three games, with Suryakumar and Bumrah stepping in as stand-in captains. Despite the struggles, Ashwin reaffirmed Pandya’s value.
“Hardik is a once-in-a-generation player. You don’t find such players. And if India finds itself in a certain T20 mastery now, Hardik’s been a linchpin in that. And to me, Hardik, the player, you can have a bad season. It’s digestible for me. Especially after you had a (T20) World Cup like that. Hardik likes a bit of space. He kind of stays in his own zone. So the only thing I’d be worried about is how late he’s been on the ball when he’s batting. Apart from that, it’s okay. I wouldn’t judge any of the other aspects of his game,” the former India spinner mentioned.
(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)
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Tushar Deshpande’s Brilliant Final Act Ensures Thrilling Win For RR Over Gujarat Titans
Dec 11, 2022; Detroit, Michigan, USA; Detroit Lions fans dressed up in a Christmas theme during the first quarter of a game against the Minnesota Vikings at Ford Field. Mandatory Credit: David Reginek-Imagn Images.
Left untouched, the Vikings’ roster is going to see a ton of talent venture into next year’s free agency, creating perfect conditions to welcome a boatload comp picks (maximum = four).
Indeed, a lot of the in-house talents are working with just a single year left on their deals. That’s not to say that things aren’t going to change for some of these guys. Making a final call on the new GM will presumably be what precedes some of the contract decisions that have yet to be made. Agreeing to longer contracts with some of these players will still involve a future where Minnesota could be adding a good cluster of picks.
The Vikings’ Comp Picks Tidal Wave
Begin with some very basic rules to govern the conversation. Anyone looking to go more in-depth on the mystery of comp picks can check out Over the Cap, especially Nick Korte.
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A basic understanding of comp picks means recognizing that a team that loses pricey veterans in free agency without bringing in a proportionally expensive incoming free agent is set to earn a draft pick. When Minnesota lost Sam Darnold on a deal for $33.5 million annually without bringing in someone of a similar price range, the Vikings earned that 3rd (the pick used on o-lineman Caleb Tiernan).
A variety of factors can complicate that too-simple math. Cutting a player, for instance, doesn’t mean a team gets a new candidate to generate a comp pick. What needs to occur is a team seeing a veteran get to the end of his deal before departing due to free agency. The NFL moves in afterwards to compensate the team that lost the pricey veteran by kicking over a draft pick.
Minnesota Vikings linebacker Blake Cashman (51) and offensive tackle Brian O’Neill (75) walk onto the field before a divisional matchup against the Green Bay Packers at Lambeau Field in Green Bay, Wisconsin, on Nov. 23, 2025. The veteran leaders prepared for another NFC North showdown as Minnesota attempted to secure an important late-season road victory against Green Bay. Mandatory Credit: Jeff Hanisch-Imagn Images.
Korte’s current estimation has Minnesota moving toward adding a 6th for the 2027 NFL Draft due to losing Ryan Wright ($3.5 million per year) and Jalen Nailor ($11.7 million per year). Signing James Pierre ($4.25 million per year) cancels out that possible Wright comp pick, but Nailor’s beefy deal didn’t have an offsetting deal to cancel out the added draft selection.
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Jauan Jennings would have cancelled out that pick since his deal is reasonably meaty. Crucial, though, was the timing. Waiting until after the draft to sign Mr. Jennings means getting that projected 6th across the finish line, at least per the current outlook.
With all of that being said, consider players moving into a final contract year who could plausibly make enough on the open market to generate a comp pick:
OL Blake Brandel
LB Blake Cashman
WR Jauan Jennings
RB Aaron Jones
RB Jordan Mason
QB Kyler Murray
RT Brian O’Neill
LB Ivan Pace
CB Isaiah Rodgers
OT Ryan Van Demark
EDGE Andrew Van Ginkel
S Jay Ward
Consider a 2027 where the cutoff for comp picks sits at an average of $5 million. How many of the above-listed players will demand contracts meaty enough to get a comp pick on the board? The 2028 NFL Draft — an event that’s genuinely not that far off — could see two, three, or four picks added due to some of these guys going elsewhere.
Nov 13, 2022; Orchard Park, New York, USA; Minnesota Vikings full back C.J. Ham (30) reacts to scoring a touchdown along with Minnesota Vikings tackle Brian O’Neill (75) during the second half against the Buffalo Bills at Highmark Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Gregory Fisher-USA TODAY Sports.
The new GM, whoever that person ends up being, could opt to extend all of Brian O’Neill, Andrew Van Ginkel, Jay Ward, and maybe two or three others. Even that scenario, though, means seeing somewhere around a half dozen veterans who could be pricey enough to generate a comp pick.
Of course, the Vikings will probably be more frisky in next year’s free agency period since the current outlook has Minnesota at $56 million in cap space, albeit with only 42 contracts under consideration. Even bringing that open room down in the $30 to $40 million range will be more than enough to bring in some external talent, especially since next year’s cap saving moves haven’t yet taken place.
A tricky balance, to be sure, as Minnesota looks to thread the needle on veteran talent and assets to acquire young talent.
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The Minnesota Vikings have worked through rookie minicamp. Next up are OTAs alongside mandatory minicamp. A summer break will take place before training camp gets rolling in late-July. After the GM mystery gets solved, some players will be extended ahead of being able to generate comp picks in March of 2027.
If/when these deals get done, consider who remains and what sort of possibilities the Vikings are working toward.
However, the 27-year-old will be on the plane to North America as part of a glittering French forward line, also featuring Ballon d’Or holder Ousmane Dembélé and Desiré Doué of Paris Saint-Germain and Bayern Munich winger Michael Olise.
Rayan Cherki will make his World Cup debut. The 22-year-old playmaker has enjoyed a sparkling debut season at Manchester City, while his Premier League rival William Saliba of Arsenal will provide defensive solidity for Les Bleus.
Full-back Lucas Hernandez and midfield dynamo N’Golo Kante are, alongside Mbappe and Dembele, the only survivors from Deschamps’ World Cup-winning squad from eight years ago in Russia.
Goalkeepers: Mike Maignan (AC Milan/ITA), Robin Risser (Lens), Brice Samba (Rennes)
Defenders: Lucas Digne (Aston Villa/ENG), Malo Gusto (Chelsea/ENG), Lucas Hernandez (Paris Saint-Germain), Theo Hernandez (Al Hilal/KSA), Ibrahima Konate (Liverpool/ENG), Maxence Lacroix (Crystal Palace/ENG), Jules Kounde (Barcelona/ESP), William Saliba (Arsenal/ENG), Dayot Upamecano (Bayern Munich/GER)
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Midfielders: N’Golo Kante (Fenerbahce/TUR), Manu Kone (Roma/ITA), Adrien Rabiot (AC Milan/ITA), Aurelien Tchouameni (Real Madrid/ESP), Warren Zaire-Emery (PSG)
If you happen to be piling up club championships and your Handicap Index is in the low single digits, there’s little doubt you are an uber-talented golfer. But what about the rest of the golfing public? At what point are you considered a “good” golfer? A Handicap Index adds some context, although the answer remains subjective.
For a sport so maddeningly difficult to master, what does an amateur golfer have to shoot to be considered “good” at golf?
That was the question CBS Golf’s Colt Knost — who is also one-half of GOLF’s Subpar podcast duo — posed to some of the sport’s best players at this week’s PGA Championship at Aronimink Golf Club. And if you needed any sort of evidence of just how compelling (or controversial) this topic is, the video has already been viewed more than 4 million times in less than 24 hours on CBS Golf’s Instagram page.
As you can imagine, the answers to the burning question were not universal.
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“I think if you can shoot in the 80s I feel like you’re a serviceable golfer,” said World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler.
“If you are shooting 85 or under, I think you are pretty good at golf,” said Xander Schauffele.
World No. 3 Cameron Young had a slightly higher bar to clear.
“I feel like anyone that shoots around 80 is realistically pretty good at golf,” he said.
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Meanwhile, two European Ryder Cup teammates have much higher standards. Justin Rose and Rory McIlroy both said you have to break 80 to be considered a good player. Their Ryder Cup captain, however, allowed for a little more grace.
“I would say break 90,” said Luke Donald.
Collin Morikawa wouldn’t offer a number, but he did have more context to add than anyone else.
“I don’t think there’s a number, but I think you have to be able to finish out every hole without like picking up a 2-footer,” he said. “But to be good at golf, not make a double bogey.”
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Pressed for a number, Morikawa still didn’t budge.
“There’s no score, just without a double bogey,” he said. “You can shoot 90, that’s 18 over, but all bogeys.”
We can also turn to our friends at the USGA for help answering this question. Last year, 3.68 million golfers in the United States alone kept a handicap and posted a domestic record of 82 million rounds. Only 2 percent of those male golfers were scratch, and less than 1 percent of females were scratch.
But we already know scratch golfers are considered good.
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The average handicap, however, was 14.0 for male golfers and 28.8 for females. The USGA also broke down the percentage of golfers in each handicap range, and the largest for men (26.48 percent) was in the 10-14.9 handicap range. According to their data, 29.81 percent of the men who kept a handicap last year were single-digit players.
So, what do you consider “good” at golf? That answer remains as subjective as ever. But if you happen to be asking this author — he agrees with the European Ryder Cup skipper.
Kylian Mbappé has reportedly created fresh tension at Real Madrid after claiming interim coach Álvaro Arbeloa reduced his importance in the squad.
The French forward spoke after Madrid’s 2-0 win against Real Oviedo, a game that did little to calm the growing frustration between the player and sections of the club’s supporters.
Mbappé came on from the bench and provided an assist for Jude Bellingham’s goal, but he was still greeted with loud boos from some fans inside the Santiago Bernabéu.
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The reaction from supporters comes after reports of an online petition calling for the striker to leave the club following Madrid’s recent struggles, including their 2-0 defeat to FC Barcelona that confirmed the La Liga title for their rivals.
After the match, Mbappé questioned why he was left out of the starting line-up and suggested that his place in the team had dropped.
“I was ready to start but Arbeloa told me I am the fourth striker now,” Mbappé said.
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“It’s okay, we have to accept the coach’s decision. I will continue to work harder. I am fully fit and ready to play. Why I didn’t start? Ask the manager.”
However, Arbeloa quickly rejected the claims and insisted he never told the player he was fourth-choice in attack.
“It never happened that I told Mbappé he’s our fourth striker,” the Madrid coach said.
“Maybe he misunderstood. I have never said that.”
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The disagreement has added more pressure around the club as Madrid prepare for changes after missing out on the league title.
Apr 13, 2025; Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA; Milwaukee Bucks forward Giannis Antetokounmpo (34) and his brother Milwaukee Bucks forward Thanasis Antetokounmpo talks during a time out against the Detroit Pistons in the second half at Fiserv Forum. Mandatory Credit: Michael McLoone-Imagn Images
Myles Turner was unaccustomed to the lack of discipline and accountability he experienced in his first season with the Milwaukee Bucks.
Turner said on the “Game Recognize Game” podcast that now-former Bucks coach Doc Rivers refused to fine players for violations or tardiness, inspiring Giannis Antetokounmpo and others to “show up whenever he wants.”
Podcast co-host Breanna Stewart asked Turner to identify the player most likely to be late.
“Giannis. Giannis is going to show up whenever he wants, really,” Turner said. “I think that this kind of just came with the territory that — and once I saw it was going down, I was like, ‘Hey man, s—, more power to you. They ain’t going to fine you. S—, do what you do.’”
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The Bucks missed the playoffs for the first time in 10 years. Milwaukee finished 32-50 and informed Rivers last month he would not return. The franchise has weighed trading Antetokounmpo in what could be a dramatic overhaul this offseason. Ownership pointed to late June, prior to the NBA draft, as a deadline for determining whether the future of the franchise would include Antetokounmpo.
Taylor Jenkins was hired as head coach and Turner said he anticipates a different level of discipline will be part of the regime change.
Turner joined the Bucks in free agency last summer, signing a four-year, $108 million contract after a decade with the Indiana Pacers. He said punctuality was optional, and eventually he stopped monitoring the clock himself.
“Guys were an hour late to the plane,” Turner said. “It got to the point where I knew not to show up until an hour after they said the plane was taking off. It was crazy.”
Brittany Russell is the latest woman with a chance to etch her name into horse racing history.
Two weeks after Cherie DeVaux became the first woman to train a Kentucky Derby winner with Golden Tempo and after Jenna Antonucci won the 2023 Belmont with Arcangelo, Russell has the chance to complete the Triple Crown sweep of female trainers when she saddles Taj Mahal in the 151st running of the Preakness Stakes on Saturday.
“It would sort of feel probably a little fairytale-like,” Russell said. “Jena opened the door just a couple years ago with Arcangelo, and Cherie got it done in the Kentucky Derby. The fact that I feel like I have a live one in the Preakness here, look, there’s some pressure and I certainly hope we can do it, but it would mean an awful lot.”
Where the race is taking place and who will be aboard could make it mean even more. The Preakness is being run at Russell’s home track, Laurel Park, for the first time, and husband Sheldon is the jockey. They would be the first married couple, at least as trainer and jockey, to win a Triple Crown race.
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“The dream, the goal was always to get one that would take us to one of the big races, and he’s sort of taken us there,” Sheldon Russell told The Associated Press. “Just like a normal day, really.”
Most weekends, the Russells take their children to Laurel Park, which is just off I-95 between Baltimore and Washington, D.C., and six-year-old daughter Edy and four-year-old son Rye are expected to be in attendance.
They were a little younger when they went to the Breeders’ Cup at Del Mar in Southern California, in the fall of 2024 when Post Time, trained by their mother and ridden by their father, finished second in a world championship mile-long dirt race. It was a cross-country introduction to the sport.
“That was a big event for them,” Sheldon Russell said. “They didn’t really understand what we were doing there until we sort of got there. (This time) it’s not like we have to travel.”
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And, unlike the usual Maryland-based horses who go into the Preakness as long shots, Taj Mahal is right in the mix of contenders in the wide-open field of 14 that does not include Golden Tempo. He opened at odds of 5-1, just behind the morning line favourite Iron Honor.
Taj Mahal is unbeaten in three races, all at Laurel Park, including going wire to wire to win the Federico Tesio Stakes on April 18 by more than eight lengths.
“Immediately everybody started talking, just the way that horse won it,” Maryland Jockey Club president and CEO Bill Knauf said. “To have Brittany as our leading trainer for many years now here, she’s obviously one of the best in the country, and Sheldon has done an unbelievable job.”
Brittany Russell called it a dominant effort, and she hopes the home track advantage could be a major one. Her husband rides most of her horses, and that’s another relationship edge they have over everyone else as they watch replays together and discuss strategy.
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“Most of the time, it’s great,” Brittany said. “Now, look, does everything go to plan? Is everything always perfect? No, and it can be a little tricky. But at the end of the day, it’s horse racing and some things are out of our control. In this particular instance, I think it’s great. He knows the horse. He’s won on it three times. He knows the racetrack better than anybody. I think it’s a good thing.”
This is Brittany Russell’s first Preakness horse in her eighth year of training. It’s her husband’s fourth chance to ride in the middle leg of the Triple Crown after finishing fifth aboard Chase the Chaos in 2023, sixth aboard Excession in 2020 and 10th aboard Concealed Identity in 2011.
This is different, though Sheldon Russell said he has not pondered the big-picture ramifications. His thoughts keep coming back to the little things, like, “We have a chance.”
“I guess if it happened, it’s going to be something,” he said. “We both know that he has a decent chance of showing up on the big day.”
Chennai Super Kings (CSK) all-rounder Jamie Overton does not feature in the playing XI for the clash against the Lucknow Super Giants (LSG) at the Ekana Stadium, on Friday, May 15. The Englishman was recently ruled out of the Indian Premier League (IPL) 2026 season due to a thigh injury, with the franchise naming Dian Forrester as his replacement.
Jamie Overton had initially travelled to England for scans and assessment of his injury, but was soon ruled out of the remainder of the season altogether. He had played a crucial role in CSK’s resurgence, with his key overs in the middle phase of the innings.
CSK captain Ruturaj Gaikwad confirmed that Jamie Overton is not in the matchday squad, while naming Australian pacer Spencer Johnson as his replacement at the toss.
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“It is tough, you need to keep changing a lot, but it something which we cannot control but also gives an opportunity to the players, Urvil coming in, Mukesh coming in, it helps them grow, and whenever we have a good squad, we deliver. It has been a must-win for a while now, and we want to take it one game at a time. We have a couple of changes – Spencer Johnson makes his debut, and Gurjapneet comes in for Akeal,” the skipper said after being put into bat first.
Chennai Super Kings (Playing XI): Sanju Samson(w), Ruturaj Gaikwad(c), Urvil Patel, Kartik Sharma, Dewald Brevis, Shivam Dube, Prashant Veer, Anshul Kamboj, Noor Ahmad, Spencer Johnson, Mukesh Choudhary
Jamie Overton left a massive impact on CSK over the course of the IPL 2026 season
Jamie Overton was CSK’s second-highest wicket-taker of the season behind Anshul Kamboj. The right-arm pacer bagged 14 wickets at an average of 17.78 and an economy rate of 8.89, and was touted to play a massive role in the franchise’s run to the playoffs, and potentially beyond.
The all-rounder became the fifth CSK player to be ruled out for the season, after Nathan Ellis, Ayush Mhatre, Khaleel Ahmed, and Ramakrishna Ghosh.
A nine-game homestand that looked promising at the start ended in despair for Toronto FC.
TFC closed out its two-month residence at BMO Field last week with a 4-2 loss to Inter Miami, leaving the Canadian club winless in seven games across all competitions, with its last victory coming on April 4.
The extended home stretch didn’t go quite to plan for Toronto — just 11 out of a possible 27 points — and it won’t be back at BMO Field until mid-August with its next six contests coming on the road, starting with Saturday night’s affair vs. Charlotte FC at Bank of America Stadium. Next week, the Reds visit the Chicago Fire before MLS takes a month-and-a-half break for this summer’s FIFA World Cup.
Toronto (3-4-5) sits 10th in the Eastern Conference with 14 points, one spot and one point out of a playoff berth. Over the last four seasons, the ninth-place team in the East has averaged 44.5 points. To hit the 45-point mark in 2026, TFC would have to average 1.41 points per game over their last 22 matches of the season (or 31 of a possible 66 points). That’s a significant jump from the 1.17 points they have averaged through the first 12 matches of the campaign.
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A good start would be for Toronto to collect 12 points from this road swing — that would give it an average of 1.44 points per game. But that would require it to win four of its next six games (or three wins and three draws). What’s more, the team has just one win from three road games in 2026 and recorded a meagre three wins away from home last season.
“Not getting the points at home that we wanted means that we have to get the points elsewhere. So, it just amplifies the importance of every game after this. And obviously everyone would like to go into this World Cup break feeling good with a positive feeling. So, certainly, these [next] two games are really important for us,” second-year coach Robin Fraser said.
Fullback Kobe Franklin, who has two goals and a pair of assists over his last five MLS appearances, admitted there is “a bitter taste in a lot of the guys’ mouths” because the Reds left so many points on the table during their nine-game home stretch.
“I thought there were a lot of games where we played really well and showcased ourselves and should have got points. And there were also games where we fought back and got points when maybe we were staring at zero. So, it was kind of a roller coaster of a ride over the homestand,” Franklin said.
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He added: “Everyone knows where the standings are at, and points are vital, especially during this next stretch.”
Making matters worse for Toronto ahead of its crucial road swing is its ongoing injury crisis. No less than 10 players were ruled out last week vs. Miami due to injury, including forward Josh Sargent, who has sat out the last three games in all competitions and is questionable for Saturday’s visit to Charlotte.
Also ruled out for Toronto are midfielder Djordje Mihailovic, Canadian international Richie Laryea, fullbacks Matheus Pereira and Henry Wingo, and Chilean international Benjamin Kuscevic and fellow centre back Lazar Stefanovic, all of whom are expected to be out until July once the World Cup break is over.
As a result, Fraser has had to turn to his young depth players off the bench, such as Franklin and on-loan Colombian forward Emilio Aristizábal, who bagged a brace in the Miami loss. He’s even had to routinely call up players from TFC II, the club’s reserve team, just so that he can fill out a complete roster for matchdays.
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“It’s obviously not easy and it’s obviously not ideal, but I keep saying we have to get points, regardless of who we have. We believe in our youth and our inexperience and our bench. They’re all now playing all the time, and now we also have to rely on some of the second team players, and it’s definitely challenging, but I do think that every game is winnable if you do enough things right,” Fraser said.
Elsewhere in MLS this weekend…
• The Vancouver Whitecaps climbed into first place in the overall MLS table with a midweek win and will try to keep their momentum going when they visit the Houston Dynamo on Saturday. Vancouver (9-1-2) is unbeaten in its last seven games (five wins) while Sebastian Berhalter has been in an incredible run of form. The American midfielder has six goals this season (a career high) and seven assists — his 13 goal contributions rank him second overall in MLS, trailing only Lionel Messi (16).
• CF Montreal wraps up its three-game homestand on Saturday when it welcomes the Chicago Fire to Stade Saputo. Montreal (4-7-1) appears to have turned a corner since firing manager Marco Donadel after it started the season with six losses through its first seven matches. Under interim coach Philippe Eullaffroy, Montreal has won three of five games with one loss, including impressive wins over the New York Red Bulls and New York City FC.
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• Speaking of the two New York teams, the latest version of the Hudson River Derby takes place on Saturday when the Red Bulls host NYCFC. Red Bulls striker Julian Hall, 18, became the youngest player in league history to record a hat trick in Wednesday’s 3-2 home win over the Columbus Crew. Fellow teenagers Adri Mehmeti and Matthew Dos Santos have also impressed this season under first-year coach Michael Bradley.
• Lionel Messi attempts to keep his hot streak going when Inter Miami hosts the Portland Timbers on Sunday. Messi has scored in three consecutive matches with four goals and five assists over that stretch. Curiously, Miami is winless in its past four home matches (with three losses) since opening Nu Stadium, its new venue, last month.
Editor’s note
John Molinaro is one of the leading soccer journalists in Canada, having covered the game for over 27 years for several media outlets, including Sportsnet, CBC Sports and Sun Media. He is currently the editor-in-chief of TFC Republic, a website dedicated to in-depth coverage of Toronto FC and Canadian soccer.
The 2026 Preakness Stakes is expected to be a battle, with five horses listed at 6-1 or shorter in the Preakness Stake 2026 odds. The race is set for Saturday at Laurel Park in Laurel, Md., the first time the race won’t be held at Pimlico Race Course since 1908. Pimlico is being renovated, but the race is expected to be back in Baltimore next year. Iron Honor is the 9-2 morning-line favorite in the 2026 Preakness Stakes odds, followed closely by Taj Mahal (5-1), Chip Honcho (5-1), Incredibolt (5-1) and Ocelli (6-1).
Kentucky Derby winner Golden Tempo is skipping the 151st running of the Triple Crown’s second jewel, and only three horses that ran at Churchill Downs are in the field. Post time for the $2 million race is 6:50 p.m. ET. Other contenders in Preakness Stakes 2026 include Napoleon Solo (8-1), Great White (15-1), Pretty Boy Miah (15-1) and The Hell We Did (15-1). Before making any 2026 Preakness Stakes picks, be sure to see the 2026 Preakness Stakes predictions and best bets from SportsLine’s elite horse racing expert Gene Menez.
A former reporter and editor at Sports Illustrated, Menez covered an array of sports, including horse racing, for the magazine and its website for almost 14 years. Between 2010 and 2012, he served as SI’s handicapper for the Triple Crown races and correctly predicted Super Saver to win the Kentucky Derby in 2010.
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In 2015, while writing for Sports on Earth, Menez accurately gave out the Kentucky Derby superfecta (American Pharoah, Firing Line, Dortmund and Frosted), which paid $1,268.20 for $2. Then in 2017, he tweeted out his Kentucky Derby picks, including Always Dreaming to win, and hit the Pick 4, which paid almost $6,900 on a $1 bet. In 2024, Menez gave out 18-1 Mystik Dan as a live longshot in the Kentucky Derby. In last year’s Kentucky Derby, he hammered the exacta and trifecta for a $1,045 payout. Anyone who has followed his horse racing betting advice could be way up.
Now, Menez has handicapped the 2026 Preakness Stakes field and revealed his picks. Go here to see them.
Top 2026 Preakness Stakes predictions
One of Menez’s surprising 2026 Preakness Stakes picks: He is fading the favorite, Iron Honor. The horse won his first two starts, which came at 3/4 mile and 1 mile. But then he attempted the 1 1/8 mile distance at the Wood Memorial and had a disastrous finish, placing seventh. The Preakness will be even longer than the Wood Memorial, making it hard to feel confident about his chances versus an even stronger field.
While Iron Honor’s sire, Nyquist, won the 2016 Kentucky Derby, he didn’t fare as well at that year’s Preakness. Just like Iron Honor, Nyquist was the Preakness favorite but placed third, which ended his undefeated racing career after winning each of his first eight races. There are just too many red flags for Iron Honor to justify backing him with Preakness Stakes bets. See who to back at SportsLine.
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Another stunner: Menez is high on The Hell We Did, even though he is a longshot at 15-1. He has been training at Laurel Park for the past two weeks so he and his team can get a feel for the track. The Hell We Did finished second at the 2026 Lexington G3 at Keeneland his last time out. He has run at some lesser-known tracks but has never finished outside of the top two in four career starts.
Menez expects the son of 2020 Kentucky Derby winner Authentic and half-brother of 2024 Saudi Cup winner Senor Buscador to have a solid game plan Saturday. “He also should get the perfect trip behind the speed horses and in front of the late-running closers who are returning in two weeks,” Menez says. “And best of all, the price should be right.” The only question is the distance, but the horse racing expert says “this is a horse who’s moving in the right direction at the right time.” See which other horses to back at SportsLine.
Arizona Cardinals quarterback Kyler Murray (1) warms up near midfield following the national anthem before a road matchup against the Seattle Seahawks at CenturyLink Field in Seattle on Dec. 22, 2019. Murray prepared for the NFC West contest during his rookie campaign as Arizona closed out the regular season against a familiar division rival in primetime conditions. Mandatory Credit: Joe Nicholson-USA TODAY Sports.
It doesn’t quite have the flair of the NFL MVP award, but CBS Sports formally handed Minnesota Vikings quarterback Kyler Murray the best case to win Comeback Player of the Year this week.
Minnesota’s new quarterback has a clear path to national buzz if the Vikings rebound in 2026.
Murray missed 12 games last season before the Arizona Cardinals dropped him like a bad habit. Now, the speedy 28-year-old is in Minnesota to get back on track.
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A Strong Vikings Season Could Put Murray in Awards Talk
Arizona Cardinals quarterback Kyler Murray (1) goes through pregame warmups before facing the Seattle Seahawks at Lumen Field in Seattle on Nov. 24, 2024. Murray prepared for the NFC West road matchup as Arizona attempted to remain competitive late in the regular season against a familiar division rival in one of the league’s loudest stadium environments. Mandatory Credit: Joe Nicholson-Imagn Images.
Parker Loverich: Murray Has 50% Odds to win Comeback Player of the Year
Parker Loverich of SI.com sized up the NFL’s soon-to-be race for Comeback Player of the Year, and Murray led the way, in his estimation.
He explained, “Kyler Murray | 50% Chance. The ACL tear in late 2022 was serious, the kind of injury that takes a quarterback more than a full year to stop thinking about. Murray came back, got through the early awkwardness, and by 2025 was playing at a level that reminded people what he looked like before it happened.”
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“Unfortunately, last year in week 5 he suffered a season ending foot injury. After sitting out the rest of the season, Murray finds himself with a change of scenery in Minnesota. He has new weapons and a new home to try and revive his career. The market gives him 50%. The remaining half is split across a field that includes some genuinely strong cases.”
In addition to Murray and Mahomes, Micah Parsons (Green Bay Packers), Malik Nabers (New York Giants), and George Kittle (San Francisco 49ers) made the cut for Loverich.
The Case … Makes Sense
After stumbling to a 4-8 start in 2025, the Vikings somehow clawed their way back to a 9-8 finish. Just one more win — specifically, the Week 18 game against Green Bay when the Packers were resting starters — could have decisively altered the NFC North race.
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The most remarkable aspect of that turnaround was the quarterback play. The Vikings had the NFL’s fifth-worst quarterback production (by Dropback EPA) yet still finished above .500. The outcome was highly unusual; teams with such poor QB efficiency typically find themselves drafting in the top 10, firing their coaches, or both.
Despite this, Kevin O’Connell guided the Vikings to nine wins.
Arizona Cardinals quarterback Kyler Murray (1) stretches and warms up before a home matchup against the San Francisco 49ers at State Farm Stadium in Glendale, Arizona, on Dec. 17, 2023. Murray prepared for the divisional contest as the Cardinals hosted San Francisco during the final stretch of the regular season in the NFC West race. Mandatory Credit: Michael Chow-Arizona Republic.
Given the Vikings achieved nine wins with quarterback play ranked 28th in the league, their ceiling dramatically increases with Murray under center— provided he stays healthy and plays consistently. The team doesn’t require MVP-level football from him. Just solid, healthy quarterback play could easily propel this team to 11 or 12 wins.
In Arizona, Murray averaged roughly 4,000 passing yards, 600 rushing yards, and 30 cumulative touchdowns every 17 starts, so if he could do that on a poor franchise, generally speaking, he’ll have the opportunity to pop off further in Minnesota.
A nine-win team from the year prior, welcoming a usually productive Murray, indeed has all the makings for Comeback Player of the Year.
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Why Not MVP?
At the moment, he has +7500 odds to win the MVP award, wedged between Jaxson Dart (+7000, NYG) and Cam Ward (+8,000, TEN). Bleacher Report‘s Mo Moton even named Murray as one of his first-time winners who could tip the scales for the award in 2026 this week.
In 2024, when the Vikings employed Sam Darnold, he briefly nibbled at MVP consideration before his final two games went off the rails — in a bad away — as Minnesota finished the season with a 14-3 record. And when Darnold arrived in the Twin Cities, he was a punchline to jokes.
If Darnold could post MVP numbers in Minnesota, why not Murray? It’s not a likely outcome, but if Murray has a Comeback Player of the Year resume, that may also factor into the league’s MVP race.
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The Case for Mahomes
Loverich also named-dropped Mahomes as a Comeback Player of the Year candidate: “Kansas City went 6-11 in 2025 and missed the playoffs for the first time in 11 years. For a team accustomed to January football, that was a different kind of season. Mahomes had stretches where the sharpness was not there, the timing was off, and the offense looked like it was searching for answers.”
“A rough season capped off with an ACL and LCL tear late in the year. A full return to form in 2026, the kind of dominant season the league saw from him in past seasons, would generate serious award conversation. At 37%, the market is treating that scenario as probable, but the question of his timeline for return is what complicates this number.”
Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes (15) reacts following the AFC divisional round playoff game at Highmark Stadium in Orchard Park, New York, on Jan. 21, 2024. Mahomes helped guide Kansas City through another postseason road victory as the Chiefs continued their playoff run in difficult winter conditions against the Buffalo Bills. Mandatory Credit: Mark Konezny-USA TODAY Sports.
If you care about the Comeback Player of the Year trophy, it could be a two-horse race between Murray and Mahomes, two passers back in the saddle after 2025 season-ending injuries.
Dustin Baker is a novelist and political scientist. His second novel, The Invaders , is out now. So is … More about Dustin Baker
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