Cristiano Ronaldo is yet to win a major trophy since arriving in Saudi Arabia, and Al-Nassr will be hoping the 41-year-old Portuguese star returns to action on Wednesday to help the Riyadh club move closer to silverware.
Al-Nassr takes on Arkadag of Turkmenistan with a place in the quarterfinals of the Asian Champions League Two on the line.
Ronaldo hasn’t played any part in Al-Nassr’s most recent two games in the Saudi Pro League amid reports he was unhappy with the way the club is being funded, particularly after watching rival Al-Hilal sign Karim Benzema in last month’s transfer window.
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Al-Nassr, Al-Hilal, Al-Ittihad and Al-Ahli are all majority owned by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund.
In a statement, the SPL outlined that no player is bigger than the club or the league.
“The Saudi Pro League is structured around a simple principle: every club operates independently under the same rules,” the league said. “Cristiano has been fully engaged with Al-Nassr since his arrival and has played an important role in the club’s growth and ambition. But no individual – however significant – determines decisions beyond their own club.”
Despite the absence of the five-time Ballon d’Or winner, Al-Nassr beat reigning champion Al-Ittihad 2-0 on Friday.
Ittihad is the only one of three Saudi teams in the top-tier AFC Champions League Elite not to have secured a place in the round of 16, with two group games remaining.
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Despite losing star striker Karim Benzema last week to Al-Hilal, which has a history of making high-profile signings, including Neymar from Paris Saint-Germain in 2023, Ittihad will advance to the next round if it defeats Al-Gharafa of Qatar on Tuesday.
The top eight in each of the tournament’s two 12-team groups – divided geographically into East and West Asia – qualify for the second round.
Al-Hilal leads the western zone and is the only team with a perfect record of six wins from six, meaning coach Simone Inzaghi can choose to rest players. Al-Ahli, which won its first Champions League title in May, is also guaranteed a spot in the knockout stage.
In the eastern zone, only Vissel Kobe has clinched qualification, but Japan will have three teams in the round of 16 if both Sanfrecce Hiroshima and Machida Zelvia win this week.
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The pressure is on China’s three representatives, which occupy the bottom three positions.
Chinese champion Shanghai Port is in last place and on the verge of being ousted from the tournament. Wins for Chengdu Rongcheng and Shanghai Shenhua would keep both teams in contention.
Oct 19, 2025; Glendale, Arizona, USA; General view down the line of scrimmage as Green Bay Packers center Elgton Jenkins (74) prepares to snap the ball against the Arizona Cardinals at State Farm Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images
Gone is Ryan Kelly, the rugged veteran who occupied for the C1 spot for a single season (with no shortage of injury turmoil). Minnesota could opt for one of Blake Brandel, Michael Jurgens, or Zeke Correll. None can match Kelly, though.
Would anything have been different by adding Elgton Jenkins?
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The large lad has been an excellent player for the Packers for a long time. He’s one of the few who can match — or surpass — Brandel’s versatility. Bringing him to the Twin Cities to lock down the center spot had merit until it evaporated.
“The #Browns are expected to sign former #Packers Pro Bowl C Elgton Jenkins,” Rapoport begins, “per me and @TomPelissero. He can play guard or center for Cleveland. It’s a 2-year, $24M deal with $20M guaranteed.” At least in a general sense, the Jenkins deal mirrors Kelly’s insofar as it involves a veteran interior lineman playing on a two-year deal and for a similar financial commitment (Kelly was sitting at $20 million).
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Mark Hoffman-Imagn Images
In Mr. Jenkins, the Browns are getting a good one. Not as well-known as many of the NFL’s top talents, but someone who has been rock solid for a little while. His résumé shows a pair of trips to the Pro Bowl.
Consider what he has done across his career in terms of snap counts across the o-line positions:
LT: 524 Snaps
LG: 4,161 Snaps
C: 906 Snaps
RG: 2 Snaps
RT: 374 Snaps
Cleveland would be wise to play to Jenkins’ strengths, allowing him to settle into where’s he’s comfortable. Seldom, though, are the Cleveland Browns a wise football team. For his part, Elgton Jenkins has proven to be quite selfless and team first in his approach, rightly commanding a pile of respect.
Jan 4, 2026; Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA; Minnesota Vikings quarterback J.J. McCarthy (9) hands the ball off to Minnesota Vikings running back Jordan Mason (27) against the Green Bay Packers during the first quarter at U.S. Bank Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jeffrey Becker-Imagn Images
Around Minnesota, there’s ongoing concern about what’s going to take place at quarterback, especially with the Geno Smith surprise. Whoever is passing the ball is going to have a better time if the o-line is solid.
Starting left tackle Christian Darrisaw has had his deal restructured. He’s not going anywhere. Left guard Donovan Jackson is coming off an impressive rookie season; right guard Will Fries will want to bounce back from a modest effort in 2025. Meanwhile, Brian O’Neill is still doing his thing. The only factor that appears likely to get adjusted is his deal, which expires after the season. Look for an extension.
The opening at center is where things get uncertain.
At the very least, the Vikings can proceed with the understanding that the floor is known. The 2025 season offered a ton of tape on what Jurgens and Brandel can do at center. Did either show enough to fully settle the debate? Or, perhaps, did the coaching staff see the exact opposite, red flags that need to get addressed?
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Nov 23, 2025; Green Bay, Wisconsin, USA; Minnesota Vikings quarterback J.J. McCarthy (9) is pressured by the Green Bay Packers defense during the second half at Lambeau Field. Mandatory Credit: Jeff Hanisch-Imagn Images
Elgton Jenkins, 30, comes in at 6’5″ and 311 pounds. The Packers gained cap space by moving on but aren’t as good as they were with him on the roster.
Welcome to our weekly PGA Tour gambling-tips column, featuring picks from GOLF.com’s expert prognosticator, Brady Kannon. A seasoned golf bettor and commentator, Kannon is a host and regular guest on SportsGrid, a syndicated audio network devoted to sports and sports betting, and is a golf betting analyst for CBS Sportsline. You can follow Brady on Twitter at @LasVegasGolfer, and you can read his picks below for the 2026 Players Championship, which gets underway Thursday in Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla.
The Players Championship, the PGA Tour’s granddaddy event, is here. And what a glorious one it is. It’s not a major championship, and I hope it never becomes one despite the recent push for such. TPC Sawgrass is a remarkable golf course, without a doubt one of the finest in the world and is world-class designer Pete Dye’s masterpiece. Can we just leave some things in sports alone? The Players is affectionately known as “the fifth major” and I would just love to keep it that way — please. The Masters, PGA Championship, U.S. Open, and Open Championship are different. The Players is brilliant just the way it is, and the best of the rest.
Okay, off the soap box and on to the handicap. TPC Sawgrass is indeed a masterful design. Dye was brought in to PGA Tour headquarters in Ponta Vedra Beach, Fla., to build exactly this, a stadium-like showcase venue that tests every fiber of one’s game. No two holes run in the same direction. Outside of the four par 3s, half of the holes favor a draw and the other half cater to a fade. Water comes into play on all but one of the 18 holes. It is an intense examination of precision, nerve, and stamina. The finishing stretch, holes 16, 17, and 18, are arguably the finest closing holes in the game, with 17 being the globally recognizable island green.
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The golf course is a par 72 that measures close to 7,400 yards. The fairways are relatively narrow, bordered by thick rough, and the Bermudagrass greens are smaller than average size. The weather forecast is calling for temperatures in the high 70s and low 80s all week with winds in the range of 10-20 mph.
The results over the years at The Players are wild. Just about everyone that has done well here has also missed multiple cuts. We’ve had marquee winners like Jack Nicklaus, Tiger Woods, Fred Couples, Davis Love III, Scottie Scheffler, and Rory McIlroy. We’ve also seen Stephen Ames, Jerry Kelly, Ian Poulter, Fred Funk, and Tim Clark seemingly play well here at TPC Sawgrass every time. Predicting the winner at The Players feels to me like one of the bigger challenges on the entire Tour calendar but that is not to say that the formula around here is a mixed bag. Rather, it is pretty straightforward as to what needs to be done around this track. Ball-striking is A, No. 1. Iron play, approach shots — if the ball-striking is not spot on, it is not going to be your week. Off the tee, accuracy is preferred over distance, and finally, Scrambling. Getting oneself out of trouble needs to be executed successfully time and time again.
The correlations are strong and some are just simply other Pete Dye designs we see regularly on Tour, like TPC River Highlands (Travelers Championship), and Harbour Town (RBC Heritage). Sedgefield Country Club (Wyndham Championship) has an incredible amount of crossover success with TPC Sawgrass. I also looked at Innisbrook (Valspar Championship), Waialae Country Club (Sony Open), and I did not rule out success at the American Express in La Quinta, Calif., either as two of the four rounds there are played at Dye’s Stadium Course at PGA West.
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Russell Henley (30-1)
Henley was quite impressive in his title defense last week at Bay Hill, finishing sixth. He ranked 13th in the field for SG: Off the Tee and was No. 1 in Scrambling. His record at the correlated courses is tremendous, with top 10 and top-20 finishes up and down the board. He’s been runner-up at TPC River Highlands and at Sedgefield, and he’s won the Sony Open. Henley finished eighth at the American Express earlier this season. He does everything very well, he is one of the most accurate off the tee in the game, and in 2026 the putter is firing too, ranking 24th on Tour in SG: Putting.
Rickie Fowler (50-1)
Yes, I’m going to go there. It has been a while but it sure would be something to see Fowler add a second Players Championship to his resume and with the way he’s going lately, it’s enough for me to risk a few shekels on him doing it again. Fowler is yet to miss a cut all season and was ninth last week in Orlando, where he ranked ninth for SG: Off the Tee, was second in Scrambling, eighth in Greens in Regulation, and was fifth in Driving Accuracy. Like Henley, everything is working well along with the putter. After last week’s top-10 finish at Bay Hill, Fowler has vaulted to No. 60 in the OWGR. He has three more events to either win or crack the top 50 in order to qualify for the Masters. I’m betting the push continues.
Maverick McNealy (65-1)
McNealy missed a great deal of the 2023 season with injury but since then, we have seen him become one of the best players in the world, currently 25th in the OWGR. He’s been as high as ninth here at Sawgrass and has twice finished top 5 at Harbour Town. McNealy was 10th earlier this season at Torrey Pines and has finished 13th twice, including last week at Bay Hill. He ranks 53rd on Tour for SG: Approach, 30th in SG: Off the Tee, is 36th in Scrambling, and 40th in Par 4 Scoring.
Shane Lowry at the 2026 Genesis Invitational.
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Shane Lowry (70-1)
The Irishman missed the cut last week at the Arnold Palmer Invitational and I’m not all that surprised with the way it went down the week before for Lowry at the Cognizant Classic. But I expect him to be ready to bounce back this week at a place he’s finished as high as eighth and top 20 another four times. He’s been top 10 at all of the correlated courses and has twice finished third at the RBC Heritage. Lowry has been playing fantastic golf so far this season and different from last year, the putter has also found its groove in 2026, ranking 35th on Tour for SG: Putting. I was hoping to get 50-1 this week on Lowry, so 70 feels like an excellent bargain.
Adam Scott (80-1)
The 45-year old Australian was another Tour veteran that came to mind for me this week, much like Fowler. Both of these former Players champions have been playing exceptional golf so far in 2026. Scott was fifth in the field last week at Bay Hill for Driving Distance. Amazing that this guy can still really bang it. You recall, he was right there in the mix for the U.S. Open last year at Oakmont. In addition to his win at TPC Sawgrass, Scott has finished top 10 another three times and top 20 six times. He’s also finished runner-up and seventh before at the Wyndham Championship. Four weeks ago, Scott was fourth at Riviera. Last week he was 11th at Arnie’s place, where he ranked 12th in the field for both SG: Approach and Scrambling. Scott ranks 26th on Tour in Ball Striking.
Sahith Theegala (92-1)
It has been a minute since the star from Pepperdine University has been a factor on the PGA Tour but it appears now that he is back. Theegala has three top-10 finishes already this season, including eighth at the American Express and sixth last week at Bay Hill, where he ranked eighth for SG: Approach and 10th in Scrambling. He’s been as high as ninth here at the Players and has been runner-up at both Harbour Town and TPC River Highlands. Off the tee has been a bit of a shaky area for Theegala early this season but he gained over a half stroke on the field last week. It that continues this week, he will be in the mix again.
Christiaan Bezuidenhout (100-1)
To the triple-digits we have arrived. Bezuidenhout finished 13th here at Sawgrass in back-to-back visits in 2023 and 2024. He was eighth last week in Puerto Rico where he ranked 12th in the field for Driving Accuracy and was fourth for Greens in Regulation. Bezuidenhout ranks 56th on Tour this season for SG: Approach, 21st for SG: Putting, is 33rd for Driving Accuracy, and is 45th in Scrambling. He’s been top 10 before at the Valspar Championship and was runner-up at the American Express in 2024.
DOHA, QATAR FEBRUARY 12:
Iga Swiatek of Poland is seen during a press conference following her loss to Maria Sakkari of Greece in the quarterfinal on Day Five of the Qatar TotalEnergies Open, part of the Hologic WTA Tour, at the Khalifa International Tennis and Squash Complex on February 12, 2026 in Doha, Qatar. (Photo by Artur Widak/NurPhoto via Getty Images)
World No. 2 Iga Swiatek has praised her next opponent, Karolina Muchova, describing her as the “Roger Federer of women’s tennis” ahead of their fourth round clash at the BNP Paribas Open.
Swiatek made the comment during her press conference after defeating Maria Sakkari 6-3, 6-2 to reach the last 16 in Indian Wells. Muchova also advanced comfortably after beating Antonia Ruzic 6-0, 6-3.
Although Swiatek leads their head-to-head 4-1, the Polish star expects another tough match.
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“She’s an amazing player, and most of the times we played really tight matches,” Swiatek said. “It’s going to be tough, and I’m ready for the battle.”
Swiatek went further in her praise, highlighting Muchova’s intelligence and style on the court.
“Honestly, I love playing against her. I also love watching Karolina. It’s nice to see someone who plays so smart and so smooth. She’s like women’s Roger Federer.”
Liverpool manager Arne Slot calls for improvement from both his players and the officials, after the Reds 1-0 first leg defeat to Galatasary in Istanbul.
Russian tennis player Alana Tuayeva has been banned from professional tennis for three years and nine months after admitting to match-fixing offences.
The sanction was confirmed by the International Tennis Integrity Agency, which announced that Tuayeva accepted the punishment along with a £22,000 fine, part of which has been suspended.
According to the ITIA, the 26-year-old admitted to fixing two of her own matches on the ITF World Tennis Tour in 2023 and 2024. By accepting the charges, Tuayeva also waived her right to a hearing before an independent Anti-Corruption Hearing Officer.
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Tuayeva, whose highest singles ranking was No. 1282 in the world, has already been under provisional suspension since December 19, 2025. That period will count toward her ban, meaning she will be eligible to return on September 18, 2029, provided any outstanding fines are paid.
While serving the suspension, Tuayeva is prohibited from competing in, coaching at, or attending any event sanctioned by major tennis bodies, including the ATP Tour, WTA Tour, and the International Tennis Federation.
The case forms part of ongoing efforts by tennis authorities to combat corruption and protect the integrity of the sport at all levels.
Tottenham replaced goalkeeper Antonin Kinsky in just the 17th minute of their Champions League last-16 tie at Atletico Madrid after conceding three goals inside the opening quarter of an hour.
The Czech Republic stopper, 22, endured a nightmare start and interim boss Igor Tudor quickly replaced him with Guglielmo Vicario.
Italian Vicario has started the majority of Tottenham‘s games this season but was dropped for Tuesday’s first-leg tie in Madrid after being criticised for poor performances.
However, Vicario also conceded five minutes after coming on as Atletico stormed into a 4-0 lead by the 22nd minute, before Pedro Porro reduced the deficit by half-time.
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Tottenham signed Kinsky from Slavia Prague in a deal worth about £12.5m in January 2025.
His first error – a slip – led to Marcos Llorente making it 1-0 in the sixth minute, before Antoine Griezmann added a second eight minutes later.
Kinsky – who last started in October for the second of two Carabao Cup games this season – was also at fault for Atletico’s third goal, gifting the ball straight to Julian Alvarez to finish easily in the 15th minute.
The keeper had his head in his hands after that horror show and was taken off less than two minutes later, going straight down the tunnel.
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BBC Sport’s chief football writer Phil McNulty, who was at the match, said: “I’ve watched a lot of football but not sure I’ve ever witnessed anything quite like this.
“Not just those mistakes, but Igor Tudor’s decision to take Antonin Kinsky off.
“What a horrible night for the young keeper. The Atleti fans actually gave him sympathetic applause but not sure how he can be consoled after that.”
BBC Sport’s Spanish football reporter Elizabeth Conway, also at the match, added: “Kevin Danso, Cristian Romero and Pedro Porro went straight over to Antonin Kinsky as he left the pitch to show their support.
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“It was a disastrous 17 minutes for the 22-year-old Czech.”
After training with ChatGPT over the last six months, Ukrainian biathlete Maksym Murashkovskyi won a silver medal at the 2026 Milan Cortina Paralympic Games.
Murashkovskyi, 25, said he used the AI chatbot in a variety of ways throughout his training.
“For the past six months, I have been training with ChatGPT,” Murashkovskyi said, according to The Athletic. “It was not only tactics. It was half of my training plan, motivation, etcetera. So it was a huge volume of all of my training.
Silver medalist Maksym Murashkovskyi of Team Ukraine and guide Vitaliy Trush celebrate on the podium during the medal ceremony for the Para Biathlon Men’s Individual Visually Impaired on day two of the Milan Cortina 2026 Winter Paralympic Games at Tesero Cross-Country Skiing Stadium in Val di Fiemme, Italy, on March 8, 2026.(Buda Mendes/Getty Images)
“I used it as a psychologist, coach and sometimes, as a doctor.”
Murashkovskyi won a few medals at the Para Biathlon World Cup in January and gave credit to ChatGPT for his success.
“I also won a few medals there, and even a gold. So I can give great credit to ChatGPT,” he said. “I believe in it, it is a revolutionary technology.”
Gold medalist Hesong Dang of Team People’s Republic of China and guide Hongda Lu, silver medalist Maksym Murashkovskyi of Team Ukraine and guide Vitaliy Trush, and bronze medalist Dmytro Suiarko of Team Ukraine and guide Oleksandr Nikonovych pose for a photo on the podium during the medal ceremony for the Para Biathlon Men’s Individual Visually Impaired on day two of the Milan Cortina 2026 Winter Paralympic Games at Tesero Cross-Country Skiing Stadium in Val di Fiemme, Italy, on March 8, 2026.(Buda Mendes/Getty Images)
Murashkovskyi was asked if AI could replace coaches, psychologists and doctors, and he agreed to an extent.
“Not completely for five to 10 years. But part of it, definitely.”
Maksym Murashkovskyi of Team Ukraine approaches the finish line with guide Vitaliy Trush during the Para Biathlon Individual Visually Impaired on day two of the Milan Cortina 2026 Winter Paralympic Games at Tesero Cross-Country Skiing Stadium in Val di Fiemme, Italy, on March 8, 2026.(Buda Mendes/Getty Images)
Murashkovskyi competed under the NS3 classification, which is applied to athletes with the lowest level of visual impairment. He ran the race alongside his guide skier, Vitaly Trush. For the NS2 and NS3 competitors, guide skiers are optional, but are mandatory for NS1 athletes.
Murashkovskyi finished with a time of 33:41.1 in the men’s individual vision-impaired event on Sunday. He was just over two minutes behind Chinese gold medalist Dang Hesong, and beat his compatriot Dmytro Suiarko for second place.
Tottenham keeper Antonin Kinsky was replaced just 17 minutes into his side’s Champions League last-16 first leg after a disastrous debut.
Head coach Igor Tudor opted to replace first-choice keeper Guglielmo Vicario with Kinsky for their knockout tie against Atletico Madrid, despite the Czech having only made two appearances this season, both in the Carabao Cup.
It was a baptism of fire for Kinsky, who endured a torrid start in just his 13th appearance for the club.
The 22-year-old let in Atletico’s first goal just six minutes into proceedings at the Metropolitano.
He slipped on a routine pass out from the back amid damp conditions in Madrid, fumbling the ball and allowing Ademola Lookman to gain possession.
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Marcos Llorente then slotted home an easy finish in an embarrassing start for crisis-ridden Spurs, who were fourth in the Champions League table going into the knockouts but in relegation form at home, and have carried that dire run into the knockout stage in Europe.
Defender Micky van de Ven slipped a few minutes later attempting to clear a ball forward by Llorente, with Antoine Griezmann picking up the ball and finishing past Kinsky again.
A mere minute later and just 15 minutes into the first half Kinsky was again at fault, slipping again on the ball and falling flat on the pitch, and allowing Julian Alvarez to stroll forward and tap into an empty net at leisure.
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Antonin Kinsky was comforted by his Tottenham team-mates (PA Wire)
Tudor opted to immediately replace his keeper with his initial decision to bench Vicario totally backfiring.
Kinsky was consoled by teammates Joao Palhinha, Conor Gallagher and Dominic Solanke as he left the pitch, with captain Cristian Romero and Kevin Danso hugging him before he headed straight down the tunnel.
The Atletico fans also showed their support, applauding him off sympathetically.
While it was a calamitous 15 minutes for Kinsky it was also a terrible beginning to the game for Tudor, whose judgement will be further questioned in just his fourth game in charge.
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Fiorentina keeper David de Gea, who began his career at Atletico before a long spell at Manchester United, posted in support of Kinsky on social media.
The Spaniard wrote: “No one who hasn’t been a goalkeeper can understand how difficult it is to play in this position. Keep your head up and you will go again.”
Confirmation of Hunter Greene’s elbow injury came down Tuesday, and while it wasn’t quite the worst-case scenario, Greene is going to have surgery and miss most of the first half of the season, the team announced.
Greene will have arthroscopic surgery to clean up bone spurs in his right elbow and is not expected to return until July. That decision came after a second opinion from Dr. Neal ElAttrache, and the surgery will carry a 14-to-16 week timetable to return to the majors.
The early part of that timetable could see Greene back just before the All-Star break, though any kind of delay would push him back to the second half of the season. And of course, while this is viewed as a fairly minor surgical procedure, the ligaments in his elbow are healthy, apparently, so it’s more about cleaning up loose bodies – a full return to play at the same level as before is never a guarantee when a pitcher goes under the knife.
That’s a blow for the Reds and for Fantasy players, who had been drafting Greene as an ace before this injury. He could still give us about a half-season of ace-level production, but that would require him to come back from this surgery without any setbacks and be himself when he does. It’s possible, but there’s also plenty of ways for things to go wrong along the way.
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One example is Walker Buehler, who had a bone spur removed in July of 2022 and was given a similar timetable to Greene. However, his recovery didn’t go as planned, and he ultimately required Tommy John surgery later that same season. He was also dealing with a flexor strain along with the bone spur surgery, which could explain the complications, but nonetheless, that is a prominent example of another ace having a season ruined after a relatively minor cleanup procedure.
Ultimately, there’s no such thing as minor elbow surgery for any pitcher, but this is about as minor as you can hope for when they have to open a guy up. Greene dealt with this issue late last season and is having surgery now with the plan to be ready for the stretch run of a season where the Reds very much plan to be alive for the postseason, which certainly gives Greene an incentive to get back for the second half.
The good news for the Reds is they do have the pitching depth to survive an injury to their ace. They have a solid pitching staff already, with hope for Nick Lodolo to take a step forward after a solid 2025. But the bigger hope for truly replacing Greene’s impact is for Chase Burns to emerge as an ace in his own right. He shares a lot of similarities with Greene as a pitcher, and could have a similar ceiling if he stays healthy and throws enough strikes. With an open rotation spot, Burns seems all but certain to be in there for the Reds – not that there was much skepticism that he would win a spot, with Burns’ ADP holding steady just outside the top 100 in most drafts.
But he was in a competition for the fifth starter spot, and this injury also seemingly confirms that Rhett Lowder, another former first-rounder, will be in the rotation. Lowder, the team’s 2023 first-round pick, made his MLB debut for a cup of coffee in 2024, but struggled with injuries in 2025 while throwing just 9.1 innings in the minors. He’s healthy this spring, throwing well, and has 10 strikeouts to two walks in 8.2 innings. He doesn’t have near the upside of Greene or Burns, but Lowder has the upside to be an above-average strikeout pitcher with great groundball rates. I could see some outcomes like what we’ve gotten from Chris Bassitt in recent years – not a superstar, but a useful pitcher for Fantasy. Add him to the late-round flier pile, especially if the early-season schedule looks beatable.
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As for Greene, it depends on what kind of league you’re in. In a 15-team or NL-only league, it’s harder to justify drafting him as anything more than a reserve rounds pick, especially if you don’t have a lot of IL spots to play with. But in leagues with robust IL spots and shallower rosters overall, the replacement level on the wire is high enough that Greene is an interesting stash candidate. You’d have to let Gerrit Cole and Carlos Rodon go off the board before you look Greene’s way, since their timetables should have them back before Greene.
But I would still take a flier on Greene after the top 200 or so are off the board in those shallower leagues with IL spots. Stick him in an IL spot and go add your favorite late-round sleeper who might go undrafted – Andrew Painter, Parker Messick, or Mike Burrows, Sean Manaea, Jacob Lopez, or whoever, there is no shortage of options! – and hope you catch lightning in a bottle for a few months.
And if Greene comes back and pitches like himself, you could still end up with 80-90 innings of ace-level production. That’ll be worth waiting for, even if it’s not as much of a guarantee as you’d like.
Michael Vaughan (Photo by Stu Forster/Getty Images)
NEW DELHI: After their early exit from the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2026, the West Indies national cricket team and South Africa national cricket team have been stuck in Kolkata for more than a week, sparking criticism from former England captain Michael Vaughan.Vaughan questioned why England national cricket team managed to return home quickly while the other teams remain stranded. England were knocked out on March 5 but reportedly flew home within 36 hours. Meanwhile, West Indies were eliminated on March 1 and South Africa on March 4, yet both squads were still waiting in India days later.
Suryakumar Yadav receives grand homecoming after India’s T20 World Cup win
Frustrated by the situation, Vaughan wrote, “Just to let you all know that the West Indies got knocked out of the World Cup on March 1st .. it’s now March 9th .. they are still stranded in Kolkata .. SA are in the same position .. !!!!!!!!!!!! This isn’t right … England got on a charter 36 hrs after being knocked out .. as should be the case for all teams ..”The issue has also been raised by players such as Quinton de Kock, David Miller, and West Indies coach Daren Sammy, who have expressed concerns about the delay.However, tournament organisers say the problem is not favoritism but travel restrictions. According to the International Cricket Council and Cricket West Indies, the delay is linked to airspace restrictions caused by rising tensions in the Middle East involving the US, Israel, and Iran. Several flight corridors across the Gulf region have been partially closed for safety.Flights heading to the UK can avoid the most affected zones by taking northern routes, which likely helped England return sooner. But routes to the Caribbean and South Africa pass closer to restricted Gulf airspace, leading to cancellations and permit issues. A charter flight planned earlier was reportedly cancelled due to missing overflight approvals.