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The T.J. Hockenson Decision Arrives

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T.J. Hockenson runs after a catch against Falcons safety Billy Bowman Jr.
Minnesota Vikings tight end T.J. Hockenson (87) carries the ball after a reception while defended by Atlanta Falcons safety Billy Bowman Jr. (33) during second-half action on September 14, 2025, at U.S. Bank Stadium in Minneapolis. Hockenson’s ability to gain yards after the catch remained central to Minnesota’s passing attack as the Vikings worked to establish offensive rhythm. Mandatory Credit: Matt Krohn-Imagn Images.

Since 2022, T.J. Hockenson has been the top tight end in the Twin Cities. Getting him onto the roster involved Kwesi Adofo-Mensah pulling off a bold, unexpected trade deadline swap with an NFC North rival.

These past few years have included highs and lows for Mr. Hockenson. Great performance got interrupted by injury and a prolonged recovery.

He’s going to remain on Minnesota’s roster. ESPN’s Adam Schefter offers the update: “Vikings and T.J. Hockenson have agreed to a restructured contract that saves the team more than $5M in cap space in 2026. Interim GM Rob Brzezinski continues to clear cap space before free agency.”

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Later on, Tom Pelissero offered more details. Check it out: “As part of Vikings TE T.J. Hockenson’s restructured contract, the team agreed to delete the final year of his deal, per sources. So Hockenson takes a $5 million pay cut that provides Minnesota cap relief, and now gets to be a free agent after this season.”***

Vikings Make T.J. Hockenson Decision

Lately, there have been all sorts of moves to get the finances into a decent spot.

Already, WR1 Justin Jefferson, CB1 Byron Murphy Jr., and LT1 Christian Darrisaw have seen their deals restructured (read more here and here). C1 Ryan Kelly is moving into retirement. DT2 Jonathan Allen, DT3 Javon Hargrave, and RB1 Aaron Jones are all going to be cut unless an unexpected trade gets figured out (not likely).

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There are even rumors swirling around EDGE1 Jonathan Greenard. Lots going on.

T.J. Hockenson reacts after scoring a touchdown during a Minnesota Vikings home game at U.S. Bank Stadium.
Minnesota Vikings tight end T.J. Hockenson (87) reacts after scoring a touchdown against the Washington Commanders at U.S. Bank Stadium in Minneapolis, Minnesota, Dec. 7, 2025. Hockenson celebrated in the second half after finishing the drive with a scoring catch as Minnesota’s passing attack found success at home. Mandatory Credit: Brad Rempel-Imagn Images.

Kevin Seifert chimed in with some added insight on why the decision was made. Consider his brief word to offer context: “Prior to the restructure, T.J. Hockenson was going to have a cap number of $21.3 million this season, highest in the NFL for tight ends.”

Consider a rough, simple summary of the cap savings that are known:

  • Justin Jefferson: $18M
  • Christian Darrisaw: $9M
  • Byron Murphy: $11M
  • Ryan Kelly: $8M
  • T.J. Hockenson: $5M

And then with the upcoming cuts — Allen, Hargrave, and Jones — the Vikings will add another $25 million into the mix. Adding it all together means obliterating the $46 million in cap debt that was showing up on Over the Cap.

Rob Brzezinski, a numbers nerd who had been wrestling with Minnesota’s salary cap for decades, has injected $76 million into the mix. Debt is gone; cap space is available.

Week 16 vs
Nov 24, 2022; Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA; Minnesota Vikings tight end T.J. Hockenson (87) celebrates his touchdown against the New England Patriots during the second quarter at U.S. Bank Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Matt Krohn-USA TODAY Sports.

Other levers that can get pulled include trades. More likely, though, are the extensions. In particular, there’s Brian O’Neill, who can give back more than $14 million in 2026 with an extension.

So, the Vikings will be able to add talent if there’s a desire to do so. Can’t get too frisky in free agency but can join in the fun.

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T.J. Hockenson, 28, is coming off a season where he turned 51 catches into 438 yards and 3 touchdowns. The 8.6 yards-per-reception average is modest. So is the scoring. He’ll look to improve in both areas, something that appears plausible since he’s further away from his serious knee injury. More importantly, Minnesota’s quarterback play should (note: should) take a large step forward next year.

Worth remembering, as well, that keeping Hockenson means sitting on a deep tight end position. Josh Oliver remains. So, too, is there Gavin Bartholomew, Ben Yurosek, and others in the mix. What happens with Ben Sims, someone whom the Vikings like quite a bit?

The Vikings won’t need to worry about adding at tight end unless there’s a great opportunity.

Josh Oliver celebrates a touchdown with Christian Darrisaw during the Vikings’ first-half matchup against the Rams at SoFi Stadium.
On October 24, 2024, in Inglewood, California, Minnesota Vikings tight end Josh Oliver celebrated a first-half touchdown with offensive tackle Christian Darrisaw during the team’s matchup against the Los Angeles Rams at SoFi Stadium. The score highlighted Minnesota’s physical red-zone execution and Oliver’s growing role as a reliable target in Kevin O’Connell’s offense, blending power and precision on the road. Mandatory Credit: Gary A. Vasquez-Imagn Images.

Mr. Hockenson comes in at 6’5″ and 248 pounds. A gifted athlete who was chosen at No. 8 in the 2019 NFL Draft, Hockenson has been getting better as a blocker. Returning to his old explosiveness would make a huge difference.

Look for him to work toward a bounce back in 2026 as the team more broadly endeavours to do likewise.

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Editor’s Note: Information from Pro Football Reference and Over the Cap helped with this piece.

*** The Pelissero note was inserted into the story afterwards since the details weren’t known at original time of publication.


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Senior Editor for Vikings Territory & PurplePTSD . Twitter & Bluesky: @VikingsGazette. Email: k.joudry[at]vikingsterritory[dot]com. Canadian. Jude 1:24-25.

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UFC 326 results, takeaways: Charles Oliveira delivers performance few saw coming

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The main event of UFC 326 produced a surprise performance from Charles Oliveira in a rematch 11 years in the making for the ceremonial BMF title in Las Vegas.  

Former lightweight Oliveira, 36, relied on his grappling to shut out and completely dominate Max Holloway over five rounds inside T-Mobile Arena. In the co-headliner, middleweight contender Caio Borralho bounced back from his first UFC defeat by winning all three rounds on all three scorecards to take a decision from Reinier de Ridder. 

Let’s take a look at the biggest takeaways from an exciting night at the fights. 

1. Charles Oliveira delivered the performance not enough of us saw coming

Despite how legendary this matchup was on paper in a fight that set a record for the most combined UFC wins in a single fight, the 34-year-old Holloway held firmly as a nearly 2-to-1 betting favorite and many (including this writer) predicted he would finish Oliveira in an all-action fight. But, in hindsight, there simply wasn’t enough talk about just how big Oliveira is for the division. Historically, Holloway has been stingy when it comes to takedown defense. But he had never fought a grappler this big or skilled and it showed immediately. Oliveira routinely took Holloway down with ease and spent most of the first two rounds threatening chokes while beating the former featherweight king up with ground and pound. Oliveira also held the advantage the rare times they exchanged on the feet to begin each round. Already the UFC recordholder for finishes, submissions and post-fight bonuses, Oliveira also moved into second place for most wins (two behind Jim Miller’s record of 27). Adding a name like Holloway to his legendary resume — and doing so by complete domination — was something very few pundits or fans had on their bingo card. 

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2. If we’re being honest, Oliveira’s performance was not befitting of a BMF title fight

On one hand, it’s hard to criticize a fighter who just won seemingly every second of a 25-minute title fight against a fellow legend. But the BMF title was created to showcase the combined toughness and violent striking of two action legends and, without question, MMA fans expected (rightfully) for this rematch to be an all-out war. While Oliveira wasn’t exactly resistant to exchanging strikes with Holloway (and the Brazilian doubled Holloway’s output in significant strikes landed), he did quickly shoot for takedowns in all five rounds and amassed an absurd control time of 20 minutes and 49 seconds over the 25-minute fight. This simply wasn’t the spirit of a title lineage that was created in 2019 to honor the swagger and exploits of celebrated brawlers Jorge Masvidal and Nate Diaz. No one is saying Oliveira was expected to make this fight easier for Holloway. It’s just that anymore performances like the one Oliveira delivered on Saturday will quickly make the delightfully gimmicky BMF title played out and unnecessary.   

3. Oliveira’s gameplan and post-fight demeanor proved what matters most to him

For “Do Bronx,” defeating Holloway in their rematch wasn’t about the BMF title. It was about taking one giant step forward toward his real goal: regaining the UFC lightweight title. That was apparent not only by Oliveira’s decision to grapple and methodically beat up Holloway but also his reluctance to call out a big name after the victory. Instead of trying to secure a BMF title defense against, say, a returning Conor McGregor at July’s International Fight Week in Las Vegas, Oliveira pushed UFC brass for a last-minute opportunity on the June White House card and mentioned his want for a title fight next. Oliveira, who was knocked out by Ilia Topuria in their vacant lightweight bout last June, put himself in a strong position to get a second chance should Topuria defeat interim titleholder Justin Gaethje in the recently announced White House main event

4. Raul Rosas Jr. is evolving quickly but still has more work to do

At just 21, Rosas was stepping up considerably in class on Saturday for his seventh walk to the Octagon by facing his first ranked opponent in 38-year-old Rob Font. But even though Rosas would go on to pass the test with flying colors by pitching a shutout on all three scorecards and completing a bantamweight three-round record of 16 takedowns, his performance was a bit one-dimensional. Rosas, who won his fifth straight bout since his lone pro defeat in a 2023 decision loss to Christian Rodriguez, ultimately relied on his wrestling to a fault. Even though it was the right strategic move to get past the striking-heavy Font, it failed to showcase whether Rosas’ own striking could hold up at this level. Rosas will likely earn a top-15 ranking with the win and is still on pace at 21 years, 5 months to potentially break Jon Jones’ UFC record (23 years, 8 months) as the youngest champion. But it will be difficult to call him a true title threat until he levels up his striking to where his incredible grappling skills already lie. 

5. ‘RoboCop’ is quietly becoming a legitimate threat at middleweight

In the three years since Gregory Rodrigues was knocked out in Round 1 by countryman Bruno Ferreira, he won six of his next seven fights, including four by knockout. But it wasn’t until he changed his demeanor and gameplan entering their rematch on Saturday that he truly looked like a future title contender. The 34-year-old Rodrigues opened calm, cool and patient this time, which is a departure from his normal aggressive starts that have often left him fatigued late in fights. Not only did Rodrigues control distance, he waited for the risk-taking Ferreira to come to him and lined him up with a perfect right cross to knock him out less than two minutes into their rematch. Rodrigues has always had size, tremendous power and a solid ground game but if he continues to add the veteran wrinkles and utilize his fight IQ, a run into the top 10 appears likely. 

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NHL roundup: Devils defeat Rangers behind Jack Hughes’ hat trick

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NHL: New York Rangers at New Jersey DevilsMar 7, 2026; Newark, New Jersey, USA; New Jersey Devils center Jack Hughes (86) celebrates his goal against the New York Rangers during the third period at Prudential Center. Mandatory Credit: Thomas Salus-Imagn Images

Olympic hero Jack Hughes recorded his fourth career hat trick and second this season, lifting the New Jersey Devils to a 6-3 victory over the New York Rangers on Saturday in Newark, N.J.

Hughes, who also had an assist, scored one of the Devils’ three power-play goals before converting on a breakaway with 3:04 to play in the third period. He completed the hat trick by scoring into an empty net with 32 seconds left. New Jersey’s Jesper Bratt collected a goal and two assists, and captain Nico Hischier and Dawson Mercer also tallied.

Jacob Markstrom made 17 saves for the Devils, who rode a 3-for-3 performance on the power play to their fourth straight win.

New York’s Will Cuylle scored his third goal in two games, defenseman Vladislav Gavrikov tallied in his third consecutive contest and fellow blueliner Will Borgen also found the net. Jonathan Quick turned aside 29 shots for the Eastern Conference cellar-dwelling Rangers, who have lost 15 of their last 19 games (4-12-3).

Bruins 3, Capitals 1

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Viktor Arvidsson scored the game-winning goal at 4:28 of the third period, leading Boston past visiting Washington for the Bruins’ 12th straight home win.

Pavel Zacha and Elias Lindholm also scored, David Pastrnak dished out two assists, and Jeremy Swayman made 22 saves for Boston, which has won three of five since the Olympic break. Elias Lindholm clinched the victory on an empty-net goal with 23.2 seconds left.

Aliaksei Protas scored the lone goal and Logan Thompson stopped 27 shots for Washington, which lost its third straight after having veterans Nicolas Roy and John Carlson traded in recent days.

Jets 3, Canucks 2 (OT)

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Josh Morrissey scored in overtime and added an assist in his first game back from an upper-body injury as host Winnipeg rallied past Vancouver.

Mark Scheifele had a goal and two assists and Gabriel Vilardi also scored for the Jets, who got 21 saves from Connor Hellebuyck. Morrissey scored the winner from high in the zone, with the puck deflecting off the skate of the Canucks’ Filip Hronek and into the net at 1:49 of the extra frame.

For Vancouver, Linus Karlsson had a goal and an assist and Liam Ohgren also scored. Teddy Blueger added two assists and Kevin Lankinen made 32 saves

Penguins 4, Flyers 3 (SO)

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Trevor Zegras scored the game-winner in the shootout and Dan Vladar made 20 saves and stopped all three shootout attempts to lead Philadelphia to a victory over host Pittsburgh.

Alex Bump, who helped lead Western Michigan to its first NCAA hockey title in 2025, scored a goal in his NHL debut for the Flyers. Owen Tippett and Denver Barkey also scored for Philadelphia. Head coach Rick Tocchet secured a win in his 700th game as an NHL coach.

Rickard Rakell collected a goal and an assist, Egor Chinakhov had two assists and Erik Karlsson and Tommy Novak also scored goals for Pittsburgh. Stuart Skinner stopped 12 of 15 shots for the Penguins, who lost their third straight game and fell to 1-9 in shootouts.

Mammoth 5, Blue Jackets 4 (OT)

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Utah’s Logan Cooley scored a pair of goals, including the game-winner in overtime against host Columbus.

Alexander Kerfoot and Michael Carcone each tallied a goal and an assist for the Mammoth, who improved to 3-0-0 on their five-game road trip. Dylan Guenther also scored, while Clayton Keller tacked on a pair of assists and Karel Vejmelka made 27 saves.

Adam Fantilli, Mason Marchment, Damon Severson and Mathieu Olivier all finished with a goal and an assist for the Blue Jackets, who saw their three-game winning streak halted. Elvis Merzlikins tallied 18 stops.

Islanders 2, Sharks 1 (OT)

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Bo Horvat scored the winner at 4:20 of the extra period as New York edged host San Jose.

Horvat, on a partial break, put a backhand between the legs of Yaroslav Askarov for his 27th tally of the season. Tony DeAngelo scored in regulation for the Islanders, who avoided a third straight loss and improved to 9-0 in overtime this season.

Ilya Sorokin made 30 saves to improve to 5-0-3 in eight career appearances against the Sharks. Macklin Celebrini scored in regulation and Askarov stopped 32 shots for San Jose, which has dropped back-to-back games in overtime.

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Lightning 5, Maple Leafs 2

Jake Guentzel and Brandon Hagel each had a goal and an assist and visiting Tampa Bay defeated Toronto.

Nikita Kucherov added four assists to give him 100 points (32 goals, 68 assists) for the season. Ryan McDonagh, Corey Perry and Oliver Bjorkstrand also scored for the Lightning, who snapped a four-game losing streak. Andrei Vasilevskiy stopped 27 shots.

Matias Maccelli and Nicholas Robertson scored for the Maple Leafs, who have lost seven in a row (0-5-2) since the Olympic break. Anthony Stolarz made 28 saves for Toronto.

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Sabres 3, Predators 2

Tage Thompson extended his career-high point streak to 10 games with a goal as host Buffalo held on to beat Nashville for its sixth straight win.

Thompson has six goals and five assists during the streak. Jason Ducker and Josh Doan also scored for the Sabres, who were opening a five-game homestand as they look to keep pace atop the Atlantic Division with the Tampa Bay Lightning, whom they host on Sunday. Alex Lyon made 23 saves.

Zachary L’Heureux scored his first goal of the season for the Predators, who have lost four of five and were kicking off a five-game road swing. Matthew Wood also scored, and Juuse Saros made 21 saves.

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Canadiens 4, Kings 3

Juraj Slafkovsky had two goals and an assist for Montreal in a comeback win against host Los Angeles.

Nick Suzuki notched a goal and two assists, Jake Evans also scored and Jakub Dobes made 36 saves for the Canadiens, who were coming off a 6-5 shootout loss at the Anaheim Ducks on Friday night.

Scott Laughton scored in his first game with the Kings, who are 2-4-0 since the Olympic break. Los Angeles acquired Laughton from the Toronto Maple Leafs at Friday’s trade deadline. Anze Kopitar and Alex Laferriere also scored, Brandt Clarke had two assists and Darcy Kuemper made 19 saves for Los Angeles.

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Flames 5, Hurricanes 4

Joel Farabee scored two goals and added an assist and Ryan Strome scored once and added an assist in his team debut as host Calgary rode a three-goal second period to upset Eastern Conference-leading Carolina.

Morgan Frost netted one goal and two assists while Blake Coleman also collected one goal and one assist for the Flames, who snapped a four-game skid (0-3-1) after dealing away key veterans MacKenzie Weegar and Nazem Kadri this week. Goaltender Dustin Wolf made 25 saves.

Seth Jarvis netted one goal and two assists, Andrei Svechnikov posted one goal and one assist and Sean Walker and Alexander Nikishin each tallied once for Carolina. Sebastian Aho collected three assists and goalie Brandon Bussi stopped 20 shots as his personal nine-game winning streak ended.

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Senators 7, Kraken 4

Shane Pinto had a goal and two assists as Ottawa defeated host Seattle.

Michael Amadio added a goal and an assist, and Tyler Kleven, Dylan Cozens, Warren Foegele, Tim Stutzle and Brady Tkachuk also scored. Nick Cousins and Thomas Chabot had two assists for the Senators, who extended their point streak to six (4-0-2) and improved to 3-0-1 on their five-game trip. Linus Ullmark made 17 saves.

Jacob Melanson, Eeli Tolvanen, Matty Beniers and Brandon Montour scored and Jordan Eberle had two assists for short-handed Seattle, which dropped to 2-2-0 on its six-game homestand. Joey Daccord stopped 29 of 36 shots.

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–Field Level Media

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Erikan Francis Vows to Help Heartland Return to NPFL After Win Over Smart City

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Erikan Francis has restated his commitment to help Heartland FC regain promotion to the Nigeria Premier Football League after scoring in their 3–1 victory over Smart City FC.

The forward who joined Heartland FC in mid-season on-loan from Akwa United gave the Owerri side a perfect start when he opened the scoring just two minutes into their Matchday 13 clash at the Dan Anyiam Stadium on Saturday.

Erikan’s early strike helped set the pace for a strong performance by the home side, who went on to secure an important win.

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After the match, the Akwa Ibom-born forward, who was named the NNL Player of the Match, thanked God and spoke about his strong connection with the club. He said returning to Heartland means a lot to him and that he is determined to help the team return to the top division.

“First and foremost I want to thank the Almighty God. I want to thank Christ Jesus that I truly believe in. Coming back to Heartland to play for them is something I have always had in mind because this is my home,” he said.

“I love it here and anytime I play I put in everything. What runs through my mind is that this team needs to promote back to the NPFL. That is why I am giving 100 percent. The God that did it before through me when this team went to the NPFL in 2023/24, I believe that same God will do it again for Heartland this season.”

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Heartland began the match strongly, with Erikan’s quick goal giving the Naze Millionaires an early advantage.

Erikan Francis was again involved in a key moment in the 21st minute when he was fouled inside the penalty area, leading the referee to award a penalty. Jonathan Osondi stepped up and calmly converted the spot kick to extend the lead.

Smart City reduced the deficit just before half-time when Gafar Ojo scored in the 45th minute.

However, Heartland regained control in the second half when Ali Sunday added a third goal to seal the victory for the team coached by Emmanuel Amuneke.

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Erikan Francis of Heartland FCErikan Francis of Heartland FC

Erikan had previously played for Heartland under the late coach Christian Obi when the club secured promotion to the top flight. Since returning to the team in the middle of the season, he has recorded two goals and one assist.

The win moves Heartland to third place in Conference A with 17 points from 11 matches.

They will next face Sunshine Stars F.C. in another crucial fixture as they continue their push for promotion back to Nigeria’s top division.

Both clubs were relegated from the NPFL last season alongside Akwa United F.C. and Lobi Stars F.C., making the upcoming clash an important battle in the race for a return to the top flight.

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NBA: Oklahoma City Thunder 104-97 Golden State Warriors: Shai Gilgeous-Alexander closes on Wilt Chamberlain record

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Victory at Paycom Center was the Thunder’s fifth in a row. They became the first side to 50 wins this season and sit top of the Western Conference.

Gilgeous-Alexander said: “If we were the best team last year, all year, we win a championship, and we get better, we should put ourselves in great position to repeat.

“This year’s had a little bit more ups and downs for us, but I think we’ve done a pretty good job keeping that front of mind.”

The Warriors – again missing the injured Stephen Curry – scored seven unanswered points to reduce the Thunder’s lead to 99-97 before a three-pointer from Gilgeous-Alexander in the final minute.

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Michael Porter Jr scored 30 points as the Brooklyn Nets came from 23 points down to win 107-105 at Eastern Conference leaders Detroit Pistons and end a 10-game losing streak.

Giannis Antetokounmpo scored 27 points as the Milwaukee Bucks beat the visiting Utah Jazz 113-99.

Jalen Johnson’s 35 points, 10 rebounds, and seven assists helped the Atlanta Hawks to a 125-116 home win over the Philadelphia 76ers.

Kawhi Leonard scored 28 points as the Los Angeles Clippers overturned a 19-point first-half deficit to win 123-120 at the Memphis Grizzlies.

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The Orlando Magic won 119-92 at the Minnesota Timberwolves despite Anthony Edwards’ 34 points for the hosts.

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Scottie Scheffler ‘beaten up’ by unusually punishing Arnold Palmer Invitational

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Maybe more than any week on the PGA Tour schedule, Bay Hill delights in kicking your teeth in.

And on a noticeably punchy Saturday afternoon at the Arnold Palmer Invitational, Scottie Scheffler wasted no time getting started.

The World No. 1 began a vexing third round at Bay Hill in particularly unusual fashion, recording three bogeys in his first five holes — and four in his first seven — to drop from the outskirts of the leaderboard to well out of contention. As he has for much of the week in Florida, the typically cool and collected Scheffler looked out of character with a club in his hands and out of patience without it, en route to a decidedly up-and-down 72. As if to emphasize the point, when his fourth bogey of the day dropped on the seventh hole, NBC cameras captured Scheffler crow-hopping his ball into the woods in disgust — his second frustrated ball-toss of the week.

By the time he made the turn, Scheffler had recorded his most bogeys on an opening nine in more than eleven months, since the second round of the Masters last April, and just one fewer black score than he recorded all week at the American Express in January. (Of course, another read of these stats emphasizes Scheffler’s brilliance in the 2020s, seeing as until the Genesis Invitational at the end of February, the World No. 1 had gone 11 months without a finish outside of the top 10.)

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After it was over, Scheffler was blunt.

“Pretty up and down, I would say,” he said.

No kidding. But the ups were revealing, too. On a Saturday when Bay Hill pulled few punches, the 29-year-old responded with a few of his own. Just when it seemed he might fade from the competition entirely, Scheffler recorded four straight birdies between holes 11 and 14, and then added a fifth on the par-5 16th. He entered the 18th hole needing a birdie to get to six under for the tournament, seven shots out of the lead set by Daniel Berger and within striking distance for another Sunday charge.

Instead, he wiped his approach short and right, watching helplessly as it bounced on a lakebed and plunged into the water. Scheffler folded over in exasperation as the ball disappeared into the water. He tidied up from there, but the damage was done: A double on the last had ended the momentum he’d battled so hard to win back. He finished the day at even par for the round, and 3 under for the tournament, 10 shots off the lead set by Daniel Berger.

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“Out here the margins are just so small,” Scheffler said. “I felt like the breaks, when they go against you, you make bogeys, and when they go with you, sometimes you make birdies.”

On Saturday at the Arnold Palmer Invitational, the story for Scheffler was in the margins. And at a golf tournament known for its snarl, the World No. 1 admitted that he left wounded.

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Jack Draper gets Indian Wells title defence off to winning start

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Norrie, who won the Indian Wells title in 2021, will play Australian world number six Alex de Minaur in the last 32.

“I have been having an amazing preparation,” said Norrie.

“I got here with time – a lot of time – so I’ve been practising really really well against all types of players, and the weather’s been unreal, so good vibes all around.”

World number one Carlos Alcaraz was a 6-2 6-3 winner against Bulgaria’s Grigor Dimitrov, while five-time Indian Wells champion Novak Djokovic beat Poland’s Kamil Majchrzak 4-6 6-1 6-2 to also reach the third round.

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Spaniard Alcaraz won the Australian Open this year to become the youngest man to complete the career Grand Slam, and has won all 13 of his matches in 2026.

“I played great,” he said. “The conditions weren’t easy – a lot of wind today.”

Serb Djokovic, playing for the first time since losing the Australian Open final to Alcaraz, said: “I knew that the first match in such a long time will be a little bit tricky.

“I felt like I had to find my A-game when it was most needed, particularly the beginning of the third.”

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Five transfers Manchester United must make including Rashford and Casemiro replacements

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Man Utd are set to strengthen their squad in the summer transfer window, and there will be departures from the club.

Manchester United are preparing to make a splash in the summer transfer window. Michael Carrick is in pole position to be permanently appointed after a brilliant start to his interim tenure, and he recently admitted he will be involved in transfer conversations leading up to the window.

A season is usually defined by summer recruitment. United have key areas of the squad to strengthen ahead of a campaign in which they will return to European competition after missing out this term.

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The Manchester Evening News reported at the beginning of February that United are planning to strengthen their midfield and left wing. Those areas will be prioritised this summer, but there will also be some high-profile departures, which will raise cash and create headroom on the wage bill.

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United are tracking several midfielders with a view to replacing Casemiro. The Brazilian is set to leave upon the expiry of his contract, and the Reds will sign a high-quality operator to succeed him.

Last summer, United considered a move for Brighton man Carlos Baleba, while Nottingham Forest midfielder Elliot Anderson and Crystal Palace’s Adam Wharton have also been tracked. Newcastle star Sandro Tonali is another midfielder who United have been following closely.

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Baleba’s form has dropped off a cliff since United showed an interest in signing him, though. Brighton manager Fabian Hurzeler admitted a few months ago that reports linking him with a move to Old Trafford had negatively impacted his performances.

“I think it’s normal for a young player when the media creates the noise around him,” Hurzeler said. “It’s not easy for this player to handle it. Therefore, we need to give him the time and support.”

It remains to be seen whether enthusiasm over Baleba at United has been dampened by his regression this season. It’s possible that the hierarchy views his drop-off as part of a young player’s journey and considers his form as an opportunity to negotiate a lower transfer fee with Brighton.

United have overhauled their data department and the numbers will be crunched on Baleba, who had a progressive profile before his head was turned by interest from Old Trafford last summer.

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Anderson has taken his game to another level since joining Nottingham Forest from Newcastle. The 23-year-old has delivered consistently strong performances and has become a starter for England.

United greatly admire Anderson’s skill set, but they could face competition from Manchester City to sign him this summer. Anderson is set to play for England at the World Cup in the United States, and his future may not be addressed until the tournament has concluded.

Crystal Palace chairman Steve Parish has warned there is no pressure to consider offers for Wharton, while Newcastle are desperate to keep Tonali after being raided for Alexander Isak last summer.

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However, Tonali’s representatives spoke to Arsenal in the January transfer window. Newcastle are 12th in the Premier League, and Eddie Howe is facing the prospect of losing some of his best players.

Carrick has denied that United have a problem with width, but Matheus Cunha is not a natural left winger and has a preference to drift inside to central areas, which explains why the club are considering signing a traditional-thinking left-sided forward in the summer transfer window.

United were interested in Antoine Semenyo before his £62.5million move to Manchester City. The Reds were prepared to deviate from their plan not to make a mid-season signing because Semenyo was a long-term target and his release clause made him attainable.

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However, the market for left-wingers is not inspiring, so United may need to rely on their scouting and data departments to sign a player for that area, which is how they landed on goalkeeper Senne Lammens last summer.

United can raise funds to offset incomings by selling Marcus Rashford and Andre Onana. Rashford has spent the season on loan with Barcelona, who have the option to sign him permanently for £26m (€30m).

Rashford was left searching for a new club after Aston Villa opted against signing him permanently. Barcelona agreed to cover Rashford’s entire salary during his stay at the Camp Nou.

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Barcelona would like to negotiate a lower fee to sign Rashford at the end of the season, but it’s understood United intend to hold out to obtain the fee agreed when he signed on loan.

Onana prepared for the new season under the assumption he would stay at United, but he was demoted when he returned from a hamstring injury, and Lammens was signed on deadline day.

United shipped Onana to Turkish club Trabzonspor on a season-long loan, and are set to cut their losses with him this summer. Onana committed too many mistakes to have a future in Manchester.

Tyrell Malacia is set to leave on a free transfer. Malacia was at fault as United lost against Newcastle at St James’ Park last time out, while he was close to leaving in the January window before his switch was blocked by club chiefs.

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Malacia was ready to fly to Istanbul to seal a switch away from Old Trafford, having made his desire to leave the club five months before his contract expires clear, but United decided he needed to stay. It felt harsh to pin blame on Malacia against Newcastle, given he’s played little football.

United have made a catalogue of errors in the transfer market, but last summer’s deals suggest the penny may have dropped in terms of getting recruitment right. The good work must continue.

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Shakur Stevenson sets his sights on one world champion: “I want that belt”

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Shakur Stevenson has set his sights on adding another world title to his ledger.

Stevenson most recently defeated Teofimo Lopez to win the WBO super-lightweight title, but it appears the 28-year-old believes there is unfinished business at 135lbs.

Stevenson had moved up from lightweight to face Lopez in January, producing a truly dominant performance to become a four-division world champion, though the slick southpaw discovered he had been stripped of his WBC title at 135lbs for not following the sanctioning body’s rules.

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In response, Stevenson delivered a scathing social media post against the WBC, while at no point ruling out a potential return to lightweight.

But rather than looking to reclaim his green and gold strap, the pound-for-pound star has expressed his desire to collect the vacant Ring Magazine lightweight title.

Speaking with Joe Rogan, Stevenson explained that he would need to defeat IBF world champion Raymond Muratalla, who is ranked No.2 by Ring Magazine, in order to make his dream a reality.

“I may go back to 135[lbs] and get that Ring [Magazine] belt. We’ll see, though. I can’t promise that I will, but I may.

“I like the Ring Magazine belt. I know the opponent that I would have to fight to get it – I’m hearing it’s Raymond Muratalla.

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“He’s a good fighter – he just beat Andy Cruz – [but] it ain’t [about] the opponent; it’s more so just to have the Ring belt.”

Muratalla comes off a strong performance against Olympic gold medallist Cruz, who he outpointed by majority decision to defend his IBF title in January.

The American is generally thought to be tight at the weight, though, and has previously hinted at a move up to 140lbs.

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Canelo Alvarez addresses his retirement plan

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Canelo Alvarez has outlined how much longer he could remain in the sport, before hanging up his gloves and calling time on a decorated career.

The 35-year-old is already destined for a place in the Hall of Fame, having become a four-division world champion, but remains eager to compete at the highest level.

Since making his professional debut in 2005, the Mexican has amassed 68 outings and become a two-time undisputed king at 168lbs, claiming notable victories over the likes of Callum Smith and Caleb Plant.

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His most significant win, however, arrived at middleweight, where Alvarez edged a highly-contentious majority decision in his 2018 rematch with Gennady Golovkin.

More controversial was their first encounter, the previous year, when many believed that Golovkin had done enough to claim a convincing victory, only for the Kazakh to instead come away with a draw.

But still, Canelo received ample credit for emerging triumphant in their sequel, before dethroning Sergey Kovalev for the WBO light-heavyweight title over a year later.

Alvarez’s second undisputed title reign at super-middleweight then came to an end last September, with Terence Crawford moving up two weight divisions to claim a unanimous decision victory.

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But despite this, Canelo has explained to Froch On Fighting that he could still compete for another two years, or perhaps even longer, depending on how frequently his opportunities materialise.

“I don’t know. I’m thinking maybe two years. I don’t need it, [but] I still enjoy it. If I [fight] once a year, maybe [I can go on] a little bit [longer].

“Once a year, for me to rest my body, I think I can fight more [than two years].”

While an official announcement is yet to emerge, Canelo is set to fight in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, this September, with Turki Alalshikh having promised a world title shot.

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Michigan vs. Michigan State prediction, pick, odds, spread, where to watch live

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The final day of the college basketball regular season Sunday will be headlined by a heavyweight rivalry matchup between No. 8 Michigan State and No. 3 Michigan on CBS. This is a rematch of an earlier season matchup won by Michigan on the road, which allowed the Wolverines to take firm control of the Big Ten title race.

Michigan is coming off an upset scare against Iowa earlier in the week. The Wolverines ultimately walked away with a 71-68 win on the road. Since losing to Duke last month on a neutral court, Michigan has won three straight games ahead of its matchup against MSU. Michigan also wrapped up the Big Ten regular season title after beating Illinois.

Michigan State has won five consecutive games since losing to Wisconsin by 21 points on the road last month. MSU has wins during that stretch over UCLA, Purdue and Indiana. Michigan State is in second place in the Big Ten standings entering the weekend and could be on a collision course to face Michigan a third time in next weekend’s Big Ten title game if both teams run the table.

Here is everything you need to know ahead of Michigan’s matchup against Michigan State.

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Michigan vs. Michigan State: Need to know

Michigan’s dominance in Big Ten play: Michigan is 18-1 in Big Ten play this season, with the lone loss coming against Wisconsin earlier this season. The Wolverines already set the program record (previously 16) for the most wins in conference play in a season. A win over MSU would make it 19 wins with just one loss. The Wolverines are riding a 14-game winning streak against Big Ten teams and had won eight straight of those games by at least 10 points before it was snapped earlier this week.

Jeremy Fears Jr. chasing MSU history: Fears enters this weekend with 272 assists this season. That is two behind Mateen Cleaves for the second-most assists in a single season in MSU program history. Cassius Winston, one of the best players in MSU program history, holds the record with 291. Fears is averaging 9.1 assists, which leads all Division I players — and has a chance to break the record, depending on how far the Spartans go in both the Big Ten and NCAA Tournament

Bracketology implications: Michigan is in the driver’s seat to be a No. 1 seed on Selection Sunday next weekend. It doesn’t matter how the remainder of the season shakes out because the Wolverines will likely join Duke and Arizona on the No. 1 line. In CBS Sports’ latest Bracketology projections, Michigan State is a No. 2 seed. MSU having a strong showing in the Big Ten Tournament next week would go a long way toward remaining on the No. 2 line.

Where to watch Michigan vs. Michigan State live

Date: Sunday, March 8 | Time: 4:30 p.m. ET
Location: Crisler Center — Ann Arbor, Michigan
TV: CBS | Live stream: CBSSports.comCBS Sports App
Streaming on Paramount+ Premium  

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Michigan vs. Michigan State prediction, pick

Michigan State made things interesting in the second half of the first matchup against Michigan before the Wolverines pulled away at the end. Yaxel Lendeborg had a strong showing in the first matchup (26 points and 12 rebounds). I expect Lendeborg to once again play well against MSU’s stout frontline. Michigan wins this game by double digits, just like the first game. Pick: Michigan -9

Who will win and cover in every college basketball game? Visit SportsLine to get picks from the model that simulates each game 10,000 times and is up more than $1,200 for $100 players on its top-rated spread picks the past six years. 

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