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Voodoo wrestling and attempted poisonings: Jeamie TKV’s incredible family history

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“VOODOO – you know, the word voodoo,” says Jeamie TKV, when I ask him to spell what he’d just said.

No, it wasn’t a word that sounded like voodoo. It was voodoo. It’s not a word you tend to hear very often when conducting boxing interviews with blokes from North London. Nor would you expect, when sitting down with the British heavyweight champion, to end up discussing military coups, murder plots and Congolese wrestling.

Not Congolese voodoo wrestling, anyway.

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“In Congo, they do voodoo wrestling; it’s a bit different,” says TKV, with more than a dash of understatement. “They do witchcraft.

“In boxing, you have your trainer in your corner; in wrestling, you have a witch doctor. Whoever’s is more powerful wins the fight.”

But this is wrestling – it’s not a real fight… right?

TKV says it is. Congolese wrestling, he says, is a real sport; a variant of the freestyle amateur wrestling in which he participated when growing up in Tottenham, just with some black magic rituals, trances, chants and spells thrown in.

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“It sounds like bulls**t, but people believe it,” says TKV. “And I’ve seen it happen. It’s crazy, but I’ve seen it. If I tell you half the stuff that happens, you’ll think ‘this guy’s been watching too many movies’.

“All of this, I studied in university. I made a documentary about it, called The Story Behind Voodoo Wrestling. It’s really bad in Africa – people use it for bad reasons.”

Like winning fights. Does it happen in boxing, too?

“My teammate was doing witchcraft when I boxed [amateur] for Congo,” says the London-born TKV, who holds dual nationality and wore the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) vest in qualifiers for the 2020 Olympics.

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But he doesn’t dabble in the dark arts himself. As a Christian, he prefers the power of prayer.

“My dad was very famous in Congo in the late ’80s for wrestling; wrestling is huge there,” he says. “He brought a pastor to pray in his corner to counteract the witchcraft.”

Whoever was in his corner, and whatever the forces at play, Makasi Tshikeva – father of Jeamie Tshikeva, to give TKV his full surname – was a wrestler of high enough pedigree to turn pro in the UK and later set up Haringey Wrestling Club.

Makasi had moved to London, seeking asylum for himself and his family after two generations of persecution from the military and government, in 1991, a year before Jaemie was born.

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And while it was wrestling that occupied TKV’s childhood, it is boxing in which he has now made his name – and for which the man behind the persecution of his father and grandfather is well known. Mobutu Sese Seko, the then-president of Zaire (now DRC), was the dictator who bankrolled The Rumble In The Jungle in 1974.

But when he wasn’t helping Don King to bring Muhammad Ali and George Foreman to fight in Kinshasa, Mobutu was notorious for running a totalitarian regime defined by corruption, nepotism and the use of deadly force against threats.

One such threat was TKV’s grandfather, a Congolese army general who had at one point been a friend and ally of Mobutu, and in 1960 helped him lead the coup that deposed prime minister Patrice Lumumba and eventually put Mobutu in power.

But the further Andre-Bruno Tshikeva rose through the ranks, the more this concerned Mobutu.

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“Mobutu killed my granddad because my grandad helped when the Cubans went into Angola,” says TKV, referring to when, in 1975, Cuba intervened in the Angolan civil war, sending troops to support the communist president against a pro-western opposition coalition.

Andre-Bruno helped the Angolan forces defend against the Cuban intervention and restore control. His part in the victory impressed the pro-Angola United States, who lined him up to lead the self-declared Republic of Cabinda, an Angolan exclave.

“The CIA [which supported Cabindan independence] were so impressed with him, they offered him to be the president when it became a country,” says TKV.

“They informed Mobutu about that and he felt my grandad was a threat now, because he’d helped him to overthrow Lumumba. But he couldn’t just get rid of him – he had to do it in a smart way.

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“He sent him to protect a base in a town where the French and Belgians and Americans did a lot of business, and then paid rebels to go and kill some civilians, to make my granddad look bad.

“Then he sent soldiers to arrest my grandad. He said to them: ‘How can you do this? I put you in this position.’ They said, ‘Mobutu said we have to.’

“My grandad was security for King Baudouin, the King of Belgium. King Baudouin told Mobutu: ‘I don’t believe General Tshikeva would do that – if you arrest him, you’re not allowed to kill him.

“So, my grandad got sentenced to life in prison, but there were a lot of attempts on his life. He got poisoned several times, and one night someone put a letter under his door saying at such-and-such a time, the doors are gonna open and you can escape. He knew something was off, so he stayed in his cell. When the time came, the doors opened, and all the other prisoners started running, and he just heard the gunshots outside.

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“Eventually his sentence was commuted. He did six years and was released, but because he’d been poisoned, he died soon after.

“My grandad was a very powerful man. He had 10 wives, multiple houses, a lot of money. But after he died, some family members took everything and didn’t leave nothing to his wives and kids, so my dad ended up going in the army to make ends meet.”

Dad Makasi Tshikeva became a commando, but once Mobutu learned who he was – that the son of a man he’d had killed was rising through the military ranks – he attempted to put an end to him, too.

“My dad was invited to a private meal and the chef said, ‘I’ve been told to poison you.’ So, he took a different plate and when he didn’t die, Mobutu was angry.

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“Later, he was doing a climbing exercise and they loosened the rope he was supposed to climb, so he’d fall. A friend warned him, so he used a different rope.

“He knew his life was at risk, and he had just had my elder brother, so he decided to leave and come to the UK.

“He was famous in Congo but came here with nothing. He likes to say, ‘I went from having cleaners to becoming a cleaner.’ He didn’t know no one, didn’t speak the language, and had to find a way to bring his wife and kids over.”

Once he did so, and had learned to speak English, Makasi resumed his wrestling career.

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No voodoo was involved this time, but he embraced the spectacle and ceremony of professional wrestling under the monicker Big Papa T, winning several regional championships.

As he did so, he started training young Jeamie in freestyle amateur wrestling, leading to an early introduction to competitive fight sports.

“All I knew growing up was wrestling; I grew up competing,” says TKV. “I won the junior world championships in Amsterdam when I was 10. I was too young to enter but my dad put me up as a 12-year-old. I was a national champion, too, and had a four-five-year winning streak in freestyle wrestling.”

But as he went from boy to man, and a very big man at that, another sport emerged as a more attractive proposition: boxing.

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“When I was 18, my dad was doing a youth programme, with all the coaches from the area doing their respective sports,” he says. “My dad was coaching wrestling, but he said ‘why don’t you give boxing a try?’, and I said ‘yeah, why not.’

“The coach said: ‘You’re a natural – you can make millions!’ He made it sound so easy, and there’s no money in freestyle wrestling – you have to either turn pro or you try MMA.

“I became addicted to boxing from that day on; from the first session, really. It wasn’t just the [prospect of] money, it was just really good.

There followed a claimed 72-bout amateur run, including two national titles, five London championships and an African Games silver medal in 2019.

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The coronavirus pandemic delayed his pro career, which didn’t start until March 2022, when he was 28. But the man born Tshikeva, and rebranded TKV “to stand out”, has moved quickly, and last time out – in November, in just his 11th pro bout – he was crowned British champion.

Frazer Clarke, his co-challenger for the vacant title, was favoured to win, but TKV tapped into the psychology of pro wrestling to unsettle the Olympian.

“The first presser we did, we were very nice to each other. I gave him a lot of compliments, there was no back and forth; it was very respectful. But then the fight got postponed when I picked up a [rib] injury.

“He made a few comments I didn’t like, saying it was a fake injury, so the second presser, I put it on him. I pretended to be upset; I was teasing him, teasing him. From then on, he was upset – I’d never seen Frazer stick the middle finger up before.

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“So, I knew when we got into this fight, he’d start off fast – and I knew he had no stamina. People watching were worried, but when I went back to my corner after the first round, my trainer [Barry Smith] said: ‘Brilliant! He’s thrown the kitchen sink at you.’ After three rounds, he had nothing left.”

Even so, Clarke lasted the distance, but only after an extremely rocky 11th round.

“He was lucky to survive that,” says TKV, “but to be honest with you, I don’t know how I did 12 rounds either.

“I really had a bad camp – I had a bad back, in the middle of camp I got cut in sparring, I pulled my intercostal muscle, and then I had that flu that was going around. A week before the fight, I couldn’t even do two rounds on the pads.”

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Both men went the full 12 in a hard-hitting, physically draining brawl that served as an appropriately exciting main event to mark the BBC’s return to televised boxing after a 20-year absence.

“It was a big deal,” says TKV of the opportunity to perform on the national broadcaster. “I’m all about making history, and I made history.”

Winning British boxing’s flagship prize gives him a platform to make more, especially with so many domestic rivals jostling for the Lonsdale Belt and world honours.

One obvious challenger would be David Adeleye, who thwarted TKV’s first title shot with a controversial sixth-round stoppage last April and then vacated the belt rather than accommodate a mandated rematch.

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“He was holding my arm, the ref said ‘break’, and then he hit me,” says TKV of the circumstances behind the first knockdown of his career and which led to the second defeat on his 9-2 (5) record.

“He knew what he was doing; it was deliberate. But yeah, I’ll take it [a rematch] any time, even if I’m entitled to give him the same energy he gave me [by not taking the fight].”

The big dream, though, is to tread in the footsteps of giants and fight in the former Zaire. “That would be the greatest thing,” says TKV of the prospect of taking big-time boxing back to Kinshasa.

“Imagine me and [Martin] Bakole – he’s a huge star there. That would be such a big, big, big card – The Rumble In The Jungle 2.”

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The long-term goal, unsurprisingly, is “to fight for the world title and win it, with God’s grace”.

And if a world title fight is to take place in the Congo, TKV may indeed need God in his corner – because he’ll be back in the land of his fighting father, where witch doctors decide outcomes just as routinely as coaches.

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Tyson Fury’s comeback fight to take place at Tottenham’s stadium

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Boxing: Fury vs Wilder IIIOct 9, 2021; Las Vegas, Nevada, USA; Deontay Wilder (red/black trunks) is knocked out by Tyson Fury (black/gold trunks) during their WBC/Lineal heavyweight championship boxing match at T-Mobile Arena. Mandatory Credit: Joe Camporeale-Imagn Images

Tyson Fury’s return to the boxing ring will take place at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium.

The former heavyweight champion’s April 11 bout against Arslanbek Makhmudov was announced last month, but the venue wasn’t revealed until this week. 

Fury, a 37-year-old Manchester, England, native, hasn’t fought since losing back-to-back matches in 2024. He lost his title belts in a split decision against Ukraine’s Oleksandr Usyk that May in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, then dropped a rematch to Usyk in a unanimous decision at the same venue seven months later.

Those were the first two career defeats for Fury (34-2-1).

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Tottenham Hotspur Stadium was the site of Fury’s last title defense, on Dec. 3, 2022, against fellow Briton Derek Chisora. Fury won his next fight, vs. former UFC heavyweight champ Francis Ngannou, in Riyadh on Oct. 28, 2023, before taking the two defeats the following year.

Makhmudov (21-2) will be fighting in England for the second straight time. The 36-year-old Russian defeated David Allen by unanimous decision in Sheffield last October.

Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, in addition to being home of a Premier League soccer team, plays host to two NFL games per season.

The Fury-Makhmudov fight will be shown on Netflix.

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–Field Level Media

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Rory McIlroy with work to do as Akshay Bhatia & Ryo Hisatsune lead

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Akshay Bhatia shot an eight-under-par 64 to share the second-round lead with Ryo Hisatsune at 15 under at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am.

Defending champion Rory McIlroy birdied the final hole to sign for a 67 but sits six strokes off the pace heading into the weekend.

The Northern Irishman made five birdies and an eagle but was left to rue bogeys on the 10th and 14th, although his four on the par-five 18th proved a more than satisfactory conclusion to the five-time major winner’s day.

American Bhatia had earlier produced one of the rounds of the day at Spyglass Hill, while Hisatsune recovered from dropping shots either side of the turn to pick up four shots in his final five holes.

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Rickie Fowler was equally as impressive as he moved into a tie for second alongside Sam Burns, at 14 under as he chases his first win since July 2023.

Austria Sepp Straka is currently the best placed European player at 12 under, with England’s Matt Fitzpatrick two shots further back along with the likes of Keegan Bradley, Jordan Spieth and Xander Schauffele.

Englishman Tommy Fleetwood followed his 67 on Thursday with a 68 to sit at nine under with McIlroy, with Ireland’s Shane Lowry one shot further back.

A charging Scottie Scheffler brought himself back into picture with three birdies and an eagle on a five-hole stretch after the turn to reach the clubhouse at six under across the first two days.

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England’s Justin Rose and Harry Hall are at five under with Scotland’s Robert MacIntyre, with each player in the field having played one round at Pebble Beach and Spyglass Hill.

All the third and fourth-round action will take place solely at Pebble Beach, with there also being no 36-hole cut at the $20m (£14.7m) PGA Tour signature event.

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ISL Season Preview: Better late than never? Indian football resets for a truncated season | Football News

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ISL Season Preview: Better late than never? Indian football resets for a truncated season
The truncated ISL 2025-26 season will start on Saturday. (X | ISL)

New Delhi: “Why don’t you write something positive?” said an irate Indian football official to this reporter. It was the plea of a frustrated representative who had done plenty at the grassroots level but was trying to please multiple stakeholders in the administrative chaos that is Indian football.Picture this. Only two days before the Indian Super League, the country’s top football division, was set to get underway on February 14, members of the All India Football Federation (AIFF) Executive Committee were voting on whether to keep it a 14-team league or expand it to 15 by including Churchill Brothers.

Why is Ahmedabad likely to be the sporting capital of India? | Bombay Sport Exchange

That plea from Churchill Brothers was unanimously rejected, keeping Inter Kashi in the top division after a legal quagmire that remains unresolved. The league will therefore remain a 14-team competition with a single round-robin format, featuring 91 matches across the 2025–26 season.Yes, the 2025–26 season is finally getting underway in February 2026, five months later than originally planned. The February 14 start date was reached only after the intervention of the Sports Ministry, which wanted the delay to not affect the country’s ambitious bid to host the 2036 Olympics.All this transpired because Football Sports Development Limited (FSDL), the Reliance-backed company that launched and ran the ISL since 2014, saw its Master Rights Agreement (MRA) with the AIFF end in December 2025.The AIFF, stalled by court visits and constitutional updates, neither contemplated its options leading up to this deadline nor moved to renew the association.In the interim, uncertainty prevailed over if, or when, the season would get underway. While administrators twiddled their thumbs, foreign players departed to keep their careers going. Clubs were forced to let them go to recover some costs and to respect the players’ wishes.When the season finally received a start date, organisers struggled to get stadiums in playable condition. Odisha FC will only begin training for the new season on February 17 and, with no home venue confirmed, their opening fixture against Punjab FC on February 16 has been postponed. Kerala Blasters, who at one point considered shutting shop, had no clarity on which city they could feasibly play in.After extensive back-and-forth, the AIFF readied an interim fixture list, which was officially announced just a week before the league’s start. With FanCode on board as the digital broadcaster, the linear television announcement with Sony Sports Network will only take place on the day the season begins.

Not just doom and gloom

Now for the positives amid the gloom. All stakeholders, including clubs, players, fans, sponsors and even the AIFF, deserve credit for ensuring the season was not lost. They showed maturity for the greater good.Most players have agreed to take pay cuts to keep the ball rolling, quite literally. The same applies to club owners and CEOs who have agreed to invest in a truncated season, aware that revenues will not match previous years, but have returned for the greater good.Even the AIFF, which has faced heavy criticism and could serve as a case study in administrative mismanagement, can argue that its hands were tied by legal disputes and warring factions. The fact that it eventually managed, through multiple mediators, to get everyone moving in the same direction is commendable.

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More drama in store?

Unsurprisingly, the drama and court visits may not be over. As the AIFF circulated the League Rules on the eve of the season’s start, it made clear that relegation will be implemented as per the latest Constitution.This comes barely two weeks after clubs wrote to the Sports Ministry seeking Force Majeure for the season, effectively requesting a pause on relegation.Subsequently, the club that goes down could take the legal route later if the issue is not addressed for now.

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Should Indian football expand to a 15-team league?

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QUICK REFRESHER

Clubs: FC Goa, Mohun Bagan Super Giant, Odisha FC, East Bengal, Jamshedpur FC, SC Delhi, Punjab FC, Mumbai City FC, Bengaluru FC, Kerala Blasters, Inter Kashi, Mohammedan SC, NorthEast United, Chennaiyin FC1st match: Mohun Bagan Super Giant vs Kerala Blasters on February 14 at 5 pm2nd match: FC Goa vs Inter Kashi on February 14 at 7:30 pmPrize money for winner: Rs 1.25 crorePrize money for runner-up: Rs 75 lakhPrize pool for 2025–26 season: Rs 2 croreLive streaming: FanCodeLive on TV: Sony Sports Network

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Zach Gallen free agency: Diamondbacks bring back ace on one-year deal, per report

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Zac Gallen is heading back to the desert. Gallen and the Arizona Diamondbacks are closing in on a one-year contract worth $22.025 million, according to a report from The Athletic. About $14 million would be deferred. The deal matches the $22.025 million qualifying offer Gallen rejected in November. The team has not yet announced the signing, which is pending a physical.

Gallen, 30, is coming off a 2025 season in which he didn’t live up to his established standards, hence settling for a one-year contract despite finishing in the top 10 of the National League Cy Young voting three times in his career. 

For his career, Gallen has pitched to a 119 ERA+ and an FIP of 3.65 across parts of seven MLB seasons. Over that span he’s compiled a WAR of 20.7, and he’s topped 30 starts and 180 innings in three of the last four seasons. Gallen spent the last six seasons and change with the D-backs, who acquired him from the Miami Marlins in July 2019 in exchange for Jazz Chisholm Jr

Earlier in the offseason, CBS Sports ranked Gallen as the No. 18 available free agent in the class of 2025-26. Here’s part of R.J. Anderson’s write-up: 

“Gallen salvaged what he could with a good 11-start closing stretch, but an otherwise miserable walk year makes him feel like a strong candidate to accept the qualifying offer (if one is tendered) and try again in 2026. Otherwise? He’s a candidate to sign a one-year deal elsewhere and modify his arsenal in an attempt to push back against a trend that has seen his performance slip in each of the past two years.”

Before Gallen’s return, FanGraphs estimated Arizona’s 2026 payroll at $173 million. That is just south of the franchise record ($177 million in 2024), so Gallen will push the club well into uncharted payroll territory. The D-backs will neither gain nor forfeit draft picks to re-sign their own qualified free agent.

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Arizona brought Merrill Kelly back earlier this offseason, and now they’ve reunited with Gallen. Those two will join lefty Eduardo Rodriguez and righties Ryne Nelson and Brandon Pfaadt in the rotation. Corbin Burnes, last offseason’s big free-agent splash, is expected to return from Tommy John surgery at midseason.

The D-backs went 80-82 last season and missed the postseason by three games. They sold at the trade deadline, most notably sending Kelly to the Texas Rangers and Eugenio Suárez to the Seattle Mariners, though they kept Gallen.

Gallen was originally drafted by the St. Louis Cardinals. He went to the Marlins with Sandy Alcantara as part of a December 2017 deal that sent Marcell Ozuna to St. Louis.

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Keyshawn Johnson reveals what Tua Tagovailoa needs amid uncertain future in Miami

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Retired wide receiver Keyshawn Johnson believes that quarterback Tua Tagovailoa’s stint with the Miami Dolphins might be coming to an end. After a disappointing 2025 season, there is uncertainty regarding his future.

On Friday’s episode of Jordan Schultz’s podcast, the Super Bowl XXXVII champion said that Tagovailoa still has a chance at redemption. However, he needs the right coach and team to help guide him out of this hole.

“The guy, if he can stay healthy, and he finds the right coach in the right system, is Tua,” Johnson said. “Because he’s done it at high level at Alabama. I’ve seen the Miami Dolphins winning when he’s healthy. And I’ve seen the Miami Dolphins without him.

“And that tells me if he got the right coach in the right situation that understands the player, you can work miracles with him. I don’t need him to carry the team. I just need him to drive the bus and not sideswipe cars. And if he can do that, he’s a guy I think in the right situation, he gets out to places you’re trying to go.”

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The Dolphins drafted Tua Tagovailoa with the fifth overall pick in the 2020 NFL draft. However, in just six years, he’s suffered multiple concussions, raising concerns about his longevity in the league. Despite this, the team decided to give him a four-year, $212.4 million extension in 2024.

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During that season, Tagovailoa suffered his third concussion in two years, which sidelined him for a couple of games. The Dolphins missed the playoffs and finished second in the AFC East with an 8-9 record.

This season, they once again failed to make the postseason after a 7-10 campaign, finishing third in the AFC East. Tagovailoa played in 14 games and recorded 2,660 yards and 20 TDs passing with 15 interceptions and 30 sacks. He was then benched in favor of rookie Quinn Ewers for the last four games.

Last month, the Dolphins decided to fire coach Mike McDaniel after four seasons. They named ex-Packers defensive coordinator Jeff Halfey as his replacement.


ALSO READ: “Welcome to hell Tua Tagovailoa” “Doomsday hire”: NFL fans react as Dolphins sign Super Bowl-winning coach as pass-game coordinator

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ALSO READ: Mike McDaniel says Tua Tagovailoa’a 2024 concussion “really narrowed my focus” during introductory presser as Chargers OC


Dolphins GM gets honest about Tua Tagovailoa’s future with the franchise

On Thursday, Dolphins GM Jon-Eric Sullivan shared his thoughts on the team’s quarterback situation involving Tua Tagovailoa.

He said that they plan on acquiring a quarterback at this year’s draft. However, they have not yet finalized whether they plan on retaining Tagovailoa after his disappointing 2025 season.

“Of course, we’ll be looking at other quarterbacks in the draft,” Sullivan said as per PFT. “But look, Tua was in my officec the other day, if I’m being perfectly frank. We had a great conversation. Tua has been a very good player in this league. He’s done a lot of really good things for the Miami Dolphins You guys should be proud to have him and having had him.

“I don’t know what the future holds right now, and I told Tua that. We’re working through some things. What I can tell you is that we are going to infuse competition into that room, whether Tua is part of the room, whether he’s not part of the room. … We’re getting close to a decision. And when we do, we’ll let Tua know whether he’s gonna be a part of this or not.”

In six seasons, Tua Tagovailoa played in 78 total games and has recorded 18,166 yards and 120 TDs passing for the Dolphins.

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