Dec 2, 2024; Denver, Colorado, USA; Denver Broncos running back Javonte Williams (33) scores a touchdown in the first quarter against the Cleveland Browns at Empower Field at Mile High. Mandatory Credit: Ron Chenoy-Imagn Images
Dallas Cowboys running back Javonte Williams reclaimed his career on Jerry Jones’s team in 2025 — and he’s not going anywhere in 2026 free agency. Dallas re-signed Williams over the weekend, wiping a high-profile and veteran name off the board for the Minnesota Vikings if the club has interest in a veteran tailback in the first place.
With Williams gone, Minnesota’s best paths now run through a smaller pool of vets and draft depth.
Williams wasn’t inches from signing in Minnesota, but he could have been a quasi-affordable option.
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Remaining Free-Agent RB Options for the Vikings
The list of free-agent options for Minnesota is now minus one.
Dallas Cowboys running back Javonte Williams (33) warms up and surveys the field before kickoff at Empower Field at Mile High on Oct 26, 2025; Denver, Colorado, USA. Williams returned to face his former team during a season that helped restore his value as a starting-caliber NFL runner. Mandatory Credit: Ron Chenoy-Imagn Images
Williams Back to DAL
Williams re-upping with the Cowboys is a done deal.
ESPN’s Todd Archer announced Saturday, “The Dallas Cowboys kept a key player to their offense Saturday, agreeing to a three-year deal with running back Javonte Williams that guarantees him $16 million, sources told ESPN’s Adam Schefter. The total deal is worth $24 million and includes a $6 million signing bonus, according to sources.”
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“When the Cowboys head to Indianapolis for the NFL scouting combine next week, they can turn their attention to Pro Bowl wide receiver George Pickens. The expectation is the Cowboys will put the franchise tag on Pickens at a cost of roughly $28 million before the March 3 deadline and then hope to work out a multiyear deal. Pickens set career highs last year in catches (93), yards (1,429) and touchdowns (nine).”
Williams entered the NFL in 2021 as the next big thing for the Denver Broncos, a scouting report that didn’t translate to immediate stardom. He never wholly struggled in Denver, but Williams did not pop off as a show-stopping bellcow back.
In Dallas last season, he began to reclaim his story. Now, he’ll stick around Arlington for three more years.
The Production in 2025
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Williams revitalized his career in Dallas this season, amassing 1,338 scrimmage yards and 13 touchdowns, fueling championship runs for fantasy managers. Williams, who will turn 26 during draft weekend, was expected to garner significant attention in free agency and likely command around $8-10 million per year. The Cowboys settled on $8 million, which seems fair.
Jan 7, 2024; Paradise, Nevada, USA; Denver Broncos running back Javonte Williams (33) carries against the Las Vegas Raiders during the first quarter at Allegiant Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Stephen R. Sylvanie-USA TODAY Sports
After failing to establish himself as the Denver Broncos‘ lead running back — despite being te 2nd-Round pick in 2021 — many had written him off. His resurgence in Dallas raises questions about whether the Broncos were utilizing him effectively. Probably not. One can’t break off 1,338 yards from scrimmage by accident.
Remaining FA Options at RB for Vikings
If one assumes the Vikings will scour free agency for an RB1, Williams back to Dallas makes the board a wee bit smaller. “Legal tampering” begins in two weeks, and Minnesota, in theory, could target these men:
J.K. Dobbins (Denver Broncos)
Rico Dowdle (Carolina Panthers)
Travis Etienne (Jacksonville Jaguars)
Breece Hall (New York Jets)
Kenneth Walker III (Seattle Seahawks)
Dobbins is oft-injured, and he’s — you guessed it — recovering from a season-ending injury. Dowdle will turn 28 this summer and is probably past his prime. Etienne is the best pass-blocking running back from the group; the Vikings will probably love that. Hall is the almighty free-agent RB prize. And Walker is fresh off the steam of a Super Bowl MVP.
Will Minnesota Pursue an RB in March at All?
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The Vikings currently have just over $20 million in 2026 cap dollars committed to Aaron Jones and Jordan Mason, the RB1 and RB2 from 2025. That’s a lot of dough at running back already spoken for. While it’s tempting to glance at the availability of players like Etienne, Hall, and Walker, all those men will fetch contracts over $10 million per season. So, one must wonder if Minnesota has the budget for another veteran tailback.
Many expect Jones to be released, easing the pain a bit of a cash-strapped salary cap. But Minnesota would still be on the hook for $7 million in dead cap funds if so.
Minnesota Vikings running back Aaron Jones Sr. (33) carries the football during first-half action against the Los Angeles Chargers on Oct 23, 2025; Inglewood, California, USA. Jones worked between the tackles and along the edge as Minnesota leaned on its veteran runner in road action at SoFi Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Gary A. Vasquez-Imagn Images
The Athletic‘sAlec Lewis opined on the possibility of Jones’s release last week: “This move would leave a major void. Jones has played nearly 60 percent of the team’s offensive snaps over the last two seasons. During that time, he ran for nearly 1,700 yards, caught 79 passes and served as a reliable pass protector on early downs.”
“Backfield mate Jordan Mason is an efficient runner, but he’s not a proven three-down guy. That’s why the Vikings could find themselves in the market for another back if they part ways with Jones. The more likely outcome would be a free-agent acquisition.”
April’s draft may be a more reasonable spot to find a running back of the future. Notre Dame runners Jeremiyah Love and Jadarian Price, along with Jonah Coleman (Washington), Emmett Johnson (Nebraska), Mike Washington Jr. (Arkansas), and Nick Singleton (Penn State), headlining the 2026 class.
Dec 21, 2025; East Rutherford, New Jersey, USA; Minnesota Vikings head coach Kevin O’Connell during the first half at MetLife Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Robert Deutsch-Imagn Images
With the draft process intensifying, the Vikings have already begun evaluating running back prospects, including a small-school breakout name who recently met with the team.
A player who could be on the team’s radar is running back Chris Mosley. The North Carolina Central alumnus reportedly met with the Vikings.
Draft reporter Justin Melo of SI.com revealed on social media that the Vikings’ brass chatted with Mosley at the HBCU Legacy Bowl that took place this past weekend. The Vikes were not alone, as he listed eight other franchises.
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North Carolina Central Eagles running back Chris Mosley runs the football against the Florida A&M Rattlers during a Week 7 NCAA football game on Ken Riley Field at Bragg Memorial Stadium in Tallahassee, Florida, Saturday, October 11, 2025.
After three quiet campaigns at North Carolina Central, the runner broke out during the 2025 season. Mosley rushed 188 times for 1,020 yards and 8 touchdowns, resulting in an average of 5.4 yards. He also showed he can be a reliable pass-catcher, recording 30 receptions for 324 yards and 2 more scores.
Gerald J. Huggins II wrote this month about the draft hopeful on SI.com. “Mosley projects as an NFL camp/2nd-tier league starter who will be most impactful in a power-heavy running scheme that allows him to utilize his vision, patience, and toughness. His toughness as a runner and ability to consistently gain positive yardage give him upside to be an RB3 or 4 at the NFL level. He will need to refine his receiving ability and pass protection to be a more serviceable option.”
It would be far-fetched to expect a back from the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference, especially one that isn’t putting up prime Adrian Peterson numbers, to arrive in the NFL as an elite weapon. Still, there might be some hidden upside.
If the Vikings strike out on the top halfbacks in the Draft, adding one later in the three-day event or even as an undrafted rookie can’t be ruled out.
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Aaron Jones, Minnesota’s RB1 in the last two seasons, is a potential cap casualty, given his expensive salary cap hit and the limited production due to his injury struggles and age-related declining explosiveness. He’s just coming off a season with the lowest yards-per-attempt in his career, with 4.2 and he missed five games with injuries. Jones still produced 548 rushing yards and found paydirt twice.
Of course, there’s also Jordan Mason, who shared the workload with the veteran. The trade acquisition from last offseason appeared in 16 games and delivered a solid yardage total of 758 with an average of 4.8 yards per carry. Crossing the goalline six times isn’t too shabby either.
Besides the top duo, the Vikings enter the offseason with pending free agents Ty Chandler and Zavier Scott. Chandler has not consistently earned a role on offense in his four seasons in the State of 10,000 Lakes. A departure seems likely. Scott showed enough promise to earn a spot on the offseason roster.
If Jones isn’t retained for a third season in purple, Mason would climb to the top spot until the franchise finds someone else in the Draft or free agency. Mosley is unlikely to be that guy; he’s more of an upside swing later in the Draft.
Pre-draft meetings like this are not always an indication of strong draft interest, but they do signal that a prospect is at least on the team’s evaluation radar. For smaller-school players like Mosley, events such as the HBCU Legacy Bowl and Combine interviews are often crucial.
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During the 2024 season, Minnesota Vikings defensive tackle Levi Drake Rodriguez shared a celebration with teammate Bo Richter after delivering a key play. The moment captured the energy and enthusiasm of Minnesota’s defensive front as the young players made their presence felt. Rodriguez’s ability to disrupt and Richter’s support highlighted the team’s depth and emerging contributors on defense. Mandatory Credit: Alli Rusco, Vikings.com.
The Vikings, in particular, have shown a willingness in recent years to explore under-the-radar prospects who can compete for depth roles and special teams snaps before potentially carving out a larger role on offense. Levi Drake Rodriguez, out of Texas A&M Commerce, comes to mind. He was drafted in the 7th round in 2024 and played a significant role on the defensive line in his sophomore season.
While a meeting does not guarantee draft interest, it does confirm that Mosley is firmly on Minnesota’s scouting radar. For a team potentially reshaping its backfield depth this offseason, identifying late-round or undrafted runners with upside could quietly become an important part of the Vikings’ draft strategy.
The USA women’s hockey team has declined an invitation to attend Tuesday night’s State of the Union, a day after President Donald Trump jokingly told the men’s hockey team that he would probably be impeached if he also didn’t invite the women’s team.
Scheduling conflicts was the reason for declining the invitation to attend the State of the Union, according to a USA Hockey spokesperson.
“We are sincerely grateful for the invitation extended to our gold medal–winning U.S. Women’s Hockey Team and deeply appreciate the recognition of their extraordinary achievement,” the spokesperson said. “Due to the timing and previously scheduled academic and professional commitments following the Games, the athletes are unable to participate.”
The spokesperson added that the team was “honored to be included and are grateful for the acknowledgment.”
Trump invited the men’s team to the State of the Union during a call with the team shortly after their win over Canada. It is unclear whether the team will attend.
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“I must tell you, we’re gonna have to bring the women’s team,” he said. “I do believe I probably would be impeached.”
Team USA made history at the 2026 Olympics by completing a sweep of hockey gold medals for the first time. The women’s team won the gold for the first time in eight years after recording a 2-1 overtime win over Canada. Two days later, the men’s team followed suit in nearly identical fashion after posting a 2-1 overtime win over Canada. The men’s team captured their first gold medal since the 1980 “Miracle on Ice.”
While the women’s team trailed for most of regulation before tying the score in the third period, the men’s team took an early lead before Canada tied things up in the second period. It remained tied throughout the third period before Zach Werenski fed Jack Hughes for the game-winning goal less than two minutes into overtime.
The women’s golden goal was scored by Megan Keller, who had assisted on Hilary Knight’s game-tying goal in the third period.
A former WWE champion provided a major health update during a recent interview. The star sustained an injury earlier this month.
On the February 6 edition of Friday Night SmackDown, Chelsea Green wrestled Tiffany Stratton and Lash Legend in an Elimination Chamber Qualifying Triple Threat Match. The Buff Barbie pinned The Hot Mess to secure the win. Unfortunately, to make matters worse for Green, she also hurt her foot during the match.
Thanks for the submission!
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In a recent conversation with Denise Salcedo, Chelsea Green disclosed that she was healing up better than expected. However, the 34-year-old noted that she should not be out of her walking boot. The former WWE Women’s United States Champion added that she was lucky that the injury was not serious. Green further clarified that she won’t be out for long.
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“I’m healing up much faster than I thought I would be. I’m out of the boot, but only for the fashion. I should not be out of the boot. I chipped my ankle, the side of it. So, it’s painful, but I feel like I got lucky. Like, in terms of a broken ankle, I feel like I got very very very lucky. Thank gosh… No, no, no, I won’t be [out for long],” Green said.
You can check out their conversation in the video below:
WWE Superstar Chelsea Green lost a championship without competing
Chelsea Green and WWE NXT star Ethan Page won the AAA World Mixed Tag Team Championship by defeating La Hiedra and Mr. Iguana at AAA Alianzas in November 2025.
The duo was scheduled to defend the title against NXT’s Lola Vice and AAA’s Mr. Iguana on an episode of AAA on Fox. However, due to the injury she sustained during the Elimination Chamber Qualifying Match, Green had to be pulled out of the championship bout.
AAA’s La Hiedra replaced Chelsea Green as Ethan Page’s tag team partner for the match. Unfortunately, they lost the bot and, with it, the gold as well.
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It remains to be seen how much longer it takes for Chelsea Green to make her in-ring return following the unfortunate injury and the disappointing setbacks.
If you use any quotes from the first half of this article, please credit Denise Salcedo with an H/T to Sportskeeda Wrestling for the transcription.
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Floyd Mayweather and Manny Pacquiao will clash in a professional fight in September, 11 years after their first showdown, which was the most-lucrative boxing match in history.
On 19 September, Mayweather and Pacquiao will square off at the Sphere in Las Vegas, the same city where Mayweather outpointed his Filipino rival in 2015.
Their first fight still holds the records for most pay-per-view sales (4.6m) and highest gate ($72.2m) in boxing history.
American Mayweather will turn 48 on Tuesday, while Pacquiao is 47 years old. Each man is expected to compete in his own exhibition match this spring, before they share a ring live on Netflix. Mayweather is currently set to face heavyweight legend Mike Tyson in his exhibition contest.
Addressing the news in a press release, “Money” Mayweather kept it short and sweet: “I already fought and beat Manny once. This time will be the same result.”
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Meanwhile, “Pac Man” said: “Floyd and I gave the world what remains the biggest fight in boxing history. The fans have waited long enough – they deserve this rematch, and it will be even bigger now that it will be streamed live globally on Netflix.
Floyd Mayweather (left) beat Manny Pacquiao on points in their 2015 fight (AP)
“I want Floyd to live with the one loss on his professional record and always remember who gave it to him. As always, I dedicate this fight to my fellow Filipinos around the world and to bringing glory to the Philippines.”
As Pacquiao mentioned, Mayweather has an unbeaten pro record of 50-0 (27 knockouts), with his last pro contest taking place in 2018, when he beat UFC star Conor McGregor via TKO. Since then, he has competed in a number of exhibition bouts.
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Pacquiao’s pro record stands at 62-8-3 (39 KOs), and he remains the only eight-weight world champion in boxing history, while Mayweather is a former five-weight title holder.
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Pacquiao actually returned to pro boxing last summer, fighting then-champion Mario Barrios to a draw in their WBC welterweight title bout. He had contested an exhibition bout in 2024, and his previous pro bout was a 2021 loss to Yordenis Ugas.
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Pacquiao has been heavily involved in politics in the Philippines (Copyright 2022 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.)
Pacquiao has also been heavily involved in politics in his home country, having served as a senator in the Philippines from 2016 until 2022, and having launched a failed presidential bid ahead of the 2022 election.
Mayweather vs Pacquiao 2 sees Netflix continue its venture into boxing, with the streaming platform having hosted several high-profile fights since 2024. In November of that year, influencer Jake Paul beat a 58-year-old Tyson on points.
In 2025, a trio of events followed: an undisputed title fight between Katie Taylor and Amanda Serrano, with the Irishwoman going 3-0 in their trilogy; another undisputed contest as Terence Crawford beat Canelo Alvarez; and a crossover bout between Paul and ex-heavyweight champion Anthony Joshua, who stopped the American in six rounds.
Los Angeles Angels owner Arte Moreno’s recent comments have the Major League Baseball Players’ Association ticked off.
Moreno was speaking with reporters on Friday when he mentioned that the “number one thing fans want is affordability” to attend games during the MLB season, per the Orange County Register.
But that wasn’t the worst of it, as Moreno said, “Winning is not in their top five,” referencing data the organization procured themselves.
Los Angeles Angels owner Arte Moreno gets ready for a game against the Kansas City Royals at Tempe Diablo Stadium on March 14, 2025.(Rick Scuteri/Imagn Images)
“They want affordability,” Moreno said to reporters. “They want safety, and they want a good experience when they come to the ballpark. Believe it or not, winning is not in their top five.”
Bruce Meyer, the new head of the MLBPA following Tony Clark’s resignation, said “the players took notice” of Moreno’s comments, while the union did as well.
“The bottom line is players are competitors,” Meyer told The Athletic. “They grew up competing every day. They go out, and they try their hardest to win every game. And players want to see owners doing the same thing.”
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It may be hard for players to hear their owner isn’t focused on winning, especially those on the Angels’ roster like future Hall of Fame center fielder Mike Trout, who hasn’t seen playoff baseball since 2014.
In fact, that was the last season the Angels finished the regular season over .500 (98-64), where they eventually lost in the ALDS. Since then, the best record the Angels have finished with was 85-77 in 2015.
It’s been a rough go of it for the AL West franchise despite years with Shohei Ohtani and Trout on the roster, though the latter dealt with numerous injuries along the way.
Los Angeles Angels starting pitcher Shohei Ohtani (17) delivers a pitch in the first inning against the Texas Rangers in a baseball game Thursday, June 15, 2023, in Arlington, Texas. (AP Photo/Richard W. Rodriguez)
Last season, Los Angeles finished 72-90 for last place once again in the division after going 63-99 the year prior.
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Given the Angels are in a large market on the West Coast, one would suspect them to be a contender each year and a popular destination. However, that hasn’t been the case, and the product has suffered in the win-loss column in recent seasons.
On the other side of town, the Los Angeles Dodgers have become the franchise envied by fans and teams alike given their massive spending spree and utilizing deferred money to field an All-Star roster that continues to get better by the year.
“If you can’t have a successful operation in Los Angeles, it’s hard to see what the problem is,” Meyer said. “It’s easy to make excuses, but certainly the Los Angeles Angels have resources to compete in every respect.
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“To come out and say that winning is not a priority, not even in the top five priorities, is really pretty remarkable.”
Moreno’s focus seems to be on how he can continue to put customers in the seats at Angel Stadium in Anaheim. The team was 13th in MLB for total attendance last season (2,615,506).
“Moms make about 80% of the decisions,” Moreno continued. “They want to be able to bring their kids and be affordable and they want safety and they want to have a good experience, so they get all the entertainment stuff or whatever. The purists, you know, it’s just straight winning.”
Los Angeles Angels owner Arte Moreno reacts during the game against the Tampa Bay Rays at Angel Stadium on May 10, 2022.(Kirby Lee/USA TODAY Sports)
Moreno, who is worth $5 billion according to Forbes, sees a payroll around $188 million for the 2026 season, which sits 15th in MLB. The franchise is currently dealing with its TV rights, too, having left Main Street Sports Group.
“Will [payroll] get back to $200 million? Probably,” Moreno said. “We’ve got to get our TV thing worked out, and we just have to improve our brand.”
Exquisite torture was a Pete Dye specialty. Not for nothing did the pros call him the “Marquis de Sod.” Among his sadistic markers: a penchant for particularly penal closing holes. Witness the beastly finishers at Whistling Straits, TPC Sawgrass and the Stadium Course at PGA West.
The 18th at the Ocean Course at Kiawah Island belongs in that dastardly canon — a par-4 purpose-built to kick you in the knickers.
The Dyes — Pete and his wife, Alice — designed the Ocean Course for a singular occasion: the course was built from scratch to host the Ryder Cup. It debuted in the fall of 1991, just ahead of matches so contentious they’ve been remembered ever since as the War by the Shore. Drawing on the traditions of Scottish and Irish links, the Ocean Course unfolds along the Atlantic coast of South Carolina, at the mercy of winds that never behave the same way twice. With no prevailing breeze to design around, the Dyes built enough flexibility into the routing to play as two distinct courses depending on the conditions. On any given hole, there can be an eight-club difference from one day to the next.
The 18th is a bear no matter how it’s blowing. The hole stretches nearly 490 yards, it helps to hit it big. But length won’t save you from what Dye was really up to, which was messing with your mind. The fairway is a slender target hemmed in by dunes on both sides, and from the tee it appears far more menacing than it actually is. The prescribed shot traces a gentle left-to-right curve. Miss either way and the sand awaits. The green, nestled in the dunes, is a testy target, too.
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When players griped about his punishing finales, Dye had little sympathy. He framed such holes as opportunities — a chance at the kind of lasting fame Ben Hogan achieved with his iconic 1-iron on the 72nd hole of the 1950 U.S. Open at Merion, which earned him a place on the cover of LIFE magazine.
Kiawah’s 18th had other ideas in 1991. Hale Irwin snap-hooked his drive and couldn’t recover. Bernhard Langer, needing just six feet for the win, watched his putt graze the edge and stay out. Two of the era’s finest, undone on the same hole. No glory. No magazine covers. At least not the kind that either player would have wanted framed on his wall.
18-year-old forward Chido Obi has not been given any Premier League minutes this season despite being on the fringes under former Manchester United boss Ruben Amorim
Matty Hewitt Football Writer
21:57, 23 Feb 2026
Manchester United youngster Chido Obi scored four goals for the under-21s against Leicester City on Monday as United’s first-team were in action at Everton. United fast-tracked Obi into the first-team set-up after his arrival from Arsenal last season with Ruben Amorim’s side struggling in the final third.
The Danish youth international made seven first-team appearances, but the club made the decision to move him back into the academy set up to continue his development. As the Manchester Evening Newsreported earlier this month, that plan was set before the 2025/26 campaign to keep the youngster away from the spotlight.
Obi has featured in just one senior matchday squad this season, the 1-1 draw with Wolves at Old Trafford, but was an unused substitute in one of Amorim’s final games in charge of the club.
He’s been a regular in the EFL Trophy, National League Cup, FA Youth Cup, Premier League 2 and International under-21s Cup, with Obi believed to be learning more in those academy fixtures.
There have also been fewer first-team games this season due to the lack of European football and early cup exits, with Obi benefitting from that decision.
United reaped the rewards against the Foxes, with Obi opening the scoring in the 37th minute. Their lead would last just a few minutes with Leicester equalising through Lorenz Hutchinson.
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That didn’t deter the young Reds, with Obi responding almost immediately, scoring his second goal in added on time at the end of the first half.
Things went from bad to worse for Leicester when Reiss Khela was shown a red card in the 75th minute. United turned the screw and put the result beyond any doubt with Obi completing his hat-trick in the 88th minute, scoring another five minutes later to wrap up the scoring and bag his fourth.
The youngster took to social media to pose with the match ball, holding four fingers in the air to symbolise each goal scored.
United have been keen to stress the importance of taking their time with the young striker. Speaking back in September, Travis Binnion told the Manchester Evening News: “It’s not easy for him because people look at him like he’s a big kid. The key thing there is he’s still very young, he’s still learning his game.
“Because he’s had exposure with the first-team, I think people expect performance levels that are really consistent and really high. You’ve got first-team players across the country who don’t do that.
“The expectation on him is high, but he has to deliver the basics, and what he did from minute 30 to 80 when he came off is he pressed, he ran and he occupied two centre halves to give other players space on the pitch to exploit, which is why we dominated the ball.
“I’m really pleased with him and we haven’t even scraped the top of the iceberg with him. He’s got loads to come. That will come from how he sees the game, keeps working hard and recognises he has stuff to develop because that’s always a challenge when you have that first-team exposure and then you go away and have to start working on things.”
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Binnion added: “When you score as many goals as he has throughout his relatively short life, you can define yourself by goals. And we all know there’s probably only two or three strikers in the world who get two goals in every three games.
“If you’re used to scoring two goals in every game, then recognising what the role is, how you have to go around it takes a little bit of time. He is dying to be a footballer.
“He is hungry. And he’s still learning the game, learning how to project himself and learning how to play within a team, the club’s shape and system, so there’s still lots for him to do. The key is he wants to play, he wants to do well and wants to train. He could train every day if he could.”
Aug 6, 2021; Saitama, Japan; USA men’s team player Kevin Durant looks on as the United States play Serbia in the women’s basketball semifinal during the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Summer Games at Saitama Super Arena. Mandatory Credit: Kareem Elgazzar-Imagn Images
If Team USA calls Kevin Durant for a shot at his fifth Gold medal in the 2028 Olympics, he plans to be ready.
Durant will be 39 in 2028 when Los Angeles hosts the Summer Games. Only women’s stars Diana Taurasi and Sue Bird, with six and five gold medals respectively for Team USA, have won more golds in basketball than Durant.
“Hell yeah, I want to play,” Durant said. “I would love to, but I’ve got to stay on top of my game. I’m not expecting, I want to produce on the floor and make (USA Basketball president) Grant (Hill) and whoever is making the decisions, want to put me on the team. I don’t want — not just for seniority. I want to still prove I can help the team win. Today, yeah I feel like I’ll put my name in that hat.”
The self-described gym junkie said if he remains effective on the court as age 40 approaches, there is no reason he wouldn’t be open to another run in the Olympics despite a working narrative that LeBron James, Steph Curry and Durant were all unlikely to be back with Team USA. Curry turns 38 next month. James is 41.
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“You guys, the media, have projected that. I didn’t say I wasn’t playing. LeBron said he wasn’t,” Durant told ESPN. “You didn’t hear that from me or Steph.”
Durant told ESPN he views the criticism of American basketball being “ruined” by Curry or the AAU style of play as a racial critique.
“I just don’t like the talk around the USA versus European style of how you approach the game,” Durant told ESPN. “All I hear is, ‘AAU is destroying the game, the Euros do it right while the Americans do it wrong.’ It’s a lot of bulls– with that. I can read between the lines on that. It’s a shot at Black Americans. We’re controlling the sport. They’re tired of us controlling the sport. ‘France is coming for you.’ Really? We smacked them boys.”
Britain’s Tara Moore in action during her round of 32 match against Britain’s Heather Watson at the 2021 Nottingham Open.
Suspended WTA professional Tara Moore of Great Britain filed a $20 million lawsuit in New York claiming her positive test for steroids in 2022 was because of contaminated local meat served during an event in Colombia.
Moore, 33, was given a four-year suspension after testing positive for two different steroids at the Colombia event. The lawsuit references “concrete, actionable knowledge” the WTA has regarding meat at certain tournament locations that might contain banned substances.
The lawsuit comes as this week’s ATP Mexican Open eliminated local meat at its player restaurant over contamination fears. Last week, the International Tennis Integrity Agency cleared three players who tested positive for the steroid boldenone during an event at Colombia in May.
The substances boldenone and nandrolone appeared in Moore’s positive test in 2022.
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Moore has ranked as high as No. 145 in singles and No. 77 in doubles.
Holders Chelsea will host either Tottenham Hotspur or London City Lionesses in the Women’s FA Cup quarter-finals.
WSL 2 side Birmingham City welcome WSL leaders Manchester City, while Brighton will travel to 14-time FA Cup winners Arsenal.
The final tie is WSL 2 leaders Charlton Athletic against WSL strugglers Liverpool.
The fixtures are set to be played on Sunday, 5 April.
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Spurs and the Lionesses are playing the remaining fifth-round tie on Monday evening.
Six-time winners Chelsea reached the quarters-final on Sunday after beating Manchester United 2-1, thanks to an extra-time goal from defender Naomi Girma.