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Digital Sports Desk

Final Week of Big East Season

March 1, 2023 by Digital Sports Desk

NEW YORK – (Staff Report from Official News Release) – Going into the final week of the regular season, tremendous fan support has increased once again across the BIG EAST Conference in men’s basketball.

Led nationally by Creighton (17,172, 6th) and Marquette (14,098, 16th), seven BIG EAST schools rank among top-50 in overall attendance in 2022-23. Overall, nine of 11 BIG EAST schools’ attendance number have increased this season, with BIG EAST teams combining for 53 sellout home games.

Powered by the boisterous crowds, BIG EAST programs are 123-45 on their home courts, collectively winning 73.2 percent of games. In addition, the top five seeds in the 2023 BIG EAST Men’s Basketball Tournament, presented by JEEP boast an astounding 70-7 home mark, winning 90.9 percent of contests in front of their respective fan bases.

As a league, average attendance has risen to 10,322 fans per game, up 6.87 percent from a season ago. The attendance across the league currently ranks second since realignment, with an average of 10,371 fans per game set in 2018.

For schools playing in their primary arenas, percentage capacities are at or near 100 percent for multiple programs, led by Xavier and Villanova. Playing all 16 games in front of the fans at Cintas Center, the Musketeers are averaging 10,279 fans and hitting 100.54 percent capacity. In addition, Villanova has sold out at each of its nine home game played at Finneran Pavilion (6,501 seat capacity).

Just shy of reaching full capacity, Creighton has sold 98.96 percent of tickets to its 14 home games, while Marquette has filled 76.21 percent of Fiserv Forum (18,500 seat capacity) seats across 16 games to stay in the top-20 in overall NCAA attendance.

Filed Under: Big East, NCAA, NCAA Basketball Tagged With: Big East, Big East Basketball

Four Big East Teams in Top 25

February 27, 2023 by Digital Sports Desk

NEW YORK – (Staff Report from Official News Release) – For the eighth straight week, at least four BIG EAST teams are ranked among the nation’s top-25 teams in both the AP and USA Today polls.

Extending its win streak to four games after a 2-0 week, Marquette (23-6, 15-3 BIG EAST) jumped to No. 6 in both polls on Monday. The ranking marks the highest for the Golden Eagles since 1978.

Also making a four-position leap in the AP poll, Connecticut (22-7, 11-7 BE) ranks No. 14, followed closely by No. 19 Xavier (21-8, 13-5 BE) and No. 20 Providence (21-8, 13-5 BE).

Heading into the final week of regular season action, the rankings once again set up a top-20 midweek matchup. Looking to remain perfect at home, the Friars will welcome the Musketeers to Amica Mutual Pavilion Wednesday at 6:30 p.m. ET on FS1.

Providence earned a road win on Sunday, moving past Georgetown 88-68 at Capital One Arena. The Friars held firm control at halftime, 46-27, spearheaded by a 13-0 run midway through the opening 20 minutes. Ed Croswell led the visitors with a career-high 25 points and a game-high 13 rebounds, while Jared Bynum pitched in 18 points and drilled six three-pointers. Primo Spears led Georgetown with a game-high 26 points.

Filed Under: Big East, NCAA, NCAA Basketball Tagged With: Big East, Big East Basketball

TL’s Sunday Sports Notes | February 26

February 26, 2023 by Digital Sports Desk

By TERRY LYONS

BOSTON – When it comes to load management, not a word is uttered about the PGA Tour where players build their schedules very carefully to maximize potential earnings of dollars and FedEx Cup points, while playing courses that are conducive to their personal style and overall game – the Horse for the Course theory.

Yes, PGA Tour players are the ultimate load managers and have been for years. They skip tournaments where the purse is low or the travel is difficult. They stack their schedule with proper tune-ups for the Majors, usually getting within the same time zone to practice for the course the Major will be played. When the season starts, some of the previous year’s tournament champions even skip the Sentry Tournament of Champions and blow-off the Hawaii portion of the West Coast swing in order to extend their winter vacations, stay with family or work on their games in preparation for the California and Arizona portions of the Tour.

This weekend, after two tournament with enhanced purses of $20 million total and $3.6m to the winner, the Honda Classic has a less than impressive field with only three Top 20 players. The gradual fall of the Honda came with an announcement last year, but as of this weekend no future sponsor has been announced to take the prestigious slot in late February, clear of NFL Football and before March Madness dominates the sports TV calendar.

Honda, one of the best known auto-makers on the planet, sponsored this event for 42 years, the longest-running sponsorship on the PGA Tour.

“It’s disappointing on many aspects of it,” said PGA Tour pro and Florida native Billy Horschel. “I’m sort of disappointed in the PGA Tour in the sense that — I’m not going to say they didn’t prioritize the Honda Classic, they prioritize every sponsor that we have. … But, you know, when I was out on tour early in my career, this was a hot event. I mean, you had all Top 20 players in the world playing here (Palm Beach Gardens.)”

The next two weeks, the top ranked players will flock to Bay Hill and then to The PLAYERS Championship for the big bucks. The Honda will be offered-up to a slew of PGA Tour sponsors awaiting their chance to join the party.

That brings us to … (drum roll, please) … Load Management in the NBA.

HERE NOW, THE NOTES: The NBA is getting crushed with criticism after a lackluster 2023 All-Star Weekend and ensuing team announcements of (players listed as DNP- (Coaches Decision-Rest) on boxscores throughout the land this week (and in general, all season long).

“This isn’t a new issue,” said NBA Commissioner Adam Silver when asked to share his viewpoint during his annual NBA All-Star State of the League address with media. “There’s nothing particularly happening this season that we haven’t seen happening over the last several seasons. I understand it from a fan standpoint that if you are buying tickets to a particular game and that player isn’t playing. I don’t have a good answer for that other than this is a deep league with incredible competition.

“But the mind-set of our teams and players these days, it’s not just a player issue, is that they should be optimizing performance for the playoffs. The difficulty is fans of that team, of those teams, want them to do that, as well. Just think about some of the injuries we have now going into All-Star. I think for fans, if you had said that if Steph Curry had missed these two games at this point earlier in the season, if it was that formulaic and people said, therefore, he would be healthy today and he would be here, maybe people would take that trade-off. It’s something that, I don’t think we’re approaching it necessarily in an adversarial way with the Players Association. We’re working collectively together with our doctors, our data scientists, and trying to see if there’s an optimal way for player performance.

“I’ll say one thing, added Silver, “I know that talking to players, I think part of the realization these days in playing in this league is that this is a year-round pursuit now. I think part of injury avoidance means how players are treating their bodies year-round, how teams are interacting with players year-round, and using the best data to conclude what is it that will allow players to stay healthy and on the floor as long as possible.”

That all makes perfect sense, just as you would expect when Silver digs-in deep and provides the media with his straight-forward and always honest point of view.

Since he shared his POV, the author of WWYI will share his, no holding back.

NBA players and their agents rule the roost. A young player drafted into the league or beginning as an early-entry to the draft, play under the “Rookie Scale” of the NBA’s multi-faceted Collective Bargaining Agreement. If the player’s talent or potential is significant, they score a larger contract after completing the “Rookie Scale” portion. That second player contract is quite handsome in terms of salary, incentives and it provides some security.

The fact of the matter, however, is that a player’s THIRD contract (and beyond, if they are good enough and stay healthy) is the REAL DEAL. Whether it be earned via Free Agency or by staying with his incumbent employer, it’s that third NBA contract that breaks the bank acount wide open, usually called “Max” (as in maximum amount allowed under the terms of the Collective Bargaining Agreement’s flavor of the day.

There’s not a player agent in the land who isn’t aware of the bonanza of a player earning and signing a “max” contract. Important to note, is the fact a player has to get there with a work ethic and talent level far beyond any normal pro athlete. They’ve endured for 12-month, 365-days-a-year preparation, much via their NBA team, some via off-season workouts with trainers who make them seem bionic.

On the flip side, the player has to exhibit the will to win and to prove that point by – well – winning. Or at least making his team better and advancing further into the NBA Playoffs. It is not done alone, as we’ve all witnessed the fact team play and trusting their teammates for the good of the club winning is what gets it done come June.

My personal POV, it’s nobody’s business other than the head coach of the club and the player on how they get to the promised land of NBA ‘W’s” as it’s such a long journey and learning process that requires a few things, such as:

  1. Staying Healthy
  2. Playing in a great environment, the buzzword is creating a “culture.”
  3. Continuity in coaching, coaching/playing philosophies which must jive together
  4. Support (from every direction imaginable). A few to consider? – Family, friends, teammates, fans, front-office staff, coaching staff, training, strength and conditioning staff – including good nutrition and life habits (rest, routine, hydration, and the ability to deal with PRESSURE.
  5. LUCK! Yes L-U-C-K. It can come from a ping-pong ball bouncing in the NBA Draft Lottery to a great second-round draft choice who pans out (think TonyParker and Manu Ginobili – two Hall of Famers “to be” this September who filled-out the San Antonio Spurs roster nicely behind the two bouncing ping-pong ball gifts received by Gregg Popovich, R.C. Buford and the Spurs when they landed No. 1 Lottery picks David Robinson and Tim Duncan. … Luck also relates to staying injury free and many other factors which can make-or-break an NBA title contender.

Who is to say a day-off here and a rest day there doesn’t contribute to a positive relationship between player and coach? Yet, sometimes it comes with a downside of losing one game here and another there, to the point of homecourt advantage for a playoff series or for the NBA Finals. (Suffice to say, it’s no picnic thinking about player at Denver in the altitude come NBA Finals time).

This leads us back to the NBA All-Star Weekend (ASW), the three-ring circus just concluded in Salt Lake City where Commissioner Silver reported some 33,000 heads in beds were secured by area hotels all coming with a significant economic impact for the host city and the State of Utah.

Throughout the ASW and this week that followed, every basketball talking head was tossing out ideas to improve the experience.

  • Former basketball coach turned media guy, Stan Van Gundy, suggested a USA vs. The WORLD game with a cool $1 million in cash for each player on the winning team – winners take all.
  • One of the league’s all-time great GMs, Pete Babcock noted: “Twenty years ago, I made a proposal at the NBA Competition and Rules Committee meeting that we stage a mid-season “final four” tournament at the mid-year break. The teams with the four best records play on Saturday and the winners play on Sunday, with each winning player receiving a check for $1 million.” “My thought was and is, this would provide the fans with three actual competitive games rather than trying to come up with gimmicks to entertain,” said Babcock. … When we spoke this week, I brought up one major issue: “Hasn’t the League heaped enough PRESSURE on the athletes,” asked yours truly? Why can’t the weekend be an enjoyable weekend for everyone and maybe put competitive basketball on the side for two or three days?
  • Yes, my point was to let the players enjoy themselves as much as the fans, sponsors and team executives while they play in a pressure free atmosphere and have some FUN.
  • Over the many years, it seems some NBA All-Star Games end up being close down the stretch of the final quarter and the players’ competitive instincts kick-in. It isn’t fueled by the money in a winner’s or loser’s share, but rather in pride.
  • That pride-factor was lost a bit when EAST vs WEST went out the window for choosing up sides, a concept which was fun for a year or so. Last week, we all jumped further down that rabbit hole when the sides were selected just prior to the game – playground style. That move removed the one team practice conducted for each squad, always held Saturday.
  • It also made the job of Coaching nearly impossible, as each head coach had NO IDEA who was going to be on their respective clubs and could not plan for some offensive sets, playing combinations or some defensive schemes to combat a size or speed advantage. Not that the All-Star Saturday practice was a session of “Red on Roundball,” but c’mon, at least give the coaches a day or two advance instead of less than an hour.
  • The perpetual lay-up line and hoisting of three-pointers resulted in a 29-for-66 3PT FG by Team Giannis and a 17-of-60 (.283%) debacle for Team LeBronprovided a 184-175 victory for Giannis but an all-time low TV rating for the game itself. Only the fans of Boston’s Jayson Tatum (22-for-31 FG; 10-of-18 3FG and an all-time NBA All-Star game record of 55 points) were entertained by the “game.” Tatum was awarded the All-Star Game MVP for his efforts.

*Important note and in full transparency of being a former 25+ year employee:

The NBA finds itself in an incredible conundrum. Do they keep trying some new ideas as they come along? Counting the fact they scrapped the longtime tradition of East vs West; then pivoted to naming Team Captains and choosing up sides; then, installed the famed “Elam Ending” to decide the game; and this year, went to the length of choosing-up sides only minutes before tip-off, among some other ideas past and present – many discarded.

By virtue of the TV ratings forecast, the NBA All-Star Weekend seems to be going backwards, although highlight views of the Slam Dunk and other assorted clips remain the rage of the Twitter, Instagram, Tik Tok and other forms of stealing highlights (with the NBA’s full-fledged nod). In-arena feedback was mixed while home viewing obviously suffered the most.

In conclusion, the NBA conundrum lies with the “basketball traditionalists; the coaches and those closest to the game itself” all wanting a much more competitive exhibition game. That comes regardless of the extra pressure, strain and potential injury to the best 24 players in the league. They are ready to plop $1 million in cash in 12 briefcases to up the ante – winner’s take all – a premise that has no chance of clearing the legal team at the NBA Players Association.

The “non-basketball crowd” is okay with the exhibition game as it is and the photo op that the entire weekend has fast become, as long as the beer is cold and the buffet tables serve shrimp. Maybe that’s the way original NBA PR man Haskell Cohendreamt-up the idea – as a big Photo Op?

There is NO in between.

USA vs The WORLD sounds nice, but that is really FIBA’s domain for the FIBA World Cup of Basketball and the Olympic Games. It is also a pressure cooker for the players as only 12 USA players will be recognized as “NBA All-Stars,” a sure issue for the NBPA and the incentive-laden player contracts with an All-Star selection worth a cool million incentive. In addition, the team ownership and GMs would prefer that their players NOT be subject of added PRESSURE AND POTENTIAL INJURY but rarely admit to it – with the exception of Dallas’ Mark Cuban.

NBA on ABC commentator and former NBA head coach Jeff Van Gundy suggested a weekend full of fun and parties, but, “just don’t PLAY that Game.”

There’s been discussion on having a mid-season tournament, call it a “Cup,” and that might replace the game formerly known as All-Star. That is an interesting concept for sure, as it simply steals the idea from European futbol competition so well accepted. Once again, that heaps the PRESSURE on the teams, players and coaches while it surely creates a BILLION dollar TV programming pot.

I’d be game to see what the “Cup” looks like, but failing that concept and a very serious break in the season and the reduction of regular season games, I’d rewind the clock, go back to EAST vs WEST with the fans selected the starters and the respective conference coaches selecting the reserves. Cut Thursday games out of the schedule, allowing everyone to fly to the All-Star city on Thursday with team meetings Thursday evening. Two mandatory and closed to the public practice sessions (Thursday eve walk-through and Friday), then, an open-day for the All-Star Game players on Saturday to let them enjoy the festivities. Hold a very basic (and private/closed) shoot-around at 11-12 Noon (ET) Sunday and then toss it up at about 6pm (ET) on Sunday evening with two teams of 12 who play until one team scores 125 points. (The Al Domenico rule +25 points).

TID-BIT: The Boston Bruins acquired Dmitry Orlov and Garnet Hathaway on Thursday in exchange for veteran Craig Smith, a 2023 first-round pick, a 2024 third-round pick and a 2025 second-round selection all going to the Washington Caps. The move stated clearly, the Bruins are “all-in” for the 2023 Stanley Cup Playoffs and a possible return to play for the Cup. It also stated the Caps were folding the deck for 2023. … The question at hand, but hardly uttered, will the Bruins locker remain as one and fully bonded with the addition of Orlov, a Russian player who hob-nobbed with Alex Ovechkin, his former teammate with Caps and known-to-be supportive of Russia’s Vladimir Putin, the psuedo dictator and the man behind Russia’s attack of the Ukraine, war crimes included. … The Boston locker is populated by its talented players from the Czech Republic, including leading goal-scorer David Pastrnak, and centers David Krejci and Pavel Zacha among others. Just how will they blend with the newly acquired Russian player with the animosity towards his land so high throughout Europe and the USA? … The Bruins also acquired the rights to Andrei Svetlakov, a top 26-year old prospect currently with the CSKA club but was drafted by the Minnesota Wild back in 2017.

The most likely occurrence is for the Bruins players to put politics aside and for Orlov and his talents to be accepted as a player who can contribute to the one goal the Bruins have in front of them – and that is their desire to hoist the Stanley Cup in June.

Filed Under: While We're Young Ideas Tagged With: All-NBA Team, PGA Tour

NFL Commanders Attract $5.5b Bid

February 26, 2023 by Digital Sports Desk

WASHINGTON DC – (Staff and Wire Service Report) – Houston Rockets team owner Tilman Fertitta has submitted a $5.5 billion bid to buy the Washington Commanders, The Washington Post reported Sunday. Fertitta purchased the NBA franchise for $2.2 billion in September 2017.

Embed from Getty Images

The only other known bidder is Philadelphia 76ers and New Jersey Devils owner Josh Harris, according to ESPN.

Commanders owner Dan Snyder announced in November that he and his wife, Tanya, had hired Bank of America Securities to consider “potential transactions” involving the NFL franchise.

ESPN reported Thursday that Amazon founder and Washington Post owner Jeff Bezos had hired an investment firm to explore the possibility of bidding on the Commanders.

On Saturday, however, The Athletic reported that Snyder has barred Bezos from placing a bid.

Snyder, 58, has owned the team since 1999.

Media reports last month said the Commanders could be sold as soon as March but that no candidate met Snyder’s asking price of $7 billion in the first round of bids.

–Field Level Media

Filed Under: NFL, Sports Business Tagged With: NFL, Sports Biz, Washington Commanders

Providence Unbeaten at Home

February 15, 2023 by Digital Sports Desk

NEW YORK – (Staff Report from Official News Release) – The “down the stretch” portion of the regular season is here. Tuesday night was a great example with two of the four games going into double overtime.

No. 24 Providence stayed unbeaten at home (14-0) this season with a 94-86 double-overtime decision over No. 18 Creighton at the AMP. The Friars got 65 points from the trio of Devin Carter (25), Bryce Hopkins (20) and Noah Locke (20). Creighton point guard Ryan Nembhard was the game’s top rebounder with 10 boards and scored a team-high 21 points. The Friars and Bluejays are tied for third place in the standings with 11-4 records. PC is 19-7 overall. Creighton is 17-9.

The other double-overtime contest had St. John’s (16-11, 6-10 BE) rallying from a 13-point deficit with less than seven minutes in regulation and outlasting DePaul 92-83. Dylan Addae-Wusu scored a career-high 24 points, including a 3-pointer with 0.5 seconds left to force overtime. Joel Soriano posted his 21st double-double with 21 points and 16 boards. For DePaul (9-17, 3-12 BE), Javon Johnson had six 3-pointers and 26 points.

Seton Hall held Georgetown to 36.5 percent shooting from the field and helped force 16 turnovers in a 76-68 victory. Al-Amir Dawes scored a game-high 20 points for the Pirates (16-11, 9-7 BE). Tyrese Samuel added 15 points and 10 rebounds. The Hoyas (6-21, 1-15) cut a 15-point deficit to four in the final minutes but could not complete the comeback. Primo Spears netted a team-high 16 points.

Villanova put the defensive clamps on visiting Butler in a 62-50 win. The Wildcats (13-13, 7-8 BE) held the Bulldogs (13-14, 5-11 BE) to a .377 percentage from the floor. VU’s Justin Moore had a team-high 15 points and Caleb Daniels added 13. Butler’s Jayden Taylor continued his strong play with a game-high 20 points.

The lone game on Wednesday figures to be a must-see matchup with No. 11 Marquette hosting No. 16 Xavier on CBS Sports Network at 7 p.m. ET. The Golden Eagles (20-6, 12-3 BE) have a half-game lead over the Musketeers (19-6, 11-3 BE). Xavier won the first meeting 80-76 on Jan. 15 at Cintas Center.

Filed Under: Big East, NCAA, NCAA Basketball Tagged With: Big East Basketball, Providence

PGA Tour: The Genesis

February 15, 2023 by Digital Sports Desk

By TERRY LYONS

PACIFIC PALISADES – The Genesis Invitational is the 16th event of the 2022-23 PGA Tour Season and third designated event, featuring 23 of the top 25 players in the Official World Golf Ranking (39 of top 50), the Top 30 players in the FedEx Cup standings and all 13 players that have won on Tour this season. The field was expanded from the original size of 120 players to 130 to include all players defined as eligible in the tournament regulations. This is the second week in a row that the field has been expanded due to the strength of the field, with the WM Phoenix Open expanded from 132 to 134.

That stated, the field has been reduced to 129 because of several player WDs, including Maverick McNealy (full listing below).

Purse of $20m and 550 FedEx Cup points are on the line

Tournament host and 82-time PGA Tour winner Tiger Woods is making his first start on Tour since the 2022 Open Championship and first in a non-major since the 2020 ZOZO Championship. Woods’ opening tee shot in the first round will take place 844 days since his last competitive round in a non-major (October 25, 2020).

With a victory, Woods would break a tie with Sam Snead for most wins in PGA Tour history. Woods has not finished in the Top-10 on Tour since the 2020 Farmers Insurance Open (T-9) and his most recent victory, his 82nd, came at the 2019 ZOZO.

Woods has 14 starts at The Genesis Invitational, the most of any tournament in his career without a victory. He made his PGA Tour debut at the event in 1992 as a 16-year-old amateur (MC) and most recently competed in 2020 (68th).

Tiger Woods’ most starts in a PGA Tour event without a victory:

  • 14 The Genesis Invitational
  • 11 FedEx St. Jude Championship (formerly The Barclays)
  • 5 The Honda Classic

Genesis Invitational | Tournament Facts

COURSE: Riviera Country Club, Pacific Palisades

YARDS/PAR: 7,322 yards/Par 71

ARCHITECTS: G.C.Thomas, Jr.\ W.P. Bell

PRIZE Money – Purse: $20,000,000/$3,600,000

DEFENDING CHAMPION: Joaquin Niemann

PAST RESULTS: (link)

PAST CHAMPIONS: (link)

FEDEx CUP Points to Winner: 550

SOCIAL MEDIA: #PGATour #FedExCup @thegenesisinv

Filed Under: PGA TOUR Tagged With: PGA Tour, The Genesis Invitational

Super Bowl LVII Scores Big

February 14, 2023 by Digital Sports Desk

NEW YORK – (Staff and Wire service Report) – Super Bowl LVII earned an average TV audience of 113 million people, the Nielsen Company reported, making it the third most-watched Super Bowl on record and the third most-watched television broadcast of all time.

The Kansas City Chiefs’ 38-35 win over the Philadelphia Eagles came up just shy of the record of 114.4 million viewers, on average, that watched the New England Patriots beat the Seattle Seahawks in Super Bowl XLIX in February 2015.

Super Bowl LI, the Patriots’ famed 34-28 comeback win over the Atlanta Falcons in February 2017, hit 113.7 million for Fox between network and streaming, making Chiefs-Eagles Fox Sports’ second most-watched broadcast ever.

About 106 million viewers watched Super Bowl LVII on Fox and Fox Deportes, and the other seven million utilized streaming platforms that factored into the total.

It represents a modest bump over last year’s Super Bowl between the Los Angeles Rams and the Cincinnati Bengals, which reported 112.3 million viewers on average.

Rihanna’s halftime show drew an average of 118.7 million viewers, Nielsen reported, making it the second most-watched Super Bowl halftime performance on record.

The average of seven million streams made Super Bowl LVII the most-streamed Super Bowl to date, Fox said.

Predictably, Kansas City and Philadelphia were the top two metered markets for the broadcast, followed by Cincinnati, Detroit and Pittsburgh.

Filed Under: NFL, Sports Business Tagged With: NFL, Sports Business, Super Bowl LVII, TV Ratings

NFL: Top 50 Free Agents for 2023

February 13, 2023 by Digital Sports Desk

NEW YORK – (Wire Service Report by Field Level Media) – Running backs, defensive backs and defensive linemen could be popular when free agency begins in March.

The top players scheduled to become free agents are likely to be heavily considered for the franchise tag this month, including Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson, before shopping can officially begin at 11:59:59 p.m. ET on March 15.

Teams face a March 7 deadline for the franchise tag.

Speculative free agents, such as players with looming contract negotiations that could lead to their release or a trade — Raiders quarterback Derek Carr or Titans offensive tackle Taylor Lewan — are not included.

Field Level Media’s Top 50 unrestricted free agents for 2023:

1. Lamar Jackson, QB, Ravens
Former MVP isn’t going anywhere. Self-represented and negotiating without an agent, Jackson is using the fully guaranteed $230M deal Deshaun Watson signed with the Browns last year as his guidepost. Will the Ravens blink? Jackson is 26, but the Ravens might not have the salary cap room to use the exclusive franchise tag, which blocks other teams from negotiating with him, but runs $45 million compared to $32.5 million for the non-exclusive tag.

2. Orlando Brown Jr., OT, Chiefs
Jackson’s former teammate in Baltimore and a member of the same Ravens’ 2018 draft class, Brown has outperformed his draft slot (83rd overall) and contract. Unless general managers wait for the draft, the OT market is slim pickings. Brown has plenty of leverage. Tagged last spring at a value of $16.62 million for 2022, Brown declined a six-year, $139 million deal with a $30.25 million signing bonus last July.

3. Daron Payne, DT, Commanders
The 25-year-old might not make it out of Washington. If he does, a salary of $20 million is highly likely.

4. Josh Jacobs, RB, Raiders
Not going anywhere, the Raiders plan to keep Jacobs after his bounceback 2022 season.

5. Jessie Bates, S, Bengals
All too familiar with the franchise tag ($12.9M last year), Bates held out until Aug. 23 last summer when the two sides couldn’t reach a long-term agreement.

6. Javon Hargrave, DT, Eagles
The ideal fit in Philadelphia’s front after leaving a more restrictive role with the Steelers, Hargrave can command top dollar in free agency after posting a career-best 11 sacks last season.

7. Mike McGlinchey, OT, 49ers
With big contracts clogging the 49ers path to a huge raise for the 28-year-old, McGlinchey will not offer a home-town discount to stay.

8. Daniel Jones, QB, Giants
Jones is the priority for the Giants this offseason as stated by the head coach and GM, and could be a tag candidate. Last season, 14 quarterbacks were paid at least $29.7M in total outlay, making the $32.5 million tag rate for Jones look more palatable.

9. Geno Smith, QB, Seahawks
Maybe trust Seahawks GM John Schneider to balance the books, eh? Smith made a measly $3.5 million in 2022, a career year in which he outperformed expectations and Seattle’s ex-QB, Russell Wilson. By the way, Wilson signed a new five-year deal in 2022 that averages $48,517,647 per year.

10. CJ Gardner-Johnson, S, Eagles
A trade heist in 2022 brought Gardner-Johnson to the Eagles for mid-round draft picks. Keeping him won’t be quite as simple with the Jalen Hurts contract around the bend, but Philadelphia has a pair of first-round picks in 2023.

11. Jamel Dean, CB, Buccaneers
At 26, the former third-round pick can nearly name his price in a shallow pool of young free agent corners. Cap-strapped Tampa can’t afford to keep him.

12. Saquon Barkley, RB, Giants
Barkley likes his fit in the Brian Daboll system and the Giants are interested in retaining the former No. 2 overall pick if the price is right. He turned 26 on Feb. 9, but other first-rounders have seen relative or dramatic letdowns on their second NFL contracts. Todd Gurley is only 28 and flat-lined two seasons ago with 6,082 career rushing yards. Ezekiel Elliott turns 28 in July and is showing severe wear and tear.

13. Lavonte David, LB, Buccaneers
Limited capital likely renders the Buccaneers as non-players in the David Sweepstakes, unless he’s willing to go with a team-friendly deal at age 33.

14. Miles Sanders, RB, Eagles
Depth in the free agency class and upcoming draft takes some of the leverage out of Sanders’ hands. He turns 26 a week after the NFL draft and has low mileage for a four-year pro. In 94 total games over the past seven pro and college seasons since enrolling at Penn State, Sanders has only 975 regular-season carries. By comparison, his predecessor at Penn State — Saquon Barkley — has 954 in 60 NFL games the past five seasons and tore his ACL in 2020.

15. Dalton Schultz, TE, Cowboys
Critical without a steady No. 2 wide receiver, the Cowboys might be willing to look toward the draft for his replacement or let understudy Jake Ferguson (fourth round, 2022) step into the lead role.

16. Tremaine Edmunds, LB, Bills
Drafted at 20 years old, Edmunds might not reach the Roquan Smith stratosphere of $20M annually, but $15 million per season isn’t out of the question. That’s too rich for the Bills, who are over the cap and signed linebacker Matt Milano to a new deal.

17. Tony Pollard, RB, Cowboys
Pollard was in the lead role for the Cowboys for only part of his fourth season, which ended at San Francisco in the playoffs due to a broken leg. His calling card is speed, and even with the focus on his physical recovery, there will be teams ready to bet on Pollard being their big-play back next season.

18. Jakobi Meyers, WR, Patriots
An undrafted free agent who became a nightmare matchup in the slot, Meyers should benefit from the rising market value for good and sometimes-great wide receivers.

19. James Bradberry, CB, Eagles
Before the holding penalty in Super Bowl LVII, Bradberry had one of the best seasons in pass coverage in the NFL. He’ll be coveted, but too pricey for the Eagles to retain.

20. Jimmy Garoppolo, QB, 49ers
Proven starter but unproven finisher with an expanding history of injuries. Garoppolo is 44-19 as a starter and the 31-year-old fits as a short-term option for teams potentially in transition (Buccaneers, Jets, Packers).

21. Evan Engram, TE, Jaguars
22. Yannick Ngakoue, DE, Colts
23. Jason Kelce, C, Eagles
24. Ben Powers, OG, Ravens
25. Dre’Mont Jones, DT, Broncos
26. Kaleb McGary, OT, Falcons
27. Dalvin Tomlinson, DT, Vikings
28. Marcus Peters, CB, Ravens
29. Kareem Hunt, RB, Browns
30. David Montgomery, RB, Bears
31. Marcus Davenport, DE, Saints
32. JuJu Smith-Schuster, WR, Chiefs
33. Isaiah Wynn, OT, Patriots
34. Isaac Seumalo, OG, Eagles
35. Rodney Hudson, C, Cardinals
36. Jadeveon Clowney, DE-OLB, Browns
37. Brandon Graham, DE, Eagles
38. Fletcher Cox, DT, Eagles
39. Drue Tranquill, LB, Chargers
40. Allen Lazard, WR, Packers
41. Ethan Pocic, C, Browns
42. Dalton Risner, OG, Broncos
43. Cam Sutton, CB, Steelers
44. David Long, LB, Titans
45. Jordan Poyer, S, Bills
46. Mike Gesicki, TE, Dolphins
47. Devin Singletary, CB, Bills
48. Baker Mayfield, QB, Rams
49. Mecole Hardman, WR, Chiefs
50. Odell Beckham Jr., WR, N/A

– Field Level Media

Filed Under: NFL Tagged With: NFL

Chiefs Max-Out Super Second Half

February 12, 2023 by Digital Sports Desk

GLENDALE – (Staff and Wire Service Report by Field Level Media) – Patrick Mahomes limped off the field at halftime with the Kansas City Chiefs trailing by 10 points.

It turns out there was no need to fret, not with the Super Bowl having a 29-minute halftime.

Embed from Getty Images

Mahomes got treatment during the lengthy break and came out convinced his injured right ankle would hold up. His belief was correct, and he guided the Chiefs to a 38-35 comeback victory over the Philadelphia Eagles in Super Bowl LVII on Sunday night in Arizona.

Harrison Butker kicked a 27-yard field goal with eight seconds left and Mahomes passed for two of his three touchdowns in the fourth quarter as Kansas City became just the second team in Super Bowl history to rally from a deficit of 10 or more points.

The Super Bowl title is the third for Kansas City. The Chiefs also won Super Bowl IV (1969 season) and Super Bowl LIV (2019).

Mahomes was named Super Bowl MVP for the second time in four seasons, but he stopped short of calling the Chiefs the rulers of the NFL.

“I’m not going to say dynasty yet,” Mahomes said. “We’re not done.”

Midseason acquisition Kadarius Toney sparked Kansas City by catching a touchdown pass and setting up another score with a long punt return. Travis Kelce and Skyy Moore caught touchdown passes, Isiah Pacheco ran for a score and Nick Bolton returned a fumble for a touchdown for the Chiefs.

The result gave Kansas City coach Andy Reid a victory over the team he coached for 14 seasons from 1999-2012.

“I know that city loves him and that organization loves him,” Kelce said of Reid. “Call it what you want — there is a lot of pride that he has had success in two different organizations, but this is the better one.”

Philadelphia’s Jalen Hurts tied a Super Bowl record with three rushing scores and also passed for one touchdown. Hurts was 27-of-38 passing for 304 yards and rushed for 70 while teaming up with Mahomes as the first pair of Black starting quarterbacks in Super Bowl history.

Former Denver Broncos star Terrell Davis rushed for three touchdowns against the Green Bay Packers in Super Bowl XXXII.

Kansas City moved 66 yards on 12 plays for the winning field goal, receiving help from a third-down defensive holding penalty on Philadelphia’s James Bradberry. The cornerback briefly grabbed the jersey of Kansas City wideout JuJu Smith-Schuster.

“It was a holding,” Bradberry said. “I tugged his jersey. I was hoping they would let it slide.”

Eagles coach Nick Sirianni declined to criticize the call.

“I know it always appears that it’s one call,” Sirianni said. “That’s not what it is. There are so many plays that contribute to the end result of the game. And today they were better than we were.”

Another key play was a 26-yard scramble by Mahomes, who earlier aggravated his right ankle injury on Kansas City’s final offensive snap of the first half.

“Whenever you aggravate those high ankles, it hurts,” Mahomes said. “It feels like it did the first time. … But you’ve got to play at the end of the day.”

A.J. Brown caught six passes for 96 yards and one touchdown and DeVonta Smith had seven receptions for 100 yards for the Eagles.

Teams that trailed by 10 or more points at halftime in the Super Bowl are now 2-26. The New England Patriots were the first team to accomplish it as they recovered from a 25-point hole to beat the Atlanta Falcons in Super Bowl LI.

Kansas City took its first lead of the contest at 28-27 when Mahomes completed a 5-yard scoring pass to a wide-open Toney with 12:04 left in the game. That also marked the first time Philadelphia had trailed the entire postseason.

The Chiefs then forced a three-and-out and cashed in big when Toney set a Super Bowl record with a 65-yard punt return. He fielded the ball at his 30-yard line and started left before reversing to the right with a wall of teammates blocking. He was stopped at the Eagles 5.

Three plays later, Mahomes had another wide-open target in Moore, who caught a 4-yard scoring pass to give Kansas City an eight-point lead with 9:22 remaining.

Philadelphia quickly responded as Hurts connected with Smith on a 45-yard pass to the Chiefs 2. Hurts scored on a quarterback sneak on the next play and then ran in the two-point conversion to tie it at 35 with 5:15 remaining.

Mahomes re-injured his right ankle when tackled with 1:33 left in the first half but he didn’t seem bothered by it when the Chiefs opened the second half with a 10-play, 75-yard drive. Pacheco capped the drive with a 1-yard run with 9:30 left in the third quarter to pull Kansas City within 24-21.

Philadelphia responded with a 17-play, 60-yard drive that took 7:45. Jake Elliott finished it by booting a 33-yard field goal to give the Eagles a six-point lead with 1:45 left in the period.

Hurts rushed for two touchdowns and threw for one in the first half to give Philadelphia a 24-14 advantage.

He made one big first-half miscue, dropping the ball while trying to run out of danger. It bounced up to Bolton, who easily scored on a 36-yard fumble return to tie it at 14 with 9:39 left in the half.

“I’m so proud of this team,” Hurts said. “We had a big-time goal in the end, and we came up short. The beautiful part is we experience different agony in life, and we decide how we want to move forward, how we want to learn. My only direction is to rise.”

Mahomes connected on an 18-yard scoring pass to Kelce in the first quarter. The touchdown reception was Kelce’s 16th in the postseason, second all-time behind legendary Jerry Rice (22).

Kelce also improved to 3-0 all-time in matchups against his older brother Jason, the Eagles’ standout center.

“I’m really, really happy for Trav,” Jason Kelce said. “That team deserves everything it had coming to them. They earned it. … You can’t win them all.”

–Field Level Media

Filed Under: NFL Tagged With: Kansas City Chiefs, Super Bowl, SuperBowlLVII

Super Bowl LVII Preview

February 11, 2023 by Digital Sports Desk

GLENDALE – (Staff and Wire Service Report by Field Level Media) – Patrick Mahomes is on the verge of becoming the youngest quarterback to start three Super Bowls, but the Kansas City Chiefs star is more interested in becoming the 13th to earn multiple Super Bowl rings.

Mahomes will be playing in his third Super Bowl in the past four campaigns, and his task on Sunday is to solve the dominant defense of the Philadelphia Eagles in Super Bowl LVII in Arizona.

Philadelphia has been backed by 67 percent of the spread-line bets and 68 percent of the handle at BetMGM. The action was similar at BetRivers to begin the week before more money started flowing in on the Chiefs, with the Eagles now drawing 58 and 51 percent, respectively.

Mahomes will be 27 years, 148 days old when he takes the field but is already viewed as an NFL great. He is 1-1 in previous Super Bowls, having beaten the San Francisco 49ers 31-20 in Super Bowl LIV and lost 31-9 to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in Super Bowl LV one year later.

Philadelphia’s defense, ranked second in the regular season at 301.5 yards allowed per game, will be swimming like sharks around Mahomes.

The Eagles have racked up 78 sacks during the regular season and postseason. That is third-most all-time behind the mid-1980s Chicago Bears, who had a record 82 in 1984 and 80 in 1985.

Philadelphia will look to corral Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce, who ranks second all-time in postseason receptions (127) and receiving yardage (1,467) and is tied for second with Rob Gronkowski with 15 postseason touchdown grabs. Jerry Rice leads in all three categories.

Kelce is part of a juicy storyline as he and older brother Jason (the Eagles’ center) will become the first set of brothers to play against one another in Super Bowl history. Both Kelces already own a Super Bowl ring, but Travis is 3-0 in matchups against Jason.

“Whoever wins this one will have the ultimate bragging rights,” Jason Kelce said.

Chiefs coach Andy Reid is looking for his second Super Bowl ring as he faces the organization that fired him in 2012 after 14 seasons. Reid ranks second all-time in postseason victories (21) behind Bill Belichick (31).

The 64-year-old has tried to swat away “Andy Reid Bowl” questions all week. He reached five NFC title games with the Eagles but just one Super Bowl, a 24-21 loss to the New England Patriots in Super Bowl XXXIX.

Also a hot topic is whether the Chiefs can stamp themselves as a dynasty with a second Super Bowl win in four seasons. Reid, not surprisingly, has no interest in the subject.

“I’m not really into all that,” Reid said. “It’s important in our world as coaches and players that you try to get better every day. You’re only as good as your last game, or your next game, I should say. We’re striving to focus on this thing and try not to worry about all that stuff.”

The quarterback matchup between Mahomes and Philadelphia’s Jalen Hurts is noteworthy, marking the first Super Bowl in which each team has a Black starting quarterback.

Only three Black quarterbacks have won a Super Bowl: Doug Williams (Super Bowl XXII), Russell Wilson (Super Bowl XLIX) and Mahomes.

“It’s not about me. It’s about the team,” the multi-dimensional Hurts said. “Football is the ultimate team game, and you can’t have one player with the belief that he can succeed without the others around him.”

The Eagles have held steady as a consensus 1.5-point favorite after the spread reached as high as 3.0 points at some major sportsbooks.

PROP PICKS
–Hurts Over 10.5 Rushing Attempts (+100 at BetMGM): This has received the most total bets among player props at the sportsbook. Hurts has averaged 11.5 carries over the past four games. That includes 11 against the 49ers in the NFC Championship Game despite the Eagles being in control much of the game. The offseason begins Monday, so look for Philadelphia to use Hurts’ legs to the fullest as it attempts to keep the Chiefs’ defense off balance.

–Travis Kelce Anytime TD (-124 at BetRivers): Kelce has three touchdowns in two playoff games already and will be coveted safety blanket against the Eagles’ ferocious pass rush. Him scoring at least one touchdown on Sunday leads the sportsbook’s player props with 4.5 percent of the total money. Kelce is also among the top 10 most popular plays to score twice, which has drawn 1.3 percent of the money at +575.

–Josh Sweat Over 0.75 Sacks (+110 at DraftKings): Eagles linebacker Haason Reddick has been on an absolute tear with 3.5 sacks in the playoffs following 16 during the regular season. But his -180 odds at Over 0.25 sacks doesn’t portend a great potential payout. With the Chiefs having to prioritize protection Mahomes against Reddick on obvious passing downs, there should be plenty of opportunity for Sweat, who set a career high with 11.0 sacks during the regular season and racked up another 1.5 in the playoff-opening win against the Giants.

INJURY REPORT
The right ankle injury Mahomes sustained against the Jacksonville Jaguars on Jan. 21 is healing, but he won’t be 100 percent against the Eagles.

“You won’t know exactly how it is until you get to game day,” Mahomes said this week. “I mean, I definitely move around better than I was moving last week or two weeks ago. So it’s just trying to continue to get the treatment and the rehab and get it as close to 100 percent and then rely on some adrenaline to let me do a little bit extra when I’m on the field.”

The Chiefs overall have a clean bill of health, while the Philadelphia Eagles listed only one player, wide receiver and return specialist Britain Covey, on the final injury report ahead of the game.

Covey (hamstring) popped up for the first time Thursday, was limited for two straight days and was listed Friday as questionable for the game.

An undrafted rookie, Covey has rarely seen snaps on offense but serves as Philadelphia’s punt returner. He also returned kicks in Weeks 4, 8, 9 and 10. Covey fielded 33 punts in the regular season for 308 yards with a long of 27. He averaged 9.3 yards.

If Covey can’t play, the Eagles may need to turn to the likes of speedy former Heisman Trophy winner DeVonta Smith as a replacement punt returner.

Friday’s news was good for Chiefs cornerback L’Jarius Sneed, who appeared on Thursday’s injury report as a limited participant with a knee issue. The Chiefs said Sneed practiced in full on Friday and gave him no game status designation.

That’s not to say Kansas City is at perfect attendance. Earlier in the week, it placed wide receiver Mecole Hardman on injured reserve with a pelvic injury, taking him out of the equation for the Super Bowl.

But that allowed the Chiefs to activate running back Clyde Edwards-Helaire (ankle) from IR in a corresponding move, and two other wide receivers with previous injury concerns — JuJu Smith-Schuster (knee) and Kadarius Toney (ankle, hamstring) — are cleared to play Sunday.

PREDICTION
The NFL might be an offensive league in this era, but most of the recent Super Bowl champions have sported the superior defense. The Chiefs lack a real threat in the backfield, which will force them to rely on the short passing game as a complement to help thwart that pass rush. The Eagles bring more offensive balance to the equation along with variety in the red zone that will pay off in crunch time. –Eagles 28, Chiefs 26

–Field Level Media

Filed Under: NFL Tagged With: Kansas City Chiefs, Philadelphia Eagles, Super Bowl LVII, Super Bowl Preview

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