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The NFL has banned Philadelphia Eagles head of security Dom DiSandro from the sidelines for the remainder of the regular season, but can return for the playoffs, a person familiar with the situation told USA TODAY Sports.

The person spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren’t authorized to speak publicly.

DiSandro was ejected from the Eagles’ 42-19 loss to the San Francisco 49ers in Week 13 after getting into a scuffle with Dre Greenlaw after the 49ers linebacker picked up Eagles receiver DeVonta Smith and slammed him to the turf. DiSandro pulled Greenlaw off Smith and yelled at him while on the sidelines.

Greenlaw was also ejected from the game and fined for his actions.

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The Eagles at the time said they were in talks with the league office and were going ‘to respect the restriction that is currently in place.’

The NFL also sent a memo to teams saying that non-player personnel are prohibited from putting their hands on players or officials and should not be involved in trying to break up altercations.

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The NFL fined Kansas City Chiefs head coach Andy Reid and quarterback Patrick Mahomes for comments they made about the officiating following last Sunday’s 20-17 loss to the Buffalo Bills, a person with knowledge of the situation confirmed to USA TODAY Sports.

The person spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren’t authorized to speak publicly.

Reid and Mahomes criticized a play in the fourth quarter when officials threw an offensive offsides flag on wide receiver Kadarius Toney, wiping out a potential touchdown after tight end Travis Kelce caught a pass and then lateraled it to Toney, who ran it into the end zone.

‘Very disappointed that it ended the way it did,’ Reid said after the game. ‘Normally I’ll get — I never use any of this as excuses, but normally I get a warning before something like that happens in a big game. (It’s) a bit embarrassing in the National Football League for that to take place. … I’ve been in the league a long time and I haven’t had one like that. So, not where, at least in that kind of position there where it is not given a heads-up to.’

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Referee Carl Cheffers, who also was the lead official in Kansas City’s Super Bowl 57 win over the Philadelphia Eagles, said Toney was ‘far offsides” and was blocking the official’s view of the football.

Mahomes, the league’s reigning MVP, was seen on the sidelines slamming his helmet and had to be restrained by teammates from going after the officials. He told Bills quarterback Josh Allen after the game that the call was (‘expletive)’ terrible.

‘I’ve played seven years [and] never had offensive offside called. That’s elementary school [stuff] we’re talking about. There was no warning throughout the entire game,’ Mahomes said. ‘Then you wait until there’s a minute left in the game to make a call like that? It’s tough. Lost for words. It’s tough. Regardless if we win or lose, just the end of another game and we’re talking about the refs. It’s just not what we want for the NFL and for football.

‘What you want as a competitor is you practice all week to go out there and try to win, and you want it to be about your team and that team and see what happens. You don’t want to be talking about this stuff after the game. I’m not worried about if there was a flag on the next player or whatever, not a flag. I want to go out there and play and then see what happens at the end, see what the score is, and then I can live with the results.’

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INDIANAPOLIS − Tommy Lloyd had a plan to limit Zach Edey.

Against Purdue men’s basketball, you pick your poison and Arizona’s coach threw his tandem of 7-footers at Edey.

Fletcher Loyer and Braden Smith made the Wildcats pay.

Purdue’s sophomore guard duo combined for 53 points in the fourth-ranked Boilermakers’ 92-84 win over top-ranked Arizona at Gainbridge Fieldhouse.

The Wildcats (8-1) used an 11-0 run in the second half to narrow a 15-point lead to four, but could get no closer.

It marks Purdue’s first win over the No. 1 team since beating, coincidentally, Arizona in Indianapolis in 2000.

It was over when

The Boilermakers (10-1) had gone 8:25 without a field goal before Edey put back a missed Loyer one-hand floater. That came with 6:44 to go.

With the lid lifted off the rim, Edey scored again, followed by 3s from Lance Jones and Smith. When Edey scored with 3:35 to go, putting Purdue ahead 83-73, the place came unglued as the Boilers were clearly in control.

3 stars

Fletcher Loyer, Purdue: Loyer had those Maui Invitational semifinal vs. Tennessee vibes. By halftime, he’d ripped Arizona for 18 points and matched his career-high from that Nov. 21 game with 27 points on Saturday. And just as was the case against the Volunteers, it was Loyer’s active defense that set him apart.

Braden Smith, Purdue: Back-to-back big scoring games on neutral courts. Smith had 26 and shot 15 times. In the last two games, Smith has taken 35 field goal attempts and Purdue won both in high-scoring affairs. It is the only two times Smith has attempted more than 13 shots in his career.

Zach Edey, Purdue: Credit the Wildcats for doing a good job on Edey, probably better than anyone else this season. That just tells you how good Edey is. Purdue’s 7-foot-4 center still ended up with 22 points, nine rebounds and a career-high five assists.

Sam King covers sports for the Journal & Courier. Email him at sking@jconline.com and follow him on Twitter and Instagram @samueltking.

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The Detroit Lions have their mojo back, and they’re on the verge of taking it to the playoffs. 

Jared Goff tied a career-high with five touchdown passes, three of them to Sam LaPorta, and the Lions defense pitched a shutout in the first half to beat the Denver Broncos in one of their most complete games of the season, 42-17, at Ford Field. 

With the win, the Lions (10-4) are on the brink of qualifying for the playoffs for the first time since 2016. 

They can clinch a postseason berth Sunday or Monday under one of seven scenarios, and can win their division for the first time in 30 years next week with a win over the Minnesota Vikings. 

For either the Vikings or Green Bay Packers to win the NFC North, they would have to win out and the Lions would have to lose their remaining three games. The Lions play the Vikings twice in the final three weeks and have a Week 17 game remaining against the Dallas Cowboys. 

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The Vikings host the Packers in Week 17. 

Coming off a loss to the Chicago Bears and playing generally mediocre football since their early-November bye, the Lions dominated the Broncos (7-7) on both sides of the ball Saturday to reach double-digit victories for the first time since 2014. 

Ifeatu Melifonwu forced a Russell Wilson fumble on Denver’s opening possession and the Lions led 21-0 at halftime, scoring on all three of their second quarter possessions against a defense that entered the week tied for the NFL lead in takeaways. 

After a scoreless first quarter, Goff completed all four of his passes for 69 yards on an eight-play, 80-yard touchdown drive. LaPorta converted a third-and-6 to keep the possession alive, then scored his first touchdown of the night on a 19-yard pass when he broke one tackle and ran through another on his way to the end zone. 

The Lions forced a three-and-out on the ensuing series, then followed with a six-play, 61-yard touchdown drive, capped with a 9-yard Goff touchdown pass to Jahmyr Gibbs. 

St. Brown, coming off his worst game of the season when he caught just three of nine targets and had a crucial drop in the fourth quarter against the Bears, caught seven passes for 112 yards Saturday in a Lions passing game that had much more rhythm playing indoors. 

LaPorta caught his second touchdown on a 3-yard Goff pass midway through the third quarter, and scored again on a fourth-and-2 catch from the 10-yard line with 2:21 to play. A second-round pick out of Iowa, LaPorta broke Jim Gibbons’ franchise record for most touchdown receptions in a season by a tight end (nine) and became the third rookie tight end in NFL history to catch at least 70 passes in a season. 

He has 71 catches for 758 yards on the year. 

Gibbs scored on a 12-yard run with 12:12 to play and finished with 100 yards rushing on 11 carries, his second 100-yard rushing day of his career. And David Montgomery added 85 yards rushing on 17 carries for the Lions, who held the Broncos to 75 yards of offense in the first half and kept heavy pressure on Wilson all day with an array of defensive back blitzes. 

Wilson finished 18 of 32 passing for 223 yards as Denver lost for just the second time in its past eight games. The Broncos scored on their first two possessions of the second half, but had a touchdown on fourth-and-goal from inside the 1 taken off the board by an offensive offsides penalty on right guard Quinn Meinerz late in the third quarter. 

Contact Dave Birkett at dbirkett@freepress.com. Follow him@davebirkett.

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Indianapolis Colts receiver Michael Pittman Jr. was ruled out of Saturday’s game against the Pittsburgh Steelers with a concussion after he was leveled by safety Damontae Kazee, who was ejected on the play.

With 8:42 remaining in the second quarter of Indianapolis’ come-from-behind 30-13 win, Colts quarterback Gardner Minshew dropped back at the Colts’ 31-yard line on second and 8 and attempted a deep pass to Pittman. Kazee ran up and hit Pitman hard on the incomplete pass, prompting several referees to throw penalty flags.

Kazee was penalized for unnecessary roughness and ejected.

After the game, Steelers coach Mike Tomlin didn’t seem to think the crew at Lucas Oil Stadium tossed Kazee, suggesting the ejection ‘came from New York’ — a reference to the league’s officiating department, which remotely monitors every game.

Pittman remained down and was tended to by team medical personnel before he was able to walk off the field under his own power.

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Pittman was evaluated and later ruled out for the remainder of the game with a concussion. His night ended with four receptions for a team-high 79 yards on five targets.

Kazee had five total tackles before his ejection, including a key third down stop in the first quarter. He was previously ejected in 2018 for a helmet-to-helmet hit on Cam Newton while playing for the Atlanta Falcons.

The Steelers found themselves even more short-handed on defense when safety Minkah Fitzpatrick was hurt soon after Kazee’s ejection. He was ruled out with a knee injury.

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NBA legend Kareem Abdul-Jabbar was hospitalized after he suffered a broken hip when he fell at a concert in Los Angeles, his representative Deborah Morales said in a statement on social media.

The 76-year-old basketball Hall of Famer was transported to UCLA Hospital on Friday and is expected to undergo surgery on Saturday, according to Morales. No other details of his condition were released.

‘We are all deeply appreciative of all the support for Kareem, especially from the Los Angeles Fire Department who assisted Kareem on site and the amazing medical team and doctors at UCLA Hospital who are taking great care of Kareem now,’ Morales said.

Abdul-Jabbar is considered one of the greatest basketball players of all-time, winning three national championship during his college career at UCLA and winning six NBA titles with the Los Angeles Lakers and Milwaukee Bucks in 20 seasons.

He is the only person to be named NBA MVP six times, and he was the league’s career scoring leader for 39 years until LeBron James broke the record in February. Abdul-Jabbar still holds the record for field goals made (15,837) and minutes played (57,446) in the regular season.

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Most of the quarterbacks in action weren’t necessarily big names, but the stakes in play for the rare Saturday NFL tripleheader certainly made for a consequential football trifecta. And the aftermath could be far-reaching, especially as it pertains to the AFC’s playoff picture, with the final quarter of the 2023 regular season continuing to unfold.

So while the obvious winners were the Cincinnati Bengals, Detroit Lions and Indianapolis Colts, there were quite a few other prominent beneficiaries beyond those three clubs … and most definitely several losers aside from the troika of teams saddled with defeats.

So let’s assess the day’s fallout:

WINNERS

Backup quarterbacks: They’re ubiquitous … and have won five consecutive games league-wide going back to Monday night, the Bengals’ Jake Browning and Colts’ Gardner Minshew II adding to the victory total while bolstering their respective teams’ seemingly unlikely playoff pushes. Browning, in particular, is becoming something of a cult hero in Cincinnati after winning his third consecutive start in Joe Burrow’s stead – two of those triumphs coming in overtime after the Stripes overcame 24-17 deficit to the Minnesota Vikings in the final minute of regulation to prevail 27-24.

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Jared Goff: After accounting for seven touchdowns and nine turnovers over his previous four games, Detroit’s quarterback tied a career high by going off for five TD passes – three to rookie TE Sam LaPorta – on Saturday night, driving the Lions closer to their first-ever NFC North crown.

Buffalo Bills: Beware, AFC playoff hopefuls. The reigning (for now) AFC East champs face a tough battle Sunday with the Dallas Cowboys, but losses by the Pittsburgh Steelers and Denver Broncos continue to increase the odds Buffalo will find its way back into the postseason despite its 5-5 start. Still imposing, the Bills certainly appear to be catching fire (and some good breaks) at just the right time – and moved from 11th place to ninth place in the conference Saturday from the comfort of their hotel.

Premier pass rushers: Pittsburgh’s T.J. Watt (2 sacks), Minnesota’s Danielle Hunter (2 sacks) and Cincinnati’s Trey Hendrickson (1½ sacks) all had big games. Watt now leads the NFL with 16 sacks, a half-sack ahead of Hunter, who established a new career high Saturday, and one up on Hendrickson, whose 15 sacks are also a personal best and tie him with the Los Angeles Chargers’ Khalil Mack for third place league-wide.

Detroit’s run game: Rhythm and Bruise, anyone? It most definitely wasn’t all Goff, veteran RB David Montgomery combining with first-round rookie Jahmyr Gibbs for 185 yards (on 28 collective carries) on the ground. Gibbs’ 12-yard scoring run early in the fourth quarter effectively ended the game.

Baltimore Ravens: Saturday couldn’t have gone much better for the AFC North leaders. With the Broncos and Steelers succumbing, the AFC’s projected No. 1 seed has a win-and-in postseason clinching scenario in Jacksonville on Sunday night.

Ty Chandler: Making his first professional start, the second-year Vikings back scored a TD and piled up a career-best 160 yards from scrimmage while stepping in for injured Alexander Mattison, who might have been Wally Pipp’d.

B.J. Hill: That’s an interception each of the past two weeks for Cincy’s 311-pound defensive tackle.

NFL Network: The league-owned cable outlet – and its streaming offshoot, NFL+ – likely raked in quite a few oddballs with a monopoly on Saturday’s games, at least outside local markets, and on the weekend most fantasy football league playoffs commence.

Former LSU wideout: In his first full game since suffering a Week 5 hamstring injury, the Vikings’ Justin Jefferson – he suffered a chest injury that knocked him out of Week 14’s game – hauled in seven passes for 84 yards. He needs 6 more yards to break Michael Thomas’ record (5,512 yards) for the most ever by a player in his first four NFL seasons.

Previously 7-6 AFC teams: The Bengals and Colts find themselves holding the conference’s final two wild-card spots after notching their victories – Cincinnati in an especially good spot, despite a generally bad record in AFC games (3-6), thanks to its Week 14 win over Indy. And, like Buffalo, the idle Houston Texans, who have already beaten Denver and Pittsburgh, saw their prospects improve slightly on day when rookie QB C.J. Stroud was ruled out of Sunday’s game with a concussion.

LOSERS

Previously 7-6 AFC teams: Pittsburgh and Denver both lost convincingly and fell into 10th and 11th place, respectively, in the conference. At least, unlike the College Football Playoff, style points count for very little here, aside from deep-track tiebreakers.

Former LSU wideout: Things didn’t go so well for the Bengals’ Ja’Marr Chase, Jefferson’s former teammate from Baton Rouge and the legendary 2019 national championship team. Chase had a modest four catches for 64 yards but was unable to finish the game due to a separated shoulder – obviously a tough injury when your job is to catch passes.

NFL Network: Unfortunately, the games got progressively worse as the day wore on – and quite a few folks undoubtedly headed out for dinner, drinks and/or dancing well before the final gun of the Broncos-Lions affair.

Bengals’ blows: It wasn’t just Chase. Underrated Cincinnati DT DJ Reader, rookie special teamer DJ Ivey, who was carted off the field in tears, and G Alex Cappa were all banged up Saturday. Cappa managed to return, but Reader and Ivey apparently suffered more serious injuries for a team that’s already down its biggest star, QB1 Joe Burrow.

Colts’ blows: Indianapolis’ top wideout, Michael Pittman, suffered a concussion on a reckless hit by Pittsburgh S Damontae Kazee, who was ejected Saturday. Pittman was trying to become the sixth player to catch eight passes in seven consecutive games. RB Zack Moss was also knocked out of the game with an arm injury. Fortunately for the Colts, backups Trey Sermon and Tyler Goodson rushed for a combined 157 yards, and All-Pro Jonathan Taylor (thumb surgery) has a chance to return in Week 16.

Denver D: The unit that infamously surrendered 70 points to the Miami Dolphins earlier this season had only allowed an average of 16 points per since Week 6. Serious regression at Ford Field, where the Lions erupted for 42 – the most allowed by the Broncos this year to a team not based in South Florida.

Vikings’ anniversary: Saturday marked 364 days since they rallied past the Colts on another Saturday showcase, overcoming a record 33-point deficit to win 39-36 in overtime. But against the Bengals, Minnesota came from ahead to lose, squandering a 17-3 fourth-quarter lead before succumbing in OT.

Mike Tomlin: The Steelers’ longtime coach watched his offensively challenged team fall to .500 and well down the AFC standings, to 10th place, after dropping its third straight game. And now – with the Bengals, Seahawks and Ravens lying in wait – Tomlin is suddenly in serious jeopardy of suffering his first losing season at the end of his 17th campaign in Pittsburgh.

Officiating: It struck again, in the form of a horrendous offside call on Denver G Quinn Meinerz – costing the Broncos a touchdown and HC Sean Payton his mind on the sideline … and on a night when he was already getting his butt kicked by mentee Dan Campbell from Detroit’s sideline.

Mitchell Trubisky: He’s appeared in five games this season for Pittsburgh. The Steelers have lost them all, the No. 2 pick of the 2017 draft (by the Chicago Bears) serving up a pair of picks to the Colts. By the time Tomlin turned to his other experienced understudy, Mason Rudolph, late in the fourth quarter, the game was lost.

Russell Wilson: He appeared to be collateral damage during Payton’s refereeing rant. RW3 also just no longer looked like a quarterback who could keep up with the likes of Goff, a guy he outplayed so regularly during their NFC West battles.

Backup quarterbacks: Like I said, they’re ubiquitous … and have lost three in a row going back to Thursday night, the Vikes’ Nick Mullens and Trubisky taking the Ls on Saturday, two days after the Chargers’ Easton Stick went down 63-21 in his inaugural NFL start. Mullens, making his first start since 2021, probably deserved better after throwing for 303 yards and two scores at Paycor Stadium … yet his pair of first-half interceptions were a major reason Minnesota only led 7-3 at intermission. Still, maybe the Vikings, who scored three points in their previous game, have found their answer behind center for the rest of this season.

***

Follow USA TODAY Sports’ Nate Davis on X, formerly Twitter @ByNateDavis.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Every week for the duration of the 2023 NFL regular season, USA TODAY Sports will provide real-time updates to the league’s ever-evolving playoff picture − starting after Sunday afternoon’s late games and then moving forward for the remainder of the week (through Thursday’s game or Saturday’s, if applicable).

What just happened? What does it mean? What are the pertinent factors (and, perhaps, tiebreakers) prominently in play as each conference’s seven-team bracket begins to crystallize? All will be explained and analyzed up to the point when the postseason field is finalized on Sunday night, Jan. 7.

Here’s where things stand with Week 15 of the 2023 season underway:

NFC playoff picture

x – 1. San Francisco 49ers (10-3), NFC West leaders: They became the first team to clinch a berth courtesy of the Packers’ loss Monday night. With wins in hand against the Eagles and Cowboys, the Niners had previously moved into the top seed following Dallas’ Week 14 defeat of Philadelphia. Next up, Arizona – a team the Niners have beaten three times in a row. A win in the desert (or a Rams loss) would officially wrap up the division for Kyle Shanahan’s crew. Remaining schedule: at Cardinals, vs. Ravens, at Commanders, vs. Rams

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2. Dallas Cowboys (10-3), NFC East leaders: With a 15th consecutive home win, they wrested first place from Philadelphia. However, ‘America’s Team’ will give it back if the Eagles win out given the tiebreakers will revert to Philly’s favor due to the way the schedule unfolds − and Dallas’ remaining games are no cakewalk. Still, a win in Orchard Park on Sunday officially puts the Cowboys into the field … as do a bevy of scenarios that involve various NFC teams losing. Remaining schedule: at Bills, at Dolphins, vs. Lions, at Commanders

3. Detroit Lions (10-4), NFC North leaders: Big get-right Saturday, the Lions pummeling Denver 42-17 a few hours after Minnesota lost in Cincinnati. A loss by Seattle on Monday will clinch a playoff spot for Detroit, but that could also come Sunday if the Rams lose in conjunction with at least one other NFC team. One more win secures the Lions’ first-ever NFC North title. Remaining schedule: at Vikings, at Cowboys, vs. Vikings

4. Tampa Bay Buccaneers (6-7), NFC South leaders: Week 14’s win at Atlanta vaulted the Bucs to the top of the division thanks to a very slim lead over the Falcons in the common-games tiebreaker given their season split and identical 3-1 mark in NFC South games. Still, hardly time to relax given both Atlanta and New Orleans are also 6-7. Remaining schedule: at Packers, vs. Jaguars, vs. Saints, at Panthers

5. Philadelphia Eagles (10-3), wild card No. 1: Their loss at Dallas knocked them from first place in the conference to fifth. However win out, against a very manageable schedule, and the reigning NFC champs will again be kings of the NFC East. A seemingly tired bunch could benefit from an extra day off ahead of Week 15’s Monday nighter at Seattle. Beat the Seahawks, and the Eagles are definitely going back to the playoffs – though they’ll clinch before kickoff if the right combo of teams lose over the weekend. Remaining schedule: at Seahawks, vs. Giants, vs. Cardinals, at Giants

6. Minnesota Vikings (7-7), wild card No. 2: Heartbreaking loss at Cincinnati doesn’t cost them any ground … for now. However, entering Saturday, the Vikes could have won out and claimed the NFC North crown given their pair of upcoming dates with Detroit. They’ve lost that pathway. Remaining schedule: vs. Lions, vs. Packers, at Lions

7. Green Bay Packers (6-7), wild card No. 3: They retain the conference’s final wild-card spot despite seeing their three-game winning streak come to an end Monday against the Giants. No margin for error amid a cluster of 6-7 teams, the Pack’s defeat of the Rams and 4-4 record in conference games presently serving them well in the tiebreaker department. Remaining schedule: vs. Buccaneers, at Panthers, at Vikings, vs. Bears

8. Los Angeles Rams (6-7), out of playoff field: Tough loss in Baltimore a week ago, but they’re still knocking on the door …. though the Week 9 loss at Green Bay without QB Matthew Stafford could ultimately hurt quite a bit. Remaining schedule: vs. Commanders, vs. Saints, at Giants, at 49ers

9. Seattle Seahawks (6-7), out of playoff field: That’s five defeats in their past six outings, their latest loss at San Francisco coming with QB1 Geno Smith unable to play. Dropping both games to the Rams could be a lingering issue. And they’re only ahead of Atlanta by virtue of a very slim lead in NFC games, Seattle’s 5-5 mark a half-game better. Remaining schedule: vs. Eagles, at Titans, vs. Steelers, at Cardinals

10. Atlanta Falcons (6-7), out of playoff field: They plummeted from fourth in the conference after losing at home to the Bucs. But the NFC South remains eminently winnable. Remaining schedule: at Panthers, vs. Colts, at Bears, at Saints

11. New Orleans Saints (6-7), out of playoff field: They didn’t make up any ground despite blowing out the Panthers. But the NFC South remains eminently winnable. Remaining schedule: vs. Giants, at Rams, at Buccaneers, vs. Falcons

AFC playoff picture

1. Baltimore Ravens (10-3), AFC North leaders: The first AFC club to 10 wins, they retain the conference’s top spot after Miami was upset by Tennessee on Monday. Baltimore’s next three contests will come against division leaders. But thanks to Saturday’s outcomes − losses by Denver and Pittsburgh – the Ravens need to simply win Sunday night at Jacksonville to lock up the AFC’s first berth. Remaining schedule: at Jaguars, at 49ers, vs. Dolphins, vs. Steelers

2. Miami Dolphins (9-4), AFC East leaders: Penal loss to the Titans on Monday cost them opportunity to move back atop the conference and dropped them to 6-3 in AFC games (same as Baltimore). The Fins’ Week 9 loss to Kansas City also means they can’t afford to let the Chiefs catch up to them. Still, win out, and they clinch home field and the bye. Remaining schedule: vs. Jets, vs. Cowboys, at Ravens, vs. Bills

3. Kansas City Chiefs (8-5), AFC West leaders: A 6-2 record in AFC games and wins over Miami and Jacksonville keep K.C. viable to play a sixth consecutive AFC title game at Arrowhead Stadium. Week 14’s loss to Buffalo was damaging to that aim, but the final four games shouldn’t be. Remaining schedule: at Patriots, vs. Raiders, vs. Bengals, at Chargers

4. Jacksonville Jaguars (8-5), AFC South leaders: On the plus side, QB Trevor Lawrence was able to play through his ankle injury last weekend and survived the game. Even better, on a day when the Jags lost, so did their closest division pursuers, Houston and Indianapolis. But two setbacks in six days pretty much eliminates any hopes of home-field advantage. Remaining schedule: vs. Ravens, at Buccaneers, vs. Panthers, at Titans

5. Cleveland Browns (8-5), wild card No. 1: Things are looking up by Lake Erie. The Browns not only vanquished the Jaguars, they gladly settled on their new QB1, deserving Joe Flacco, for the rest of the season. Win or lose Sunday, Cleveland will remain locked into the fifth seed. Remaining schedule: vs. Bears, at Texans, vs. Jets, at Bengals

6. Cincinnati Bengals (8-6), wild card No. 2: QB2 Jake Browning’s impressive performances the past three weeks, including Saturday’s furious comeback against Minnesota, have them back in the projected postseason field – at least temporarily. Still, a winless mark (0-4) against the division and 3-6 record in conference matchups will likely be tough to overcome in the tiebreaker department. Remaining schedule: at Steelers, at Chiefs, vs. Browns

7. Indianapolis Colts (8-6), wild card No. 3: Beating Pittsburgh was as huge a win for them as it was a loss for the Steelers. Indy is currently behind Cincinnati due to its Week 14 loss to the Bengals. Remaining schedule: at Falcons, vs. Raiders, vs. Texans

8. Houston Texans (7-6), out of playoff field: Rough loss to the New York Jets in Week 14, primarily so due to rookie QB C.J. Stroud landing in concussion protocol – an injury that will keep him out in Nashville. A 4-4 record in AFC competition keeps them this high … for whatever it’s worth at this juncture, when wider tiebreakers can take precedence with so many compressed teams. Remaining schedule: at Titans, vs. Browns, vs. Titans, at Colts

9. Buffalo Bills (7-6), out of playoff field: Despite all the adversity, on and off the field, there’s a strong heartbeat here – especially after knocking off the Chiefs at Arrowhead again. And Buffalo started turning its recent wins into playoff progress Saturday, moving head of Denver and Pittsburgh in the overall AFC standings − just a half-game back of Houston in the tiebreaker formula (AFC record) for eighth place. Yet the division crown is again a possibility if the Bills can sweep Miami and get a little help. Remaining schedule: vs. Cowboys, at Chargers, vs. Patriots, at Dolphins

10. Pittsburgh Steelers (7-7), out of playoff field: Their three-game losing streak may permanently disqualify them – head-to-head losses to Houston and Indianapolis also quite problematic, which also sums up their issues under center. Remaining schedule: vs. Bengals, at Seahawks, at Ravens

11. Denver Broncos (7-7), out of playoff field: They got run out of the building Saturday night, resembling an early season version of themselves devoid of playoff hope. A win would have vaulted the Broncos into the AFC’s third wild-card spot. Now? A 4-5 record in AFC games parks them behind Pittsburgh … and in danger of falling further. Remaining schedule: vs. Patriots, vs. Chargers, at Raiders

x – clinched playoff berth

***

Follow USA TODAY Sports’ Nate Davis on X, formerly Twitter @ByNateDavis.

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Kansas City is gaining ground toward becoming the most popular football team in the U.S., according to an artificial intelligence data company that credits a certain mega pop star for giving the Chiefs a swift boost. 

“Our range is anything cultural,” said Justin Zhen, the vice president of sales. “What is a trend around the world that we can shed some color on? We’ve written about the top turkey brands by state.”

The Qloo algorithm takes public data from social media, adds in some transactional data of consumer purchases and mixes in anonymized first-party data from Qloo partners. Out of 100,000 brands analyzed, the Chiefs now rank 475 and the Cowboys rank 314. No. 1 is Nike.

All the data is analyzed by AI and data scientists, like Sam Eauch, who are able to create visual representations like a heat map of NFL team popularity. Outside of the football team’s native states, the December maps show shows the Philadelphia Eagles have an impressive fan base in North Dakota. Mississippi is home to a concentration of Baltimore Ravens supporters. And the Dallas Cowboys still have a Texas-sized, lasso-hold on the nation. But the pinkish red of the Chiefs is stretching in popularity from the center of America out.

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“As you can see by the heat maps, we look at affinity by state,” said Eauch. “Affinity is people expressing how popular a certain brand is. We can aggregate that down to a city block level.”

In the massive list, the Chiefs are climbing, up 77 spots in the past few months. While the Cowboys, known as “America’s Team,” have dropped seven spots.

‘It’s definitely a trend that we’re keeping an eye on,” Eauch said.

Although the Kansas City Chiefs won the Super Bowl earlier this year and in 2020, the CEO and founder of Qloo, Alex Elias, credits the recent boom in popularity to Taylor Swift dating tight end Travis Kelce.

“Taylor is such a phenomenon,’ said Elias. ‘She transcends being just a hitmaker; she’s a cultural icon.’

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Steve,

I love your columns. They make so much sense, and having two of three grown children who were athletes from a young age, went to college on athletic scholarships and are just great people, I get joy from reading about how to navigate talent from a young age.

Hopefully, you can address the damage a ‘not good’ coach can do to kids. Unfortunately, both of my children suffered through crappy coaches, but my husband and I were determined to keep our kids mentally strong and motivated. Blessed that both of them can now laugh about those past times. I believe parents are not sure how to deal with this issue, and there are so many variables: How to approach the coach? Is it better to find a new team? What about friends they’ve made and love to play with? I would love to read your thoughts.

Kind Regards,

Alida

You don’t often find a perfect fit. Take these steps to make the experience worthwhile.

Dear Alida,

A dissatisfying coach can consume a child (and his or her parents) for a season, and the effects of one can linger far longer. To all of the families out there who are experiencing one, know you are not alone.

This subject came up recently when I was interviewing Mark Thomas, the husband of Maryland women’s basketball coach Brenda Frese for a column about how he and his wife parent their teenage boys through sports.

‘It is way harder than people realize to find a great fit and great coaching situation for your kid,’ Thomas said.

‘Bad’ coaches come in many forms: From apathetic to ones who play favorites or are enabling of star players and neglectful toward weaker ones. I have seen many youth coaches who want to win at the cost of development of everyone on the team.

Some coaches, even at the youth level, are verbally abusive and act as bullies. A youth coach shouldn’t be insulting your child. If you are in such a situation, pull your kid off the team and report the coach to your league.

Most crummy youth coaches are that way for lesser offenses. Here’s how to identify them, approach them and handle the situation while maintaining perspective on it.

What can poor coaching do to your kid?

Trauma, neglect and abuse of the developing brain can cause anxiety and lead to acting out and violence as children grow into adolescence and adulthood, according to Dr. Bruce Perry, a psychiatrist and professor at Northwestern who has dedicated his work to children’s mental health and neuroscience.

J.P. Nerbun, an author and leadership coach who has extensively studied team culture, writes about the long-lasting traumatic effects from his fear-based high school coach of the Bob Knight mold.

‘During our time under his coaching, the true extent of our wounds remained largely concealed. It wasn’t until years later, long after our time under his influence had concluded, that the weight of the emotional scars began to manifest in painful and profound ways for many of us who had played under him,’ Nerbun writes in his book, ‘The Sports Parent Solution.’

‘To this day, these enduring wounds have shaped our self-perception, relationships, and default reactions to stress.’

The trauma even shaped Nerbun’s own approach when he began coaching high school kids himself.

‘Was I like my high school coach?’ Nerbun told USA TODAY Sports. ‘Absolutely not, not that bad, but how do you discipline? Well, you just yell at people, you make them run. We operate from this tool box that was passed onto us from our previous coaches and so, for me, it was oftentimes those threatening-type coaching behaviors.’

COACH STEVE: What young athletes can learn from the late Frank Howard – and not from Bob Knight

Hopefully, you won’t encounter an old-school coaching situation with your child. However, consider these scenarios that might be affecting you:

A kid who sees a coach favor other players over them may lose interest in a sport he or she might otherwise love. A player for a coach who emphasizes winning over development − and thus plays certain players a lot more than that player − might have a similar experience.A player on a stacked youth team that stresses winning over all else might have trouble handling failure (and mentally moving on from losses) when the stakes are higher in high school and college.A player who knows a coach will make the team run extra if its members don’t do exactly what he or she tells them might equate sports (or a particular sport) with punishment.

We know from studies that about 70% of kids stop playing organized sports before age 13, mainly because they’re not having fun anymore.

Before you get to the point of your child quitting a sport due to a coach, there are actions you can take.

Step 1: How to talk to the coach

Youth coaches can be a kid’s gateway to sports and hold the keys to his or her future in them. These coaches can also be inexperienced volunteers. They also are often the mom or dad of a player on the team who, whether he or she will admit it or not, has an agenda for their child at the expense of everyone else.

We all say we aren’t biased toward our kids, but we all are. In some cases, a coach may even be subconsciously favoring a kid or his or her friend.

Whatever it is the coach is doing that is affecting your child’s experience, though, you need to let them know about it. They may not even realize what they are doing.

More importantly, coaches need to be held accountable for their behavior, especially if it is being enabled by an organization, league or school.

Nerbun has found that even the worst coaches have good intentions of wanting to help kids in some capacity. His abusive high school coach, he says, had enough support in the community to help justify his style and status. Thus, he didn’t really think he was doing anything wrong.

You need to gently suggest otherwise to your offending coach.

Schedule a meeting or a call away from the field to express your feelings. Be firm but calm. Parents can sometimes veer out of control when it comes to their own children. The more composed you are, the more likely the coach is to take your concerns to heart.

If the coach doesn’t agree with you, he or she might at least consider what you say. I know when I was coaching my sons at the youth level, I took constructive criticism to heart.

Offer to work with the coach. Volunteer to help out as an assistant or to help run drills in practice. The coach is likely to push back at least a little, but he our she also might make some concessions.

Step 2: Take a group approach (if Step 1 doesn’t work)

‘In the Sports Parent Solution,’ Nerbun promotes an open partnership and communication between coaches and parents that can strengthen the long-term health of their bond. Nerbun found more open communication between coaches and parents leads to fewer parent meetings, and thus more autonomy for the coach.

If you have issues with your coach, others on your team likely do, too. In these situations, there is a tendency to complain to other parents about the issue instead of actually addressing the problem. What if you all went to the coach for a friendly, open discussion?

This method is especially important for a team that will be together for more than one season. You don’t want issues to linger. They will only fester with time.

If you are up front with the coach about your concerns, and the coach still doesn’t concede anything, you have solidarity with others. This way, if you need to change teams, you can try and do it en masse and keep some continuity for your child. A mass exodus will also send a strong message to the coach.

I don’t recommend leaving during the season unless it is a situation of abuse. Doing so will send a message to the players that it’s OK to give up on things. Think compromise. You might not get everything you want out of the coach, but you might create a situation that allows every kid on the team to have a good experience.

Maybe just a few slight adjustments from the coach, and a few more positive words, make all the difference.

Step 3: Keep everything in perspective

Thomas, the husband of Brenda Frese, suggests you only have a few truly special coaches over your athletic career.

‘My wife and I talk about it,’ he says. ‘When you think back on your school life, how many great teachers did you have over all those years? Probably a pretty short list, right? It’s the same thing with coaches.’

Your child is not going to like every teacher he or she has, just like you probably haven’t liked every boss you have had. Part of one’s athletic education is playing for a number of coaches, and adjusting to their styles, whether you like them or not.

Try focusing on something positive that coach does. Chris Petersen, the head football coach at Boise State and Washington for 14 seasons (2006-2019), offered examples of purposeful coaching for kids as a guest on The Audible podcast Dec. 14:

Are the kids trying as hard as they can?

Are they supporting teammates when they make mistakes?

Are they losing with honor and winning with humility?

Finally, think of your situation as an opportunity to work through a problem with your child.

When I initially read this question, my thoughts went to an abusive/fear-based type of coach. I reached out to Richard Weissbourd, a child and family psychologist on the faculty of Harvard’s Graduate School of education.  I asked him about the short- and long-term effects of this type of coaching on a child.

Part of his response, I thought, covers how you can deal with any coaching situation you find is affecting your child in a negative way.

‘The kind of coach you describe can certainly be harmful to children emotionally and morally in many ways, but the nature and severity of the harm will depend on many factors, including whether a child has caring, stable and supportive relationships at home, whether the child feels dependent on the coach, whether teammates are supportive, and the nature of the abuse.

‘It’s important for parents to open lines of communication so that their children talk to them about their experiences.’

In other words, the best way to handle a “bad” coach? Support your child through the experience.

Steve Borelli, aka Coach Steve, has been an editor and writer with USA TODAY since 1999. He spent 10 years coaching his two sons’ baseball and basketball teams. He and his wife, Colleen, are now sports parents for a high schooler and middle schooler. His column is posted weekly. For his past columns, click here.

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