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Stocks went on a tear the last seven weeks with Nasdaq 100 stocks leading the charge. The S&P MidCap 400 SPDR (MDY) and Russell 2000 ETF (IWM) gained more than QQQ over the last seven weeks, but QQQ is still the only major index ETF to exceed its 2021 high and record a new all time high. Chartists looking for momentum leaders should still focus on the Nasdaq 100.

The chart above shows QQQ with two leading uptrends (green arrows) and IWM with two trading ranges (blue arrows). IWM looks poised to break out of its 18 month trading range, but it remains well below the November 2021 high. In short, QQQ shows much more “trendiness” than IWM and I would stay with QQQ.

Picking a focus index is important for momentum strategies. I have tested many strategies using large-caps, mid-caps, small-caps and Nasdaq 100 stocks. S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 stocks outperformed on a risk-adjusted basis because small-caps and mid-caps strategies generated excessive drawdowns. Small-caps are simply not worth the hassle, IMHO.

TrendInvestorPro runs momentum rotation strategies that trade stocks in the S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100. These strategies use trend indicators to find uptrends and a ranking indicator to identify the leaders. The idea is to buy the top ten and sell when they drop out of the top twenty. Some of this week’s leaders include META, NVDA, CRWD, ADBE, MSFT and AVGO. See CandleGlance chart above.

Check out TrendInvestorPro to learn more about our momentum-rotation strategies and the performance metrics. We also have a chart trading strategy with setups featured every Tuesday and Thursday. Click here to gain immediate access.

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The 2023 NFL season is past the three-quarter mark with more than half of the league fighting for playoff positions. Only a few fan bases are turning their attention to the 2024 NFL Draft and the headline prospects involved in it.

With just a few games left to go in the season, it’s a good time to take a look back at some of the biggest free agent signings of 2023 and see how they’ve helped their new teams. These were the top eight biggest deals by total value signed this offseason:

QB Derek Carr

Carr signed the biggest deal of the off-season for four years and $150 million to go from the Las Vegas Raiders to the New Orleans Saints. He’s started 13 games for New Orleans in his first season outside of the Raiders franchise.

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He’s been about league-average in most passing categories in 2023. He’s 17th in passer rating (89.4), 20th in yards per game (221.5), and 13th in completion percentage (66.4). Carr’s thrown 13 touchdowns to seven interceptions. The Saints are one of three NFC South teams at 6-7 heading into the final four games. With the 10th-best scoring defense, Carr could help New Orleans make the playoffs.

RT Mike McGlinchey

McGlinchey wrapped up a fifth year with the San Francisco 49ers and signed with the Denver Broncos in the 2023 off-season on a five-year, $87.5 million deal.

Though he’s played in all 13 games of the season so far, McGlinchey’s had a career-high 5.3% blown block percentage, per Sports Info Solutions (SIS) data. He’s also had a career-high six false start penalties. He’s near the bottom of the league in run and pass blocking ratings among starting tackles in 2023, per SIS data. The Broncos are pushing for the playoffs but McGlinchey hasn’t been a rock as hoped in 2023.

DT Javon Hargrave

Hargrave signed a four-year, $84 million deal with the 49ers after a career-high 11 sacks with the Philadelphia Eagles in 2022.

Through 13 games this season, he’s totaled 13 quarterback hits, six sacks, and seven tackles for a loss. Hargrave’s on pace for his best statistical season since making the Pro Bowl in 2021. Despite this, he’s been the fourth-rated interior defender for the 49ers in 2023, per PFF player grades, and helped San Francisco be the top scoring defense this season.

RT Jawaan Taylor

Taylor signed a four-year, $80 million deal to move from Jacksonville to Kansas City.

Per SIS data, Taylor’s blown 25 pass blocks in 2023, second-highest of his career. He’s notched a career-high 16 penalties this season and the bulk of them came in Week 2, when he had five against the Jaguars. He’s been the third- or fourth-best starter on the Chiefs’ offensive line this year by SIS pass and run blocking numbers.

QB Jimmy Garoppolo

Garoppolo started just six games this season before being benched in Week 9 against the New York Giants by interim coach Antonio Pierce. His passer rating in this season (78.1) is the worst of his career. Rookie Aidan O’Connell’s started the rest of the season and led the team to a 2-5 record.

LB Tremaine Edmunds

Edmunds signed a four-year, $72 million deal to go from the Buffalo Bills to the Chicago Bears. He edged out Hargrave for the most guaranteed money handed out to a defensive player in free agency.

He’s set a career high in interceptions (three) including a game-sealing pick against the Detroit Lions. He sits second behind T.J. Edwards on the Bears in total tackles as Chicago’s defense is improving over the second half of the season. That unit’s caused 11 turnovers and allowed just 272.2 yards per game in the last five matchups.

LT Orlando Brown Jr.

Brown Jr. signed a four-year, $64 million deal to join the Cincinnati Bengals away from the Chiefs as the top left tackle in the 2023 free agent class.

Like Taylor and McGlinchey, Brown Jr. is in the midst of a down season in 2023. He’s had a career-high 4.5% blown block percentage, per SIS data. Per the latest numbers, he’s been the worst starter in pass and run blocking on the Bengals’ offensive line this season.

FS Jessie Bates III

Bates III signed a four-year, $64 million deal to go from Cincinnati to the Atlanta Falcons. The highest-paid defensive back of the 2023 free agency class has been a star in 2023.

PFF grades Bates III as the third-best safety in the league in 2023. SIS data is even more generous, making him the top defensive back by the site’s total points saved metric. He’s been targeted just 17 times in coverage and allowed just 155 yards through 13 games.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

MLB superstar Shohei Ohtani rocked the sports world in signing a 10-year, $700 million contract with the Los Angeles Dodgers. The 29-year-old pitcher and power hitter’s record contract came with a few unusual conditions, not the least of which is $680 million getting deferred until after the 10-year contract is up.

But that’s not the only oddity in Ohtani’s deal. Here’s a look at what else it includes – plus a few other unusual clauses in contracts from other sports.

What clauses are in Shohei Ohtani’s contract?

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Ohtani’s contract also gives him a suite at Dodger Stadium, provides for an interpreter, and states donations to club charities will not exceed one percent, per Ken Rosenthal.

Kyler Murray’s ‘independent study’

The Arizona Cardinals came under fire for including an ‘independent study’ clause in Murray’s five-year, $230.5 million extension signed in 2022.

The clause mandated that Murray complete at least four hours of game film per week to prepare for the team’s next game. In this time, Murray could not specifically be ‘engaged in any other activity that may distract his attention (for example, watching television, playing video games or browsing the internet) while such material is being displayed or played.’

Arizona eventually removed the clause from Murray’s contract. Team officials said in a statement that it ‘was clearly perceived in ways that were never intended. Our confidence in Kyler Murray is as high as it’s ever been and nothing demonstrates our belief in his ability to lead this team.’

Ichirzo Suzuki’s rent clause

By 2007, Suzuki had racked up a sizable number of awards. Six consecutive All-Star game and Gold Glove awards as well as one AL MVP and AL Silver Slugger nod in his first six seasons in the majors.

Despite the Seattle Mariners’ struggles at the time, Suzuki signed a five-year, $90 million extension with the team. Clauses in that deal included a personal trainer, interpreter, four round-trip airline tickets to Japan each year, and either a new Jeep or Mercedes SUV.

But most unusual of all, Suzuki received at least $32,000 per year as a housing allowance. Current median Seattle rent prices aren’t too far from that but in 2007 that was a big boost to ensuring Suzuki had his pick of housing options.

Michael Jordan’s ‘love of the game’ clause

Jordan enjoyed unprecedented success on the court: six NBA titles, five NBA MVPs, 14 All-Star teams, two Olympic Gold Medals, and an NCAA title, among many other accolades. The icon could seemingly do no wrong on the court.

He didn’t want to confine himself to just NBA or international basketball courts and even got that in writing. Jordan had a ‘Love of the Game Clause’ written into his contract with the Chicago Bulls that allowed him to play basketball against anyone, anywhere, at any time.

Rick Mirer’s ‘end of the world’ clause

A three-year starter at quarterback in college, Mirer wrapped up his Notre Dame career with comparisons to fellow Irish legend Joe Montana. The Seattle Seahawks drafted Mirer second overall in the 1993 NFL Draft.

Luckily, he didn’t need to find out what American dollars would be worth post-apocalypse. Mirer played four seasons with the Seahawks and didn’t live up to lofty expectations, going 20-31 as a starter.

Monica Abbott’s crowd clause

Abbott is one of the best pitchers in American softball history, winning two Olympic Medals and three Women’s Softball World Cup gold medals. Her NCAA records for strikes and wins still stand 15 years after she graduated from the University of Tennessee.

She started her professional career in the National Pro Fastpitch (NPF) softball league in 2007. By 2015, she’d won three MVP awards and four championships.

So it’s no surprise the expansion Scrap Yard Dawgs signed her to the first million-dollar contract in league history ahead of the 2016 season. The six-year, $1-million contract started out as just $20,000 yearly. With a salary cap of $150,000 per year, the Houston-area team had to get creative to meet the $1 million total.

The solution? Attendance bonuses requiring at least 100 fans at the game, regardless of location or whether or not Abbott was pitching. It paid off with a championship for the expansion team in 2017.

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The basketball star announced on social media Thursday that she and her wife, Anna Petrakova, are expecting a second child together. Petrakova’s due date is in May 2024, according to Parker’s post, and the couple will have three children altogether, with Parker’s oldest, Lailaa, born in her first marriage.

‘Parker starting 5 loading! Mama and Mommy are switching from man-2-man to zone defense this spring,’ Parker wrote on Instagram. ‘After four years in the game we are focused on building our roster. We know this rookie will add to our depth chart and contribute versatility to our team … The team as a whole struggles with clock management and a little bit on the defensive end. We are hoping the young buck will play their role, bring IQ, hustle, length, athleticism and passion to this team.’

Parker and Petrakova’s first child together, Airr Larry Petrakov Parker, was born in February 2022.

‘There will be competition at the toddler position,’ Parker continued. ‘But we will see how training camp plays out. We are super excited for this draft and Team Parker cannot wait to welcome this new star to our team. We love you already!’

This is the second time Parker has announced her wife’s pregnancy on their anniversary, Dec. 14. She joked in the caption that every other year the couple announces another baby and said ‘#LetsMakeThisAThing.’

When Parker announced they were expecting Airr, she was also announcing her marriage to Petrakova for the first time publicly. They had been married for two years at that time, and had been married in a private ceremony attended by friends and family.

Parker recently shared the story of her family in her documentary ‘Candace Parker: Unapologetic.’ The three-time WNBA champion gave the public an intimate perspective of her personal life, which she has historically kept private.

Parker played for the Las Vegas Aces during the 2023 WNBA season. The 16-year WNBA veteran hasn’t said whether it was her last season, only that she wants to return if she’s healthy and recovered from the fracture in her foot that required surgery in July. Parker was unable to finish the season and play in the Aces’ historic run to a second straight championship.

Parker also serves as an analyst for the NBA on TNT.

The 6-foot-5 forward is one of the greatest Tennessee Lady Vols to put on the jersey. Parker played for the legendary Pat Summitt from 2004-08 and won back-to-back NCAA championships in 2007 and 2008, which is the last time Tennessee made it to the Final Four or won a national title.

Cora Hall covers University of Tennessee women’s athletics. Email her at cora.hall@knoxnews.com and follow her on Twitter @corahalll.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Texas and Wisconsin won’t have to wait long for a Final Four rematch in women’s volleyball.

The Badgers and Longhorns, who face off Thursday night in the NCAA tournament semifinals, will play Labor Day weekend as part of a new, nationally televised, nonconference event. It will be held at Fiserv Forum in Milwaukee in 2024, and rotate among other volleyball hotbeds in subsequent years.

The Wisconsin-Texas rematch will be Sept. 1 along with a game between Stanford, which lost to Texas in the Elite Eight, and Minnesota. The following day, It will be Wisconsin-Stanford and Minnesota-Texas. Fox will air two of the games, with the other two on FS1.

‘This is going to be an awesome event,’ Wisconsin coach Kelly Sheffield said. ‘Big-time teams on a big-time stage. The 2024 volleyball season is going to be shot out of a cannon!’

Already on an upward trend the last few years, this season has seen unprecedented growth in volleyball’s popularity. When Fox aired a pair of matches after an NFL game in October, it drew more than 1.6 million viewers, a record for volleyball. Marquette and Wisconsin played before 17,037 fans at Fiserv earlier this season, a record for a regular-season, indoor game.

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Nebraska set the record for any women’s sporting event in August, drawing 92,003 for a game at the school’s football stadium.

‘There is an obvious growing appetite for the sport of volleyball, evidenced by roaring attendance numbers and record-breaking television ratings. It will be an incredible sight to help further amplify the sport with an elite early season showcase on network television,’ said Mark Starsiak, vice president at Intersport, which is putting on the showcase with Fox Sports.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

He’d just been asked for a final prediction for his Friday night fight against Andre August in Orlando, Florida, in a bout that will be livestreamed by DAZN.

“Well, I just think it’s funny, like, the peanut gallery is laughing,’’ Paul said Wednesday, shifting his gaze from the audience at the press conference to his opponent. “’Does your coach tell you that I dropped him in sparring too? Or did he not tell you?’’

A man sitting in the audience began yelling at Paul.

“See,’’ Paul said, “he’s getting all worked up because he knows what happened.”

So, what exactly happened?

For starters, the man yelling was Justin Deshone. He is August’s coach and trainer, and in the summer of 2022 he also worked as a sparring partner for Paul.

“I’m going to be all the way honest about it,’’ Deshone told USA TODAY Sports Thursday. “In the sport of boxing, if your glove touches the ground, it’s a knockdown, right? So, yeah, that happened. …

“Jake caught me while I was throwing (a punch). I wasn’t hurt or anything. My glove touched the canvas. I had to jump back up, get myself together and get right back on his ass.

“Jake is a tough kid.’’

Who is Justin Deshone?

There’s a reason you’ve probably never heard of him.

Deshone, who also goes by Justin Williams, is 6-13-2 as a professional boxer, according to BoxRec.com.

But he did win his last two fights by knockout and he was in August’s corner for August’s last fight, a victory over Brandon Martin by unanimous decision.

Deshone, 35, said he agreed to spar with Paul in the summer of 2022 after getting a call from Paul’s trainer, Danny Smith.

At the time, Paul was getting ready for a fight with Tommy Fury that fell through and then was preparing for another bout that did not materialize, according to Deshone.

“Jake glorifies sparring, but doesn’t even know what sparring is really for,’’ Deshone said. “Sparring is to learn. You know, I was really out there just trying to help him. That’s why his coach had called me and ask me to come down there and help him. And it got to times where it was, ‘Hey, man, dial it back a little bit. You’re kind of hitting him too hard.’”

But apparently Paul was holding his own before the knockdown?

“It happened, bro,’’ Deshone said.

Getting baited by Jake Paul

Clearly, Paul was calling into question the wisdom of August being coached by a guy who Paul knocked down. ‘And that was two years ago when I wasn’t (expletive).’

Deshone barked back at Paul during the press conference.

But on Thursday, he said he had no hard feelings.

“No, not at all,’’ Deshone said. “He has to do what he has to do to sell a fight. Whatever. Cool. If it makes my family some money, I’m happy. Whatever. You can say whatever you want.’’

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

PHILADELPHIA – Jordan Mailata has another superpower, a different one than protecting Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Jalen Hurts’ blind side.

His voice.

‘He’s a gifted musician,’ said War on Drugs drummer Charlie Hall, the producer of the Eagles’ holiday albums ‘A Philly Special Christmas’ and their latest, ‘A Philly Special Christmas Special’. ‘Obviously, he can sing. You hear him sing and it’s no joke. It is for real.’

The man who has been on ‘The Masked Singer’ and provided the vocals for his wife’s father-daughter dance at his own wedding has been one of the major reasons why the pair of Christmas albums he and his teammates – mainly fellow offensive linemen Jason Kelce and Lane Johnson – have replicated the team’s on-field success.

But the superpower Hall described isn’t the pitch and soothing aspect of his crooning. It’s his sense of harmony.

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‘I think that’s an important aspect of what makes him such a special musician, on top of the fact that he can play everything, and he’s sort of deep in the cut at all times,’ Hall told USA TODAY Sports. ‘Whenever music is being made, his brain is firing on all cylinders. It’s pretty cool to watch. And it’s contagious. And that’s a big reason why it was such a fun environment in the studio.’

Mailata leads the vocals and has solo turns on several of the 11 songs on ‘A Philly Special Christmas Special’.

‘When it’s time for me to lead in the spotlight, I do it,’ Mailata told USA TODAY Sports. ‘But I love being in the back, man. I love being a harmonizer, I love playing the instruments. I just do everything. I love music.’

Polynesian upbringing gives Mailata his voice

There is little debate over who the best singer in the Eagles locker room is. But Mailata isn’t even the best singer in his own family, he says. That title belongs to his sister, Sess.

‘I’ve always said my sister’s got the best voice,’ said Mailata, seated in front of his locker with a guitar next to him, ‘and then my sister would probably say me.’

Growing up in New Zealand, the Mailata family honed their singing skills thanks to their Samoan Christian faith. Choir participation was a given. Services could last as long as three hours.

‘You’re around singing all the time,’ Mailata said. ‘You do a church service at home, you do a prayer at home, and you got to sing in that. It’s just you and your family. So I just always grew up around it. The Polynesian people in general just love music, so that’s where the influence (comes from).’

And Mailata, the second-youngest of five children, was never the lead singer growing up.

‘I was always the harmonizer,’ he said. ‘I could harmonize before I could sing. So that was just my ear for music.’

Embedded content: https://www.instagram.com/p/Cy1PC_Xp0eS/

How only ‘The Godmother of Soul’ could leave Mailata speechless

During the Eagles’ recording sessions, Mailata was the energizer. Always singing. Always playing some instrument.

Only Patti LaBelle could render the former professional rugby player speechless. ‘The Godmother of Soul’ and Mailata recorded a version of ‘This Christmas’ together that had him feeling honored and ‘nervous as hell.’

‘Patti walks in the room and she’s got a presence,’ Hall said. ‘She’s a legend for a reason.’

LaBelle, 79, recorded her bars at the Eagles’ facility in South Philly, not at the Elm Street studio where the Eagles laid down most of the album, and took time after to meet with team employees after the session.

‘I wasn’t nervous at first,’ Mailata said. ‘I didn’t know I was going to be singing with her. And then she was like, ‘Yeah, I would love for you to (join).’’

Embedded content: https://www.instagram.com/p/CzZJg9yKYC8/

How was he going to say no to that chance?

‘But at the same time I was like … ‘I don’t know if I’m going to do this,’’ Mailata said. ‘I’ve got a potty mouth, but I watched what I was saying around the queen. So the whole time in my head I’m just like, ‘(Expletive).’’

Said Eagles director of player development Connor Barwin, who is the executive producer of the albums: ‘Patti LaBelle … was the one person where he sort of got star-struck and couldn’t sing for a moment there at the beginning, which was really fun to see.’

Retelling the story, Mailata imitated his frozen face.

‘Nothing was coming out. I just couldn’t force out a sound,’ he said. ‘I was like, ‘Man, this is such a surreal moment, singing with The Queen like that.’

‘Everyone’s like, ‘You’re always singing and playing. Why can’t you sing now?’ I don’t know,’ Mailata said. ‘Why don’t you come up here and sing with Patti – Ms. Patti?’

Mailata hits the Mariah Carey high note

‘This Christmas’ was the one song Hall wanted on the second holiday album, as it’s his favorite non-traditional, modern Christmas jam. He thought he’d have to sell Mailata on the idea. But Mailata, who grew up singing a handful of Christmas tunes but not a large catalog, already loved the tune.

‘So that was a no-brainer,’ Hall said.

But maybe the most impressive vocal performance from Mailata comes on his cover of Mariah Carey’s classic ‘All I Want For Christmas Is You.’

‘The Mariah (song) was like a last-minute Hail Mary where Jordy was like, ‘I think we need one more banger on this. Let’s do the Mariah Carey,’’ Hall said. ‘I’m like, ‘What? You want to do what? You’re out of your mind, man.’

‘We kind of treated it more like a soul song, got those horns on there with the band,’ Hall added. ‘It’s still a banger.’

Hall arranged the tune in the key at the top of Mailata’s range and let him do the work from there. He obviously hit the high note for the ‘YOUUUUUU’ that ends the song.

‘Trying to, anyway,’ Mailata said. ‘I was just having fun with it. Once we found the right key to play it in, we’re like, ‘All right, let’s get banging now.’’

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The Cleveland Browns have signed Joe Flacco for the remainder of the regular season, and he could earn a lot more money if he’s able to lead the team to a deep playoff run.

Flacco hasn’t looked back since the team signed him following the season-ending injury of Deshaun Watson and he made his first start against the Los Angeles Rams in Week 13. Despite losing to the Rams, Flacco had an impressive outing, and his stellar performance continued into last week, when he led Cleveland to a 31-27 win against the Jacksonville Jaguars in which he completed 26-of-45 passes for 311 yards and three touchdowns with one interception. Following the win, head coach Kevin Stefanski declared Flacco the starting quarterback for the remainder of the season.

Now officially with the squad, here’s a look at how much money the 16-year veteran could earn by the end of the playoffs:

How much money could Joe Flacco earn with the Browns?

Flacco could earn millions of dollars if Cleveland is the one hoisting the Lombardi Trophy in February.

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A person with knowledge of the deal confirmed the following breakdown of Flacco’s possible incentives, with four regular-season games remaining, to USA TODAY Sports’ Tyler Dragon.

$75,000 for each regular-season win$250,000 for winning a wild-card game$500,000 for winning a divisional-round game$1 million for winning the AFC championship$2 million for winning Super Bowl 58

In total, Flacco could earn an extra $4.05 million if he can win his second career Super Bowl this season.

What did Joe Flacco have to say about his contract?

Flacco, 38, said he has enjoyed his time in Cleveland and wanted to stay with the organization, but he said he wasn’t aware of the financial benefits he could have in staying with the team.

‘I mean, listen, I’m not aware of any of that stuff,’ Flacco said. ‘I kind of leave it up to Joe (Linta), my agent, and he brushes over it with me real quick and I come up and sign it.’

The possible playoff payouts don’t sound out of the world though. Cleveland currently sits in the No. 5 spot in the AFC playoff standings, with a remaining schedule against the Chicago Bears, Houston Texans, New York Jets and Cincinnati Bengals.

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More than a month into Major League Baseball’s 2023-24 offseason, the hot stove’s two biggest names (Shohei Ohtani and Juan Soto) are with new teams, but most of the other dominoes are yet to fall after the unusually slow winter meetings.

Twelve of USA TODAY Sports’ top 15 free agents are still on the board and there hasn’t been a particularly notable trade other than Soto landing with the New York Yankees, meaning there should be plenty of action in the weeks to come.

With about two months until players report to spring training, here’s a look at every team’s biggest need:

American League East

Baltimore Orioles: Starting pitcher – Kyle Bradish had a nice 2023 season, John Means returned in September and you’d expect Grayson Rodriguez to improve in his second year, but Baltimore needs to add a veteran innings-eater (it was Kyle Gibson in 2023) to solidify the rotation.

HOT STOVE UPDATES: MLB free agency: Ranking and tracking the top players available.

Tampa Bay Rays: Starting pitcher – They’ll be without ace Shane McClanahan (Tommy John surgery) this season and Tyler Glasnow looks unlikely to be on the roster come February.

Toronto Blue Jays: Third base – Matt Chapman didn’t put up big offensive numbers (averaging 22 home runs and 65 RBI) in his two seasons for Toronto, but that’s going to be a glaring hole if the Blue Jays don’t bring him back. Cavan Biggio is atop the depth chart at the moment, but he’s much better suited for a super-utility role than being an everyday player.

New York Yankees:Starting pitcher – The Yankees are in on top free agent Yoshinobu Yamamoto, who would obviously look fantastic behind Cy Young winner Gerrit Cole, but there’s questions to be asked of their rotation if he signs elsewhere. They’ll be relying on Carlos Rodon and Nestor Cortes to bounce back and could stand to add a second-tier free agent arm like Michael Lorenzen or Sean Manaea.

Boston Red Sox: Second base – The keystone was a black hole for Boston last season and new Chief Baseball Officer Craig Breslow said the team was ‘open-minded about the possibilities of meaningfully upgrading’ at second base. Whit Merrifield leads a thin free agent class, so a trade might be the more prudent option for the Red Sox.

AL Central

Minnesota Twins:Starting pitcher – With Sonny Gray and Kenta Maeda gone, another veteran starter for the middle/back of the rotation would go a long way towards an AL Central repeat.

Detroit Tigers: Infield – Ignoring the Javy Báez problem at short, the Tigers could use an upgrade at second and/or third. This is the weakest division in baseball and even the slightest improvements could change the Central’s balance of power.

Cleveland Guardians:Outfield bat(s) – Steven Kwan is a stud in left but they probably need more contributions than whatever they’ll get from Myles Straw and Ramón Laureano. Maybe old friend Michael Brantley?

Chicago White Sox: Relievers – There’s a lot of holes on this team, but some veterans in the bullpen could keep the White Sox afloat in the summer.

Kansas City Royals: A veteran bat – After losing 106 games, Kansas City made some early moves to bolster its pitching (Seth Lugo, Will Smith, Chris Stratton, Nick Anderson) and an offensive addition would make this team much more palatable in 2024.

AL West

Houston Astros: Center field – AL champions in five of the last seven seasons, the Astros surely feel comfortable going into 2024 with Jake Meyers in center. But it wouldn’t hurt to bring in another part-time player.

Texas Rangers:Bullpen Expect the World Series champions to push hard for closer Josh Hader.

Seattle Mariners:Designated hitter – Seattle is in desperate need of power and there’s no shortage of hit-first players available on the free agent market.

Los Angeles Angels:Starting pitchers – “There ain’t no rebuild here,’ said new manager Ron Washington.

Oakland Athletics:Anybody fans may have heard of – With one foot out the door of Oakland, the current roster is probably one of baseball’s worst in recent memory. There’s no reason to believe that ownership cares about improving the team, but it would be nice to see John Fisher give even the slightest bit of crumbs to the souls who show up at the Oakland Coliseum this year.

National League East

Atlanta Braves: Fourth outfielder(?) – Probably the most complete team in baseball, Atlanta is expected to have new addition Jarred Kelenic and Vaughn Grissom platoon in left field. They could use another outfielder on the roster, perhaps bringing back Kevin Pillar.

Philadelphia Phillies:Late-inning reliever: The Phillies’ bullpen actually looks much better than recent years but if they’re not going to go get Hader, adding at least one proven arm would help manager Rob Thomson sleep much better.

Miami Marlins: Catcher – Coming off a postseason trip, Miami recently acquired Christian Bethancourt and could use a more offensive-minded backstop to split time with him.

New York Mets: Third base – Mets third basemen were second-to-last in baseball in 2023 with a .324 slugging percentage and Ronny Mauricio’s torn ACL further complicates the team’s weakness at the position. The Mets really can’t afford to live with the struggles of third-year big leaguers Brett Baty (.598 OPS in 353 AB) and Mark Vientos (.620 OPS in 218 AB).

Washington Nationals: Outfield – It’s not like the Nats expect to meaningfully compete in 2024 and huge shoutout to Lane Thomas (28 HR, 20 SB in 2023) in right field, but a low-cost veteran (who they could flip at the deadline!) would provide the roster with some more stability heading into spring training.

NL Central

Milwaukee Brewers:Corner infielders – Hoping to repeat as division champions, Jake Bauers and Andruw Monasterio are probably not who the Brewers want seeing the bulk of at-bats.

Chicago Cubs: A bat – The Cubs could stand to upgrade at both corner infield spots, making the NL Central hopefuls a prospective landing spot for Matt Chapman or Rhys Hoskins. Bringing back Cody Bellinger would be nice.

Cincinnati Reds:Starting pitcher – They’ve already signed Nick Martinez but could use another arm at the back end of the rotation.

St. Louis Cardinals: Relievers – The Cardinals were quick to address their biggest need entering the winter, already signing starters Sonny Gray, Kyle Gibson and Lance Lynn. That leaves questions in the bullpen after closer Ryan Helsley missed half of last season due to injury and Giovanny Gallegos struggled with a 4.42 ERA in 56 games.

Pittsburgh Pirates:Warm bodies – The goal here should be signing veterans that may have some value at the trade deadline.

NL West

Los Angeles Dodgers: Starting pitcher – $700 million man Shohei Ohtani won’t pitch until 2025 and while Clayton Kershaw may wind up coming back, they’re going to be asking a lot of Walker Buehler, who missed all of last season. They’ll be looking to sign or trade for at least one frontline starter.

Arizona Diamondbacks:Relievers – The bullpen was stellar in the postseason as Arizona reached its first World Series since 2001 and Andrew Saalfrank will step into a bigger role in 2024, but a middle reliever or two would really give them some more depth.

San Diego Padres:Outfielders With Juan Soto and Trent Grisham gone, the Padres have enormous holes in left and center. A bargain veteran or two might be the best course of action as San Diego tries to keep its payroll down.

San Francisco Giants:Quite literally anybody who can hit – The Giants already signed Korean outfielder Jung Hoo Lee to a six-year, $113 million deal (after years of whiffing on top free agents) but the team had the NL’s worst average and slugging percentage last season – and the lineup is still dominated by replacement-level guys who somehow led them to 107 wins in 2021.

Colorado Rockies:Pitching The Rockies had an MLB-worst 5.68 ERA last season.

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The mystery behind Shohei Ohtani’s dog’s identity has been solved.

The Los Angeles Dodgers rolled out their $700 million superstar acquisition Thursday afternoon and in a 20-minute press conference, perhaps no question was quite so burning as the name of the beagle who crawled on Ohtani’s lap during a televised announcement of his American League MVP award last month.

And the name is?

Decoy.

It is an appropriate tag for a hound and his human, whose identity and destination remained shrouded in secrecy for the last month. And Ohtani, always pleasant but famously private, was far more forthcoming about his beagle (or beagle-like specimen) than he was about, say, the nature of his elbow reconstruction surgery in September.

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Decoy was the name the dog came with, Ohtani said, but he decided to give him a similar-sounding Japanese handle, dekopin.

According to online language translation, dekopin means, ‘the act of flicking someone’s forehead with a finger.’ Naturally, intrepid Reddit users surfaced a video of Ohtani doing a little bit of that dekopin to Patrick Sandoval on the Angels bench between innings.

OK, then! Just another explanation for the Ohtani-crazed media to pursue.

And perhaps the Dodgers now have their new home run celebration.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY