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Eric Bieniemy may be happy and who am I to say someone shouldn’t be happy? Bieniemy may also be doing what he wants. He may see what he’s doing as something that’s as important as any of his NFL coaching jobs. All of that may be true.

But the news, first reported by ESPN, that Bieniemy was joining UCLA’s staff as associate head coach/offensive coordinator is also something else: shameful. It’s shameful that a coach who won a Super Bowl has to flee to college. It’s shameful that Bieniemy, who helped craft the career of future Hall of Famer Patrick Mahomes, has to run to college.

It’s embarrassing for the NFL, its teams, its owners, that someone who was as good as Bieniemy has to scamper off to college. And he didn’t leave for college to become a head coach. He left to become an assistant coach.

‘Happy for Eric Bieniemy,’ former NFL quarterback and current ESPN analyst Robert Griffin III wrote, in part, on X, formerly Twitter, ‘but how this man can’t get a head coaching job in the NFL or in college is UNBELIEVABLE.’

Bieniemy helped Kansas City reach multiple Super Bowls but unlike many other champion offensive coordinators, he never got a head coaching position. This despite being a key cog in the ascension of the Chiefs to a dynasty.

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“EB is going to be harsh on you,” Mahomes once said. ‘He’s going to really try and get the best out of you every single day. He’s going to hold you accountable when you don’t want to hold yourself accountable. (His coaching) made me a better player.’

Bieniemy should have become an NFL head coach but he never got that opportunity. But it wasn’t for lack of trying. After being shut out for head coaching jobs while he was with Kansas City, Bieniemy left to become the offensive coordinator for Washington. It was generally assumed he went to the Commanders to get out from under the shadow of coach Andy Reid.

The fact he had to do that in the first place was another embarrassment for the NFL.

And now here we are. A Super Bowl winner. A Mahomes developer. A smart offensive mind. Now off to college.

Bieniemy framed the move (partly) as a sort of homecoming. He grew up in the area and coached for the Bruins in the early 2000s.

‘Southern California,’ Bieniemy wrote in an email Saturday, according to ESPN. ‘I attended high school there. I started my career in the league here (with the Chargers). It’s obviously great to be back with the Bruins, where I was previously employed.’

Bieniemy says one team he interviewed with (he didn’t identify the franchise) offered him its assistant head coach/running backs job. That position was essentially a lateral move.

‘I have had countless conversations and interviews with many teams, and I have been applauded and lauded,’ Bieniemy wrote. ‘I can’t say why certain decisions were or were not made but it had nothing to (do) with a lack of anything on my end.

‘My self-dignity, worth, integrity, personhood, manhood will never be questioned or compromised. It is not always about money, either. With everything in life, it is often all about timing. At this time in my life, the opportunity affords me the pleasure of continuing to be a maker and leader of men, to do what I love, follow my passion and my dreams while not compromising on who I am as a man.’

We need to be clear. If Bieniemy had been offered an NFL head coaching job, he wouldn’t be going to college. Even if he was offered some type of position that looked like a promising avenue to a head coaching position, he wouldn’t leave the NFL.

Bieniemy, I believe, looks at his NFL prospects and knows his chances of finding true career advancement are all but dead. He has an opportunity (perhaps) to reset things at UCLA and (maybe) get another chance to become a head coach in the NFL.

But for now, for right now, someone who won two Super Bowls as Kansas City’s offensive coordinator, who went to five consecutive conference championship games that included three Super Bowl appearances, will reportedly coach at UCLA. No offense to UCLA but this is a magnificent step down.

The NFL, the owners, and others, should be ashamed of themselves that this happened.

Absolutely ashamed.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The 2024 NFL draft is officially two months away. And with the scouting combine starting this week, the pre-draft process is about to begin its time in the spotlight.

With that in mind, here are the 11 most fascinating prospects in this year’s NFL draft class:

11. Qwan’tez Stiggers, CB, Toronto Argonauts

It’s a shame that Stiggers wasn’t invited to the combine, as the event could have provided a larger stage for one of this draft’s most compelling figures. The Atlanta native dropped out of Division II Lane College after his father’s death in 2020. After a stop in Fan Controlled Football, he became the Canadian Football League’s most outstanding rookie last season after a campaign in which he notched five interceptions. Now, he could be poised to become one of the rare draftees who never played any college football.

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10. Kiran Amegadjie, G, Yale

The Ivy League has ample representation in the NFL thanks to the likes of San Francisco 49ers fullback Kyle Juszczk, Jacksonville Jaguars linebacker Foyesade Oluokun and Los Angeles Rams edge rusher Michael Hoecht, among others. Amegadjie, however, has the chance to be the rare product from those select few schools who enters the league with high expectations. The 6-5, 326-pounder dominated the competition as a left tackle. Even in a deep class for offensive linemen, he stands out as a captivating option for a team that can teach him to harness his overwhelming power and tenacity as a blocker.

9. T’Vondre Sweat, DT, Texas

One year after Jordan Davis turned heads at the combine at 6-6 and 341 pounds, another supersized defensive tackle is trying to make a push all the way into Day 1 of the draft. The 362-pound Sweat gained more than 100 pounds at Texas and became a force, winning the Outland Trophy in 2023 as the best interior lineman in college football. He doesn’t offer Davis’ upside as a pass rusher, but he still will pose a significant problem for opposing offenses while regularly commanding double-teams.

8. Chop Robinson, DE, Penn State

The traits almost all scream top-10 pick, with his explosiveness and 6-3, 255-pound frame earning him comparisons to former Nittany Lions standout Micah Parsons. The production, however, never quite amounted to what one expected from a premier pass rusher. Robinson probably isn’t as fluid or fast as Parsons – who is? – but teams will gladly bet on edge threats with superlative athleticism. Expect him to emerge as one of the top testers at the combine.

7. Bo Nix, QB, Oregon

Can he sneak into the first round as possibly the fifth passer taken? The former five-star recruit at Auburn pulled off an impressive career revival at Oregon, throwing for more than 8,000 yards and 74 touchdowns in two years. But Oregon’s system afforded him ample throws behind the line of scrimmage, and questions about his arm strength will linger.

6. Michael Penix Jr., QB, Washington

The four career season-ending injuries – two torn ACLs and two shoulder ailments – might prove problematic to his draft stock. But it’s hard to write off the Heisman Trophy runner-up, who looked masterful in a College Football Playoff semifinal win over Texas before unraveling in the title game against Michigan. As a pure thrower, Penix can be sublime when he’s fully in rhythm, as he can zip throws to almost any spot on the field. But he is often undone when forced off his spot, and it might be hard to sell teams on using an early pick on a quarterback who will be 24 as a rookie and struggles with pressure.

5. Brock Bowers, TE, Georgia

After a prolific career that included helping the Bulldogs win two national titles, Bowers could join Kyle Pitts, T.J. Hockenson and Eric Ebron as the only tight ends selected with a top-10 pick in the last 10 years. Listed at 6-4 and 240 pounds, he’s hardly the prototype for the position like Pitts was. Still, Bowers has rare ability to shed tackles and rack up yards after the catch. But recall that Pitts, whose career with the Atlanta Falcons still hasn’t taken off, was chosen ahead of Ja’Marr Chase, Jaylen Waddle and DeVonta Smith, among others. Will Bowers face a similar dynamic with other talented receivers who could land in the top 10 in Malik Nabers and Rome Odunze?

4. Jayden Daniels, QB, LSU

Whenever a quarterback makes the kind of stratospheric leap that Daniels did after transferring from Arizona State, it warrants closer inspection. The 2023 Heisman Trophy winner became a true dual threat, showing himself to be comfortable picking teams apart from the pocket or taking off for long gains. His accuracy, poise and decision-making bode well for a smooth transition to the NFL. As a runner, however, he can be extremely wild and invite hits that will leave teams nervous about how he can hold up at the next level.

3. Drake Maye, QB, North Carolina

In the best-case scenario, the 6-4, 230-pounder will give his future team a passer somewhere in the Josh Allen or Justin Herbert arena. In the worst-case scenario, he might end up the kind of quarterback many feared those two would have been had they not quickly refined their games shortly after reaching the NFL. Maye’s top-tier arm strength and comfort throwing on the move will spark some phenomenal highlight-reel plays. But suspect decision-making and shaky mechanics make him a highly volatile passer who will need to clean up some substantial mistakes.

2. Caleb Williams, QB, USC

Yes, this is a bit of a quarterback spree, and it might seem like a cheat to have the overwhelming favorite for the No. 1 pick on here. But how could this exercise go on without the 2022 Heisman Trophy winner and a player with singular creativity? Williams became an even more intriguing evaluation after a challenging final campaign in which his proclivity for pursuing big plays frequently came at a high cost. While the Patrick Mahomes comparisons are inherently unfair, they’ll no doubt follow him for the early portion of his career. The biggest developmental question for Williams is whether he can settle in and play on schedule in the manner Mahomes has, with that patience helping make him the premier passer in the game after defenses sold out to shut down his deep shots.

1. J.J. McCarthy, QB, Michigan

All quarterback draft picks entail a somewhat sizable leap of faith. This one, however, likely will have evaluators on edge. McCarthy didn’t shoulder the load for Michigan in the way that the other quarterbacks on this list did for their respective teams. While he displayed significant growth in his second year as a starter, his lapses in many phases − particularly in his processing and decision-making − leave considerable question about where exactly he stands right now in his development. Some teams will no doubt be captivated by his athleticism, arm strength and potential. Others might be deterred by the unknowns. In all, he’s very likely to be this draft class’ most polarizing prospect.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The Los Angeles Dodgers shelled out $700 million this offseason in order to secure Shohei Ohtani in free agency. The two-time American League MVP may not be able to pitch until 2025, but Ohtani is still a massive draw for MLB fans everywhere. With that in mind, it’s no wonder that fans have been anxiously waiting for Ohtani to make his spring training debut with the Dodgers.

Ohtani is taking his recovery slow though. Some days he does not even partake in batting practice despite being listed as a participant. It makes sense the Dodgers would want to take an overly cautious approach with the man they just spent more than half a billion dollars on. However, that makes it difficult to determine when Ohtani will finally see Cactus League action.

Here’s what we know.

When will Ohtani play in spring training?

On Friday, Feb. 23, Dodgers manager Dave Roberts told reporters that ‘the plan is at some point in time to get [Ohtani] into a Cactus League game next week.’

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

When Ohtani does make his debut, it will likely be a reflection of how the Dodgers’ lineup will look all season. Roberts said, ‘It’s a safe bet to assume Mookie Betts will hit leadoff, and the first lineup with Ohtani will be an indication of how the order is going to be.’

When will Yoshinobu Yamamoto make his debut?

It appears Ohtani and Yamamoto, the two biggest signings of the offseason, will not make their Dodgers debuts together. On Friday morning, it was reported that Yamamoto would not make his first spring training start until Monday, Feb. 26. That would put him in line to start against the Colorado Rockies, but would be too early to line up with Roberts’ timeline for Ohtani.

Dodgers schedule: Date, TV and time

Monday, Feb. 26 @ Rockies – 3:10 p.m. ET; TV – SportsNet LA
Tuesday, Feb. 27 v. White Sox – 3:05 p.m. ET; TV – SportsNet LA
Wednesday, Feb. 28 @ Rangers – 3:05 p.m. ET; TV – SportsNet LA
Thursday, Feb. 29 @ Reds – 8:05 p.m. ET; TV – SportsNet LA
Friday, Mar. 1 v. Guardians – 8:05 p.m. ET; TV – SportsNet LA, MLB Network (out of network)
Saturday, Mar. 2 v. Cubs – 3:05 p.m. ET; TV – SportsNet LA

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — Former Cincinnati Reds MVP Joey Votto, sitting in his car as it slowly moves through a car wash, looks at his phone and glumly utters: ‘This isn’t spring training.’ 

Outfielder Tommy Pham, who just four months ago helped lead the Arizona Diamondbacks to the National League pennant, continues working out every day in Las Vegas, waiting for someone, anyone, to just make a contract offer. 

Two-time Cy Young award winner Blake Snell, World Series hero Jordan Montgomery and four-time Gold Glove winner Matt Chapman, remained unemployed while all of their friends are playing in spring training games a month before the season starts. 

Meanwhile, early Sunday morning, former MVP Cody Bellinger and the Chicago Cubs have agreed on a three-year, $80 million contract, according to a person with direct knowledge of the agreement. The person spoke to USA TODAY Sports on condition of anonymity because the contract will not be finalized until Bellinger completes his physical. The deal was first reported by ESPN.

Agent Scott Boras is usually up at 5:30 in the morning, talking on the phone, patiently waiting for someone to make a move on one of his top remaining free agents. 

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

‘I feel like I’m an airport controller,’ Boras tells USA TODAY Sports, ‘trying to land these planes.’ 

The 2024 season-opener is less than four weeks away, but several of the biggest stars in the game have yet to be signed, along with about 25 other veteran everyday players and starting pitchers. 

“You feel for those guys,’’ Dodgers veteran reliever T.J. McFarland says. “You play really well. You get to free agency. It should be a great offseason. You finally get to negotiate your own worth. And then something like this happens. 

“It’s disheartening. It stinks. I would imagine they’re getting offers, but they don’t like what’s been offered to them so far. They’re not signing because they don’t believe they’re being offered what their value to a team is, but you know, your market is whatever someone is willing to pay you.’ 

The $2.7 billion winter of expenditures has been highlighted by Shohei Ohtani’s historic 10-year, $700 million contract with the Los Angeles Dodgers and starter Yoshinobu Yamamoto’s 12-year, $325 million deal. There have been five players who have received contracts worth at least $95 million, with Snell and Montgomery all expected to be added to eclipse nine figures. 

Yet, outside the international market, there have been only five players who have received contracts of at least four years, compared to 15 players each of the past two winters. 

The greatest obstacles in this year’s free-agent market is that the traditional big spenders have not cracked open their checkbooks. The Boston Red Sox, New York Mets, New York Yankees, San Diego Padres and World Series champion Texas Rangers have all spent less than the Kansas City Royals. 

There are 11 teams expected to open the season with a lower payroll than a year ago, including the Padres, who have slashed their payroll by $95 million. 

It’s enough to make a high-powered agent, who has the top five players on the market, scream into the Newport Beach, Calif., night. 

“Clubs have plenty of money to spend,’ Boras says, “but they’re not spending in a matter that is customary to competitiveness. It’s not that they don’t have the ability to pay, but their choice to regress on their payrolls. 

Just a year ago, the Mets and Padres were in an arms race, spending wildly, convinced it was their year to win the World Series.  This season, they’re settling for being competitive, with a simple wild-card berth considered a tremendous accomplishment. 

“Nobody is saying the revenues in baseball are not going up, or that every team in baseball isn’t getting record revenues than at any time in their history,’ Boras says, “but you’re seeing clubs that are not in any way pursuing competitiveness in the manner of the past.’

 The stagnant market has caused some of the biggest stars in the game to call out their own ownership this past week. Three-time MVP Mike Trout of the Los Angeles Angels, Yankees MVP Aaron Judge and Boston Red Sox All-Star third baseman Rafael Devers each implored their teams to take advantage of the players available.

“Players that have made commitments to their franchise,’ Boras says, “they’re crying out. They were told by ownership they had a common goal of winning. We’re seeing those situations now where the players are serving as the litmus test for the commitment to winning. 

“When you have players like this who are available, they can dramatically impact the outcome and goals of teams. It’s like the trade deadline in July. You can absolutely change the culture in the clubhouse by adding one of these players.’

Several general managers and managers have privately joined the chorus, telling agents to remain patient. They continue to have discussions with their owners, hoping to convince them that reinforcements are needed. 

“We understand that there are a lot of very good players still available as we sit here,’ Clark said Saturday, “while knowing that there a lot of players out there that can help clubs be better. There remains an opportunity now as there remained an opportunity in November for clubs to determine which players they’re interested in and sign those players. 

“We remain hopeful that even where we are on the calendar that the glut of talent that is out there, if teams are indeed looking to continue to improve to be the last team standing, they’ll find homes.’’ 

There’s no doubt that the remaining free agents in Boras’ Big Five – Snell, Montgomery, Chapman and slugger J.D. Martinez – will eventually be signed. It’s just a matter of the details. 

“I don’t really know what’s going on,’ Dodgers first baseman Freddie Freeman says, “but I just know a lot of teams are going to get some really good players soon.’ 

Several teams who have expressed strong interest in short-term contracts, but are leery about providing lengthy deals.

Several owners and executives have also created consternation among agents and union officials by publicly declaring their intentions to stay out of the free agent market. Minnesota Twins owner Joe Pohlad’s recent comments saying they would not sign a $30 million free agent has the union considering filing a formal complaint saying that Pohad’s interview may have violated a reservation of rights clause with the use of media in the collective bargaining agreement. 

Several other executives, such as Farhan Zaidi, president of baseball operations for the San Francisco Giants, and Texas Rangers GM Chris Young have also publicly declared their intentions to stand pat, just not as explicit as Pohlad. 

Time will tell whether these teams are offering honest assessments, or engaging in bargaining tactics. 

“When you talk about a commitment to win,’ Boras says, “it’s hard to sell the city and fans you’re doing everything possible to achieve a championship if you don’t pursue the talent that’s available. 

It may be painfully frustrating, and the wait can be excruciating, but it’s too early for panic to set in. Manny Machado and Bryce Harper didn’t sign their mega contracts with the San Diego Padres and Philadelphia Phillies, respectively, until after the of spring training in 2019.

There’s still no concrete timetable, but if there’s no movement two weeks from now, there could be severe complications. 

“We’re open to all sorts of ideas, short-term, long-term, flex,’ Boras says. “I can tell you these players are not seeking anything beyond the what the existing industry standards are.’’ 

Besides, as several teams have already revealed in their pursuit of Ohtani and Yamamoto, they have the money. The Blue Jays were willing to pay $700 million on Ohtani, but have only spent $37.5 million since being rejected. The Yankees, Mets, Phillies, Red Sox and Giants all offered Yamamoto at least $300 million, but after being snubbed, no one decided to use at least a portion of that money to sign another marquee free agent like Snell or Montgomery. 

It’s too early to draw conclusions, Clark said, and the union will wait until the season starts to evaluate the entirety of the free-agent period. 

“I’m not going to offer any theories at this point … ,’ Clark said.  “Once the lights come on, we’ll sit down with the individual representatives and/or have conversations along the way with respect to the players that were in the middle of it…It’s an ongoing evaluation of any market to try to determine what the experience was versus what the rhetoric may have been versus what may need to be addressed as a result.’

Besides, it’s never too late to make a move, invigorate a fanbase, and let your fanbase know you’re in it to win it. 

“Remember,’’ Boras says, “this is still February.’

Proud voices

Los Angeles Dodgers manager Dave Roberts and Los Angeles Angels manager Ron Washington were thrilled to be invited by the Hall of Fame to be the voices on their new exhibit, ‘The Souls of the Game: Voices of Black Baseball.’

“I think it’s going to be phenomenal for people to hear and see this interactive exhibit,’ Roberts said. “They asked me things like what it was like being be a Black player, what was the experience of being a Black manager, how the game has changed, and how we can have more people of color playing baseball. 

“I wish I could have seen and met some of the Negro League players. I would have loved to have a glass of wine and talk to Satchel Paige. He had so much fun, and was so dominant for so long. A crazy competitor.’ 

The exhibit opens on May 25 when Cooperstown hosts the Hall of Fame East-West Classic: A Tribute to the Negro Leagues All-Star Game. 

“One of the things we’re trying to do is make sure that we go back to the beginning of when black people started playing baseball all the way through modern times,’’ Hall of Fame President Josh Rawitch said. “These two guys, what they’ve accomplished both as players and managers, what they’ve seen and what they’ve experienced, we think are really important voices in the exhibit.’’ 

The Hall of Fame also will have Hall of Famers Lee Smith, Andre Dawson and Dave Winfield as part of the exhibit. 

“It’s important that we also find a way to take this whole project outside of Cooperstown and share it virtually with schools across the country,’ Rawitch said. “We’re excited about this.’ 

Around the basepaths

– The New York Yankees would prefer to trade for Chicago White Sox ace Dylan Cease instead of signing free agent Blake Snell, but they are at a standstill with the White Sox. They refuse to part with top outfield prospect Spencer Jones in any package for Cease while the White Sox are insisting on him. 

– The Yankees say they will not consider a short-term deal or early opt-outs with Snell because of a luxury-tax surcharge. They offered a five-year, $150 million contract for Snell in January but there was no counter-offer. If the Yankees signed Snell, they would be taxed at 110% while also losing two draft picks. 

– The Los Angeles Angels think that if they had been willing to match the Dodgers’ offer of 10 years, $700 million for Shohei Ohtani, he’d still be with the team. But while the Dodgers were thrilled with the record deferrals, Angels owner Arte Moreno had no interest in the delayed payments. 

– Ohtani is expected to make his Dodgers’ spring-training debut Tuesday at Camelback Ranch. The Dodgers sold out their entire spring training season-ticket package and can’t keep Ohtani jerseys on the shelves with the high demand. It may take until mid-summer for the Dodgers to have enough Ohtani jerseys to keep in stock. 

– The San Francisco Giants offered DH J.D. Martinez a one-year, $14 million contract, which he rejected, seeking a two-year deal. The Giants then turned to Jorge Soler, signing him to a three-year, $42 million contract. 

– The Dodgers are expected to hire former All-Star outfielder Matt Kemp in an advisory role in their organization. 

– If the Chicago Cubs did not pursue and hire manager Craig Counsell, friends say he was planning to go to Cleveland to replace Terry Francona. 

– Union chief Tony Clark says he’s still concerned that shaving two seconds off the pitch clock this season with runners on base, from 20 seconds to 18, could lead to pitching injuries. 

‘When fatigue happens, you’re more susceptible to injury,’ Clark said. ‘We’re seeing a lot of injuries, and we’re seeing them in a way that simply can’t remove the question of whether or not shortening recovery time is in anyone’s best interest.’ 

Clark believes that MLB should have kept the rules in place from a year ago. The average time of game was cut by 24 minutes to 2:40 last season, the quickest games since 1984, and Clark believes MLB should not force the players to make another adjustment. 

“That’s a conversation that should have warranted a much longer dialogue than what we had,’ Clark says. “We voiced those concerns, players voiced those concerns, and yet, the push through of the change to the pitch clock still happened. … 

‘We just had the biggest adjustment this league has ever seen in regards to length of game and how the game was affected by including a clock,’ Clark said. ‘Rather than give us another year to adjust and adapt to it, why are we adjusting again, and what are the ramifications going to be?’ 

– The Mets are not only expected to strongly pursue, but could be among the favorites for outfielder Juan Soto when he’s a free agent next winter. 

– While the Mets say that Kodai Senga is likely to start the season on the IL, the team is privately anxious about how much time their ace could miss.

– Arizona Diamondbacks GM Mike Hazen said he was in awe meeting Shohei Ohtani at the New York Baseball Writers dinner and was trying to get the courage to ask for a selfie with him. 

The D-backs and Dodgers play 13 times during the regular season, so there will be plenty of opportunities. 

–Tony Clark on the Oakland A’s still trying to decide where they will play for the next three years beginning in 2025: “I’ve been pretty consistent in that it needed to happen yesterday. The longer this conversation goes on, the more detrimental it is in the grand scheme of things. Whether it’s Sacramento, whether it’s Salt Lake, whether it’s somewhere else, decisions need to be made sooner rather than later.’ 

– Phillies owner John Middleton after losing in the NLCS to the Arizona Diamondbacks: 

“If you’re using the phrase, ‘Get over it,’ it’ll never happen,” Middleton told the Philadelphia Inquirer.. “I mean, ‘09, ‘10, and ‘11 still hurt. You don’t get second chances to win that year. To be up 2-0 [in the series] and heading to a place [Arizona] where you took three out of four in August and lose two out of three, and then lose two at home, when you have your foot on your enemy’s throat, you kill ‘em. And we didn’t do it. 

“I’m angry. It’s a funny word to use, but when you lose like that, I get angry. And frankly, if people don’t get at least a little angry, I’m not sure you care enough.” 

– The Padres never gave Xander Bogaerts a heads up that he was switching from shortstop to second base until spring training for the simple reason they were trying to trade Ha-Seong Kim, who now moves to shortstop. 

– Bruce Bochy, who managed Pablo Sandoval in San Francisco, on Sandoval’s return to the Giants as a 37-year-old non-roster invitee: ‘I knew he had the drive, the passion to get back in, so good for him. He worked hard. He has always loved the game and I can see, even when he’s done, he should stay in the game as a coach or whatever he wants to do, because the guy plays the game the way you love players to play. He has the joy and enthusiasm.’ 

– Congrats to Eric Hosmer, who announced his retirement after a fabulous career as a World Series champion and four-time Gold Glove winner. 

He’s still being paid $26 million over the next two years by the Padres. 

– The Texas Rangers hired Brett Bochy, 36, the son of Bruce Bochy, to be a first-year scout. It runs in the family. Joe Bochy, the older brother of Bruce, was a long-time amateur and professional scout. 

– The Washington Nationals were seeking $2.4 billion when the Lerner family took the team off the market. 

– Boston Red Sox veteran reliever Liam Hendriks became the latest ex-White Sox player to expose the problems the White Sox had in the clubhouse last year. 

 “We had too many guys pulling in different directions, too many cooks in the kitchen trying to fix what they thought was [wrong],” Hendriks told the Chicago Sun-Times. “There’s a lot of Type-A people in a clubhouse. You’ve got certain people thinking, ‘This is the way it’s got to go.’ Certain people want to fix something, so they just scream and yell until someone fixes it. There wasn’t, honestly, enough positivity and eagerness to go out there and play on a day-to-day basis.” 

– Former All-Star outfielder Carlos Gomez, 38, is training to become a cyclist for the Dominican Republic. 

– Dodgers All-Star Mookie Betts on the new uniforms that has drawn widespread criticism: “It doesn’t matter to me. If we’re worrying about uniforms, I couldn’t care less. As long as I’ve got one on.” 

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This post appeared first on USA TODAY

CHICAGO — Chris Chelios basked in glory as his No. 7 was raised to the rafters.

The former NHL great, who helped the Detroit Red Wings win two Stanley Cups, took center stage at United Center in an afternoon ceremony that culminated with the Chicago Blackhawks retiring the number with which he was synonymous during his decade with his hometown team.

‘The day I was traded to Chicago was the greatest day of my life,’ Chelios said of the deal on June 29, 1990, when he left the Montreal Canadiens for the Windy City, where he would play for a decade until a trade at the 1999 deadline landed him in Detroit.

‘I just think how unique it is,’ Chelios said after the ceremony. ‘It’s one thing to get your jersey retired and then it’s another thing to do it in your hometown.’

During his speech, Chelios gave a shoutout to former Blackhawk star Patrick Kane, who signed with the Red Wings in November, saying, ‘That jersey looks kind of funny on you, but it will grow.’

All things Blackhawks: Latest Chicago Blackhawks news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

Kane ended up scoring the game winner in overtime to give the Red Wings a 3-2 win.

Chelios advised Kane when he was making his decision this fall on whether to sign with the Wings. Chelios ended up playing a decade in Detroit, helping the Wings win Cups in 2002 and 2008.

‘I should have thanked the Ilitch family, which I forgot, but my mind was racing,’ Chelios said. ‘I think the Ilitches know how much I appreciated my time there and how great they were to me, too.’ 

Those at the ceremony included Dennis Rodman, who played for the Detroit Pistons and the Chicago Bulls during his career. Michael Jordan couldn’t make it.

‘MJ is here in spirit,’ Chelios said of his close friend, the Bulls icon. ‘I’m hanging in the rafters with his jersey. We spoke yesterday. He’s always been there for me. We’ll celebrate on his boat next week.’

Chelios recalled how he got to know Rodman and Jordan during his days with the Blackhawks. Both they and the Bulls play at United Center.

‘We had a relationship with all the Bulls,’ Chelios said. ‘Michael went out a lot, Dennis went out all the time. We could come back from practice and we would scrimmage with them before games. Rodman, he was a character.’

Chelios, 62, was accompanied at the ceremony by his mom, Susan; his wife, Tracee; and their four children. Chelios said Cindy Crawford was among friends at the event.

The ceremony began with a lengthy video tribute that highlighted the rough-and-tough side of Chelios, who racked up 2,891 penalty minutes in 1,651 career games. He played first for the Canadiens (1984-90), then went on to the Blackhawks (1990-99), Red Wings (1999-2009) and Atlanta Thrashers (2009-10). Tributes from the likes of Eddie Belfour and Jeremy Roenick were played over the clips, which naturally centered on Chelios’ decade with the Blackhawks.

‘There’s no question I was lucky, breaking in with Montreal the time I did it,’ Chelios said. ‘I got to Montreal and it was like getting a Harvard degree because of the great players they had and the coaches and the leaders. It developed me into the player I was. By the time I got to Chicago, I was ready to take charge.

‘My trade to Detroit, it wasn’t my first choice, but I had a sister going through cancer and it was the easiest way to get back and forth. The Detroit, with the history and great ownership — I’m just glad Kaner did this now, too, because it takes a little bit of the heat off me. I’m so happy he’s doing so well.’

Chelios summed up his career — three Stanley Cups and tenures on three Original Six teams in one sentence: ‘No question, I was incredibly lucky.’

Contact Helene St. James athstjames@freepress.com. Follow her on Twitter@helenestjames. Her latest book, “On the Clock: Behind the Scenes with the Detroit Red Wings at the NHL Draft,” is available from Amazon,Barnes & Noble and Triumph Books. Personalized copies available via her e-mail.

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The NBA suspended five players, including Miami Heat star Jimmy Butler, after a scuffle broke out during Friday night’s game between the Heat and New Orleans Pelicans, the league announced Sunday.

Butler, his Heat teammate Nikola Jović and the Pelicans’ Naji Marshall were all given a one-game suspension for the incident at the Smoothie King Center in New Orleans. Butler and Marshall were penalized for instigating the fight — Butler pushed Marshall, who retaliated by putting his hand on Butler’s neck — while Jović was flagged for leaving the bench during the incident.

Miami’s Thomas Bryant and New Orleans’ Jose Alvarado were each handed a three-game suspension for their involvement in the altercation.

Butler, Marshall, Bryant and Alvarado were all ejected from the game after the incident.

Four players ejected Friday after Heat-Pelicans scuffle

Jimmy Butler was one of four players ejected Friday evening after a scuffle broke out between the Heat and the New Orleans Pelicans in the fourth quarter.

The incident started when Heat forward Kevin Love committed a hard foul on the Pelicans’ Zion Williamson under the basket with 11:19 remaining as the Heat led the Pelicans, 84-80. After the foul, the Pelicans’ Naji Marshall ran to his teammate’s defense and pushed Love from over Williamson.

Then chaos ensued. Butler pushed Marshall, his hand running up by Marshall’s neck. Marshall retaliated by putting his hand around Butler’s neck to choke him. The teams were eventually separated before another scuffle broke out between the Pelicans’ Jose Alvarado and the Heat’s Thomas Bryant, who both appeared to throw punches at each other.

In the end, Butler, Bryant, Marshall and Alvarado were all ejected from the game. Butler, who finished the night with 23 points, nine rebounds, six assists and three steals, flexed his muscles to the crowd before leaving the floor.

The Heat beat the Pelicans 106-95.

Here’s how the fight broke out

Players reaction to ejections post-game

“I don’t think I should have gotten thrown out of the game,” Butler said afterwards.

Butler believes that Williamson flopped on the play that touched off the scuffle, and said the former No. 1 overall pick “knew he shouldn’t have did that.”

“Then (Marshall) came and put his hands on K-Love and that’s how it all escalated,” Butler said.

Williamson said he ‘wasn’t tripping about K-Love because he actually protected me on my fall.’

“All of a sudden I see Butler kind of lunging toward Naji, so I’m trying to get there like, ‘Yo, relax, like what’s going on?” Williamson said.

‘You never want to see that,’ Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said. ‘Once it was all done, the response was appropriate – discipline, physicality, force, but not going over the top.’

Spoelstra believes the situation spiraled out of control thanks in part to ‘a misunderstanding of the play’ involving Love and Williamson.

‘I think Zion slipped on the play when K-Love grabbed him and it looked a lot worse than what it was. And then everybody kind of overreacted.

‘I think they interpreted that K-Love threw (Williamson) down. On K-Love’s best day, I don’t think he could throw him down.’

Despite the tense moment, both teams appeared to appreciate the response of the players.

“It’s people competing – people riding for their teammates,” Williamson said.

Spoelstra said the intensity on the court that led to the melee ‘is what competitors want. It’s what the fans want. It’s what everybody wants and sometimes it boils over unfortunately.”

“We’ll just see what happens from the league,” Spoelstra said. “Everybody’s intentions were right at first but you get a bunch of competitive people out there and it kind of boiled over.”

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Atlanta Hawks guard Trae Young is set to undergo surgery to repair a ligament tear in his left pinky finger, the Hawks announced Sunday.

He will be re-evaluated in four weeks.

Young is averaging 26.4 points and 10.8 assists per game this season, while the Hawks (24-32) occupy the last play-in spot at 10th in the Eastern Conference.

In his lone season with the Oklahoma Sooners, Young led the NCAA in points and assists.

All things Hawks: Latest Atlanta Hawks news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

Here’s everything to know about Young’s injury:

Trae Young injury update

The Atlanta Hawks announced Sunday that Trae Young will undergo surgery to repair a tore ligament in his fifth finger of left hand and will be re-evaluated in four weeks.

The Hawks said Young underwent an MRI on Saturday that revealed a tear of the radial collateral ligament. The announcement said he will undergo surgery on Tuesday.

Young suffered the injury in Friday’s 123-121 loss to Toronto, where he scored 11 points with seven assists on 4 of 13 shooting in 35 minutes.

What is Trae Young’s injury?

Young underwent an MRI on Saturday that revealed a tear of the radial collateral ligament in his fifth finger of his left hand. He is expected to miss at least the next four weeks.

Trae Young NBA stats

Career averages: 25.6 points, 9.5 assists, 3.6 rebounds, 1.0 steals
2023-24: 26.4 points, 10.8 assists, 2.7 rebounds, 1.4 steals

Trae Young college stats

2017-18 (Oklahoma): 27.4 points, 8.7 assists, 3.9 rebounds, 1.7 steals

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Republican National Committee Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel will formally resign her position after the March 5 Super Tuesday primaries, weeks after former President Trump asked her to step down.

The announcement comes weeks after Trump revealed his recommendations for changes within the RNC earlier this month. He proposed that North Carolina GOP chair Michael Whatley take over as chairman, while his daughter-in-law Lara Trump and campaign senior adviser Chris LaCivita also receive leadership positions.

‘It has been the honor and privilege of my life to serve the Republican National Committee for seven years as Chairwoman to elect Republicans and grow our Party,’ McDaniel said in a statement. ‘I have decided to step aside at our Spring Training on March 8 in Houston to allow our nominee to select a Chair of their choosing. The RNC has historically undergone change once we have a nominee and it has always been my intention to honor that tradition.’

‘I remain committed to winning back the White House and electing REpublicans up and down the ballot in November,’ she added, before thanking her husband, family and RNC staff.

As he has moved closer to securing the Republican presidential nomination, Trump has been ramping up his calls for changes and new leadership at the GOP’s national party committee. 

The former president met with McDaniel at his Mar-a-Lago club in Palm Beach, Florida in early February.

Trump wrote in his Truth Social platform following the meeting that McDaniel was a ‘friend’ but that he would be urging changes at the RNC after the Feb. 24 South Carolina GOP presidential primary.

Fox News’ Greg Wehner and Paul Steinhauser contributed to this report

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Palestinian Prime Minister Mohammad Shtayyeh announced Monday that he submitted his government’s resignation to President Mahmoud Abbas.

‘I submitted the government’s resignation to President Mahmoud Abbas on February 20, 2024, and today I submit it in writing,’ Shtayyeh said at a news conference via the Palestinian News & Info Agency.

Abbas must still decide whether to accept Shtayyeh and his government’s resignation, but the move signals a willingness by the Western-backed Palestinian leadership to accept a shake-up that could lead to reforms viewed as necessary to revitalize the Palestinian Authority.

The U.S. seeks a reformed Palestinian Authority to govern Gaza once the war between Israeli forces and Hamas terrorists is over.

The prime minister said this decision ‘comes in light of the political, security, and economic developments related to the aggression against Palestinian people in the Gaza Strip, and the unprecedented escalation in the West Bank, including the city of Jerusalem.’

‘It comes in light of what Palestinian people, our Palestinian cause, and our political system are facing from a ferocious and unprecedented attack, genocide, attempts at forced displacement, starvation in Gaza, intensification of colonialism, colonizers’ terrorism, and repeated invasions of camps, villages, and cities in Jerusalem and the West Bank. Its re-occupation, unprecedented financial strangulation, attempts to liquidate the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Refugees, repudiation of all signed agreements, gradual annexation of Palestinian lands, and striving to make the Palestinian National Authority a security administrative authority with no political content,’ Shtayyeh said.

‘We will remain in confrontation with the occupation, and the Palestinian Authority will continue to struggle to establish the state on the lands of Palestine,’ he added.

Shtayyeh said his government has worked in complicated circumstances, including the COVID-19 pandemic, the Russia-Ukraine war and its economic repercussions on Palestinian people, and the conflict with Israel, which he describes as a genocide against Palestinian people in Gaza.

‘In the midst of all this, the government was able to achieve a balance between meeting the needs of our people, and the requirements of providing services worthy of them, such as infrastructure, legislation, reform programs, civil peace, municipal elections, chambers of commerce, and so on – and preserving our political and national rights, and protecting them, confronting settlement, supporting the confrontation areas and Area C, and internationalizing the conflict with the occupation,’ he said.

The prime minister added that five years have passed since the formation of his government and that it is a ‘political and professional government that includes a number of political partners and independents, including five ministers from Gaza.’

Shtayyeh concluded by explaining his reasoning for offering his resignation.

‘Accordingly, I see that the next stage and its challenges require new governmental and political arrangements that take into account the emerging reality in the Gaza Strip, the national unity talks, and the urgent need for an inter-Palestinian consensus based on a national basis, broad participation, unity of ranks, and the extension of the Palestinian Authority’s sovereignty over the entire land of Palestine,’ he said.

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AFP Action, the conservative wing of the powerful and influential conservative Americans for Prosperity, funded by the billionaire Koch Brothers, has pulled funding for the presidential campaign of Nikki Haley. 

In an email to staffers obtained by Fox News, AFP Action senior adviser Emily Seidel said the group did not believe that ‘any outside group can make a material difference to widen [Haley’s] path to victory.’ 

‘And so while we will continue to endorse her, we will focus our resources where we can make the difference. And that’s the U.S. Senate and House,’ Seidel wrote. 

The news was first reported by Politico earlier Sunday. 

AFP Action endorsed Haley in November, giving her a major grassroots and organizational boost.

The deep-pocketed fiscally conservative network launched an ad blitz on behalf of Haley in January, including mailers, digital ads, and connected TV spots. 

AFP Action, which pledged to spend tens of millions of dollars to help push the Republican Party past former President Trump as it endorsed Haley in late November, said last month it was putting an initial $27 million behind this new wave in their ongoing campaign.

The news came after Haley’s GOP rival, former President Trump, won the GOP primary in Haley’s home state of South Carolina on Saturday.

Despite the loss, and defying calls to exit the race, Haley has said it’s not the ‘end of our story’ as she traveled Sunday to Michigan ahead of the state’s primary on Tuesday. 

In the less than 24 hours following her Saturday night loss, Haley’s campaign said that she had raised $1 million ‘from grassroots supporters alone,’ Fox News previously reported. 

Haley’s campaign argued that the money raised ‘demonstrates Haley’s staying power and her appeal to broad swaths of the American public.’

Asked Sunday about losing funding from AFP Action, Haley said she was ‘not worried.’ 

‘Americans for Prosperity was an amazing partner. They strongly believe in freedom. They believe in limited government. They believe in all the things that I, as a conservative, believe. And they’ve been fantastic through these states,’ Haley said, vowing to continue fighting ‘for the 70% of Americans that don’t want to see a Trump-Biden rematch.’ 

With his win Saturday in the first-in-the South contest, Trump has now swept every primary or caucus on the GOP early-season calendar that awards delegates. His performances have left little maneuvering room for Haley, his former U.N. ambassador.

Still, Haley insists she is sticking around even with the growing pressure to abandon her candidacy and let Trump focus entirely on Democratic President Joe Biden, in a 2020 rematch.

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