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As the calendar flips to February with spring training just weeks away, some of Major League Baseball’s best free agents remained unsigned.

It’s been a relatively quiet winter (new Dodgers Shohei Ohtani and Yoshinobu Yamamoto aside), with a top-heavy market never really taking shape.

Six of the top 14 players in USA TODAY Sports’ 2023-24 free agent rankings are still without a team, including two-time Cy Young winner Blake Snell and former MVP Cody Bellinger, with suitors waiting for asking prices drop.

Here’s how USA TODAY Sports’ MLB writers and editors predict the final weeks of the hot stove season will go:

Blake Snell

Bob Nightengale: Los Angeles Angels – The Angels were aggressive early saying how much they want him, and are now just waiting for his price-tag to dip below $200 million to seal the deal, hoping the Giants don’t swoop in.

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

Gabe Lacques: New York Yankees – Snell swallows some pride and the Yankees sweeten their offer just a bit to create enviable, if unpredictive, rotation depth.

Steve Gardner: San Francisco Giants – They have a serious need for another top starter to pair with Logan Webb.

Scott Boeck: New York Yankees – Pairing Snell with Gerrit Cole, two reigning Cy Young Award winners, creates a historic one-two punch for the Bronx Bombers, who are all in this upcoming season.

Jesse Yomtov: Los Angeles Angels – It doesn’t feel like there’s a perfect fit out there for Snell and the Angels’ payroll is projected about $150 million for 2024, giving the perpetually-rudderless organization plenty of room to sign the market’s top pitcher.

Cody Bellinger

Nightengale: Chicago Cubs – It’s a perfect marriage after dating all of last season, and everyone knows it’s going to happen. The only question is who proposes first.

Lacques: Chicago Cubs – Pete Crow-Armstrong’s fine defense is no reason to pass on a Bellinger reunion, not when he’s still out there, the Cubs lack thump at Bellinger’s positions and at 28, the 2019 MVP still has plenty of prime years remaining.

Gardner:Chicago Cubs – Not finding any takers for his big-money demands, he returns to the Friendly Confines and fills the Cubs’ greatest need..

Boeck: Chicago Cubs – Bellinger returns to Chicago on a short term deal despite interest in moving back to Los Angeles to play for the Angels. 

Yomtov: Chicago Cubs – You have to wonder if Bellinger’s stellar 2023 was an aberration or a return to form for the former MVP. Either way, it makes sense for the Cubs to run it back.

Matt Chapman

Nightengale: San Francisco Giants – Giants manager Bob Melvin and bench coach Matt Williams are openly campaigning for Chapman, a Bay Area favorite, whose options have dramatically dwindled.

Lacques: San Francisco Giants. Not exactly the star power the Giants sought this winter, nor the offensive thump they need, but Chapman can lay a foundation upon which the club can build – and perhaps snare a third wild card spot.

Gardner: Detroit Tigers – The AL Central is theirs for the taking; adding a power bat and Gold Glove will definitely help..

Boeck: Chicago Cubs – With the Blue Jays signing Justin Turner, a reunion with Chapman is no longer in the picture. The Cubs, a potential playoff team, could use a reliable defensive third baseman for a relatively bargain price.

Yomtov: San Francisco Giants – At 30 years old, the four-time Gold Glove third baseman would be a relatively low-risk signing.

Jordan Montgomery

Nightengale: Texas Rangers — Montgomery badly wants to return to Texas, Texas wants Montgomery, but can the two sides make the economics fit with the Rangers’ TV contract in limbo?

Lacques: Boston Red Sox – At some point, public shaming of Red Sox officials for their lack of action has to pay off.

Gardner:Baltimore Orioles – Assuming they can’t swing a deal for Dylan Cease, the O’s need to do something to show they’re in it to win it.

Boeck:Boston Red Sox – The Red Sox are in need of an additional veteran arm to compete in the AL East and Montgomery’s wife is currently interning at a Boston hospital. Could be a perfect fit for the left-hander.

Yomtov: San Francisco Giants — The 31-year-old southpaw would be a sorta-budget-friendly alternative to signing Snell.

Jorge Soler

Nightengale: Boston Red Sox – The Red Sox have been relatively quiet all winter (with the only noise being the fanbase screaming for action) but the unrest should at least be momentarily subdued with a Soler signing.

Lacques: Detroit Tigers – A bit of insurance against Parker Meadows’ inexperience and at this point, the price is right.

Boeck: Boston Red Sox – Soler’s power could help balance out the Red Sox lineup and improve the outfield that lost Alex Verdugo via trade and likely free agent Adam Duvall.    

Gardner: Tampa Bay Rays — Watch Tampa Bay wait out the market and get a nice bargain to lead the team in home runs.

Yomtov: Boston Red Sox – Fans have been livid with the team’s moves (or lack thereof) this winter, but inking the 31-year-old Soler would give Boston a big bat – albeit a fairly inconsistent one – in the middle of the order who can play both corner outfield spots and DH.

J.D. Martinez

Nightengale: San Francisco Giants – The Giants still have plenty of money to burn, and although Martinez doesn’t have the versatility they covet, his bat could solve a whole lot of offensive concerns.

Lacques: Los Angeles Angels – Their really weird offseason continues.

Gardner:Cleveland Guardians – Last in the majors in homers in 2023, Cleveland’s offense could use an infusion of veteran power.

Boeck:Arizona DIamondbacks – In 2017, Martinez flourished in the desert when he spent half a season with the D-backs and slugged 29 homers in 62 games. Now at 36, a reunion would make a good fit for the veteran slugger on a team that reached the World Series last year.

Yomtov:New York Mets – After an ugly 2023, the Mets haven’t really done anything to improve their offense and approach February with D.J. Stewart as their presumed primary designated hitter. A one or two-year deal for the 36-year-old would who had 33 HR and 103 RBI with the Dodgers last season would really stretch out the lineup.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

As the calendar flips to February with spring training just weeks away, some of Major League Baseball’s best free agents remained unsigned.

It’s been a relatively quiet winter (new Dodgers Shohei Ohtani and Yoshinobu Yamamoto aside), with a top-heavy market never really taking shape.

Six of the top 14 players in USA TODAY Sports’ 2023-24 free agent rankings are still without a team, including two-time Cy Young winner Blake Snell and former MVP Cody Bellinger, with suitors waiting for asking prices drop.

Here’s how USA TODAY Sports’ MLB writers and editors predict the final weeks of the hot stove season will go:

Blake Snell

Bob Nightengale: Los Angeles Angels – The Angels were aggressive early saying how much they want him, and are now just waiting for his price-tag to dip below $200 million to seal the deal, hoping the Giants don’t swoop in.

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

Gabe Lacques: New York Yankees – Snell swallows some pride and the Yankees sweeten their offer just a bit to create enviable, if unpredictive, rotation depth.

Steve Gardner: San Francisco Giants – They have a serious need for another top starter to pair with Logan Webb.

Scott Boeck: New York Yankees – Pairing Snell with Gerrit Cole, two reigning Cy Young Award winners, creates a historic one-two punch for the Bronx Bombers, who are all in this upcoming season.

Jesse Yomtov: Los Angeles Angels – It doesn’t feel like there’s a perfect fit out there for Snell and the Angels’ payroll is projected about $150 million for 2024, giving the perpetually-rudderless organization plenty of room to sign the market’s top pitcher.

Cody Bellinger

Nightengale: Chicago Cubs – It’s a perfect marriage after dating all of last season, and everyone knows it’s going to happen. The only question is who proposes first.

Lacques: Chicago Cubs – Pete Crow-Armstrong’s fine defense is no reason to pass on a Bellinger reunion, not when he’s still out there, the Cubs lack thump at Bellinger’s positions and at 28, the 2019 MVP still has plenty of prime years remaining.

Gardner:Chicago Cubs – Not finding any takers for his big-money demands, he returns to the Friendly Confines and fills the Cubs’ greatest need..

Boeck: Chicago Cubs – Bellinger returns to Chicago on a short term deal despite interest in moving back to Los Angeles to play for the Angels. 

Yomtov: Chicago Cubs – You have to wonder if Bellinger’s stellar 2023 was an aberration or a return to form for the former MVP. Either way, it makes sense for the Cubs to run it back.

Matt Chapman

Nightengale: San Francisco Giants – Giants manager Bob Melvin and bench coach Matt Williams are openly campaigning for Chapman, a Bay Area favorite, whose options have dramatically dwindled.

Lacques: San Francisco Giants. Not exactly the star power the Giants sought this winter, nor the offensive thump they need, but Chapman can lay a foundation upon which the club can build – and perhaps snare a third wild card spot.

Gardner: Detroit Tigers – The AL Central is theirs for the taking; adding a power bat and Gold Glove will definitely help..

Boeck: Chicago Cubs – With the Blue Jays signing Justin Turner, a reunion with Chapman is no longer in the picture. The Cubs, a potential playoff team, could use a reliable defensive third baseman for a relatively bargain price.

Yomtov: San Francisco Giants – At 30 years old, the four-time Gold Glove third baseman would be a relatively low-risk signing.

Jordan Montgomery

Nightengale: Texas Rangers — Montgomery badly wants to return to Texas, Texas wants Montgomery, but can the two sides make the economics fit with the Rangers’ TV contract in limbo?

Lacques: Boston Red Sox – At some point, public shaming of Red Sox officials for their lack of action has to pay off.

Gardner:Baltimore Orioles – Assuming they can’t swing a deal for Dylan Cease, the O’s need to do something to show they’re in it to win it.

Boeck:Boston Red Sox – The Red Sox are in need of an additional veteran arm to compete in the AL East and Montgomery’s wife is currently interning at a Boston hospital. Could be a perfect fit for the left-hander.

Yomtov: San Francisco Giants — The 31-year-old southpaw would be a sorta-budget-friendly alternative to signing Snell.

Jorge Soler

Nightengale: Boston Red Sox – The Red Sox have been relatively quiet all winter (with the only noise being the fanbase screaming for action) but the unrest should at least be momentarily subdued with a Soler signing.

Lacques: Detroit Tigers – A bit of insurance against Parker Meadows’ inexperience and at this point, the price is right.

Boeck: Boston Red Sox – Soler’s power could help balance out the Red Sox lineup and improve the outfield that lost Alex Verdugo via trade and likely free agent Adam Duvall.    

Gardner: Tampa Bay Rays — Watch Tampa Bay wait out the market and get a nice bargain to lead the team in home runs.

Yomtov: Boston Red Sox – Fans have been livid with the team’s moves (or lack thereof) this winter, but inking the 31-year-old Soler would give Boston a big bat – albeit a fairly inconsistent one – in the middle of the order who can play both corner outfield spots and DH.

J.D. Martinez

Nightengale: San Francisco Giants – The Giants still have plenty of money to burn, and although Martinez doesn’t have the versatility they covet, his bat could solve a whole lot of offensive concerns.

Lacques: Los Angeles Angels – Their really weird offseason continues.

Gardner:Cleveland Guardians – Last in the majors in homers in 2023, Cleveland’s offense could use an infusion of veteran power.

Boeck:Arizona DIamondbacks – In 2017, Martinez flourished in the desert when he spent half a season with the D-backs and slugged 29 homers in 62 games. Now at 36, a reunion would make a good fit for the veteran slugger on a team that reached the World Series last year.

Yomtov:New York Mets – After an ugly 2023, the Mets haven’t really done anything to improve their offense and approach February with D.J. Stewart as their presumed primary designated hitter. A one or two-year deal for the 36-year-old would who had 33 HR and 103 RBI with the Dodgers last season would really stretch out the lineup.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

He was described as ‘a coaching vagabond’ who lacked ‘the chops’ to bring his new program ‘out of the conference basement and into the mix for bowl bids, let alone a division title.’

That was the USA TODAY Sports breakdown three years ago of new Arizona coach Jedd Fisch, who came in dead last in the Power Five in a ranking of the new hires.

Oops. A few years later, Fisch has been revealed instead as one of the top hires of the cycle, along with Kansas coach Lance Leipold, Texas coach Steve Sarkisian and Tennessee coach Josh Heupel.

Hey, it just goes to show: The quality of these hires is almost impossible to predict in the moment. And a few years later, we get a chance to take another crack at ranking Fisch, now the new head coach at Washington.

With that in mind, let’s take a look at this year’s moves and rank every new hire in the Bowl Subdivision. In this case, we’re not going to include Northwestern’s David Braun, who coached the Wildcats this entire season and was named the coach of the year in the Big Ten.

1. Bronco Mendenhall, New Mexico

He’s a winner, pure and simple. Mendenhall has been very successful at two stops, Brigham Young and Virginia, reaching bowl eligibility in every non-COVID-19 year of his coaching career outside of his debut season with the Cavaliers. Mendenhall is also a former New Mexico assistant under Rocky Long and brings deep familiarity with the program and the broader region. As one of the surest bets in coaching and a terrific ambassador for the program and athletics department, he’s an absolute coup for the Lobos.

2. Willie Fritz, Houston

And speaking of home-run hires: Fritz brings to Houston an unimpeachable track record highlighted by a 23-4 mark across the past two seasons with one New Year’s Six bowl victory against Southern California in the Cotton Bowl. Going all the way back to JUCO powerhouse Blinn College in the early 1990s, Fritz has put together inventive offenses that maximize talent. With the Cougars and in the Power Five, he’ll have the chance to work with a higher caliber of athlete and make a run at the College Football Playoff.

3. Kalen DeBoer, Alabama

About the only question regarding DeBoer and Alabama is whether he can recruit at a level equal or beyond what Georgia, Ohio State and others are doing. There are no questions about his coaching acumen after turning leading Washington to the national championship game in just his second season. One factor outside of DeBoer’s control is the shadow that Nick Saban will continue to cast over the program into the foreseeable future. That makes it almost imperative that he starts fast against a schedule that includes Georgia and road games against Wisconsin, Tennessee, LSU and Oklahoma.

4. Ken Niumatalolo, San Jose State

Niumatalolo is back for a second turn as a head coach after a disappointing final three seasons at Navy. While things clearly took a turn for the worse in Annapolis, Niumatalolo has still compiled a borderline Hall of Fame résumé and is one of the most accomplished new head coaches of this cycle. He won’t run the option offense used with the Midshipmen, he said, and will likely take the offense in a more advanced direction after spending the past year at UCLA in an off-field role. The hire at coordinator will be important but Niumatalolo is a very solid fit at a program with a strong infrastructure.

5. Jon Sumrall, Tulane

While the track record is smaller compared to other names at the top of this list, Sumrall is one of the profession’s rising stars after going 23-4 and winning a pair of Sun Belt championships in his two seasons at Troy. The former SEC assistant at Mississippi and Kentucky also spent three years as the co-defensive coordinator with the Green Wave. The program is on an upward trend after its recent success with Willie Fritz.

6. Pete Lembo, Buffalo

Lembo has won at every one of his stops across multiple levels of competition. Most importantly, he went 33-29 in five seasons at Ball State, another MAC program with limited resources that demands careful talent evaluation and player development to make ends meet. Since leaving the Cardinals after the 2015 season, Lembo has worked as an assistant at Maryland, Rice, Memphis and South Carolina. He’s one of the top Group of Five hires of the cycle.

7. Curt Cignetti, Indiana

History says Cignetti won’t do much at Indiana, historically one of the most difficult places to win in the Power Five. Three or four years down the line, he might be the latest to try and fail to turn the Hoosiers into a consistent winner. But chew on this: Cignetti has been a head coach across multiple levels since 2011 − Division II, the Championship Subdivision and the FBS − and has yet to post a losing season. Most recently, he led James Madison to an incredibly successful two-year transition to the FBS, going 19-4 overall and finishing first in the Sun Belt East in both seasons.

8. Jonathan Smith, Michigan State

Smith flew way under the radar at Oregon State until the past two seasons, when the Beavers seemed to spend more weeks than not in the US LBM AFCA Coaches Poll. His commitment to a physical offense and ability to develop players will fit extremely well at Michigan State, which has to steer clear of quick fixes through the portal and build a roster that can compete with best programs in the Big Ten.

9. Brent Brennan, Arizona

Brennan proved his credentials by turning San Jose State into one of the most consistent winners in the Mountain West. That experience will come in very handy at an Arizona program that is aimed in the right direction heading into the Big 12. With many of the top players on this year’s team back on the roster instead of in the portal – notably quarterback Noah Fifita and receiver Tetairoa McMillan, Brennan has the talent to make some noise in his first year and avoid the multiple-year rebuilding project that kicked off his tenure with the Spartans.

10. Jedd Fisch, Washington

Fisch pulled off a borderline miracle in turning Arizona into one of the top teams in the Pac-12 in just three seasons. That earned him a big raise and a better job at Washington, a new member of the Big Ten. The experience with the Wildcats will come in handy as the Huskies try to reload against a tough schedule and with a roster shredded by losses to the NFL and transfer portal. The expectations for his first team may end up being too high, but Fisch has proven himself as a strong program builder.

11. Mike Elko, Texas A&M

Elko’s defensive pedigree is a breath of fresh air at A&M after the Aggies’ run of failed hires arriving with an offensive background, with Jimbo Fisher the latest and most obvious example. He’s a high-floor hire who can set the Aggies’ baseline at eight wins while developing a stronger culture that should avoid the dips and lulls that have defined the program for nearly a generation.

12. Sherrone Moore, Michigan

Moore seems like the right coach at the right time as the Wolverines look to keep things rolling without Jim Harbaugh, but the spotty track record of assistants promoted from within championship-winning staffs makes this a hard one to predict. On one hand, Moore has clearly been a vital piece behind the Wolverines’ recent three-year run and has the obvious support of the locker room and administration. On the other hand, he’s never been a head coach on any level and will face the pressure of replicating the success of one of the best coaches of this era in Harbaugh.

13. Spencer Danielson, Boise State

Danielson is the latest Boise State assistant to get a crack at the top job, following Dan Hawkins, Chris Petersen, Bryan Harsin and Andy Avalos. He replaced Avalos late this past season and led the Broncos to the Mountain West championship. Danielson clearly has the respect of the locker room along with a high-energy style that provides a nice change of pace from the recent past.

14. Bob Chesney, James Madison

Chesney is an unknown on this level but has been viewed as one of the top coaches on the FCS level since early in his six-year tenure at Holy Cross. He went 44-21 with the Crusaders with four appearances in the FCS playoffs and five Patriot League crowns. Like Sumrall, Chesney is an up-and-coming coach stepping into a very strong situation at JMU.

15. Sean Lewis, San Diego State

Lewis had a rocky single season as the offensive coordinator under Deion Sanders at Colorado, eventually losing play-calling duties amid the Buffaloes’ swoon following a strong start. But he proved himself at Kent State as a top offensive mind, meaning San Diego State might actually — gasp — have an offense that carries the load. Given the talent in his new backyard, Lewis could build something special on that side of the ball.

16. Manny Diaz, Duke

Diaz more than warranted another Power Five opportunity after turning Penn State’s defense into one of the top units in the country. He went 21-15 with three bowl trips in as many years at Miami (Fla.), giving him experience in the ACC, and could step right into Elko’s shoes and keep the Blue Devils moving up the ladder in the conference standings.

17. Jeff Choate, Nevada

Choate has one of the most interesting résumés of any new hire. He got his FBS start as an assistant under Petersen at Boise State. He then spent four years as a Power Five assistant before another four seasons as head coach at Montana State, leading the Bobcats to a pair of FCS playoff appearances and a top-five finish in 2020. Add in the past three years under Steve Sarkisian at Texas and you get a very strong mix of experience across multiple levels of competition. While he takes on a pretty dire situation at Nevada, Choate seems very prepared for this opportunity.

18. Fran Brown, Syracuse

Brown comes to Syracuse after two seasons as the defensive backs coach under Kirby Smart at Georgia, and it’s hard to top the seal of approval that comes from working at one of the top programs in the FBS. But he’s background is more so under Nebraska coach Matt Rhule, who gave Brown his first shot as an on-field coach at Temple in 2013 and brought him along to Baylor in 2017. He knows how to build a program, in other words. And there’s another thing he does as well as anyone: Brown is an elite recruiter who will really beef up the program’s efforts in the transfer portal and with traditional recruits.

19. Major Applewhite, South Alabama

South Alabama lost coach Kane Wommack, who reunited with DeBoer as Alabama’s new defensive coordinator. Given South Alabama’s 16 wins across the past two years, it made sense to hand the job to Applewhite. The Jaguars’ offensive coordinator went 15-10 as the head coach at Houston from 2017-18 and has coached offenses at some of the top programs in the country, including Alabama and Texas. Wommack proved that you can win at South Alabama, which hadn’t posted a winning record as a member of the FBS until 2022.

20. Jay Sawvell, Wyoming

Sawvell replaces Craig Bohl after spending the past four seasons as Wyoming’s defensive coordinator. The Cowboys finished in the top three in the Mountain West in yards allowed per play twice in these four years, including a second-place finish this past season. There’s always a big risk in hiring first-time coaches, but the coaches Sawvell has worked under helps to mitigate that risk. Since 2001, he’s been a defensive assistant under some of the best in the business in Jerry Kill, Dave Clawson and Bohl.

21. Derek Mason, Middle Tennessee

Formerly the head coach at Vanderbilt and a well-regarded assistant at multiple Power Five stops, Mason will run a good, clean program and build solid-to-strong defenses, so this hire looks nice on paper. He also brings name recognition to the Blue Raiders and a new outlook after the program’s long run under former coach Rick Stockstill. What direction the Blue Raiders take on offense will determine whether Mason’s second round as a head coach goes better than his first.

22. Trent Bray, Oregon State

This was a smart hire in the moment for the Beavers, who faces an uncertain future given the demise of the Pac-12 and might not have attracted an extremely high caliber of candidates as Smith’s replacement as a result. Bray did strong work as the Beavers defensive coordinator, has the support of the roster and is very aware of what it takes to win off the beaten path in Corvallis. But there are still some question marks about his ability to run his own program, which is only understandable.

23. Scotty Walden, Texas-El Paso

While only 34, Walden has already been a head coach at two different stops, East Texas Baptist State and Austin Peay, and was the interim coach at Southern Mississippi for most of the abbreviated 2020 season. But given how hard it can be to win at UTEP, the overall lack of experience is a concern. Still, Walden was born in Texas and went to school and started his career in the state, so he knows the area. And maybe being young is a very good thing: the Miners needs a spark.

24. Jeff Lebby, Mississippi State

Lebby should get the Mississippi State offense back in gear, at least. The former Oklahoma coordinator has also been embraced by a fan base reeling from Zach Arnett’s failed one-year tenure. That’s a good start. In the bigger picture, however, Lebby walks into the best conference in college football needing to prove that he can develop the culture necessary to offset the Bulldogs’ inherent disadvantages compared to most of the SEC.

25. Bryant Vincent, Louisiana-Monroe

Vincent takes over one of the worst situations in the country at Louisiana-Monroe, owners of just one winning season since joining the FBS in 1994. He’ll have to perform a borderline miracle to succeed where so many others have failed before. One thing you have to admire: Vincent played a big part in Alabama-Birmingham’s rise from the ashes under former coach Bill Clark, so he knows a thing or two about winning under extremely adverse circumstances.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

He was described as ‘a coaching vagabond’ who lacked ‘the chops’ to bring his new program ‘out of the conference basement and into the mix for bowl bids, let alone a division title.’

That was the USA TODAY Sports breakdown three years ago of new Arizona coach Jedd Fisch, who came in dead last in the Power Five in a ranking of the new hires.

Oops. A few years later, Fisch has been revealed instead as one of the top hires of the cycle, along with Kansas coach Lance Leipold, Texas coach Steve Sarkisian and Tennessee coach Josh Heupel.

Hey, it just goes to show: The quality of these hires is almost impossible to predict in the moment. And a few years later, we get a chance to take another crack at ranking Fisch, now the new head coach at Washington.

With that in mind, let’s take a look at this year’s moves and rank every new hire in the Bowl Subdivision. In this case, we’re not going to include Northwestern’s David Braun, who coached the Wildcats this entire season and was named the coach of the year in the Big Ten.

1. Bronco Mendenhall, New Mexico

He’s a winner, pure and simple. Mendenhall has been very successful at two stops, Brigham Young and Virginia, reaching bowl eligibility in every non-COVID-19 year of his coaching career outside of his debut season with the Cavaliers. Mendenhall is also a former New Mexico assistant under Rocky Long and brings deep familiarity with the program and the broader region. As one of the surest bets in coaching and a terrific ambassador for the program and athletics department, he’s an absolute coup for the Lobos.

2. Willie Fritz, Houston

And speaking of home-run hires: Fritz brings to Houston an unimpeachable track record highlighted by a 23-4 mark across the past two seasons with one New Year’s Six bowl victory against Southern California in the Cotton Bowl. Going all the way back to JUCO powerhouse Blinn College in the early 1990s, Fritz has put together inventive offenses that maximize talent. With the Cougars and in the Power Five, he’ll have the chance to work with a higher caliber of athlete and make a run at the College Football Playoff.

3. Kalen DeBoer, Alabama

About the only question regarding DeBoer and Alabama is whether he can recruit at a level equal or beyond what Georgia, Ohio State and others are doing. There are no questions about his coaching acumen after turning leading Washington to the national championship game in just his second season. One factor outside of DeBoer’s control is the shadow that Nick Saban will continue to cast over the program into the foreseeable future. That makes it almost imperative that he starts fast against a schedule that includes Georgia and road games against Wisconsin, Tennessee, LSU and Oklahoma.

4. Ken Niumatalolo, San Jose State

Niumatalolo is back for a second turn as a head coach after a disappointing final three seasons at Navy. While things clearly took a turn for the worse in Annapolis, Niumatalolo has still compiled a borderline Hall of Fame résumé and is one of the most accomplished new head coaches of this cycle. He won’t run the option offense used with the Midshipmen, he said, and will likely take the offense in a more advanced direction after spending the past year at UCLA in an off-field role. The hire at coordinator will be important but Niumatalolo is a very solid fit at a program with a strong infrastructure.

5. Jon Sumrall, Tulane

While the track record is smaller compared to other names at the top of this list, Sumrall is one of the profession’s rising stars after going 23-4 and winning a pair of Sun Belt championships in his two seasons at Troy. The former SEC assistant at Mississippi and Kentucky also spent three years as the co-defensive coordinator with the Green Wave. The program is on an upward trend after its recent success with Willie Fritz.

6. Pete Lembo, Buffalo

Lembo has won at every one of his stops across multiple levels of competition. Most importantly, he went 33-29 in five seasons at Ball State, another MAC program with limited resources that demands careful talent evaluation and player development to make ends meet. Since leaving the Cardinals after the 2015 season, Lembo has worked as an assistant at Maryland, Rice, Memphis and South Carolina. He’s one of the top Group of Five hires of the cycle.

7. Curt Cignetti, Indiana

History says Cignetti won’t do much at Indiana, historically one of the most difficult places to win in the Power Five. Three or four years down the line, he might be the latest to try and fail to turn the Hoosiers into a consistent winner. But chew on this: Cignetti has been a head coach across multiple levels since 2011 − Division II, the Championship Subdivision and the FBS − and has yet to post a losing season. Most recently, he led James Madison to an incredibly successful two-year transition to the FBS, going 19-4 overall and finishing first in the Sun Belt East in both seasons.

8. Jonathan Smith, Michigan State

Smith flew way under the radar at Oregon State until the past two seasons, when the Beavers seemed to spend more weeks than not in the US LBM AFCA Coaches Poll. His commitment to a physical offense and ability to develop players will fit extremely well at Michigan State, which has to steer clear of quick fixes through the portal and build a roster that can compete with best programs in the Big Ten.

9. Brent Brennan, Arizona

Brennan proved his credentials by turning San Jose State into one of the most consistent winners in the Mountain West. That experience will come in very handy at an Arizona program that is aimed in the right direction heading into the Big 12. With many of the top players on this year’s team back on the roster instead of in the portal – notably quarterback Noah Fifita and receiver Tetairoa McMillan, Brennan has the talent to make some noise in his first year and avoid the multiple-year rebuilding project that kicked off his tenure with the Spartans.

10. Jedd Fisch, Washington

Fisch pulled off a borderline miracle in turning Arizona into one of the top teams in the Pac-12 in just three seasons. That earned him a big raise and a better job at Washington, a new member of the Big Ten. The experience with the Wildcats will come in handy as the Huskies try to reload against a tough schedule and with a roster shredded by losses to the NFL and transfer portal. The expectations for his first team may end up being too high, but Fisch has proven himself as a strong program builder.

11. Mike Elko, Texas A&M

Elko’s defensive pedigree is a breath of fresh air at A&M after the Aggies’ run of failed hires arriving with an offensive background, with Jimbo Fisher the latest and most obvious example. He’s a high-floor hire who can set the Aggies’ baseline at eight wins while developing a stronger culture that should avoid the dips and lulls that have defined the program for nearly a generation.

12. Sherrone Moore, Michigan

Moore seems like the right coach at the right time as the Wolverines look to keep things rolling without Jim Harbaugh, but the spotty track record of assistants promoted from within championship-winning staffs makes this a hard one to predict. On one hand, Moore has clearly been a vital piece behind the Wolverines’ recent three-year run and has the obvious support of the locker room and administration. On the other hand, he’s never been a head coach on any level and will face the pressure of replicating the success of one of the best coaches of this era in Harbaugh.

13. Spencer Danielson, Boise State

Danielson is the latest Boise State assistant to get a crack at the top job, following Dan Hawkins, Chris Petersen, Bryan Harsin and Andy Avalos. He replaced Avalos late this past season and led the Broncos to the Mountain West championship. Danielson clearly has the respect of the locker room along with a high-energy style that provides a nice change of pace from the recent past.

14. Bob Chesney, James Madison

Chesney is an unknown on this level but has been viewed as one of the top coaches on the FCS level since early in his six-year tenure at Holy Cross. He went 44-21 with the Crusaders with four appearances in the FCS playoffs and five Patriot League crowns. Like Sumrall, Chesney is an up-and-coming coach stepping into a very strong situation at JMU.

15. Sean Lewis, San Diego State

Lewis had a rocky single season as the offensive coordinator under Deion Sanders at Colorado, eventually losing play-calling duties amid the Buffaloes’ swoon following a strong start. But he proved himself at Kent State as a top offensive mind, meaning San Diego State might actually — gasp — have an offense that carries the load. Given the talent in his new backyard, Lewis could build something special on that side of the ball.

16. Manny Diaz, Duke

Diaz more than warranted another Power Five opportunity after turning Penn State’s defense into one of the top units in the country. He went 21-15 with three bowl trips in as many years at Miami (Fla.), giving him experience in the ACC, and could step right into Elko’s shoes and keep the Blue Devils moving up the ladder in the conference standings.

17. Jeff Choate, Nevada

Choate has one of the most interesting résumés of any new hire. He got his FBS start as an assistant under Petersen at Boise State. He then spent four years as a Power Five assistant before another four seasons as head coach at Montana State, leading the Bobcats to a pair of FCS playoff appearances and a top-five finish in 2020. Add in the past three years under Steve Sarkisian at Texas and you get a very strong mix of experience across multiple levels of competition. While he takes on a pretty dire situation at Nevada, Choate seems very prepared for this opportunity.

18. Fran Brown, Syracuse

Brown comes to Syracuse after two seasons as the defensive backs coach under Kirby Smart at Georgia, and it’s hard to top the seal of approval that comes from working at one of the top programs in the FBS. But he’s background is more so under Nebraska coach Matt Rhule, who gave Brown his first shot as an on-field coach at Temple in 2013 and brought him along to Baylor in 2017. He knows how to build a program, in other words. And there’s another thing he does as well as anyone: Brown is an elite recruiter who will really beef up the program’s efforts in the transfer portal and with traditional recruits.

19. Major Applewhite, South Alabama

South Alabama lost coach Kane Wommack, who reunited with DeBoer as Alabama’s new defensive coordinator. Given South Alabama’s 16 wins across the past two years, it made sense to hand the job to Applewhite. The Jaguars’ offensive coordinator went 15-10 as the head coach at Houston from 2017-18 and has coached offenses at some of the top programs in the country, including Alabama and Texas. Wommack proved that you can win at South Alabama, which hadn’t posted a winning record as a member of the FBS until 2022.

20. Jay Sawvell, Wyoming

Sawvell replaces Craig Bohl after spending the past four seasons as Wyoming’s defensive coordinator. The Cowboys finished in the top three in the Mountain West in yards allowed per play twice in these four years, including a second-place finish this past season. There’s always a big risk in hiring first-time coaches, but the coaches Sawvell has worked under helps to mitigate that risk. Since 2001, he’s been a defensive assistant under some of the best in the business in Jerry Kill, Dave Clawson and Bohl.

21. Derek Mason, Middle Tennessee

Formerly the head coach at Vanderbilt and a well-regarded assistant at multiple Power Five stops, Mason will run a good, clean program and build solid-to-strong defenses, so this hire looks nice on paper. He also brings name recognition to the Blue Raiders and a new outlook after the program’s long run under former coach Rick Stockstill. What direction the Blue Raiders take on offense will determine whether Mason’s second round as a head coach goes better than his first.

22. Trent Bray, Oregon State

This was a smart hire in the moment for the Beavers, who faces an uncertain future given the demise of the Pac-12 and might not have attracted an extremely high caliber of candidates as Smith’s replacement as a result. Bray did strong work as the Beavers defensive coordinator, has the support of the roster and is very aware of what it takes to win off the beaten path in Corvallis. But there are still some question marks about his ability to run his own program, which is only understandable.

23. Scotty Walden, Texas-El Paso

While only 34, Walden has already been a head coach at two different stops, East Texas Baptist State and Austin Peay, and was the interim coach at Southern Mississippi for most of the abbreviated 2020 season. But given how hard it can be to win at UTEP, the overall lack of experience is a concern. Still, Walden was born in Texas and went to school and started his career in the state, so he knows the area. And maybe being young is a very good thing: the Miners needs a spark.

24. Jeff Lebby, Mississippi State

Lebby should get the Mississippi State offense back in gear, at least. The former Oklahoma coordinator has also been embraced by a fan base reeling from Zach Arnett’s failed one-year tenure. That’s a good start. In the bigger picture, however, Lebby walks into the best conference in college football needing to prove that he can develop the culture necessary to offset the Bulldogs’ inherent disadvantages compared to most of the SEC.

25. Bryant Vincent, Louisiana-Monroe

Vincent takes over one of the worst situations in the country at Louisiana-Monroe, owners of just one winning season since joining the FBS in 1994. He’ll have to perform a borderline miracle to succeed where so many others have failed before. One thing you have to admire: Vincent played a big part in Alabama-Birmingham’s rise from the ashes under former coach Bill Clark, so he knows a thing or two about winning under extremely adverse circumstances.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Get the uniforms ready: we know what the Kansas City Chiefs and San Francisco 49ers wear in Super Bowl 58.

Kansas City will serve as the ‘home’ team in the matchup at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas on Feb. 11, meaning it got to choose first what uniforms it wants to wear. The decision has been made, and the Chiefs will wear it’s home red uniform for the game. Meanwhile, the 49ers will don its traditional road white uniform.

What pants both teams will wear was not released, but the Chiefs will likely wear their white pants with their red helmets, while the 49ers will likely wear its gold pants to match the gold helmet.

Chiefs vs. 49ers Super Bowl uniform déjà vu

If the teams look too familiar when they play for the Lombardi Trophy next Sunday, it’s because it’s the same exact look both teams wore for Super Bowl 54 in 2020. Kansas City won that game, 31-20, at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami.

NFL STATS CENTRAL: The latest NFL scores, schedules, odds, stats and more.

Kansas City Chiefs Super Bowl uniform history

This will be Kansas City’s sixth Super Bowl appearance and it’s had good results when sporting the home uniform. When wearing home red, the Chiefs are 2-1, with wins in Super Bowl IV vs. the Minnesota Vikings and Super Bowl 54 against the 49ers. The lone loss came in Super Bowl 55 against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

In the white uniforms, the Chiefs are 1-1, losing in the first Super Bowl against the Green Bay Packers, but winning in them against the Philadelphia Eagles in Super Bowl 57.

San Francisco 49ers Super Bowl uniform history

San Francisco will be playing in its eighth Super Bowl and it’s also had favorable results wearing white uniforms despite losing the last time they were worn. The 49ers wore white when they won Super Bowl XVI against the Cincinnati Bengals and Super Bowl XXIV against the Denver Broncos.

The 49ers have worn red more are 3-1 in them. They won Super Bowl XIX against the Miami Dolphins, Super Bowl XXIII against the Cincinnati Bengals and Super Bowl XXIX against the San Diego Chargers in red. The lone loss in red came in Super Bowl 47 against the Baltimore Ravens.

Super Bowl uniform facts

For those superstitious fans, the road white uniforms have been the most successful in Super Bowl history, winning 37 of the 57 games for a 64.9% winning percentage. It’s been a recent dominance as well, with 16 of the past 19 champions wearing white in the Super Bowl.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Get the uniforms ready: we know what the Kansas City Chiefs and San Francisco 49ers wear in Super Bowl 58.

Kansas City will serve as the ‘home’ team in the matchup at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas on Feb. 11, meaning it got to choose first what uniforms it wants to wear. The decision has been made, and the Chiefs will wear it’s home red uniform for the game. Meanwhile, the 49ers will don its traditional road white uniform.

What pants both teams will wear was not released, but the Chiefs will likely wear their white pants with their red helmets, while the 49ers will likely wear its gold pants to match the gold helmet.

Chiefs vs. 49ers Super Bowl uniform déjà vu

If the teams look too familiar when they play for the Lombardi Trophy next Sunday, it’s because it’s the same exact look both teams wore for Super Bowl 54 in 2020. Kansas City won that game, 31-20, at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami.

NFL STATS CENTRAL: The latest NFL scores, schedules, odds, stats and more.

Kansas City Chiefs Super Bowl uniform history

This will be Kansas City’s sixth Super Bowl appearance and it’s had good results when sporting the home uniform. When wearing home red, the Chiefs are 2-1, with wins in Super Bowl IV vs. the Minnesota Vikings and Super Bowl 54 against the 49ers. The lone loss came in Super Bowl 55 against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

In the white uniforms, the Chiefs are 1-1, losing in the first Super Bowl against the Green Bay Packers, but winning in them against the Philadelphia Eagles in Super Bowl 57.

San Francisco 49ers Super Bowl uniform history

San Francisco will be playing in its eighth Super Bowl and it’s also had favorable results wearing white uniforms despite losing the last time they were worn. The 49ers wore white when they won Super Bowl XVI against the Cincinnati Bengals and Super Bowl XXIV against the Denver Broncos.

The 49ers have worn red more are 3-1 in them. They won Super Bowl XIX against the Miami Dolphins, Super Bowl XXIII against the Cincinnati Bengals and Super Bowl XXIX against the San Diego Chargers in red. The lone loss in red came in Super Bowl 47 against the Baltimore Ravens.

Super Bowl uniform facts

For those superstitious fans, the road white uniforms have been the most successful in Super Bowl history, winning 37 of the 57 games for a 64.9% winning percentage. It’s been a recent dominance as well, with 16 of the past 19 champions wearing white in the Super Bowl.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Guess who’s back?

On Tuesday, the Detroit Lions retained offensive coordinator Ben Johnson. The assistant coach was a suggested candidate for the vacant head coaching jobs with the Seattle Seahawks and the Washington Commanders. But apparently, he’s calling Ford Field home till the roof comes off.

Upon hearing the news, Slim Shady retracted his threat to release a diss track directed toward Johnson and expressed his continued support for head coach Dan Campbell. He had some words of hope for Lions fans after the team was ousted from the playoffs in the NFC championship, where he cheered in person.

‘Guess I should stop recording this diss track..!! Lol!!’ Eminem posted on X, formerly Twitter. ‘@ Ben Johnson Thank you for staying!!! We can’t break this team up ESPECIALLY since I’M on it!!! Coach Campbell we love you bro!!! Let’s run it back next year!!…I’m READY!!!! I promise you I WILL get us to the super bowl!!!’

Eminem previously spoke on DJ Whoo Kidd’s radio show and said he was upset that Johnson was reportedly being lured away by the Commanders.

NFL STATS CENTRAL: The latest NFL scores, schedules, odds, stats and more.

‘Ben Johnson, if he leaves us, bro… Ben Johnson, if you leave us, this record is coming,’ he said in the interview, which was posted on Sunday. ‘This song is coming.

‘Just stay with us one more year. Our team is amazing right now. We can’t change anything. I don’t even want to change the (expletive) hat I wore last week.’

Eminem made his name in the rap game with unapologetic, and often shocking, lyricism. He starred as Jimmy aka B-Rabbit in the movie ‘8 Mile,’ which was based on his journey as a battle rapper. Among the targets of his real life rap disses are Ja Rule, Will Smith and Machine Gun Kelly.

The Lions made history this season by capturing their first division title in 30 years and winning their first playoff game in 32 seasons. Under Johnson, Jared Goff threw for 4,575 passing yards, the second-most in the NFL. Detroit was fifth in the league in rushing yards. David Montgomery had the second 1,000-yard season of his career and rookie Jahmyr Gibbs added 945 yards on the ground.

Detroit won’t have to feel so empty without their OC.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

SANTA CLARA, Calif. − Brock Purdy threw the big pass − overthrew it, actually − that resulted in the miracle, 51-yard catch by Brandon Aiyuk that was the signature moment of the huge second-half comeback that sent the San Francisco 49ers to another Super Bowl. Yet amid the celebration that followed the NFC title game triumph, there was just as much buzz about the legs of the highly-scrutinized quarterback.

‘Sick!’ is how 49ers tight end George Kittle began his assessment.

Purdy ripped off two desperate scrambles, both for 21 yards and both leading to touchdowns during a frantic rally from a 17-point deficit. 

They were not textbook runs in the classic sense. This was a man who spotted an opening and ran for his life, diving rather than sliding to move the chains when his team needed it the most. And then the 49er Faithful holding their collective breath at Levi’s Stadium could exhale. In that sense, it was textbook Purdy. Just watch rather than try to emulate the form … and know that it achieved the in-the-moment mission.

‘Do it more,’ Kittle continued, recalling his thought process as Purdy delivered in crunch time. ‘Just don’t get hit. Scramble. Maybe tuck the ball a little faster. He scampers. I think that’s the best way to describe it.’

NFL STATS CENTRAL: The latest NFL scores, schedules, odds, stats and more.

Then Kittle paused briefly at the podium as a comparison popped into his mind.

‘You ever see one of those little water dragons run across the water?’ Kittle said. ‘That’s what I envision every time he’s running with the football.’

A few minutes earlier, former 49ers guard Guy McIntyre, who blocked for Super Bowl heroes Joe Montana and Steve Young, shook his head as he stood outside the locker room marveling over Purdy.

‘Remember that run Steve Young had against the Vikings?’ McIntyre said, alluding to a breathtaking, weaving, 49-yard, game-winning jaunt in 1988 that included Young staggering across the goal line. ‘That’s what he reminded me of.’

How fitting. Purdy has a chance to become the first 49ers quarterback to win a Super Bowl since Young and along the way has prompted a comparison to the man who capped an MVP season by firing six touchdown passes in a Super Bowl XXIX rout.

He should be used to it by now. Purdy is a 49ers quarterback. For a franchise that has won five Lombardi Trophies, there’s a certain standard. And fair or not, the legendary quarterbacks are always such handy reference points.

Granted, Purdy has done enough to make a name for himself rather than to live up to the legends. He set franchise records with 4,280 passing yards and a league-best 113.0 passer rating, and led the 49ers to the No. 1 seed in the NFC playoffs as the NFL’s ultimate rags-to-riches story. In case you haven’t heard (yeah, right), the Iowa State product was the last player drafted in 2022, earning the ‘Mr. Irrelevant’ title, which is now a joke on the NFL’s scouting process. The knocks that left him undrafted until the end included questions about his arm strength and athleticism. 

Look at him now. He’s headed to the Super Bowl in his second season − after sweating it out with comeback victories in each of the 49ers’ two playoff triumphs − with the honor of trying to upstage Patrick Mahomes in what will be the biggest game of his life.

‘I think it’s a testament to God, where he’s taken me in life,’ said Purdy, 25, a four-year starter at Iowa State. ‘I’ve never been the biggest, fastest, strongest, any of that. I feel like I’ve always had to sort of fight for what I get, work for what I get.’

Purdy didn’t hesitate to point to his spiritual foundation as the source that has helped him during the toughest times. His faith helped him deal with getting overlooked in the draft, he insisted. On Sunday night, he spoke to God when trailing by 17 points at halftime.

‘That’s the honest truth,’ he said. ‘I leaned into that. Sure enough, we were able to come back.’

Of course, doubters persist. Purdy may be one of just four quarterbacks to win four playoff games in his first two NFL seasons, but he has been chided as a ‘game manager’ by critics who contend that he’s merely a product of crafty coach Kyle Shanahan’s system. Sure, he’s surrounded by a boatload of talent, including Kittle, Aiyuk, Deebo Samuel and Christian McCaffrey, the running back who will likely earn NFL Offensive Player of the Year honors.

Think of all the quarterbacks who would love to ‘manage’ that offense.

‘Brock has always done what we needed him to do for us to win,’ Trent Williams, the 14-year veteran left tackle, told USA TODAY Sports. ‘Whether he has to sit there and throw the ball with a 300-pound lineman coming down and crashing on him; whether he has to bootleg and get to the edge; whether he sits there on third-and-10, dicing people up, he can do it all.’

Williams scoffs at the noise questioning Purdy’s viability.

‘I know he doesn’t get a ton of credit,’ Williams said. ‘He’s low-hanging fruit for a lot of people to pick on, but he’s made the plays all year.’

Still, Purdy seemed to be in line for a fresh batch of criticism as the 49ers avoided being upset by the Green Bay Packers in the NFC divisional round. He struggled throwing the wet football as the offense sputtered. Yet he was on-point in crunch time, completing six of seven passes − and scrambling for a nine-yard gain − on the 12-play, 69-yard game-winning touchdown.

Last weekend, he threw an early interception while hit on his release. Then came the second-half rally, when he led the 49ers to scores on five consecutive possessions.

That’s a ‘game manager’ for you. A ‘game manager’ who also happens to win with a style that plays so well with his co-stars.

‘I don’t have enough good things to say about Brock,’ McCaffrey said on Sunday night. ‘All he’s done since he’s been here is play at an elite level. Everything starts with him. We’re lucky he’s our quarterback. He takes a lot of heat for absolutely no reason.’

Which in another vein, undeniably makes him ‘Mr. Relevant.’

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

SANTA CLARA, Calif. − Brock Purdy threw the big pass − overthrew it, actually − that resulted in the miracle, 51-yard catch by Brandon Aiyuk that was the signature moment of the huge second-half comeback that sent the San Francisco 49ers to another Super Bowl. Yet amid the celebration that followed the NFC title game triumph, there was just as much buzz about the legs of the highly-scrutinized quarterback.

‘Sick!’ is how 49ers tight end George Kittle began his assessment.

Purdy ripped off two desperate scrambles, both for 21 yards and both leading to touchdowns during a frantic rally from a 17-point deficit. 

They were not textbook runs in the classic sense. This was a man who spotted an opening and ran for his life, diving rather than sliding to move the chains when his team needed it the most. And then the 49er Faithful holding their collective breath at Levi’s Stadium could exhale. In that sense, it was textbook Purdy. Just watch rather than try to emulate the form … and know that it achieved the in-the-moment mission.

‘Do it more,’ Kittle continued, recalling his thought process as Purdy delivered in crunch time. ‘Just don’t get hit. Scramble. Maybe tuck the ball a little faster. He scampers. I think that’s the best way to describe it.’

NFL STATS CENTRAL: The latest NFL scores, schedules, odds, stats and more.

Then Kittle paused briefly at the podium as a comparison popped into his mind.

‘You ever see one of those little water dragons run across the water?’ Kittle said. ‘That’s what I envision every time he’s running with the football.’

A few minutes earlier, former 49ers guard Guy McIntyre, who blocked for Super Bowl heroes Joe Montana and Steve Young, shook his head as he stood outside the locker room marveling over Purdy.

‘Remember that run Steve Young had against the Vikings?’ McIntyre said, alluding to a breathtaking, weaving, 49-yard, game-winning jaunt in 1988 that included Young staggering across the goal line. ‘That’s what he reminded me of.’

How fitting. Purdy has a chance to become the first 49ers quarterback to win a Super Bowl since Young and along the way has prompted a comparison to the man who capped an MVP season by firing six touchdown passes in a Super Bowl XXIX rout.

He should be used to it by now. Purdy is a 49ers quarterback. For a franchise that has won five Lombardi Trophies, there’s a certain standard. And fair or not, the legendary quarterbacks are always such handy reference points.

Granted, Purdy has done enough to make a name for himself rather than to live up to the legends. He set franchise records with 4,280 passing yards and a league-best 113.0 passer rating, and led the 49ers to the No. 1 seed in the NFC playoffs as the NFL’s ultimate rags-to-riches story. In case you haven’t heard (yeah, right), the Iowa State product was the last player drafted in 2022, earning the ‘Mr. Irrelevant’ title, which is now a joke on the NFL’s scouting process. The knocks that left him undrafted until the end included questions about his arm strength and athleticism. 

Look at him now. He’s headed to the Super Bowl in his second season − after sweating it out with comeback victories in each of the 49ers’ two playoff triumphs − with the honor of trying to upstage Patrick Mahomes in what will be the biggest game of his life.

‘I think it’s a testament to God, where he’s taken me in life,’ said Purdy, 25, a four-year starter at Iowa State. ‘I’ve never been the biggest, fastest, strongest, any of that. I feel like I’ve always had to sort of fight for what I get, work for what I get.’

Purdy didn’t hesitate to point to his spiritual foundation as the source that has helped him during the toughest times. His faith helped him deal with getting overlooked in the draft, he insisted. On Sunday night, he spoke to God when trailing by 17 points at halftime.

‘That’s the honest truth,’ he said. ‘I leaned into that. Sure enough, we were able to come back.’

Of course, doubters persist. Purdy may be one of just four quarterbacks to win four playoff games in his first two NFL seasons, but he has been chided as a ‘game manager’ by critics who contend that he’s merely a product of crafty coach Kyle Shanahan’s system. Sure, he’s surrounded by a boatload of talent, including Kittle, Aiyuk, Deebo Samuel and Christian McCaffrey, the running back who will likely earn NFL Offensive Player of the Year honors.

Think of all the quarterbacks who would love to ‘manage’ that offense.

‘Brock has always done what we needed him to do for us to win,’ Trent Williams, the 14-year veteran left tackle, told USA TODAY Sports. ‘Whether he has to sit there and throw the ball with a 300-pound lineman coming down and crashing on him; whether he has to bootleg and get to the edge; whether he sits there on third-and-10, dicing people up, he can do it all.’

Williams scoffs at the noise questioning Purdy’s viability.

‘I know he doesn’t get a ton of credit,’ Williams said. ‘He’s low-hanging fruit for a lot of people to pick on, but he’s made the plays all year.’

Still, Purdy seemed to be in line for a fresh batch of criticism as the 49ers avoided being upset by the Green Bay Packers in the NFC divisional round. He struggled throwing the wet football as the offense sputtered. Yet he was on-point in crunch time, completing six of seven passes − and scrambling for a nine-yard gain − on the 12-play, 69-yard game-winning touchdown.

Last weekend, he threw an early interception while hit on his release. Then came the second-half rally, when he led the 49ers to scores on five consecutive possessions.

That’s a ‘game manager’ for you. A ‘game manager’ who also happens to win with a style that plays so well with his co-stars.

‘I don’t have enough good things to say about Brock,’ McCaffrey said on Sunday night. ‘All he’s done since he’s been here is play at an elite level. Everything starts with him. We’re lucky he’s our quarterback. He takes a lot of heat for absolutely no reason.’

Which in another vein, undeniably makes him ‘Mr. Relevant.’

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Tara Reade, the woman who came forward in 2020 with a sexual assault allegation against then-candidate Joe Biden, is suing the Department of Justice over alleged misconduct.

A lawyer for Reade filed a tort claim on Wednesday seeking $10 million ‘for infliction of emotional distress and anxiety’ following what was described as an ‘FBI operation’ that was conducted after she came forward with her accusation against Biden. The tort claim alleges Reade’s Fourth Amendment right was violated as well as violations of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) and state privacy laws. 

Included in the tort claim was a July 2020 grand jury subpoena issued to Twitter from the US District Court for the Eastern District of California demanding all records pertaining to Reade’s Twitter accounts.

The tort claim outlines several allegations against the FBI, insisting it was behind suspicious occurrences like disruptions in her bank accounts and a manuscript of her book that had gone missing from a FedEx shipment in November 2020 that further detailed her claims against Biden. 

‘The United States should not have a two-tiered justice system,’ Reade’s attorney Jonathan Levy said in a statement. ‘If President Trump and Mr. Giuliani can be assessed tens of millions in damages for their words; a weaponized FBI that seeks to silence, intimidate and eliminate Joe Biden’s victim, Tara Reade, must also be held accountable; failing to do so means our justice and legal system has become an instrument of political oppression and suppression.’

The DOJ declined to comment. 

Last month, Reade’s lawyer sent a letter to the DOJ Inspector General’s Office requesting the release of all FBI files it has on her and to expunge any cases.  

Reade came forward in 2020 alleging Biden had sexually assaulted her on Capitol Hill in 1993 while she served as his Senate staffer. Biden denied her claims. 

Last year, Reade made headlines when she revealed she had moved to Russia citing safety concerns. 

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS