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Harbaugh has a meeting scheduled with the Los Angeles Chargers this week about the team’s head-coach opening, a person familiar with the situation told USA TODAY Sports. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to disclose the team’s intentions.

NFL Network was the first to report the news.

The Chargers are the first team Harbaugh is meeting with during this year’s head-coaching hiring cycle. He spoke with the Denver Broncos last year and the Minnesota Vikings in 2022.

Harbaugh is coming off a national championship victory at the University of Michigan. The 60-year-old coach has spent the past nine years with the Wolverines, compiling an 89-25 record in that span.

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Prior to becoming Michigan’s head coach, Harbaugh led the San Francisco 49ers for four seasons. He produced a 44-19-1 record and led San Francisco to an appearance in Super Bowl 47. He has also had coaching stints at University of San Diego and Stanford University.

Harbaugh was a quarterback for the then-San Diego Chargers from 1999-2000.

The Chargers are searching for a head coach and general manager after they fired head coach Brandon Staley and general manager Tom Telesco on Dec. 15.

The team has already spoken with former Buffalo Bills defensive coordinator Leslie Frazier, Baltimore Ravens defensive coordinator Mike Macdonald, Ravens offensive coordinator Todd Monken, San Francisco 49ers defensive coordinator Steve Wilks and Las Vegas Raiders defensive coordinator Patrick Graham. Two in-house candidates in interim coach Giff Smith and offensive coordinator Kellen Moore also have interviewed for the position.

The Chargers, Raiders, Atlanta Falcons, Carolina Panthers, Seattle Seahawks, Tennessee Titans and Washington Commanders all currently have head-coach openings.

Follow USA TODAY Sports’ Tyler Dragon on X @TheTylerDragon.

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As America enters a pivotal election year, faced with a decision that will determine nothing less than the future of our country, Martin Luther King, Jr. Day offers us a moment to stop and reflect on where we have come and how far we have strayed from our foundational values.

Jan. 15, 2024, marks the 95th anniversary of the birth of my uncle, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., who, in 1963, stood upon the Lincoln Memorial steps and delivered his famed ‘I Have a Dream’speech – remarks that helped define the Civil Rights Movement and indeed the whole of the 20th century.

As MLK spoke that day, he reminded the masses that his dream was not set apart from America or our national story; instead, as a patriot, MLK’s dream was ‘deeply rooted in the American dream.’ As patriots, it is all our duty to keep that dream alive.

In contrast, today, in 2024, Americans have seen the opposite of this dream come to life. Violent protesters have rioted and looted our cities and small businesses, which flies in the face of my uncle’s commitment to nonviolent protest.

The current administration has focused on expanding abortions and taking away parental rights over children, opposing school choice, and even spying on communities of faith. 

Israel has come under violent attack and faces terrorism and hate in the most extreme form since the Holocaust, while the leaders of our major universities and academic institutions have refused to condemn these acts of brutal savagery against the Jewish people.

In my mind, these recent actions are the ultimate betrayal of my uncle’s legacy. Indeed, Rev. King taught civil disobedience and nonviolent resistance to injustice in everything he did. He taught that ‘we must come together as brothers’ – and here I will add ‘and as sisters’ – so that we do not ‘perish together as fools.’

MLK also taught we are the one-blood human race, based on Scripture: ‘…and hath made of one blood all nations of men for to dwell on all the face of the earth, and hath determined the times before appointed, and the bounds of their habitation…’ (Acts 17:26). 

I, too, believe that we are ‘one blood/one human race.’ What’s most important is that we respond to each other’s concerns without violence, in unity and peace, so that we can affirm the fundamental truths that make our nation the greatest on Earth.

In that spirit, my uncle always remained a man of peace who sought justice and preached unity, and he would be abhorred by the violence on our streets today.

My uncle also said once that our people ‘cannot win’ if we are ‘willing to sacrifice [our] children for immediate personal comfort and safety.’ He followed this sentiment with one of his most iconic lines: ‘Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.’

This strikes me as eerily similar to the debate we are having on abortion in America today. It also leads me to ask our country the following question: ‘How can the dream survive if we murder the children?’

Of course, we agree that a woman has a right to choose what she will do with her own body. However, the baby in her womb is not her body but an independent creation with the breath of life from God himself. Where is the choice for the baby?

As we ponder these truths, we must examine the spirit of error that has taken hold of our lawmakers, deceived our nation’s people, and hoodwinked the entire world regarding the sanctity of life. 

This spirit of error tells us that a living, breathing, independent baby in her mother’s womb is not worthy of value or protection. It is this same spirit of error that tells us an unborn child is simply a ‘clump of cells’ rather than a human being made in the image and likeness of God. 

For far too long, our society has accepted the lie being pushed by the government, media and education system that abortion is a proper remedy for women’s health issues, financial struggles, relationship woes and even racial justice. 

But the reality is that the answer to these things is not allowing us to kill our children. Instead, the answer is in seeing God with our hearts. Therein lies the source of the ‘possible dream.’

So, this year, as we reflect on the 95th anniversary of my uncle’s life and legacy, let us pray that our efforts and examples in our interactions with one another will reflect God’s love for us all. 

Let us embrace a time for repentance, forgiveness, revival and jubilee. Imperfect vessels, though we are, we can all work together to bring an end to the evils we face in America today. 

By doing so, we may someday live in a country that Martin Luther King Jr. dreamed about – a nation that cherishes all life from the womb to the tomb.

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FIRST ON FOX – The Biden administration is facing pressure from numerous human rights and religious groups for failing to designate Nigeria as a Country of Particular Concern (‘CPC’) for the brutal killing of over 200 Christians last month. 

In a letter to Secretary of State Antony Blinken, two dozen interest groups, including Advancing American Freedom, Alliance Defending Freedom, the Hudson Institute, former Ambassador Sam Brownback and former defense and national security officials, scolded the State Department for its ‘refusal’ to designate Nigeria as a CPC – calling the lack of action ‘unconscionable.’

‘Less than two weeks ago, almost 200 Nigerian Christians became martyrs while celebrating Christmas. According to one account, these Christians were ‘killed for sport.’ Just weeks earlier, the Christian Association of Nigeria received a letter threatening them against celebrating Christmas,’ the letter sent Monday states.

‘The international religious freedom community stands outraged at your refusal to hold these acts of evil to account,’ it continues.

The letter notes that the International Society for Civil Liberties and Rule of Law (Intersociety), a Nigeria-based nonprofit, has found that more than 52,000 Christians have been killed and more than 14 million Christians have been forced to flee Nigeria since 2009. 

Over that same period, Intersociety also found that 18,000 churches and 2,200 schools had been attacked, according to the letter.

On Jan. 4, Blinken announced that he’d designated a series of countries, including Iran and Russia, as a CPC, but Nigeria was notably left off the list. 

The letter says that ‘within hours’ of Blinken’s announcement, the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF) called for a congressional hearing, and international religious freedom advocates ‘publicly criticized’ his decision.

USCIRF is a federal government commission created by the International Religious Freedom Act of 1998 and consists of commissioners who are appointed by the president and a bipartisan group of congressional leaders.

Nigeria, which is a hub for Boko Haram, was added to the list during the Trump administration but has been left off the list since 2021.

According to the Pew Research Center, Nigeria has the largest Christian population of any country in Africa, with over 80 million believers. 

‘The eyes of the world look to the United States as a beacon of hope and freedom. Religious freedom is grounded in the American founding, enshrined in the Bill of Rights, and quintessential to what it means to be an American,’ the letter states. 

‘When the United States stands silent as evil runs amok, the world takes notice,’ it concludes.  

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FIRST ON FOX: Right-wing climate and energy groups are urging House GOP leaders to go further in their opposition to President Biden’s green energy policies.

‘In addition to 2023’s climate science claims falling far short of reality and honesty, President Biden’s Green New Deal climate policy agenda is also in rapid meltdown and countdown to disaster,’ a letter sent to Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., and Majority Leader Steve Scalise, R-La., said. 

The letter was accompanied by a 13-page report arguing that claims made this year about global temperatures rising and events like decreasing monarch butterfly populations were incorrect. 

‘Not a day seems to go by without news of some sort of EV [electric vehicle] disaster or problem. From the supply chain that includes child slave labor in the Congo and Communist China-sourcing of key materials and parts; to low consumer demand because of high prices, inconvenience and poor performance/failure; to auto industry financial losses, job cuts and labor problems; to the utter waste of taxpayer money through Inflation Reduction Act subsidies and programs, EV’s are becoming a casebook study in the failure of government industrial policy,’ one of the highlights in the letter read.

‘Taxpayers are subsidizing this disaster at the rate of $50,000 per EV over a 10-year period. This is a gasoline-equivalent subsidy of $17.33 per gallon. Crowning this disaster is that there is not a single chance that EVs will ever improve the climate or environment.’

On offshore wind farming, the letter said, ‘Not only is offshore wind the most expensive way to generate electricity, as with EVs, there is not a single chance that any amount of offshore wind power will improve the weather, climate or environment.’ 

It comes after the House voted to disapprove of President Biden’s ‘Buy America’ requirements for taxpayer-funded EV charging stations.

The resolution is aimed at overturning the president’s Waiver of Buy America Requirements for Electric Vehicle Chargers. Republican lawmakers argued the waiver would benefit Chinese manufacturers who dominate the EV charger supply chain. Its Senate counterpart, led by Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., passed in November.

But the letter’s signatories, which include experts from the Heartland Institute, Energy & Environment Legal Institute, American Energy Institute (AEI), Committee for a Constructive Tomorrow (CFACT), the International Climate Science Coalition (ICSC), and Truth in Energy and Climate, suggest Johnson should go further in cracking down on Biden’s agenda.

‘The false claims used to support the Green New Deal agenda and its ensuing policy failures are jeopardizing our economic and national security, and our liberties and standard of living while failing to produce any demonstrable benefits,’ the letter said.

‘As Congress addresses these vital issues in 2024 and beyond, we hope you will take note of these developments.’

Fox News Digital’s Thomas Catenacci contributed to this report

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The Biden campaign raised more than $97 million in the fourth quarter of 2023, and has $117 million cash-on-hand — the ‘highest total of any Democratic candidate in history’ at this point in a presidential election cycle.

The campaign announced Monday that President Biden’s re-election campaign is entering the 2024 presidential election year with ‘historic resources,’ and touted the campaign’s grassroots efforts.

‘This historic haul—proudly powered by strong and growing grassroots enthusiasm—sends a clear message: the Team Biden-Harris coalition knows the stakes of this election and is ready to win this November,’ Biden campaign manager Julie Chavez Rodriguez said. ‘Across our coalition, we are seeing early, sustained support that is helping us scale our growing operation across the country and take our message to the communities that will determine this election.’

She added: ‘Our democracy and hard-fought basic rights and freedoms are on the line in 2024, and these numbers prove that the American people know the stakes and are taking action early to help defeat the extreme MAGA Republican agenda again.’

The campaign out-raised its Q3 numbers. In October, the campaign announced it raised approximately $71 million in the third quarter of 2023. 

The campaign said it has successfully grown its cash on hand for the last three quarters – starting at $77 million in Q2, to $91 million in Q3, and now $117 million at the end of Q4.

‘While most of the Republicans have not yet announced their fundraising numbers, we fully expect to lap them…Several times.’ Biden Senior Advisor for Communications TJ Ducklo said.

The Biden campaign, in December, had its strongest grassroots fundraising month, breaking its previous record from November. The campaign said nearly 1 million supporters have made more than 2.3 million contributions.

The campaign reported that 97% of its donations in Q4 were under $200, with the campaign seeing an average grassroots contribution of $41.88.

Reflecting on its fundraising history, the campaign said its ‘Cup of Joe’ contest to meet with Biden and Vice President Harris was the campaign’s ‘most successful contest to date, raising over $3 million.’

The campaign has also held 110 fundraisers since President Biden announced his re-election campaign —including 39 in the last quarter of 2023.

In December, Biden raised more than $15 million during a fundraising blitz. 

First, the president attended a fundraising event in Boston, Massachusetts, which featured a concert by singer-songwriter James Taylor. Front-row tickets sold for $7,500 per seat.

Then, he traveled to Los Angeles for a Hollywood fundraiser hosted by Steven Spielberg, Shona Rhimes, CEO of Paramount Pictures Jim Gianopulos, actor and filmmaker Rob Reiner, and others. Top tickets for that event were said to be $930,000 each. 

But the campaign said the numbers tell a story — and reflect efforts across not just the Biden re-election campaign, but the Democratic National Committee and its joint-fundraising committees.

The campaign said one-third of its donors are new donors since the 2020 campaign.

‘As Republicans burn through millions of dollars in their race to out-MAGA each other, grassroots supporters across the country are pitching in to reelect Joe Biden and Kamala Harris and stop MAGA extremism in its tracks,’ DNC Chair Jaime Harrison said. ‘This historic haul—powered by grassroots donors—makes it clear that voters understand the stakes of this election and they’re ready to stand up and fight for our democracy and freedoms.’

Harrison said the Biden campaign and the DNC are working ‘as one team with a single mission.’

That mission is ‘to build a winning campaign that has the resources to send Joe Biden and Kamala Harris back to the White House, and elect Democrats up and down the ballot.’ 

The campaign announced the numbers on the day of the Iowa caucuses — the first-in-the-nation presidential primary contests. With Joe Biden running unopposed in the Democratic primary, all eyes are on Republicans.

Voters, for the first time, will choose between former President Trump, who is leading the GOP field by a massive margin; former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and businessman Vivek Ramaswamy.

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The White House is calling on Israel to scale back its military offensive in the Gaza Strip as the country’s war with Hamas in Gaza crossed the 100-day milestone.

On Sunday, the official 100th day of the conflict, U.S. officials said ‘it’s the right time’ for Israel to transition to ‘low-intensity operations’ in Gaza. The comment was met with Israeli leaders again vowing to continue with their ground operation through the Gaza Strip to eradicate the ruling Hamas militant group.

During a public interview on Sunday, White House National Security Council spokesperson John Kirby said the U.S. has been speaking to Israel ‘about a transition to low-intensity operations’ in Gaza.

‘We believe it’s the right time for that transition. And we’re talking to them about doing that,’ he added.

Kirby credited Israel with having taken some ‘precursory steps’ toward scaling down its offensive, but said there was more to do.

‘We’re not saying let your foot up off the gas completely and don’t keep going after Hamas,’ he continued. ‘It’s just that we believe the time is coming here very, very soon for a transition to this lower intensity phase.’

In a short and sure response, Defense Minister Yoav Gallant vowed Sunday that Israel would continue its war against Hamas.

‘It’s been 100 days, yet we will not stop until we win,’ he said.

The war in Gaza, launched by Israel after Hamas-led forces carried out an unprecedented terror attack on Israeli soil on Oct. 7, has killed nearly 24,000 Palestinians and displaced approximately 85% of the territory’s 2.3 million residents. Israel faces a world court hearing over genocide allegations stemming from the deaths.

Hamas’ initial terror attack killed some 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and took 250 others hostage. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has vowed to continue fighting until Hamas is destroyed and the remaining 100+ hostages still in captivity are freed.

Separately, tens of thousands of people in Europe and the Middle East took to the streets Sunday to mark the 100th day of the war. These included opposing demonstrations with some groups demanding the release of Israeli hostages held by Hamas or and others calling for a cease-fire in Gaza.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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There are plenty of reasons not to buy an electric vehicle in 2024: Auto loan rates are high. Despite a recent wave of discounting, many EVs remain pricier than gas-burning cars. And an incomplete network of sometimes glitchy chargers has stoked drivers’ “range anxiety” about running out of juice.

But while the all-electric market is slowing, sales are forecast to keep rising. Cox Automotive expects EVs to comprise 10% of the United States’ vehicle market by the end of the year, up from 7.6% last year — when domestic sales hit a record 1.2 million — and 5.9% in 2022. And first-time EV adopters are still powering the expansion, with LexisNexis Risk Solutions telling NBC News that 3 in 4 new EVs are driven by people switching from a combustion-engine vehicle.

Here’s what to know if you’re considering buying this year.

Car shoppers can still expect to be rewarded for going electric, thanks to tax breaks from the Inflation Reduction Act, but the rewards won’t be as widespread.

The law’s tax incentives are limited to EVs whose batteries aren’t substantially built in certain foreign countries, particularly China, or with minerals sourced there. The number of models eligible for the full federal tax credit of $7,500, or partial $3,750 credit, shrank from 43 last year to fewer than 15 that comply with criteria on the books currently. The punted models include popular picks like the Tesla Model 3 and the Nissan Leaf.

Tesla has been cutting prices on some versions of the Model Y, among other vehicles, in recent months. Yuki Iwamura / Bloomberg via Getty Images

And income caps still apply: Individuals making over $150,000 annually or couples bringing in $300,000 qualify for the credits, which stop at electric sedans over $55,000 and SUVs and trucks over $80,000.

“Maybe you’re a person who’s overwhelmed with all the choices, and if you start with a smaller list, that helps you out,” said Alison Flores, a manager at H&R Block’s Tax Institute. But “if you’re really into the technology or certain nuances and you were looking at a certain thing, you may be disappointed,” she conceded.

A narrower selection of EVs eligible for tax incentives could push more consumers toward leasing, said Jay Turner, an environmental studies professor at Wellesley College and author of “Charged: A History of Batteries and Lessons for a Clean Energy Future.”

If you’re really into the technology or certain nuances and you were looking at a certain thing, you may be disappointed.

Alison Flores, manager at H&R Block’s Tax Institute

Many of the excluded vehicles still qualify for discounts when leased, he said, because the U.S. Treasury considers leasing an EV a commercial transaction, exempting the vehicles from some IRA rules.

“That may be a more attractive strategy for many consumers in the next couple of years,” Turner said.

One “pretty major” change taking effect this year, Flores noted, is that consumers can now apply their full federal tax credit right away at dealerships, rather than having to wait to file their taxes to receive it.

The rule “allows the dealer who you purchased the vehicle from to essentially advance you the tax credit,” she said, which can reduce financing costs for buyers taking out auto loans.

Auto experts said the mix of federal and state incentives, at a time when many EV prices are falling, could allow customers in some places to drive a new or used EV off the lot for as little as $10,000 this year.

Tesla and GM have slashed prices on some electric models to spur demand as inventories have piled up. Cox said those price cuts helped bring average EV prices down nearly 18% over the course of last year. They are now nearing price parity with gas cars, the firm said: At the end of 2023, the average EV cost, even after factoring in the more expensive Tesla models, was $50,789, within spitting distance of the average gas vehicle at $48,759.

Edmunds, an online car shopping resource, put the average price of a used EV at $50,000 as recently as December 2022 but now estimates it at about $37,000.

“Strangely enough, it’s one of the few areas where you can get a great deal right now,” said Joseph Yoon, a consumer insights analyst at Edmunds. “A lot of dealers are seeing that demand for EVs has kind of cooled. So there are discounts on top of the federal stuff.”

This year may also be a better time to go pre-owned, said Turner. “Normally we think that EVs are just for people who are pretty well off. But the tax incentives, especially for used EVs, are definitely opening up the market to more consumers,” he said.

While the IRA’s used EV credit took effect last year — offering buyers 30% off the car’s purchase price, up to $4,000 — some states and municipalities have since launched their own incentive programs.

The tax incentives, especially for used EVs, are definitely opening up the market to more consumers.

Prof. Jay Turner, Wellesley College

Turner’s back-of-envelope math suggests that, thanks to a mix of stackable federal and state credits, consumers in California or Massachusetts eyeing a used Chevy Bolt with 30,000 miles and a $20,000 list price could purchase it for around $10,000 — “which is crazy,” he added. “And I think a lot of people who are in the market for a $10,000 car don’t think an EV is accessible.”

In some areas, the discounts could go even deeper. Colorado, for example, allows residents who meet a certain income threshold to trade in a gas-powered vehicle for a tax credit of up to $6,000. An eligible buyer in that state could stack the available incentives and take home a brand-new Chevy Bolt for a four-figure price tag.

Using those same incentives — the $7,500 federal tax credit, $7,500 in state credits, and the $6,000 vehicle exchange program — strategic Coloradans could theoretically nab a Tesla Model 3 for $14,000. That is, if the company regains eligibility for the list.

Turner noted that leased Teslas can still take advantage of the full tax credit, and that Hertz is currently selling off Model 3s from its rental fleet for as low as $20,000. The respective tax credits for qualified buyers could bring costs down to between $13,000 and $18,000, he said, “a pretty good deal when a used Toyota Corolla falls in the same price range.”

On Thursday, the Biden administration announced $623 million in new grants to fund 47 EV charging projects in 22 states and Puerto Rico. The move was a tacit acknowledgment of the need to upgrade and expand a charging network whose limited extent and reliability have turned off many current and would-be EV drivers.

“All the early adopters, and all the people that live in big cities with easy access to charging, they’ve bought their EVs now,” said Yoon. “And now the manufacturers have to figure out a way to get the regular people, if you will, to buy the cars.”

Some have found driving battery-powered cars outside of major metro areas a dicey proposition, given a shortage of chargers in less populated places. But consumers “should be optimistic that better charging experiences are coming this year,” said Turner.

Major automakers struck deals with Tesla last year to gain access to its network of superchargers, which are designed to juice an EV for hundreds of miles after charging for an hour or less. As of last July, the company operated 1,900 supercharging stations — with 10 times as many connectors — across the country.

As part of those deals, Ford and GM will supply EV owners with adapters for the connectors, and they’ll start integrating Tesla’s unique plug with their new models in 2025.

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The Houston Texans quarterback, who turned 22 in October, became the youngest quarterback to win an NFL playoff game following the Texans’ dominant 45-14 win over the Cleveland Browns on Saturday during wild-card weekend. The record was previously held by quarterback Michael Vick, who was 22 years and 192 days old when he led the Falcons to a win over the Green Bay Packers in 2003.

‘I’m blessed to be in the position that I am in and blessed enough to be playing at a high level right now. We just got to keep it going,’ Stroud, who is exactly 22 years and 102 days old, said after the Texans’ win. ‘There’s no me without my teammates… We put it together and when we play complimentary football, we are hard to beat.’

In his playoff debut on Saturday, Stroud completed 16 of 21 attempts for 274 yards, three touchdowns and no interceptions. Browns quarterback Joe Flacco, meanwhile, registered back-to-pack pick-sixes in the third quarter. The Texans jumped to such a large lead over the Browns that Stroud sat out a majority of the fourth quarter.

Stroud finished with a near-perfect passer rating of 157.2 in the Texans’ first playoff game since 2019.

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Flacco, who turns 39 on Tuesday, completed 34 of 46 passes for 307 yards, one touchdown and two interceptions. He finished with a 80.6 passer rating.

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The blinding excitement behind the comeback story that was Joe Flacco’s, the Cleveland Browns quarterback, papered over one fatal flaw.

Turnovers. More specifically, interceptions. And Flacco threw two of the worst kind in the third quarter of Saturday’s AFC wild-card game against the Houston Texans, a 45-14 drubbing by Houston. The AFC South champions won their first postseason game since the 2019 playoffs.

With Cleveland trailing 24-14 more than halfway through the third quarter, Flacco dropped back on first-and-10 from the Houston 34-yard line. Texans defensive lineman Derek Barnett pressured Flacco from the veteran’s throwing side. The quarterback appeared to try to throw the ball away. But it landed in the belly of Houston cornerback Steven Nelson. The ninth-year cornerback sprinted down the sideline with Texans defenders transforming into blockers to clear his path. Eighty-two yards after he caught it, Nelson put the Texans up by 16.

Flacco made his next mistake less 2:08 of game time later. He tried to hit tight end Harrison Bryant over the middle. He didn’t see weakside linebacker Christian Harris. The second-year player from Alabama intercepted the pass and walked 36 yards into the end zone.

The rout was officially on, and the Texans led 38-14 with 4:06 left in the third. Flacco became the first player to throw two pick-sixes in a playoff game since Todd Collins did it for Washington in the 2007 postseason against the Seattle Seahawks.

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Flacco threw an interception in all six games he started for Cleveland. The former Baltimore Ravens standout accounted for eight interceptions, and he had a pair of multi-pick performances. His interception rate of 3.9% would have led the league had he had enough attempts to qualify.

Meanwhile, the home crowd chanted ‘MVP!’ for Texans quarterback C.J. Stroud and Offensive Rookie of the Year favorite as the third quarter closed. Stroud is trying to become the first rookie to win his first career playoff start since Brock Purdy did so for the San Francisco 49ers last year.

‘It’s been amazing, being in this city as short as I’ve been for the love that I’ve got,’ Stroud said in a postgame interview on NBC. ‘I’ve really been just doing it for Houston.’

Flacco entered the game 5-0 in the wild-card round. The Browns signed him to an incentives-based contract after starter Deshaun Watson suffered a season-ending shoulder in jury on Nov. 12. Flacco made his first start on Dec. 3 against the Los Angeles Rams, a loss, but the Browns won five in a row to clinch the No. 5 seed in the AFC.

Backup Dorian Thompson-Robinson, a fifth-round rookie, suffered a head injury in his first start after Watson went down. P.J. Walker was on the roster and started two games earlier in the season. But head coach Kevin Stefanski went outside the building and brought Flacco in to run his offense – a move that had he and DeMeco Ryans, his counterpart Saturday, as the front-runners for NFL Coach of the Year. 

Following a “Thursday Night Football” victory over the New York Jets on Dec. 28, Flacco, who will turn 39 on Tuesday, reflected on the journey that brought him from his “couch” – carpooling his children – to the playoffs weeks apart. 

‘You don’t know how many of these moments you’re going to get,’ Flacco said, per the Browns. ‘Not too many people get the opportunity to have kids as old as mine and that understand what’s going on – get to witness this. And I think it’s cool for them, but ultimately, it’s really cool for me. I’m going to remember this for the rest of my life. And anything that you get to do with people that you love, especially your children, they just make everything that much more special.’

Flacco’s competitiveness remained even with the game out of reach by the start of the fourth quarter. He escaped a pass rush and ran eight yards for the first down. The University of Delaware product fired his share of throws with zip for big completions. He connected his with his favorite target, David Njoku, seven times (11 targets) for 93 yards. 

Flacco finished 34-for-46 with 307 yards – his fifth straight game with at least 300 yards through the air – and a touchdown. The Browns’ loss prevented a possible homecoming of sorts for Flacco against No. 1 seed Baltimore in the divisional round.

Houston Texans’ Texas-sized turnaround

It was 370 days ago the Texans lost to Indianapolis Colts in Week 18, costing them the No. 1 pick, which went to the Chicago Bears before landing with the Carolina Panthers via trade. Houston and coach Lovie Smith were chastised by some for the last-minute victory instead of securing the top overall selection. 

A lot has happened since. DeMeco Ryans was hired as head coach. He brought Bobby Slowik to be his offensive coordinator. General manager Nick Caserio used that No. 2 pick on Stroud, who has blossomed into one of the league’s most complete passers in his first season. The GM traded up to take edge rusher Will Anderson Jr. That move has paid off in Year 1, too. 

Ryans’ defense, beyond the game-changing turnovers and scores, held the Browns to 2.9 yards per carry. The Texans sacked Flacco four times and were in his face on several more occasions.

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Seven years into a career that has featured two NFL MVPs, two Super Bowl titles and a laundry list of accomplishments, Patrick Mahomes still encountered a first on Saturday.

The conditions at Arrowhead Stadium were ripe for a unique outcome, as the minus-4 degree temperature at kickoff between the Kansas City Chiefs and visiting Miami Dolphins in a wild-card matchup made for the NFL’s fourth-coldest game ever on record. In that frigid setting, Mahomes encountered an equipment setback that left him in an unfamiliar spot.

On a second-and-7 play with 9:25 remaining in the third quarter, Mahomes scrambled right and barreled ahead for a 13-yard gain. As he lowered his head, he was met by Dolphins safety DeShon Elliott, with the two players engaging in a helmet-to-helmet collision that sent a piece of Mahomes’ crown flying.

Mahomes was able to play for two plays with the damaged helmet before officials made him seek out a replacement.

“I was very unhappy because my helmet’s warm and it cracked … and I put the other helmet on, and it didn’t fit at all,’ Mahomes said in an interview after the Chiefs’ 26-7 victory. ‘It was sitting out in the cold all day long.” 

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The quarterback didn’t initially notice the missing piece.

‘I didn’t know what happened in the moment, but I got in the huddle and everybody was telling me,’ Mahomes said in his postgame news conference. ‘And I was like ‘I got y’all, but I’m not coming out (of) the game. … It was a first for me.’

Mahomes added it took some maneuvering to get the backup helmet to the point where it could be worn.

‘We gotta talk about where we store the backup helmet because it was frozen,’ Mahomes said. ‘When I tried to put it on, it was completely frozen. I couldn’t get it on. I don’t know if anyone got a picture of it. It didn’t look great. But we were able to adjust it on the sideline and get it warmed up a little bit and get rolling from there.

In the divisional round, the Chiefs will either face the Houston Texans, who beat the Cleveland Browns on Saturday, or the Buffalo Bills, who will host the Pittsburgh Steelers on Monday in a game that was postponed due to severe weather.

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