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Consumers who got a taste of higher-end amenities during the last couple years’ travel boom aren’t too keen to go back to basic economy, and the travel industry doesn’t want them to.

“If ‘revenge travel’ was then, emboldened travel is now,” said Erika Richter, a spokesperson for the American Society of Travel Advisors, which has seen customers continuing to take advantage of the upgraded offerings operators are dangling. With travel volumes still trending well ahead of pre-pandemic highs, “premium leisure travel is definitely on the rise,” said Henry Harteveldt, president of Atmosphere Research Group, which analyzes the travel industry.

At the top end of the market, the most deep-pocketed consumers are still spending heavily on high-dollar getaways and exclusive experiences. Now, airlines, hotels and cruises are prodding passengers of less lavish means to go premium, too — in some cases revising down what counts as “luxury.”

Caleb Cash-Tobey and his husband have been springing for larger rooms and suites than they used to. Each year, the Fort Smith, Arkansas-based couple takes one major trip as well as smaller monthly ones that they’re increasingly comfortable enhancing with extra amenities, such as evening turndown service and in-room breakfast.

“We’ve learned that we should take the experience when it is offered, because some experiences are no longer available in the post-Covid world that we may have really enjoyed,” Cash-Tobey said, citing a Champagne-augmented tour of the British crown jewels that a favorite London hotel discontinued.

Kristin Winkaffe, a travel adviser with Avenue Two Travel in Columbus, Ohio, said customers are becoming “more inclined to treat themselves to experiences that they may not have considered a few years ago. They’re now prioritizing the quality of their vacations over budget constraints.”

The airlines have realized that if they price these products in the right way, they can coax enough people to trade up.

Henry Harteveldt, Atmosphere Research Group Founder

That’s a habit players across the travel industry want to spur more of.

Both international and domestic airlines are increasing their premium cabin capacities, a pre-pandemic trend that shows no sign of letting up. Major carriers have been adding extra legroom in premium economy and expanding some business and first-class cabins, looking to nudge more flyers out of their cheapest seats and into pricier ones.

Delta Air Lines President Glen Hauenstein told investors in October that revenue from premium offerings jumped 17% from the prior year, “outperforming main cabin by five points.” Its premium select tier for long-haul flights, situated between economy options and the upscale Delta One, was revamped in late 2022 and has performed “above expectations,” he said.

Delta Air Lines has said revenue from its premium select seats has exceeded expectations.Courtesy Delta

A round-trip Delta ticket from Atlanta to Zurich in April would cost around $1,350 for a main cabin seat if booked today, compared with about $2,800 for premium select and $5,250 for Delta One.

“The airlines have realized that if they price these products in the right way, they can coax enough people to trade up,” Harteveldt said. His firm found last year that 1 in 3 travelers either booked a premium option or considered one, down just slightly from 38% in 2022, “when we were still in the throes of revenge travel and when people still had more savings.”

Some consumers are shelling out on upgrades that are more about practicality than self-pampering.

“Since the pandemic, I now only book changeable airplane tickets and hotels,” said Cathy Raines of Washington, D.C. That typically adds about 15% to her bills, Raines said, but she thinks it’s worth it for the added flexibility.

Life is too short to be standing around with a roller bag and a double-parked car wondering how to get in.

Rebecca Ross, Seattle Consumer

Kristin Chambers, founder of the Boston-based luxury travel agency Travellustre, said many of her clients now ship their luggage ahead of arrival and book VIP services like airside pickups, expedited service at customs and immigration, or cars to hotels. “Travelers are increasingly willing to invest in aspects of their journey that will guarantee an elevated level of service,” she said.

Seattle resident Rebecca Ross and her husband have ruled out Airbnb-style accommodations without 24-hour staff. “Life is too short to be standing around with a roller bag and a double-parked car wondering how to get in. We’ve vowed that our lodging must have a front desk with a human,” she said. That sometimes means spending more but often just requires a little extra time to hunt down, she added.

A Morning Consult report in September put it bluntly: “Forget first-class seats and penthouse suits — luxury travel is about customer service.” If that means redefining what counts as premium to include things like the ability to speak to a real support agent, the researchers found consumers may welcome it all the same.

First-class flights, fancy hotel stays and fine dining hold less appeal now than simply “feeling relaxed,” “experiencing comfort” and great service, the report said, adding that brands can find opportunity by treating the latter as high end: “The experiences that comprise ‘new luxury’ don’t require the traveler to be affluent.”

Some amenities certainly do, though, and wealthy customers are scooping them up.

Many “ultra-high-net-worth individuals” ditched first-class seats on commercial flights for private jets during the pandemic, and the habit stuck, said Doug Gollan, founder of Private Jet Card Comparisons, a buyer’s guide to these services.

“New flyers racked up record-high private flight hours in 2021 and 2022, and 95% of these newcomers have continued to fly privately,” he said — at an average cost of about $40,000 for a two-hour trip.

Our private cabanas are selling out on a regular basis.

Bill Zucker, Carnival Cruise Line Spokesperson

Lodging operators have also seen strong demand from offerings aimed at higher-dollar guests. “Booking patterns continue to overwhelmingly favor premium suites, and some categories are booked months to years in advance,” said Gebhard Rainer, the CEO of Sandals Resorts International.

The company’s newest resort, Sandals St. Vincent and the Grenadines, won’t open until March, but its beachfront butler villas that start at $1,111 per person per night, and two-story overwater units starting at $1,570 per person per night, have already sold out dates well into 2025, Rainer said.

The Westin Poinsett hotel in Greenville, South Carolina, put together a “Home Alone” themed holiday package with prices ranging from $599 to more than $1,000 a night — over-the-top rates for the local market during what’s usually a slow holiday season there. It sold out with 93 bookings and many guests asking about reservations for next year.

“I have been in the industry for 25 years between Washington, D.C., and Greenville, and by far this was the most successful package I have ever seen,” said John Geddes, the hotel’s sales and marketing director. “Guests were spending a minimum of four to five times the amount they would generally spend.”

Tour organizations and cruise lines report much the same.

“Travelers are willing to pay more for exclusive experiences,” said Terry Dale, CEO of the United States Tour Operators Association. As a result, organizers “are curating itineraries to include personalized services and experiences with more exclusivity, going beyond the standard offerings.”

Average fares on Lindblad Expeditions-National Geographic’s Islander II yacht are 45% higher than its predecessor’s.Courtesy expeditions.com

Holland America, a subsidiary of Carnival Cruise Line, is seeing more guest bookings for premium spa services like its thermal suites and hydropool, said spokesperson Bill Zucker. “Our private cabanas are selling out on a regular basis. And our new direct luggage service, where guests can have their luggage shipped directly to and from their home, is proving to be very popular,” he said.

Lindblad Expeditions, which operates National Geographic-branded cruises, replaced its Islander I luxury yacht with the more luxurious Islander II for Galapagos voyages in 2022, raising the average fare by 45%.

“Some nail-biting ensued” said Lindblad Chief Commercial Officer Noah Brodsky, but the Islander II is already 78% booked for this year. That’s well ahead of historical trends, he said, “and an indication of the uptick in premiumization.”

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

Nico Collins enjoyed a career year in 2023 and will enter the AFC wild-card round as Houston Texans quarterback C.J. Stroud’s top receiver option. Collins would be the last person to tell you that. Humility is the main reason why, his teammates and those who have coached him say.

Apparently, Collins isn’t much of a yapper.

“He didn’t really talk much,” Stroud said this week when asked about his initial impression of working with Collins.

Central Michigan head coach Jim McElwain, who coached Collins at Michigan in 2018 as his position coach, also described the third-year receiver as “quiet.”

“Humble, talented,” McElwain told USA TODAY Sports, “and he’s obviously a great person.”

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What immediately stood out to Stroud was the tenacity with which Collins lined up.

“You can tell he really wanted to get off the ball,” Stroud told reporters. “He really put his foot in the ground, and he declared where he was going. When he was jumping to catch a fade or something, he was grabbing with two hands, aggressively putting it away. All the attention to detail, like the little things that a lot of people probably don’t notice that he does on a day-to-day basis in his routes.”

That sounds a lot like the player McElwain knew at Michigan, where he immediately saw the commitment Collins had in the pursuit of being great.

“Everything he did, he took serious,” McElwain said. “He studied it. Very obviously, he’s a great talent. But I really think he worked himself into being a great player.”

Collins first popped on McElwain’s radar when the coach held the top job at Florida. A native of Pinson, Alabama, Collins was a consensus four-star recruit who held offers from several Southeastern Conference schools. He chose to go further from home and arrived at Michigan before the 2017 season.

Under McElwain, the coach said, Collins – who is a big target at 6-foot-4 – worked on his hands to the point he became a “a natural catcher.”

“I could just see it develop. He always had the size and the speed,” McElwain said. “He’s actually got pretty sneaky one-cut ability, which for a long guy, sometimes you don’t see that. Just the physical nature and really the way he became a real ball-catcher. I feel like his hands got better and better every day in practice.”

Attention to detail during practice drills and making it a point of emphasis on every repetition was the difference-maker. By his sophomore season in 2018, Collins’ end-of-year statistics looked nothing like what he posted his freshman year (two games, three catches, 27 yards). Collins caught 38 balls for a team-high 632 yards and six touchdowns. He scored seven times the next year to lead the Wolverines and had 729 yards on 37 catches (19.7-yard average per reception) in 12 games.

When the 2020 season rolled around, the Big Ten initially wavered on playing due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Collins opted out, signed with an agency and began training for the NFL draft in Florida.

The Texans took him in the third round (89th overall) in the 2020 draft. McElwain, who coached Collins for that 2018 season, wouldn’t say whether the receiver not playing his senior season hurt his draft outlook.

 “Beauty is in the eye of the beholder,” McElwain said. “I just know being around him, the guy’s a great talent.”

It took two seasons, but Collins blossomed in 2023. He posted more catches (80) and receiving yards (1,297) than his first two seasons combined (70 catches, 927 yards). Collins scored eight touchdowns and finished seventh in the NFL in yards per reception (16.2).

The arrival of Stroud, a lock to be Offensive Rookie of the Year, certainly helped. Collins had five 100-yard games, punctuated by a 195-yard effort in the regular-season finale against the Indianapolis Colts – the 75-yard touchdown he caught on the Texans’ first play from scrimmage playing a large part in that performance.

“Nico has done an outstanding job this entire year,” first-year Texans coach DeMeco Ryans said. “He deserves a ton of credit for the season that he’s had – a career year. He’s shown up every single week and made play after play, whether he’s double covered, it doesn’t matter. He’s shown up with a willingness and a want to be that leading receiver for us, and he did that, and he deserves a ton of credit for that.”

Houston offensive coordinator Bobby Slowik said designing one-on-one matchups for him is becoming a more difficult challenge as opponents devote increased attention to the target, especially as the Texans have navigated the end of the season without rookie wideout Tank Dell.

“He’s been a stud,” Slowik said.

Collins has altered the passing game at all three levels: downfield, intermediate and as a catch-and-run receiver.

“He’s taken such great strides just from where he was the last couple of years watching him on tape,” Slowik said. “It’s been really fun to watch and be a part of and it changes our team. You can see it spread across the whole offense in the culture of what we’re doing.”

Texans receivers coach Ben McDaniels – who was an offensive assistant at Michigan in 2018 – is familiar with Collins and has been instrumental in his development, both McElwain and Slowik said.

But it all comes back to the person Collins is.

“Anytime you have someone like that, the right kind of person, and Nico is an unbelievable individual, and they’re about the right things, and they put the work in, you’re always excited to see what they do,” Slowik said. “He’s far exceeded anything that I think any of us could have imagined.”

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The Kansas City Chiefs and Miami Dolphins have weathered various storms throughout the regular season, from injuries to inconsistent play, but on Saturday, both teams will have to endure another set of conditions during their wild-card weekend playoff matchup.

The Chiefs and Dolphins will both have to brave ‘dangerously cold temperatures’ during Saturday’s night’s NFL playoff game in Kansas City, Missouri, where the high of 8 degrees will have long since passed when the teams kick off at 8 p.m. ET.

‘No one likes being cold, that’s why we have temperature control,’ Dolphins head coach Mike McDaniel said Thursday.

Well, unfortunately for all, there’s no temperature control at the open-domed Arrowhead Stadium, where temperatures aren’t the only thing dropping – ticket prices have dropped to as low as $38 each due to the frigid forecast.

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PLAYOFF PICKS: Can Tyreek Hill, Dolphins stun Chiefs in wild-card round?

The irony is that the Dolphins could have been gearing up for a first-round playoff game at the Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens, Florida, where it’s predicted to be a high of 80 degrees Saturday, if they had defeated the Buffalo Bills in Week 18 and secured home-field advantage and the AFC East division title.

Instead, the Dolphins will fight for their playoff lives as the sixth-seed in conditions that will set a franchise record for the coldest game in Dolphins’ history. Despite being at home, Chiefs head coach Andy Reid said his team ‘can’t bank on’ the weather giving them an advantage: ‘Cold is cold, for you and me.’

Here’s everything you need to know about Saturday’s forecast:

How cold will the Chiefs-Dolphins game be?

As of Saturday morning, the temperature for Saturday’s kickoff between the Dolphins and Chiefs is forecast for negative 5 degrees with wind chill making it feel like negative 30 degrees, according to AccuWeather.

There’s a ‘slight chance of snow’ between 9 a.m. and 3 p.m. leading into Saturday’s contest, according to the National Weather Service. By Saturday night, there are winds of 16-20 mph expected, with gusts up to 29 mph. A wind chill warning is in effect until Tuesday.

‘Evening temperatures likely drop below zero, and AccuWeather RealFeel Temperatures will likely be in the negative teens throughout the entirety of the game,’ AccuWeather meteorologist Mike Youman said.

What is the coldest Dolphins game ever?

The coldest game in Dolphins history coincidentally took place against the Chiefs at Arrowhead Stadium on Dec. 21, 2008, when it was 10 degrees with a wind chill of negative 12 degrees, according to Pro Football Reference. The Dolphins won 38-31.

Saturday’s contest is predicted to set a new record for the coldest game in Dolphins history.

How do the Dolphins perform in cold weather games?

The Dolphins have found themselves on the short end of the cold-weather stick. The Dolphins have lost their last 10 games when the weather is 40-degrees or below by an average margin of 17 points, according to the Associated Press.

Miami quarterback Tua Tagovailoa, a Hawaii native who played his collegiate career in Alabama, said he’s never been in temperatures ‘lower than 15 degrees.’ When asked how he prepared for this week, Tagovailoa candidly said, ‘You can’t prepare for a game like that with that kind of weather. So it will be new.’

The Dolphins can rely on the knowledge of receiver Tyreek Hill, who called Arrowhead Stadium home for six seasons while part of the Chiefs from 2016-2021. Saturday will mark Hill’s first time returning to Kansas City since he was traded by the franchise to Miami in March 2022.

‘It’s a mindset. I feel like if you believe it’s going to be cold, then you’re going to freeze your (butt) off. But if you go into this game not even thinking any of that, you’ll be fine,’ Hill said. ‘I’ve played there and I understand the conditions. So I’m even not worried at all. I’m going to go out there with no sleeves. I’m going to tell the rest of the guys… if those guys see you wearing sleeves, obviously they are going to think you’re soft.’

What is the coldest Chiefs game ever?

Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes said he’s ‘excited’ for Saturday’s subzero temperatures: ‘What can be better. Playing football in January in Arrowhead Stadium is going to be cold. It is what it is… The adrenaline rush gives you that warmness that you’re seeking and you have heaters on the sideline. People make it a big deal, but at the end of the day, you just go out there and play football.’

What is the coldest game in NFL playoff history?

‘The Ice Bowl,’ the NFC Championship game between the Green Bay Packers and Dallas Cowboys in Lambeau Field on Dec. 31, 1967, was the coldest game in NFL history, registering at a blistering negative 13 degrees with wind chills of negative 48 degrees.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Eighteen teams down, 14 still alive and kicking.

The NFL playoffs have arrived, the tournament to win Super Bowl 58 next month in Las Vegas finally initiating Saturday – and won’t it be nice to focus attention on the football field instead of the vortex of coaching news occurring away from it?

The wild-card round of the 2023 postseason should be something, expected to include everything from frigid weather, a game that will be streamed on Peacock but won’t be widely available on television (aside from local markets in Kansas City and Miami), one coach, the Dallas Cowboys’ Mike McCarthy, facing his former team (Green Bay Packers) and perhaps the pièce de résistance – Los Angeles Rams QB Matthew Stafford and Detroit Lions QB Jared Goff simultaneously squaring off against their previous clubs Sunday night.

Who survives and advances? Who doesn’t? Our experts’ forecast:

NFL wild-card picks

(Odds provided by BetMGM. Access more BetMGM odds here.)

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NFL wild-card game-by-game predictions, picks, odds

Cleveland Browns at Houston TexansMiami Dolphins at Kansas City ChiefsPittsburgh Steelers at Buffalo BillsGreen Bay Packers at Dallas CowboysLos Angeles Rams at Detroit LionsPhiladelphia Eagles at Tampa Bay Buccaneers

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The Chicago Bulls celebrated their inaugural Ring of Honor class during Friday night’s game against the Golden State Warriors. But one man who was honored drew the ire of the United Center crowd in an unfortunate scene: late general manager Jerry Krause.

Krause, who died in 2017 at the age of 77, was the longtime general manager of the Bulls, from 1985-2003. He built around Michael Jordan and turned the Bulls into six-time NBA champions. He collected two Executive of the Year awards (1988, 1996) along the way and was inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame shortly after his death. He also oversaw the dynasty’s undoing, as documented (without his perspective) in ‘The Last Dance.’

That fact, presumably, is what led to audible boos when he was honored during the halftime ceremony. His wife Thelma, who was representing him, appeared to be in tears over the poor reception.

‘What we witnessed today, when Jerry Krause’s name was called and the people that booed Jerry Krause and his widow, who was accepting this honor for him — it was the worst thing I’ve ever seen in my life,’ Bulls analyst Stacey King, a member of Chicago’s first three title teams, said on the broadcast.

‘I hurt for that lady. Brought her to tears. Whoever booed her in this arena should be ashamed of themselves,’ King continued. ‘That’s not Chicago. That’s New York. Philly. Chicago’s not like that. We don’t have a reputation of being that way. Whether you like Jerry Krause or not, that man brought six championships here. He didn’t shoot a basket, nor did he get a rebound, but he put six titles up (in the rafters). There’s a lot of teams don’t even have one (championship).

‘That was really classless. I was disappointed in the people that booed. It was a sad thing.’

King is right. Though the breakup of the Bulls dynasty may have been premature and Krause failed to build a winner again before he left in 2003, citing health problems, by pretty much any measure, he’s one of the great executives in league history. Only three other franchises have collected more rings than the Bulls’ six: The Warriors (7), Lakers (17) and Celtics (17).

Jordan, Scottie Pippen, Dennis Rodman, Toni Kukoc, Artis Gilmore, Bob Love, Chet Walker, Jerry Sloan, Phil Jackson, Tex Winter, Dick Klein and Johnny ‘Red’ Kerr rounded out the inaugural Ring of Honor class. The 1995-96 Bulls were also honored. That team, which went 72-10 and won the NBA title, was, of course, built by Krause.

Warriors coach Steve Kerr, a member of that 1995-96 team, said he did not hear the boos for Krause as he was back in the locker room with his team. But Kerr didn’t hold back, calling the booing fans’ actions ‘shameful.’

‘It’s absolutely shameful,’ Kerr said. ‘I cannot believe … I’m devastated for Thelma and for the Krause family. What can we possibly be thinking?

‘…I’m so disappointed in the fans — and I want to be specific, because I know there were lots of fans I’m sure who did not boo. But those who booed, they should be ashamed.’

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

In choosing Washington’s Kalen DeBoer to replace the greatest college football coach of all time, Alabama athletics director Greg Byrne has opted for safe and logical over high risk/high reward.

67-3 at NAIA-level Sioux Falls.

9-3 in his only non-COVID season at Fresno State. 

25-3 at Washington. 

But DeBoer isn’t Saban. And for all the reasons he makes sense in this job, there’s one that makes this hire as terrifying as it is exciting.

Recruiting. 

Can he do it? Does he even like it? 

Let me offer some advice to Coach DeBoer: You better learn the lay of the land in the Southeastern Conference — and fast. Because at the place you now work, it’s going to take a lot more than your playbook to survive. 

The secret of Saban’s success at Alabama wasn’t really a secret. As told in Monte Burke’s book “Saban: The Making of a Coach,” Saban once asked then-athletics director Mal Moore if he thought Alabama had just hired the best coach in college football. When Moore responded that he did, Saban famously shot back: “Well, you didn’t — I’m nothing without my players. But you did just hire a helluva recruiter.’ 

Is DeBoer a “helluva recruiter?” We don’t know. He’s never had a job in Div. I football long enough for anyone to be able to tell. Even at Washington, the players who mattered were mostly there already when he got the job in 2022. Even Michael Penix, the excellent quarterback who made it all go, transferred there because of a prior relationship with DeBoer.

To put it mildly, he’s never done the kind of recruiting it takes to navigate the shark-infested waters of the South. The closest place to SEC territory DeBoer has ever worked is Southern Illinois. Does he even know you aren’t supposed to put sugar in your grits? 

This isn’t merely going to be culture shock for DeBoer; it’s going to be a jolt the size of Tuscaloosa’s electrical grid. Can he handle it? 

You don’t need to be an SEC guy to win in the SEC. Byrne made that bet once before when he plucked Nate Oats out of Buffalo to be his basketball coach. Oats, a former Michigan high school coach, had never worked anywhere close to the South. He’s done pretty well for himself with a couple of SEC championships and trips to the Sweet 16. 

But even that example doesn’t quite capture the magnitude of what DeBoer is walking into. If you want to win national championships, you have to regularly beat Georgia and LSU for players, not to mention Auburn, Ole Miss, Tennessee, Florida, Texas A&M and the rest.

The easy response to that is, “OK, but it’s Alabama. They’ll get players.” Maybe that’s true. 

But Saban recruiting to Alabama was a different animal. His track record was about getting guys to the NFL. His aura was unmatched. Without him, Alabama looks a lot more like everybody else it’s competing against for those recruits — and that’s not going to be easy in the name, image and likeness era.  

To that end, DeBoer and Alabama’s administration are going to have a lot of work to do. In talking to a few people since Saban announced his retirement, it became clear that Alabama’s NIL program was not set up to just go out and buy a bunch of players. 

Saban adjusted and adapted to the NIL era, but only to a degree. His NIL philosophy was built more around ensuring all of his players had a relatively equal baseline and anything else above that number was secured individually. Players accepted that “Saban discount” because they wanted to go to Alabama and play for him.

That will not happen under DeBoer, and Alabama will have a lot of work to do getting its NIL program on equal footing with its competition and convincing donors that things are going to be different under a new coach. You’re not going to be able to pick and choose who you want to come to Alabama because the lure of the coach is unmatched. Recruits and transfers will need to be convinced, and the competition has never been this strong. 

It’s going to be a very different world — especially for a guy who was a relatively anonymous offensive coordinator at Indiana a mere four years ago.

Becoming the coach at Alabama and the guy who followed Nick Saban is not just a change of jobs, it’s a new life. He will never walk out of his house without people knowing who he is. Everything he does on and off the field, practically every minute of his day, will be scrutinized to a degree that will surely make him uncomfortable. And if he loses some games, it will be a miserable existence — Alabama’s fan base will make sure of that. 

But it’s the job DeBoer wanted. Hopefully he knows what he’s getting into. 

The same can be said of Alabama. To fulfill the expectations that will now be placed on DeBoer, you have to be an excellent coach and recruiter. We know he can do the first part. The second will be a mystery for everyone. 

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Alabama has hired Kalen DeBoer to succeed Nick Saban in Tuscaloosa. DeBoer, who spent the past two seasons at Washington, brings nine years of head-coaching experience (five with an NAIA school) to Alabama, where he faces myriad challenges in sustaining a Saban-like level of success.

Here’s everything we know so far about DeBoer’s deal with Alabama and what you need to know about his past contracts, compensation, bonuses and buyouts.

Kalen DeBoer contract

We don’t yet know the details of DeBoer’s contract with Alabama. For context, Saban was making $11.1 million this season with the Tide and had been working on an eight-year contract that began March 1, 2022, and had been scheduled to pay him at least $93.6 million. The average annual compensation for Power Five programs in 2023 was $5.9 million while the average in the SEC in 2023 was $7.6 million.

Kalen DeBoer salary at Washington

At Washington, DeBoer was working under a contract of just over six years that began in November 2022 and was set to pay him $4.2 million this season and increase by $100,000 annually for a total of $26.7 million. Over his four years as an NCAA Bowl Subdivision head coach — two at Fresno State and two at Washington — DeBoer had earned about $9.9 million, not including bonuses.

From 2014 through 2016, as an assistant coach at Eastern Michigan, DeBoer’s average annual pay was about $140,000. In 2017 and ’18, as an assistant at Fresno State, he averaged $320,000. In 2019, as Indiana’s offensive coordinator, DeBoer was making $800,000, before Fresno State made him its head coach.

Kalen DeBoer bonuses

At Washington this season, DeBoer earned a total of $1.075 million in on-field bonuses, and had been eligible for another $125,000 in bonuses connected to the team’s academic performance. His bonus total for the 2023 season was second-highest among public-school coaches, trailing Michigan’s Jim Harbaugh ($3 million). Louisville’s Jeff Brohm had the third-highest total at $800,000.

This season, DeBoer got:

$50,000 for the team playing in the Pac-12 Conference championship game$100,000 for winning the Pac-12 title$400,000 for the team being selected to play in a College Football Playoff semifinal$450,000 for advancing to the CFP title game$25,000 for being named Pac-12 coach of the year$50,000 for being named national coach of the year, an honor he received from multiple outlets

Kalen DeBoer buyout clause

DeBoer’s contract with Washington called for him to pay the school $12 million if he terminated the agreement on or before Jan. 31, 2025, to take another football coaching job at an NCAA Division I school or with a pro team.

If Washington had fired DeBoer without cause, it would have owed all of the basic annual compensation remaining under the deal, subject to his duty to make good-faith efforts to find another job, with the income from that position offsetting what Washington would have owed him.

His buyout terms with Alabama have not yet been made public by the school.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Embodying the blue-collar mindset of the city where he played 13 of his 16 major league seasons, Chase Utley was one of the cornerstones of a Philadelphia Phillies team that won five consecutive division titles and one World Series during the height of his career.

A first-round pick of the Phillies in the 2000 draft, Utley didn’t reach the majors until he was 24, and even then, didn’t become an everyday starter for another two years. Once he did, he showed he belonged, ripping off a 35-game hitting streak in 2005 that trails only teammate Jimmy Rollins (38) among the longest streaks of the past 35 years.

With Rollins alongside at shortstop, Utley blossomed into one of the game’s best second basemen. The duo helped lead the Phils to the NL East crown every year from 2007 to 2011, and back-to-back World Series appearances in 2008 (beat the Rays) and 2009 (lost to the Yankees).

Utley made five consecutive All-Star appearances from 2006-2010 – adding a sixth in 2014. He also finished in the top 15 in the NL MVP balloting every year from 2005-2009.

He could hit for average and power, especially impressive for a second baseman. The four-time Silver Slugger award winner posted a career-best slash line of .332/.410/.566 in 2007 and slugged 33 home runs in 2008.

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

He concluded his career by playing parts of four seasons with the Los Angeles Dodgers and adding one final World Series appearance in 2017 to his resume.

The case for Chase Utley

The lefty-swinging second baseman was outstanding both at the plate and in the field.

He was a fixture at the top of the order during the Phillies’ run of dominance, leading the National League in runs scored in 2006 with 131, and finishing in the top five twice more.

His intensity in the field and at the plate was legendary, starting with his first major league hit in 2003 – a grand slam – when he sprinted around the bases to his aggressive baserunning that earned him the nickname “The Man” from longtime Phillies broadcaster Harry Kalas.

(Perhaps as a result of his style of play, Utley led the league in getting hit by pitches for three consecutive years.)

Defensively, Utley may not have received the credit he’s due. Advanced defensive metrics show him as an above-average defender – Utley’s 131 fielding runs (based on Total Runs and Defensive Runs Saved) ranks seventh all-time among second basemen. However, he never won a Gold Glove.

Wins Above Replacement is much kinder to Utley. Taking offense, defense and baserunning into account, his 59.7 WAR from 2005-14 was second-highest in the majors over that 10-year span, trailing only Albert Pujols (67.7). His 64.5 career WAR puts him ahead of ballot mates Todd Helton, Andruw Jones, Gary Sheffield, Andy Pettitte, Bobby Abreu and Joe Mauer.

The case against Utley

Although Utley played 16 seasons in the majors, he did have issues staying healthy. As a result, his career numbers may not look as impressive in comparison with players who are already in the Hall of Fame.

He has only 1,885 career hits, and no player in the post-expansion era with fewer than 2,000 hits has been elected to Cooperstown by the baseball writers.

Also, he doesn’t have a signature season or award on which to hang his cap. Despite the six All-Star appearances and four Silver Sluggers, Utley never finished higher than seventh in the MVP voting and he never won a Gold Glove.

Though he had his moments in postseason play, Utley’s overall playoff numbers aren’t great. In 258 plate appearances over 68 games, he posted a .224/.364/.410 slash line.

Perhaps the lasting impression many fans have of Utley came in the 2015 NL Division Series, when he slid hard and out of the baseline to break up a double play, collided with Mets second baseman Ruben Tejada and in the process fractured Tejada’s right leg.

Voting trends

Utley is off to a solid start in his first year on the BBWAA ballot.

According to Ryan Thibodaux’s Hall of Fame Tracker, Utley has been named on 45.2% of public votes collected as of Jan. 9.

That’s not quite as strong a start as Hall of Fame second basemen Craig Biggio (Class of 2015) and Roberto Alomar (Class of 2011) had, but it’s much better than the 10.2% mark last year’s lone inductee, Scott Rolen, had in his first year.

Realistic outlook

Chase Utley was a top-tier second baseman for the majority of his 16-year MLB career with the Phillies and Dodgers, especially during his 10-year peak in Philadelphia. He developed a reputation as one of the game’s smartest and toughest players, though he was sometimes accused of going a bit too far.

Utley was a key member of the Phils’ 2008 World Series champions, making a huge heads-up play in the decisive Game 5 when he faked a throw to first base and nailed the potential game-tying run at the plate.

Utley also hit five home runs in a losing effort against the New York Yankees in the World Series the following year.

While it’s doubtful Utley makes it into Cooperstown on the first ballot, time is on his side and he should receive additional support in the years to come.

Follow Gardner on X @SteveAGardner

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Texas and head football coach Steve Sarkisian have agreed to a four-year contract extension that will keep him with the Longhorns through the 2030 season, the university announced Saturday.

Sarkisian, 49, just completed the third year of the six-year contract that he signed after his hire in 2021. Terms of the extension were not released.

‘I said it when I came here three years ago, this is a dream job for me. It’s a destination job, and I’m fired up every day to be the head coach at The University of Texas,’ Sarkisian said in a statement. ‘We’re thrilled with what we’ve been able to accomplish and proud of the culture we’ve built and the way our players have grown — on and off the field. But we’re just getting started. I’ve said it all along, we’ve been building this program for long term success. We’re here to chase greatness, win championships, and be one of the best in the nation year in and year out.’

This past season, Sarkisian ranked 30th on the USA TODAY-compiled list of the highest-paid coaches in college football. Sarkisian made $5.6 million. Nick Saban topped the list with $11.4 million in earnings.

Texas athletic director Chris Del Conte recently told the American-Statesman that Sarkisian and the school would soon meet to discuss a possible extension and raise. Those discussions were likely expedited this week when Sarkisian’s name was floated as a possible candidate to replace Saban, who retired on Wednesday as the head coach at Alabama.

Sarkisian, though, publicly pledged his allegiance to Texas with a social media post on Thursday night in which he stated that ‘It’s a Great Day to be a Longhorn.’ He spent his Friday recruiting. On Saturday, Sarkisian secured his future.

In three seasons at Texas, Sarkisian has compiled a 25-14 record. During the 2023 season, Texas went 12-2, won the Big 12 championship and reached the College Football Playoff for the first time.

Texas will move to the Southeastern Conference this summer.

‘As we head into the SEC next year, we’re doing that with a great deal of momentum, a program we’re extremely proud of and with a great head coach and leader,’ Del Conte was quoted as saying in the university’s press release. ‘We knew that Coach Sarkisian was the man for the job when we hired him, and he’s proven that each step of the way. We couldn’t be more excited about where we are and where we’re headed, and we’re thrilled that Coach Sark will be our coach for a long time.”

Sarkisian is 71-49 over his 10 seasons as a head coach. Sarkisian previously led the football programs at Washington (2009-13) and USC (2014-15). He won a national championship as Alabama’s offensive coordinator in 2020.

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MIAMI BEACH, Fla. — Lionel Messi’s second season with Inter Miami in Major League Soccer comes with sky-high expectations.

It begins with an international preseason tour beginning next week, which includes a match between Messi and rival Cristiano Ronaldo, a lengthy MLS schedule with in-season tournaments, and commitments to play with Argentina this summer at the 2024 Copa América.

As fans worldwide clamor for tickets to watch Messi play in the twilight of his career after his 2022 World Cup victory with Argentina, Inter Miami coach Tata Martino has a fine line to balance between player participation and rest, extending the Inter Miami brand globally, and contributing to the sport’s rising momentum in the United States.

“It’s looking at the balance of the sporting side and the growth of this club and the revenues that benefit the business side,” said Inter Miami’s Sergio Busquets, the former FC Barcelona standout. “We will also compete against great teams that will prepare us to be at a high level.

‘When it comes to time changes and long trips, we have to be prepared and physically fit, and that will help us during the season.”

Inter Miami ‘super team’ enters 2024 season as MLS Cup favorite

Just one look at Inter Miami’s roster and it’s easy to call them a “super team.”

Messi, Busquets and Jordi Alba welcome Luis Suarez to Inter Miami this season, and the stakes are even higher for the MLS club co-owned by David Beckham and brothers Jorge and Jose Mas.

Inter Miami enters the 2024 MLS season as the favorites to win the MLS Cup with +200 odds, according to BetMGM. And the gap between their competitors is significant: LAFC (+800), Columbus and FC Cincinnati (+1200), Philadelphia (+1400), Seattle (+1600) and Atlanta (+2000).

“I think if you have Messi on your team, you’re always the favorite,” 2022 MLS MVP Hany Mukhtar of Nashville SC said this week. “But it’s a team sport. We saw last year, not always the better team wins. That’s the beauty of soccer. We’ll see this year.”

Still, Inter Miami must perform and can’t rest on their best players’ past successes, which includes Champions League, Super Cup, La Liga and Club World Cup titles.

Martino, asked about the super team comparison, used an NBA analogy of what’s ahead for Inter Miami during the MLS season.

“I know we have an excellent team that will compete well, but we have to be aware of what this generates in our rivals,” Martino said. “When the Wizards play Milwaukee, they play even better because they are playing against a team that has a lot of big, big names. We have to prepare for that. We have to move away from talking about the names and the past and focus on what we can achieve now.”

How much will Messi play during Inter Miami’s preseason tour?

Messi and Inter Miami’s stars have contractual obligations to play in multiple preseason games internationally, but their availability could be limited in their first two matches.

Inter Miami’s preseason tour begins Jan. 19 with a game against the El Salvador national team in San Salvador, and a quick turnaround with a match against FC Dallas at the Cotton Bowl Stadium in Dallas on Jan. 22.

Messi and Inter Miami will participate in the Riyadh Season Cup in Saudi Arabia against Al Hilal Jan. 29, and face Ronaldo’s Al Nassr Feb. 1. Inter Miami’s tour in Asia continues with a stop in China for an exhibition in Hong Kong Feb. 4 and a match against Vissel Kobe at Japan National Stadium in Tokyo Feb. 7.

Inter Miami’s preseason ends at home in Fort Lauderdale against Newell’s Old Boys, Messi’s boyhood club in Argentina Feb. 15.

“We understand the business side and sport side, and we try to have both coexist without exceeding one or the other,” Martino said. “We have to balance how much each player participates.

‘The games in Saudi Arabia, Hong Kong and Japan were planned from the end of last season, and we will be ready for those. The question is how we manage the first two games against El Salvador and Dallas because those are so soon. We will have to made decisions about how many minutes certain players can play in those games.”

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