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The Las Vegas Raiders (2-3) are in a precarious position as their season is in danger of withering away.

Raiders head coach Antonio Pierce announced Wednesday that the team plans to reinsert quarterback Aidan O’Connell into the starting lineup on Sunday against the Pittsburgh Steelers.

“It wasn’t a team decision. It was my decision. I just felt it’s what’s best for our offense going forward,” Pierce said.

O’Connell lost an offseason quarterback competition to Gardner Minshew. Minshew’s rocky first five games with the Raiders led to his demotion. The journeyman QB was replaced by O’Connell during Las Vegas’ 34-18 loss to the Denver Broncos on Sunday. Minshew was benched after completing 12 of 17 passes for 137 yards with one touchdown and two costly interceptions.

“It is what it is. Try to help the team, whatever I can. Try to still be an Aidan’s [O’Connell] ear, tell him things I’ve been seeing and keep providing a positive presence on the sideline,” Minshew said after being replaced. “At the end of the day, no matter what my role [is] on the team, I’m going to try and help the team any way I can.”

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O’Connell started 10 games as a rookie last season after being promoted from a backup role. He finished with 2,394 passing yards, 13 touchdowns and eight interceptions. He went 5-5 as a starter. The Raiders drafted O’Connell in the fourth round of the 2023 NFL draft.

“He’s not looking like a rookie no more (and) not acting like a rookie no more. He has a certain presence about himself,” Pierce said. “I love how he walks around the building. Really what I respected the most is when we named Gardner the starter, he was, ‘all right, I’m going to be the best scout team quarterback possible.’ And he was lighting our (expletive) up. Everyday he gave us the best look and he walked around with a smile on his face.”

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Pierce’s decision to switch quarterbacks comes amid Davante Adams trade speculation. Adams’ future is in doubt in Las Vegas after the wide receiver requested a trade.

Adams, who signed a five-year, $141.25 million contract with the Raiders in 2022 after being traded from Green Bay, is the team’s best offensive player. He’s led the Raiders in receptions and receiving yards in each of the past two seasons.

With Adams likely on his way out the door and quarterback uncertainty, the Raiders 2024 season seems in peril. To compound matters, the Kansas City Chiefs are 5-0 and well on their way to winning their ninth straight AFC West title.

“It really just comes down to all of us collectively playing better football,” Raiders defensive end Maxx Crosby said. “It’s simple stuff like that we didn’t do well enough, and it starts with me, starts with leaders, and we just got to find ways to keep getting better and we’re going to do that every single day.”

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

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Lionel Messi and the Argentine National Football Team departed from South Florida on Wednesday afternoon, a day before a match in Venezuela and ahead of Hurricane Milton’s expected landfall in the state. 

Argentina trained in Fort Lauderdale at the facility of Messi’s Major League Soccer club, Inter Miami, this week ahead of two qualifying games for the 2026 World Cup. Those plans were made due to travel restrictions by the Venezuelan government, and before the threat of Milton — a Category 4 storm expected to make landfall late Wednesday or early Thursday. 

The team is unable to fly from Argentina and the United States directly to Venezuela. So, the reigning World Cup champions departed Miami and have a layover in Barranquilla, Colombia before arriving in Maturín, Venezuela. 

Messi and Argentina will face Venezuela on Thursday at the Monumental Stadium of Maturin at 5 p.m. ET. The second match is Tuesday in Argentina against Bolivia at 8 p.m. ET. 

Argentina previously trained at Inter Miami’s facility earlier this year before their Copa America run, and before their World Cup title run in September of 2022. Coach Lionel Scaloni expressed concern about Milton’s effect on travel plans, wanting to leave two days before the match instead of one. 

“It will be difficult for us. We will arrive just one day before the game. We have to make a stop because they are not allowing flights from American soil directly to Venezuela,” Scaloni told reporters at a news conference Tuesday. “These are things that do not depend on us. We have had bad luck with this situation. But the most important thing is the safety and health for the players and the rest of us.” 

Messi is expected to be in the starting lineup against Venezuela. It will be his first match with the national team since injuring his right ankle in the Copa America final against Columbia on July 14. He missed qualifiers against Chile and Colombia last month, while making his return to the pitch for Inter Miami on Sept. 14. 

Messi has played in five games since his injury return, scoring four goals and helping Inter Miami secure the MLS Supporters’ Shield. The regular-season award marked Messi’s 46th title for club and country in his legendary career. 

“Messi is fine. He played several games for his team in recent weeks, after not being in the last call-up, which was what we had agreed because he needed to recover and get more minutes,” Scaloni said. “Leo is training with the squad and is ready to be part of the team to play against Venezuela, who will be a great rival.”

Argentina beat Chile 3-0 Sept. 6, but lost 2-1 to Colombia on Sept. 10 in a rematch of the Copa America final. It was just the fourth loss by Argentina in its last 65 matches, the others coming against Brazil in the Copa America 2019 semifinal, Saudi Arabia in the 2022 World Cup opener and Uruguay in World Cup qualifying last November.

Argentina is in first place with 18 points in the CONMEBOL World Cup qualifying standings among South American teams.

Messi will return to South Florida for Inter Miami’s regular-season finale on Oct. 19. The MLS Cup Playoffs begin Oct. 25. 

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Five of Lionel Messi’s Inter Miami teammates have been named to the MLS 22 Under 22 list, with Paraguayan Olympian Diego Gomez snagging the No. 1 spot.

Gomez rose from No. 20 on last year’s list. Argentine midfielder Federico Redondo (No. 5), USMNT Olympic midfielder Benjamín Cremaschi (No.6), Argentina defender Tomás Avilés (No. 12) and Honduran international David Ruiz (No. 21) also represent first-place Inter Miami, which won the MLS Supporters’ Shield for the best record during the 2024 season.

Gomez breaks a three-year streak of FC Dallas players holding the top spot. And for the second consecutive year, Inter Miami has the most representatives of any club in the league on the list, which was released Wednesday and highlights the best young international and domestic players in MLS.

Gomez was Most Valuable Player and top scorer in the CONMEBOL Pre-Olympic Tournament before captaining Paraguay in the 2024 Paris Olympics, where he scored a goal and had two assists. He also scored a game-winning goal against Brazil in World Cup qualifiers for the Paraguay senior national team this year. He leads all MLS players in Points per Match (2.39), and Inter Miami is unbeaten in 17 of the 18 matches he’s played (13-1-4 record) this season.

“We’re very proud of Diego for the tremendous growth he’s shown since arriving at the club, and happy to see it recognized with this special honor,” Inter Miami sporting director Chris Henderson said. “He’s a game-changing player who makes everybody around him better. His dynamism paired with his effort have been crucial to the team’s success, and we are excited to see everything he will accomplish.”

Added legendary Inter Miami midfielder Sergio Busquets:“He is an important player for us because of everything he contributes.”

Real Salt Lake’s Diego Luna is second on the list, U.S. Olympic Team member Jack McGlynn of Philadelphia Union is third, and Chicago Fire’s Brian Gutiérrez rounds out the Top 4.

The Union’s Quinn Sullivan is No. 8, while his 15-year-old brother Cavan Sullivan debuts on the list at No. 18. Cavan Sullivan became the youngest player in American sports to debut for a major league team at 14 years and 293 days old earlier this year.

The other MLS teams with multiple players on the MLS 22 under 22 list are the Philadelphia Union (3), Chicago Fire FC (2), L.A. Galaxy (2), and New England Revolution (2).

This year’s list is comprised of 16 homegrown signings and six U22 Initiative signings. Ten players previously played in MLS NEXT, while 10 others have played in MLS NEXT Pro.

The players were voted on by an expert panel of coaches, general managers, sporting directors, MLS Season Pass Talent, and select media.

Here’s the full MLS 22 Under 22 listed by player, club and age:

Diego Gómez, Inter Miami CF, 21
Diego Luna, Real Salt Lake, 21
Jack McGlynn, Philadelphia Union, 21
Brian Gutiérrez, Chicago Fire FC, 21
Federico Redondo, Inter Miami CF, 21
Benjamin Cremaschi, Inter Miami CF, 19
Obed Vargas, Seattle Sounders FC, 19 
Quinn Sullivan, Philadelphia Union, 20
Jalen Neal, LA Galaxy, 21 
Esmir Bajraktarević, New England Revolution, 19
Daniel Edelman, New York Red Bulls, 21
Tomás Avilés, Inter Miami CF, 20
Chris Brady, Chicago Fire FC, 20
Nathan Saliba, CF Montréal, 20
Kevin Kelsy, FC Cincinnati, 20
Julián Aude, LA Galaxy, 21
Owen Wolff, Austin FC, 19
Cavan Sullivan, Philadelphia Union, 15
David Martínez, Los Angeles Football Club, 18
Christian McFarlane, New York City FC , 17
David Ruiz, Inter Miami CF, 20
Peyton Miller, New England Revolution, 17

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The NFL placed New England Patriots safety Jabrill Peppers on the commissioner’s exempt list on Wednesday.

Peppers, a team captain, is not permitted to participate in practice or attend games while on the list.

Peppers pleaded not guilty Monday in Quincy District Court after he was arrested on multiple charges that include strangulation and drug possession, per police in Braintree, Mass. Multiple reports indicated the alleged victim is his girlfriend.

‘I just want to be clear — any act of domestic violence is unacceptable for us as a team, whether you’re a player, staff member. We’re wholeheartedly against any type of domestic violence. I know the organization’s position, which I fully support,’ Patriots coach Jerod Mayo said Wednesday.

‘With that being said, I do think that Jabrill has to continue to go through due process. We’ll see how that works out. The league has put him on the exempt list, and that will give us time to gather more information going forward. At this time, he is not in the building and we’ll talk about that at a later time. As a father of three daughters, I definitely understand the seriousness of the allegations and hopefully they’re not true.’

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Peppers did not appear in the Patriots’ 15-10 loss to the Miami Dolphins on Sunday, having already been ruled out due to a shoulder injury.

Peppers, who turned 29 last Friday, had started all four previous games and has 23 tackles, one interception and two passes defended.

In his eighth season, Peppers has 494 career tackles with 28 tackles for loss, 5.5 sacks, seven interceptions (one returned for a touchdown), five forced fumbles and seven fumble recoveries in 97 games (83 starts).

The Cleveland Browns selected Peppers in the first round (25th overall) out of Michigan in the 2017 NFL Draft. He has played for the Browns (2017-18), New York Giants (2019-21) and Patriots.

Peppers signed a three-year, $24 million contract extension with New England on July 26.

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Last weekend was of the utmost importance for every 2-2 team. The difference between 2-3 and 3-2 might only be a game but each record feels massively different. Now, in Week 6, it’s up to those teams that lost to find their footing as we approach midseason.

Week 6 kicks off with a Thursday night showdown between the San Francisco 49ers and Seattle Seahawks. The 49ers are coming off a disheartening defeat to the Arizona Cardinals. Two of the 49ers three losses have come after obtaining big leads. We know Kyle Shanahan has a knack for blowing leads like that, but the 49ers are still Super Bowl hopefuls and need to figure out their issues if they want to compete in the NFC West.

On Sunday, the Jacksonville Jaguars return to London to take on the Chicago Bears. Sunday night will feature Cincinnati Bengals taking on the New York Giants, fresh off a stunning victory over the Seahawks. Then, Monday Night Football will finish the week off with an AFC East showdown between the New York Jets and Buffalo Bills.

Take a look at all the odds and our expert predictions for this week’s matchups.

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PROP TALK: These are the best prop bets for NFL games this week 

NFL Week 6 picks/predictions

Seahawks vs. 49ers
Bears vs. Jaguars
Ravens vs. Commanders
Packers vs. Cardinals
Patriots vs. Texans
Saints vs. Buccaneers
Eagles vs. Browns
Titans vs. Colts
Broncos vs. Chargers
Raiders vs. Steelers
Panthers vs. Falcons
Cowboys vs. Lions
Giants vs. Bengals 
Jets vs. Bills

NFL Week 6 point spreads

San Francisco 49ers (-3.5) at Seattle Seahawks
Jacksonville Jaguars (+2.5) vs. Chicago Bears
Washington Commanders (+6.5) at Baltimore Ravens
Arizona Cardinals (+5) at Green Bay Packers
Houston Texans (-7) at New England Patriots
Tampa Bay Buccaneers (-3.5) at New Orleans Saints
Cleveland Browns (+8.5) at Philadelphia Eagles
Indianapolis Colts (-1) at Tennessee Titans
Los Angeles Chargers (-3) at Denver Broncos
Pittsburgh Steelers (-3) at Las Vegas Raiders
Atlanta Falcons (-6) at Carolina Panthers
Detroit Lions (-3) at Dallas Cowboys
Cincinnati Bengals (-3.5) at New York Giants
Buffalo Bills (-2.5) at New York Jets

NFL Week 6 moneylines

San Francisco 49ers (-190) at Seattle Seahawks (+155)
Jacksonville Jaguars (+120) vs. Chicago Bears (-145)
Washington Commanders (+240) at Baltimore Ravens (-300)
Arizona Cardinals (+190) at Green Bay Packers (-250)
Houston Texans (+240) at New England Patriots (-300)
Tampa Bay Buccaneers (-200) at New Orleans Saints (+165)
Cleveland Browns (+350) at Philadelphia Eagles (-450)
Indianapolis Colts (-115) at Tennessee Titans (-105)
Los Angeles Chargers (-165) at Denver Broncos (+140)
Pittsburgh Steelers (-155) at Las Vegas Raiders (+130)
Atlanta Falcons (-275) at Carolina Panthers (+220)
Detroit Lions (-165) at Dallas Cowboys (+140)
Cincinnati Bengals (-185) at New York Giants (+150)
Buffalo Bills (-145) at New York Jets (+120)

NFL Week 6 over/under

San Francisco 49ers at Seattle Seahawks: 47.5
Jacksonville Jaguars vs. Chicago Bears: 44.5
Washington Commanders at Baltimore Ravens: 52.5
Arizona Cardinals at Green Bay Packers: 49.5
Houston Texans at New England Patriots: 38
Tampa Bay Buccaneers at New Orleans Saints: 41.5
Cleveland Browns at Philadelphia Eagles: 43.5
Indianapolis Colts at Tennessee Titans: 42.5
Los Angeles Chargers at Denver Broncos: 35.5
Pittsburgh Steelers at Las Vegas Raiders: 36.5
Atlanta Falcons at Carolina Panthers: 47.5
Detroit Lions at Dallas Cowboys: 52.5
Cincinnati Bengals at New York Giants: 49
Buffalo Bills at New York Jets: 41

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Aaron Rodgers couldn’t fire himself. And surely, the fading New York Jets quarterback has no stomach to cast aside Nathaniel Hackett, his pal of a coordinator.  

Yet Robert Saleh? Roadkill. 

The Jets sprang an October Surprise on Tuesday by dumping Saleh as the coach, just five games into his fourth season. Sure, Saleh’s 20-36 record is not the ideal measure of defense (pun intended) for his viability as the coach. 

But this reeks of desperation. And one way or another, it traces back to the quarterback the Jets banked on take them back to the NFL’s promised land. 

Of course, the plug on Saleh was pulled, officially, by team owner Woody Johnson, the former U.S. ambassador to the United Kingdom who was undoubtedly embarrassed by the Jets’ most recent outing on Sunday in London, a 23-17 loss to the Minnesota Vikings. 

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As Johnson explained during a media conference call, “I feel we had to go in a different direction. Change will bring new energy and positivity.” 

Johnson maintained that while he talked to Rodgers on Monday night, they didn’t specifically discuss Saleh. He claimed he talked to GM Joe Douglas, too, and that ultimately it was his call. Maybe so.  

I’m guessing, though, that Johnson – who during his 25-year ownership reign had never fired a coach during the season until now – doesn’t make the move if Rodgers isn’t on board with the dramatic change. After all, the Jets have been operating under some serious A-Rod Rules for a while now. That also explains, I suspect, why Hackett, whose unit ranks 27th in the NFL for total yards, still has a job while Saleh was shown the door. 

Hackett, whose tenure as Denver Broncos coach was a short-lived disaster in 2022, got a chance to resurrect his career by reuniting with Rodgers, whom he worked with in Green Bay. And look at what’s happened. The plan has backfired. But with Rodgers having the ear of Johnson, you can bet he wasn’t jumping up and down on the proverbial table in support of Saleh. 

What a mess. Saleh, whose specialty is defense, is leaving behind a championship-caliber defensive unit that ranks second in the NFL. With defensive coordinator Jeff Ulbrich promoted to become interim coach, the talented defense should continue to roll. 

No, defense wasn’t the Jets problem and it won’t be next year, either, if Johnson recruits Bill Belichick to become his next coach. 

Saleh, though, apparently is paying the price for not winning big after he was provided with the, well, privilege of having a Hall of Fame-credentialed quarterback. The Jets gave him Rodgers and his hand-picked coordinator, a new O-line coach, and this year added an elite pass rusher in Haason Reddick – well, theoretically, anyway, as the edge rusher remains a holdout – and they’re still getting the same lousy results. 

So, given the huge investment in Rodgers and, well, the inability for Saleh to win big with him – what, is he supposed to be undefeated right now? – it traces back to the quarterback one way or another. Even with the ugly showing in London, it doesn’t make sense to make this move now. Maybe that awkward body language and the icy glare that Rodgers gave Saleh during the win against the New England Patriots was indeed a signal of a strain between the coach and quarterback. Especially with Johnson talking about “positive energy.” 

In any event, Jets dysfunction strikes again. The offense is a mess, so they keep it status quo. Hardly logical. Rodgers, coming off the torn Achilles tendon that ruined his debut season in 2023, has not resembled the four-time MVP the team bargained for when acquiring him in a trade with the Green Bay Packers. Instead, the 40-year-old has been displaying significant rust. The rhythm that defined his game for so long has been short-circuited. On Sunday, he threw three picks and came up empty on a last-gasp drive. 

It’s not just Rodgers. The Jets are last in the league with 402 rushing yards, averaging a paltry 3.6 per carry. The O-line has neither paved the way to daylight in the trenches nor provided a consistent fortress of pass-blocking protection. 

Stuff needs to be fixed. And I’m guessing it’s not about Rodgers’ cadence. Trading for disgruntled Las Vegas Raiders receiver Davante Adams would help, but they will still need to block and run the ball. 

Why fire Saleh now? Why not let this season play out? At 2-3, the Jets, with their elite defense, at least are positioned to believe they have a legit chance to dethrone the Buffalo Bills as rulers of the AFC East. If they catch fire, they might even emerge as the serious Super Bowl contender that team owner Johnson envisions because, well, defense wins championships – especially if complemented by a stud quarterback. 

In firing Saleh, Johnson has gone way out of character. He certainly has had ample practice. Look at how he’s moved: In 2020, Johnson let Adam Gase finish out a 2-14 season. In 2018, he didn’t get rid of Todd Bowles until after the 4-12 campaign. Same for Rex Ryan in 2014, a 4-12 finish. In 2005, Herm Edwards was also allowed to finish 2-14. 

Yet now, Johnson has flipped to a different track in the decision to relieve Saleh in the middle of the season. 

Maybe the franchise quarterback, backed by Hackett, will ignite the resurgence that the Jets probably thought would have happened by now. Jets fans, who have suffered through one broken promise after another for decades, know better than to hold their breath. There’s a better chance the hopes will be ultimately pinned on a new HC for the NYJ. 

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A blitzkrieg of raucous, roller-coaster playoff baseball is about to reach its zenith: A quadrupleheader featuring a pair of potential closeout games and two more pivotal Division Series Game 3s.

From the moment the Detroit Tigers greet a Comerica Park crowd awaiting its first playoff game in 10 years until the Los Angeles Dodgers and San Diego Padres exit the stage – perhaps for good in the Dodgers’ case – some nine hours of taut, tense postseason play will unfold.

It’s the last day there’ll be so many games to track until 2025, and for the first time, all four Division Series began with 1-1 splits. As this day of reckoning arrives, USA TODAY Sports breaks down what to watch in these pivotal hours:

Guardians-Tigers, 3:08 ET (TBS): Hitting accelerator in Motown

After two games at Cleveland’s Progressive Field, which can feel claustrophobic, the Guardians and Tigers return to the spacious confines of Comerica Park, their ALDS tied 1-1.

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And the Tigers are surely thrilled with the chance to not only play in front of their home fans, but stretch their legs on the base paths.

Detroit led the major leagues with a 49% rate taking extra bases in 2024, and since third base coach Joey Cora led a fiery August meeting that touted the upside of aggressive baserunning, the Tigers have gone first-to-third more than any team in the majors.

And after they took Cleveland’s best punch in Game 1 – the Guardians scored five runs before the Tigers recorded an out – the series has settled down considerably. Cleveland has scored just two runs in 17 innings since that breakout, while Detroit managed just one run-scoring hit – Kerry Carpenter’s stunning three-run homer off peerless Guardians closer Emmanuel Clase in the ninth inning of Game 2.

Now, the series is square, back on Detroit ground and perhaps on their terms. A day off has rested their bullpen and with right-hander Alex Cobb starting for Cleveland, they can throw speedy Parker Meadows back atop the lineup.

Sure, Comerica remains a tough yard to hit a ball in the seats. But don’t take your eye off the Tigers, lest they steal away with another win against the AL’s top seed.

Phillies-Mets, 5:08 ET (FS1): End of the road?

Once again, Mets slugger Pete Alonso is facing his potential Last Home Game At Citi Field, a road first crossed way back on Sept. 22, when New York closed its home schedule with a Sunday night win over the Phillies.

That launched the Mets into a furious flurry of elimination baseball, 10 consecutive road games bridging the regular season and playoffs until finally, Tuesday, the Mets hosted Philly again for Game 3 of their NLDS.

And Alonso made sure this improbable party raged on, his second-inning homer off Aaron Nola ensuring the Mets never trailed in their 7-2, series-turning win.

Yes, today, Alonso, a pending free agent and four-time All-Star, could play his final home game in Flushing. But this time, odds are he won’t.

The Mets hold a 2-1 lead in this NLDS, with two shots to close out the Phillies: In Game 4, behind Jose Quintana, or back in Philly, where they’d have to topple Phillies ace Zack Wheeler again.

But all the pressure, suddenly, is on the other side of the field.

The Phillies have taken terrible at-bats in almost all the 27 innings of this series, save for a late uprising in Game 2. Their hopes rest on Ranger Suarez’s left arm, and while he’s been a clutch playoff performer he did not finish the year in good form.

And it’s more useful to ponder what the Phillies might be frittering away.

Their 95 regular season wins, for naught. An undeniable feeling that, for all the good vibes at Citizens Bank Park, they are backsliding: Pennant winners in 2022, NLCS losers in 2023, NLDS exit in 2024.

Simply, it will be a nauseous evening in both dugouts Wednesday night. Yet for the Mets, it will be anticipatory; for the Phillies, simple dread.

“This whole experience,” Alonso said after Game 3, “has just been incredible.”

Yankees-Royals, 7:08 ET (TBS): Same as it ever was?

After their own 17-day road odyssey, the Royals are finally home. And Salvador Perez is once again saying that 2015 “feels just like yesterday.”

The Royals certainly hope so. Their classy old ballpark will host its first two playoff games since beating the Mets in a five-game World Series conquest in 2015. Perez, the respected and likely future Hall of Fame catcher, is of course the only soul remaining from that roster.

It is quite a hornet’s nest for the Yankees to happen upon.

They are tied 1-1 in this ALDS. They face a daunting matchup in veteran right-hander Seth Lugo, who dominated them at Yankee Stadium exactly a month ago, striking out 10 in seven shutout innings. And while they love their own starter, Clarke Schmidt, he’s made just five starts since returning from a nearly four-month absence due to a strained right lat.

It would help if he gave them some length. Right now, the only element firing properly for the Yankees is their bullpen, which has absorbed 9 ⅓ innings and given up just one run.

That feels unsustainable. And the Royals have managed to score nine runs in two games while their greatest player, shortstop Bobby Witt Jr., goes 0 for 10 with four strikeouts.

He’ll have a far more welcoming crowd greeting him in Game 3. The Yankees would do well to get out of town with their season intact – which will require a win Wednesday or Thursday night.

“Now the boos are going to be for them, not for us like it was in New York,” Perez said Tuesday. “Super excited. I can’t wait for tomorrow.”

Dodgers-Padres, 9:08 ET (FS1): Going for the kill

It’s going to be a hot mess.

There’s really no other way this crazy NLDS can end, and end it probably will in Game 4, with San Diego tapping ace Dylan Cease on three days’ rest to suppress the Dodgers once and for all.

It’s been a crazy fall for the Dodgers, who once engendered huge hopes entering the postseason, only for the strangest calamities – some self-inflicted – to befall them.

Now, they’re going on two consecutive years of staggering into October with uncertain pitching plans and, unsurprisingly, failing in occasionally spectacular fashion. One more loss, and they’ll be eliminated in the NLDS a third consecutive season – twice by the Padres.

Yet unlike last year’s sad sweep at the hands of Arizona, these Dodgers fight back. Sure, they lost a crucial Game 3 at Petco Park 6-5, but given that they trailed 6-1 and pushed every last high-leverage Padres reliever into the fire is not an insignificant victory.

Now, to parlay that win into the momentum provided by the next day’s starting pitcher….

“It’s a bullpen game,” manager Dave Roberts said after Game 3. “I see one of our relievers starting.”

Ah, well.

The Dodgers aren’t just ailing in the arms department. Shortstop Miguel Rojas aggravated an adductor injury and first baseman Freddie Freeman once again couldn’t complete nine innings on a bum ankle, though of course he banged out a base hit before hobbling off.

L.A. got to Cease in Game 1, or more specifically Shohei Ohtani did, wiping out an early deficit with a three-run homer. Padres manager Mike Shildt says Cease will have “some bullets” for Game 4, and said his bullpen will be “ready to rock” despite absorbing four high-stress innings Wednesday.

“It’s good to get two,” says Shildt, “but it doesn’t matter until we get three.”

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Even though the S&P 500 index appears to be relentlessly pursuing new all-time highs, the traditional seasonal weakness in October leads me to be very focused on risk management right about now.

After my latest conversation with fellow StockCharts contributor Joe Rabil, and hearing his thoughts on risk management, I wanted to share some reflections on what risk management could mean for investors as we get into the meat of the 4th quarter.

Watch the S&P 500’s “Line in the Sand”

My general approach to technical analysis is determine the current trend, and then identify what level or signal would convince me that the trend had reversed.  I call this the “line in the sand” technique, because you literally draw a line on the chart, and then don’t give the chart a second thought until and unless that line is violated.

For the S&P 500, that means I’m laser focused on the 5650 level.  The July peak was right around this level, along with the subsequent peaks in mid and late August.  The September breakout above 5650 was a key bullish move for the benchmark, and I would expect a break back below this price point could signal the end of the current bull run.

So until and unless we see the S&P 500 break below 5650, then the current bullish trend appears to be alive and well!

Breadth Indicators Could Provide an Early Warning

Now even if the S&P is still holding key support, plenty of individual names could break down before the benchmarks.  In fact, this happens quite often at major market tops like 2007!  Market breadth indicators are perhaps the best way to analyze and track this potential divergence, where individual stocks start to break down.

Here we can see the S&P 500 for the last 12 months along with the new 52-week highs minus new 52-week lows, the new highs and lows for the entire NYSE, and the new highs and lows for the S&P 500 members.

Note how all three of these data series topped out in mid-September, and have been steadily declining since then?  A healthy bull market phase usually sees an expansion in new 52-week highs, as the leading names are powering to the upside.  But in the last few weeks, we’re seeing a significant breadth divergence that tells me to be skeptical of the current uptrend phase.

Keep Your Position Size Manageable

In my latest podcast episode with fellow StockCharts contributor Joe Rabil, he shared some words of wisdom on how to think about risk management.  I particularly appreciated his thoughts on position sizing, sharing that he usually risks about 1% of his portfolio on each new idea.

Options expert Price Headley once quipped, “If you’re having trouble sleeping at night, your position size is too big!”  By being thoughtful and intentional about how much capital we risk on each new idea, we can minimize the pain in case some of the bearish signs we’re observing actually play out in the days and weeks ahead!

Mindless investors ignore risk management, focusing instead on how much they stand to gain if they’re proven right.  Mindful investors recognize that they will often be wrong, and by managing risk, they can survive to invest another day.

RR#6,

Dave

PS- Ready to upgrade your investment process?  Check out my free behavioral investing course!

David Keller, CMT

President and Chief Strategist

Sierra Alpha Research LLC

Disclaimer: This blog is for educational purposes only and should not be construed as financial advice.  The ideas and strategies should never be used without first assessing your own personal and financial situation, or without consulting a financial professional.  

The author does not have a position in mentioned securities at the time of publication.    Any opinions expressed herein are solely those of the author and do not in any way represent the views or opinions of any other person or entity.

After another weekend of college football unpredictability, Matt Hayes weighs in with his First-and-10 column looking at the key topic across the country ahead of Week 7 action.

1. USC football: The Fall of Troy

What we have here is a bona fide inflection point, a crossroads where all paths lead to one underlying question.

Does Southern California have the right coach with Lincoln Riley?

“That’s the frustrating thing for our team right now,” Riley said last weekend, after he and his tenure at USC ran face first into Big Ten reality. “We’re two plays away from probably being 5-0.”

And a couple more plays from being USC under Clay Helton.

This is how it begins, everyone. The road to unemployment is littered annually with the three undeniable excuses: coulda, woulda and shoulda.

We’re not even two weeks into October, and already the Trojans are staring at make or break this season. Beat No. 5 Penn State Saturday in a game of Who’s The Pretender (more on that later), or the unfolding ugly begins to infect everything.

Think about this: What do Billy Napier (Florida), Sonny Dykes (TCU), Sam Pittman (Arkansas), Hugh Freeze (Auburn) and Riley have in common?

They’ve all lost seven of their last 12 games.

If you’re Lincoln Riley, that’s the last group of coaches you want to run with. For the first time in his meteoric rise as head coach/offensive savant, he doesn’t have the answers.

Michigan and Minnesota physically manhandled USC in the second half of losses, exposing the one variable Riley’s teams at Oklahoma and USC haven’t been able to shake: the finesse tag.

Soft on the lines of scrimmage, fading with the game on the line.

USC trudged off the field last weekend, beaten up and beaten down by a middling Minnesota team that was 1-6 in its previous seven games against ranked teams ― the only win over Iowa last year in a game of which defense can score the most points. We’re not talking Ohio State or Oregon or any other Big Ten heavyweight.

This was Row The Boat with players USC wouldn’t think twice about recruiting.

But there was Riley’s offense, the foundation of his coaching resume, managing all of 17 points against a Gophers defense that gave up 31 points to offensively-challenged Iowa on the same field two weeks earlier.

If your offense is trailing Iowa – the team that last year punted for more yards than it gained – there’s clearly a disconnect somewhere.

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2. The recruiting problem

Late in the fourth quarter against Minnesota, after USC couldn’t protect quarterback Miller Moss and the defense finally wore down and couldn’t stop the Minnesota run game, the glaring problem with Riley at USC was exposed.

He’s not recruiting and developing players on the lines of scrimmage.

We’re three recruiting classes into the Riley era, and only two of the starting offensive linemen are organically recruited and developed. On the defensive line, all four starters are transfers from the portal.

You’re not surviving in the Big Ten with that buildout plan.   

Riley’s three recruiting classes at USC finished 70th (2022), 8th (2023) and 17th (2024) in the 247sports composite rankings, but more damning is the staff’s inability to recruit the talent-rich state of California.

In the last three recruiting classes ranked by 247sports, USC signed three of the top 20 players from California in 2022, four in 2023 and two in 2024 – or nine of the top 60 players (15 percent) from the state over that span. Six are still on the team, and none of the original nine were offensive or defensive linemen.

The state of California had 13 offensive and defensive linemen ranked in the top 20 over that three-year period. USC didn’t sign one.

USC has commitments from two of the top 20 California players for the 2025 class, and there are four offensive or defensive linemen in the top 20. Two are committed to Oregon, one to Texas A&M and one to Alabama.

Want to know how USC loses to Minnesota? There’s your answer.

3. The fall of Troy, The Epilogue

Penn State rolls into the Coliseum Saturday, and there’s nothing left to guess: It’s a manhood game.

Who wants it more?  

Penn State, which since 2021 has won every regular season game against everyone not named Michigan and Ohio State ― or USC, which has cratered since the high-water mark under Riley in 2022.

Since USC played (and lost to) Utah in the 2022 Pac-12 championship fame with a spot in the playoff on the line, the Trojans are 8-8 vs. power conference teams. Riley’s brief tenure is as much about developing another Heisman Trophy winner (Caleb Williams), as it is failing miserably with him a year later.

And now there’s the move to the Big Ten, which could begin with three losses in the first four games and a whole lot of unknown on the horizon. If USC can lose to Minnesota, it can lose to Big Ten mids Rutgers, Washington and Nebraska, too.

Then guess who’s middling?    

This is where we are with Riley at USC. A $100 million-plus marriage of coulda, woulda, shoulda.

4. Ashton Jeanty: chasing Barry Sanders

Somebody has to say it: Ashton Jeanty is 1,598 yards from breaking Barry Sanders’ single-season NCAA rushing yards record.

But look deeper into the numbers, and Jeanty’s season is statistically better than one of the most unreachable records in sports history.

Sanders had 344 carries for 2,628 yards in 11 games (bowl game statistics weren’t counted in 1988), and – here’s the key – averaged 7.6 yards and 31.2 carries per game. Jeanty, heading into Saturday’s game at Hawaii, is averaging 10.8 yards and 19 carries per game.

So while Jeanty will have more games (a minimum of 13, or more if Boise State wins the Mountain West Conference) than Sanders, he hasn’t had as many opportunities. If Jeanty were averaging as many carries as Sanders, he’d have 1,782 yards after five games.

Instead, Jeanty has 1,031, and needs to average 200 yards per game over the next eight games to break the record. Here’s where it gets intriguing: if Jeanty averaged Sanders’ 31.2 carries per game, he’d reach the unreachable in Game 10.

One game quicker than Sanders.

5. The Weekly Five

Five suggestions for new Alabama coach Kalen DeBoer to right the ship.

1. The guy who wears No. 2 and plays like Lynn Swann? Feed him.

2. The guy who once occupied your office? Tell him to back off the bulletin board material.

3. Offensive lineman Kadyn Proctor is a mountain. Run to the perimeter behind him.

4. Figure out the zone-read offense – before South Carolina QB LaNorris Sellers does the same thing this week that Diego Pavia did last week.

5. Ignore this utter nonsense as much as humanly possible.

6. NFL scout’s take on Boston College DE Donovan Ezeiruak

An NFL scout analyzes a draft eligible player. The scout requested anonymity to protect the team’s draft preparation.

“He stayed in school and has really improved his game. More explosive and better awareness. I’d watch him last year and think, he’s right there to make a play – but doesn’t, for whatever reason. He’s getting home now, and he’s a load to block. Much more disruptive this season, and has improved his bend and hands. These are the stories you love to see when guys stay another season, get legitimate NFL coaching from Bill O’Brien’s staff, and get much better.”

7. Power Play: Ohio State’s big test

This week’s College Football Playoff power poll, and one big thing.

1. Texas: Last time we saw QB Quinn Ewers in a big game, he was the best player on the field in a win at Michigan.

2. Ohio State: Defense has given up four touchdowns in five games, and now gets explosive Oregon offense on the road.

3. Miami: QB Cam Ward responded with nine touchdowns (7 pass, 2 rush) when Hurricanes trailed South Florida, Virginia Tech and California.

4. Brigham Young: Cougars should be 8-0 (games against Arizona, Oklahoma State, at Central Florida) when traveling to Utah for the Holy War.

5. Georgia: Good to know coach Kirby Smart has found a new foil: the Georgia fans. Tighten up, folks.

6. Alabama: Suddenly the games at Tennessee (Oct. 19) and at LSU (Nov.9) look more interesting – and threatening.

7. Oregon: If QB Dillon Gabriel starts slow against Ohio State like he did against Michigan State, the Buckeyes rout is on.

8. Penn State: The USC game is why Penn State paid offensive coordinator Andy Kotelnicki $7.1 million over 4 years: find plays to win games that matter.  

9. Tennessee: Vols are a different team at home, and QB Nico Iamaleava will play with more confidence against rival Florida.

10. Ole Miss: Breathe, everyone. One week after the shock of the Kentucky loss, and everything is back on track.

11. Iowa State: Cyclones are 5-0 for the first time since 1980, and have a manageable path to 10-0.

12. Boise State: Through the magic of the transitive property, an Oregon victory over Ohio State strengthens Boise State’s three-point loss to the Ducks.   

13, Clemson: Since the 34-3 loss to Georgia, QB Cade Klubnik has 18 touchdowns (4 rush) and 1 interception.

14. Notre Dame: QB Riley Leonard still needs a higher percentage on easy, drive-sustaining throws.

15. Texas A&M: No team has grown more over the first six weeks of the season.

16. Kansas State: Wildcats have had two weeks to prepare for Colorado QB Shedeur Sanders, and Buffs’ shaky offensive line.

8. Mail Bonding: goodness, those ACC officials

Matt: I’ve just about had enough of ACC officials clearing the road for the favorites just to get the (CFP) playoff money. When are you guys going to call it out? – Vick Fisher, Atlanta.

Vick:

I assume you’re talking about the (take your pick) non-targeting call on Miami against Cal, or the missed illegal man (men, multiple offensive linemen) down field call on Miami’s game-winning touchdown, or the Hail Mary overturn in Miami’s win over Virginia Tech that clearly wasn’t “indisputable” in any way, shape or form, or the overturned SMU fumble that was a fumble on a drive that led to the game-winning points?

Yeah, uh, I don’t know what you’re talking about.

9. Numbers game: Florida State’s suddenly uneasy future

70. It’s just a one-off season at Florida State, right? Just a few (or 8-10, depending on how you look at it) misses in the transfer portal away from the team that won 19 consecutive games from 2022-23.

Now FSU is careening toward a two-win season.

But before you start thinking about firing everybody, understand this: after last year’s flirtation with Alabama and the corresponding contract extension (God bless Jimmy Sexton), coach Mike Norvell is bulletproof with a near $70 million buyout. That, and FSU’s ongoing legal battle with the ACC has pegged the university in a deep financial hole.

Or, FSU can throw that $70 million on top of a potential ACC buyout and see what happens down the road in whatever conference eventually accepts them.

I’ll give you a hint: the Florida State Seminoles, brought to you by Blackstone.

10. The Last Word: Anchor Down, Diego

Look, the idea is to keep it clean, kids.

But anyone who beats big, bad Alabama can say whatever he wants. Especially if it hadn’t been done since 1984.

Matt Hayes is the senior national college football writer for USA TODAY Sports Network. Follow him on X @MattHayesCFB.

(This article was updated with new information.)

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

SAN DIEGO — The Los Angeles Dodgers and San Diego Padres didn’t swear at each other or accuse each other of immoral behavior, and the fans stayed cool.

When it was all over Tuesday night – what began as a laugher, turned into a thriller, and then a nail-biter – the Padres as the last team standing.

The Padres knocked off their neighbors to the north, 6-5, moving to within one game of reaching the National League Championship Series.

The Padres, relying on perhaps the best bullpen in the land, shut down the Dodgers for the final six innings, taking a 2-1 lead in the National League Division Series.

The Padres’ bullpen was the hero, with four relievers allowing up just one baserunner in the final four innings. The sellout crowd of 47,774 at Petco Park went bonkers when Robert Suarez struck out Gavin Lux, ending the game.

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“This is what we have built,” Padres left fielder Jurickson Profar said. “This is who we are.”

The Padres looked as if they could run away with the game, exploding for six runs in the second inning, climaxed byFernando Tatis’s two-run homer into left.

Tatis stood and watched the ball land 396 feet away, flipped his bat high into the air, and slowly circled the bases while the sellout crowd roared to Del Mar, dancing up and down the aisles.

“I think that’s definitely part of their game,’ Dodgers third baseman Max Muncy said ahead of Game 3. “They play off the emotion. The atmosphere here plays off their emotion. We’ve seen that for the last several years, even in regular season games. …

“That is kind of part of their game is trying to get under your skin and trying to have the emotion come out and get you to do something that you’re not normally doing. For example, if you’re a pitcher and you see a guy doing that, all of a sudden you want to throw harder, and now you’re missing balls right over the plate. And that’s when their guys are doing the damage.

“It’s easier said than done, obviously, but you can’t let that happen.’

After that inning, the Dodgers didn’t.

Buehler, who allowed seven runners to reach base in the second, settled down, allowed just three baserunners the next three innings, and watched his team come storming back in the third inning.

The Dodgers led off the inning with three consecutive singles by Miguel Rojas, Shohei Ohtani and Mookie Betts, and after Freddie Freeman lined out, Teoscar Hernandez temporarily silenced the boisterous crowd.

He hit a grand slam that barely cleared the center-field fence, and just like that, a potential Padres rout became a nail-biter, with a 6-1 lead melting down to 6-5.

It became a battle of the bullpens, with Buehler and Padres starter Michael King each pulled after surviving five innings.

Certainly, the game didn’t lack entertainment.

Mookie Betts, who has been in a postseason slump for the past three years, was convinced his luck was so bad that he believed Profar robbed him of another homer when he sent Michael King’s pitch over the left-field wall in his first at-bat.

Who can blame him after what happened in Game 2?

This time, he actually headed back to the Dodgers dugout and was halfway across the infield when he realized that Profar did NOT catch it this time.

Betts, who was hitting .068 (3-for-44) in his last 12 postseason games dating back to Game 4 of the 2021 NL Championship Series, later singled in the Dodgers’ four-run outburst in the third inning, hoping it would also change the Dodgers’ fate.

The Padres, after watching the Dodgers’ crowd interrupt Sunday’s game for 10 minutes throwing objects onto the field, sent out a memo to their ticket holders in the afternoon, imploring them to keep the peace.

Padres manager Mike Shildt issued the same verbal warning to the Dodgers and particularly manager Dave Roberts, telling him to basically keep Manny Machado’s name out of his mouth.

The Padres were livid when Roberts accused Machado of throwing a baseball directed towards him in between innings in Game 2, saying it was “unsettling,’ while also saying the Padres embrace the “villain-type’ role.

“I come from maybe just a different philosophy of dealing with this,” Shildt said. “Listen, I got into this game to help players get the most out of their God-given ability and to compete on the field and respect the opponent. I’m not, nor will I ever, disparage another player on another team, especially anybody I’ve managed in the past, nor will I do it to a collective team.

“That’s not how I want to operate. I have a lot of respect for their club, the players on their club.”

The Dodgers sent the video to MLB to see if discipline should be warranted, but MLB officials didn’t see anything worth discipline.

“Zero chance,’ Shildt said, when asked if Machado threw the ball deliberately towards Roberts of anyone else in the dugout.

Really, Shildt said, it was time to play baseball and forget all of the other shenanigans.

“I don’t think it’s good for the game,” he said. “I think this game stands on its own merits. … You look at the passionate fan bases that love the teams. That’s what we’re here for. That’s what this game’s about.

“This game, just like the players, doesn’t need any defense, doesn’t need anything to heighten it, to bring any attention to it. It’s a beautiful game that’s very well run from our leadership. And the theater of this sport is plenty enough.”

Certainly, it proved just that once again Tuesday evening as the Padres answered the crowd’s pleas:

Beat LA.

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Here’s how Tuesday’s game unfolded

FINAL: Padres 6, Dodgers 5

Robert Suarez recored a four-out save to end San Diego’s 6-5 victory at Petco Park, with the Padres now just one win away from eliminating the rival Dodgers and reaching the NLCS.

Padres will take lead into ninth inning

Padres lefty Tanner Scott came in to start the eighth and struck out Shohei Ohtani looking before getting Mookie Betts to fly out to center. Freddie Freeman singled in a lefty-on-lefty matchup, leading Padres manager Mike Shildt to pull Scott in favor of Robert Suarez to face Dodgers slugger Teoscar Hernandez. Suarez got Hernandez to pop out in the infield to end the frame.

Seventh-inning stretch: Padres 6, Dodgers 5

Padres started Michael King was removed after five innings, with Jeremiah Estrada and Jason Adam combining to get six consecutive outs and bring San Diego’s 6-5 lead into the bottom of the seventh.

Through five: Padres 6, Dodgers 5

Both starters settled in, with Walker Buehler throwing up three consecutive zeros after the Padres’ six-run second inning. Michael King has retired eight in a row after Teoscar Hernandez’s grand slam in the top of the third inning that cut San Diego’s lead to 6-5.

Dodgers strike back with Teoscar Hernández grand slam

Wow. After a trainwreck of a second inning put the Dodgers in a 6-1 hole, Los Angeles came right back with Teoscar Hernández’s grand slam to dead center field off Padres starter Michael King, making it a 6-5 ballgame.

Expect the pendulum to swing a few more times in this game.

Fernando Tatis Jr. home run gives Padres 6-1 lead

Who else? Fernando Tatis Jr. clobbered a two-run homer to left field in the bottom of the second, capping off a nightmare inning for the Dodgers and starter Walker Buehler.

It’s Tatis Jr.’s fourth homer in five games this postseason.

Padres capitalize on LA mistakes to take 4-1 lead

Walker Buehler’s second inning turned into a disaster after a leadoff single, with two fielder’s choices and a Freddie Freeman error allowing the Padres to tie the game. WIth runners on first and third, David Peralta laced a two-RBI double past Freeman down the right field line to make it 3-1. 

Another single moved Peralta to third, setting up Kyle Higashioka’s sacrifice fly to bring home the Padres’ fourth run, mercifully the first out of the inning.

Mookie Betts home run puts Dodgers up in first

Mookie Betts got the party started in Game 3 with a solo home run off Padres starter Michael King in the top of the first inning – just beyond the glove of Padres left fielder Jurickson Profar.

Betts had been mired in a postseason slump, batting .068 (3 for 44) in his past 12 playoff games dating back to the 2021 NLCS.

It was almost a carbon copy of a much-discussed play from Game 2, but Profar leaped into the stands to rob Betts of a home run and took the time to celebrate in front of fans.

What time is Dodgers vs. Padres?

First pitch at Petco Park is scheduled for 9:08 p.m. ET on Tuesday.

Dodgers vs Padres TV channel

TV: Fox Sports 1
Stream: Watch this game on Fubo (Regional restrictions may apply)

Dodgers lineup for Game 3

Shohei Ohtani (L) DH
Mookie Betts (R) RF
Freddie Freeman (L) 1B
Teoscar Hernández (R) LF
Max Muncy (L) 3B
Will Smith (R) C
Gavin Lux (L) 2B
Tommy Edman (S) CF
Miguel Rojas (R) SS

Padres lineup

Luis Arraez (L) 1B
Fernando Tatis Jr. (R) RF
Jurickson Profar (S) LF
Manny Machado (R) 3B
Jackson Merrill (L) CF
Xander Bogaerts (R) SS
David Peralta (L) DH
Jake Cronenworth (L) 2B
Kyle Higashioka (R) C

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