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Rather than walking down the aisle as part of his sister’s wedding, Kansas City Chiefs running back Carson Steele darted through running lanes in the first start of his NFL career.

With Steele’s sister Kesslar scheduled to be married Sunday, the long-haired rookie had an acceptable excuse to miss the special occasion. Because running back Isiah Pacheco underwent leg surgery last week and Clyde Edwards-Elaire is on the non-football injury list, Steele started against the Atlanta Falcons in the prime time matchup, a 22-17 Chiefs victory. He rushed for 72 yards on 17 attempts and received an unprompted shoutout from head coach Andy Reid after the game, according to the Kansas City Star.

‘I hate to say it, but I’d be here every day of the week,’ he said during a postgame interview on NBC.

The Star also reported that Steele watched video of the ceremony in the locker room.

During the game, NBC reporter Melissa Stark explained that Kesslar had sent the ‘save-the-date’ invitations more than a year in advance and that her chosen venue had only Sunday, Sept. 22 available. Steele was supposed to be a groomsman alongside Kesslar’s new husband, Jack.

All things Chiefs: Latest Kansas City Chiefs news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

At the time, Steele was about to begin his final season in college, his first with the UCLA Bruins following a productive two seasons with Ball State, where he averaged 5.4 yards per carry in 2022 (1,556 yards rushing) and scored 14 rushing touchdowns. The next year at UCLA, he started nine of 12 games and had 847 rushing yards.

The Chiefs signed Steele as an undrafted free agent and he made the team out of training camp and appeared in the first two games of the season. He fumbled in Week 2 against the Cincinnati Bengals, but Reid stuck with him and made him the primary back against Atlanta.

Video of the wedding guests cheering on Steele as he ran for a first down played while Stark said ‘he’s there in spirit.’

‘Love you Kesslar,’ Steele said on NBC, ‘but I’m taking this every day of the week.’

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A very impressive road win against Oklahoma moves Tennessee ahead of Alabama and into the top four of this week’s USA TODAY Sports NCAA Re-Rank 1-134.

The No. 4 Volunteers have looked like the most balanced team in the country through four games. The offense ranks fourth nationally in yards per game and second in scoring, while the defense leads the Bowl Subdivision in yards allowed per game.

Combined with the win in the Sooners’ SEC debut, there’s enough evidence to say Tennessee deserves to step ahead of Alabama and into the re-rank’s elite top four.

That might change in a week: No. 5 Alabama meets No. 1 Georgia this coming Saturday in maybe the marquee game of the regular season. Both teams did not play this past weekend, but the Bulldogs were able to stay atop the 1-134 despite two more blowout wins by No. 2 Texas and No. 3 Ohio State.

HIGHS AND LOWS: Winners and losers from Week 4 in college football

MISERY INDEX: North Carolina lead way after loss to James Madison

Also on the move are No. 18 Michigan and No. 21 Southern California. The Wolverines are up 11 spots after scoring a late touchdown to beat the Trojans 27-24. USC played much better in the second half, which has to be seen as a positive takeaway. But the loss dumps the Trojans nine spots.

One new face in this week’s top 25 is No. 25 Brigham Young. Down 6-0 late in the first half against Kansas State, the Cougars put up 31 points in about seven minutes of game time bridging the second and third quarters. The loss drops the Wildcats from No. 9 to No. 20.

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If there has been one theme thus far in the 2024 NFL season, it has been the palpable presence of unpredictable upsets.

Week 3 was no exception. On the first day of fall, a pair of teams not many expect to compete in their divisions, the Denver Broncos and New York Giants, secured their first victories. Another squad that earned its first win of the season, the Baltimore Ravens, did so against a Dallas Cowboys team that has now lost its last three consecutive home games – going back to the playoffs – and appears to have serious flaws in its offensive and defensive run games.

Here are the winners and losers from Sunday’s Week 3 action:

WINNERS

Chiefs find a way, again

They were certainly aided by a clear defensive pass interference no-call and an abysmally slow-developing running play the Falcons called on the decisive fourth down, but Kansas City survived for a 22-17 win. The Chiefs are one of only four teams in the NFL at 3-0 – the Buffalo Bills have the chance to join them Monday night – and Kansas City isn’t showing any signs of slowing down.

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

Patrick Mahomes has built an instant rapport with receiver Rashee Rice (12 receptions on 14 targets for 110 yards and one touchdown). Steve Spagnuolo’s defense continues to generate pressure and make plays deep in the clutch. And Kansas City still has the best coaching staff in the NFL. The rest of the league may not want to hear it, but it looks to be business as usual for the Chiefs, seeking to become the first team to ever win three consecutive Super Bowls.

Brian Flores is on an absolutely dominant run

Right after the Vikings defense dominated San Francisco last week, hot mics caught 49ers quarterback Brock Purdy telling Minnesota defensive coordinator Brian Flores: “Your scheme is crazy.” The Houston Texans just found that out, too, in Sunday’s 34-7 blowout.

Minnesota’s defense brings pressure from all over the field – and Flores does a tremendous job of disguising where it’s coming from using defenders in a two-point stance – disrupting the timing and rhythm of the quarterback’s processing. That barrage of pressure also gets in the quarterback’s head. Minnesota sacked C.J. Stroud four times and limited Houston to 4-of-14 (29%) on third-down conversions. The Vikings (3-0) are building their case for best defense in the NFL.

The case for Justin Fields as QB1

Justin Fields, frankly, likely won’t have the explosive passing numbers most coaches want from their quarterback. Through three games, however, he has shown more than enough to stay on as the Pittsburgh Steelers’ starter, even when Russell Wilson is healthy enough to play.

Fields has been fairly efficient in three games, completing 73.3% of his throws for 518 yards. He has only thrown a couple of touchdowns against one interception, one that was tipped Sunday against the Los Angeles Chargers, though he also added a rushing score in the 20-10 win. Those numbers are modest at best. But he is protecting the ball and generating enough offense while managing the game. Pittsburgh’s identity is its defense. It can win games behind that unit. Fields, for now, is the passer who best puts the Steelers (3-0) in position to win.

A pair of defenses spring unlikely upsets

The New York Giants (playing the Browns on the road) and Denver Broncos (playing the Buccaneers on the road) each came into Sunday as touchdown underdogs. Each won behind their respective, oppressive defenses.

Denver generated seven sacks and New York dropped Deshaun Watson eight times. Both defenses combined to hold their opponents to 7-of-25 (28%) on third-down conversions. Each forced two turnovers. Realistically, it’s difficult to project the Broncos and Giants as contenders this season; Denver (1-2) may sustain some growing pains with rookie Bo Nix at quarterback, and New York’s roster has holes at receiver, tight end and on the offensive line. But if both teams can develop their young players – the Giants (1-2) still have a key question to answer at quarterback with Daniel Jones – these defenses showed they can be foundational units that establish the respective identities of their franchises.

LOSERS

Sloppy Texans may not be ready for elite status

Houston is a young team with plenty of dynamic weapons and plenty of promise. The Texans, after getting utterly dominated against the Vikings, may also have some growing up to do.

Houston (2-1) played undisciplined and unfocused football. The Texans had 11 enforced penalties for 88 yards. Midway through the second quarter, Houston faced a third-and-4 in Minnesota territory, already facing a 14-point hole. The Texans proceeded to commit three consecutive false starts, followed by an illegal formation – which was declined – leading to a punt. This was the second consecutive game Houston had with 10 or more penalties. The Texans’ body language was passive and they lacked urgency – simply put, they looked like a team that was not ready.

The Cowboys simply cannot stop the run

It feels like the book is already out on the Cowboys: through three weeks, what speed and athleticism they have along the edge can be neutralized by what they lack in physicality. Said another way: getting to the quarterback won’t matter if opposing teams run straight at them. And that’s a problem for coach Mike McCarthy and the Cowboys (1-2).

In a 28-25 win, the Ravens rolled up 274 rushing yards (and three rushing scores) on Dallas one week after the Saints shredded the Cowboys for 190 rushing yards. Dallas now ranks dead last in the NFL in rushing defense (185.7 yards per game allowed) and rushing touchdowns allowed (eight). The Cowboys are also tied for dead last in rushing yards allowed per carry (5.4). The problem extends on offense, too, where Dallas’ own rushing attack lacks pop and explosion.

Miami’s roster construction

The Dolphins knew their window to win was now. They also knew starting quarterback Tua Tagovailoa was injury-prone. Presumably, they understood that keeping him upright would be paramount. Yet general manager Chris Grier failed to effectively upgrade the offensive line – a known weakness. Presumably, Grier and the Dolphins also understood that Tagovailoa would perhaps miss time, given his injury history.

Still, the team proceeded to trot out Skylar Thompson, a 2022 seventh-round draft pick, as its backup. This came even as Miami saw the Green Bay Packers trade for Malik Willis (who now has two wins as a fill-in starter) and the Steelers acquire Fields (who has three wins), both at a bargain. In a 24-3 loss to the Seattle Seahawks, Thompson faced relentless pressure (behind that leaky O-line) and eventually sustained a chest injury. Now, Miami is 1-2 and facing at least three more games without Tagovailoa, who is on injured reserve. In a competitive AFC East, the season may already be slipping away.

Are the 49ers in trouble?

This was a total breakdown of a normally reliable offensive line, secondary, special teams, a lack of overall concentration and execution, and – suddenly – the 49ers are 1-2 and in last place in the NFC West. Granted, it’s incredibly early and this is a banged-up team with a recent track record of success.

But San Francisco was playing a Rams team that was facing comparable injury issues. In the final three minutes of the game, the 49ers missed a field goal, allowed a 50-yard bomb that set up a touchdown, had a key dropped pass that would’ve set up a potential game-winning field goal and allowed a 38-yard punt return inside the final minute that helped set up the game-winning field goal. The Niners are now under .500 for the first time since Purdy took over at quarterback.

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During a recent event celebrating Foot Locker’s 50th anniversary in New York City, it was hard to imagine that the legacy sneaker chain was appearing on bankruptcy watch lists as recently as March.

Grammy-nominated rapper Coi Leray was there to celebrate the company with a special performance of her hit song “Players” as influencers, journalists and handpicked members of the company’s revamped loyalty program sipped on lavender margaritas and champagne cocktails.

Employees — and not just those in the glare of the company’s PR team — gushed about CEO Mary Dillon as Adidas staffers celebrated the company’s new store design, which showcases individual brands instead of mixing them on nondescript shoe walls. 

Foot Locker turns 50 while on a bit of an upswing two years into Dillon’s tenure as CEO. Last month, it released fiscal second-quarter results and full-year guidance that beat expectations, as comparable sales grew for the first time in six quarters.

As Foot Locker revamps its sprawling store footprint, and perhaps benefits from some good timing, it’s making strides in winning back its critical brand partners like Nike and Adidas, the latter of which co-hosted the Monday night party and helped secure Leray’s performance. 

“Our last quarter was a really good indication that the hard work that we’ve been putting into the Lace Up plan is working, and that makes me feel really, really great, because I really see the next 50 years of growth for Foot Locker and our future,” Dillon told CNBC in an interview, referencing the company’s turnaround plan. “I really think that there’s layers of category growth that we can drive by just making sneakers that much more inclusive, that much more fun, that much more easy to access.”

But as Foot Locker stares down the next 50 years, the company is still at a crossroads and must answer some fundamental questions: can it once again be the market leader in sneakers, and can it not just survive, but thrive, as brands rely less and less on wholesalers?

“With the combination of more direct to consumer from the brands, the deepening of specialists like [Dick’s Sporting Goods], the incursion of JD Sports, Foot Locker still looks risky,” said Neil Saunders, a retail analyst and managing director of GlobalData. “In some ways, they’re just a sort of distributor of everyone else’s products.”

Dick’s has a big private-label business and sells other categories like sporting goods, while JD Sports has strong loyalty programs and a robust fashion business, he said.

“Whereas Foot Locker looks vulnerable because it just doesn’t have all these other strings to its bows,” said Saunders. “The truth is that although they’re getting better, there is still this question: Do we need this specialist sneaker retailer?” 

Foot Locker can be traced back to the legendary retailer Frank Winfield Woolworth, whose namesake company branched into footwear in the 1960s and later opened the first Foot Locker in City of Industry, California, in September 1974. 

From the beginning, Foot Locker was a mall retailer. Over the next two decades, it opened thousands of stores in malls across the U.S. and abroad. 

By the turn of the century, it was the world’s largest retailer of athletic footwear and apparel, with a 20% market share in the U.S., according to a 2002 Forbes report. It was the primary place to buy Nike sneakers and was responsible for 26% to 28% of Nike’s total domestic revenue. Nike accounted for more than half of Foot Locker’s total sales at the time.

“It was a simpler retail world. I think in the years that they were initially really experiencing strong growth, it was as simple as being in the mall, having a large mall footprint and having the right brands and they had that footprint,” said Janine Stichter, a retail analyst and managing director at BTIG, who has been covering the retail industry since 2008. “They were the No. 1 partner of Nike. Nike, at the time, was strong and growing, and I think they were really viewed as like the destination in an environment that was a lot less competitive.” 

When Foot Locker’s chief commercial officer, Frank Bracken, joined the company in 2010, the retailer’s relationship with Nike was poised to get even stronger. By the end of the decade, 75% of the products Foot Locker sold were from Nike.

“This was [pre-direct-to-consumer], Foot Locker was definitely ‘most favored nations’ with most of our brand partners at that time, Nike was about to go on a pretty epic run alongside Jordan, and so I actually joined at a really good time,” Bracken said in an interview.

Bracken recalled how from 2012 to about 2018, Foot Locker’s stock rose to record highs as revenue grew at a mid-to-high single-digit compound annual growth rate. But as the 2020s neared, the company got “complacent” and began taking its position as the market leader in sneakers “for granted,” said Bracken. 

″[We] got some weak signals about where the industry was headed, from our partners and from competition, and then Covid, you know, paralyzed everybody momentarily and I think we lost some time, candidly, during Covid,” he said. “Competition used it as an opportunity to invest in technology and capability and the business, and maybe we probably stood a little bit too still at that point in time.” 

As consumers moved online and away from malls, Foot Locker did too little to update its e-commerce capabilities and its real estate footprint, said Bracken. At the same time, competitors were getting bigger and savvier, adjusting their real estate strategies as malls across America sputtered and died. 

In North America, the company let its banners — Foot Locker, Footaction and Champs Sports — overlap too heavily with each other in terms of assortment, location and marketing, and brands “started to take note of that,” said Bracken.

At the end of 2021, Foot Locker was winding down its Footaction business and had acquired WSS — an off-mall athletic apparel retailer that caters to the Hispanic community — to help differentiate itself from competitors.

But by then, it was too late.

Nike, carrying out a new strategy to cut off wholesalers and sell directly to consumers through its own websites and stores, had started reducing the number of sneakers it was selling to Foot Locker, the company said on an earnings call in February 2022. It chose instead to reserve its best products for Foot Locker’s primary competitors: Dick’s and JD Sports. 

For a company that relied almost exclusively on Nike, the change was devastating and posed an existential threat. By the end of fiscal 2022, comparable sales had fallen 7.2% in North America. The declines would only mount in the quarters to come. 

When Dillon, the former CEO of Ulta Beauty, took the helm of Foot Locker in September 2022, Wall Street breathed a collective sigh of relief. Highly regarded among peers, Dillon was known for her ability to win over brands, and appeared to have the necessary chops to turn Foot Locker around. 

“In a way, she soothed investors … they know that she can deliver and they know that she understands retail and the sector and she’s got good operation control and all the rest of it,” said Saunders from GlobalData. “That’s obviously starting to come through a little bit more now.”

In her first major public event as CEO, Dillon hosted an investor day last March where she touted a revitalized relationship with Nike. She pledged the “fruits of our renewed commitment to one another” would begin to show up in results by the end of the year. 

She outlined her Lace Up turnaround strategy, which focused on four key pillars: better marketing, a new real estate plan, a revamped loyalty program and an emphasis on online sales. 

But as the year wore on, the macroeconomic picture worsened, which hit Foot Locker hard because about half of its customers are considered low income. The company went on to cut its guidance twice, suspend its dividend and delay a key financial target that it outlined at its investor day. 

“As a CEO, it’s hard to go out and make a commitment and have to change it, but because I believe so much in the plan and where we’re heading, I felt confident that it was the right thing to do,” said Dillon. “Now I believe we’ve kind of worked past that.”

Beyond the macro situation, the company likely underestimated the challenges it was facing, and how much the Nike breakup would hurt its business, Saunders and Stichter said. 

“You don’t really know until you do it how impactful that’s going to be and I think that they thought they’d be able to offset more of that loss more quickly,” said Stichter. 

While Foot Locker’s fiscal 2023 turned out worse than it originally anticipated, the company is seeing some of its turnaround efforts start to take hold. While Nike is still its biggest partner, it’s focusing more on other brands, such as upstarts like Hoka and On and legacy incumbents like Birkenstock and Ugg.  

Online sales are growing. Foot Locker plans to relaunch its mobile app at the end of the year, and it recently unveiled its revamped loyalty program FLX, which allows customers to earn discounts, access to product launches and perks like free returns. 

“We know that we only capture a fraction of this annual sneaker spend that our existing customers spend on sneakers,” said Kim Waldmann, Foot Locker’s chief customer officer. ”[FLX] isn’t necessarily about getting you to buy 10 more sneakers per year, it’s an opportunity for us to drive share of wallet consolidation by the fact that you’re getting value back in shopping with us.” 

When Waldmann started in the role last year, she learned from consumer research that customers loved having access to a wide variety of brands at Foot Locker’s stores and enjoyed the product knowledge that its employees, known as “Stripers,” had. 

“The thing that they wanted to see more from us is like we’re just not top of mind. A lot of consumers just hadn’t seen us in a while,” said Waldmann. “And I think that was really the opportunity to take what is an iconic brand and make it influential and top of mind again, and that’s really the work that we’ve been doing.” 

The company is marketing more toward women and has partnered with stars such as Leray, who was part of Foot Locker’s spring style and trend campaign. 

Perhaps most critically, Foot Locker is finally doing the work necessary to overhaul its aging store fleet, which is responsible for about 80% of its sales. Since Dillon took over, she’s closed around 500 stores, opened about 200 new shops and remodeled or relocated another 200 or so doors. Earlier this year, Foot Locker unveiled its “reimagined” store concept and its plans to move away from its traditional format, which tends to be two walls of shoes with a middle section used for trying on sneakers. 

As more and more brands move away from wholesalers in favor of their own stores and website, the strategy change was critical to Foot Locker’s survival. Its business does not work if it doesn’t have the support of its brand partners, which want to ensure that their assortments are showcased individually — not mixed together with competitors. 

“When you talk to a company like On they’re like, yeah, we’re selective about who we sell to, we don’t want to be just another shoe on the wall,” said Stichter. “They’re really investing behind putting more signage and just investing in the displays … that’s what makes the brands want to work with them.” 

Since May, Foot Locker has brought the new design concept to at least 80 of its stores, which it says have better comparable sales and margins compared with the balance of the chain. The company is working to refresh two-thirds of its global Foot Locker and Kids Foot Locker doors by the end of 2025, and said 40% of its North American footprint is now off-mall. 

The new store approach couldn’t come at a better time for Foot Locker. Over the last year, Nike has begun to walk back its direct selling strategy after acknowledging that it went too far in cutting out wholesalers. 

“Nike is our largest partner and they’re the largest in the industry so for us, it’s also about, how do we make sure that we have a really terrific long-term growth relationship with Nike? And I’m proud about the fact that we’re going back to growth [with Nike] starting in the fourth quarter of this year,” said Dillon. “Also … at the same time, Nike has been very public about the role of retailers and the importance of that for them as well so maybe it was good timing, right?” 

As Foot Locker looks ahead to the next 50 years, its ability to survive is still up for debate. Nike is at a low point and is cozying back up to the wholesale partners, but when it rebounds, will it cut off those retailers once again? 

Absent a robust private-label business, Foot Locker’s success is also highly dependent on the performance of its brand partners, which leaves it with less control over its own destiny than other retailers that have recently made big comebacks, such as Abercrombie & Fitch. 

If Nike has a major product launch, it can be a boon for Foot Locker’s sales, but if innovation dries up, Foot Locker will suffer. It has found itself in a similar quandary facing other multi-brand retailers, such as Macy’s, which has also struggled to find itself in a post-mall world. 

When asked if Foot Locker can survive another 50 years, GlobalData’s Saunders said the company is the “most at risk of extinction” of its peers. Stichter disagreed. 

“One thing we’ve learned is that consumers really do want a multi-brand experience. There are people who go to Nike.com or Adidas.com but people really like having that selection, having the service,” said Stichter. “So there is a reason for a concept like Foot Locker to exist. I think it all just depends on, can they execute well and be one of the preferred places for consumers who are looking for choice.”

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Now that more than a quarter of the college football regular season is in the books, we have a few useful data points to help us evaluate what we’ve witnessed thus far. The picture is far from complete, of course, with quite a few teams yet to embark on the conference portion of their schedules. In short, there’s still plenty of room to overreact.

Our top five overreactions from Week 4 include a reassessment of the playoff viability of a couple of one-loss squads, a little premature crowning of some conference champs, and a peek at the crowded race to represent the group-of-five leagues. Maybe this edition just means less, but since the SEC practically monopolized this space last time out we’ll spotlight other conferences here.

Michigan will repeat as national champion

The dream is more alive than it was a week ago at this time thanks to the Wolverines’ win against Southern California, and the Week 2 loss to Texas is hardly disqualifying on its own. But Michigan’s path to the playoff, either as Big Ten champion or as an at-large invitee, remains murky at best.

The Wolverines were able to break off some big runs against the Trojans, but their offense is almost exclusively one-dimensional. The formula of taking few chances and controlling the line of scrimmage will work against some opponents, but there are some high-scoring clubs still on Michigan’s schedule. The Wolverines are in the mix, but we’ll need to see more before we move them back into the likely column to make the field of 12.

Notre Dame is still an at-large candidate

The Fighting Irish took care of their own business over the weekend, avoiding a second loss to a visitor from the Mid-American Conference. But a number of other results did not work in Notre Dame’s favor.

The notable measure of collateral damage came courtesy of the team that toppled the Irish two weeks ago, as Northern Illinois dropped its MAC opener to Buffalo. Furthermore, Notre Dame’s dominant bounce-back win at Purdue doesn’t appear as though it will count for much, as the Boilermakers were throttled by Oregon State. The aforementioned loss by USC, a Notre Dame future opponent, also didn’t help. At least Texas A&M was able to outlast Bowling Green, but it remains to be seen how well Notre Dame’s win against the Aggies in Week 1 will hold up. At least the next outing for the Irish against Louisville presents another opportunity against a ranked opponent, but a lot of factors that would help the Irish get back into the at-large pool are out of their control. We’ll talk more about Louisville in our next item.

HIGHS AND LOWS: Winners and losers from Week 4 in college football

MISERY INDEX: North Carolina lead way after loss to James Madison

The Clemson-Miami ACC title game is inevitable

The Tigers have found their groove after being shut down by Georgia in Week 1, and the Hurricanes are blowing through everyone in their path. They would appear to be on a collision course given the struggles of most other expected contenders in the ACC. The Tigers and Miami will not meet in the regular season, and the Tigers’ remaining league schedule in particular would seem to have few impediments.

There is, however, one other conference member that could still have something to say about the race. No, not Florida State. The Seminoles do play both the ‘Canes and the Tigers but have shown no indication of being able to challenge either.

As you’ve undoubtedly surmised, we’re talking about Louisville. The Cardinals, remember, played for the ACC title last season. They will host Miami on Oct. 19 and visit Death Valley two weeks later, likely needing at least a split of those to make a return trip to the title game. We think the Clemson-Miami showdown is the most likely championship game scenario, but nothing in this sport is etched in stone.

Just send the Big 12 trophy to Utah

With the win at Oklahoma State in the bank and the Sunflower State contenders fading, the Utes are clearly in the driver’s seat in their new conference at this early juncture. The remainder of their schedule looks quite manageable with only a couple of potential obstacles.

Most fans in the Beehive State probably have Nov. 9 circled on the calendar already, when the Utes will renew acquaintances with old rival Brigham Young. The Cougars, off to a 4-0 start themselves coming off a surprisingly one-sided victory against Kansas State, have just added another level of intrigue to the coming reunion. Utah will then have to tangle with a resurgent Iowa State a couple weeks later. Other X-factors could emerge, but Utah is the clear favorite. How the Utes handle wearing the big target will be a major storyline to follow the rest of the way.

James Madison will make the College Football Playoff

The Dukes’ 70-point outburst at North Carolina certainly got the college football world’s attention. Could JMU’s rapid rise from FCS power to instant Sun Belt contender result in a shot at the title this quickly? It’s not out of the question, but there are a slew of other teams in that mix.

Remember, only the highest ranked conference champion from among the Group of Five leagues will earn a spot in the current playoff format. Should the Dukes win the Sun Belt, and that’s still a big if with a number of good teams in that league, they’d need to finish ahead of the champs from the other four non-power conferences. The losses by Northern Illinois and Memphis over the weekend didn’t hurt, but there are still plenty of candidates from the American Athletic and the Mountain West in the equation. Bottom line, there’s a lot to watch with conference play about to begin in earnest across the country. Enjoy.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

This story has been updated with new information.

The 32 things we learned from Week 3 of the 2024 NFL season:

QB1: Been beating this drum for a month, but any more Russell Wilson truthers remaining after Justin Fields was in the driver’s seat – if not “pole position” – as the Pittsburgh Steelers improved to 3-0 for the fourth time under HC Mike Tomlin? The Steelers made the playoffs following Tomlin’s other 3-0 starts, including a berth in Super Bowl 45 to cap the 2010 season.

2. Fields’ jersey number, by the way, but also the number of touchdowns (1 pass, 1 rush) he generated in Sunday’s win over the previously undefeated Los Angeles Chargers – noteworthy given Pittsburgh entered the game tied for the league low with one TD scored on the season. It hasn’t been spectacular – yet – as Fields continues to adapt to OC Arthur Smith’s offense. But he’s making enough plays – his legs weapons he’s currently using more judiciously than he did in Chicago – and limiting his mistakes, a formula that almost perfectly complements the Steelers’ swarming defense and deadeye K Chris Boswell.

3. Wilson’s jersey number, by the way, but it also signifies Pittsburgh being his third NFL stop. Whenever his lingering calf issue heals, might it make sense for the Steelers to deal Wilson, who’s playing for the veteran’s minimum ($1.2 million) while the Broncos pay him $39 million not to be in Denver? Sure, Fields could get hurt, and Wilson would be a nice fallback. But veteran QB Kyle Allen is also on this roster, and it’s pretty clear that Fields is the only one of these pending 2025 free agents who might have a long-term future in the Steel City. Why not get something for Russ, especially at a time when a team like the Miami Dolphins or Las Vegas Raiders could really use him?

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4. Back to that Steelers defense – which became the first in 15 years to allow 10 points or fewer in each of the first three games to start a season.

5. Guess who’s right back in the NFC South race after newly promoted QB Andy Dalton (319 yards, 3 TDs passing) had one of the best games of his 14-year career to beat the Raiders in Sin City? After looking like the worst team in the league through two weeks with former No. 1 pick Bryce Young at the helm − he’d orchestrated a single TD drive – the Carolina Panthers are suddenly a game out of first place after two of the NFL’s early surprises, the New Orleans Saints and Tampa Bay Buccaneers, tripped. Just no telling what’s going to happen in this league.

6. The number of teams since the 1970 AFL-NFL merger to make the playoffs following an 0-3 start. Looking at you, Tennessee Titans … and the Cincinnati Bengals and Jacksonville Jaguars better take heed ahead of this season’s first ‘Monday Night Football’ doubleheader.

6a. Six 0-2 teams won Sunday.

6b. Four teams – the Steelers, Minnesota Vikings, Seattle Seahawks and Kansas City Chiefs – are 3-0 and could be joined by the Buffalo Bills on Monday.

7. The number of interceptions swiped by the Green Bay Packers defense – matching its 2023 total – after pilfering Titans QB Will Levis twice in Sunday’s 30-14 victory.

8. The number of times Levis was sacked Sunday, meaning he’s gone down 15 times in three starts – and is on pace to suffer a record 85 over the course of the season.

8a. Also the number of turnovers Levis, who started the day with a league-worst five giveaways, has committed after coughing the ball up three times against the Pack. Green Bay enjoyed a 35-yard pick-six from CB Jaire Alexander via the mayonnaise-loving passer.

9. Let’s also give a salute to Green Bay QB2 Malik Willis, who kept it classy during the week before exacting some revenge against the Titans, who drafted him two years ago but appeared to give up on him long before trading Willis to the Packers last month. Sunday, he passed for his second NFL TD and a career-best 202 yards in Nashville and ran for 73 yards and another score while notching his second victory in place of injured starter Jordan Love. Seems like Willis might’ve been a guy who could have helped in Music City about now?

10. But rest assured, Mr. Levis, even if you get sacked 85 times … Cleveland Browns QB Deshaun Watson is actually on track for 91 after going down eight times himself behind a patchwork line in an unsightly home loss to the previous winless New York Giants on Sunday.

11. Entering Sunday, Denver was the other team (aside from Carolina and Pittsburgh) with one visit to the end zone. But rookie QB Bo Nix ran for a score while playing his first turnover-free NFL game and leading the Broncos to a rather surprising upset of the previously undefeated Bucs in Tampa.

12. But maybe the day’s biggest stunner came in another meeting of 2-0 squads when the Vikings thoroughly embarrassed the Houston Texans 34-7, QB Sam Darnold matching his career high with four TD passes.

13. In his first game against his former team, Texans DE Danielle Hunter was limited to two tackles. Hunter had 87½ sacks in eight years with Minnesota before signing a two-year, $49 million deal with Houston in the offseason.

14. In his first game against his former team, Vikings OLB Jonathan Greenard had three sacks. Greenard had 23 sacks – including a career-best 12½ last season – in four years with Houston before signing a four-year, $76 million deal with Minnesota in the offseason.

15. The Vikes collected five sacks total Sunday, becoming the first club in the last 23 seasons to have at least that many in each of its first three games.

16. What kind of career might RB Saquon Barkley have truly enjoyed had he not toiled for the Giants for six years? His 351 rushing yards three games into his Philadelphia Eagles tenure are 34 better than his best three-game start for Big Blue. His four touchdowns, two more occurring in Sunday’s defeat of the previously unbeaten Saints, double the total of his best three-game start in New York.

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17. After scoring 91 points in their first two games, the Saints posted 12 on Sunday.

18. After not allowing a rush longer than 8 yards in their first two games, the Saints were burned for three of at least 20 yards by Philadelphia – including a 65-yard TD gallop by Barkley, who nicely atoned for his crucial drop six days before in a Week 2 loss to Atlanta.

19. The Dolphins made the longest NFL domestic flight possible – more than 2,700 miles – to get whacked by the Seahawks in Seattle. At least the Fins don’t have to swim back to Miami.

20. Seahawks HC Mike Macdonald is the first to start his career with three straight wins since Miami’s Mike McDaniel in 2022. Macdonald is the fifth coach shy of 40 years old since 2000 to launch with a 3-0 ledger.

21. Even better for Seattle? The Seahawks are now two games clear of the rest of a turbulent NFC West field that saw the listing San Francisco 49ers collapse against the decimated Los Angeles Rams on Sunday afternoon.

22. Number of starts Ravens QB Lamar Jackson has against NFC teams. After surviving the Dallas Cowboys 28-25 for Baltimore’s first win of the season, he’s now 21-1 in those matchups. If only the Ravens could reach the Super Bowl …

23. The 2024 NFL draft was the first in league history to feature a half-dozen quarterbacks selected among the first 12 picks. Yet it took until Sunday for one of them – No. 1 overall pick Caleb Williams – to throw a regular-season touchdown pass, albeit in another loss for his Chicago Bears (1-2).

24. Still, Williams did make a touch of history, his 1-yard scoring pass to WR Rome Odunze marking the first time a quarterback and wide receiver both selected in the top 10 by the same team hooked up for a score in their rookie year. (Still unclear which mantle that ball winds up on.)

25. But let’s put the rookie quarterback on the backburner where they belong for right now – and, heck, Darnold may be Wally Pipp-ing injured Minnesota QB J.J. McCarthy (to the degree a player who hasn’t taken a regular-season snap can be Pipp-ed). But some folks thought the 2024 draft’s best players were its receivers, and that that might manifest when it’s time to cast Offensive Rookie of the Year votes. Predictably, Arizona Cardinals WR Marvin Harrison Jr. and Giants WR Malik Nabers are the early standouts and seeming front-runners for the award. But Jags WR Brian Thomas Jr. and Raiders TE Brock Bowers have also lived up to their advance billing to date – far more than you can say for the fellas slinging the ball.

26. Harrison and Nabers already have three TD receptions apiece. Sunday, Nabers became the youngest wideout (21 years, 56 days) in league history to haul in a pair of scoring catches in one game.

27. It feels like only a matter of time before Cowboys K Brandon Aubrey drills the longest field goal in NFL history after hitting from 65 yards – the second-longest in league annals – on Sunday, when he also hit a chip-shot 51-yarder.

28. Of more concern to “America’s Team” should be that Aubrey is currently its best offensive weapon.

29. Of further concern to the Cowboys? After winning 16 in a row at AT&T Stadium, they’ve now lost their past three.

30. Uniform note of the week: Apparently a team once dubbed the “Orange Crush” ought to embrace its history. The Broncos finally donned their new orange jerseys Sunday – on the road at Tampa, sadly – and got their first win of the year.

31. Very premature MVP vote goes to … Darnold. It’s not necessarily a surprise his career is being resurrected in Minnesota under the tutelage of HC Kevin O’Connell. But a 3-0 record and eight TD passes while shaking off a knee injury Sunday? If you predicted that, well, we don’t believe you.

32. Always good to see more women making NFL history, as occurred Sunday in Las Vegas.

***

Follow USA TODAY Sports’ Nate Davis on X, formerly Twitter, @ByNateDavis.

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– Former Attorney General William Barr says he is ‘dumbfounded’ that the Justice Department released a chilling letter penned by would-be assassin Ryan Wesley Routh on Monday, calling the decision ‘rash’ and serving no purpose ‘other than to risk inciting further violence.’

Routh is the suspect in former President Donald Trump’s second foiled assassination attempt. The DOJ obtained the letter from a witness who says they received it inside a box delivered to them by Routh several months prior to the assassination attempt.

The box contained several handwritten letters as well as ammunition, among other things. One of the letters, addressed ‘Dear World,’ admitted to an assassination attempt on Trump. He also offered money to anyone willing to finish the job.

‘I was dumbfounded that the DOJ made public this morning the contents of the letter that, Ryan Routh, left with an acquaintance prior to the attempted assassination of former President Trump,’ Barr said in a statement to Fox News Digital. 

‘The letter calls on people to ‘finish the job’ of killing President Trump, attempts to rouse people in incendiary terms to do so, and offers $150,000 to anyone who succeeds. There was no apparent justification for releasing this information at this stage,’ he continued. 

Barr, who served during both the Trump and George H. W. Bush administrations, says that ‘DOJ had more than enough evidence to have Routh detained pending trial, without publicizing these details.’

‘Even if DOJ thought it important to provide the letter to the court, it could have redacted inflammatory material or arranged to have the letter submitted under seal. It was rash to put out this letter in the midst of an election during which two attempts on the life of President Trump had been made,’ Barr said. 

‘It served no purpose other than to risk inciting further violence,’ he added. 

The department’s detention memo revealed that Routh traveled from Greensboro, North Carolina, to West Palm Beach, Florida, on Aug. 14, a month before the Sept. 15 golf course incident. One of Routh’s cell phones pinged cell towers near Trump’s golf course and his Mar-a-Lago residence ‘on multiple days and times’ from Aug. 18 to Sept. 15, the detention memo alleged.

Investigators say they also found a book Routh had authored in 2023, titled ‘Ukraine’s Unwinnable War: The Fatal Flaw of Democracy, World Abandonment and the Global Citizen-Taiwan, Afghanistan, North Korea, WWIII and the End of Humanity.’

The detention memo also provided a fresh detail on the witness who saw Routh flee the sniper’s nest. The witness made eye contact with the suspect before Routh jumped into a Nissan Xterra and sped away. The witness is credited with photographing the vehicle and reporting it to law enforcement.

The Justice Department did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment. 

Routh will likely face additional charges in the coming days, which could include aggravated assault for allegedly pointing the rifle at a Secret Service agent and making threats against a former president, State Attorney Dave Aronberg previously told Fox News Digital.

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First, a history lesson. It’s a lesson about a good man. A unique man. In some ways, a remarkable one. You may not know about the life of Mercury Morris. But you should.

It was the year before the Miami Dolphins’ undefeated season, and the team had just been embarrassed by Dallas in Super Bowl 6. Morris barely played in the game, won by the Cowboys, 24-3, and let reporters know about his displeasure afterward. ‘The only time I got off the bench,’ Morris said, ‘was for kickoffs and the national anthem.’

Coach Don Shula was furious that Morris had publicly aired his complaint but the truth was: Morris was right.

‘Our whole game was to stop the running game and Paul Warfield,’ said Dallas defensive back Cornell Green at the time. ‘If they were going to beat us, they were going to beat us with Howard Twilley and Marv Fleming. They weren’t going to beat us with (Paul) Warfield, Jim Kiick, or (Larry) Csonka. We geared up for Mercury, and Mercury Morris did not play in that whole game, and that was a blessing. (Because) Chuck Howley could catch Kiick. If Mercury got in the game, that was going to be tough. I have no idea why Shula didn’t play Mercury more. I don’t know what Mercury did to p— Shula off. I wish I did.’

After that awkward post-Super Bowl moment, two things would happen.

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The following year, the Dolphins would go undefeated at 17-0. No achievement in the history of American team sports has been more impactful or lasting.

But also, Shula would go on to not only forgive Morris, but later admit that Morris was correct. Shula and Morris eventually became close and like many of the Dolphins from that team they’d be lifelong friends. And despite Morris later running into legal troubles, he’d become something almost larger than life, and over the past few decades, as teams like the New England Patriots challenged their legacy, Morris was its greatest public defender.

That’s because Morris loved the Dolphins and all of the Dolphins on that team loved him. They appreciated him. Respected him. Admired his fight and humanity. His decency. His kindness.

When I wrote a book on the undefeated team, Csonka spoke about Morris with such reverence, Csonka’s words actually made me emotional listening to them. Csonka posted on X on Sunday: ‘It’s a very sad day for me and our Dolphin family.’

You may not know about the life of Mercury Morris. But you should.

Morris was a protector of the Dolphins’ undefeated legacy. Teams would approach the Dolphins’ mark and Morris would go into action. He would be interviewed and would use that time not to taunt or hope teams would lose, but to educate people about those Dolphins players, and that era of football.

If there was one thing Morris and the Dolphins hated (and hate) is what many of them feel is a lack of respect for that time. Morris wanted to be a teacher who told people the 1970s NFL was as formidable as any other decade.

Morris did this often with a sense of humor. ‘And for the record, we DO NOT TOAST every time an unbeaten team loses,’ Morris posted on social media in 2015, when the Carolina Panthers started 14-0. ‘There’s no champagne in my glass, only Canada Dry Ginger ale! Ha!’

When Morris was asked about the Dolphins’ 0-8 start during the 2007 season, he joked: ‘The Dolphins are not embarrassing me, because our record’s at the top of the heap. That’s not my team. People say, ‘Your team is doing bad.’ I say, ‘My team all has AARP cards.”

There was also a serious side to Morris. He was convicted in 1982 on cocaine trafficking charges and sentenced to 20 years in prison. Morris said he used the drug to ease the pain of lasting injuries from his playing days but never sold it. The Florida Supreme Court overturned his conviction.

‘Was I bitter? Not really,’ Morris wrote in his book ‘Against The Grain,’ published in 1998. ‘I would not recommend three days in jail to anyone, much less three years. But I must be honest: I needed to go through what I did to develop the character I had when I became a free man.’

Morris would go on to become an activist encouraging people to stay away from drugs. He turned his life around all while becoming an ardent defender of that undefeated team.

Which, again, bring us to this. You may not know about the life of Mercury Morris. But you should.

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At 28, he qualifies as the current elder of the Detroit Tigers lineup, and knows that after 156 games, there’s little sense in letting the mind wander too much when so much remains at stake in the final six.

Yet he also knows that what these Tigers are doing is so rare, so surprising and so much fun that yes, he can’t help but go there – to October, and the potential of a startling playoff appearance for a club that hasn’t had even a winning record in eight years.

“I have thought about that – how much fun it would be to get there with this team,” Vierling, the club’s left fielder and cleanup hitter, tells USA TODAY Sports. “I’ve tried to suppress those thoughts a little bit to focus on the day-to-day. That’s what makes this team great.

“But I’ve thought about it. I’ve been in that spot where you’re having a great time and celebrating all the hard work. It would be pretty incredible to do that.

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“Here.”

With each passing day, the likelihood only seems to increase.

The Tigers have stunningly reached the final week of the regular season in playoff position, thanks to a raucous road trip in which they won five out of six games against fellow postseason inhabitants Kansas City and Baltimore. They are 27-11 since Aug. 11, the best record in the majors in that span, during which they also have the best ERA (2.74).

They are 30-18 since trading No. 2 starter Jack Flaherty to the Los Angeles Dodgers, a nominal waving of the white flag that reduced their stable of starting pitchers to two.

Since then?

It’s been a wave of bullpen games and bulk guys and dudes with 20-ish home run pop going yard at opportune times and young players – so many young players – taking significant steps forward.

“It wasn’t ideal trading Jack,” says Tigers closer Jason Foley of the deal swung just minutes before the July 30 trade deadline, when the Tigers were 52-56. “You don’t want to be sellers at the deadline. It means you’re obviously not in an opportune spot to make the postseason. But you still have to go out and perform and win each night and win each day.

“We started stacking some good games together, stacking some good weeks, stacking a couple good months, and next thing you know we find ourselves in a pretty decent spot to make a postseason push.”

And now they’re going home.

After improving to 82-74 – their best record since winning 86 games in 2016 – with a rousing 4-3 win before 44,040 at Camden Yards, the Tigers finish the season with six games at Comerica Park. Tuesday, presumed Cy Young Award winner Tarik Skubal opens a three-game set against the Tampa Bay Rays.

And while their margin for error is razor-thin – they’re one game ahead of the Minnesota Twins for the final wild-card spot – they hold the 2024 equivalent of a golden ticket: Their final three games are against the 120-loss, historically terrible Chicago White Sox.

And recent history suggests they’re not just a live dog, but also a potentially dangerous one.

Playing with house money

A.J. Hinch knows of pennant drives and October drama. He managed the Houston Astros to two AL pennants and the 2017 World Series title, before the club’s sign-stealing scheme resulted in his firing.

Now in his fourth year managing the Tigers, Hinch presided over clubs that won 77, 66 and 78 games in his first three seasons. In short: A handful of decent prospects marinating around $140 million infielder Javy Baez, an offensive bust in his three three seasons with Detroit before departing Aug. 23 for season-ending hip surgery.

Yet despite an everyday lineup featuring three rookies and a second-year player, Hinch has seen enough: These guys are ready for the final lap.

“This (final) week is really no different than the last six weeks have been for us. We’ve been in all hands on deck mode, grind mode, playoff mode, whatever you want to say, for a long time now,” says Hinch, whose club went into Kansas City and swept the Royals last week, dragging them from a solid perch as the No. 2 wild card into the quagmire, now tied with the Tigers.

“We went to environments that were new. San Diego was rocking. (Baltimore) has been a fun experience. In Kansas City, we won all three games in a tough environment. I think this last week is the same – get dressed every day and try to win and see how many wins we total up at the end.”

Should they win one more game than the Twins or Royals – and the Tigers must, as they lose the tiebreaker to both clubs – be wary. Detroit represents the platonic ideal of a playoff team in this expanded era: A club that’s had to fight for its life for weeks, maybe months, and hits the postseason in a groove and with its heart rate already regulated for do-or-die play.

Vierling knows. He was a member of the 2022 Philadelphia Phillies who ushered in this trend, slipping into the playoffs with 87 wins before taking it all the way to Game 6 of the World Series.

Certainly, these Tigers don’t have nine-figure superstars like Bryce Harper or Zack Wheeler. But they have arguably the game’s best pitcher in Skubal to toss in a Game 1.

And perhaps most important, a devil-may-care vibe for a franchise whose last playoff berth came in 2014.

“In Philly, we felt the same way: We hadn’t been there in 11 years. We knew we had the talent, for sure. We just had to get in,” says Vierling. “It’s kind of the same thing. Kind of playing with house money. No one expected this. We just want to keep this going and see what we can turn this into.

“Just gotta emphasize: No pressure, no fear.”

‘I love this team’

Sunday’s series finale in Baltimore – and the clubs may very well match up in a best-of-three wild-card series – was emblematic of the club’s run. The club tossed a half-dozen pitchers at the Orioles, none recording more than seven outs. Kerry Carpenter smacked a pair of home runs, the second a tiebreaking shot giving Detroit the lead for good moments after second-year center fielder Parker Meadows robbed a two-run homer from Baltimore’s Colton Cowser.

All this looked like a mirage on July 30.

Flaherty posted a 2.95 ERA and averaged almost exactly six innings in his 18 starts; his trade to L.A. left Detroit with just two regular starters: Skubal and rookie right-hander Keider Montero.

Filling the gaps: A phalanx of semi-starters and openers.

These are not the Tigers of Max Scherzer and Justin Verlander vintage, but rather Beau Brieske (no earned runs in his past 13 innings), Tyler Holton (started two of the last three games) and Sean Guenther (1.04 ERA in 14 games). Rookies like Brenan Hanifee and Ty Madden have taken on increasingly greater responsibilities.

And the Flaherty trade netted their current starting shortstop: Trey Sweeney, a spare part in the Dodgers organization but now a cog in Detroit.

Are you excited yet? Hinch certainly is.

“I love this team,” says Hinch. “I love what we’re doing to fight every game like it’s the last game of the season. That’s how we’ve operated and that’s how we’re going to continue to operate.

“We bring it every day.”

Earlier Sunday, Hinch did something his club hadn’t seen in weeks: He named all three starting pitchers for the Tampa Bay series. With right-hander Reese Olson’s recent return from an eight-week absence due to a shoulder injury, the Tigers put their old friend “TBA” on ice for the moment; Skubal, Montero and Olson will have at the Rays.

Not that improvisation hasn’t served the club well.

Vierling was musing about this the other day, thinking that just a couple months ago, Sweeney was toiling in Oklahoma City for the Dodgers’ Class AAA club. Now, he’s making game-saving catches.

“It’s just incredible to see what these guys came from and knowing it’s such a long year, right? A lot of things can happen. A lot of things can change.

“We’ve had our ups and downs. After the trade deadline, we stayed afloat and things kind of got going here. It’s been kind of cool to see how these guys have used that momentum and brought that energy to the team.”

No doubt, the Twins (11 losses in 16 games) and Royals (losers of seven in a row) have opened the door. But the Tigers have taken full advantage, playing with boundless conviction and not pausing to ponder their good fortune. Come next Sunday, they’ll likely be packing very large suitcases and pondering multiple destinations, the ride guaranteed to last so long as they maintain this delicate balance.

“We’re vibin’ here,” says Meadows. “Such good chemistry on this team and we’re having a lot of fun and have each others’ backs.

“It’s pretty surreal. But we’re going to keep doing our job and keep winning games.”

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(This story was updated to add new information.)

Against all odds, the American League Central is still aligned to send three teams to the postseason for the first time in the division’s history.

But not before two of those teams produced pitiable September collapses.

The Kansas City Royals and Minnesota Twins had a lock on the Nos. 2 and 3 wild-card spots all month – heck, all second half, really, with the Royals briefly tied with the Cleveland Guardians for the division lead. That’s all gone now in the wake of both clubs’ hideous play the past week-plus.

The Royals, aiming for their first playoff berth since 2015, have lost seven in a row. They’re tied with the surprising Detroit Tigers for the No. 2/3 wild card, though the Royals have the tiebreaker. The Twins have dropped 10 of their last 15 games, and, after starting the month within 3½ games of first place, are now out of the playoff picture altogether.

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Those two, unsurprisingly, are the biggest losers in this week’s MLB power rankings.

Not all is lost. Minnesota (81-75) will finish with a six-game homestand, against Miami and Baltimore, with the latter possibly not having much to play for if it’s nailed down the top wild-card spot. Kansas City (82-74) hits the road, with three games each at Washington and Atlanta.

A look at our updated rankings:

1. New York Yankees (+1)

Luke Weaver perfect in four save chances as nouveau closer.

2. Los Angeles Dodgers (+1)

Shohei Ohtani’s 60-60 chances? Better than zero, for sure.

3. Philadelphia Phillies (-2)

Zack Wheeler deserves more than a passing nod of Cy Young consideration.

4. San Diego Padres (+2)

Drew 3.3 million fans. What’s your excuse?

5. Cleveland Guardians (-)

That’s five AL Central titles since 2016.

6. Milwaukee Brewers (-2)

If the past two weekends are any indication, a wild-card rematch with Arizona would be a real slobberknocker.

7. Baltimore Orioles (-)

Jordan Westburg is back, and the lineup will be better for it.

8. Arizona Diamondbacks (-)

CLub sparring with county once again over stadium renovations.

9. New York Mets (+4)

Francisco Lindor fill-in Luisangel Acuña with a nifty 1.228 OPS in his first nine games.

10. Atlanta Braves (-)

Kinda need to sweep the Mets at home, starting Tuesday.

11. Houston Astros (-)

Good: They’ll clinch the division any day. Bad: Yordan Alvarez is ailing.

12. Detroit Tigers (+2)

19-8 since losing Javy Baez to hip surgery.

13. Kansas City Royals (-4)

Need a winning road trip to Washington, Atlanta to salvage playoff spot.

14. Minnesota Twins (-1)

A total collapse to miss playoffs is way worse than a quick first-round exit.

15. Chicago Cubs (-)

‘I mean, they’re ahead of us by a lot.’ – Craig Counsell, on his old Milwaukee Brewers.

16. Seattle Mariners (-)

Blowing a 5-0 lead to nearly kill your playoff chances is a tough way to go.

17. Boston Red Sox (-)

Rafael Devers, who hit just four homers in his last 166 at-bats, finally shuts it down due to bum shoulder.

18. St. Louis Cardinals (-)

Sonny Gray ends his season just a smidge early.

19. Tampa Bay Rays (+1)

‘We’ve got a chance,’ says Kevin Cash. (Cue Jim Carrey GIF).

20. San Francisco Giants (+1)

One more start for Blake Snell to add some zeros to his offseason haul.

21. Cincinnati Reds (-2)

Yeah, firing the manager oughta do it.

22. Toronto Blue Jays (-)

Vlad Guerrero Jr. drives in a hundred for the first time since 2021.

23. Pittsburgh Pirates (-)

Paul Skenes lowers ERA to 1.99 in 22 starts. Yeah, pretty good debut.

24. Texas Rangers (-)

Jacob deGrom with a couple of short starts that sow some hope for ’25.

25. Washington Nationals (-)

The CJ Abrams flap is a bummer conclusion for a squad taking steps forward.

26. Oakland Athletics (-)

Just about time to head east on 80.

27. Los Angeles Angels (-)

This Jack Kochanowicz growing into a relatively reliable starter.

28. Colorado Rockies (+1)

Ryan McMahon posts his fifth season with at least 20 homers.

29. Miami Marlins (-1)

Skip Schumacher likely bids farewell to whatever their ballpark’s called these days.

30. Chicago White Sox (-)

Admin’s week was as good as their season’s been bad.

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