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We’ve come to the end of the line. Most fantasy football leagues have crowned their champions and it’s time to bask in our collective successes (or wallow in our failures).

Looking back, the 2024 NFL season was an excellent one for rookies, especially ones at skill positions. If there’s a general theme for this year, it’s that talented young players can thrive without an extended learning curve. Fantasy managers who rolled the dice on this year’s top rookies frequently had their investments pay off handsomely.

These players saw their fantasy values increase or decrease most based on their performances this season:

Fantasy football players to buy for 2025

QB Jayden Daniels, Washington Commanders: Rookie quarterbacks rarely enjoy instant success in the NFL, but Daniels was an exciting exception. He was equally effective with his legs (setting a franchise rushing record for a QB) as he was with his arm (69% completion rate, 25 TDs). A top-five QB this season, he likely go higher in next year’s drafts.

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RB Bucky Irving, Tampa Bay Buccaneers: An unheralded fourth-round rookie, Irving took over the lead back role from veteran Rachaad White and topped the 1,000-yard mark in Week 17. In his best overall game of the season, he ran for 113 yards and caught four passes for 77 more. Not bad, considering his preseason ADP of 161 (RB 53).

RB Chase Brown, Cincinnati Bengals: On the NFL’s best passing offense, Brown’s receiving ability catapulted him into the top 10 among fantasy backs. He ranks fourth at the position with 54 catches, and should easily surpass 1,000 rushing yards in the season finale. Zack Moss is just a distant memory.

WR Brian Thomas Jr., Jacksonville Jaguars: In a draft full of top-end wideouts, Thomas — the 23rd overall pick — outshined all his 2024 classmates by hauling in 10 TD passes and ranking fourth at the position in PPR fantasy points through 17 weeks.

TE Brock Bowers, Las Vegas Raiders: Despite the Raiders’ horrendous quarterback issues all season long, it didn’t seem to make a difference in Bowers’ production. The rookie from Georgia is poised to finish No. 1 among tight ends, leading the position in both receptions (108) and yardage (1,144).

Fantasy football players to sell for 2025

QB Kirk Cousins, Atlanta Falcons: Except for a 509-yard, 4-TD effort in Week 5, Cousins was a huge free-agent bust. He lost the starting job after going four games without a touchdown pass and will likely be back on the market this offseason as the Falcons turn to 2024 draftee Michael Penix Jr.

RB Christian McCaffrey, San Francisco 49ers: The consensus No. 1 overall fantasy pick came with a dangerous ‘if healthy’ caveat. Turns out he wasn’t — until Week 10. And by that time, many fantasy managers’ seasons were already sunk. Thanks to a season-ending knee sprain, his entire season consisted of four starts and zero touchdowns.

WR Chris Olave, New Orleans Saints: Olave played only a half season due to multiple concussions, but he wasn’t very effective when he was on the field. He topped 100 receiving yards just once and finished with one touchdown catch.

WR Michael Pittman Jr., Indianapolis Colts: Sky-high expectations for Pittman (ADP: 30) never materialized as second-year QB Anthony Richardson struggled with injuries and inconsistency. It doesn’t bode well that his best games seemed to come with backup Joe Flacco under center.

TE Sam LaPorta, Detroit Lions: After a brilliant rookie season, LaPorta became a mere afterthought in the Lions’ high-powered offense. He had just one game with more than six catches or 70 receiving yards — and it came in Week 15 after many of his fantasy managers’ seasons were already over.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

It’s an interesting market day with the market moving lower despite positive seasonality. Natural Gas (UNG) broke out in a big way up over 15% at the time of writing. Is it ready to continue its big run higher?

Carl took the day off so Erin gave us the review of the signal tables and market charts. She then gave us her perspective on the Natural Gas (UNG) chart. As of writing, we have determined that the big move is due to geopolitical tensions over the expiration of LNG exports with Russia for Europe. This could mean more exports and demand for US Natural Gas.

Erin then covered Sector Rotation and walked us through all of the sector charts “under the hood”. No sectors currently have rising momentum. All Price Momentum Oscillators (PMOs) are in decline setting up for a very difficult January.

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01:40 DP Signal Tables

04:38 Market Overview (including Bitcoin, Yields, Dollar, Gold and more)

24:40 Questions

26:52 Natural Gas (UNG)

33:04 Sector Rotation Overview

35:02 Magnificent Seven

41:37 Sector Chart Review Under the Hood

50:13 Symbol Requests

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Who is the Athlete of the Year? You asked. We’re going to answer.

USA TODAY Sports assembled an expert panel to break it all down. It includes: national columnists Nancy Armour and Dan Wolken; reporters Jordan Mendoza and Cydney Henderson; and editor Mike Freeman.

It was another remarkable year in sports. But it was these athletes who were the best.

Nancy Armour: Simone Biles

Simply getting to the Paris Olympics was a triumph in itself. Biles is 27, an age once considered positively ancient for a gymnast. Three years earlier she’d been forced out of much of the Tokyo Games with a case of ‘the twisties’ that made her question whether she’d be able to do gymnastics again.

So yeah, Biles could have shown up in Paris, done a couple of back handsprings and it would have been a success.

But Biles didn’t go to Paris for participation trophies. She went for gold, and she got it. Three of them in fact. Biles led the U.S. women to the team title, claimed gold in the all-around two days later and won vault with a skill we might never see again. She’s one of only three women to win two Olympic all-around titles, and the first to do it in non-consecutive Games.

Biles also won silver on floor exercise, upping her total medal count in three Olympics to 11. Seven of those are gold. She’s now won 41 medals at the Olympics and world championships, more – a lot more – than any other gymnast, male or female.

These stats alone, along with her ability to push the boundaries of gymnastics, would make Biles an obvious choice for athlete of the year. But she is so much more than a gymnast.

Her nightmare experience in Tokyo forced a long-overdue conversation on the mental health struggles many athletes have, and she continues to be a vocal advocate for therapy and prioritizing self-care. Biles has taught a master class on dealing with trolls, reminding everyone that living your best life is the ultimate answer to these small-minded people and bigots. She’s shown how to be a good and supportive teammate, using her platform to help elevate others.

The athletes who continue to loom large even when they’ve long since retired are those who transcend sports. Biles didn’t just change gymnastics, she changed our society. She is the GOAT of GOATs, as teammate Jordan Chiles called her, one of one.

The Paris Olympics were the biggest sporting event of the year this year. When people look back on them, Biles will be the first name that comes to mind.

Dan Wolken: Scottie Scheffler

Early on the morning of May 17, the world’s best golfer was arrested in a snarl of traffic while trying to get to Valhalla Golf Club before the second round of the PGA Championship. 

After spending a little more than an hour in jail and enduring the most surreal and distressing experience of his life, strait-laced Scottie Scheffler got back to the course for his 10:08 a.m. tee time and proceeded to shoot a cool 66. 

Though Scheffler didn’t win the tournament, nor does the arrest alone make him my athlete of the year, the round he played that day was emblematic of how unflappable, how dominant and, of course, how talented he was in 2024. 

Though Scheffler is never going to have Tiger Woods’ Q-Rating off the course or make non-golf fans tune in when he’s in contention, what he accomplished this year is as close to Tiger-like as anything we’ve seen since his run in the early 2000s.

In 21 PGA Tour-sanctioned events, Scheffler won nine times, including his second Masters, The Players, the year-end FedEx Cup and the Olympic gold medal. He racked up another nine top-10 finishes and didn’t miss a cut. His scoring average for the season was 68.65, nearly half a shot per round better than No. 2-ranked Xander Schauffele. In the advanced ‘strokes gained’ metrics, he was No. 1 by a mind-blowing margin in approaching the green, No. 2 off the tee, and No. 17 around the greens. If he was a little bit better at putting – he ranked No. 77 in strokes gained – he might never lose. 

And that’s not too much of an exaggeration. 

The level of consistency is just staggering, and the scary part is Scheffler has gotten better every year he’s been on the Tour. And at age 28, he may not have even reached his peak. 

There’s no doubt that Rory McIlroy and Brooks Koepka have been the two defining golfers of the post-Tiger era. With four and five majors, respectively, they still have a little breathing room over Scheffler, who just has his two Masters titles. 

But unless something goes wrong to take Scheffler off his current trajectory, he has enough game and enough years ahead to eventually be in the company of the all-time greats. And having won pretty much all the other important stuff already – as well as more than $71 million in career earnings – don’t be surprised if his focus turns almost exclusively to racking up more majors. 

Still, it’ll be hard for Scheffler to duplicate a year like this one – which included the charges against him getting dropped and his mug shot becoming an all-time golf meme. Not only was he the best golfer on the planet, nobody in any sport created a gap as big between themselves and the rest of the field. 

Jordan Mendoza: Caitlin Clark

I also debated Simone Biles and Shohei Ohtani, but no one captivated sports this past year quite like Caitlin Clark. She had a packed schedule that began with the college basketball world watching her pass the NCAA all-time scoring record, and she brought record attention to the women’s side of March Madness. For once – and rightfully so – the women’s national championship had more viewership than the men’s side. At some points, it cost an arm and a leg just to be able to witness the end of her Iowa career.

When she moved to the WNBA, Clark had the same effect. Everyone wanted to see her, and teams had to move to bigger arenas just accommodate the demand. She brought more eyes to the WNBA, and although it was late, people began to see just how much talent the league has outside of one player.

There are so many moments that show why Clark is a star, but I was someone that was able to witness it firsthand. I covered Clark and when she came to Los Angeles, it was an incredible sight to see. A packed arena, and so many children excited to see a player they are looking up to and hoping to one day be. It reminded me of my childhood and when me and countless other children wanted to grow up to play like Kobe Bryant.

Even if you weren’t someone following Clark, you at least knew who she was and what she was doing – regardless of sports knowledge. I can’t tell how many times I’ve been with family, friends or big gatherings where someone would suddenly ask me about Clark. Some of these people I’d hardly ever talk about sports with, but they all knew what Clark was doing was incredible. 

Even with all of the basketball talk, there have been plenty off-the-court issues that have centered around Clark. She was used in culture wars and unfortunately brought out the ugly side of fandom. It wasn’t her fault, and she recognizes her white privilege, but how she was used politically showed there’s still plenty of things people must learn in how women athletes are viewed and portrayed. 

We haven’t touched the fact she’s pretty good at her job too. She broke several WNBA rookie records and was a major contributor for an Indiana Fever team that hadn’t made the playoffs since 2016. Every team made it their mission to not let Clark perform any of her magic, and while it sometimes worked, it didn’t stop her from having a stellar rookie season.

It was the year of Clark, and she’ll likely continue to captivate the country – and the world – for years to come.

Cydney Henderson: Simone Biles

Simone Biles didn’t have to compete at the Paris Olympics this summer to cement herself as the GOAT. 

After unexpectedly pulling out of several events at the Tokyo Games in 2021 after anxiety brought on ‘the twisties’ – where a gymnast loses their sense of space and awareness in the air – Biles returned to the Olympic stage in dominant form. She brought home three gold medals (team, all-around, vault) and a silver (floor), bringing her total number of Olympic medals to 11, the most by any U.S. female gymnast. 

More importantly, Biles continued to highlight the importance of mental health, a discussion she helped destigmatize three years ago. Although all eyes were on her difficult gymnastics routines and eponymous skills that only she can do, Biles credited another routine for her Olympic success.

‘I saw (my therapist) about three or four times throughout this whole entire process,’ Biles said in Paris. ‘It didn’t matter if it was before all-around or after qualifications, I went back to the village and got on a call and did my therapy sessions because that’s routine for me now.’

Biles even offered a behind-the-scenes look at how she was battling anxiety in real time throughout the Olympics. In a TikTok video titled, ‘Get ready with meeee for all around finals @ the Olympics,’ Biles opened up about being ‘really nervous’ as she did her makeup for the competition. 

‘I just had therapy this morning so I am feeling a little bit better. I have just worked so hard mentally to get to this moment,’ she said. 

Biles’ vulnerability wasn’t reserved for TikTok. She shared her journey to Paris in the Netflix docuseries ‘Simone Biles: Rising,’ offering fans a raw look into the mental and physical work she underwent. 

Biles had every reason to shut out the world after some critics labeled her a quitter for prioritizing her mental health at the Tokyo Games, but she didn’t. She didn’t need to prove anything to anyone, but she did. Biles is not only an 11-time Olympic champion, she’s a champion for mental health. 

It was fun watching Simone Biles have fun (and win) this year and her GOAT necklace was as epic as her 2024. 

Mike Freeman: Transgender athletes

Sometimes, many times, the athlete of the year is about, well, a singular athlete. As it should be. But there are occasions, so rare and yet so important, when such an honor is less about an individual and more about a statement. Or even a movement. Or, in this case, almost a resistance.

Trans athletes don’t want to be heroes. They just want to do what they love, which is play sports. Which is what every athlete wants. They may not want to be heroes but they are.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The 2025 NFL offseason is around the corner, and it appears that one of the top potential coaching candidates on the market is looking to get a jump on the field.

That would be former Tennessee Titans head coach Mike Vrabel. The 49-year-old spent the 2024 NFL season serving as a consultant for the Cleveland Browns, but his contract with the team expired on Dec. 30, according to ESPN’s Adam Schefter.

As a result, Vrabel is no longer employed by an NFL team. That makes him eligible to start interviewing for head coaching positions immediately.

Vrabel posted a 54-45 record during his six years with the Titans and routinely helped the team exceed expectations. Notably, he led Tennessee to the AFC’s No. 1 seed during the 2021 NFL season with an offense highlighted by Ryan Tannehill and Derrick Henry. He had enduring success creating cohesive defensive units.

Vrabel’s combination of experience and leadership should make him a coveted coaching candidate. Where might his best fit be? Here’s a look at Vrabel’s top landing spots as the NFL’s ‘Black Monday’ approaches.

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Mike Vrabel landing spots

New England Patriots

Are the Patriots going to make Jerod Mayo a one-and-done head coach? NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport reported ahead of Week 17 that the team’s Robert Kraft-led ownership group ‘wants to keep’ the man that they tapped as Bill Belichick’s successor.

‘They believe he is the leader for the organization for the future, and they knew it would be a multi-year process to get this thing right,’ Rapoport said before also acknowledging, ‘Now if things go off the rails, if they really start to struggle and he loses the locker room the last couple games of the season, we’ve seen this thing turn. But as of now, the Patriots believe Jerod Mayo is their leader for the future.’

The Patriots lost 40-7 to the Los Angeles Chargers at home in Week 17. Will that be enough to change Kraft’s mind? It remains to be seen, but the air of dysfunction around the Patriots seems to be growing.

If the Patriots move on from Mayo, what better way to replace him than Vrabel? Essentially, Vrabel would provide a proven version of what New England hoped to get in Mayo: a quality coach and leader with playing experience with the Patriots who could ease the transition away from Belichick, a coaching legend.

Chicago Bears

The Bears sported one of the best defenses in the NFL in the second half of the 2023 season after acquiring Montez Sweat ahead of the trade deadline. Despite the team’s collection of young talent, that success did not carry over under Matt Eberflus in 2024.

Vrabel could better utilize that young talent and scheme a way to turn the Bears into a top defense. Chicago already has some blue-chip players in Sweat and Jaylon Johnson, and Vrabel would likely be able to help build on the early-career success enjoyed by Kyler Gordon while leveling out the inconsistencies in Tyrique Stevenson’s game.

The only hitch in getting Vrabel to the Bears is that Chicago might prefer an offensive-minded coach to pair with 2024 No. 1 overall pick Caleb Williams. Even so, Vrabel’s leadership skills should draw him interest from a Bears squad desperate for direction. That’s why NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport and Tom Pelissero listed him as a ‘name to watch’ in Chicago’s coaching search.

New York Jets

Like the Bears, the Jets fired their previous coach midseason and may prefer to hire an offensive-minded coach after employing a defensive-minded one. That said, Vrabel would be well-positioned to help New York maintain the defensive success it enjoyed at times under Robert Saleh. The Jets thrice ranked sixth or better in yards allowed under Saleh but only once had an above-average scoring defense.

Vrabel could clean up some of those issues allowing points. He may even be able to help Sauce Gardner, Quinnen Williams and Co. reach another level defensively. The only question is what Vrabel’s plans for the offense would look like as the Jets’ hire may hinge upon their decision to roll with 41-year-old Aaron Rodgers for another season or plunge into the great unknown at quarterback again.

Either way, Vrabel would provide the Jets with some stability, which the team has been noticeably lacking in recent years.

New Orleans Saints

The Saints have spent the better part of the post-Drew Brees era as one of the NFL’s middling teams. They repeatedly delayed their massive cap hits, and the bill is finally due.

With that in mind, the Saints need a few things during the offseason: a plan, direction and leadership. Vrabel would give that to them on the field, as he could focus on rebuilding New Orleans’ once-proud defense back into a quality stop unit.

Would Vrabel be willing to go to a rebuilding squad without an answer at quarterback after struggling to find a franchise guy in Tennessee? Perhaps, but if given multiple choices, the Saints may not be at the top of his list.

Jacksonville Jaguars

The Jaguars haven’t had an above-average defensive unit since 2018, midway through Doug Marrone’s tenure as head coach. Vrabel would represent a nice change of pace for the franchise and could finally get the unit to play well and cohesively again, as it did early in Marrone’s tenure.

Joining Jacksonville would also give Vrabel a chance to exact revenge on Tennessee twice a year. That could make the Jaguars a desirable landing spot for the coach.

Dallas Cowboys

The Cowboys may keep Mike McCarthy after their solid late-season surge, but his contract is up after the season. If Dallas wants to get a seasoned coach to help replace McCarthy – who posted three 12-win seasons before the team fell off in 2024 – few available coaches would be better than Vrabel.

Vrabel would undoubtedly get the most out of Micah Parsons while already having an established offense to trust. The Cowboys would likely catapult to the top of this list if they have an opening.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

It all comes down to next week.

Week 17 of the NFL season was frontloaded with games on Christmas and Saturday, but Sunday’s slate carried plenty of playoff implications.

And the clear winners were the Minnesota Vikings, who controlled their NFC North rivals, the Green Bay Packers, for most of the game, setting up a massive, winner-take-all showdown against the Detroit Lions for first place in the NFC.

And then, in the AFC, the Indianapolis Colts sputtered out of the field with a disappointing loss against a New York Giants team that entered Sunday with the worst record in the league.

Here are the winners and losers from the penultimate Sunday of the 2024 NFL regular season.

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WINNERS

Vikings outlast Packers, set up huge season finale

The Vikings have answered test after test this season. Sunday was no different, when Minnesota (14-2) outlasted the Packers (11-5) 27-25 to set up a massive regular-season finale against the Lions (13-2). The winner of that game – even if Detroit loses Monday to the San Francisco 49ers – claims the No. 1 seed in the NFC, a first-round bye and home-field advantage throughout the playoffs.

On Sunday, the spark was again Sam Darnold, who has fully resurrected his career. Three weeks ago, in a win against the Atlanta Falcons, Darnold set a career high with 347 passing yards. Against Green Bay, Darnold bested himself once more, throwing for 377, including a game-icing third-down conversion. And again, it was also the defense under coordinator Brian Flores, which frustrated Green Bay until late in the game. Minnesota is now 9-1 this season in one-score games. The culture is there, and coach Kevin O’Connell is a good bet to win the Associated Press Coach of the Year award.

Culture-changing wins turn the tide in Washington

A ton of credit should go to coach Dan Quinn, rookie quarterback Jayden Daniels, offensive coordinator Kliff Kingsbury – all in their first seasons with the Washington Commanders (11-5) – for turning around the culture of the franchise. New owner Josh Harris should also get praise.

The Commanders have won four consecutive games, with the last two against the Eagles and Falcons, to clinch their first postseason berth since 2020. Against Atlanta, Washington erased a 10-point deficit at the start of the second half and fended off a late comeback attempt with a dominant 12-play, 75-yard drive in overtime that ended with a Zach Ertz touchdown grab. Daniels appears to be a rising star. The Commanders appear to be on the verge of relevance – maybe even for years to come.

Dolphins stay alive, still need some help

Pretty much everything that the Miami Dolphins needed to happen in order to sneak into the final AFC wild-card slot happened. The Denver Broncos lost Saturday, the Colts – almost unfathomably – lost to the Giants and Miami (8-8) did its part, defeating the Cleveland Browns 20-3.

That slid the Dolphins into the No. 8 seed in the AFC. Backup quarterback Tyler Huntley played reasonably well, though the Dolphins still have massive flaws. Against the Browns, they converted just two of 11 (18%) third-down attempts. They committed 11 penalties for 94 yards, many of them senseless. Their execution in short-yardage situations remains poor. Yet, if they beat the New York Jets (4-12), and if the Kansas City Chiefs (15-1) beat Denver (9-7), Miami will clinch its third consecutive postseason berth.

Buccaneers do their part, get huge assist from the Commanders

The Tampa Bay Buccaneers (9-7) entered Week 17 needing some help to reclaim first place in the NFC South, and everything broke right. The Buccaneers throttled the Carolina Panthers, and the Falcons, who were in first place in the division entering Sunday, couldn’t complete their comeback try against the Commanders.

That moved the Bucs into a position of control, where winning next week against the New Orleans Saints pushes them through to the postseason as host of a wild-card game. Baker Mayfield went off for 359 passing yards and five touchdowns against the Panthers, and he has been confirming the team’s decision to install him as the starting quarterback. The other good news for the Bucs in all this? New Orleans is a team Tampa Bay beat 51-27 in Week 6.

LOSERS

Colts stumble in epic fashion, eliminated from playoff contention

When the Broncos lost Saturday, it opened a window for the Colts to make up ground in the AFC wild-card picture. All Indy needed to do was beat the Giants, the team that entered Week 17 that hadn’t won a home game all season long and was the front-runner for the No. 1 pick in the 2025 NFL draft.

The Colts (7-9) lost by 12. They struggled in the red zone. Their defense was atrocious, particularly on third downs, during which Giants backup Drew Lock completed eight of nine passes (88.9%) for 130 yards and three touchdowns; Lock also ran for a 5-yard score that sealed New York’s victory on a third down late in the fourth quarter. While the Colts had backup Joe Flacco at quarterback, this is the type of loss that forces a franchise to question everything about its culture.

Eric Dickerson’s single-season rushing record

Eagles running back Saquon Barkley became just the ninth player in NFL history to eclipse 2,000 rushing yards in a single season. And now, with his 167 rushing yards Sunday in a 41-7 rout of the the Dallas Cowboys, Barkley is 101 shy of breaking former Los Angeles Rams star Eric Dickerson’s 40-year old record of 2,105 rushing yards.

Behind Philadelphia’s stellar offensive line, Barkley has been the unquestioned top offseason addition in the NFL. He also deserves MVP consideration. Though he will play one more game than Dickerson did in 1984 – assuming the Eagles don’t rest Barkley in the season finale against the Giants – Barkley’s year (2,283 yards from scrimmage, 15 total touchdowns) is one of the all-time great statistical seasons. Still, with Philadelphia out of the running for the top seed in the NFC, coach Nick Sirianni may opt to rest his players.

Seahawks fall from field (even though they didn’t play)

With Washington’s win against the Falcons, the Seattle Seahawks (9-7) were officially eliminated Sunday night, even though they won their game Thursday against the Bears. The outcome sealed a strength-of-victory tiebreaker for the Rams, who clinched the NFC West title.

Surely, Seattle will regret certain losses it had this season, none more debilitating than a Week 5 defeat at home against the Giants.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The Washington Commanders’ celebratory steak dinner might have to be on Zach Ertz’s dime.

In addition to scoring the game-winning, playoff-clinching touchdown on ‘Sunday Night Football,’ the veteran tight end hit three separate contract incentive marks during the Commanders’ Week 17 win to earn an additional $750,000. Now that’s a pretty good night.

Ertz’s one-year, $3 million contract with Washington also included incentives that would net the tight end additional money for hitting certain totals. One incentive was for 60 receptions on the season, another for 600 receiving yards and a final one for six touchdowns. Each one was worth $250,000.

Zach Ertz contract incentives

Entering Sunday’s game, Ertz needed five more catches, 62 more yards and two more touchdowns to hit each of those incentive marks, respectively. Through the full 60 minutes of regulation, those numbers had shrunk to two more catches, six more yards and one more touchdown. Fortunately for the 34-year-old, the game went to overtime.

All things Commanders: Latest Washington Commanders news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

Ertz went on to hit all three incentive marks on the Commanders’ overtime drive. He caught three passes for 16 yards and the game-winning touchdown in overtime, giving him 61 receptions, 610 yards and six touchdowns on the year – enough to hit all three incentives and earn himself $750,000.

The tight end can still earn up to $1.25 million more on five higher incentive marks during Washington’s final game, but it’s unlikely he’ll hit any of them. He’d make $250,000 more each for reaching 70 catches, 80 catches, 700 yards, 800 yards and eight touchdowns on the season.

Zach Ertz stats

Here’s where Ertz’s 2024 stats stand through 17 weeks of play:

Targets: 86
Receptions: 61
Receiving yards: 610
Yards/reception: 10
Receiving touchdowns: 6

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

As House Speaker Mike Johnson seeks to retain his grip on the gavel, Rep. Victoria Spartz, R-Ind., is demanding ‘assurances’ that Johnson ‘won’t sell us out to the swamp.’

Johnson, who secured the speaker’s gavel last year, got a major boost on Monday when Trump endorsed him to remain in the role.

‘I understand why President Trump is endorsing Speaker Johnson as he did Speaker Ryan, which is definitely important. However, we still need to get assurances that @SpeakerJohnson won’t sell us out to the swamp,’ Spartz noted in a post on X. 

‘President Trump will be able to save America only if we have a speaker with courage, vision and a plan – also public commitment to the American people how he will help deliver President Trump’s agenda to drain the swamp,’ she added in another tweet.

Spartz had previously issued a statement on Monday in which she called out Congress’s profligate spending and demanded a plan to accomplish President-elect Donald Trump’s agenda, something which she said she has not seen from current House Speaker Mike Johnson.

‘Congress has abandoned its constitutional duty to the American people to properly oversee the spending of their hard-earned money paid as taxes,’ Spartz declared in the statement. ‘Our next speaker must show courageous leadership to get our country back on track before this ‘Titanic’ strikes an iceberg at any moment.’

Fox News Digital reached out to Johnson’s office but no comment was provided.

In a post on Truth Social, Trump described Johnson as ‘a good, hard working, religious man,’ and declared, ‘He will do the right thing, and we will continue to WIN. Mike has my Complete & Total Endorsement. MAGA!!!’

Speaker Johnson thanked Trump in a post on X, noting, ‘Together, we will quickly deliver on your America First agenda and usher in the new golden age of America. The American people demand and deserve that we waste no time. Let’s get to work!’

Rep. Thomas Massie, R-Ky., who has said that he will not vote for Johnson to remain speaker, maintained his position on Monday after Trump’s endorsement.

‘I respect and support President Trump, but his endorsement of Mike Johnson is going to work out about as well as his endorsement of Speaker Paul Ryan. We’ve seen Johnson partner with the democrats to send money to Ukraine, authorize spying on Americans, and blow the budget,’ Massie tweeted.

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The Department of Defense (DoD) announced two weapons packages for Ukraine on Monday, totaling $2.47 billion. 

The first of the two, the Presidential Drawdown Authority package, with an ‘estimated value’ of $1.25 billion, is meant to ‘provide Ukraine additional capabilities to meet its most urgent needs, including: missiles for air defense; munitions for rocket systems and artillery; and anti-tank weapons,’ the DoD stated in a press release.

‘In addition, DoD announced an approximately $1.22 billion Ukraine Security Assistance Initiative (USAI) package to provide Ukraine with additional air defense, air-to-ground, Unmanned Aerial Systems, and other capabilities to fight Russian aggression.’

The aid packages come as the national debt tracker stands at more than $36 billion as of Dec. 26. 

The DoD outlined the packages’ capabilities, including missile systems, missiles, munitions, ammunition, anti-armor systems, medical equipment and more.

‘This is the Biden Administration’s twenty-third USAI package and seventy-third tranche of equipment to be provided from DoD inventories for Ukraine since August 2021,’ the statement reads. 

‘The United States continues to work together with some 50 Allies and partners through the Ukraine Defense Contact Group and its associated Capability Coalitions to provide the support Ukraine needs to prevail in its fight against Russian aggression.’

FOX News’ Eric Revell and Liz Friden contributed to this report. 

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Google’s blowout earnings report in April, which sparked the biggest rally in Alphabet shares since 2015 and pushed its market cap past $2 trillion for the first time, tempered fear that the company was falling behind in artificial intelligence.

As executives enthusiastically talked about the results with Google’s employees at an all-hands meeting the following week, it was clear that Wall Street viewed things differently than the company’s workforce.

“We’ve noticed a significant decline in morale, increased distrust and a disconnect between leadership and the workforce,” one employee wrote in a comment that was read by executives at the meeting. “How does leadership plan to address these concerns and regain the trust, morale and cohesion that have been foundational to our company’s success?”

The comment was highly rated on an internal forum.

“Despite the company’s stellar performance and record earnings, many Googlers have not received meaningful compensation increases” another top-rated employee question read.

That meeting set the stage for what would be a year of contrasting takes from the company’s vocal workforce. As Google faced some of the most intense pressure its experienced since going public two decades ago, so too did CEO Sundar Pichai, who took the helm in 2015.

Pichai oversaw a steady stream of revenue growth this year in key areas like search ads and cloud. The company rolled out groundbreaking technologies, rounded out its AI strategy despite a slew of embarrassing product incidents and saw its stock price rise more than 40% as of Thursday’s close, ahead of the S&P 500 but trailing rivals Meta and Amazon.

Over the course of 2024, many staffers questioned Pichai’s vision following product mishaps in the first half of the year as well as internal shake-ups and layoffs, according to conversations with more than a dozen employees, audio recordings and internal correspondence. 

As the second half of the year progressed and Google rolled out a number of eye-catching AI products, Pichai’s standing improved, though some skepticism remains, sources told CNBC.

After the introduction of ChatGPT in late 2022, the tech industry saw an influx of AI products from Microsoft, with its Copilot AI assistant, and Meta, which placed its Meta AI chatbot in the search functions of its apps, as well as from hot startups like OpenAI and Perplexity.

The popularity of those tools has eaten into Google’s grip on U.S. search. The company’s share of the search advertising market is expected to dip below 50% in 2025, which would be the first time falling below that mark in more than a decade, according to research firm eMarketer.

Google responded to the pressures from new AI tools with offerings of its own. The company in 2024 rebranded its family of AI models as Gemini and released a number of products that were well received. But in its scramble to play catch-up, the company also released a pair of AI products that initially proved embarrassing. 

In February, Google launched Imagen 2, which turned user prompts into AI-generated images. Immediately after it was introduced, the product came under scrutiny for historical inaccuracies discovered by users. Notably, when one user asked it to show a German soldier in 1943, the tool depicted a racially diverse set of soldiers wearing German military uniforms of the era. 

The company pulled the feature, and Pichai told employees the company had “offended our users and shown bias,” according to a memo. Google said it would take a few weeks to relaunch Imagen 2, but it ended up being six months before it was revived as Imagen 3 in August. 

“We definitely messed up on the image generation,” Google co-founder Sergey Brin told a small crowd at a hacker house in March, in a video posted to YouTube. “It was mostly due to just not thorough testing.” 

The launch of AI Overview in May caused a similar reaction. 

That product showed users AI summaries atop Google’s traditional search results. Pichai hyped the product, calling it the biggest change to search in 25 years. Once again, users were quick to find problems.

When asked “How many rocks should I eat each day,” the tool said, “According to UC Berkeley geologists, people should eat at least one small rock a day.” AI Overview also listed the vitamins and digestive benefits of rocks.

Google responded by saying it would add more guardrails to AI Overview for health-related queries but said the mistakes weren’t hallucinations, and were rather just rare edge cases. Search Vice President Liz Reid told employees at an all-hands meeting in June that AI Overview’s launch shouldn’t discourage them from taking risks. 

“We should act with urgency,” Reid said. “When we find new problems, we should do the extensive testing but we won’t always find everything and that just means that we respond.”

Beyond its AI blunders, Google also saw its greatest regulatory challenges to date in 2024.

In August, a federal judge ruled that the company illegally holds a monopoly in the search market. The Justice Department in November asked that Google be forced to divest its Chrome internet browser unit as a remedy for the ruling

The DOJ’s request represents the agency’s most aggressive attempt to break up a tech company since its antitrust case against Microsoft, which reached a settlement in 2001.

The remedies are expected to be decided next summer, and Google has said it will appeal, likely dragging out the situation a couple more years, but the company faces more antitrust hurdles. 

In a separate case, the DOJ accused the company of illegally dominating online ad technology. That trial closed in September and awaits a judge ruling. In October, a U.S. judge issued a permanent injunction that will force Google to offer alternatives to its Google Play app store for Android phones. After the ruling in October, Google won a temporary pause on the ruling, meaning it won’t have to open up Android to more app stores yet.

Amid the external pressure, Google notched some notable victories particularly toward the end of 2024, leading to a more positive sentiment from people within and outside the company.

Google successfully launched its most powerful suite of new Gemini models that underpin all of the company’s AI products, including its lightweight model Gemini Flash, which has been popular among developers. YouTube’s combined ad and subscription revenue over the past four quarters surpassed $50 billion. 

In the third quarter, Google saw the fastest-growing cloud business across the big tech players, up 35% over last year, with operating margins of 17%. The company has also seen double-digit revenue growth for each of the past four quarters and launched Trillium, its powerful sixth generation Tensor Processing Units, or TPUs, which were also found to have powered Apple’s AI models. 

Despite the blunders, AI Overview reached nearly 1 billion monthly users by the end of October. Demand for AI software has also driven consistent growth for the company’s cloud infrastructure. And Google launched an impressive video generation product, Veo 2, this month as well as an updated AI note-taking product, NotebookLM.

Beyond AI, Google in December announced Willow, a chip the company calls its biggest step in the march toward commercially viable quantum computing. The Waymo self-driving car unit was also a bright spot, expanding its robotaxi service to three cities and laying the groundwork for even more expansion in 2025. The company has delivered 4 million fully autonomous rides this year, with plans to commercially launch in Austin, Texas, and Atlanta next year.  

But as Pichai approaches a decade running Google and starts his sixth year as CEO of parent Alphabet, questions remain about his ability to guide the company into the future.

Internally, employees routinely criticize leadership on the company’s Memegen messaging board, and some have aired their grievances publicly. 

“Google does not have one single visionary leader,” a Google software engineer wrote in a LinkedIn post earlier this year that received more than 8,500 reactions. “Not a one. From the C-suite to the SVPs to the VPs, they are all profoundly boring and glassy-eyed.”

In October, Google announced it would shake up the leadership of its ads and search division.

The company replaced longtime search boss Prabhakar Raghavan with Nick Fox, a deputy of Raghavan’s and a career Google employee. Raghavan was given the title of “chief scientist,” but internally, he is now listed as an “IC,” or individual contributor. 

Google also shifted the team working on its Gemini AI app to the Google DeepMind division, under AI head Demis Hassabis. Employees praised Pichai’s leadership shuffle, but some complained that the moves should’ve happened sooner.

Notably, some employees were perturbed when Raghavan addressed employees at an all-hands meeting in April, when he urged them to move faster, according to several people who spoke with CNBC. Raghavan noted that the staffers working to fix the failed Imagen 2 tool had increased their workloads from 100 hours a week to 120 hours to correct it in a timely manner.

Pichai has made efforts to get Google back to its nimble startup-like culture. 

When addressing employees, Pichai often name-checked co-founders Sergey Brin and Larry Page to remind them of Google’s scrappy roots. He’s flattened the company, removing 10% of middle management, according to audio of a December all-hands meeting. And in the spring, Pichai greenlit a hackathon, allowing employees to build using Google products that have yet to be announced. Pichai has also personally joined meetings with Google’s Labs team and enabled them to move quickly on products like NotebookLM, one of the company’s hit AI products in 2024.

After Brin’s hacker house appearance in March, some employees internally joked he should retake the helm, nostalgic for what they perceived as a visionary leader devoid of corporate speak. 

Brin co-founded Google with Page in 1998, but he stepped down as president of Alphabet in 2019. Brin, who remains a board member and a principal shareholder with a stake worth more than $140 billion, began appearing more frequently on campus starting in 2023, as part of an effort to help ramp up Google’s position in the hypercompetitive AI market. Employees, particularly working in AI and DeepMind said they’ve seen Brin walking around the company’s Mountain View, California, headquarters throughout the year and have been able to ask him questions for projects they’re pursuing.

Despite Brin’s reemergence, several employees told CNBC they’re doubtful he could adequately run what has become an increasingly larger and complex corporation. 

Employees said that although Pichai didn’t strike them as particularly visionary or as a wartime leader, it’s hard to find someone better suited for the job, given all the complexities of Alphabet. The key quandary remains: move too early and risk widespread criticism; move too late and risk missing the boat.

Through the year, morale inside Google wavered. Efforts to cut costs across the company in order to invest more in AI resulted in some teams feeling bifurcated and created yet another challenge for Pichai.

Within the company’s AI and DeepMind divisions, morale is mostly high, according to employees, boosted by hefty investments. Elsewhere, the vibes have been marred by cost cuts, bureaucracy and declining trust in leadership, employees said. 

DeepMind and AI teams have held off-sites, team-building activities, and have much bigger travel and recruiting budgets, people familiar with the matter said. In the spring, the company moved employees out of an eight-story office on San Francisco’s waterfront Embarcadero street and replaced them with AI and AI adjacent teams. 

A meme posted internally in November summed it up. 

The meme featured a photo of the cast of “Wicked” actors, where one, labeled “execs” looked longingly at one fellow actor labeled “Gemini” while ignoring the other beside her, which was labeled as “users.”

A Google spokesperson contested the idea that AI workers are receiving favorable treatment and said higher travel and recruiting budgets are not exclusive to AI teams or DeepMind. 

“Most Googlers, regardless of team, continue to feel positively about our mission and the company’s future, and are proud to work here,” the spokesperson said. 

A few employees say they’re no longer incentivized by the prospects of landing a promotion, which have become harder to achieve, and rather by the hope of avoiding layoffs. 

Despite slashing 12,000 jobs, or roughly 6% of its workforce, in 2023, Google has continued eliminating roles this year. In her first public statements as Google’s CFO, Anat Ashkenazi, told Wall Street in October that one of her top priorities would be to drive more “cost efficiencies” across the company in order to invest more in AI.

“I think any organization can always push a little further and I’ll be looking at additional opportunities,” Ashkenazi said.

That month, Google posted a job listing for a “Central Reorg Support Team Partner.” The responsibilities of that fixed-term contract position would include consulting with local HR teams and noted the need for the support staff’s “ability to operate with empathy and diffuse/de-escalate challenging conversations/situations.” 

“Hire the smartest people so they can tell us what to do,” one employee wrote on the internal forum in meme-style font atop the images of Brin and Page. “Hire a reorg consultant so they can tell us how to layoff the smartest people,” another said. 

Google ultimately took the job listing down.

Touting its AI technology to clients, Pichai’s leadership team has been aggressively pursuing federal government contracts, which has caused a heightened strain in some areas within the outspoken workforce since the beginning of the year.

Google terminated more than 50 employees after a series of protests against Project Nimbus, a $1.2 billion joint contract with Amazon that provides the Israeli government and military with cloud computing and AI services. Executives repeatedly said the contract didn’t violate any of the company’s “AI principles.”

However, documents and reports show the company’s agreement allowed for giving Israel AI tools that included image categorization, object tracking, as well as provisions for state-owned weapons manufacturers. Earlier this month, a New York Times report found that four months prior to signing on to Nimbus, officials at the company worried that signing the deal would harm its reputation and that “Google Cloud services could be used for, or linked to, the facilitation of human rights violations.”

In an all-hands meeting in April, a highly rated question asked why employees who did not participate in the protests were also fired, which was reported and cited in a National Labor Relations Board complaint from affected employees. Chris Rackow, Google’s security chief, took the stage at the all-hands and rebutted those claims.

“This was a very clear case of employees disrupting and occupying work spaces, and making other employees feel unsafe,” a Google spokesperson told CNBC, adding that the company “carefully confirmed” that every person terminated was involved in the protests. “By any standard, their behavior was completely unacceptable.”

That round of job eliminations underscored Google’s clampdown on internal discussions related to hot-button topics, including politics and geopolitical conflicts, which was encouraged by executives several years prior.

One internal meme that got more than 2,000 likescompared Google to Star Wars’ Anakin Skywalker. The meme shows an image of a smiling childhood Skywalker, framed by one of the company’s original, colorful employee badges. The meme progresses Skywalker’s age in two later versions of the badge. 

The final badge shows Darth Vader working for “Google,” spelled out in the font of IBM’s logo.

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The advertising market has positive momentum going into 2025 — especially for media companies with sports rights and tentpole live programming.

Sports and live events such as awards shows reigned supreme in conversations with media executives who weighed in on their expectations for the advertising market in the year ahead. The end of the uncertainty surrounding the election has helped the outlook improve, too, they said.

And despite consumers fleeing the traditional TV bundles, with more ad dollars going toward streaming, executives emphasized that traditional TV is still important in discussions with advertisers, especially when it comes to sports.

Overall, executives said they expect stability in the market and are hoping to move past the slowdown in ad spending in recent years.

“Normalization is the right way to say it with the advertising market,” said Mark Marshall, NBCUniversal’s chairman of global advertising and partnerships. “With the election settled, a lot of companies feel the uncertainty over that has gone away.”

He added that the company has seen more so-called scatter market budgets come in during the fourth quarter, which is what the industry calls the buying and selling of ads closer to their airdate versus ads that are bought further out.

“Our first quarter is looking really strong. I think that any election year is challenging for anyone in the fourth quarter because a lot of marketers end up sitting on their hands since the airwaves and digital are crowded,” said Dan Porter, CEO of sports media company Overtime. “I think that’s true for us and it’s true for everyone.”

Yet despite the uptick in ad revenue following the election and the forecast stability, Natalie Bastian, global chief marketing officer at Teads, said she expects a lot of the same trends.

Bastian noted that 2024 included major moments like the Summer Olympics and presidential election, which strengthened TV ad revenue. She expects the same budgets to carry over into the new year, however.

“What we’ve heard in general from some of our closest partners … media budgets aren’t growing, and so there’s just more selection into where [advertisers are] spending their money,” said Bastian. This makes sports and live programming that much more important to media companies.

Overall, the global advertising industry is expected to surpass $1 trillion in total revenue for the first time this year, excluding U.S. political advertising, and will grow 7.7% in 2025 to reach $1.1 trillion, according to a recent report from GroupM, WPP’s media investment group. Advertising on digital platforms — which includes retail media as a segment — is what’s driving that increase.

TV, considered “the most effective form of advertising,” is expected to grow nearly 2% in 2025 to $169.1 billion in total global ad revenue. In comparison, ad revenue for “pure-play digital,” which excludes “the digital extensions of traditional media” like streaming but includes platforms like YouTube and TikTok, is expected to grow by 10% to $813.3 billion globally in 2025, according to GroupM.

Sports keep attracting big audiences and advertisers, leading media companies to pay hefty sums for the rights to games.

Commercials during live sports generated 24% more engagement than other programming, according to EDO, an advertising data company.

“Live event coverage will continue to be a cornerstone of media engagement, and streaming services must step up their game,” said Tim Hurd, vice president of media at Goodway Group. “As more streaming platforms dive into sports, the challenge will be to keep viewers engaged, not just by offering content, but by enhancing the overall experience with personalized, non-disruptive ad units.”

Comcast’s NBCUniversal said the Summer Olympics in Paris generated a record $1.2 billion in ad revenue. It appeared to have paid off, with the company reporting a total audience delivery of more than 30 million people on NBC’s TV and streaming platforms.

Fox Corp. executives have said the company already sold out of Super Bowl ads for this coming February, which reportedly cost about $7 million each. The 2024 Super Bowl had an estimated 123.7 million viewers.

And Disney said it had sold out of ads for its Christmas Day NBA games two weeks before they aired. The company added that it’s “pacing up substantially” for the full NBA season when it comes to ad revenue compared with last year, and that it’s “already seen early movement” for the postseason in the scatter market.

The audience for women’s sports, driven by the WNBA in particular, also ramped up in the last year, meaning more opportunities for advertisers.

“This is beyond Caitlin Clark, even though she is a massive catalyst,” said Josh Mattison, Disney Advertising’s executive vice president of digital revenue pricing, planning and operations. “This was a transformational year in terms of audiences.”

The audience for the WNBA hit a record in 2024, and consumers were 16% more likely to engage with ads during these games compared with last year, according to EDO. But while advertisers spent $8.5 billion on sports TV ads in 2024, women’s sports only made up 3% of that number, according to EDO, leaving plenty of room for growth next year.

The growing popularity of women’s sports and its importance for media companies was evident this month when Netflix secured the U.S. rights to the FIFA Women’s World Cup in 2027 and 2031. The streaming giant has been bulking up its sports portfolio, as have its peers across the legacy and digital media space.

While consumers are cutting the cord and streaming services are now snapping up sports rights, linear TV’s audience still significantly outpaces streaming.

“There’s still declines in linear TV in a lot of markets, but not in all markets,” said Kate Scott-Dawkins, GroupM’s global president of business intelligence, noting there are international markets that are seeing growth. “When we talk about total TV, there is still a lot of opportunity and hopefully a renewed appreciation for how effective that can be as a medium [for advertisers].”

Amy Leifer, DirecTV Advertising’s chief ad sales officer, said the company predicts continued growth in programmatic ad spending, or automated digital ad buying, in streaming.

“Despite the shift towards streaming, linear TV still holds a significant advantage in terms of ad impressions, generating six times more than streaming,” said Leifer.

Executives said they have been talking with advertisers about how to look at linear and streaming together when disbursing ad dollars.

Leifer said DirecTV Advertising’s mantra is that “TV is TV,” no matter the distribution method. “Our focus for 2025 is to unify digital and linear television advertising by adopting a comprehensive approach and developing convergent TV solutions,” she added.

Both Marshall of NBCUniversal and Mattison of Disney said advertisers used to be focused on linear “versus” streaming. That’s not the case anymore.

“The pitch [we made to advertisers] last year is you really can’t look at one versus the other. When it’s rolled out into one platform, it’s how do you look at digital and linear together. That’s made a huge difference,” said Marshall, noting that older audiences are more present on linear TV, while younger generations have gravitated toward streaming.

Marshall said that NBCUniversal’s Peacock “hasn’t been cannibalizing linear,” because there’s little overlap between the content on both distribution outlets. “It’s actually two distinct, different audiences,” Marshall said.

Mattison noted Disney’s expansive sports portfolio and its various platforms across linear and streaming, with TV networks like ABC and ESPN, and streaming service ESPN+, which has content being added to Disney+, have been an advantage.

“The convergence [of the streaming apps] is really good for consumers, which leads to growth for advertisers,” he said. “We’re fortunate we spent years building our streaming ad tech, and we’re able to maximize audience reach as well as targeting and performance.”

“Maybe a few years ago it was linear versus streaming. I think now it’s linear AND streaming,” Mattison continued. “They’re kind of planned together. It’s true on both the media side and the advertiser side.”

Disclosure: Comcast owns CNBC parent NBCUniversal. NBCUniversal owns NBC Sports and NBC Olympics. NBC Olympics is the U.S. broadcast rights holder to all Summer and Winter Games through 2032.

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