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Red Sox ace Garrett Crochet struck out 11 Yankees in his unbelievable postseason debut.
Boston acquired Crochet last winter and signed him to a $170 million extension.
The Red Sox can advance to the ALDS with a win in Game 2 on Wednesday.

NEW YORK – Garrett Crochet seemingly had plenty left in the tank.

In an era where starting pitchers are yanked at the first sign of trouble, usually before completing six innings, Boston Red Sox manager Alex Cora rolled the dice and let his ace play the starring role.

On the last of his career-high 117th pitches, Crochet blew a 100-mph four-seam heater by Austin Wells, who went back to the New York Yankees’ bench in disgust as the Red Sox ace’s 11th strikeout victim.

It was the most pitches by a starter in a playoff game since Washington Nationals ace Stephen Strasburg threw 117 in Game 3 of the 2019 National League Championship Series against the St. Louis Cardinals.

“With them leaving me in there, I wanted to honor that decision. I felt like he’s put a lot of faith in me this year, and I haven’t let him down yet,” Crochet said. “So I was going to be damn sure this wasn’t the first time.

“I feel like in this environment it is hard to feel any sort of fatigue beyond mental. Up until that point I was incredibly locked into the game, especially right after we took the lead. There was a lot at stake, so it kept me locked in and engaged the whole time.”

Crochet, who improved to 4-0 against the Yankees this year, held the Bronx Bombers at bay until his offense picked up the slack in the top half of the innings, staking him to a 2-1 lead, ultimately, holding on for a 3-1 victory in Game 1 of the wild card series. Boston is one win away from an ALDS matchup against the Toronto Blue Jays.

“We are talking about a stud pitcher. I still thought we got some good swings off,” Yankees manager Aaron Boone said of Crochet. “Look, he’s really good. I thought we had some decent at-bats. We weren’t able to pressure them enough and put enough traffic against him to put him in real trouble.”

The 26-year-old Crochet had it working all night, from his lethal heater to his slider. The one mistake he did make was when Anthony Volpe, who had two of the four hits against Crochet, sent a 97 mph slider into the right field seats. Volpe’s 382-foot home run would have cleared the fences in every major league ballpark – except Boston’s Fenway Park.

That’s precisely why Red Sox management sent four prospects to the Chicago White Sox in December for the left-hander, for performances like he had Tuesday night. The six-year, $170 million extension he signed in March is looking all the more genius.

“He’s the best pitcher in the game,” said Yankees slugger Aaron Judge, who went 2-for-4 in Game 1. “He’s going to work all his pitches. We got the Volpe homer but after we got guys on we couldn’t do much after that.”

Cora said he never felt Crochet was overextended because of the care that Boston has taken to keep him fresh. But a Monday conversation with his ace foreshadowed Game 1, Crochet telling Cora that he would be handing the ball ‘straight to (closer Aroldis Chapman).’

“You have to make sure you stay with the process. That’s the most important thing. For how great he was tonight, I tip my hat to the medical staff,” Cora added. “They have done an amazing job with a guy that has never pitched 200 innings, had never made more than 30 starts, has never pitched seven and two-thirds in the playoffs.”

Crochet’s seven-inning masterclass saw him retire 17 of the final 18 batters he faced in his first postseason start. Over the last month of the season, Crochet began throwing more sinkers because his cutter was getting hit and the command on his four-seam fastball was spotty.

‘He is a guy that wants it bad, to be honest with you,’ Cora said. ‘He was in a situation last year that he was learning how to become a starter. He got traded to become the ace. He got paid like an ace, and since day one he has acted like that.’

Crochet also doesn’t let the outside noise affect how he goes about his business.

“For me, it was just a commitment to play for the team that, you know, I owed something to. At the time, it was the White Sox, now it is the Red Sox,’ he said. “I am going to do everything I can to give us a chance to win every time I grab the ball.”

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The Indiana Fever’s Cinderella run has officially come to an end. 

The No. 2 seed Las Vegas Aces eliminated the No. 6 seed Fever from the WNBA playoffs on Tuesday with a 107-98 overtime win in Game 5 to clinch the semifinal series and advance to the WNBA Finals for the third time in four years.

The Aces led by as many as nine points in Game 5, but the Fever outscored the Aces 23-15 in the fourth quarter to tie it up and force overtime, all without All-Star Kelsey Mitchell, who was ruled out in the third quarter after suffering severe cramps in her legs. The Fever were also without Aliyah Boston, who fouled out in the fourth quarter, for the extra period.

A’ja Wilson and Jackie Young carried the Aces in regulation, but overtime belonged to Chelsea Gray, who scored eight of her 17 points in the extra period, including back-to-back 3-pointers.

‘It’s not just one person, it’s not just five people, it’s everybody. Everybody you see contributed to this game… that’s the same of a championship team,’ Aces center A’ja Wilson said. ‘We’ve worked so hard to get to this point. People counted all of us out, but we’re making it to the Finals right now. We’re not done.’

Wilson finished with 35 points, seven rebounds, five assists, four steals and four blocks on Tuesday, becoming the first player in WNBA history to record 25-plus points, 3-plus blocks and 3-plus steals in consecutive games in the regular season or postseason. It was Wilson’s eighth career 30-point playoff game, tying Breanna Stewart and Diana Taurasi for the most all time.

Wilson (35) and Jackie Young (30) combined for 65 points, becoming the first pair of teammates to score 30-plus in the same game in WNBA playoff history. 

Fever guard Odyssey Sims finished with 27 points in the loss.

End of regulation: Aces 86, Fever 86

The Indiana Fever may be down but they are not out. The Fever lost Kelsey Mitchell for the remainder of the game in the third quarter, but the Fever outscored the Aces 23-15 in the fourth quarter to force overtime.

Aces guard Jackie Young had a look at a game-winning layup, but missed the shot and a putback attempt.

A’ja Wilson (33) and Jackie Young (28) combined for 61 points, while the rest of the team scored 25 points. 

The Fever will be without Aliyah Boston, who fouled out in the fourth quarter. She exited with 11 points and 16 rebounds. Odyssey Sims has a team-high 23 points

End of 3Q: Aces 71, Fever 63

The Aces are 10 minutes away from their third trip to the WNBA Finals in four years. 

A’ja Wilson (27 points) and Jackie Young (21 points) have combined for 48 of the Aces 71 points. 

Kelsey Mitchell leads the Fever with 15 points, but was ruled out the remainder of the contest after going down with an injury. Odyssey Sims is up to 13 points, while Aliyah Boston has seven points, 13 rebounds and five personal fouls. 

Kelsey Mitchell exits game with injury

Fever guard Kelsey Mitchell went down with an injury with 5:05 remaining in the third quarter as the Fever trailed the Aces, 59-55. Fever players surrounded Mitchell with towels as she laid on her back. Mitchell subsequently rolled over onto her stomach while team staff appeared to stretch her leg. The ESPN broadcast initially reported that Mitchell was suffering from a cramp, but a stretcher was then brought on the floor, signaling something more. Mitchell didn’t get on the stretcher, but was carried to the locker room by team staff. She couldn’t put any pressure on her left leg. Holly Rowe reported Mitchell is out for the remainder of the game.  

Fever center Aliyah Boston in foul trouble

Aliyah Boston picked up her fifth personal foul with 5:05 remaining in the third quarter and Fever head coach Stephanie White subsequently pulled Boston from the game.

Aces guard Chelsea Gray exits game with injury

Aces guard Chelsea Gray limped back to the locker room after turning her right ankle after Fever guard Odyssey Sims stepped on her foot with 8:15 remaining in the third quarter. Gray exited the game with seven points, shooting a perfect 3-of-3 from the field, in addition to four assists and one steal. Dana Evans entered the game for Gray, but Gray returned in the third quarter.

Halftime: Aces 47, Fever 45

Game 5 has been has close as it gets so far, with 11 lead changes and 14 ties in the first half alone. Neither team has led by more than five points at any time so far.  The Aces have a two-point lead over the Fever heading into halftime.  

Aces center A’ja Wilson has a game-high 14 points, four rebounds, three assists, two blocks and one steal. Jackie Young has 12 points and Megan Gustafson added five points in nine minutes off the bench. 

Kesley Mitchell scored 12 points in the first half, while Aliyah Boston is nearing a double-double with seven points and 11 rebounds, including four offensive rebounds. Odyssey Sims has nine points, while Lexie Hull is looking to get going from beyond the arc after going 0-of-4 from the 3-point line. 

The Fever have been controlling the boards with 22 rebounds (eight offensive), compared to 10 rebounds (two offensive) for the Aces. Indiana, however, is up to 10 turnovers that have led to 11 points for the Aces. 

DiJonai Carrington in the building

What happens in Las Vegas doesn’t always stay in Las Vegas. Minnesota Lynx guard DiJonai Carrington was spotted courtside at Michelob ULTRA Arena fresh off the Lynx’s playoff ousting on Sunday. Carrington is wearing a No. 3 NaLyssa Smith jersey, paired with a walking boot on her left foot. (Carrington sat out the Lynx’s semifinals series against the Phoenix Mercury with a significant mid-foot sprain.) Carrington and Smith were teammates on Dallas Wings earlier this season before Smith was traded to the Aces and Carrington was traded to the Lynx.

End of Q1: Fever 23, Aces 23

We’re all tied up in the do-or-die Game 5. 

Aces center A’ja Wilson leads all scorers with eight points and two rebounds, while Jackie Young added seven points. Shey Peddy has given the Fever some huge minutes off the bench and scored a team-high seven points in the first quarter. Kelsey Mitchell is up to six points, while Aliyah Boston has four points and six rebounds.

Fever lead Aces early in winner-take-all game

Game 5 is underway at Michelob ULTRA Arena in Las Vegas and the Fever have an early 11-9 lead over the Aces. Both teams appeared to have some early jitters and frequently turned over the ball. The Fever turned the ball over five times to start the first quarter, while the Aces are up to two turnovers. 

Kelsey Mitchell leads the Fever with five points, while Aliyah Boston has four points. The Fever are out-rebounding the Aces 10-2, including five offensive rebounds. Nine of the Fever’s 11 points have come from second-chance opportunities. 

Jackie Young has a team-high four points for the Aces, while A’ja Wilson has two points. 

Shey Peddy stats

Indiana Fever guard Shey Peddy, 36, has averaged 5.2 points, 1.7 steals and 0.8 rebounds in nine regular season game with the Fever. Peddy had seven points, three rebounds and two steals in the Fever’s Game 4 win over the Aces on Sunday. 

Las Vegas Aces roster

Indiana Fever roster

What time is Fever vs. Aces Game 5?

Game 5 of the WNBA semifinals series between the No. 2 seed Las Vegas Aces and No. 6 seed Indiana Fever is scheduled to tip off at 9:30 p.m. ET on Tuesday, Sept. 30 at Michelob Ultra Arena in Las Vegas.

How to watch Fever vs. Aces in WNBA playoffs: TV, streaming for Game 5

Date: Tuesday, Sept. 30
Time: 9:30 p.m. ET
Location: Michelob Ultra Arena (Las Vegas)
TV: ESPN2
Stream: Fubo, ESPN Unlimited

Stream Fever-Aces series on Fubo (free trial)

Indiana Fever starting lineup

Head coach: Stephanie White

0 Kelsey Mitchell | G 5′ 8′ – Ohio State
1 Odyssey Sims | G 5′ 8′ – Baylor
6 Natasha Howard | F 6′ 3′ – Florida State
7 Aliyah Boston | C 6′ 5′ – South Carolina
10 Lexie Hull | G 6′ 1′ – Stanford

Is Caitlin Clark playing tonight? Indiana Fever injury report

Chloe Bibby (left knee), Caitlin Clark (right groin), Sydney Colson (left knee), Sophie Cunningham (right knee), Damiris Dantas (concussion protocol) and Aari McDonald (right foot) have all been ruled out for Game 5.

Las Vegas Aces starting lineup

Head coach: Becky Hammon

0 Jackie Young | G 6′ 0′ – Notre Dame
1 Kierstan Bell | F 6′ 1′ – Florida Gulf Coast
3 NaLyssa Smith | F 6′ 4′ – Baylor
12 Chelsea Gray | G 5′ 11′ – Duke
22 A’ja Wilson | C 6′ 5′ – South Carolina

WNBA MVP: A’ja Wilson wins for record fourth time

A’ja Wilson was named the WNBA’s Most Valuable Player for the 2025 season. She is the first four-time MVP, besting three-time winners Sheryl Swoopes, Lisa Leslie and Lauren Jackson. 

Wilson received 51 of 72 first-place votes and 21 second-place votes (657 points) from a national panel of sportswriters and broadcasters. The Las Vegas Aces center won the award over finalists Minnesota Lynx forward Napheesa Collier (534),  Phoenix Mercury forward Alyssa Thomas (391), Atlanta Dream guard Allisha Gray (180) and Indiana Fever guard Kelsey Mitchell (93).

Caitlin Clark injury timeline

May 24: Clark suffered a left quad injury during the Fever’s 90-88 loss to the New York Liberty, where she recorded a double-double with 18 points and 10 assists. Clark couldn’t pinpoint the specific play that caused her injury, but noted that it happened early in the contest. Clark said, ‘Adrenaline covers up a lot of stuff when you’re in the heat of battle. After the game, I had some pain, and then we got an MRI, and that kind of gave me the result that I didn’t want to see.’ She missed the Fever’s next five games.
June 14: Clark returned to Indiana’s lineup in the Fever’s 102-88 win over the Liberty and dropped 32 points, nine assists and eight rebounds in her first game back. 
June 24: Clark suffered a left groin injury in the Fever’s 94-86 winover the Seattle Storm, which resulted in Clark missing the team’s next four games. Fever coach Stephanie White said she learned of Clark’s groin injury the following night after Clark alerted team trainers of discomfort.
July 1: Clark was ruled out of the Fever’s 2025 Commissioner’s Cup win over the Minnesota Lynx in Minneapolis. That didn’t stop Clark from rightfully celebrating the team’s hardware.
July 9: Clark returned to the Fever’s lineup in the Fever’s 80-61 loss to the Golden State Valkyries. Clark was limited to 10 points, shooting 4 of 12 from the field and 2 of 5 from the 3-point line, and had six assists, five rebounds and four turnovers. Following the blowout loss, Clark said it was ‘going to take me a second to get my wind back. … Just trying to get my legs under me.’
July 15: Clark suffered a right groin injury in the final minute of the Fever’s 85-77 victory over the Sun at TD Garden in Boston. White later confirmed Clark ‘felt a little something in her groin.’ This marked the last game for which Clark suited up.
July 18: Clark announced that she would sit out the 2025 WNBA All-Star Game in Indianapolis, where she was named a team captain. Clark was also set to participate in the 3-point contest. She said, ‘I am incredibly sad and disappointed to say I can’t participate … I have to rest my body.’
July 24: The Fever said Clark’s medical evaluations confirmed there’s ‘no additional injuries or damage,’ but the team said it will be cautious with Clark’s rehab and recovery.
Aug. 7: Clark reportedly suffered a mild bone bruise in her left ankle during an individual workout session in Phoenix, according to The Indianapolis Star, part of the USA TODAY Network.
Aug. 8: During an appearance on Sue Bird’s podcast, ‘Bird’s Eye View,’ Clark spoke about the frustrations of her injury-filled season: “It’s not like I have a training camp to build up to play in my first game again. It’s like no, you’re tossed into Game 30 — like, ‘Go try to play well.’ It’s hard, it really is.”
Aug. 10: Fever coach Stephanie White said Clark has progressed in her recovery and has started running full court again, but Clark hasn’t returned to practice just yet: an important step in her ramp-up. ‘She’s been able to get a little bit more in her full-court running with all of her body weight. … She’s been able to do a little more on the court in terms of how she moves, but not into practice yet,’ White said.
Aug. 20: White confirmed that Clark has not returned to practice yet.
Aug. 24: Clark participated in a team shootaround and went through some non-contact drills with the second team, marking her first time practicing with the team since suffering a right groin injury on July 15.
Sept. 4: Clark shared a post on her official X account, stating that she will miss the rest of the regular season and any potential postseason action.

Kelsey Mitchell has been carrying the Indiana Fever — it’s time everyone noticed

In a tumultuous season defined by injuries and resilience, Indiana Feverguard Kelsey Mitchell has remained a constant.

Mitchell has, in fact, been a constant for the Fever organization ever since she was drafted No. 2 overall out of Ohio State in 2018. She’s endured ups and downs during her eight-year career in Indiana, including six losing seasons and five different head coaches, enough turmoil to send any top pick packing.

But Mitchell never bailed and the 29-year-old is now leading the Fever’s improbable postseason charge.

‘There have been multiple times this season where (Mitchell) has put us on her back and she’s carried us,’ Indiana head coach Stephanie White said on Sunday after the Fever upset the Las Vegas Aces 89-73 to steal Game 1 of the WNBA playoff semifinals behind Mitchell’s 34-point performance. Full story here.

2025 WNBA Finals schedule

*if necessary

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And then there were two.

The 2025 WNBA Finals is set as the No. 2 seed Las Vegas Aces and No. 4 seed Phoenix Mercury will face off following wins over the No. 6 seed Indiana Fever (3-2) and No. 1 seed Minnesota Lynx (3-1), respectively, in the best-of-five semifinal round. This will be the Aces fourth Finals appearance since 2020 and the Mercury’s first since 2021.

The WNBA Finals is expanding to a best-of-seven series, which will follow a 2-2-1-1-1 format that will see the higher seed Aces hosting the first two games at Michelob ULTRA Arena in Las Vegas. The series will shift to PHX Arena in Phoenix for Game 3 and 4.

The Aces are vying for their third WNBA championship in four years, while the Mercury are in search of their first title since 2014. Aces center A’ja Wilson is also trying to become the second player in league history to win the league MVP and a WNBA championship in the same season twice. (Cynthia Cooper won the MVP and titles in 1997 and 1998 and Wilson in 2022.)

The journey to the title continues on Friday. Here’s a look at the 2025 WNBA Finals, including projected starting lineups, full rosters, head-to-head records and X factors:

No. 2 Las Vegas Aces vs. No. 4 Phoenix Mercury

Las Vegas won the regular-season series vs. Phoenix, 3-1

2025 WNBA Finals schedule

*if necessary

Las Vegas Aces starting lineup

Head coach: Becky Hammon

0 Jackie Young | G 6′ 0′ – Notre Dame
1 Kierstan Bell | F 6′ 1′ – Florida Gulf Coast
3 NaLyssa Smith | F 6′ 4′ – Baylor
12 Chelsea Gray | G 5′ 11′ – Duke
22 A’ja Wilson | C 6′ 5′ – South Carolina

Why the Las Vegas Aces could win

Batman has Robin, and A’ja Wilson has teammate Jackie Young. Wilson is a gamechanger but the four-time MVP proved she’s only human with a couple of ‘stinkers’ in the semifinal round against the Fever. Wilson was limited to 13 points (6-of-20 FG; 1-of-2 3PT) in Game 3, but the Aces still beat the Fever behind a 25-point performance from Young.

The dynamic duo were the highest scoring pair in the league this season, averaging a combined 39.9 points per game. Wilson and Young made history in Game 5 by becoming the first pair of teammates to score 30-plus points in the same game, finishing with 35 and 30 points in the must-win game.

Wilson and Young can only carry the team so far, as evidenced in Game 5. Chelsea Gray and Jewell Loyd lifted the Aces to the finish line in overtime and will be critical moving forward. ‘It’s not just one person, it’s not just five people, it’s everybody,’ Wilson said. The Aces not only have the highest field goal percentage (48.5%) and the highest amount of average points (87.0) in the postseason, Las Vegas has experience, playing in their third WNBA Finals in the four years.

X-factor: Las Vegas Aces forward NaLyssa Smith

Smith was fire in the Aces’ semifinal series win against the Indiana Fever, the team that drafted her No. 2 overall in 2022. After averaging 6.6 points in the Aces’ first-round series against the Seattle Storm, Smith aggressively looked to score against the Fever. The forward averaged 11.5 points in four games, including an 18-point performance in their Game 2 win, shooting 7-of-9 from the field and securing seven rebounds. ‘When you are on a team where winning is the standard, it raises your level of focus,’ Smith said. Wilson’s load is eased when Smith is on the court, but she must stay out of foul trouble. (She had five fouls in Games 3, 4, and 5.)

Phoenix Mercury starting lineup

Head coach: Nate Tibbetts

0 Satou Sabally | F 6′ 4′ – Oregon
2 Kahleah Copper | G 6′ 1′ – Rutgers
4 Natasha Mack | C 6′ 4′ – Oklahoma State
8 Monique Akoa Makani | G 5′ 11′ – Cameroon
25 Alyssa Thomas | F 6′ 2′ – Maryland

Why Phoenix Mercury could win

The Phoenix Mercury’s stout defense is undeniable. The Mercury turned in a defensive clinic and leaned into their physicality to knock out the league-leading Minnesota Lynx. The Mercury have the best defensive rating of the 2025 WNBA playoffs (92.2), holding opponents to the fewest points (75.9) and paint points (32) per game this postseason. That’ll make for an interesting matchup as the Aces’ have scored 47.5% of their points in the paint.

We can’t forget about the Mercury’s ability to score, primarily Phoenix’s Big 3 of Alyssa Thomas, Satou Sabally and Kahleah Copper, who average 47.3 combined points per game this season. The Mercury haven’t been shooting the 3-pointer as consistently as they did in the regular season, averaging 31.4%, slightly down from the team’s 34% average in the regular season. If the Mercury can get going from the 3-point line and stretch the floor, they will be clicking on all cylinders heading into the WNBA Finals.

X-factor: Mercury’s DeWanna Bonner, Sami Whitcomb

The Mercury entered the postseason with the highest scoring bench in the league and Phoenix will need two-time WNBA champions Sami Whitcomb and DeWanna Bonner to win the Mercury’s first title since 2014. Whitcomb was pivotal in the Mercury’s Game 2 comeback win over the Lynx, knocking down a clutch 3-pointer to send the contest to overtime. But Whitcomb was held to four points (2-of-7 FG, 0-of-2 3PT) in 24 minutes in Game 3 and six points (2-of-8 FG, 1-of-6 3PT) in 27 minutes in Game 4. The Mercury are 2-1 this postseason when Whitcomb scores 10 or more points.

Bonner struggled in the first three games of the semis against the Lynx, averaging 2.6 points in about 24 minutes per game, although she found other ways to impact the game, with eight rebounds, two assists, one steal and one block in Game 3. Bonner turned in a breakout performance in the Mercury’s Game 4 win over the Lynx to clinch the semifinal series, scoring 11 of her 14 points in the fourth quarter, including 3-of-3 from beyond the arc. The Mercury will benefit if she can consistently contribute on both sides of the ball. Bonner has appeared in 94 career playoff games, the most in WNBA history, and her experience will be crucial in the Finals. She previously won two titles with the Mercury in 2009 and 2014.

Las Vegas Aces roster

Phoenix Mercury roster

WNBA champions by year

Who will be the next team to join this list?

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The Miami Dolphins have little recourse for shifting plans and adapting to Tyreek Hill’s season-ending knee injury.
The Dolphins’ reckless approach to managing the cap and building a roster has boxed the organization in for some time.
Miami largely eschewed efforts to rethink its route despite a 2024 season that presented plenty of problems.

The Miami Dolphins’ prospects for a bright future have been dimming for some time. But with Tyreek Hill suffering a season-ending dislocated knee on Monday, a franchise that has long since passed a point of no return now is facing what looks like the beginning of a long-awaited end.

Few franchises could withstand having to navigate the bulk of a season without their top target, and Miami is no exception. Despite having largely struggled to rekindle his connection with Tua Tagovailoa in the early going, Hill still has more than one-third of the Dolphins’ receiving yards so far in 2025. His overall presence was instrumental to Mike McDaniel’s offense, with the rest of the skill-position crew having grown accustomed to the benefits of working alongside a player who consistently pulls defense’s attention and resources thanks to his game-breaking ability.

With Miami having vaulted to prominence under McDaniel by making splashy moves to acquire high-priced veterans, it was natural to wonder whether the organization would take bold action to try to salvage a 1-3 season that’s quickly spinning out of control.

But Hill’s injury seems more likely to come with a level of resignation for a front office that has few moves left at its disposal. Miami has the fourth-lowest available cap space of any team at just over $3 million, according to Over The Cap. Talented pass catchers don’t tend to come cheap, and those who do don’t figure to be available at the Nov. 4 trade deadline.

Tyreek Hill thanks fans for support after knee injury in video message

Now, at what could be a career-defining juncture for McDaniel and Grier, the duo has no easy recourse to clean up a mounting mess they have largely overlooked for some time.

The latest injury setback is a massive blow for a franchise that has already seen recent seasons derailed by long-term losses of Tua Tagovailoa, Bradley Chubb and Jaelan Phillips. But the Dolphins are not a mere victim of outside circumstance. Doubling down on a flawed roster pushed Miami to a point where it had limited options to either retreat or move in a different direction, even when it became apparent that blazing a new path was necessary.

McDaniel and Grier began down this road in the aftermath of a 2023 season that saw the team go 11-6 before falling to the Kansas City Chiefs in the wild-card round. With an offense that led the league in yards per game and a defense that finished 10th, Miami harbored hopes of joining the AFC’s contending class and securing the organization’s first postseason win since 2000.

But while a 12-month run that brought in Hill, Bradley Chubb and Jalen Ramsey via trades transformed the top tier of the roster, Miami didn’t see the bill for its imbalanced approach come due until the 2024 offseason.

In addition to signing Tua Tagovailoa to a four-year, $212.4 million extension, the Dolphins also inked wide receiver Jaylen Waddle to a three-year, $84.75 million extension before locking in Hill with a restructured deal that shifted significant money forward to 2024 and ’25. Crucial to solidifying that core was a free agency stretch in which standout defensive tackle Christian Wilkins and offensive guard Robert Hunt signed massive deals elsewhere. The widespread defections also included linebacker Andrew Van Ginkel, who went on to enjoy a Pro Bowl campaign with the Minnesota Vikings last season.

Paying exorbitant prices for marquee veterans doesn’t have to be a short-term play at a time when the salary cap rapidly expands year over year. But unlike the Los Angeles Rams, who secured a Super Bowl with an analogous caution-to-the-wind approach in valuing draft picks, the Dolphins failed to cover lower-investment spots with capable young starters on the cheap. The Chubb and Hill trades deprived Miami of its first-round choices in 2022 and ’23, and Miami managed to find just one notable contributor across those two classes in running back De’Von Achane.

The toll of the imbalanced roster was felt particularly along the offensive and defensive lines, which played central roles in the team’s 8-9 unraveling in 2024. Tagovailoa suffered his third documented concussion in Week 2 and missed four games, putting the team in a hole from which it would not emerge. The once-electric run game short-circuited, ranking 31st in expected points added per carry with little help from the blocking up front.

Former NFL team physician says WR Tyreek Hill’s injury possibly career-ending

After Grier and McDaniel were retained for 2025 but put on notice by owner Stephen Ross, the general manager seemed to back away from the tactics he once so readily embraced.

‘It’s just not sustainable the way the contracts are with players and what they’re making now,’ Grier said in late August in explaining the team was in the midst of a ‘reset’ rather than a rebuild. ‘So in terms of directive, no; for us, it was just good business sense working through it and trying to find value, but we also had to get younger, so we added younger players.’

Other than trading disgruntled cornerback Jalen Ramsey and tight end Jonnu Smith to the Pittsburgh Steelers and watching safety Jevon Holland walk to the New York Giants, however, it’s essentially been the ‘status quo’ that Ross insisted the organization wouldn’t settle for.

This month was hardly the first indication of a deeper problem, as franchise leadership has eschewed off-ramps and resisted other challenges to the team’s dynamic. Grier repeatedly shot down trade speculation this offseason surrounding Hill, with the receiver’s open-market value likely sapped by his end-of-season meltdown, decline in production and domestic violence allegations. Dealing him at last year’s trade deadline amid a 2-6 start might have yielded the optimal return, but doing so was almost assuredly a non-starter for an outfit that would have taken a massive competitive hit and been saddled with extensive cap ramifications.

The fallout from defensive coordinator Vic Fangio’s split with the organization after the 2023 season also might have been a harbinger for the multi-season descent. In the aftermath of Fangio’s exit, several Dolphins players – including Holland – took shots at one of the NFL’s most highly respected defensive minds. Fangio went on to orchestrate a Philadelphia Eagles defense that engineered an immediate turnaround, capped by the unit clamping down on Patrick Mahomes and the Chiefs in Super Bowl 59. The Dolphins’ internal strife only deepened, with multiple reports detailing the organization’s widespread effort to push enhanced accountability this offseason.

Yet after a 33-8 loss to the Indianapolis Colts in Week 1, a players-only meeting was called on the team’s off day.

The Colts are a meaningful reference point for how the Dolphins have done little to help themselves. Coach Shane Steichen and Chris Ballard faced a similar outlook as McDaniel and Grier did entering the campaign, with late owner Jim Irsay giving a reprieve yet stating improvements were needed after an 8-9 mark.

Steichen and Ballard took that to heart. In signing Daniel Jones and then installing him as the team’s starting quarterback, the duo sought to set things right after the disastrous start to No. 4 overall pick Anthony Richardson’s career. They managed to do so by reconfiguring the offense once dominated by Richardson’s downfield shots into a precise, on-schedule attack replete with schemed solutions for the signal-caller. The shift has unlocked levels of production that once seemed unattainable with Jones at the helm, as Indianapolis averages a league-best 6.5 yards per play.

But the reconsideration of the Colts’ previous tendencies didn’t stop there. Indianapolis brought aboard defensive coordinator Lou Anarumo to replace Gus Bradley’s largely static scheme, and the early dividends have been extremely favorable. Cornerback Charvarius Ward and safety Cam Bynum also arrived as high-priced free agents, with Ballard having the flexibility to address a problem area thanks to his discerning approach to investing. Now, the team stands at 3-1 and in a tie atop the AFC South despite not taking a sledgehammer to the coaching staff or roster.

Maybe comparable avenues for improvement were largely closed to a Dolphins franchise that only had so much room to maneuver. But some degree of creativity was clearly required for a group boxed into seeing out a vision yielding diminishing results.

With no wiggle room and only the faintest of hopes of seeing the ‘next man up’ philosophy push the organization to even the periphery of the playoff race, Miami might be a non-entity at the trade deadline – and possibly the rest of the season. The best course of action might actually be to sell off any key pieces, including Phillips, who could fetch a nice return in the final year of his deal. But going that route would entail the team’s leadership taking a short-term hit for returns to be realized down the road, and no one has prioritized the team’s timeline in that fashion.

Amid a groundswell of criticism regarding the direction of the Dolphins this offseason, McDaniel put forth a mantra for 2025: ‘They talk, we do.’ If only he and Grier had embraced that mindset when it came to reimagining the franchise’s approach before it was already too late.

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Mitchell went down with an injury with 5:05 remaining in the third quarter of the deciding WNBA playoff game of the semifinal series. The Fever trailed the Aces, 59-55. Fever players surrounded Mitchell with towels as she laid on her back. Mitchell subsequently rolled over onto her stomach while team staff appeared to stretch her leg.

The ESPN broadcast initially reported Mitchell had a cramp and a stretcher was brought onto the floor. Mitchell didn’t get on the stretcher, but was carried to the locker room by team staff and put no pressure on her left leg. It was reported in the postgame press conference that Mitchell had severe lower body cramping and was at the hospital receiving fluids.

‘Prayers for Kelsey Mithcell,’ Aces forward A’ja Wilson said. ‘That is my draft partner. To see her go down like that was not good. Super prayers out to her.

‘She’s just had a phenomenal season and I really hope that Indiana Fever continue to take care of her, because she’s a gem.’

Mitchell had 15 points when she left Game 5 and averaged 20.2 points and 3.4 assists for the Fever during the regular season.

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House Republicans’ campaign arm is going after Democrats hours after the federal government entered a shutdown at midnight on Wednesday.

A new National Republican Congressional Committee (NRCC) ad being rolled out in 42 battleground districts is aimed at putting pressure on Democratic lawmakers to accept the GOP’s plan and end the shutdown.

‘Democrats refused to fund the government. So now military troops, police and Border Patrol lose their paychecks. Because of Democrats, veterans, farmers, small businesses lose critical funding. Disaster relief — cut off,’ a voiceover states.

‘Democrats are grinding America to a halt in order to give illegal immigrants free healthcare. Tell Democrats: Stop the shutdown.’

The ad buy came at a four-figure price tag, according to an NRCC spokesperson.

It’s being rolled out in 25 districts represented by Democrats and 17 held by Republicans.

The federal government shut down overnight after Democrats and Republicans in the Senate failed to reach a spending agreement in time for the end of fiscal year (FY) 2025 on Sept. 30.

A short-term extension of FY 2025 funding, aimed at giving Congress more time to reach a longer-term deal, failed to advance in the Senate on Tuesday evening.

The measure, aimed at keeping the government open through Nov. 21, passed the House mainly along party lines earlier this month.

Democrats were angered at being sidelined in the spending negotiations, and by the GOP bill’s exclusion of enhanced COVID-19-era Obamacare subsidies. Those subsidies, passed in 2021 under President Joe Biden, are set to expire by the end of 2025 without congressional action.

Republicans have signaled that they will not budge from their measure, citing Democrats’ past support for similar bills aimed at averting shutdowns.

‘Out of touch Democrats shut down the government to bankroll handouts for illegal immigrants and appease their radical base. Voters won’t forget who betrayed them, and the NRCC will make sure Democrats pay the price,’ NRCC spokesman Mike Marinella told Fox News Digital.

President Donald Trump and his administration have wide discretion over what changes occur during a shutdown.

However, it’s likely that thousands of government employees get furloughed, while others are made to work without paychecks until funding is reinstituted. A host of federal agencies and services could also be shuttered.

Some federal workers could lose their jobs permanently as well, with Office of Management and Budget Director Russ Vought issuing guidance earlier this month warning offices to consider plans for mass layoffs in the event of a shutdown.

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A judicial consensus is forming against climate lawfare, but the U.S. Supreme Court must still end environmental extortion of American energy. In two landmark cases, the court will soon have the opportunity to reassert the federal government’s authority over questions of national energy and environmental policy. 

Environmental groups believe that energy use increases global temperatures, causes sea levels to rise and creates more destructive weather. Their campaign to curtail energy has taken many forms — including asking the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to block pipelines and the Interior Department to deny oil and gas leases — but it met a roadblock with the 2024 election and the Trump administration’s subsequent blizzard of executive orders lifting overregulation.  

Rather than pursue their interests in Congress or before the electorate, environmental extremists have now allied with bankrupt cities and trial lawyers to use the courts to shake down the energy industry. Blue cities and states have filed tort suits in state courts to extract money for allegedly causing weather-related costs in their jurisdictions. 

The Supreme Court will soon decide whether to take up one of those cases, Boulder County v. Suncor Energy, following a ruling this year from the Colorado Supreme Court that allowed the county’s case to move forward in state court. Borrowing theories of liability from tobacco and opioid litigation, Boulder alleges that energy companies sold their products without disclosing climate risks. Such claims plainly intrude on federal authority over interstate pollution. 

Other climate cases are still progressing in lower state courts. In Hawaii, summary judgment motions are pending in a case seeking damages for rising sea levels. Hawaii’s highest court allowed this litigation to move forward in 2023 with Justice Todd Eddins issuing a remarkable concurrence, declaring that litigation would proceed under the ‘Aloha Spirit,’ regardless of federal precedent.  

In Rhode Island, the state judge presiding over a similar lawsuit against the energy industry compared it to developing nations devastated by natural disasters, citing Kenya, Tanzania and the Seychelles. The suggestion that Rhode Island has suffered comparable ‘severe destruction’ is telling: judges are inflating rhetoric to justify climate claims, not grounding them in law.  

Meanwhile, other states are effectively trying to replace federal authority over environmental policy. In Louisiana, plaintiffs obtained a $750 million judgment (potentially over $1 billion with interest) against Chevron for coastal erosion that they claimed was caused by oil extraction during World War II. Those companies had been under federal contracts to supply aviation fuel for the war effort. Yet eight decades later, Louisiana claims it can punish those practices retroactively. 

The energy firms sought to move the case to federal court because of its genesis in work for the federal government. But a divided 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals panel refused to allow it. As Judge Andrew Oldham rightly noted in dissent, crude oil extraction plainly ‘relates to’ war production. If states can sue private businesses for their wartime work generations later, future cooperation with the federal government will be chilled, raising the costs of national defense. This coming term, the Supreme Court will review the Fifth Circuit’s decision. 

Despite some disappointing rulings from activist judges, a growing number of state courts are beginning to resist such frivolous claims. A Maryland judge rejected Baltimore’s lawsuit that alleged fossil fuels caused sea rises that have harmed the city; the Maryland Supreme Court will hear the appeal later in October. A South Carolina court dismissed Charleston’s similar claims, which blue city officials will almost certainly appeal as well. Likewise, nearly identical state and municipal lawsuits have been similarly dismissed in Pennsylvania, New York, Delaware and New Jersey. 

Notwithstanding some recent wins, climate lawfare is like Hydra — new cases are constantly being brought. Even if higher courts ultimately overturn them, simply forcing the industry to defend against these suits imposes enormous litigation costs. That alone is a victory for environmental radicals. At this stage, the Supreme Court must act to reaffirm federal authority over national energy and environmental policy.  

If climate change is producing harmful effects nationwide, then the nation should decide how to address it. As the U.S. Court of Appeals ruled in a 2021 case rejecting New York City’s lawsuit against Chevron, ‘the question before us is whether a nuisance suit seeking to recover damages for the harms caused by global greenhouse gas emissions may proceed under New York law. Our answer is simple: no.’ However, they frame their aims, blue cities and states are trying to set nationwide climate policy through litigation — violating federal law and tort principles. 

As the country decides how to respond to climate change, those choices — including the possibility of not acting — must have nationwide legitimacy. Courts cannot allow a handful of blue jurisdictions, aided by trial lawyers and environmental activists, to dictate those decisions for the rest of America. 

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LOS ANGELES — It was the shot that left the Cincinnati Reds shell-shocked.

The ball came in at 100.4-mph.

It was sent out at a stunning 117.7 mph.

Shohei Ohtani circled the bases, and even though he was just the first batter of the night Tuesday for the Los Angeles Dodgers, the game was all but over at that point.

And by the end of the night, with the Dodgers clobbering the Reds, 10-5, hitting five homers – including two apiece by Ohtani and outfielder Teoscar Hernandez – they were checking out the temperatures in Philadelphia. Why not, they’ll soon be packing their suitcases for a trip to play the Phillies in the National League Division Series.

Oh, sure, you still need to win two games in this best-of-three wild-card series, but the way the Dodgers dominated the Reds in Game 1 in front of 50,555 at Dodger Stadium, they left no doubt that they plan to make this as short a series as possible.

The Dodgers knocked Reds ace Hunter Greene out of the game after three innings, punishing him with three home runs, while Dodgers starter Blake Snell put on a pitching clinic.

The last time Snell faced the Reds Aug. 2, 2024 the San Francisco Giants, he pitched his first career no-hitter.

This night, the Reds produced all of one hit, and struck out nine times in the first six innings.

Snell’s domination against the Reds is so ridiculous that entering the seventh inning, when the Reds finally snapped their 29-inning postseason scoreless streak, they were 1-for-42 against Snell dating back to the no-hitter.

That is an .029 batting average.

Snell wound up pitching seven innings, giving up four hits and two runs with his nine strikeouts, throwing 91 pitches.

The Dodgers will now send out Yoshinobu Yamamoto on Wednesday night, against Redsstarter Zack Littell, trying to close out the series, hopefully saving Ohtani for Game 1 of the NL Division Series against the Phillies.

The Reds, of course, knew that this was David vs. Goliath before the series started.

The Dodgers have won the NL West title 12 times in 13 years, with four pennants and two World Series championships during this stretch.

The Dodgers had six All-Stars in the starting lineup, and one on the bench. They had three MVPs in the lineup, and one that didn’t make their playoff roster.

The Reds had one All-Star in the lineup, and their last MVP won the award 15 years ago, and is retired.

This is the Reds’ first postseason appearance in a full season since 2013. They haven’t even won a postseason series since 1995.

The Dodgers have a luxury tax payroll of $416 million.

The Reds’ payroll is $119 million.

So, yes, you do the math.

“I don’t know, I don’t think I brought that up once all year,’’ Reds manager Terry Francona said about their payroll disparity. “I never will, because I was on the other side in Boston .. but we don’t have the ability to outspend mistakes. So, you try not to make very many of them.

“Once the game starts, nobody’s going to care what you’re making. That’s what I love about it, let’s go play baseball.’’

Well, the Dodgers, with five players on the field earning at least $20 million, did just that, showing just why they make the big bucks.

“That’s why I came here,” said Snell, who signed a six-year, $182 million free-agent contract last winter. “Get to the postseason, and see how good I can be. …To face the best when the stakes are highest, that’s what I’ve always wanted.”

It’s no different for Ohtani, who once again showed why he’s worth every penny of his $700 million contract. He not only produced the hardest-hit homer off a 100-mph since MLB began using Statcast in 2015, but hit a 454-foot homer that went halfway up the pavilion in the sixth inning off right-handed reliever Connor Phillips.

The Dodgers became the fifth team in postseason history to have two players produce multi-homer games, last accomplished by Phillies in Game 3 of the NLCS with Bryce Harper and Nick Castellanos.

The Reds, who call themselves “cockroaches” that can’t be killed, at least showed what can happen if they can get into the Dodgers’ bullpen, getting the tying run to the on-deck circle until  Jack Dreyer finally shut the door.

The Reds are hoping their comeback bid will have a carry-over entering Game 2, with the Dodgers wanting to believe their bullpen woes were just a mere blip.

In the meantime,  the forecast in Philadelphia this weekend is a balmy 77 degrees with no rain.

The Dodgers may want to pack the sunscreen.

Follow Nightengale on X: @BNightengale

Dodgers survive eighth-inning scare

The Reds pushed three runs across to make it 10-5 and got the tying run to the on-deck circle with the bases loaded and one out in the top of the eighth. But Jack Dreyer got Tyler Stephenson and Ke’Bryan Hayes to escape the jam.

Dodgers tack on two more to take 10-2 lead

After giving up two runs in the top of the seventh, the Dodgers scored twice in the bottom of the frame, getting a run on a throwing error and then an RBI single from Ben Rortvedt.

Reds score two in the seventh

Cincinnati got on the board in the top of the seventh with an RBI when Elly De La Cruz hit an RBI groundout against Blake Snell and came around to score on Tyler Stephenson’s RBI double, cutting the Reds’ deficit to 8-2.

Snell is done after seven stellar innings, giving up four hits and two runs with nine strikeouts and one walk in his first postseason start for the Dodgers.

Shohei Ohtani hits second homer

With a 6-0 lead in the sixth inning, Shohei Ohtani crushed a 454-foot two-run homer off Cincinnati’s Connor Phillips for his second home run of the game.

The Dodgers became the fifth team in history to have two players each hit multiple home runs in the same postseason game, according to Sarah Langs.

Teoscar Hernandez clubs second home run

Having already dealt the big blow in the Dodgers’ four-run third, Teoscar Hernandez hit an opposite-field solo homer off Reds reliever Scott Barlow in the bottom of the fifth to extend the Dodgers lead to 6-0.

Hunter Greene done after three innings

Reds ace Hunter Greene was replaced by Scott Barlow to start the fourth inning, bringing Greene’s postseason debut to an end. The 26-year-old right-hander gave up six hits – three of them home runs – and five earned runs with four strikeouts and two walks.

Teoscar Hernandez, Tommy Edman go back-to-back

Last year’s World Series hero Teoscar Hernandez hit a three-run homer off Hunter Greene in the bottom of the third and Tommy Edman followed with a solo shot to extend the Dodgers’ lead to 5-0.

Shohei Ohtani home run leads off Game 1 for Dodgers

LOS ANGELES — Dodgers MVP Shohei Ohtani, who played with one healthy shoulder last year in the World Series, reminded everyone just what he can do this postseason when he’s healthy.

Ohtani jumped on Cincinnati Reds ace Hunter Greene’s 100-mph fastball and sent it into the right-field pavilion, traveling 117.7 mph off his bat in Game 1 of the wild-card series.

Dodgers-Reds underway in Chavez Ravine

Blake Snell struck out Reds leadoff hitter TJ Friedl to begin Game 1 at Dodger Stadium. Snell is making his 13th career postseason appearance, pitching 48⅔ innings or the Rays and Padres.

Dodgers lineup tonight

Shohei Ohtani (L) DH
Mookie Betts (R) SS
Freddie Freeman (L) 1B
Max Muncy (L) 3B
Teoscar Hernández (R) RF
Tommy Edman (S) 2B
Andy Pages (R) CF
Enrique Hernández (R) LF
Ben Rortvedt (L) C

Reds lineup tonight

TJ Friedl (L) CF
Noelvi Marte (R) RF
Miguel Andujar (R) DH
Austin Hays (R) LF
Spencer Steer (R) 1B
Elly De La Cruz (S) SS
Tyler Stephenson (R) C
Ke’Bryan Hayes (R) 3B
Matt McLain (R) 2B

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In her end of season media availability for Minnesota Lynx on Tuesday, Collier called out WNBA commissioner Cathy Engelbert and the league’s lack of transparency, in addition to officiating concerns, player safety and stalled CBA negotiations.

Collier made it clear that she was speaking for herself ‘I’m not speaking for anyone else. I’m sure other people feel this way, but I want to be clear that I’m speaking for myself. This is how I feel,’ Collier said  but fellow WNBA players, coaches and former stars are speaking up in support of Collier.

‘I agree with everything she said,’ Indiana Fever guard Lexie Hull said Tuesday afternoon. ‘We’re at a really important time in the league and changes need to be made. And so you’re seeing her talk about that and really proud of her for making that statement today.’

Hull is not the only person reacting to Collier’s scathing statement. Here’s what the WNBA world is saying.

WNBA commissioner Cathy Engelbert

In a statement shared with USA TODAY Sports, Engelbert said she has ‘the utmost respect for Napheesa Collier and for all the players in the WNBA.’

‘Together we have all worked tirelessly to transform this league,’ Engelbert said. ‘My focus remains on ensuring a bright future for the players and the WNBA, including collaborating on how we continue to elevate the game.  I am disheartened by how Napheesa characterized our conversations and league leadership, but even when our perspectives differ, my commitment to the players and to this work will not waver.”

Minnesota Lynx head coach Cheryl Reeve

 Reeve said she had to be careful with her words on Tuesday, noting that ‘Cathy (Engelbert) is out there firing fines’ after she was reportedly docked $15K for her postgame comments and behavior following her ejection in the Lynx’s Game 3 loss to the Phoenix Mercury.

‘(Collier’s) voice is a really important one and I’m proud of Phee,’ Reeve said in her exit interview. ‘Who Phee has become as a player and a person in this league is really important. Her voice is important… I support our player.’

Elena Delle Donne

Seven-time WNBA All-Star Elena Delle Donne shared highlights from Collier’s statement on her Instagram story, saying she fully relates to Collier’s comments about league leadership lacking ‘basic integrity.’ Collier said Engelbert hasn’t reached out to her all season even when she went down with a left ankle injury in Game 3 of the Lynx’s semifinal WNBA playoff series against the Phoenix Mercury.

‘It’s the human element, it’s basic integrity and it’s the bare minimum any leader should embody,’ Collier said. ‘This year alone, I’ve gotten calls, texts, and well wishes from so many players across the league. … But do you know who I haven’t heard from? Cathy (Engelbert). Not one call, not one text.’

In response, Delle Donne said ‘the Queen has spoken.’ Delle Donne, who retired in April after 10 seasons and a WNBA championship (2019), was named the league MVP twice (2015, 2019). She added: ‘It’s the care for the human part for me. I’m still not sure if Cathy knows I retired. Heard from everyone but her.’

Indiana Fever guard Lexie Hull

Hull said the WNBA players ‘are driving this change’ in the league.

‘From the players’ perspective, things need to change, reffing needs to change, leadership needs to change,’ Hull said on Tuesday. ‘Our league is at a spot that it hasn’t been in the past 10 years. We’re growing exponentially and we need change to mirror that. And I think where the players see the league going is different than where leadership sees the league going and somehow we need to see that aligned. I think the CBA negotiations will help hopefully get us there.’

Indiana Fever guard Caitlin Clark

Collier recalled a specific conversation she had with Engelbert back in February during the inaugural season of Unrivaled, the 3-on-3 league co-founded by Collier and Breanna Stewart.

‘I also asked how she planned to fix the fact that players like Caitlin (Clark), Angel (Reese) and Paige (Bueckers), who are clearly driving massive revenue for the league, are making so little for their first four years. Her response was, ‘Caitlin (Clark) should be grateful to make $16 million off the court, because without the platform that the WNBA gives her, she wouldn’t make anything.”

Clark has no comment on Collier’s statement, the Fever told Indystar, part of the USA TODAY Network.

Indiana Fever head coach Stephanie White

Fever head coach Stephanie White said she has ‘a lot of respect for Napheesa (Collier).’

‘I’m thankful that we have strong women that are willing to say the things that matter and say the things that will move the needle for change,’ White added. ‘(Collier) quietly goes about her business. She has been a dominant player in our league and on the global stage, she understands she’s been a part of the (WNBPA) and understands the business side of it as well as the basketball side of it.’

Las Vegas guard Chelsea Gray

Las Vegas guard Chelsea Gray highlighted the growing tensions between players and the league amid ongoing CBA negotiations. The current CBA, which was signed into effect in January 2020, shortly after Engelbert took over as commissioner in 2019, will expire on Oct. 31 after the WNBPA opted out of the agreement last October.

‘We have a lot of work to do, more so on the W side and with Cathy (Engelbert), and understanding our value as a league, as players, and there’s no league without the players,’ Gray said on Tuesday. ‘We’re not where we should be or we thought we would be when we decided to opt out… It’s not anywhere where we thought it would be. It’s market share, it’s salaries, it’s player safety, it’s everything. I wouldn’t say that we’re where we want to be for maybe one thing.’

New York Liberty forward Isabelle Harrison

Chicago Sky forward Angel Reese

Angel McCoughtry

Collier said she’s ‘not concerned about a fine,’ Angel McCoughtry offered to cover the cost. McCoughtry last played for the Minnesota Lynx in 2022.

Los Angeles Sparks forward Dearica Hamby

Washington Mystics forward Alysa Clark

Alysa Clark serves as the WNPBA Vice President.

Indiana Pacers Tyrese Haliburton

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Only one team received an ‘A’ in USA TODAY Sports’ NFL team grades for September, while another got an ‘F.’
The Bengals were the lone team to receive an ‘incomplete’ due to Joe Burrow’s turf toe injury.
The Colts, Eagles and Rams were among those who narrowly missed out on the top mark.

As the calendar flips to October, teams have completed less than a quarter of their slate. But this is nonetheless a meaningful juncture as byes begin and players filter onto and off of injured reserve. And with each franchise having four games in the books, every coaching staff and roster has some emerging trends to respond to.

Grading can’t be done in a vacuum, so every mark that USA TODAY Sports is doling out is determined with the team’s preseason expectations and overall capabilities taken into account.

With that in mind, here are grades for all 32 teams based on their September play:

NFL team grades for September

A

Buffalo Bills: Despite its standing as one of the league’s two remaining undefeated teams, Buffalo isn’t without fault. But it’s hard to argue with the results. A shapeshifting offense is mowing down all comers, averaging a league-best 0.18 expected points added per play, according to Next Gen Stats. With the ability to seamlessly toggle between Josh Allen airing it out to an array of pass catchers and turning the reins over to James Cook and the ground game, Joe Brady’s attack has the flexibility to keep opponents off balance all season. Rocky play at safety and frequent lapses in stopping the run have left some unease about the defense, which has also had trouble getting off the field on third downs (42% conversion rate allowed). But Buffalo has maintained the theme of rising to the occasion ever since its stunning Week 1 rally to upend the Baltimore Ravens. It will need to continue that trend once the schedule gets tougher on the back end, but this is a team plowing a trail to a possible No. 1 seed at a time when the AFC’s other leading contenders are faltering.

A-

Indianapolis Colts: They were cruising for the only A+ of the young season until an unfortunate series of miscues, including AD Mitchell’s two major blunders and the defense only having 10 men on the field for the game-winning score, doomed Indianapolis in Sunday’s loss to the Rams. Still, not much can tarnish an initial run that has featured Daniel Jones’ full-on revival as a starting quarterback. Shane Steichen has coaxed consistency out of not only Jones but an entire attack that has routinely stayed on schedule with an NFL-best 50% success rate, according to Sumer Sports. Lou Anarumo’s arrival has made the defense notably more dynamic, though cornerback Xavien Howard is revealing himself as a liability after surrendering seven catches on 10 targets for 112 yards and a touchdown against the Rams. If the early formula largely holds, Indianapolis should at least make a push for its first division crown since 2014.

Los Angeles Rams: The national view of this team might be significantly different had Sean McVay’s crew managed to hold on against the Eagles in Week 3. No matter. With Matthew Stafford continuing to sling the ball with impressive command and Puka Nacua outpacing the rest of the NFL with 42 catches and 503 receiving yards, Los Angeles remains every bit of the legitimate contender we’ve come to know under McVay. Is that enough to stave off the rest of the NFC West as well as push Philadelphia for the conference crown? To be determined. But beyond a shaky outlook at cornerback, there’s not much holding this group back at the moment.

Los Angeles Chargers:Jolting the Kansas City Chiefs in Brazil to open the season served as an impressive mission statement from a group intent on ending its rival’s nine-year reign atop the AFC West. But after Justin Herbert surged to a spectacular start, the quarterback – and Los Angeles’ offense – already might be at an inflection point. In the last two games, Herbert has now been pressured 50 times and taken 26 hits, with the protection gaffes worsening upon Joe Alt’s exit in Sunday’s loss to the New York Giants. While determining out how to move forward with the passing attack figures to be a supreme challenge for Jim Harbaugh, the grade should be determined based only on what has already occurred. Despite the emerging problems, sitting in the lead for the division is a fine place to be.

Seattle Seahawks: After overhauling its offense and subbing in Sam Darnold for Geno Smith, Seattle could have been forgiven if it stumbled out of the gates this season. Instead, the Seahawks have sizzled after a Week 1 misstep against the San Francisco 49ers, surging to a three-way tie atop the NFC West at 3-1. Darnold, who ranks third in the NFL with 9 air yards per attempt, has repeatedly taken advantage of the deep shots afforded to him with play-action looks, and Jaxon Smith-Njigba is the only player other than Nacua to have reached 400 yards through four games. Meanwhile, Mike Macdonald’s defense remains as difficult to crack as ever. The big letdown has been the run game, which was supposed to be the focal point of new coordinator Klint Kubiak’s attack but has turned up just 3.6 yards per carry so far. There’s still plenty of time and intention to get that phase up to the level of the rest of the operation, however, and an outfit that seemed like an afterthought in the playoff race now is very much part of the early discussion.

Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Their late-game mojo finally met its match against the Eagles, who finally managed to slam the door shut after Tampa Bay became the first team in the Super Bowl era to record a game-winning score in the final minute of the fourth quarter in each of its first three games. But this stretch has been all about merely scraping by, and the Buccaneers have managed to do just that. With Tristan Wirfs and Chris Godwin back, the four-time defending NFC South champions should be able to round into something closer to the form they’ve displayed when at full strength. It’s high time to cut down on the special teams errors, however, after having two punts and a field goal blocked.

B+

Detroit Lions: Credit Dan Campbell and his new-look staff with quelling any panic that began to percolate after the season-opening flop against the Green Bay Packers. The Lions have reclaimed their place as the NFL’s highest-scoring group (34.3 points per game), proving that Ben Johnson’s departure wouldn’t jam the gears of a machine-like operation. And while new defensive coordinator Kelvin Sheppard is still finding his way, he’s helped the unit tap into a big-play streak, with seven sacks against the Baltimore Ravens and three takeaways against the Cleveland Browns. Things might not run as smoothly as they did throughout the season in last year’s 15-win campaign, but Detroit has summarily dismissed any notion of its imminent demise.

Jacksonville Jaguars: Trevor Lawrence is completing a career-low 58.3% of his passes with just five touchdowns and four interceptions. A receiving corps beset by drops has failed to consistently help, with 2024 Pro Bowler Brian Thomas Jr. nearing sophomore slump status while catching just 12 of his 32 targets. And No. 2 overall pick Travis Hunter’s ironman routine has fallen flat, with the Heisman Trophy winner yielding limited returns on each side of the ball. What, then, has been the engine for the Jaguars’ surprising 3-1 start? The defense’s league-leading 13 takeaways have allowed Jacksonville to tilt each contest in its favor, and Liam Coen has transformed another rushing attack in less than a year. Expecting to continue winning the turnover battle in such lopsided fashion is unrealistic, especially with the schedule getting considerably tougher in a three-game stretch that brings the Chiefs, Seahawks and Rams to town before the bye. But the Jaguars’ winning edge shouldn’t be written off given the potential for improvement in the passing attack.

San Francisco 49ers: For most teams, navigating a bad run of injuries is a week-to-week matter, with a new season typically affording a fresh slate. Not so for San Francisco, which has seen significant personnel losses re-emerge as the prevailing theme of another campaign. Through four weeks, the team managed to push past quarterback Brock Purdy and tight end George Kittle being sidelined for the short term. Yet things finally seemed to come to a head in Sunday’s loss to the Jaguars, with Purdy showing ill effects of his toe ailment upon his return and a battered receiving corps struggling to rise to the occasion. Kyle Shanahan and Co. deserve their flowers for weathering the issue as best they can for another year, and that resilience could prove meaningful down the stretch. But the talent drain, both stemming from injuries and the roster paring necessitated by a cap recalibration, might be insurmountable.

B

New England Patriots: Too kind of a grade for a team that had five turnovers just a week ago? Mike Vrabel surely isn’t pleased with how often his team has tripped itself up in its first attempts to find a stride. Yet after years of aimless wandering to conclude the Bill Belichick era and then move past it with Jerod Mayo, the franchise is showing signs of an emerging turnaround. Drake Maye has quietly accelerated his ascent in Year 2 by ranking fifth in passer rating (109.4) and fourth in EPA per dropback (0.23). Meanwhile, the defense looks on the precipice of a major breakout with standout cornerback Christian Gonzalez back in the fold. Above all, the Patriots are starting to demonstrate a handle on a clear way out of the cellar: punishing lesser opponents for their mistakes while trying to minimize their own.

B-

Pittsburgh Steelers: A 3-1 opening to Aaron Rodgers’ time at the helm might be taken as a resounding success for some, especially at a time when everyone else in the AFC North is floundering. But from their close call in the season opener against the New York Jets to their fourth-quarter crumpling in Ireland against the Minnesota Vikings, the Steelers have established a nasty habit of making things far more difficult than they need to be. At least they international trip brought out plenty of good, with the run game complementing the quick-hit passing attack and the defense ratcheting up the pressure with a heavy dose of blitzes. Turning those into trends the team can implement stateside would alleviate a lot of the initial trepidation surrounding the Steelers.

Kansas City Chiefs: The gloom of an 0-2 start has dissipated at least somewhat, with the longstanding class of the AFC just one game back of the division lead. More important than where Kansas City stands now, however, is how it got here. Xavier Worthy’s return from a shoulder injury sustained in the opener single-handedly transformed a passing attack that couldn’t count on finding anything easy without him. With defenses having to account for Worthy’s speed downfield, a ripple effect is created in which other pass catchers can finally thrive over the middle and Mahomes can more comfortably beat the blitz. That doesn’t fully excuse the Chiefs from failing to clear their own bar in the first three weeks, but the lackluster production is easier to stomach knowing where things could be headed as Rashee Rice’s six-game suspension also approaches its expiration.

Chicago Bears: The vibes in Chicago might actually be … good? Even as pervasive offensive miscues keep the full Ben Johnson experience from taking hold, the coach’s partnership with Caleb Williams has sparked a good deal of hope for a franchise that has gone without much for more than a decade. Chicago shouldn’t have needed a blocked field goal to wrap up a win over the Las Vegas Raiders, and there’s plenty of work to be done in both stopping the run and establishing it. But even if the Bears don’t become a serious factor in the NFC North until next year, there’s at least reason to stick around to see how a discernible sense of progress shakes out.

C+

Green Bay Packers: In opening with two of the most dominant outings of the month, Green Bay built a significant buzz as a leading Super Bowl contender. Those days now feel a long way off after the Packers came crashing back to earth in the last two weeks, during which the team bungled a gimme game against the Browns and came within a single second of another massive misfire before salvaging a tie with the Dallas Cowboys. Maybe dealing with that variance is simply how life is going to be for the NFL’s youngest roster. But after appearing to have solved last year’s troubles with measuring up against the league’s elite, Green Bay looks ill-equipped to join that group itself until it figures out how to establish more consistency – and strike a proper balance of aggression and composure – on both sides of the ball.

Washington Commanders: Too early to render much of a definitive verdict on this all-in edition of the Commanders given Jayden Daniels’ absence from the last two contests. But Washington failed each of its road tests while getting by at home against subpar foes. Most worrisome for the team is the nature in which it was overwhelmed in each loss, as the Packers defense sent Daniels reeling and the Falcons diced apart a sloppy defense for 436 yards. Getting back Daniels and Terry McLaurin should give Washington the window to leave the first month behind it, especially if it can clean up the mistakes on the other side of the ball. But maybe this is an introduction to some tougher breaks for a group that had a lot of things go its way in a fortuitous 2024 run.

Atlanta Falcons: When it comes to bombing a test, falling 40-0 to a division rival that last season set the NFL record for points allowed is real ‘see me after class’ stuff. But the Falcons took their faceplant against the Carolina Panthers plenty seriously, firing wide receivers coach Ike Hilliard afterward while also moving offensive coordinator Zac Robinson from the booth to the sideline. The result was a bounceback effort that yielded 24 first downs against the Commanders and the kind of all-around excellence that was expected of a unit that looked to be on the brink of something special in Michael Penix Jr.’s first full season as a starter. It shouldn’t have taken a unit with this much talent so long to get going, but the trendline is at least pointed upward.

Dallas Cowboys: Jerry Jones bookended his offseason with decisions that drew massive scrutiny from outside. While the move to hire first-time head coach Brian Schottenheimer hasn’t yet proven cataclysmal, the fallout from trading Micah Parsons is undeniable for a defense that has been ripped apart for an NFL-worst 297.3 passing yards per game. Better communication could go a long way toward resolving the coverage busts that have become all too frequent, but there’s also a personnel disconnect with Matt Eberflus’ zone-heavy scheme that looks irreparable in the middle of the season. Dak Prescott has done yeoman’s work to cover for the flawed composition of this roster, but engaging in weekly shootouts seems bound to result in disappointment for a group not built to win this way.

C

Arizona Cardinals: Everything seemed to be trending toward a third-year leap in Jonathan Gannon and Monti Ossenfort’s extensive build. Yet after just barely handling two overmatched opponents in the New Orleans Saints and Carolina Panthers, Arizona revealed itself as not ready to compete with the rest of the NFC West just yet in consecutive losses to the 49ers and Seahawks. For all the progress the defense has made thanks to the signings of Josh Sweat and Calais Campbell, an offense that still can’t foster a consistent connection between Kyler Murray and Marvin Harrison Jr. has been a major disappointment. A better push up front could help the run game ramp back up after James Conner was lost for the season, but the Cardinals are facing a serious risk of being left behind in the division yet again.

Minnesota Vikings: In building one of the NFL’s most well-rounded rosters, Kwesi Adofo-Mensah seemed to afford Minnesota a good deal of leeway as it prepared to break in J.J. McCarthy as its new starting quarterback. Not only have the Vikings failed to determine whether they have a viable long-term answer behind center, but the team’s margin of error for its signal-caller has eroded considerably. McCarthy’s wild debut reinforced that patience would be required in his development, and Minnesota has hardly been anywhere near as reactionary as outsiders have been in responding to his first two starts and subsequent sidelining by a sprained ankle. But the Vikings’ vision of complementary football has hardly come to fruition, and the mounting injuries along the offensive line could make it impossible to minimize the ask of McCarthy this season.

Denver Broncos: Not much to be gleaned in victories over a pair of the league’s most forlorn franchises in the Tennessee Titans and Cincinnati Bengals. Still, Sean Payton probably will accept whatever promising signs he can get from his offense after an uninspiring beginning to the season. Denver has to avoid digging itself into holes on first and second down, a problem that’s been exacerbated by a predilection for penalties. Yet even though the Broncos failed to get out to the fast start that Payton harped on before the season, the lasting damage here might not be extensive.

C-

Carolina Panthers: The case against buying into the concept of momentum carrying over from one NFL season to another resides in Charlotte. When the perpetually resetting Panthers managed to pull off overtime wins in two of the team’s final three contests last season, some saw the stretch as an indication that Carolina was building toward something substantial in 2025. Outside of the shutout against the Falcons that is shaping up to be an aberration, however, things appear as dire as ever. Carolina surrendered 42 unanswered points to the Patriots and has seen its already putrid pass rush repeatedly stall out with a 24% pressure rate. Meanwhile, the Bryce Young-Tetairoa McMillan connection that began so promising has come apart. If Dave Canales doesn’t identify solutions quickly, the Panthers could be forced to take drastic action in the latest attempt at an in-season course correction.

Cleveland Browns: There’s a lot more upside here than one might expect from a franchise that gave off a strong sense it was spinning its wheels until 2026. Jim Schwartz’s defense doesn’t offer any easy outs, with the unit allowing a league-low 222.5 yards per game and 4.1 yards per play. Meanwhile, the promising rookie class is helping to reload a roster hurting for young talent, as running back Quinshon Judkins, linebacker Carson Schwesinger and tight end Harold Fannin Jr. have all made strong initial impressions. All of that has been rendered moot, however, by an offense that has coughed up eight turnovers and can’t seem to get anything started. Even more deflating than the early results is the lack of a path forward. Monday’s trade for offensive tackle Cam Robinson will only go so far toward repairing a woefully undermanned front, and the shaky receiving corps has only compounded issues that arose elsewhere. While Kevin Stefanski might not budge anytime soon in his refusal to bench Joe Flacco, turning to Dillon Gabriel might be one of the only moves left at his disposal to chart a new course for the unit.

Las Vegas Raiders: The Silver and Black opted to pursue sizable investments at both quarterback and running back to establish an immediate sense of clarity in the backfield. Instead, the Raiders have presented two of the more prominent cases of underperformance at each spot. The common denominator seemed to be the offensive line, which repeatedly allowed for No. 6 overall pick Ashton Jeanty to be swarmed behind the line of scrimmage in the first three games while also giving up 51 pressures on Geno Smith during that same span. But even when the front stepped up considerably in a Week 4 outing against the Bears, Smith still came apart at the seams with his second three-interception game in three weeks, dooming Las Vegas to its third consecutive loss. Perhaps the team’s 240-yard rushing day, which represents a single-game high for any offense in 2025, should be taken as an indication that Pete Carroll and Chip Kelly could be putting everything together in short order. Until they do, the Raiders won’t achieve the return to relevance that owner Mark Davis has so doggedly sought.

Miami Dolphins: The days of mere mediocrity surely seem alluring to many in South Florida. The Dolphins earned the Week 1 spotlight for all the wrong reasons with a 33-8 drumming by the Colts that was a disaster on nearly every front. Miami exhibited more determination and promise in its following two losses before finally coming out ahead of the New York Jets in a prime-time ensuring one of the AFC East doormats its first win. With Tyreek Hill suffering a dislocated knee in that game, however, an overdue reset for the franchise now looks almost inevitable.

New York Giants: A win over the previously unbeaten Chargers in Jaxson Dart’s starting debut saved Big Blue from entering outright disaster territory. It’s worth noting, however, that this is almost the exact scenario that the Giants said throughout the offseason they were so intent on avoiding. In installing Dart, a directionless regime has seemingly compromised the development plan of its rookie signal-caller so as not to let the season at hand spin completely out of control. But with Malik Nabers’ torn ACL hindering an already insufficient supporting cast, life could get a lot tougher for Dart once foes focus on clamping down on his running ability and quick-hit passes. Desperation seldom serves young players well, and the Giants have clearly arrived at the point where short-term considerations are outweighing the long view.

New Orleans Saints: This might stand out as a somewhat generous mark for one of the league’s three winless entities and a group with the third-worst point differential at -55. Yet the first year under Kellen Moore has featured a strong amount of resolve from a bunch determined to bridge a sizable talent gap with each of its opponents. New Orleans kept Buffalo’s hands full in an eventual 31-19 loss and has clawed to stay in games despite not leading since the first half of its season-opening defeat against the Cardinals. Yet with the front office caught midway through the demolition phase of a personnel overhaul, the returns could be far worse in a season of stasis.

D+

Baltimore Ravens: How did Baltimore stumble to a 1-3 start after looking virtually unstoppable for the first three quarters of the season opener against the Bills? Injuries are responsible for sapping a chunk of the defense’s prowess, and the attrition has only accelerated in the last two weeks. But with Lamar Jackson and the offense unable to go it alone – and the two-time MVP also nursing a hamstring injury – the Ravens have supplanted the Chiefs as the most concerning top contender. A softer schedule and better health could give rise to yet another midseason surge. Until an uptick starts to take shape, however, Baltimore will be left to ponder how the rare level of continuity the team was set to enjoy came undone so quickly.

D

New York Jets: Either Aaron Glenn’s message of accountability has fallen on deaf ears or the first-year coach needs a new way to preach to his players – or both. The winless Jets have somehow fallen short of even the most scaled-back expectations, repeatedly botching the basics with pre-snap penalties (six on offense Monday against the Dolphins) and fumbles (an NFL-worst six lost already). Don’t merely condemn one side of the ball, however, as a defense still dotted with high-level talent is routinely being caught off guard. It all leaves an uncomfortable question: Has this regime given way to something even worse than the ‘same old Jets’ that Glenn denied this group embodied?

D-

Houston Texans: In terms of discrepancy between preseason expectations and early results, there’s no bigger disappointment than the Texans. The defending AFC South champions’ plan to repair their offense by empowering C.J. Stroud with more responsibility and reworking the front has thus far backfired spectacularly, with the team averaging just 16 points per contest. Some might view the 26-0 win over the hapless Titans as a get-right game, but it’s difficult to affix that label to an effort that included the Texans surrendering the fastest sack you might ever see when Jeffery Simmons barreled untouched from over the ball to engulf Stroud. The only reasonable sources of salvation are a defense that reliably turns around favorable field position and a boost in the efficacy of the run game behind fourth-round rookie Woody Marks.

F

Tennessee Titans: Safe to say that the rampant errors that defined Brian Callahan’s inaugural season as a coach shouldn’t rest with Will Levis alone. Even in an attempt to embrace a new day with No. 1 overall pick Cam Ward, Tennessee is without peer in an unparalleled litany of issues. By almost any measure, the offense stands alone as the league’s least effective attack. Callahan responded with appropriate alarm by relinquishing play-calling duties to quarterbacks coach Bo Hardegree after three weeks, but the changes only produced the unit’s second sub-200-yard day of the season in the shutout by the Texans. Ward, who has been sacked a league-high 17 times, isn’t taking the troublesome trends lightly, saying the Titans have ‘dropped a quarter of our (expletive) games and have yet to do anything.’ Callahan can’t assert that his team does anything remotely well right now, and there’s no indication of a breakthrough anywhere in the near future.

Incomplete

Cincinnati Bengals: There’s simply no way to properly assess a team that’s been reduced to mere survival mode in the wake of Joe Burrow’s turf toe injury. Quibble all you want with the various decisions that led to Burrow shouldering such a disproportionate load for the organization, but no franchise could reasonably be expected to overcome a comparable loss. Any notion of treading water with Jake Browning is running on life support with a rudderless roster dropping its last two contests by a combined 63 points. The only question now is whether Cincinnati manages to pivot at all as what started as an all-in campaign sinks further into the abyss of a lost year.

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