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A father gave a home run ball he caught for his son to a woman who confronted him at a baseball game.
The father chose to de-escalate the situation as a teaching moment for his children who were watching.
The incident went viral, leading to online harassment and misidentification of the woman involved.
The event serves as a reminder for parents that their actions, especially at sporting events, are always being observed by their children.

Just over two weeks ago, Drew Feltwell took his family to a baseball game in Miami to see their beloved Phillies.

They sat in seats beyond the left field wall at Loan Depot Park, hoping to get a home run ball for 10-year-old Lincoln. It was his birthday week.

All of a sudden, a shot off the bat of Philadelphia’s Harrison Bader was coming for them. You might have experienced this anticipation and exhilaration yourself. Almost in a blur, Feltwell walked quickly down the row to his right. He saw the ball bobble between two armrests and grabbed it.

As he was pulling away, he says, he saw two hands come in, late to the party.

‘I didn’t really care at that point,’ he would tell NBC 10 Philadelphia. ‘I just walked away and held the ball up high.’

He put it in Lincoln’s glove. Father and son had a few seconds to share the moment before they were interrupted by a woman in a Phillies jersey who got in Drew’s face. He hadn’t seen her walk over to them.

‘That’s my ball!’ he recalled her yelling.

Startled, he says, ‘I jumped out of my skin.’ He leaned back from her.

‘I had a fork in the road,’ Feltwell told NBC 10 while looking at his son. ‘Either do something I was probably gonna regret or be dad and show him how to de-escalate a situation.’

He handed the woman the ball. She stalked away and into a social media cauldron from which she hasn’t escaped. To a much lesser degree, Feltwell was trolled for conceding to her.

It begs a question: What would you do if you were in either of their shoes?

Or more appropriately, if you are an aspiring young athlete or the parent of one: What wouldn’t you do?

Pondering those questions can be a teaching moment for all of us.

As parents, we are always on camera for our kids

It wasn’t just everyone in Feltwell’s ballpark section who saw the incident. People were making memes about it within 10 minutes, he says.

In the ensuing days, they demanded to know who this ‘Phillies Karen’ was. Some put her picture within the frame of a ‘wanted’ sign. At least one I saw called for her arrest.

Jabs and swipes at her continue. It’s a stark reminder of today’s social media landscape, where people who don’t even know you begin to make judgments and assumptions about you. They insult your looks. They trace you to a school district where you don’t work. They mistakenly circulate that you have been fired. They even misidentify you as someone else.

A Facebook account under the name Cheryl Richardson-Wagner had this statement: ‘Ok everyone…I’m NOT the crazy Philly Mom (but I sure would love to be as thin as she is and move as fast) … and I’m a Red Sox fan.’

Look at the video footage of Feltwell and the woman again. Notice how his son’s eyes are on him. While our actions often can be captured electronically, we are always on camera for our children.

‘Every moment around my kids is a potential teaching moment,’ he said to NBC 10, ‘so I try to keep that mentality.’

Through Feltwell’s actions to defuse the situation, psychotherapist Stephanie Sarkis told USA TODAY in the aftermath of the confrontation, he was ensuring there was no collateral damage.

‘When you have someone that’s so bold to do something like this, you don’t know how much further they’re going to escalate their behavior,’ Sarkis said.

Think of yourself sitting in the bleachers and watching your son or daughter play. That situation works the same way.

‘We’ve all been at games where we’ve seen parents that are going crazy on the sideline,’ says Jason Sacks, CEO of the Positive Coaching Alliance. ‘And if you watch that parent go crazy and then watch what their child is doing, the child is often putting their head down, looking at them, like raising their hand like, ‘Why are you doing this?’ And so it’s taking them out of the game.’

Instead, Feltwell’s son was rewarded for his dad’s restraint.

Take a pause before you act, at games and in life

We don’t always get credit for doing the right thing. But we can always be called out when we slip.

Things unravel in an instant. We tear off after an umpire or referee when we disagree with a call. We fire back an angry email to a co-worker when we’re upset with them.

Even if we know we are right, we might not think about how our knee-jerk reactions will be perceived. Or we forget anyone could be watching, or listening.

‘When you talk to the parents in the recruiting process, are they constantly complaining about the coaches after a bad game or are they sending you a text or are you having a conversation where their son has gotta do more, he’s gotta play harder, he’s gotta work on his skill,’ Connecticut men’s basketball coach Dan Hurley said during a 2024 interview with CBS. ‘They tell on themselves. They drop hints, and (if) you’ve got the wrong type of people in that inner circle around your players, they’ll sink your program.’

Before you make a spectacle of yourself at a high school or college game, or to a coach, take a pause.

‘Sports parenting is a lot like driving, at least in the emotion it gives rise to,’ author Michael Lewis writes in ‘Playing to Win,’ his 2020 audiobook that attempts to make sense of his daughters’ travel sports experience. ‘Your child boots a ground ball, for example, and instead of being given a second chance, she winds up on the bench. At that moment, you want to go over and scream at the coach who benched her for tearing your child down rather than building her up. And never mind that building your child up in a more robust way is exactly what the coach might be doing.

‘The next day you have trouble even remembering why you got so upset in the same way you can’t honestly recall the feeling yesterday that led you to holler and give the finger to the little old lady who cheated at the four-way stop sign.’

While you’re driving to the game, go over scenarios in your head that would upset you and how you could handle them. Talk about them with your kids, like you would before a school dance.

Reflect on how something might look. Even if your child isn’t drinking alcohol at the party, or at beach week, think about how it would appear in social media posts around others who are.

High school and college teams have their own reputations to protect. Assume their coaches are ‘checking up’ on their players and recruits.

Be remembered for interactions that tell people who you are.

If you slip, it’s never too late to redeem yourself

Put yourself in the shoes of the woman in the Phillies jersey. It can be hard to quell our anger while our kids are playing, or amid the pursuit of a foul ball at the major-league game.

If you are pointing fingers at her for how she acted the instant after Feltwell got the ball, hopefully you’re doing so because you’ve never gotten caught up in the heat of a moment.

She could have corrected herself, but instead slipped further into infamy. Video clips emerged showing her walking down the aisle to confront a man who had called her out, and to turn and give the middle finger to everyone behind her after they did the same. She held up the baseball for all to see.

Feltwell said in his interview with NBC 10 Philadelphia that after she retreated up the aisle, essentially booed out of the ballpark, he received a post of her continuing to clutch the baseball on the concourse.

We all know you’re not supposed to take a ball from a kid. But what if, a few minutes later, she had walked back over and given the ball back to Feltwell or his son? Would this all be forgotten? Would she be remembered without the bile?

Few feel sorry for her, I believe, because she had an opportunity to change the narrative after something unfortunate happened and she didn’t.

Sure, we can think of our lives in terms of what they would be like if one instant in time had or had not occurred: we caught ourselves before we stepped in front of car in traffic, or we mustered the courage to speak to our future spouse.

But life is full of moments that are correctable after they occur. The kid who talks back to the coach, or the parent who overreacts to his decision, can always apologize. It’s part of who we are, or at least strive to be, not defined by one moment in time, but by a full picture.

We don’t know the full picture of the woman in the Phillies jersey everyone has rushed to label. Her fear over the outcry of what she did has likely kept her out of the public eye since the encounter. But she has shown us only a view of herself as someone who unapologetically took a ball from a dad and his kid at a game.

If she comes out and expresses a sincere apology, maybe folks will giver her a break.

‘Please don’t do anything to that lady,’ Feltwell told USA TODAY Sports on Sept. 8. ‘Leave it alone. You know, somebody knows her and can talk to her, that’s different. But God, I don’t want people breaking in their house and stuff like that. The internet already messed her up pretty good.’

The best part about mistakes, in sports or otherwise, is we can learn from them and correct them. We can’t stop the trolls, but we can always make headway with the folks in our lives who really matter.

Steve Borelli, aka Coach Steve, has been an editor and writer with USA TODAY since 1999. He spent 10 years coaching his two sons’ baseball and basketball teams. He and his wife, Colleen, are now sports parents for two high schoolers. His column is posted weekly. For his past columns, click here.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The No. 9 Seminoles beat the Golden Flashes 66-10 from Doak Campbell Stadium in Tallahassee, Florida. However, just before a brief lightning delay suspended the game, FSU star quarterback Tommy Castellanos left the contest with an apparent lower-leg injury.

Castellanos had been 10 of 13 passing for 205 yards and an interception, to go along with seven carries for 54 yards and a touchdown. Freshman backup Kevin Sperry took over for Castellanos.

Here’s the latest on Castellanos’ injury:

Tommy Castellanos injury update

All times Eastern

8:09 p.m.: Castellanos told local media following the game that he was ‘all good,’ and called his injury ‘very manageable.’

Late in the second quarter, Castellanos dropped back to pass when several Kent State defenders rolled up on his leg as he fired a pass to Lawayne McCoy. His foot was caught under a pair of linemen in the process. According to the Tallahassee Democrat ― part of the USA TODAY Network ― Castellanos immediately motioned to be removed from the game before limping off.

Sperry took over for Castellanos for a single play before a lightning delay. However, following the lightning delay, Castellanos did not come out of the locker room with the rest of his teammates.

Several minutes later, Castellanos did run back onto the field to join his teammates. However, Sperry continued to take the reps at QB.

Castellanos, a transfer from Boston College, led the Seminoles to an upset victory over Alabama in Week 1. He has led an FSU offense that scored 108 points over its first two games, and added 35 points while he was in the game on Sept. 20.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

In a matchup of two of the most storied and historically decorated programs in the history of college football — both with large, rabid fan bases and iconic helmets — Michigan came out on top.

Behind a relentless rushing attack and an aggressive pass rush, No. 20 Michigan defeated Nebraska 30-27 on Saturday, Sept. 20 at Memorial Stadium in Lincoln, Nebraska in the Big Ten opener for both teams.

Watch Michigan vs. Nebraska football live with Fubo (free trial)

Wolverines running back Justice Haynes had his way against the Cornhuskers, rumbling for 149 yards on 17 carries, an output highlighted by a 75-yard touchdown run. It was one of two long touchdown scampers for Michigan, with Jordan Marshall’s 54-yard touchdown in the third quarter pushing his team’s lead to 27-17.

The Wolverines’ defensive line feasted on Nebraska quarterback Dylan Raiola, sacking the sophomore standout seven times. When he had time in the pocket, Raiola performed well, completing 30 of 41 passes for 303 yards, three touchdowns and an interception.

Michigan freshman quarterback Bryce Underwood completed 12 of 22 passes for 105 yards while adding 61 rushing yards, many of which came on a 37-yard touchdown run in the first quarter.

It was the first loss of the season for Nebraska, which has lost its past five Big Ten openers. The game was the Wolverines’ final contest under interim head coach Biff Poggi, with head coach Sherrone Moore set to return from his two-game suspension after Saturday’s victory.

USA TODAY Sports brought you live updates, scores and highlights from the game. Follow along.

Michigan vs Nebraska live score

This section will be updated throughout the game

Michigan vs Nebraska updates

Michigan vs Nebraska highlights

Final: Michigan 30, Nebraska 27

Michigan recovers the onside kick after the Dylan Raiola touchdown pass and drains the remaining clock to defeat Nebraska 30-27.

Dylan Raiola TD pass gets Nebraska within one score of Michigan

Nebraska’s slim hopes of a win against Michigan remain alive. Dylan Raiola ends a 10-play, 75-yard drive with a 3-yard touchdown pass to Heinrich Haarberg to cut the Wolverines’ lead to 30-27 with 1:34 remaining.

Brandyn Hillman targeting call overturned

As Nebraska drives up the field trying to cut into its deficit, Michigan defensive back Brandyn Hillman is whistled for targeting on a hit on Jacory Barney Jr. on a 21-yard catch that gets the Huskers to the Michigan 3-yard line. Upon video review, though, the penalty is overturned.

Dominic Zvada extends Michigan lead to two scores

It didn’t end with a touchdown, but Michigan plays its latest drive about as well as it could have. The Wolverines go 77 yards in 16 plays while draining 8:46 off the clock, a march that ends with a 21-yard Dominic Zvada field goal to give Michigan a 30-20 lead with 3:54 remaining. Biff Poggi’s team got some big plays along the way, including a 19-yard Justice Haynes run.

It’ll take an unusual series of events for Nebraska to pull off a win.

Dylan Raiola sacked again, leads to Nebraska punt

Dylan Raiola is sacked for the seventh time today by Michigan, this time on a third-and-12 from the Nebraska 27-yard line.

The Huskers punt with 12:53 remaining and the Wolverines will take over at their own 20.

Michigan punts

Nebraska will get the ball back with a chance to tie the game after forcing a Michigan punt. The Huskers’ drive will start at their own 29-yard line with 14:05 remaining.

Nebraska FG gets Huskers within one score of Michigan

A 12-play, 55-yard Nebraska drive ends with a 38-yard Kyle Cunanan field goal to get the Huskers within seven, 27-20, with 14:56 remaining.

Nebraska very nearly got closer, as it appeared Dylan Raiola found Nyziah Hunter for a 20-yard touchdown on a third-and-14, but officials rule that Hunter stepped out of the back of the end zone before coming back on the field to catch the pass.

End of third quarter: Michigan 27, Nebraska 17

Nebraska will open the fourth quarter with a 38-yard field goal attempt that could get it back within a single score of Michigan.

Jordan Marshall TD run extends Michigan’s lead vs Nebraska

For the second time today, a Wolverines running back takes a handoff to the house for a long touchdown. This time, the heroics come courtesy of Jordan Marshall, who blasts through a huge gap his offensive line created and outruns the Nebraska secondary for a 54-yard touchdown scamper.

Michigan now leads 27-17 with 5:40 remaining in the third quarter.

Nebraska punts again

Nebraska goes three-and-out, with an Archie Wilson punt giving Michigan the ball back at its 38-yard line with 6:21 left in the third quarter. The Huskers have negative-one yards across their two second-half possessions.

Dominic Zvada FG puts Michigan ahead of Nebraska

The Wolverines break their tie with Nebraska, going 22 yards in eight plays, setting up a Dominic Zvada 56-yard field goal that would have been good from 65 yards, if not 70. The kick ties a career long.

Since the start of the 2023 season, Zvada has made all nine of his field goal attempts from 50 yards or more.

Nebraska punts

Trapped inside their own 5-yard line, the Huskers aren’t able to do much of anything, going three-and-out and punting. Michigan will take over at its 40-yard line with 10:21 remaining in the third quarter after a 52-yard Archie Wilson punt.

Michigan punts on opening drive

The Wolverines get near midfield on their opening drive of the second half, but Justice Haynes is tackled two yard short of the sticks on a third-and-3, forcing a Michigan punt. Nebraska will take over at its own 3-yard line.

Michigan vs Nebraska halftime stats

Here are how the Wolverines and Huskers measure up in some of the major statistical categories at halftime:

Total yards: Nebraska 253, Michigan 195
Pass yards: Nebraska 210, Michigan 41
Rushing yards: Michigan 154, Nebraska 43
Plays: Nebraska 42, Michigan 21
Yards per play: Michigan 9.3, Nebraska 6
Third downs: Nebraska 2-7, Michigan 0-4
Time of possession: Nebraska 19:58, Michigan 10:02
Sacks: Michigan 4, Nebraska 1

Michigan vs Nebraska live stream

The game between the Wolverines and Huskers can be streamed on Paramount+, which requires a subscription, and Fubo, which offers a free trial to potential subscribers.

Halftime: Michigan 17, Nebraska 17

After Dylan Raiola’s Hail Mary touchdown pass, Nebraska and Michigan are tied at 17 at halftime. The Wolverines will get the opening kickoff of the second half.

Dylan Raiola Hail Mary TD ties Nebraska vs Michigan at halftime

Nebraska looked destined to head into halftime with a 7-point deficit, with a fourth-and-11 at its own 48-yard line with one second left in the second quarter. Dylan Raiola, however, had other ideas.

The Huskers’ sophomore quarterback rolls to his right and heaves up a Hail Mary, which ended up in the hands of Jacory Barney Jr. for a 52-yard touchdown with no time left on the clock.

Justice Haynes long TD run puts Michigan back ahead of Nebraska

Immediately after giving up the lead, Michigan takes it back.

On the first play from scrimmage after the Dylan Raiola touchdown pass, Wolverines running back Justice Haynes bursts through the middle of the Nebraska defense for a 75-yard touchdown run to put his team back on top, 17-10.

It’s the fourth touchdown run of at least 50 yards this season for the Alabama transfer.

Dylan Raiola TD pass ties Nebraska vs Michigan

We’ve got a tie ballgame in Lincoln. Nebraska’s third-down struggles end in a big way on its latest drive, with Dylan Raiola connecting with Jacory Barney Jr. for a 26-yard touchdown up the middle.

With the extra point, it’s tied at 10 with 2:01 remaining in the first half.

Michigan punts

The Wolverines pick up a first down on a Justice Haynes 11-yard run, but they’re not able to get past their own 36-yard line. A 49-yard Hudson Hollenbeck punt is returned 20 yards by Nebraska’s Jacory Barney Jr. to the Huskers’ 37.

Nebraska gets on the board with FG

The Huskers are able to turn the Bryce Underwood fumble into points. A Dylan Raiola 21-yard completion to Dane Key gets Nebraska down to the Michigan 21-yard line. On a third-and-3 from the Wolverines’ 14, Raiola is sacked for a 7-yard loss. Michigan already has three sacks only 21 minutes into the game.

Nebraska’s able to salvage the drive with some points, though, getting a 39-yard field goal from Kyle Cunanan.

Bryce Underwood fumbles, Nebraska recovers

Bryce Underwood is able to scamper for a first down on an 8-yard run on third-and-3, but the Michigan quarterback is stripped of the ball by Elijah Jeudy just before going to the turf. Nebraska falls on it and will take over at its own 48-yard line.

Nebraska punts

After a false start turned a third-and-3 into a third-and-8, Dylan Raiola is sacked for an 11-yard loss back at the Nebraska 16-yard line, forcing the Huskers to punt. Michigan will take over at its own 37 after a 47-yard punt from Archie Wilson.

End of first quarter: Michigan 10, Nebraska 0

The first quarter ends with Nebraska facing a third-and-3 from its own 32-yard line.

Wolverines pick off Dylan Raiola, score touchdown off turnover

Two Wolverines defenders key in on a quick out by Raiola. Jyaire Hill misses a potential pick-6, but linebacker Cole Sullivan makes the diving interception.

One play later, Bryce Underwood takes it 37 yards, untouched, up the gut on the QB keeper to get the first touchdown of the game. Michigan leads 10-0.

Michigan misses two TD opportunities, settle for field goal

Michigan will be kicking itself after two straight missed opportunities at touchdowns in Nebraska territory. The first saw the Wolverines attempt a trick play, with wide receiver Semaj Morgan underthrowing a wide-open Donaven McCulley in the end zone.

Two plays later, Underwood’s deep pass to Channing Goodwin bounces off his hands. The Wolverines instead settle for a 46-yard field goal.

Nebraska misses FG

A short punt with a bad bounce for Michigan gives Nebraska the ball at the Wolverines’ 37-yard line.

The Huskers get down to the Michigan 21 before Dylan Raiola is sacked for a 5-yard loss on third-and-7. After that, a Kyle Cunanan 44-yard field goal misses wide right, marking the first time this season he hasn’t connected on an attempt.

Nebraska has twice gotten inside the Michigan 25, but hasn’t come away with any points.

Michigan stuffs Nebraska on fourth down

Nebraska comes up empty-handed on a promising opening drive, getting down to the Michigan 6-yard line. From there, coach Matt Rhule opts to go for it on fourth-and-2, but the Wolverines snuff out a shovel pass from Dylan Raiola to Luke Lindenmeyer, with Lindenmeyer stopped a yard short of the sticks.

Michigan will take over at its own 5.

Nebraska jerseys vs Michigan

The Huskers will be going with their traditional home look against Michigan — white pants, red jerseys and white helmets.

Michigan jerseys vs Nebraska

Michigan will be wearing navy blue pants, white jerseys and the Wolverines’ famed winged helmets Saturday against Nebraska.

Bryce Underwood warms up before Michigan vs Nebraska

The Wolverines’ freshman phenom quarterback gets ready on the field at Memorial Stadium before his team’s game against Nebraska. It’s Underwood’s Big Ten debut.

Dylan Raiola leads Nebraska on the field vs Michigan

Less than an hour before one of the biggest games of his college career, Nebraska sophomore quarterback Dylan Raiola leads his team out on to the field at Memorial Stadium in Lincoln.

Bryce Underwood stats

Three games into his college career, Underwood, the No. 1 overall recruit in the 2025 class, has completed 57.5% of his passes for 628 yards, two touchdowns and an interception. Underwood has added 108 rushing yards and two touchdowns on 14 carries.

Michigan vs Nebraska injury updates

According to the latest Big Ten’s football availability report, here’s the injury outlook for Michigan and Nebraska:

Michigan

Out: WR I’Marion Stewart, DB Zeke Berry, DB Caleb Anderson, QB Davis Warren, DB Tevis Metcalf, RB Micah Ka’apana, RB Donovan Johnson, RB John Volker, LB Jaydon Hood, OL Giovanni El-Hadi, OL Andrew Babalola, DL Manuel Beigel, TE Hogan Hansen, DE Devon Baxter, WR C.J. Charleston, DL Ike Iwunnah
Questionable: DB Shamari Earls, QB Mikey Keene, DB Rod Moore, DB Mason Curtis, OL Brady Norton

Nebraska

Out: WR Janiran Bonner, WR Demitrius Bell, DB Blye Hill, RB Jamarion Parker, LB Trent Uhlir, LB Gage Stenger, DL Malcolm Simpson, OL Julian Marks, OL Nolan Fennessy, DL Tyson Terry, OL Gibson Pyle, TE Mac Markway, WR Jackson Carpenter, DL Conor Connealy
Questionable: DB Malcolm Hartzog Jr., RB Kenneth Williams, DB Caleb Benning, DB Tanner Terch, LB Derek Wacker, WR Jeremiah Jones

College GameDay Michigan vs Nebraska predictions

During the picks segment on ESPN’s ‘College GameDay,’ four of the show’s five panelists went with Michigan to top Nebraska. Here’s a look at how they voted:

Desmond Howard: Michigan
Nick Saban: Michigan
Pat McAfee: Nebraska
Matthew Tkachuk (celebrity guest-picker): Michigan
Kirk Herbstreit: Michigan

What time does Michigan vs Nebraska start?

Date: Saturday, September 20
Time: 3:30 p.m. ET
Where: Memorial Stadium (Lincoln, Nebraska)

What TV channel is Michigan vs Nebraska on today?  

TV: CBS
Streaming: Paramount+ ∣ Fubo (free trial)

Michigan vs Nebraska predictions

Matt Hayes, USA TODAY Network: Michigan
Jordan Mendoza, USA TODAY: Nebraska
Erick Smith, USA TODAY: Nebraska
Paul Meyerberg, USA TODAY: Michigan
Eddie Timanus, USA TODAY: Michigan
Blake Toppmeyer, USA TODAY Network: Nebraska

Michigan schedule 2025

Here’s a look at Michigan football’s 2025 results and remaining schedule:

Saturday, August 30: Michigan 34, New Mexico 17
Saturday, September 6: No. 24 Oklahoma 24, Michigan 13
Saturday, September 13: Michigan 63, Central Michigan 3
Saturday, September 20: at Nebraska *
Saturday, September 27: BYE
Saturday, October 4: vs. Wisconsin *
Saturday, October 11: at USC *
Saturday, October 18: vs. Washington *
Saturday, October 25: at Michigan State *
Saturday, November 1: vs. Purdue *
Saturday, November 8: BYE
Saturday, November 15: at Northwestern *
Saturday, November 22: at Maryland *
Saturday, November 29: at No. 1 Ohio State *

* Denotes Big Ten game

Nebraska schedule 2025

Here’s a look at Nebraska football’s 2025 results and remaining schedule:

Thursday, Aug. 28: Nebraska 20, Cincinnati 17
Saturday, Sept. 6: Nebraska 68, Akron 0
Saturday, Sept. 13: Nebraska 59, Houston Christian 7
Saturday, Sept. 20: vs. No. 20 Michigan *
Saturday, Sept. 27: BYE
Saturday, Oct. 4: vs. Michigan State *
Saturday, Oct. 11: at Maryland *
Friday, Oct. 17: at Minnesota *
Saturday, Oct. 25: vs. Northwestern *
Saturday, Nov. 1: vs. USC *
Saturday, Nov. 8: at UCLA *
Saturday, Nov. 15: BYE
Saturday, Nov. 22: at No. 2 Penn State *
Friday, Nov. 28: vs. Iowa *

* Denotes Big Ten game

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Philadelphia Eagles running back Saquon Barkley dished out some punishment to Kansas City Chiefs cornerback Chamarri Conner in the Week 2 battle between the two teams.

The NFL responded to it by giving a punishment of its own to the league’s reigning Offensive Player of the Year.

The NFL fined Barkley $46,371 for unnecessary roughness and improper use of the helmet during the play where he ran over Conner, as NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero reports.

Barkley appeared to lower his helmet to initiate contact during the run. He then hit Conner in the facemask with the crown of his helmet before breaking the 25-year-old’s tackle attempt and gaining a few extra yards.

Conner was no worse for wear following the Barkley-initiated contact, and no flag was thrown on the play. Nonetheless, the NFL saw fit to fine Barkley under its official rules about fines and appeals, which outlines that players may be fined even for plays during which they were not penalized.

‘Player infractions may come to the league’s attention in a variety of ways,’ the league’s rulebook reads. ‘The league may respond to an official’s call during a game or to a specific play that a team submits for review. The NFL Officiating Department also reviews every play from every game and refers potential violations to the Football Operations compliance team.

‘League staff members examine the plays identified as having potential infractions to determine whether there is cause for additional review.’

The NFL’s fine marks the third of Barkley’s career, and his third in as many seasons. All three have been for impermissible use of the helmet, with his first coming with the New York Giants in 2023 and his second coming last season with the Eagles.

That’s why Barkley was charged a fine of $46,371 as a multi-time offender; the fine for the first offense is $23,186.

In total, Barkley has been fined a combined $113,246 by the NFL during his career. He will have career earnings of $79,692,750 following the 2025 NFL season, per Spotrac.com.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

DiJonai Carrington is out for the start of the Minnesota Lynx’s WNBA playoff series against the Phoenix Mercury, with the guard unable to go because of a foot injury.

The Lynx announced the news on Saturday, Sept. 20. Carrington was the only player listed as out or questionable on the team’s availability report ahead of Sunday’s Game 1 at the Target Center.

The injury appeared to happen Wednesday during Minnesota’s 75-74 win over the Golden State Valkyries, a victory that propelled the Lynx to the semifinals.

Per ESPN, Carrington was present Friday at a press conference to announce that Lynx forward Alanna Smith had been named Defensive Player of the Year (an award she shared with Las Vegas Aces center A’ja Wilson). As of Saturday evening, her status for Game 2, scheduled for Tuesday, Sept. 23, is unknown.

Carrington is a key defensive player for the Lynx and was named to the WNBA’s All-Defensive First Team in 2024. She was viewed as a vital addition late in the trade window, joining Minnesota from the Dallas Wings in a trade that sent Diamond Miller, Karlie Samuelson and a second-round pick to Texas.

However, the 27-year-old missed time down the stretch, sitting out the final four games of the regular season because of a shoulder injury. Carrington returned for the first round of the playoffs and scored 11 points off the bench in a dramatic Game 2 win over Golden State. Minnesota head coach Cheryl Reeve used only eight players in that game but might have to look down the bench to make up for Carrington’s absence.

DiJonai Carrington statistics

DiJonai Carrington averaged 8.6 points per game during the regular season, along with 2.1 rebounds and 1.2 steals. During the playoffs, she averaged 8.5 points, 1.0 rebounds and 0.5 steals per game.

Minnesota Lynx vs. Phoenix Mercury: WNBA playoffs schedule

Home teams listed first. All times Eastern.

Game 1: Lynx vs. Mercury — Sunday, Sept. 21, 5 p.m. | ESPN, Fubo
Game 2: Lynx vs. Mercury — Tuesday, Sept. 23, 7:30 p.m. | ESPN, Fubo
Game 3: Mercury vs. Lynx — Friday, Sept. 26, 9:30 p.m. | ESPN2, Fubo
Game 4: Mercury vs. Lynx — Sunday, Sept. 28, Time TBD | Broadcast details TBD
Game 5: Lynx vs. Mercury — Tuesday, Sept. 30, Time TBD | Broadcast details TBD

Watch Lynx vs. Mercury Game 1 on Fubo (free trial)

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Summer is rapidly becoming fall, and that means the 2025 Major League Baseball playoffs are right around the corner.

The final days of the regular season will be tension-packed, and for some teams the 162-game campaign may come down to whether they can snag enough wins in September’s final days. In the American League in particular, the stress levels are sky high, with close races in all three divisions.

Over in the National League, several teams already know they’re going to the postseason. The Philadelphia Phillies have claimed the NL East, while the Milwaukee Brewers, Chicago Cubs and Los Angeles Dodgers can be sure that there are playoff games to come. Still, the door isn’t closed for a handful of clubs, meaning that every game will count.

Here’s what to know about the start date for the 2025 MLB playoffs, as well as how the bracket works:

When do MLB playoffs start?

The four-round MLB playoffs are scheduled to start with the American League and National League Wild Card Series, which will all be best-of-three battles that begin on Tuesday, Sept. 30.

From there, the four Divisional Series pairings are all scheduled to start on Saturday, Oct. 4.

The final game of the regular season, at least based on start time, will see the Chicago Cubs host their NL Central rivals, the St. Louis Cardinals. That game is scheduled to get underway at 3:20 p.m. on Sunday, Sept. 28.

MLB has left open one day between the end of the regular season and the start of the playoffs in case there needs to be a one-game tiebreaker to settle the postseason qualifiers or to cover for any potential rainouts during the season’s final weekend.

How does MLB playoff bracket work?

The MLB playoffs do not re-seed, with the bracket set in stone once the playoffs start.

Here’s how the bracket works in both the American League and the National League:

Wild Card Series

Third-best division winner (3) vs. third-best wild card (6)
Best wild card (4) vs. second-best wild card (5)

Division Series

Best division winner (1) vs. winner of 4-5 Wild Card Series
Second-best division winner (2) vs. winner of 3-6 Wild Card Series

Championship series

Two Division Series winners (higher seed gets four home games)

World Series

ALCS winner vs. NLCS winner (team with best regular-season winning percentage gets four home games)

MLB playoff format, explained

The 2025 MLB playoff format is a familiar one for baseball fans. Twelve teams in total will qualify for the postseason with six teams each coming from the American League and National League.

Each league is divided into three divisions: Central, East and West. The top three playoff seeds in both leagues will go to the teams that finish atop those divisions at the end of the 162-game regular season. The three division winners all advance to the playoffs, joined by the three remaining teams with the best record (regardless of division).

The two division winners with the best records will get a bye directly to the Division Series, while the third division winner and the other three clubs have to play through a Wild Card Series. The two Wild Card Series winners will take on the top two division winners in the Division Series round, with the winners of those pairings advancing to the Championship Series.

The two teams to come out on top at that stage will meet in the 2025 World Series.

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With three first-half touchdowns, Notre Dame football appeared to have found a much-needed groove on offense vs. Purdue after a disappointing 0-2 start to the season.

The Fighting Irish’s scoring party, and momentum, however, was impacted by a lengthy visit from Mother Nature.

Saturday’s nonconference game between the Fighting Irish and the Boilermakers was suspended for over an hour at Notre Dame Stadium from lightning that moved through the South Bend, Indiana area. The game resumed at the 1:31 mark of the second quarter with the Boilermakers on offense.

Notre Dame led Purdue 28-13 at the time the teams resumed in the second quarter. CJ Carr has completed 3 of 4 passes for 94 yards and a touchdown thus far for Notre Dame, while Jeremiyah Love and Jadarian Price have scored a combined three rushing touchdowns.

USA TODAY Sports provided live weather updates for Notre Dame-Purdue. Follow below:

Notre Dame-Purdue weather updates: Latest on Fighting Irish vs Boilermakers

All times Eastern

6:55 p.m.: And they’re back! Following a lengthy lightning delay, Notre Dame and Purdue have resumed action in the second quarter at Notre Dame Stadium.

6:09 p.m.: NBC’s Zora Stephenson reported that the plan for ND-Purdue is to send both teams back onto the field at 6:40 p.m. ET with the game resuming at 6:50 p.m. ET. This, of course, is barring another lightning strike in the area, as that would have to reset the clock another 30 minutes.

Stephenson also mentioned that the lightning delay will serve as the traditional halftime break since both teams will take a ‘quick’ break going into the third quarter after they finish the remaining 1:31 of the first half.

5:50 p.m.: In a 5:36 p.m. ET update, the University of Notre Dame’s official X (formerly Twitter) account, mentioned for fans to remain in shelter as the patch that is moving through South Bend has rain and lightning. No timetable yet on when Saturday’s game can resume.

5:36 p.m.: Meteorologist Krysten Tyler of ABC South Bend ABC57 is reporting that storms will not leave the South Bend area until around 6:30 p.m. ET, or even after that. A lengthy lightning delay could be in storm for ND and Purdue at Notre Dame Stadium.

5:31 p.m.: NBC’s in-studio showed rain coming down at Notre Dame Stadium as Notre Dame-Purdue is in a lightning delay. The studio show also mentioned that the lightning delay will serve as the ‘halftime’ for the game, as both teams will play the remaining 1:31 of the second quarter before a ‘brief timeout’ between the second and third quarters compared to taking to another extended break for a traditional halftime.

5:10 p.m.: Notre Dame vs. Purdue has entered a lightning delay at Notre Dame Stadium in South Bend, Indiana.

NCAA lightning delay policy

The NCAA notes that if a lightning strike is seen or heard within at least six miles of an outdoor stadium, then the game must be halted for a lightning delay. Though a lightning delay’s length of time starts at 30 minutes, the total time of a lightning delay can vary because for every strike that follows the initial strike, that 30-minute clock is reset.

‘To resume athletics activities, lightning safety experts recommend waiting 30 minutes after both the last sound of thunder and after the last flash of lightning is at least six miles away, and moving away from the venue. If lightning is seen without hearing thunder, lightning may be out of range and therefore less likely to be a significant threat. At night, be aware that lightning can be visible at a much greater distance than during the day as clouds are being lit from the inside by lightning. This greater distance may mean that the lightning is no longer a significant threat. At night, use both the sound of thunder and seeing the lightning channel itself to decide on when to reset the 30-minute return-to-play clock before resuming outdoor athletics activities.’

Notre Dame-Purdue weather forecast: Hour-by-hour forecast for South Bend, Indiana

According to The Weather Channel, inclement weather is expected to stay in the South Bend, Indiana area until around 7 p.m. ET.

Here’s an hour-by-hour breakdown of the weather forecast in South Bend for Notre Dame-Purdue:

5 p.m. ET: Thunderstorms (95% chance of rain)
6 p.m. ET: Thunderstorms (86% chance of rain)
7 p.m. ET: Cloudy (23% chance of rain)
8 p.m. ET: Cloudy (15% chance of rain)

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The baseball scouting community was in a state of shock and disbelief Friday learning that esteemed Texas Rangers scout Scott Littlefield was found dead in his Houston hotel room following an apparent heart attack.

Littlefield, who had heart surgery two years ago, was 59.

Littlefield, the Rangers’ player personnel special assistant who scouted for 34 years, including 16 with Texas, was one of the most popular scouts in the business. If you knew him, you loved him. And if you simply saw him, you’d smile.

He was a close confidant of Rangers manager Bruce Bochy after being together from their days together in San Diego, and spent time with Bochy and the front office during the Rangers’ series against the Astros this week in Houston.

“Scott was one of the most respected scouts in Major League Baseball who had an incredible impact on this organization,’ said Chris Young, Rangers president of baseball operations. “ His voice was influential in all aspects of our baseball operation from professional, amateur, and international scouting to Major League player evaluation. He was an invaluable resource and advisor.

“More importantly, he was one of the most genuine and caring individuals in the game.’

Littlefield, a two-time scout of the year with the Padres (2007) and Rangers (2019), is the brother of former Pirates GM Dave Littlefield and Mark Littlefield, a medical coordinator for the New York Yankees.

The son-in-law of former MLB catcher and Giants coach John Van Ornum, Littlefield is survived by his wife Heather, son Tyler (27), a scout with the San Diego Padres, and daughter Ericka (24), an amateur scouting assistant with the Baltimore Orioles.

“He was a scout’s scout and loved baseball and being a scout more than anyone I have ever met,’ said Rangers scout Mike Anderson, one of his closest friends. “It’s the only job he ever wanted, and he did it for 34 years.’

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Sports brings out the best and worst of us, especially in college football. It got the worst of a UAB defender against Tennessee on Saturday, Sept. 20.

Blazers safety Sirad Bryant was flagged for unsportsmanlike conduct after a Tennessee extra-point attempt in the first quarter for stomping on the right foot of Vols kicker Max Gilbert, who made the PAT.

Bryant initially ran into Tennessee holder Jackson Ross before stomping on Gilbert with his cleat. Ross then ran after Bryant after at least three officials threw flags on the field.

Tennessee led UAB 21-0 after halftime, as Gilbert extended the Vols’ lead to 21-0 on the extra-point kick. The Blazers had just three first downs in the first quarter.

UAB, coached by former NFL quarterback Trent Dilfer, has been a disaster in Dilfer’s three seasons so far. The Blazers are 9-18 under Dilfer, finishing 4-8 in 2023 and 3-9 in 2024. They are 2-1 so far this season.

UAB was also flagged for targeting in the first quarter, resulting in the ejection of cornerback Donald Lee.

Tennessee’s offense picked up where it left off in a nailbiting loss to Georgia in Week 3, with 21 points in the first quarter against UAB. Quarterback Joey Aguilar tossed two touchdowns

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ATLANTA ― Atlanta Dream forward Naz Hillmon is the 2025 Kia WNBA Sixth Player of the Year, a first for the franchise.

The former Michigan Wolverines forward came off the bench for 27 games, averaging career highs in points (8.6), rebounds (6.2), assists (2.4) and blocks (0.4) per game. She also became a formidable 3-point shooter this season. Before 2025, Hillmon had six total attempts beyond the arc and one made basket. This season, that number jumped to more than 50 3-point shots on 165 attempts. She became increasingly essential to Atlanta’s success as the season progressed.

“You don’t win Sixth Player of the Year without your teammates being as incredible as they are, allowing me to be who I am this year,’ Hillmon told USA TODAY during an exclusive interview. ‘Staying confident in me. It’s my team. It’s Sixth Player of the Year for a reason — there’s five others. For me, it’s the eleven others we have on the bench, as well as our coaching staff.”

Hillmon said her confidence has remained strong since joining the league in 2022, but it has evolved in 2025. Before this year, she focused on her defense, rebounding and overall effort to make an impact. This season, it’s been her shot. The Dream forward says her teammates have been asking her to shoot for years ― some as far back as USA Basketball in 2018 ― and now there hasn’t been a day that goes by that they didn’t say, ‘Naz, shoot it!’

Hillmon explained that as their confidence in her increased, she could feel her own self-confidence growing. With the encouragement from her teammates, she says she’s thankful that being a shot-making specialist is now the expectation. What’s more, the Dream coaching staff, including head coach Karl Smesko, poured into her, working on her shot since the offseason. Hillmon noted Smesko, in particular, has helped her thrive as a 3-point shooter, and his insistence on working on the smaller details has mattered more than most realize.“It’s easy to one day get into the details and then the next day, the big picture,’ she said. ‘He’s both every single day. I think that helps us to stay consistent, and it’s helped me to stay consistent.”

Still, Hillmon was doing the little things long before Smesko arrived. She’s been an iron woman for Atlanta, setting a team record with 151 consecutive games played, the third-longest active streak in the league. Hillmon also led the team in net rating swing (+13.4) this season and finished second in the WNBA in plus-minus (+7.6 per game). Furthermore, if there’s a timely play to be made ― a rebound, a turnover, a needed basket ― it’s Hillmon who’s often the go-to player. She says while many might attribute that sort of tenacity to skill, it’s actually something else.

“It takes effort. It takes heart. It takes motivation. It takes want to, and I want to be able to do those things for my team because I also know that they carry so much,’ Hillmon said.

‘Like I say all the time, I know I have great players on the floor with me. Half of them are probably going to be Hall of Famers, and I can’t wait to be celebrating all of them when those years are to come. But they shoulder so much, I wanna be able to clean up and do the dirty work, and then they can focus on, not the bigger things, but the heavier load that they’re carrying.”

Hillmon is extremely proud of Atlanta’s 2025 season. The Dream added seven new faces, a new coaching staff and doubled their wins from 2024 with 30 victories this year. The team was also able to celebrate a playoff game win under Smesko, a huge milestone in a new system. The things Hillmon has accomplished with Atlanta haven’t just stayed on the court; they’ve oozed into her personal life as well.

The Dream forward says her mom, who is her biggest supporter (and her biggest critic), was so excited for her growth that she made custom digital stickers for each one of her 3-point celebrations. However, Hillmon’s mom doesn’t want her to stray too far from her bread and butter.

“She’s like, ‘You learned how to shoot 3s, so now you don’t know what the paint is, and you don’t go post up anymore,’ Hillmon said playfully. ‘So, every now and again, I try to make sure I get inside of the paint. And, don’t let me come home with only one rebound. [She’ll say,] ‘You basically had only one more rebound than me. We have to bet better in that regard.’

Hillmon’s mom, family, teammates and coaches have a lot to be proud of now. Their immense support elevated the Dream forward right into a well-deserved new piece of hardware.

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