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Following Minnesota men’s basketball’s 76-56 loss to No. 7 Nebraska, Gophers first-year coach Niko Medved spoke to a much larger story than his team’s Big Ten regular-season contest.

In his postgame news conference at Williams Arena in Minneapolis, Medved addressed the latest unrest in Minnesota, as a man was fatally shot by federal officers in Minneapolis on Saturday, Jan. 24.

‘I think we all just care so deeply about people and each other, and I think that’s always the message to these guys. All of it’s heartbreaking. Sometimes for us, you play a game, and you want to kind of get away for a second and focus on what you’re doing. All of it really just sucks.’

The Gophers return to action on Wednesday, Jan. 28 with a trip to Wisconsin for an 8 p.m. ET tip-off.

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Alex Honnold’s ‘Skyscraper Live’ event is set for Saturday, Jan. 24 after being postponed 24 due to weather conditions in Taiwan.

The event, which was supposed to originally scheduled for Friday has been moved to air Saturday at 8 p.m. ET (5 p.m. PT).

“I’m sure viewers will probably be on edge watching this,” Honnold told Netflix. “I assume that most people will be sort of uncomfortable watching the whole thing. But I hope that viewers get a little bit of my joy from the experience — that they can appreciate the fun of it and the beauty of it, the scenery, just the whole experience. It’s not just extreme sports — it’s more.”

Taipei 101 halfway mark

Alex Honnold appears to have reached the halfway point of the building at the 35-minute mark. He continues to express no fear as he looks down from the building. He used the moment to wave at the crowd, talk with the broadcast team and clean off his shoes to prevent potential slipping.

‘The view is amazing,’ Honnold said, looking down during his break. ‘… Everywhere I look, people are watching.’

WWE superstar Seth Rollins is a member of the Netflix broadcast team.

Alex Honnold conquers a dragon

Honnold conquers the first of 10 ‘dragons’ on the Taipei 101 building.

The ‘dragon’ is a stylized ornament that symbolizes a dragonhead sculpture located on the corners of a particular section of the building.

Alex Honnold stops to take in the view

Honnold has proven not to be afraid to look down below. He stopped and turned around to take a quick break, but also used the moment to take in the scene around him. He does have a live mic on during the climb. As he continued the climb, he could be heard reacting in a joking manner to people who were watching him from out of the window and offered someone a high-five through the window.

Alex Honnold’s climb is underway

Honnold has started his climb up a 1,667-foot building in Taiwan. Just two minutes into the free solo climb, he stopped to reach for more chalk from his bag and waved to the crowd watching below.

How to watch Skyscraper Live with Alex Honnold on Netflix

Here’s all the information you need to know to tune into Honnold’s Skyscraper Live event on Netflix.

Time: 8 p.m. ET (5 p.m. PT)
Date: Saturday, Jan. 24
Stream: Netflix

It is best recommended to start the live viewing on time as it will be broadcasted globally, Netflix said. It’s the best way to ensure viewers experience the full climb.

How tall is Taipei 101?

Taipei 101 is a 101-story, 1,667-foot-tall tower located in the Xinyi District of Taipei, Taiwan. Upon its opening in 2004, the Taipei 101 was the tallest building in the world until it was surpassed by Dubai’s Burj Khalifa in 2009.

The Taipei building is based on the Chinese number eight, which is considered to be lucky, and is the largest engineering project ever in the history of the Taiwan construction business, according to the Taiwan Tourism Administration. The skyscraper is designed to resemble a bamboo stalk, featuring eight distinct segments symbolizing prosperity.

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Ja Morant will miss at least three weeks due to a left elbow UCL sprain, overlapping with the Feb. 5 trade deadline.
Morant’s injury history, off-court concerns, and large contract have reportedly limited his trade market.
The Grizzlies may keep Morant past the trade deadline if they do not receive an attractive offer.
Morant has expressed a desire to stay in Memphis, but his future with the team remains uncertain.

Ja Morant was asked one question about his future with the Memphis Grizzlies on Jan. 21.

When the star point guard was in London and Berlin for two NBA games in Europe against the Orlando Magic, the media assembled had plenty to ask the 26-year-old in his seventh NBA season. But this time, he was asked just one question after a loss to the Atlanta Hawks at FedExForum.

‘I’m sorry y’all that wasn’t able to come to London, but I’m done with those questions,” Morant said.

His response was polite, and the questions turned back to basketball. Morant wanted to focus on basketball, but the news from the Grizzlies on Jan. 24 about another setback will keep the focus on his future with the organization.

Morant will miss at least three weeks due to left elbow UCL sprain. The three-week timeline overlaps with the trade deadline on Feb. 5.

If Morant is traded, he has played his last game with the Grizzlies. There is also the possibility that Memphis could keep Morant beyond the deadline if the latest injury scares off bidders from making an attractive offer.

Morant is averaging 19.5 points and 8.1 assists per game this season. His 23.5% on 3-pointers and 41% shooting overall are both career lows. He’s a 46.6% shooter for his career, including 31.1% on 3-pointers.

Ja Morant’s trade value, contract

Reports have indicated that Morant doesn’t have a robust trade market. His injury history and off-court concerns have limited what teams are willing to offer for a player who is making $39.4 million this season.

After reports surfaced that the Grizzlies would listen to offers on Jan. 9, Morant returned from a calf contusion on Jan. 18 after missing six games. He proceeded to compile at least 20 points and 10 assists in each of his next two games.

Morant’s strong play was an indication that more teams could start calling the Grizzlies, but then he suffered his latest injury.

Anthony Davis and Giannis Antetokounmpo are two other notable NBA stars whose names have been rumored in potential trades. Both those players are also expected to be sidelined through the trade deadline.

A team in win-now mode is less likely to take on Morant’s contract, given his latest injury and injury history. Morant has missed 23 of 43 games this season. He’ll finish this season playing less than 60 games for the third consecutive year.

The Commercial Appeal reported on Jan. 9 that the Grizzlies would be open to keeping Morant if they can’t find suitable offers. The chances of Morant staying seem to be increasing.

Can Grizzlies fix the issues with Ja Morant?

Morant indicated on Jan. 18 that Memphis is where he wants to be. While that didn’t mean the Grizzlies would be more inclined to keep him, the current injury situation could lead to that.

Morant was supporting his teammates on the bench during the Jan. 23 loss against the New Orleans Pelicans. His latest actions have been positive, limiting the potential of a distraction.

The two sides being aligned throughout the remainder of the season doesn’t seem like it could be a conflict. However, what happens after the season is another question.

Morant will be eligible for a three-year contract extension. The Grizzlies didn’t sign him to a two-year extension last offseason. Given the recent events and the team’s willingness to shop him, an extension is even less likely now.

A perfect fairytale story would be the Grizzlies and Morant fixing their differences, moving on and making a run next season. However, without future certainty, there’s a strong chance the Grizzlies will be listening to offers again in the offseason if Morant remains on the roster past the trade deadline.

Damichael Cole is the Memphis Grizzlies beat writer for The Commercial Appeal. Contact Damichael at damichael.cole@commercialappeal.com. Follow Damichael on X, formerly known as Twitter, @DamichaelC.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The Minnesota Timberwolves’ game against the Golden State Warriors in Minneapolis on Saturday, Jan. 24 was postponed hours after federal officers shot and killed a man in the city .

‘The decision was made to prioritize the safety and security of the Minneapolis community,’ the Timberwolves said in a statement.

The game will be pushed back 24 hours and is now scheduled for 4:30 p.m. local time on Sunday, Jan. 25.

The game was supposed to aired nationally by ABC as part of a tripleheader.

Shootings involving federal agents

The person killed Saturday was believed to be a 37-year-old white man, according to Minneapolis Police Chief Brian O’Hara. He was identified as Alex Pretti by local news outlets and The Associated Press.

It’s the third shooting in Minnesota committed by a federal officer in the month of January alone.

Another federal officer shot a Venezuelan man during a targeted traffic stop on Jan. 14, according to the Department of Homeland Security.

Protests emerged after an ICE agent fatally shot 37-year-old Renee Nicole Good in Minneapolis on Jan. 7. Federal authorities have said she was shot in self-defense, however city and state leaders and other supporters of Good have maintained that her killing was unjustified.

Other postponed NBA games

The NBA has recently seen other regular-season games around the league postponed.

A matchup between the Washington Wizards and Charlotte Hornets was rescheduled to an earlier time to accommodate for catastrophic winter storms sweeping across the country.

A Chicago Bulls-Miami Heat regular-season game at United Center in Chicago was postponed on Jan. 8 because the court was unsafe for basketball activities due to moisture on the floor from a rainy day in Chicago.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Paralympic snowboarder Brenna Huckaby found her sport after losing her leg to bone cancer at age 14.
Huckaby believes sports provide the confidence and mental fortitude to overcome life’s challenges.
She emphasizes finding happiness in the small, everyday moments of the athletic journey, not just in winning.
Huckaby became the first Paralympian to appear in the Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue to represent and inspire others.

If we could ski down a mountain, then when we got home, we were able to conquer everyday life things.

At the time, Brenna Huckaby didn’t fully realize what the idea behind that rehabilitative trip to Utah would mean to her.

She had been diagnosed with osteosarcoma, a form of bone cancer, and lost her right leg at 14. To that point, conquering everyday things had meant wearing her prosthetic leg consistently.

But the trip, sponsored by her hospital, which sent Huckaby and kids who lost mobility from osteosarcoma to the slopes, opened up her world.

‘I fell in love with it immediately,’ she tells USA TODAY Sports. ‘It was the first sport that I had found just not only (an) incredible challenge, but also this fear and this knowing that I could do it, and I wanted to do it.’

Huckaby, now 30, became an American Paralympic snowboarder who will once again be competing at the Olympics, this time at Milano Cortina. She won gold and bronze at Beijing in 2022.

Have you ever taken the time to think about what sports, especially your favorite sport, means to you?

We caught up with Huckaby, who would also become the first Paralympian to appear in the Swimsuit Issue of Sports Illustrated and is now a sports mom, about how sports can give us the confidence to take on life’s biggest challenges.

If we set a goal, and we push ourselves, we can reap their benefits at no matter what level we achieve.

YOUTH SPORTS SURVIVAL GUIDE: Pre-order Coach Steve’s upcoming book for young athletes and their parents

Live for the moment: Sports challenge you but also heals you

Huckaby spoke to USA TODAY Sports on behalf of Hershey’s for the “It’s Your Happy Place” campaign. Athletes partnered with the chocolate and candy company to showcase how happiness is not only found in winning, but sweet, everyday moments.

Those moments, she says, ‘don’t have to be big and explosive.’ The small ones can matter the most.

‘I feel like that’s been my main focus the last eight years,’ she says. ‘How can I enjoy the process, enjoy the journey, not just the destination? And I feel like that’s way easier said than done. I’ve learned that taking time to pause, to slow down, to be in the moment, that’s how I have found happiness, presence, gratitude, all the things that make me feel good. It’s been in those tiny moments throughout the day.’

As young athletes (and parents), if we take the time to reflect on what we’re doing as we race to our different sports events, we can improve our awareness. Huckaby’s sport, she says, is mostly mental, and that part of her game helps her push through the excruciatingly physical parts.

‘I feel like I don’t make progress and grow unless I am mentally present and in a good headspace to learn,’ she says.  ‘I would say the sooner that you can take moments to reflect on – whether it’s your training in the gym or a practice that you had – what was hard, what was good, what do you want to improve on, and what did it teach you about yourself? When you can start practicing that, it makes the things that you’ve learned so much easier.

‘Then you’re able to see those moments of growth and (be) like, ‘Wow, like I’m so glad that I learned that. And I’m so glad I pushed through that because I’ve got this thing that I’m dealing with at home and I know that I can take the mindsets from sport and apply it here.”

Reflection has helped Huckaby realize she performs her best when she’s calm. She works with a sports psychologist to help her channel her strength to high stakes situations.

‘This is it’: Sports help you get to know who you are

Do you remember the instance where you either discovered your favorite sport or realized it was the one you love most?

Huckaby, who has two older brothers (Jordan and Jeremy), loved to jump around as a little girl. Jeremy, her middle brother, and her parents were really into martial arts, which she tried. Her instructor pulled her parents (Jeff and Kristie) aside and told them, ‘You need to put her in gymnastics.’

‘What I loved the most was learning how to do flips in the gym and that’s what my martial arts teachers would just teach me because that was all I could stay focused for,’ she says. ‘So my parents listened and also they were tired of me doing cartwheels in the house and stuff, and they thought it was a way to save their TV.’

Huckaby’s cancer, which led to the amputation, ended her gymnastics career. But, Huckaby says, she thought about how she loved moving her body and chasing adrenaline.

‘When snowboarding came to me, ‘I was like, this is it,” Huckaby says.

She moved to Utah, about a year after the hospital-led trip with her mom, who worked as a nurse there. The rest of the family stayed at their home in Louisiana, and Kristie moved back home when her daughter graduated high school.

‘It gave me opportunity to just heal from cancer through snowboarding,’ Huckaby says. ‘Sports (is) such a great way to understand life in the way that it challenges you and the way that you intimately get to know who you are.

‘You gain so much confidence in your body and what your body’s capable of. So during cancer, I never really questioned that I could handle it. I put myself in extreme situations through gymnastics training that I knew that I could handle what was to come.

‘I think now as I’ve been doing this at a professional level for so long, I’ve learned, ‘How do I put that more into my everyday life so that I’m not just an athlete?”

Huckaby says she doesn’t so much balance her life, but embraces what’s important to her through every season.

‘He takes care of our kids while I’m away and when I’m training and (is) such a big support, making sure that we win, right?’ she says. ‘It’s a team effort for sure.

‘I’m in the gym in the offseason three to five days a week,’ she says, ‘and I say three to five because we’re human. It’s life, you know? So the ideal, the perfect, is five. The reality is usually three, and during that period, you’re going really hard. And so those off days are really important. And then between snowboard season and gym season, we have two weeks off. We are encouraged to have fun and move our body in ways that feel good, but it doesn’t have to be intense. It’s just, ‘Take time off.’

“And then I usually give myself a fall break. I know that it’s good for my mental health. So usually as Halloween starts rolling around, I’m less intense and then I crank back up (in) November, and then most of December and then (the) holidays, I give myself permission to just chill. Because I know it’s about to get serious after Christmas.

‘It’s (about) finding a rhythm, but I absolutely rest.’

It’s OK to be scared, even if you have put in your work

Lilah and Sloan, Huckaby’s daughters, like skateboarding, wakeboarding, wake surfing and other action sports near their home in Montana.

Lilah, her older daughter, has tried gymnastics and does aerial silks, which Huckaby describes as art-based body movements.

‘We’re active,’ she says. ‘That’s where we’re trying to shine. I don’t ever want them to think anything has just been given to me and easy. Of course, there are moments that it looks easy and it’s because of all the decades of work that I’ve put in on my body and then my mind. And so things look like they come together naturally, but, I love the phrase, ‘An overnight success was not built overnight.’ It was built, you know, a decade before, just quietly working.

‘Like yesterday, I did not want to go to the gym. It was my third day of two-a-days and I was just like, ‘I don’t want to go.’ And they saw that, and I got up and I went.’

But Huckaby also never wants her daughters to think that she’s fearless. She has been scared many times, whether it’s during training, free riding or competing.

“But I’m brave, and I do it anyway, and I do it scared, and I trust my training, and I trust myself, and I hope that they learn to do that for themselves,’ she says.

Huckaby was horrified, she says, when Sports Illustrated approached her to pose for its 2018 swimsuit edition. She thought she wasn’t confident enough to put herself out in the world in that way.

‘Then I just thought about my 14-year-old self who had just lost her leg and was bald at the time and just felt unbeautiful and unworthy, and I remembered that she deserved to be represented in a way that she wanted to, and to be seen as someone who could be beautiful and could be lovable. And so I wanted to give that to her, and I’m so proud of myself for doing that.’

In a similar way, we sometimes have to put ourselves, or our kids, out there for our first big competition. It’s a risk, for sure, but then that rush of adrenaline can come, the one you only get from sports.

‘Bet on yourself,’ Huckaby says, ‘because you’re worth investing in. If you want it, go for it. If you feel like you have what it takes and you love what you’re doing, go out there and give yourself the time to do it and the opportunity to do it because that’s what matters more than when you got into your sport. It’s never too late.’

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 Coach Steve column is posted weekly. For his past columns, click here.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The Pittsburgh Steelers have found Mike Tomlin’s replacement.

Former Green Bay Packers and Dallas Cowboys coach Mike McCarthy agreed to a deal with the organization to be the historic franchise’s next head coach, according to multiple reports.

McCarthy spent the 2025 season out of the NFL after parting ways with the Cowboys. The 62-year-old finished his five-year tenure in Dallas as the head coach with a 49-35 record. He went 1-3 in the postseason but also led the Cowboys to three consecutive 12-win seasons from 2021-23.

He compiled a 125-77-2 record in nearly 13 years in Green Bay, reaching the playoffs nine times and winning a Super Bowl in the 2010 season.

McCarthy grew up in Pittsburgh and now has the chance to coach his childhood team. The former Super Bowl-winning coach brings 18 years of head coaching experience to the Steelers and stability in a time of uncertainty.

Just two weeks ago, Mike Tomlin stepped down after 19 seasons as the Steelers’ head coach, and many wondered in which direction the franchise would go. That question has been answered. McCarthy becomes the Steelers’ fourth head coach since 1969 and is the second-oldest head coach in the NFL behind Andy Reid (67).

McCarthy interviewed with the team in person on Wednesday, Nov. 21, according to multiple reports, and also spoke with the Tennessee Titans about their vacancy before withdrawing from consideration.

He inherits a team with 11 picks in the 2026 draft, and a quarterback room consisting of Mason Rudolph and 2025 sixth-round pick Will Howard.

Some will wonder if Aaron Rodgers will return to the Steelers after his one-year contract expires. Rodgers and McCarthy spent 13 seasons (2006-18) together in Green Bay. Before leaving the New York Jets two years ago, the 42-year-old quarterback said that McCarthy would be one of the few coaches he’d want to play for. Time will tell if McCarthy’s hiring will lure Rodgers back to the Steelers in 2026.

The Steelers also conducted interviews with Minnesota Vikings defensive coordinator Brian Flores, among several others: Ejiro Evero, Jeff Hafley (hired by the Dolphins as head coach), Klay Kubiak, Jesse Minter (hired by the Ravens as head coach), Nate Scheelhaase, Chris Shula, and Anthony Weaver.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The Illinois freshman guard scored 46 points in an 88-82 win for the No. 11 Fighting Illini road victory over No. 4 Purdue. Wagler scored his career-high on just 17 shots, making 13 of them. He also shot 9-of-11 from 3-point range and made 11 free throws.

The 46 points were the most points by a visiting player in Mackey Arena history and the most points by a Big Ten player this season.

Mackey Arena first opened in 1967.

Wagler had 24 points in the first half, keeping Illinois within striking distance with a four-point deficit. However, in the second half, he scored 22 points as the Fighting Illini outscored the Boilermakers by 10 points to pick up the key conference victory.

Wagler entered Saturday’s game averating 15.9-points, 5.2 rebounds, 4.0 assists on 39.4% 3-point shooting.

Here’s a look at Wagler’s stats from the Fighting Illini’s win over No. 4 Purdue on Jan. 24:

Keaton Wagler stats vs Purdue

Here’s a look at Wagler’s stats in Illinois’ upset victory over No. 4 Purdue:

Points: 46
Shooting: 13 for 17
3-point shooting: 9 for 11
Free throw shooting: 11 for 13
Rebounds: 0
Assists: 4
Turnovers: 3

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Senate Democrats are ready to break a fragile truce that would avert a partial government shutdown after a Minneapolis man was fatally shot by a border patrol agent on Saturday. 

Congressional Democrats were already leery of backing funding for the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) in the wake of the agency’s presence in Minnesota and beyond, but the shooting of 37-year-old Alex Pretti during an immigration enforcement operation has shattered what little unity they had on the bill. 

Now, Senate Democrats, led by Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., plan to vote against the legislation, which is currently included in a broader funding package along with five other spending bills. 

Schumer, in a statement on Saturday, said that Democrats tried to get ‘common sense reforms’ in the DHS funding bill, but charged that ‘because of Republicans’ refusal to stand up to President Trump, the DHS bill is woefully inadequate to rein in the abuses’ of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).

 ‘I will vote no,’ Schumer said. ‘Senate Democrats will not provide the votes to proceed to the appropriations bill if the DHS funding bill is included.’

Schumer’s play call serves as a blow to Senate Republicans, who worked with their colleagues across the aisle to find compromises in the DHS bill, in particular. It also comes as the deadline to fund the government is rapidly approaching on Friday, Jan. 30. Further complicating matters is the arctic storm ripping across the country, which has already forced the upper chamber to cancel votes on Monday. 

A senior Senate aide told Fox News Digital that Senate Democrats had been for weeks saying that they weren’t interested in shutting the government down again, and had praised the bipartisan nature of the government funding process up until Saturday.

 ‘These bills were negotiated with Dems — they agreed to what’s in them,’ they said.

The agency would be fully funded in the current proposal with several restrictions and reporting requirements that if not met, would act as triggers to turn off certain cash flows. 

Ripping the bill from the current six-bill funding package would cause a domino effect of headaches in Congress, given that any changes to the package would have to go through the House.

The lower chamber is gone until Feb. 2, making the likelihood of a partial shutdown much higher. 

Before the shooting, a handful of Senate Democrats had already made their opposition to the legislation known, including senators Chris Murphy, D-Conn., and Tim Kaine, D-Va.

Kaine, notably, crossed the aisle last year to join a cohort of Senate Democratic caucus members to reopen the government after the longest shutdown in U.S. history.

He was not the only member of that group of eight to voice opposition — senators Catherine Cortez Masto, D-N.V., and Jacky Rosen, D-N.M., both came out against the DHS bill’s inclusion in the broader package on Saturday. 

‘My personal guiding principle has always been ‘agree where you can and fight where you must,’ Rosen said in a statement. ‘And I believe this is a time when we must fight back.’

Meanwhile, House lawmakers are on a week-long recess after passing their latest spending package in two chunks — one standalone vote on DHS funding and another wrapping together funding legislation for the departments of War, Health and Human Services, Labor, Education, Transportation, and Housing and Urban Development — this past Thursday.

A provision was added to the legislation before it passed the House that would combine the bills into one large package for the Senate to consider at once. It was then expected to be paired with other bills the Senate has not yet considered but which passed the House this month.

Changing that ahead of the Jan. 30 shutdown deadline would mean House lawmakers must return to Washington early to go through multiple procedural hurdles and another vote on the legislation — something House GOP leaders are ruling out, at least for now.

‘We passed all 12 bills over to the Senate, and they still have six in their possession that they need to pass to the president,’ a House GOP leadership source told Fox News Digital on Saturday evening, referring to the lower chamber completing its portion of Congress’ annual appropriations process. ‘We have no plan to come back next week.’

Even if House leaders changed their plans, the impending snow storm would mean lawmakers may not return until Tuesday at the earliest. That would put final passage sometime Wednesday or Thursday, virtually guaranteeing Congress does not complete consideration of the bills until after the Friday deadline.

House GOP leaders would also likely be grappling with attendance issues if they did order a return, with various lawmakers on planned trips and over a dozen busy campaigning for higher office.

A partial government shutdown would mean only agencies that Congress has not yet funded would have to reduce or cease functions — in this case, payment to active duty troops, air traffic controllers, and border patrol agents could all be affected.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

The New England Patriots are facing a challenging playoff run against top-ranked defenses.
Finishing 14-3 and second in the AFC, the Patriots benefited from the NFL’s easiest strength of schedule.
Coach Mike Vrabel and players are focused on their next opponent, not outside narratives.

FOXBOROUGH, MA – As New England Patriots rookie left tackle Will Campbell walked to the locker room following his team’s victory over the Houston Texans in the divisional round, his head coach, Mike Vrabel, gave him a chin tap – in “keep your head up” fashion – between the celebratory handshakes. 

Campbell wasn’t pleased with his performance despite the 28-16 victory, as the Texans’ pass rush busted his side of the offensive line for five sacks, three by Will Anderson Jr., who had Campbell’s number all afternoon. 

The circumstance, and Vrabel’s motivational tactic, is the result of the Patriots’ scheduling conundrum entering the Jan. 25 AFC championship game against the Denver Broncos. By some metrics and statistics, the path to the Super Bowl – which now includes facing a backup quarterback in the conference title tilt – has never been easier. The Patriots’ players, and Campbell in that moment after the Texans game, beg to differ. 

“We’re just trying to play great football,” linebacker Jack Gibbens told USA TODAY Sports. “We’re chasing a goal. We’re not that worried with what’s going on on the outside.” 

The defenses of both the Los Angeles Chargers and Texans presented massive challenges for Campbell, quarterback Drake Maye and the entire offensive unit. Los Angeles’ defense finished the regular season 10th in DVOA (defense-adjusted value over average), which measures a team’s efficiency by comparing every play to a league-average baseline, adjusted for opponent strength, game situation (down, distance, score). Houston was second, and the Denver defense ranked fifth. Should the Pats to advance to Super Bowl 60, either the Seattle Seahawks (first) or Los Angeles Rams (fourth) would await. Facing four consecutive top-10 defenses – they all finished in the top-10 in least points allowed, too – would be no walk in the park.

“They’ll be the best defense that we’ve played to date, because it’s the next one,” Vrabel said of Denver’s defense. “That’s just how this goes. … Each and every week, they get tougher.”

Patriots’ schedule talk won’t matter if they keep winning

There’s also no denying the Pats set themselves up in this prime position by feasting on a weak schedule. According to ESPN’s Football Power Index (FPI) data, the Patriots faced the easiest schedule when compared to average NFL teams. The 113 combined wins by opponents was the lowest in the NFL, as was the .391 strength of schedule.

Finishing 4-13, which led to the firing of Jerrod Mayo and another top-five pick (Campbell, taken fourth overall), led to a last-place schedule in which the Pats faced every team that also finished fourth in their division in 2024. The NFC division they played against was the South, which was won by the 8-9 Carolina Panthers (the Patriots went 4-0 against that division). The AFC North was no juggernaut, either. No resistance from the New York Jets or Miami Dolphins to New England’s 5-1 record in the AFC East also helped.  

The 10-game improvement tied the 2008 Dolphins and 1999 Indianapolis Colts for the largest turnarounds year-over-year. Vrabel became the third coach in NFL history to have 14 wins in his first season coaching a team. 

“I think this is a pretty motivated group. … I’m confident that they’ll remain excited and ready to go,” Vrabel said.

The quarterback couldn’t care less about anybody minimizing the moment his team faces. 

“Shoot, I’m not worried about what everybody else thinks,” Maye said. “You worry about people in this locker room, in this building. It’s the biggest game because it’s the next one. I think that’s the best mentality for this team, and we’ve had that mentality all year long. I’ve been proud of how we’ve approached that.”

But the argument about New England’s path to the playoffs has been made throughout the discourse for more than a month, now. Invariably, the Patriots are aware of it. 

Vrabel sarcastically responded to a question about players potentially staying off their phones – an impossible reality, according to the coach. 

“Yeah, I’ll try that, see if that works,” Vrabel said. “No, we just try to stay as consistent as possible. I think from the time that we started this thing up until now, we try to stay as consistent as possible, continue to coach the actions, not the results, focus on the things that we need to do to win, the environment, making sure that our operation is good, the defense is as prepared as possible for anything that could happen, and the special teams and their role in the game – that’s about all you can do. 

“I’ll try (the) stay off your phone thing, see if that works.” 

NBC Sports Boston analyst and longtime Patriots insider Tom Curran remarked during a show recently that Patriots fans should be upset that their team isn’t entering Championship Sunday undefeated. His reasoning isn’t too far-fetched: a Week 1 loss at home to the lowly Las Vegas Raiders, a five-turnover nightmare against the Pittsburgh Steelers, along with a second-half collapse at the hands of the Buffalo Bills account for the trio of losses in 2025. 

Then again, had the Pats secured the No. 1 seed, they would have had a bye to the divisional round against the Bills and Josh Allen had everything else played out the same. Would they rather have the bye and the Bills, or the path they actually traveled?

Uncomfortable questions tend to have complicated answers.

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The St. John’s men’s basketball coach earned his 900th career on-court win with an 88-83 win over Xavier on Saturday, Jan. 24, at Cintas Center in Cincinnati.

His 900th career on-court win came against his son, Richard Pitino, who is in his first season with the Musketeers after coming over from New Mexico. The elder Pitino is now 4-1 all-time against his son as a coach.

‘I’ve got a great family, great wife, who have kept me young,’ Rick Pitino told TNT’s Andy Katz after the game on how he’s been able to win 900 on-court wins. ‘They allow me to work with these guys, 12, 13 hours a day, and I’m just enjoying it more than ever. Great group, great group to coach.’

It didn’t look like the latest accolade for the Hall of Fame coach was going to happen on Saturday as Xavier pushed its 49-37 halftime lead to 16 points at the 17:05 mark of the second half following a pair of free throws from All Wright.

However, like they have for much of this season, St. John’s willed its way to a gritty win by outscoring the Musketeers 51-34 in the second half to earn the come-from-behind victory. Dylan Darling hit a big 3-pointer for the Red Storm with 53 seconds remaining in the second half to start a 7-1 run to finish the game.

St. John’s keeps itself one game back of UConn in the Big East standings with a 8-1 conference record.

Here’s what to know about the accolade and group of Division I men’s basketball head coaches that Rick Pitino joined on Saturday:

Division I men’s basketball coaches with 900 wins

With his 900th win on Saturday, Pitino is the seventh men’s basketball coach to win 900 games in his career. Here’s a look at the other coaches to acheive the feat:

Mike Krzyzewski: 1,202 wins
Jim Boeheim: 1,015 wins
Bob Huggins: 935 wins
Jim Calhoun: 920 wins
Roy Williams: 903 wins
Bob Knight: 902 wins
Rick Pitino: 900 wins

All-time winningest Division I men’s basketball coaches

With his 900th career win, Pitino moves into sole possession of fourth place among the all-time winningest Division I men’s basketball coaches. He entered the day tied with legendary Indiana coach Bob Knight.

‘I’m happy for him that he won 900. I think he’s the best coach to ever coach college basketball. He’d have a lot more if he stayed at Kentucky’ Richard Pitino said of his dad’s accolade. ‘When your dad is 73, you just want him to be healthy and happy. We’re all reminded way too much of how short life is. To see him doing great, coaching, being celebrated at St. John’s, that’s all I care about.’

Here’s where Pitino ranks among the winningest Division I men’s basketball coaches, as shown on the TNT broadcast:

Mike Krzyzewski: 1,202 wins
Jim Boeheim: 1,015 wins
Roy Williams: 903 win
Rick Pitino: 900 wins

Rick Pitino coaching career 

Here’s a stop-by-stop breakdown of Rick Pitino’s coaching career, which includes multiple college basketball programs and NBA organizations:

Head coach position unless noted otherwise

1974-1976: Hawaii (assistant)
1976-1978: Syracuse (assistant)
1978-1983: Boston University
1983-1985: New York Knicks (assistant coach) *
1985-1987: Providence
1987-1989: New York Knicks *
1989-1997: Kentucky
1997-2001: Boston Celtics *
2001-2017: Louisville
2018-2020: Panathinaikos **
2020-2023: Iona
2023-Present: St. John’s

* Denotes NBA job

** Denotes EuroLeague job

Rick Pitino coaching record

Career record: 900-316
NCAA Tournament record: 55-22
Final Four appearances: 1987, 1993, 1996, 1997, 2005, 2012*, 2013*
National championships: 1996, 2013*

* Denotes vacated by NCAA

With St. Jon’s win over Xavier, Rick Pitino now holds a 900-316 overall record across his 38 seasons as a Division I men’s basketball head coach, including a 66-23 record in three seasons at St. John’s. He’s the lone Division I men’s basketball coach to take six different schools — Boston University, Providence, Kentucky, Louisville, Iona and St. John’s — to March Madness.

Of note, Pitino’s record does include the XXX wins and his 2013 national championship title that the NCAA vacated from his time at Louisville for a recruiting violation that was investigated by the FBI. He won his first national championship in 1996 during his eight-year stint at Kentucky.

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