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The Arizona Cardinals have fired Jonathan Gannon after three seasons as the team’s coach, per multiple reports.

Gannon posted a 15-36 record across his three seasons with the Cardinals. The team entered the 2025 NFL season hoping to build on their 8-9 record in 2024. Instead, after a 2-0 start, Arizona dropped 14 of its final 15 games to finish with one of the NFL’s worst records at 3-14.

Now, the Cardinals will look to rebuild. They will be armed with a top-3 pick in the 2026 NFL Draft but will also need to figure out their quarterback situation after Kyler Murray was outperformed by journeyman Jacoby Brissett and played just five games due to injury.

Who could be the top options to lead the Cardinals after Gannon’s dismissal? Here’s a look at the coaching candidates Arizona could pursue as the 2026 NFL coaching carousel begins spinning.

Who will replace Jonathan Gannon? 7 Cardinals replacements

Brian Flores, Minnesota Vikings defensive coordinator

Flores was considered a frontrunner for the Cardinals’ coaching job in 2023 before he removed himself for consideration for the role. Could the two parties pursue a partnership three years later?

Flores is one of the league’s top defensive minds, and his pressure-heavy scheme has confused opposing quarterbacks at each of his NFL stops. The Vikings improved rapidly under the 44-year-old’s tutelage and finished the 2025 season ranked No. 1 in pressure rate and No. 7 in defensive EPA per play, per the NFL’s Next Gen Stats.

Flores wouldn’t just give Arizona’s defense a much-needed identity. He also comes with head coaching experience, having gone 24-25 across three seasons with the Miami Dolphins. He posted winning records in each of his last two years in Miami, so his proven track record of success should appeal to Cardinals general manager Monti Ossenfort, who overlapped with Flores while with the New England Patriots.

Vance Joseph, Denver Broncos defensive coordinator

Joseph is another defensive-minded option who has ties to the Cardinals. The 53-year-old was the team’s defensive coordinator from 2019-22 under Kliff Kingsbury and and helped the team log the sixth-best defensive EPA per play in 2021.

Joseph has continued to show his great defensive mind with the Broncos, leading them to top-10 defensive finishes in each of the last two seasons. This year, Denver ranks No. 2 overall in pressure rate and has generated a league-high 68 sacks while allowing just 18.3 points per game for the season, third-fewest in the NFL.

Klint Kubiak, Seattle Seahawks offensive coordinator

If the Cardinals want to pivot away from a defensive-minded coach, they could consider trying to poach Kubiak from the rival Seahawks.

Kubiak, 38, is an up-and-coming offensive mind who led the Seahawks to a top-10 finishes in yards and points per game in his first season with the team. Sam Darnold was able to build upon his career-best 2024 season in his first year with Kubiak, joining Tom Brady as just the second quarterback in NFL history to win 14 games in back-to-back seasons.

Kubiak did similarly strong work with Derek Carr in 2024, so his track record developing quarterbacks is obviously impressive. He has also worked with Kyle Shanahan (2023) and is the son of Super Bowl-winning coach Gary Kubiak.

Chris Shula, Los Angeles Rams defensive coordinator

Shula is another assistant the Cardinals could try to lure away from a divisional rival. The 39-year-old has coordinated Los Angeles’ defense for each of the last two seasons, turning the unit into a top-10 scoring defense and finishing 10th in defensive EPA per play in 2025.

Shula has worked with Sean McVay since the offensive wunderkind took over the Rams in 2017. McVay’s coaching tree has enjoyed success league-wide, so that could help Shula in his quest to earn an NFL coaching job.

Mike McCarthy, former Dallas Cowboys head coach

The Cardinals could be looking for stability as they navigate a tricky rebuild at quarterback. That could lead them to target McCarthy, who would be a safe, high-floor hire.

McCarthy, 62, spent the 2025 NFL season out of the NFL but has a proven track record across his time with the Green Bay Packers and Dallas Cowboys. He has a 174-122-2 career record and has earned double-digit wins in 11 of his 18 seasons while routinely getting solid production out of Aaron Rodgers and Dak Prescott.

McCarthy’s playoff success since winning Super Bowl 45 has been fleeting, as he has just an 11-11 overall postseason record. Nonetheless, the Cardinals could consider him as an proven, offensive-minded pivot for the organization.

Arthur Smith, Pittsburgh Steelers offensive coordinator

Smith represents another potential retread option for the Cardinals. The 43-year-old didn’t find much success with the Atlanta Falcons, notching a 7-10 record in each of his three seasons with the team, but he has continually shown an ability to design a quality running game. That could appeal to the Cardinals, who are navigating uncertainty at quarterback and logged bottom-tier rushing production in 2025.

It also helps that Smith and Ossenfort spent the 2020 season together with the Tennessee Titans. Perhaps their familiarity will allow Smith to at least land an interview in Arizona.

Klayton Adams, Dallas Cowboys offensive coordinator

Adams is another run-game maven who helped Javonte Williams enjoy a career-best season with the Cowboys in 2025. It was the 42-year-old Adams’ first season in Dallas, and he helped oversee a unit that ranked top-five in yards per game, points per game and offensive EPA per play.

The main concerns with Adams? He has only been an offensive coordinator for one season and didn’t have play-calling duties. The positive? Adams spent the 2023 and 2024 seasons as the Cardinals’ offensive line coach, giving him familiarity with the organization. Ossenfort – who also worked with Adams in Tennessee – may at least bring him in for an interview.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

For the second consecutive season, the Las Vegas Raiders are rendering their head-coaching hire a one-and-done.

The Raiders announced they had fired Pete Carroll via a statement from team owner Mark Davis on Jan. 5.

‘The Las Vegas Raiders have relieved Pete Carroll of his duties as head coach,’ the statement read. ‘We appreciate and wish him and his family all the best.’

The Raiders posted just a 3-14 record during Carroll’s lone season in Las Vegas while sporting one of the league’s worst offenses. The Raiders’ poor overall performance prompted the midseason firings of offensive coordinator Chip Kelly and special teams coordinator Tom McMahon before ultimately costing Carroll his job.

Now, the Raiders – armed with the No. 1 overall selection in the 2026 NFL Draft – will look to rebuild under the leadership of its fifth different coach since the start of the 2021 NFL season.

Who will make that decision? Davis announced in his statement that Las Vegas’ general manager, John Spytek, will lead the search for the Raiders’ next coach ‘in close collaboration with Tom Brady,’ who is a minority owner in the team.

Below are some of the top coaching candidates Las Vegas could consider as Spytek and Brady look to take the team in a new direction.

Who will replace Pete Carroll? 8 Raiders replacements

Brian Flores, Minnesota Vikings defensive coordinator

If Brady really does have significant say in the Raiders’ next hire, that could make Flores a top candidate. Flores spent the first 11 seasons of his career with the Patriots, all while Brady was the team’s quarterback, so they have an extensive track record working together.

Flores is a top-tier defensive mind whose pressure-heavy scheme has worked at each of his NFL stops. Most recently, he turned the Vikings from a league-worst unit in 2022 to one that ranked top-two in pressure rate during the 2025 NFL season, per the NFL’s Next Gen Stats. The 44-year-old could create a similar, hard-nosed, attacking defense with the Raiders and finally give the team a much-needed identity.

Add in Flores’ previous head coaching experience – he logged a 24-25 record across three seasons with the Dolphins and led Miami to back-to-back winning seasons before his time there ended – and he checks a lot of boxes that should intrigue the Raiders.

Kliff Kingsbury, Washington Commanders offensive coordinator

Kingsbury is another coaching candidate with ties to Brady. The 46-year-old was drafted by the Patriots in 2003 and spent one season in the team’s quarterback room after suffering a preseason arm injury. Could that be enough to get Kingsbury a chance in Las Vegas?

Kingsbury posted just a 28-37-1 record across four seasons with the Arizona Cardinals, but Kyler Murray enjoyed the best seasons of his career under his tutelage. Kingsbury then found similar success developing Jayden Daniels during his elite rookie season with the Commanders.

Kingsbury’s history with young quarterbacks, along with his quarterback-friendly system, could convince the Raiders to bring him in for an interview, especially if they’re planning to take a new starting quarterback with the No. 1 overall pick in the 2026 NFL Draft.

Brian Daboll, former New York Giants head coach

OK, let’s be honest: Daboll probably isn’t getting another head coaching job fresh off a three-plus season stint with the Giants during which he went 20-40-1. He’s probably more likely to draw consideration as an offensive coordinator candidate, and the Raiders could have interest in him in that role if they hire a defensive-minded head coach.

At the same time, Daboll spent parts of 11 seasons with the Patriots, so he has strong ties to Brady. Daboll also earned flowers for his ability to develop Josh Allen during his early years with the Buffalo Bills and was making progress with Jaxson Dart before he was fired midway through the 2025 NFL season. That could lead the Raiders to at least kick the tires on the 50-year-old.

Vance Joseph, Denver Broncos defensive coordinator

If the Raiders can’t land Flores but want a defensive-minded option, Joseph would make sense. The 53-year-old has a similar knack for generating pressure, as the Broncos led the NFL in sacks during the 2025 NFL season with 68.

The only knock on Joseph is he didn’t enjoy much success in his first stint as an NFL head coach. He logged just an 11-21 record across two seasons with the Broncos in 2017 and 2018.

Still, Joseph’s recent track record of success makes him an intriguing potential add for the Raiders. Pairing him with Maxx Crosby would be exciting, as would be the prospect of poaching him from a divisional rival.

Jesse Minter, Los Angeles Chargers defensive coordinator

Minter falls into a similar bucket to Joseph. He’s an up-and-coming, defensive-minded coach who coaches for one of the Raiders’ division rivals. Poaching him could weaken the Chargers, so Las Vegas may bring in Minter – a Michigan man, like Brady and Spytek – for an interview.

The Chargers had the NFL’s top scoring defense in 2024, Minter’s first season in charge of the unit. This year, Los Angeles finished top-10 in both yards and points allowed. The 42-year-old has shown an ability to develop young defensive players, especially in the secondary. That could appeal to the Raiders, who have a lot of younger talent at cornerback.

Klint Kubiak, Seattle Seahawks offensive coordinator

The Raiders could also tap a younger, offensive-minded coach to develop any young quarterback they draft.

Kubiak would certainly fit the bill. The 38-year-old led the Seahawks to top-10 finishes in yards and points per game in his first season with the team in 2025. Sam Darnold was able to build upon the success he enjoyed with the Vikings in 2024, which helped Seattle win 14 games and earn the NFC’s No. 1 seed.

Kubiak did similarly strong work with Derek Carr in 2024, so his track record developing quarterbacks is obviously impressive. That’s something the Raiders will need in their building as they consider selecting a quarterback No. 1 overall in the 2026 NFL Draft.

Joe Brady, Buffalo Bills offensive coordinator

Brady is another young coordinator who could soon get a coaching job. The 36-year-old has a strong track record developing quarterbacks, as he helped Joe Burrow turn in a historic season at LSU and oversaw Josh Allen’s first NFL MVP campaign in 2024.

Brady has already spent parts of five seasons as an NFL offensive coordinator, so he has a lot of experience for a candidate his age. That could convince Davis – ever looking for flashy hires – to bring in Brady for a look.

Grant Udinski, Jacksonville Jaguars offensive coordinator

It might be a bit early for Udinski to get looks as a head coaching candidate. He’s just 30 years old and has only one season of experience as an NFL offensive coordinator.

Still, it’s hard to argue with Udinski’s results. The Jaguars averaged 27.9 points per game during the 2025 NFL season while Trevor Lawrence enjoyed the best season of his career, posting 38 total touchdowns and quickly gaining confidence in Udinski and head coach Liam Coen’s scheme.

Spytek could have an interest in plucking a branch from Coen’s coaching tree. The two worked together with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in 2024.

It’s also worth noting that Udinski spent three seasons on Kevin O’Connell’s coaching staff with the Vikings. O’Connell was teammates with Brady for a season after being selected in the third round of the 2008 NFL Draft.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Brenden Aaronson’s coach has already had to defend him from fan abuse this season — twice.

But things appear to be changing at Leeds for the U.S. men’s national soccer team attacker, who with each passing week looks more like the solution and less like the problem for the Premier League outfit.

His latest contribution might have been his most significant. Aaronson showed just about everything that makes him valuable on one play against Manchester United, scoring a vital goal as Leeds stretched its unbeaten run to seven.

The American’s heroics at Elland Road kick off this week’s Five.

Brenden Aaronson ‘deserves all the plaudits’

Brenden Aaronson has found his footing in the Premier League.

The Leeds attacker scored his side’s only goal in a 1-1 draw with Manchester United on Sunday, making it two goals and three assists in his last 11 Premier League appearances.

It’s a modest hot streak, but it’s a massive improvement when considering Aaronson had one goal and three assists in his previous 44 Premier League games. The 25-year-old has become a key player this season for Leeds, which is now eight points clear of the relegation zone.

Aaronson’s goal typified everything that he’s about. The USMNT midfielder chased down a 50-50 ball, getting in behind United’s defense and then showing the quality and composure to bury his chance.

‘Sometimes you have to take a chance,’ Aaronson said after the game. ‘The ball came to me. I think that the center back didn’t know that I was going to be kind of running off his shoulder like that. It was a good touch. And then it is just about putting it on target.’

Leeds manager Daniel Farke was full of praise after the game for a player he has stuck with despite many calls for his removal from the lineup.

‘He deserves all the plaudits at the moment,’ Farke said. ‘Great finish. There’s more clarity in his play. He embodies what we are about in creating chances and working hard off the ball.’

Weston McKennie shines further upfield

Weston McKennie playing a new position is hardly earth-shattering news, but the Juventus man’s latest shift is noteworthy in the context of his USMNT role.

McKennie was moved into a trequartista – or attacking midfield – role against Lecce on Saturday, a similar spot to where he played under USMNT boss Mauricio Pochettino in October.

Playing further up the pitch, McKennie found a pocket of space and converted his first Serie A goal of the season in a 1-1 draw. Though it was his first league goal, McKennie now has three goals and two assists in his past nine games in all competitions.

After he was surprisingly omitted from two of three fall rosters for the USMNT, McKennie’s proficiency as a trequartista served as a timely reminder for Pochettino.

‘It’s not a new position for me,’ McKennie said after the game. ‘I’m always available for the coach and the team and I try to give 100 percent wherever I play.

‘I like the trequartista role because you can help both defensively and offensively.’

Yunus Musah gradually building at Atalanta

Yunus Musah isn’t yet a key player for Atalanta, but the midfielder’s role is trending in the right direction.

Musah has now played in four consecutive Serie A games for La Dea, coming off the bench for the last 30 minutes of Saturday’s 1-0 win over Roma.

After Musah was an unused sub in seven of eight matches, he has finally started to prove his worth to manager Raffaele Palladino. It certainly doesn’t hurt that Atalanta has won three of its past four games either.

‘In the middle, he’s a buzzing presence who brings freshness and keeps the midfield under Atalanta’s control,’ read an assessment from Gazzetta dello Sport this week. ‘His rise within the team hierarchy continues.’

Musah found himself on the outside of the USMNT picture in 2025, making just two appearances. If he can find a way to continue his mini-surge at Atalanta, there might still be a way back before the World Cup.

Jedi thrown into the deep end

There was no build-up period for Antonee Robinson. When he was back from injury, it was full speed ahead.

After nearly three months on the sideline with knee problems, the Fulham left back has now played every minute of six consecutive games, including Sunday’s thrilling 2-2 draw against Liverpool.

Robinson was excellent against Arne Slot’s side, and could have had multiple assists with better finishing from his teammates.

The 28-year-old was a major concern for Pochettino just a couple months ago, but he’s once again locked in as a vital player for the Cottagers. If he continues in this manner, Robinson will undoubtedly regain the same status with the USMNT in 2026.

New Jersey derby in La Liga

Very few, if any, games in La Liga history will have had so much Jersey as Sunday’s match between Real Sociedad and Atlético Madrid.

New Jersey-born coach Pellegrino Matarazzo made history in his Sociedad debut, becoming the first American manager in La Liga.

New Jersey-born midfielder Johnny Cardoso, meanwhile, played the final half hour for Atlético in a 1-1 draw. It’s been an injury-hit debut campaign for the 24-year-old, who made just his seventh appearance of the season Sunday.

For Matarazzo, securing a draw against a top-four opponent is an auspicious beginning at a club mired in a relegation fight.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Canada and Finland fell short in Sunday’s world junior hockey championship semifinals, but there’s still a medal up for grabs on Monday, Jan 5.

The two countries will play for a bronze medal, starting at 4:30 p.m. ET (3:30 p.m. local time) at Grand Casino Arena in Saint Paul, Minnesota.

Canada lost 6-4 to Czechia on Sunday and Finland lost to Sweden 4-3 in a shootout. Sweden and Czechia will play for the gold medal at 8:30 p.m. ET on Monday.

Canada and Finland faced each other in the final game of the preliminary round with the Canadians skating off with a 7-4 victory.

Here’s what to know about the bronze medal game between Canada and Finland, including how to watch:

What channel is Canada vs Finland world juniors hockey bronze-medal game today?

TV channel: NHL Network

Livestream: Fubo, which offers a free trial to new subscribers, or Sling TV.

Watch world junior championships on Fubo

What time is Canada vs Finland world juniors hockey bronze-medal game today?

Date: Monday, Jan. 5

Time: 4:30 p.m. ET (3:30 local time)

The Canada vs. Finland game is scheduled to start at 4:30 p.m. ET at the Grand Casino Arena in Saint Paul, Minnesota, the home of the Minnesota Wild.

World juniors hockey bronze-medal game: How to watch, stream

Time: 4:30 p.m. ET on Monday, Jan. 5

Location: Grand Casino Arena (Saint Paul, Minnesota)

TV: NHL Network

Streaming: Fubo and certain levels of Sling TV carry NHL Network.

World junior championships medal games today

Monday, Jan. 5

All times p.m. ET

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Following the dramatic capture of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro, the United States is now positioned to exert significant influence over the future of the world’s largest oil reserves.

What President Donald Trump does next could reshape Venezuela’s energy industry, alter global oil flows and redefine the balance of influence among major powers long invested in the country’s crude.

Here are three key takeaways:

1. Venezuela holds massive oil reserves, but production remains severely constrained

Venezuela, a country almost twice the size of California, sits atop extraordinary wealth. 

With more than 300 billion barrels of proven oil reserves, Venezuela holds more crude than established energy heavyweights like Saudi Arabia, Iran and Kuwait. The Latin American country’s reserves are nearly quadruple those of the United States.

Once a major oil producer, the country pumped about 3.5 million barrels a day in the late 1990s. Since then, its oil industry has sharply deteriorated, with production falling to roughly 800,000 barrels a day, according to energy analytics firm Kpler.

A key reason: much of Venezuela’s oil is difficult and expensive to extract.

The country’s reserves are dominated by heavy and extra-heavy crude, which is costly to extract and relies on specialized equipment and refining capacity that have deteriorated after years of underinvestment, U.S. sanctions and political instability.

Similar dynamics have unfolded in countries such as Iran and Libya, where turmoil, financial distress and crumbling infrastructure have kept vast reserves locked underground.

As a result, scaling operations back up would require significant time, capital and technical expertise, with any production increase likely to be gradual rather than immediate.

2. Political risk remains a major concern for American energy companies

Decades of political instability, shifting regulations and U.S. sanctions have made Venezuela a high-risk environment for long-term investment. 

That risk dates back to the mid-2000s, when then-President Hugo Chávez reshaped Venezuela’s relationship with international energy companies by tightening state control over the oil industry.

Between 2004 and 2007, Chávez forced foreign companies to renegotiate their contracts with the government. The new terms sharply reduced the role and profits of private firms while strengthening Venezuela’s state-owned oil company, Petróleos de Venezuela, S.A. (PDVSA).

The move drove some of the world’s largest oil companies out of the country.

ExxonMobil and ConocoPhillips exited Venezuela in 2007 and later filed claims against the government in international arbitration courts. Those courts ultimately ruled in favor of the companies, ordering Venezuela to pay ConocoPhillips more than $10 billion and ExxonMobil more than $1 billion. The cash-strapped country has paid only a fraction of those awards.

That history looms over Trump’s latest proposal.

Trump said on Saturday he would seek to revive the once-prominent commodity by mobilizing investment from major U.S. energy companies.

‘We are going to have our very large United States oil companies go in, spend billions of dollars, fix the badly broken oil infrastructure and start making money for the country,’ Trump said during a news conference at Mar-a-Lago. 

It remains unclear whether U.S. energy companies are prepared to do so. American firms have yet to say whether they plan to return to Venezuela to resurrect an oil industry hollowed out by years of neglect.

Chevron, the only U.S. oil titan operating in Venezuela, said in a statement to Fox News Digital that it was following ‘relevant laws and regulations.’

‘Chevron remains focused on the safety and well-being of our employees, as well as the integrity of our assets,’ a Chevron spokesperson added.

ConocoPhillips wrote in a statement to Fox News Digital that it is monitoring the developments in Venezuela as well as the ‘potential implications for global energy supply and stability.’ 

‘It would be premature to speculate on any future business activities or investments,’ a spokesperson for ConocoPhillips added.

ExxonMobil, the largest U.S. oil company, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

3. The push reflects a broader effort to leverage energy for geopolitical influence

As U.S. and European companies withdrew from Venezuela, Russia, China and Iran expanded their footprint in the country’s energy sector, using financing, fuel shipments and technical support to maintain influence.

That shift has also reshaped how Venezuelan oil is traded. Sanctions have fueled the rise of so-called ‘ghost ships,’ nondescript oil tankers that disable tracking systems to quietly move Venezuelan crude to foreign buyers outside traditional markets. The opaque trade has reduced transparency in global oil flows while helping Caracas sustain exports despite financial isolation.

For the Trump administration, the outcome has underscored an uncomfortable trade-off: restricting access to U.S. markets can limit revenue for sanctioned governments, but it can also push them deeper into the orbit of strategic rivals, turning energy policy into a front line of geopolitical competition.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Don Mattingly will continue his quest for a World Series ring this upcoming season … in Philadelphia.

The Phillies announced on Monday, Jan. 5, that they have hired the former New York Yankees All-Star to be the bench coach for manager Rob Thomson.

‘I am excited to welcome Don Mattingly to Philadelphia,’ Thomson said in a statement. ‘Having known Don for years and having worked closely with him in New York, I know that his knowledge of the game and his character make him a great addition to our tremendous coaching staff.’

Mattingly has plenty of experience in the dugout, managing the Los Angeles Dodgers from 2011-15 and Miami Marlins from 2016-22. He won the NL Manager of the Year award in 2020.

The six-time All-Star and nine-time Gold Glove first baseman most recently served as the Toronto Blue Jays’ bench coach for the past three seasons.

Mattingly, 64, spent all 14 seasons of his major league career with the Yankees, winning the AL Most Valuable Player award in 1985.

However, he only appeared in one postseason series as a player − the 1995 AL division series, which the Yankees lost to the Seattle Mariners in five games.

As a manager, he won three consecutive division titles with the Dodgers from 2013-2015, but lost twice in the division series and once in the league championship series.

Mattingly reached his first World Series as a player or coach last season with the Blue Jays. However, Toronto lost to the Los Angeles Dodgers in seven games.

In Philadelphia, he’ll work alongside his son Preston Mattingly, who joined the Phillies front office in 2021 and was promoted to general manager in November 2024.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

An investigation into nonprofits founded by Walter Payton NFL Man of the Year nominees reveals varying levels of charitable efficiency.
Kelce’s business manager said the tax filings were incorrect and that operational costs for program services were mistakenly reported as management fees.

The nonprofits created by New Orleans Saints linebacker Demario Davis and Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce each raised more than $1.5 million over the past three years, according to federal tax records, the most among independent nonprofits founded by 2025 Walter Payton NFL Man of the Year award nominees.

But a dollar raised isn’t the same as a dollar spent.

Davis’ Devoted Dreamers Foundation was nearly twice as efficient with its donations, spending 81 cents of every dollar on charity from 2021-24, while Kelce’s nonprofit told the IRS it spent just 41 cents of every dollar on charity in that span and more on management, which his business manager said is incorrect.

Kelce’s Eighty-Seven and Running Foundation has paid hundreds of thousands of dollars to A&A Management Group, which was co-founded by Kelce’s longtime business managers, brothers Aaron and André Eanes.

Aaron Eanes is the executive director of the nonprofit, which has no official president, secretary or treasurer and just two board members, below the minimum of three required to ensure good governance.

“It appears to function more as an extension of the management company versus as an independent public charity,” said Laurie Styron, the executive director of CharityWatch, an independent charity watchdog group that reviewed the nonprofit’s tax filings for The Arizona Republic.

“That’s not how charities work. It’s wrong.”

Kelce has been nominated for the Walter Payton NFL Man of the Year award three times based on his work in the community, including with another nonprofit, Operation Breakthrough in Kansas City. He has been named to 11 Pro Bowls, is a four-time All-Pro, a three-time Super Bowl champion and is engaged to pop star Taylor Swift.

The Walter Payton NFL Man of the Year award winner and nominees, one from each team, collectively receive more than $1.5 million in annual donations from the NFL Foundation and Nationwide, a corporate sponsor, to give to the charities of their choice, often ones the players founded.

The Arizona Republic has repeatedly exposed widespread waste and mismanagement among these nonprofits, some of which spend less than 50 cents of every dollar on actual charity, often because players and their families lack sufficient nonprofit guidance and education.

Many are directed by agents and marketing professionals to work with sports charity management companies geared toward profit and optics over impact.

“Being able to give back to Kansas City and to my hometown, places that have done so much for me, has been a dream come true, and I’ll never take that for granted,” Kelce said when Walter Payton nominees were announced Dec. 4.

“Representing the team, the Hunt family, our fans, and my foundation is incredibly special and I’m very grateful.”

Aaron Eanes said the tax filings for Kelce’s nonprofit are incorrect.

Operational costs for charitable efforts were “mistakenly reported under management rather than allocated adequately to program services,” Eanes told The Republic, so the public records do not provide an accurate “indication of where the resources were truly directed.”

“We have since corrected this: Management fees decreased significantly in 2024 and dropped to zero in 2025,” Eanes said.

“Looking ahead, we are expanding our board of directors, bringing on advisers with nonprofit expertise, and restructuring our reporting processes to better reflect our actual program work. We are dedicated to ensuring this foundation operates at the highest standards.”

Chicago Bears nominee had tax-exempt status revoked, but most follow nonprofit best practices

The NFL’s vetting process for 2025 Walter Payton nominees fell short of its commitment to ensure good standing for every player’s designated charitable foundation.

Most glaringly, the nonprofit created by Chicago Bears nominee DJ Moore had its 501(c)(3) tax-exempt status revoked by the IRS in 2022 for never filing federal tax returns. Moore recently created another nonprofit with a nearly identical name.

But most nominees adhere to nonprofit best practices.

Ten of the 32 nominees, according to their Man of the Year award bios, appear to partner solely with existing nonprofits and use their celebrity to boost impact, which experts said is the safest, easiest and most efficient way to give back because the infrastructure is already in place.

Nine nominees have fiscal sponsorships, meaning their “foundations” are extensions of an existing nonprofit, which are often far more efficient than standalone entities. But tax records do not show the amount each player raised for their causes.

Thirteen nominees touted independent, tax-exempt nonprofits, which largely raise money to give to other nonprofits.

Charity watchdog groups: How to judge a nonprofit’s efficiency?

Charity Navigator, a nonprofit watchdog group, expects efficient nonprofits to spend at least 70 cents of every dollar on charity.

CharityWatch considers a nonprofit highly efficient when it spends at least 75 cents of every dollar on charity. Its rating system gives nonprofits that spent less than 50 cents per dollar on charity a grade of D or F.

The amount of each dollar spent on charity is determined by dividing a nonprofit’s annual expenses for program services by its total expenses, which are reported on federal tax forms.

For example, Davis’ Devoted Dreamers Foundation reported it raised $1.7 million and spent $1.4 million from 2021-24, with $1.1 million going to charity.

That’s nearly 81 cents of every dollar spent.

‘Tells the public nothing’: Kelce nonprofit reported lump sums for charity, management

Kelce’s Eighty-Seven and Running Foundation reported it raised $1.5 million and spent $1.1 million from 2021-24, with $469,000 going to management and $446,000 going to charity.

Again, that’s about 41 cents of every dollar spent.

Zooming out over the past decade, since Kelce’s nonprofit was created in 2015, it has reported $3.4 million in revenue and $2.7 million in expenses, with nearly $900,000 going to management and $1.5 million going to charity.

That’s about 56 cents of every dollar spent.

“The (management) costs covered the necessary operational infrastructure for the foundation to operate effectively,” Eanes said, “including coordinating fundraising events like Kelce Car Jam, maintaining ongoing relationships with partner organizations such as Operation Breakthrough and the University of Cincinnati, overseeing donor communications and the foundation’s website, and ensuring the capacity to quickly mobilize resources when community needs arise.”

Nonprofit oversight attorney Andrew Morton, a partner at Handler Law and chair of the firm’s sports and entertainment philanthropy group, told The Republic that management expenses should not be recorded as a 100 percent general expense on tax returns.

“The statement of functional expenses is supposed to be a good-faith allocation between program services, management and fundraising,” Morton said. “They’re implicit in operating a nonprofit. Nobody does 100% of anything.”

Similarly, Kelce’s nonprofit’s charitable spending each year has been reported on one vague line called “other fees for services,” rather than delineated, which “tells the public nothing about what the charity is accomplishing,” Styron said.

“Players and their managers need to stop using charities this way. Don’t get creative. Don’t look for loopholes. If you establish a charity, stop mixing in business interests or using friends to operate it. Do it the right way or don’t do it at all. There are a lot of ways for players to give back without founding their own charity.”

How efficient are the charities founded by Walter Payton NFL Man of the Year award nominees?

The Republic determined the amount of each dollar that Walter Payton NFL Man of the Year award nominees’ nonprofits spent on charitable giving and events based on what the organizations reported on federal tax forms.

The calculations are based on the past three years of publicly available federal tax returns (2021-24) unless noted. Figures are rounded.

Independent nonprofits (13)

Chicago Bears: DJ Moore, Moore 2 Life Foundation. (Revoked)  

Incorporated in May 2019 in Pennsylvania. Tax-exempt status was revoked by the IRS in May 2022 for not filing federal tax returns for three consecutive years. There is no public record of how much money the organization received in donations and spent on charity. EIN: 84-1789712.

In May 2025, in Delaware, Moore created a second nonprofit with a nearly identical name. EIN: 33-4102204.

Cincinnati Bengals: Ted Karras, Cincy Hat Foundation. (57 cents/dollar)

Incorporated July 2024 in Ohio. Tax-exempt since August 2024. It’s filed one tax return for the final five months of 2024. EIN: 99-4143088.

Raised: $374,000. Spent: $137,000. On charity: $78,000. On management: $59,000. Net assets: $237,000.

Dallas Cowboys: Solomon Thomas, The Defensive Line. (N/A)

Beginning to operate as an independent nonprofit after years as a charitable project of the Players Philanthropy Fund, which spends 86 cents of every dollar on charity. Incorporated in Texas. Tax-exempt since April 2020. EIN: 85-0908917.

Green Bay Packers: Jordan Love, Hands of 10ve. (98 cents)

Private foundation. Founded in 2024 in Delaware. Tax-exempt since January 2025. EIN: 99-2782567.

Raised: $572,000. Spent: $53,000. On charity: $52,000. Net assets: $534,000.

Jacksonville Jaguars: Logan Cooke, Logan Cooke Foundation. (0 cents)

Private foundation reports no qualifying charitable distributions. Founded in 2023 in Mississippi. Tax-exempt since January 2024. EIN: 93-4138069.

Raised: $102,000. Spent: $2,000. On charity: $0. Net assets: $100,000.

Kansas City Chiefs: Travis Kelce, Eighty-Seven and Running. (41 cents)

Raised $1.5 million over the last three years but spent more on management than charity, with $612,000 in unspent donations. The nonprofit is managed by A&A Management Group, which was co-founded by Kelce’s longtime business managers, brothers Aaron & André Eanes. Aaron Eanes is the executive director of the nonprofit. Incorporated in December 2015 in Ohio. EIN: 47-4569777.

Raised: $1,502,000. Spent: $1,097,000. On charity: $446,000. On management: $469,000. Net assets: $612,000.

Las Vegas Raiders: Maxx Crosby, Maxx Crosby Foundation. (96 cents)

The nonprofit spent less than half the donations it received in 2024. But it was extremely efficient with the money it did spend. Incorporated in Nevada. Tax-exempt since December 2023. EIN: 93-3370961.

Raised: $292,000. Spent: $140,000. On charity: $134,000. Net assets: $152,000.

Miami Dolphins: Bradley Chubb, Chubb Foundation. (77 cents)

Reported less than $50,000 in annual revenue each year through 2022, but tax returns for the last two years (2023 and ’24) provide greater insight. Incorporated in Georgia. Tax-exempt since January 2018. EIN: 82-3813411.

Raised: $95,000. Spent: $68,000. On charity: $52,000. Net assets: $79,000.

New Orleans Saints: Demario Davis, Devoted Dreamers Foundation. (81 cents)

Raised more than $1.7 million over the last three years, among the most of any nominee with an independent nonprofit, and rates among the most efficient of the group. Incorporated in Arizona. Tax-exempt since July 2020. EIN: 85-1358749.

Raised: $1,704,000. Spent: $1,396,000. On charity: $1,126,000. Net assets: $495,000.

New York Giants: Bobby Okereke, Nigerian American Football Outreach. (N/A)

The nonprofit is less than a year old and has not had to file a tax return. Incorporated in Maryland. Tax-exempt since May 2025. EIN: 33-3767244.

New York Jets: Quincy Williams, Quinnen Williams Foundation. (91 cents)

Private foundation. Incorporated in Alabama. Tax-exempt since January 2021. EIN: 85-0652445.

Raised: $243,000. Spent: $145,000. On charity: $133,000. Net assets: $225,000.

Pittsburgh Steelers: Alex Highsmith, Alex Highsmith Family Foundation. (70 cents)

Raised nearly half a million dollars over the last two years. It has spent less than half the money. Incorporated in North Carolina. Tax-exempt since September 2021. EIN: 86-1610694.

Raised: $481,000. Spent: $192,000. On charity: $134,000. Net assets: $317,000.

Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Baker Mayfield, Baker and Emily Mayfield Foundation. (78 cents)

Formed as a private foundation in October 2022. Incorporated in Texas. Reclassified as a public charity in 2024. EIN: 88-4289185.

Raised: $745,000. Spent: $431,000. On charity: $335,000. Net assets: $314,000.

Walter Payton award nominees with fiscal sponsorships (9)

Atlanta Falcons: A.J. Terrell Jr., A.J. Terrell Jr. Foundation, Athletes Charitable/United Charitable. (88 cents)

Baltimore Ravens: Derrick Henry, Two All Foundation, Players Philanthropy Fund. (86 cents)

Buffalo Bills: Dion Dawkins, Dion’s Dreamers, Edward Charles Foundation. (94 cents)

Cleveland Browns: Grant Delpit, GD Express Foundation, Sport For Impact. Co-founded by former NFL star Anquan Boldin as a direct response to The Republic’s reporting. Tax-exempt since September 2024. Based on the 2024 tax return, the first four months of operation. (99.9 cents)

Denver Broncos: Garett Bolles, GB3 Foundation, Community Foundation of Utah. (95 cents)

Detroit Lions: DJ Reader, A Son Never Forgets Foundation, Athletes Charitable/United Charitable. (88 cents)

Indianapolis Colts: Kenny Moore II, Love One Foundation, Dreambuilders Foundation. (71 cents)

Minnesota Vikings: C.J. Ham, Ham Family Scholarship Fund, Boreal Waters Community Foundation. (87 cents)

Tennessee Titans: Jeffery Simmons, Give Em A Reason Foundation, Edward Charles Foundation. (94 cents)

Nominees who only partner with existing nonprofits (10)

Carolina Panthers: Austin Corbett, All Within My Hands Foundation.

Houston Texans: Azeez Al-Shaair, HYPE Freedom School, Muslim Organization of Sports, Socials and Education.    

Los Angeles Chargers: Cameron Dicker, LA Fire Department, Chargers Impact Fund, Wholehearted Foundation. (His “Wholeheartedly Foundation” is not an independent nonprofit but described as a club for middle school kids.)

Los Angeles Rams: Kyren Williams, LA Fire Department, Big Brothers Big Sisters.

New England Patriots: Hunter Henry, International Justice Mission.

Philadelphia Eagles: Jordan Mailata, Philadelphia Children’s Alliance, American Association for Cancer Research, Eagles Autism Foundation.

San Francisco 49ers: Curtis Robinson, 49ers Foundation, Fresh Lifelines for Youth, Drive 4 Change.

Seattle Seahawks: Julian Love, Boys and Girls Club, Red Cross.                             

Washington Commanders: Bobby Wagner, Phenia Mae Fund with Virginia Mason Franciscan Health Foundation, Children’s National Hospital.

Tips or story ideas? Email sports features and investigative reporter Jason Wolf at jason.wolf@usatodayco.com. Follow him on X, formerly Twitter, at @JasonWolf.

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The Baltimore Ravens’ season ended with a 26-24 loss to the Pittsburgh Steelers after a missed game-winning field goal.
Despite being a preseason Super Bowl favorite, the Ravens underachieved due to injuries and execution errors.
Quarterback Lamar Jackson was hampered by multiple injuries, and the defense struggled with its pass rush all season.

Tyler Loop’s missed game-winning, 44-yard field goal in the Baltimore Ravens’ 26-24 loss to the Pittsburgh Steelers was emblematic of Baltimore’s entire year.

The Ravens were a popular preseason Super Bowl 60 pick. They sputtered out the gate to a 1-5 start, and Lamar Jackson dealt with hamstring, knee, ankle, toe and back injuries that hampered the quarterback and limited him to 13 games. The defense, void of a serviceable pass rush, ranked in the back half of the NFL.

Jackson never regained his two-time MVP form. The Ravens’ leaky defense was vulnerable against the pass all season. And all three phases were plagued with execution errors.

So, it shouldn’t have come as a surprise when the football drifted right off Loop’s foot to end Baltimore’s season and simultaneously clinch the Steelers the AFC North title and a playoff berth.

Baltimore underachieved all season.

“It’s definitely very frustrating,” Ravens linebacker Roquan Smith said postgame. “When you’re doing things that are not having you progress in the game of football, I think it’s just a reflection of like who we are and we have to be better. It’s nothing else to be said. We have to be better play in and play out. It sucks. This sucks. This moment sucks.”

Jackson said he was “stunned” following the season-ending loss.

“We did all that to come up short,” Jackson said. “Devastated (and) furious.”

The Ravens’ roster is comprised of six Pro Bowlers, tied with Denver Broncos, San Francisco 49ers and Seattle Seahawks for the most in the NFL. But Baltimore’s the only squad among the four teams on vacation during the postseason.

“It’s disappointing. Our guys fought. We were that close to winning the (AFC) North and we didn’t get a chance to get it done,” Ravens coach John Harbaugh said. “All that other stuff is history. We had a chance to do it. We didn’t do it. We’re disappointed and we move on.”

The Ravens had Super Bowl aspirations.

Harbaugh and the Ravens now enter an offseason filled with uncertainty. There are questions about Harbaugh’s future after a roller coaster 18th season in Baltimore. While Jackson has a $74.5 million cap hit for the 2026 season and is eligible for an extension that would ease the team’s cap burden.

“The (2025) Ravens will always remember this. At the end of the day, it’s a moment and it’s a year that we’ll never get back,” Smith said. “It sucks when you feel like we let each other down and not playing to your standard and just knowing the potential. But potential don’t mean anything because it’s just potential…We didn’t do anything. Don’t make no bone about it. We have to be better. Whoever is coming back, including myself.”

Poignant, though honest words from Smith. The 2025 Ravens should be remembered as the Super-Bowl caliber roster that underachieved and missed the playoffs.

Follow USA TODAY Sports’ Tyler Dragon on X @TheTylerDragon.

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Sweden and Czechia will look to end long droughts when they meet on Monday, Jan. 5 in the gold medal game of the world junior hockey championship.

Sweden last won the tournament for the world’s best under-20 players in 2012. They last appeared in the gold medal game in 2024. They had lost four of the previous five semifinals but got past Finland, 4-3 in a shootout, on Sunday, Jan. 4. The Swedes are unbeaten after defeating Slovakia, Switzerland, Germany, USA, Latvia and Finland.

Czechia last won it all in 2001 and last was in the gold medal game in 2023. It lost to Canada that year but has beaten the Canadians in the playoffs for three consecutive years, including 6-4 on Sunday. Czechia lost to Canada in the opening game of this year’s tournament, but since has beaten Denmark, Finland, Latvia, Switzerland and Canada.

Here’s what to know about today’s gold-medal game between Sweden and Czechia at the world junior hockey championship, including how to watch:

What channel is Sweden vs Czechia world juniors hockey gold-medal game today?

TV channel: NHL Network

Livestream: Fubo, which offers a free trial to new subscribers, or Sling TV.

Watch world junior championships on Fubo

What time is Sweden vs Czechia world juniors hockey gold-medal game today?

Date: Monday, Jan. 5

Time: 8:30 p.m. ET (7:30 local time)

The Sweden-Czechia game is scheduled to start at 8:30 p.m. ET at the Grand Casino Arena in Saint Paul, Minnesota, the home of the Minnesota Wild. The start time could be delayed if the bronze medal game runs long.

World juniors hockey gold-medal game: How to watch, stream

Time: 8:30 p.m. ET on Monday, Jan. 5

Location: Grand Casino Arena (Saint Paul, Minnesota)

TV: NHL Network

Streaming: Fubo and certain levels of Sling TV carry NHL Network.

World junior championships medal games today

Monday, Jan. 5

All times p.m. ET

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Canada and Finland fell short in Sunday’s world junior hockey championship semifinals, but there’s still a medal up for grabs on Monday, Jan 5.

The two countries will play for a bronze medal, starting at 4:30 p.m. ET (3:30 p.m. local time) at Grand Casino Arena in Saint Paul, Minnesota.

Canada lost 6-4 to Czechia on Sunday and Finland lost to Sweden 4-3 in a shootout. Sweden and Czechia will play for the gold medal at 8:30 p.m. ET on Monday.

Canada and Finland faced each other in the final game of the preliminary round with the Canadians skating off with a 7-4 victory.

Here’s what to know about the bronze medal game between Canada and Finland, including how to watch:

What channel is Canada vs Finland world juniors hockey bronze-medal game today?

TV channel: NHL Network

Livestream: Fubo, which offers a free trial to new subscribers, or Sling TV.

Watch world junior championships on Fubo

What time is Canada vs Finland world juniors hockey bronze-medal game today?

Date: Monday, Jan. 5

Time: 4:30 p.m. ET (3:30 local time)

The Canada vs. Finland game is scheduled to start at 4:30 p.m. ET at the Grand Casino Arena in Saint Paul, Minnesota, the home of the Minnesota Wild.

World juniors hockey bronze-medal game: How to watch, stream

Time: 4:30 p.m. ET on Monday, Jan. 5

Location: Grand Casino Arena (Saint Paul, Minnesota)

TV: NHL Network

Streaming: Fubo and certain levels of Sling TV carry NHL Network.

World junior championships medal games today

Monday, Jan. 5

All times p.m. ET

This post appeared first on USA TODAY