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Baltimore traded two first-round picks to the Las Vegas Raiders for edge rusher Maxx Crosby while looking to rebound from a disappointing 2025 season.
Recent seasons have ended in disappointment for the Ravens, including missing the playoffs in 2025.
The team’s defense, particularly its pass rush, has been a significant weakness despite talent elsewhere.

Welcome to Baltimore, Jesse Minter. The expectation is Super Bowl or bust.

That’s precisely the message the Baltimore Ravens sent when they agreed to send 2026 and 2027 first-round picks to the Las Vegas Raiders in exchange for standout edge rusher Maxx Crosby.

Minter, the first-year, defensive-minded head coach, is now tasked with elevating the Ravens to a place the franchise hasn’t been since February 3, 2013 – a Super Bowl.

Minter’s predecessor, John Harbaugh, won Super Bowl 47 as the Ravens head coach. But Harbaugh was fired this year because the Ravens had underachieved and flatlined in recent seasons. A three-year span included a home AFC championship game defeat to the Kansas City Chiefs, a divisional round playoff road loss to the Buffalo Bills and the 2025 culmination of the Ravens missing the playoffs entirely.

Minter must coach the Ravens into winners, and fast.

However, the onus really falls on a talent-laden Ravens roster (and that’s even before any free agent acquisitions, contract extensions and draft picks).

Lamar Jackson and Ravens star players have underachieved at the most inopportune times.

A Zay Flowers fumble near the end zone in the AFC championship game. A Mark Andrews drop on a two-point conversion in addition to two turnovers by Jackson in the 2024 divisional round loss. There’s also Tyler Loop’s missed 44-yard field goal that sailed wide right in a win-or-go-home Week 18 contest against the rival Pittsburgh Steelers.

Loop’s errant field goal was a crushing blow to the Ravens’ 2025 season, but it was emblematic of the franchise’s recent failures in the biggest moments.

Ravens have upgraded their personnel. Can they upgrade their results?

Can Minter and his staff help Ravens players be at their best when their best is required?

The Ravens potentially have the most talented roster in the NFL.

Jackson, a two-time MVP, is still the most electric player in the league. Derrick Henry has rushed for 3,516 and 32 touchdowns in two seasons with the Ravens and still has plenty left in the tank. Flowers and Andrews are multi-time Pro Bowlers. The Ravens’ O-line ranked in the top 10 in pass block win rate last year.

Defense, as strange as it sounds to anyone who’s followed this team over the years, has been Baltimore’s Achilles heel. The Ravens finished tied with the Indianapolis Colts as the worst pass defense in the AFC last year and ranked 31st in pass defense in 2024 despite rostering Roquan Smith, Kyle Hamilton and Nate Wiggins. Baltimore’s inability to affect the quarterback was the main reason why the Ravens struggled on defense. The unit ranked 28th in pass rush win rate in 2025, per ESPN.

Yet, Crosby’s arrival significantly upgrades the Ravens at their most vulnerable area. Crosby has registered double-digit sacks in four of his seven seasons. The Ravens didn’t have an edge rusher produce more than 4.5 sacks in 2025, and the entire team only had 30 sacks, the fewest in more than a decade.

With Crosby, the Ravens successfully addressed their most glaring personnel need. Minter is under immense pressure to win immediately.

The Ravens already possess a Super Bowl-caliber roster. Now the responsibility is really on Jackson and the players to perform at their highest level when it matters the most.  

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

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

DULUTH, GA — The ACC Tournament action heats up in the semifinals on Saturday at Gas South Arena.

No. 5 Notre Dame steamrolled No. 4 NC State for the tournament’s first upset of the week on Friday. The Fighting Irish had 22 points in the third quarter to take a commanding lead and never looked back.

Now, Notre Dame and Hannah Hidalgo face No. 1 seed Duke and Toby Fournier for a chance to move on to the ACC Tournament championship on Sunday.

The Blue Devils advanced with three players in double figures. Fournier had a 17-point and 10-rebound double-double along with three blocks. Fournier’s last block tied her for 10th all-time in single-season blocks in Duke history.

The Blue Devils have nine ACC Tournament championships and are the defending champions. The Irish have won six tournament titles, with the last coming in 2024.

Duke turning transition defense into offense

The Blue Devils’ defense is causing several issues for Notre Dame. Midway through the second quarter, Notre Dame has nine turnovers. Duke has scored eight points from the giveaways. The Blue Devils also have six steals.

First quarter: Duke 17, Notre Dame 11

Duke got out to a fast start, forcing Notre Dame to scramble defensively. However, the Fighting Irish eventually settled in to cut the Blue Devils’ once 10-point lead down to as little as two. Duke finished the quarter by adding to its lead, behind six points from Toby Fournier.

The Blue Devils are shooting 42% from the field with five turnovers. Notre Dame is led by Iyana Moore, who has nine points. The Fighting Irish are shooting 25% from the field with six turnovers.

Notre Dame responds to Duke’s run with quick points

Notre Dame finally got on the board with some quick scoring from Iyana Moore (7 points) and Hannah Hidalgo (4 points). The Fighting Irish cut into Duke’s lead, closing the score gap, 15-11.

Duke adds to scoring with 10-0 vs. Notre Dame

Duke opened the contest with a 10-0 run, forcing four Notre Dame turnovers.

Duke opens with a 6-0 run against Notre Dame

Less than two minutes into the contest, Duke scored six points. Taina Mair scored the game’s opening points with a putback basket, and Toby Fournier scored back-to-back layups, forcing a Notre Dame timeout with 8:21 remaining in the first.

Duke and Notre Dame get loose

The Blue Devils and Fighting Irish are preparing for today’s semifinal matchup. Both teams are getting up shots and getting loose as the game draws near.

Duke vs. Notre Dame starting lineups

These are the starting lineups for Duke and Notre Dame women’s basketball.

Duke Blue Devils starting lineup

Head coach: Kara Lawson

4 Riley Nelson | G 6-2 – Sophomore
3 Ashlon Jackson | G 6-0 – Senior
12 Delaney Thomas | F 6-3 – Junior
22 Taina Mair | G 5-9- Senior
35 Toby Fournier | F 6-2 – Sophomore

Notre Dame Fighting Irish starting lineup

Head coach: Niele Ivey

3 Hannah Hidalgo | G 5-6 – Junior
2 Vanessa De Jesus | G 5-8 – Senior
23 Iyana Moore | G 5-8 – Senior
8 Cassandre Prosper | G 6-3 – Senior
5 Malaya Cowles | F 6-3- Senior

Duke vs. Notre Dame Rosters

Here are the complete rosters for Duke women’s basketball and Notre Dame.

Duke Blue Devils Roster

2 Jadyn Donovan | G 6-0 – Junior
3 Ashlon Jackson | G 6-0 – Senior
4 Riley Nelson | G 6-2 – Sophomore
Emilee Skinner | G 6-0 – Freshman
12 Delaney Thomas | F 6-3 – Junior
13 Jordan Wood | F 6-4 – Junior
15 Emma Koabel G 5-11 – Senior
21 Arianna Roberson | C 6-4 – Red Shirt Freshman
22 Taina Mair | G 5-9- Senior
25 Anna Wikstrom | G 6-0 – Freshman
35 Toby Fournier | F 6-2 – Sophomore
42 Hailey Johnson | G 5-11 – Senior
53 Olivia Martin | G 5-6 – Senior

Notre Dame Fighting Irish Roster

1 Kelly Ratigan | G 5-8 – Junior
2 Vanessa De Jesus | G 5-8 – Senior
3 Hannah Hidalgo | G 5-6 – Junior
5 Malaya Cowles | F 6-3- Senior
8 Cassandre Prosper | G 6-3 – Senior
10 Bella Tehrani | F 6-3 – Senior
11 Jordyn Smith | G 5-6 – Senior
14 KK Bransford | G 5-11 – Senior
15 Luci Jensen | G 5-10 Sophomore
23 Iyana Moore | G 5-8 – Senior
30 Gisela Sanchez | F 6-4 – Senior
44 Leah Macy | F 6-2 Freshman

What time is Notre Dame vs. Duke?

Date: Saturday, March 7
Time: Noon ET
Location: Gas South Arena (Duluth, Georgia)

The Notre Dame Fighting Irish play the Duke Blue Devils in the first ACC semifinal game at noon ET Saturday, March 7 at Gas South Arena in Duluth, Georgia.

Notre Dame vs. Duke: TV, streaming

TV: ESPN2
Stream: Sling TV

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

. – One week into the U.S. and Israeli attacks on Iran, two Republican senators on the Senate Armed Services Committee say the military operation has ‘degraded’ Tehran’s ability to strike back.

But in exclusive interviews with Fox News Digital, Sens. Rick Scott of Florida and Ted Budd of North Carolina emphasized that the fighting will not lead to U.S. involvement in ‘forever wars’ in the volatile Middle East.

‘Our military is doing a great job,’ Scott said. And pointing to Iran, he said, ‘They want to destroy America. We’ve got to stop them.’

Budd highlighted that ‘we have significantly degraded Iran’s ability to shoot back at us… their capacities are degraded. We’ve had great success.’

Budd and Scott were interviewed as they attended an economic conference in Florida hosted by the Club for Growth, an influential and politically potent conservative group that pushes for fiscal responsibility.

President Donald Trump, who called for Iran’s ‘unconditional surrender,’ said on Saturday that Tehran will be ‘hit very hard’ and warned the U.S. is considering ‘areas and groups’ not previously considered to target.

Over the past week, ‘Operation Epic Fury’ has widened in scope as Iran has retaliated against a growing number of nations in the region. This week, the Republican-controlled House and Senate, in separate votes nearly entirely along party lines, rejected moves by Democrats to restrict the president’s ability to steer the fighting.

The president said on Thursday, in an interview with Axios, that he should be involved in choosing Iran’s next leader. Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was killed in the initial strikes against Iran a week ago.

And there are concerns among many on the right that the strikes against Iran could lead to prolonged American military involvement in the region, which Trump has repeatedly campaigned against during his three runs for the presidency.

‘Trump doesn’t want to be in forever wars. Every time I’ve talked to him, he doesn’t want that,’ Scott said. ‘But I think what we do want to make sure we don’t have another Ayatollah that wants to… chant Death to America and death to our allies and try to destroy us.’

Budd added that ‘we’re not up for forever wars. We want to get in, get this thing done, get out and have peace for our country and the rest of the region.’

The latest Fox News national poll indicated that American voters are divided on the U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran, even as a majority sees the country as a security risk. 

Sixty-one percent of those questioned viewed Iran as a danger to the U.S., according to the survey conducted Feb. 28-March 2. But that concern did not translate into majority support for the current U.S. military action, as 50% approved and 50% disapproved.

Support for the attacks was lower in national polling from other news organizations.

But the Fox News poll and the other surveys indicated widespread support among Republicans.

‘Trump’s doing the right thing. He’s saving American lives by making sure that Iran does not have a nuclear weapon or ballistic missile. So he’s doing the right thing,’ Scott emphasized.

Budd added, ‘I’m very excited [about] what President Trump’s done… The goal is American prosperity and American safety, and that’s what President Trump wants.’

Oil prices have shot up since the start of the fighting, instantly resulting in higher costs for gasoline across America. That’s a major concern for Republicans as they aim to keep control of the House and Senate majorities in this year’s midterm elections.

‘Hopefully it’s all going to be short term. Hopefully… the demolition of the Iranian military will happen quickly and actually will get lower oil prices,’ Scott said.

Budd acknowledged that ‘we are going to have some short-term disruptions.’

But the senator was optimistic that ‘very soon we’ll have gas prices much cheaper than ever before. We were already on that pathway. President Trump is all about stability. He’s all about the price of oil.’

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

SpaceX and Tesla CEO Elon Musk gave a two-word retort after Anthropic leader Dario Amodei claimed in an interview that he isn’t sure if his company’s AI models have gained consciousness.

‘Anthropic CEO says Claude may or may not have gained consciousness, as the model has begun showing symptoms of anxiety,’ read a post on X by cryptocurrency-based prediction market Polymarket, to which Musk replied, ‘He’s projecting.’ 

The comment from Musk, who is also the founder of xAI, comes as Anthropic is at odds with the Pentagon over its use in a separate matter.  

In an interview with The New York Times, Amodei, when asked about AI and consciousness, said, ‘We’ve taken a generally precautionary approach here,’ and, ‘We don’t know if the models are conscious.’

‘We are not even sure that we know what it would mean for a model to be conscious or whether a model can be conscious. But we’re open to the idea that it could be,’ he continued. 

‘We’re putting a lot of work into this field called interpretability, which is looking inside the brains of the models to try to understand what they’re thinking. And you find things that are evocative, where there are activations that light up in the models that we see as being associated with the concept of anxiety or something like that. When characters experience anxiety in the text, and then when the model itself is in a situation that a human might associate with anxiety, that same anxiety neuron shows up,’ Amodei also told the Times. 

The interview comes as the Trump administration is moving federal agencies away from Anthropic after the tech company pushed back against the War Department’s usage of its tools.

The Pentagon has called for Anthropic to allow the Department of War to utilize the company’s artificial intelligence product for ‘all lawful purposes,’ but Amodei has suggested the government could potentially use their product for ‘mass domestic surveillance’ or ‘fully autonomous weapons,’ and that the company would not be willing to allow such use cases.

President Donald Trump said last Friday, ‘The Leftwing nut jobs at Anthropic have made a DISASTROUS MISTAKE trying to STRONG-ARM the Department of War, and force them to obey their Terms of Service instead of our Constitution. Their selfishness is putting AMERICAN LIVES at risk, our Troops in danger, and our National Security in JEOPARDY.’ 

‘Therefore, I am directing EVERY Federal Agency in the United States Government to IMMEDIATELY CEASE all use of Anthropic’s technology. We don’t need it, we don’t want it, and will not do business with them again! There will be a Six Month phase out period for Agencies like the Department of War who are using Anthropic’s products, at various levels,’ Trump added on Truth Social.

Secretary of War Pete Hegseth later wrote on X, ‘In conjunction with the President’s directive for the Federal Government to cease all use of Anthropic’s technology, I am directing the Department of War to designate Anthropic a Supply-Chain Risk to National Security. Effective immediately, no contractor, supplier, or partner that does business with the United States military may conduct any commercial activity with Anthropic. Anthropic will continue to provide the Department of War its services for a period of no more than six months to allow for a seamless transition to a better and more patriotic service.’ 

Fox News Digital’s Alex Nitzberg contributed to this report. 

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Shohei Ohtani homered again and Japan dug out of an early hole to outlast South Korea for an 8-6 win, improving to 2-0 in the 2026 World Baseball Classic.

Korea jumped on Japan starter Yusei Kikuchi for three runs in the top of the first on four hits, but Seiya Suzuki hit a two-run homer in the bottom of the opening inning at the Tokyo Dome that instantly cut the deficit. The Koreans held that 3-2 lead into the fourth, when Ohtani hit a solo home run off Korea’s Young Pyo Ko to tie the game, the four-time MVP’s second homer in as many games in this WBC.

Two batters later, Suzuki connected on his second home run of the game, giving Japan a 4-3 lead. Byeong Hyeon Jo replaced Ko on the mound and Korea’s new pitcher was greeted with a solo Masataka Yoshida home run for Japan’s third longball of the inning.

But Korea tied the game right back up in the top of the fifth on a two-run homer by Los Angeles Dodgers infielder Hyeseong Kim. The game stayed tied 5-5 until the bottom of the seventh, when Japan played three on Suzuki’s RBI walk and Yoshida followed with a single that scored two more.

Taisei Ota pitched the ninth inning to get the save for Japan.

Japan will face fellow unbeaten Australia (2-0) on Sunday in a game that could decide which country wins Pool C. South Korea (1-1) plays Chinese Taipei (1-2) on Sunday and then Australia in its pool finale on Monday,March 9.

Japan vs South Korea WBC highlights

Shohei Ohtani stats vs Korea

Shohei Ohtani went 2-for-2 with a homer, two walks and three runs scored in Japan’s 8-6 win over Korea on Saturday.

Through two games in the 2026 WBC, Ohtani is 5-for-6 (.833) with two home runs and 6 RBIs. Ohtani was named MVP of the 2023 tournament.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

An Iranian official warned that any European countries that enter the conflict against Iran will become ‘legitimate targets’ for Tehran’s retaliation. 

Iran’s Deputy Foreign Minister Majid Takht-Ravanchi made the remark to France24 as Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian on Saturday apologized to neighboring countries that have been attacked by the regime. 

‘We have already informed the Europeans and everybody else that they should be careful not to be involved in this war of aggression against Iran,’ Takht-Ravanchi told the network. ‘If they help, I’m not trying to name any country, but if any country joins in the aggression against Iran, joins America and Israel in the aggression against Iran, definitely they will be also the legitimate targets for Iranian retaliation.’ 

‘This war has imposed on us, and we will continue to defend ourselves to the best of our abilities,’ he added. ‘We have an obligation to defend our people and that is what exactly we are doing.’

Takht-Ravanchi also claimed Iran was ‘negotiating in good faith‘ in talks with the U.S. about its nuclear program, before America launched Operation Epic Fury and Israel began Operation Roaring Lion on Feb. 28. 

‘We are sincere. We are sincere in our endeavor to arrive at a peaceful conclusion of this issue,’ he told France24. 

Pezeshkian said Saturday that any future attacks coming out of Iran would only be in response to attacks against the country. 

‘I should apologize to the neighboring countries that were attacked by Iran, on my own behalf,’ he said, according to The Associated Press. ‘From now on, they should not attack neighboring countries or fire missiles at them, unless we are attacked by those countries. I think we should solve this through diplomacy.’

Pezeshkian made the apology during a prerecorded televised speech on Saturday after Iran launched repeated strikes on Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar and Oman. 

Despite the vow, the United Arab Emirates (UAE) Ministry of Defense said on Saturday that the country’s air defense systems intercepted 16 ballistic missiles, 15 of which were destroyed while one fell into the sea.

Fox News Digital’s Elizabeth Pritchett and The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

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In what could be the biggest move of the NFL offseason − five days before the official start of free agency − the Las Vegas Raiders agreed to trade perennial Pro Bowl pass rusher Maxx Crosby on March 6 to the Baltimore Ravens in exchange for two first-round draft picks, one in 2026 and the other in ’27, per multiple reports.

The move should immediately restore the Ravens as front-runners in the AFC North and also bona fide Super Bowl contenders after they missed the playoffs in 2025, despite a loaded roster, and fired longtime coach John Harbaugh in the aftermath. As for the Raiders, Crosby’s departure signals their embrace of a needed rebuild − something the franchise wasn’t willing to do a year ago when it hired Pete Carroll in a bid to compete in a loaded AFC West in what was a failed one-season stint for the legendary head coach. Now, the team seems focused on collecting assets in order to forge a supporting cast around its presumed No. 1 draft pick, Heisman Trophy-winning quarterback Fernando Mendoza.

How did each club make out? Let’s grade the trade:

Baltimore Ravens’ Maxx Crosby trade grade: A

This is a team that should be in the discussion to win the Lombardi Trophy annually − and usually is. But an organization historically known for suffocating defense lapsed to 24th in 2025, in part due to an injured and ineffective front. Baltimore’s 30 sacks were tied for third-fewest in the league.

But now the Ravens are adding one of the league’s premier pressure players at a time when newly hired head coach Jesse Minter − whose specialty is defense − can deploy Crosby, whom he knows well from their time in the AFC West together. (Minter was most recently the Los Angeles Chargers’ defensive coordinator.) And while Baltimore is paying handsomely, Crosby is under contract through the 2029 season − though doesn’t have any guarantees after the 2026 campaign, effectively making his deal pay-as-you-go at present. His three-year, $106.5 million extension, signed last year, doesn’t even take effect until the 2027 season.

A Pro Bowler each of the past five seasons, Crosby has been beaten up in the last two, missing seven of a possible 34 starts over that stretch. But his production hasn’t suffered much in a span when he’s registered 17½ sacks and 99 QB pressures, per Next Gen Stats. In each of his three full seasons from 2021 to ’23, Crosby never had fewer than 79 pressures or eight sacks in an individual season. Baltimore didn’t have a player with more than five sacks in 2025, and the continued doubt swirling around the future of injured DL Nnamdi Madubuike also surely influenced GM Eric DeCosta’s thinking.

Bottom line, this should be good news for the Ravens, who should be operating from a win-now perspective for the remainder of two-time MVP QB Lamar Jackson’s tenure, and bad news for Patrick Mahomes, Josh Allen, Joe Burrow and the remainder of the AFC. It should also be a sterling opportunity for Crosby − if not a Silver-and-Black one − to legitimately pursue the excellence and ring he’s futilely sought for years in the desert after enjoying just one postseason appearance to date in his first seven NFL seasons.

Las Vegas Raiders’ Maxx Crosby trade grade: A

Crosby has long been a good, loyal soldier to the wayward operation that gave him a chance as a fourth-round pick out of Eastern Michigan in 2019 and stuck by him through substance abuse problems. But it was time for a fresh start for the 28-year-old, who bristled at being shut down by the team late last season, and also the Raiders, who need to quickly build an infrastructure around Mendoza that will help him succeed with a roster in need of many parts and in a division where Las Vegas is clearly fourth of four. Aside from Crosby, the team didn’t appear to have any foundational pieces last season aside from TE Brock Bowers and RB Ashton Jeanty − and neither plays what’s considered a premium NFL position.

As bleak as the Raiders look defensively sans Crosby, they’re nearly as deficient in the receiving corps − no player had as many as 65 catches or 700 yards in 2025 − and, as presently constructed, would have quite a difficult time safeguarding Mendoza.

Obtaining a first-rounder in 2027, which is expected to be one of the most loaded drafts in years, could be the real coup for GM John Spytek and minority owner Tom Brady as they look to restore the Raiders to glory more than 40 years after their most recent Super Bowl triumph. But, sometimes, it seems a Commitment to Excellence can mean a win-win transaction for all parties involved.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

HOUSTON — Baseball is rarely easy to predict, and so Lucas Ramirez has made a habit of the next best thing.

In the months leading up to his World Baseball Classic debut for Team Brazil against Team USA, the outfielder ritually practiced affirmations and visualizations to prepare for his entry onto baseball’s international scene.

“Ever since the (WBC) qualifiers, I was envisioning that first at-bat bomb,” Ramirez said. “And it’s crazy that it actually happened. For five months, I’ve been – every time before I go to bed after I pray, I visualize it. And it happened.”  

So when Ramirez rounded the bases at Daikin Park on Friday night after he delivered a leadoff home run in Brazil’s first at-bat of the tournament – one of two solo home runs he hit in the game – he screamed, “I told you!”

“I say go out there with confidence (and) you can do anything you speak,” Ramirez said later. “If you say it out loud, it’ll happen. I’m telling you. It will happen.”

Although Team USA broke the game open in the late innings for a 15-5 win over Brazil, two of Brazil’s youngest players provided the team’s brightest moments.

At 20 years and 49 days old, Ramirez is the youngest player in WBC history with a multi-homer game. His teammate, Brazil pitcher Joseph Contreras, the youngest player in the tournament at 17 years and 291 days old, got USA captain Aaron Judge to ground into an inning-ending double play with the bases loaded.

When asked how that moment ranked in his career, Contreras, a senior at Blessed Trinity Catholic High School in the Atlanta suburbs, said, “That has to be up there. That’s definitely like a top two moment. I would say the first one obviously was winning the state championship back home. There’s nothing better than winning it all.”

Both players represent Brazil because of their mothers’ heritage and are the sons of MLB legends. Ramirez’s father Manny won two World Series titles with the Red Sox and was a 12-time All-Star. Contreras’ father José was a World Series champion with the White Sox in 2005 and an All-Star in 2006.

Both fathers were in the stands at Daikin Park on Friday to watch their sons’ WBC debuts. The performances the sons delivered were proof that they can create their own legacies.

“Having Manny Ramirez as my father is obviously a good thing and a bad thing,” Lucas Ramirez said. “It’s a little hard. Everybody expects so much. That’s why, maybe, I visualize and say things, I guess – because I got to paint my own picture. I got to be Lucas Ramirez, and I got my own path.”

He wasted little time. Judge’s two-run shot in the top of the first inning gave the USA an early 2-0 lead that was halved a short time later.

Leading off the game for Brazil against San Francisco Giants ace Logan Webb, Ramirez deposited a low inside-corner fastball over the wall in right-center field. Feet from where the ball landed, the Brazilian contingent in the home bullpen went berserk, with one reliever even hanging over the fence.  

Besides thinking about hitting a bomb, Ramirez said another thought crossed his mind right before he went up to the plate.

“I’m gonna go out there and give it my all, and I’m just gonna have fun,” he said. “Too many people work on the field and they make baseball their whole life. They have a bad game, and they’re going to have a bad attitude the whole rest of their day. Like, this is temporary. We’re here temporarily, and we’re gonna go out there and have fun and be in life.”

In the top of the second inning, Contreras took over for Brazil starter Bo Takahashi and exacted revenge against Judge, but not before getting into a jam.

After retiring the first batter he faced, Contreras gave up a hard-hit double to Brice Turang and surrendered back-to-back walks to Bobby Witt Jr. and Bryce Harper to load the bases for Team USA’s captain.

Contreras got to a 1-1 count against Judge and threw a two-seamer on the inside of the plate. Judge grounded into a 5-4-3 double play to end the inning. Osvaldo Carvalho, Brazil’s first baseman, pumped his fist wildly while Contreras walked to the dugout and collected high-fives and pats on the back.

“It was just a surreal experience,” Contreras said. “I tried to visualize on that and make sure keep breathing, but as soon as the lights came on and I was on the mound, it was like ‘Alright, now you got to face Byron Buxton. OK, now it’s real.’ Game sped up on me a little bit but now I know for the next time.”

Following his scoreless frame, Contreras allowed two of the next three batters he faced to reach base before Kyle Schwarber scored on a wild pitch and knocked the teenager out of the game with Brazil trailing 3-1. Still, Team USA came away impressed by Contreras’ outing.

“Impressive. I know I wasn’t doing that at that age, that’s for sure,” Judge said. “Just great stuff. I know he had some poise on the mound. He’s throwing up to 100 miles an hour. He’s facing Team USA, a lot of guys he has seen on TV or different things like that. It was just impressive seeing him control himself out there and get out of a big jam.”

In the eighth inning, Ramirez blasted another home run on a one-out pitch from USA reliever Gabe Speier, making the score 8-5.

When Ramirez and Team Brazil manager Yuichi Matsumoto exited the interview room after the game, a Team USA contingent was waiting in the hallway for their turn. USA manager Mark DeRosa told Ramirez, “Way to swing the bat!” Judge shook hands with Ramirez, who in turn asked the three-time American League MVP to take a selfie with him.

Ramirez plays in the Los Angeles Angels organization and spent the 2025 season at the High-A level. Contreras will graduate from high school this spring and is committed to play college ball at Vanderbilt, if he is not drafted by an MLB organization.

Neither has made it to the majors yet, though each inherited certain traits from their dads.

Ramirez mirrors his father’s swing mechanics, though he was taught to hit lefty instead of righthanded. The 20-year-old was drafted in the 17th round in 2024 and last March helped Brazil qualify for the WBC.

The first pitch Contreras learned how to throw was his father’s infamous forkball. The son is 6-foot-4, tall and lanky like his father, and possesses the same quiet confidence.

“Oh man, that kid is something special,” Ramirez said. “Obviously, he comes from a father who plays baseball as well, so that’s been great. That kid’s going to be lights out one day.”

Ramirez regularly takes Christmastime trips to Brazil to visit his grandmother and grandfather, who own a livestock farm there. He said playing for Team Brazil has only strengthened his connection to the country. Ramirez, who speaks fluent Spanish as well as some Portuguese, has asked older players about Brazil’s lone prior WBC appearance in 2013 and been taught by some teammates how to dance to Brazilian funk music.

Friday night’s loss to the USA in pool play left Brazil still searching for its first WBC win after going 0-3 in the 2013 tournament. Brazil is scheduled to play remaining pool games against Italy, Mexico and Great Britain in Houston.

The final scoreline could have been worse, but Team USA’s offense was more junk than juggernaut. Despite Brazil’s pitchers walking 17 batters, hitting two more batters and incurring three pitch clock violations, the Americans hit 5-for-21 with runners in scoring position and stranded 13 baserunners.

What most fans will remember about the night, however, is how two burgeoning stars stole the spotlight from the tournament favorite.

Certainly, Ramirez and Contreras will never forget it. And next time Ramirez goes to visualize his success, he can close his eyes and picture those moments again and again.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Lindsey Vonn’s time atop the downhill standings is over.

Italy’s Laura Pirovano and Germany’s Emma Aicher bumped the injured Vonn down to third in the season standings after the second downhill at the World Cup in Val di Fassa, Italy. Pirovano now leads the race for the season title after her second downhill win in as many days with 436 points. Aicher is 28 points behind with 408 points.

Vonn, who has 400 points, could slip even further with one race still to go. Germany’s Kira Weidle-Winkelmann (351), Austria’s Cornelia Huetter (344) and Olympic downhill champion Breezy Johnson (333) are also within 100 points of Vonn and could surpass her at the World Cup finals later this month.

Vonn said in an Instagram post Friday, March 6, that she knew this was coming.

‘I didn’t want to win the title to prove anything to anyone. I did it because I knew I could. I just wish I had a chance to fight until the end to try and get it…’ Vonn wrote.

Vonn is currently recuperating from the serious injuries she suffered in a crash during the Olympic downhill last month. She has a complex tibial fracture, a tibial plateau fracture and fractured fibular head, all in her left leg, and also fractured her right ankle.

Vonn also said she had compartment syndrome. If not for her longtime orthopedic surgeon, Dr. Tom Hackett, Vonn said she could have lost her leg.

‘Compartment syndrome is when you have so much trauma to one area of your body, that there’s too much blood, and it gets stuck, and it basically crushes everything in the compartment,’ Vonn said in an Instagram post on Feb. 23. ‘All the muscle and nerves and tendons, it all kind of dies. And Dr. Tom Hackett saved my leg. He saved my leg from being amputated.’

Vonn claimed the No. 1 bib by winning the season’s first downhill, in December. She was on the podium in every downhill race, and took a sizeable lead into the Milano Cortina Olympics.

A season downhill title would have been Vonn’s ninth, tying Mikaela Shiffrin’s record for most in a single discipline. Making it even more remarkable is it would have come at 41, and after Vonn had been retired for almost six years.

Vonn also was skiing with a partial knee replacement, a first for an elite-level skier.

‘At the beginning of the season no one would have ever believed I would be even close to this position. And I bet people would have laughed if it was even suggested. But winning the title was my goal,’ Vonn wrote.

But with four races still left after the Games, the title was still up for grabs and her absence opened the door for other skiers.

Pirovano, who was sixth in the Olympic downhill, made the biggest move, earning 200 points just this weekend with her two wins. Aicher, the silver medalist in Milano Cortina, was poised to take the lead from Vonn after a fourth-place finish last weekend and a second in the first downhill on Friday, March 6. But a 12th-place finish Saturday, March 7, has her chasing Pirovano now.

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No. 20 Miami (Ohio) has finished a perfect regular season, and its athletic director believes it “should cement” the RedHawks as an NCAA Tournament team.

The last remaining undefeated team in men’s college basketball capped off a 31-0 campaign with a wild overtime win against rival Ohio on Friday, March 6. Despite five technical fouls and 14 made 3-pointers from the Bobcats, the RedHawks didn’t falter.

Down by one point with less than 30 seconds left in overtime, star guard Peter Suder drew a foul with 12 seconds left to get to the free throw line. Ohio had a chance to retake the lead in the final seconds, but was unable to get a basket. The RedHawks added a free throw and the Bobcats couldn’t hit the last-second 3-pointer to seal a 110-108 win for the RedHawks.

With the victory, Miami is the fifth team this century to have a perfect regular season, last accomplished by Gonzaga in 2020-21. It also snapped a 14-game losing streak at Ohio, last winning at the Bobcats’ home arena in 2011.

The undefeated record has put the RedHawks at the center of an NCAA Tournament debate, focused on whether the mid-major team needs the automatic bid to get a spot in the big dance.

On the surface, they have the qualifications. A 31-0 record is hard to ignore, and the tournament selection committee has never done so. Since the tournament expanded in 1985, no team with more than 28 wins has ever missed out on March Madness, and a squad with less than four losses has always made it. Now, the most Miami can lose before Selection Sunday is one game.

It’s why athletic director David Sayler said the victory over the Bobcats virtually punches the RedHawks’ ticket to the NCAA Tournament.

“An undefeated season, it has to matter, right?” Sayler told USA TODAY Sports. “Otherwise, why wouldn’t we just play three days in (the MAC tournament) and the winner goes to the (NCAA) tournament and forget the regular season if you’re not going to take an undefeated team?’

“It should cement it,” he added.

However, the argument for Miami’s omission from the bracket is the quality of the resume. Miami doesn’t have any Quad 1 games, just one Quad 2 victory and the majority of its wins come in the Quad 4 category, a 16-0 record. Three victories also came against non-Division I teams.

In KenPom, the RedHawks have a strength of schedule ranking of 285nd out of 365, and the nonconference rating is fifth-worst in Division I. Their rating of 88 puts them around teams that aren’t in the NCAA Tournament at-large conversation. It also hasn’t helped the past three wins were all by one possession.

It’s led to pundits like former Auburn coach Bruce Pearl stating Miami needs the auto-bid or it shouldn’t be in the tournament, resulting in some frustration for those trying to celebrate a historic run.

“It’s disappointing that more people across the country can’t just enjoy a good story,” Sayler said. “They’re on the verge of a historic thing here, and all people try to do is tear them down.”

He pointed to two reasons why people have been trying to discount the program: “Expert” bias toward power conference schools and that fans “can’t sit back and acknowledge” what’s happening, instead making excuses for their teams while belittling others.

“That’s why I’ve been quoting Yoda sometimes, because we’re fighting the evil empire here,” Sayler said. “It’s inevitability. These forces are out there that are against you, and you’re trying to carve a path.”

Still without a loss, Miami is eager to prove its worth. While there’s so much conversation on qualifying for the field of 68, coach Travis Steele has already said the second week of the tournament – the Sweet 16 and Elite Eight – is where the RedHawks want to be. 

Sayler supports the idea, and likes his team’s chances of getting there. There’s still the MAC tournament, which kicks off the quarterfinals on Thursday, March 12 with the championship game two days later. The RedHawks will be the No. 1 seed, and there’s stiff competition challenging to secure the automatic March Madness spot, including defending conference champion Akron.

But it shouldn’t stop the historic RedHawks from dancing.

“We’re not a fluky story,” Sayler said.

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