Thursday, May 29, 2025

QB Justin Fields thinks he can 'be great' in Jets' offense, but knows there's plenty of work to doNew Foto - QB Justin Fields thinks he can 'be great' in Jets' offense, but knows there's plenty of work to do

FLORHAM PARK, N.J. (AP) — Justin Fields has been the face of a franchise, a disappointing draft pick, a promising newcomer and an eager backup. And that's all in the span of his first four NFL seasons. The 26-year-old quarterbackhas never lost his confidencethrough it all and sees a potential opportunity to achieve what he has always wanted as a pro while now leading the New York Jets' offense. "I think I can be great, you know?" Fields said Thursday after the Jets' fifth practice of organized team activities. "That's been the goal for me my whole life, my whole career. Like I've said, I think the sky's the limit for this team, for this offense. But we do have a long way to go." Fields has certainly come a long way himself. He was the 11th overall pick by Chicago in the 2021 draft out of Ohio State, became the Bears' starter early in his rookie season and showed some flashes — and struggles. He remained under center for most of the next two seasons and his ability to make plays with his legs made him an intriguing quarterback option, but his accuracy, decision-making and overall play had the Bears looking to move on. Fields was traded to Pittsburgh last year and filled in as the Steelers' starter for an injured Russell Wilson, going 4-2 in his six starts before hitting the sideline once the veteran was healthy. In March,Fields signed a two-year, $40 million contractwith the Jets, who have tapped him to be their starter with the hope he can develop into a consistent playmaker in New York. "I take to him because he's authentic and he's himself," coach Aaron Glenn said last week. "It's one thing that players can pick out is someone that's fake, and there's nothing about him that's fake. So, I love everything about the player, I love everything about the way he carries himself." On the field, Fields' dual threat ability excites the Jets' coaching staff. "Everybody talks about the running," offensive coordinator Tanner Engstrand said Thursday. "Well, the guy's got an arm, too. And he does a great job with that. And mentally, he's phenomenal." Added quarterbacks coach Charles London: "I really like where he's headed for us right now. I think the arrow is pointed up." Fields might be able to gain some measure of revenge when the Jets open the regular season against the Steelers — who may or may not have Aaron Rodgers as their quarterback by then. But if Fields has that date circled, he's not letting on right now. "Umm, that's who we play in Week 1," Fields said when he saw the schedule. "There wasn't really a thought to that." Engstrand was Detroit's passing game coordinator the past three seasons and worked with more of a prototypical pocket quarterback in Jared Goff. Fields, who set the NFL regular-season, single-game rushing record for quarterbacks with 178 yards against Miami in 2022, could give New York's offense some unpredictable flair. "I think it just opens things up more, that's all," Engstrand said. "It just adds a different another layer to what we can do with where we're going on offense." Fields has spent much of the offseason learning the playbook and his teammates. There are some familiar faces from college, such as wide receiver Garrett Wilson, tight end Jeremy Ruckert and center Josh Myers. But there have also been group bonding trips — the offense and defense — to local golf simulators and crab boils. "That camaraderie and that closeness that we're trying to get to as a team, I think all of that just makes us play for each other more, get to know each other better, and really just learn about each other's backgrounds," Fields said. "So it's really just things that you can't measure on the football field. But I think the closer our team is, the better we'll be." On the field, though, what Fields is able to accomplish will likely go a long way to determining the Jets' success. "They always say it's up to players to make plays when we need them the most," he said. "So it's not necessarily in the scheme or anything like that. "But when it's time to make those plays in the game, when it's time to make something happen, that's what I'm going to do. And that's what the guys around me are going to do as well." ___ AP NFL:https://apnews.com/hub/nfl

QB Justin Fields thinks he can 'be great' in Jets' offense, but knows there's plenty of work to do

QB Justin Fields thinks he can 'be great' in Jets' offense, but knows there's plenty of work to do FLORHAM PARK, N.J. (AP) —...
Rangers offense continues to struggle at the same time their pitching has been so goodNew Foto - Rangers offense continues to struggle at the same time their pitching has been so good

ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) — The Texas Rangers have done a lot to try and solve the offensive woes that have plagued them all season, from firing their offensive coordinator to manager Bruce Bochy tinkering with the lineup. Texas went into its day off Thursday at the bottom of the American League with a .219 batting average and 185 runs scored. "Really they just need to get away. You know, it's been a little bit of a tough grind here lately," Bochy said. '"And so hopefully, they freshen up, clear their heads and come back and be the offense that we keep saying that they're gonna be." The Rangers (27-30) just played 35 games in 37 days, going 14-21 and falling from the AL West lead to 4 1/2 games back. They scored two runs or fewer in 19 of those games, including this week against Toronto when both teams combined for seven total runs in a three-game series. Meanwhile, the Texas pitching staff has been one of the best in the majors with its 3.19 ERA ranking third. Nathan Eovaldi (1.56 ERA) was third among individual pitchers, just ahead of Tyler Mahle at 1.64. Two-time Cy Young Award winnerJacob deGromhad a 2.42 ERA that ranked 12th. After throwing six scoreless innings Wednesday against the Blue Jays, Mahle was asked how the pitchers handle things and stay competitive amid the offensive struggles. "Kind of separate yourself from it. ... Hitting's the hardest thing to do in probably all of sports, right? So I mean I don't know anything about hitting," Mahle said. "We just try to keep the team in the game and they're gonna turn around. I think all of us know that. I know we keep saying that, but it's gonna happen. These guys are way too good. ... We're just waiting for it to happen. And then when it does, we are going to be really, really good." Offensive coordinator Donnie Ecker was fired May 4, after Texas scored 30 runs in a 2-9 stretch when half those runs came with aseason-high 15 runsin a win against the Athletics. Ecker was in his fourth season with the Rangers, and helped them win their only World Series title in 2023. Former big league All-Star infielderBret Boone, the 56-year-old older brother of New York Yankees manager Aaron Boone, was hired to work with hitting coach Justin Viele and assistant hitting coach Seth Conner, who remained on Bochy's staff. Marcus Semien, so long a staple leading off for Bochy, is now near the bottom of the order and last among AL qualifiers with a .173 average. Slugger Adolis García is 11 for 71 with 25 strikeouts over the past 20 games and is hitting .208 overall. Josh Smith, who took over in the leadoff spot, was in a 4-for-39 slide before having their only hit and two walks Wednesday, when they were shut out for the seventh time. Joc Pederson and Jake Burger were their primary offseason acquisitions. Burger was went down to Triple-A earlier this month and is 3 for 27 his last eight games games. Pederson hit .131 in 46 games before a broken hand last week, and was as low as .052 during an 0-for-41 drought that was the franchise's longest hitless stretch since at least 1974. Two-time World Series MVP shortstopCorey Seager missed 28 gamesand had two stints on the injured list because of a right hamstring strain before returning for the finale against the Blue Jays. Evan Carter has been out since May 17 because of a right quad strain, but could rehab and return to the big league lineup next week. "Well, I'm not gonna stop believing, I mean we have a lot of baseball left. That's the worst thing you can do," Bochy said. "I think that's important for them, and this is a tough part of the game you have to deal with when you go through something like this. And we're men and we've got to handle it in the right way." ___ AP MLB:https://apnews.com/MLB

Rangers offense continues to struggle at the same time their pitching has been so good

Rangers offense continues to struggle at the same time their pitching has been so good ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) — The Texas Rangers have done a...
College sports lurches forward, hoping to find a level playing field with fewer lawsuitsNew Foto - College sports lurches forward, hoping to find a level playing field with fewer lawsuits

MIRAMAR BEACH, Fla. (AP) — On the one hand, what this new version of cash-infused college sports needs are rules that everybody follows. On the other, they need to be able to enforce those rules without getting sued into oblivion. Enter the College Sports Commission, a newly created operation that will be in charge of counting the money, deciding what a "fair market" deal for players looks like and, if things go well, helping everyone in the system avoid trips to court whenever a decision comes down that someone doesn't like. Withname, image, likeness payments taking over in college, this group will essentially become what the NCAA committee on infractions used to be – the college sports police, only with the promise of being faster, maybe fairer and maybe more transparent. In a signal of what the CSC's most serious mission might be, the schools from the four biggest conferences are being asked tosign a documentpledging not to rely on state laws – some of which are more permissive of payments to players -- to work around the rules the commission is making. "We need to get out of this situation where something happens, and we run to our attorney general and file suit," said Trev Alberts of Texas A&M, one of 10 athletic directors who are part of another group, the Settlement Implementation Committee, that is helping oversee the transition. "That chaos isn't sustainable. You're looking for a durable system that actually has some stability and ultimate fairness." Number crunching to figure out what's fair In this new landsacpe, two different companies will be in charge of two kinds of number crunching. The first, and presumably more straightforward, is data being compiled by LBi Software, which will track how much schools are spending on every athlete, up to the $20.5 million cap each is allowed to distribute in the first year ofthe new arrangement expected to begin July 1. This sounds easy but comes with the assumption that universities – which, for decades, have sought to eke out every edge they can, rulebook or no – will provide accurate data. "Over history, boosters have looked for ways to give their schools an advantage," said Gabe Feldman, a sports law professor at Tulane. "I think that will continue even with the settlement. It's anyone's guess as to how that manifests, and what the new competitive landscape looks like." Adding some level of transparency to the process, along with the CSC's ability to deliver sanctions if it identifies cheaters, will be key to the new venture's success. "There's legal risk that prohibits you from doing that," Alberts said. "But we want to start as transparent as we can be, because we think it engenders trust." Good intentions aside, Alberts concedes, "I don't think it's illogical to think that, at first, it's probably going to be a little wonky." How much should an endorsement deal be worth? Some of the wonkiest bookkeeping figures to come from the second category of number crunching, and that involves third-party NIL deals. The CSC hired Deloitte to run a so-called clearinghouse called "NIL Go," which will be in charge of evaluating third-party deals worth $600 or more. Because these deals aren't allowed to pay players simply for playing – that's still technically forbidden in college sports -- but instead for some service they provide (an endorsement, a social media shoutout and so forth), every deal needs to be evaluated to show it is worth a fair price for what the player is doing. In a sobering revelation, Deloitte shared with sports leaders earlier this month that around 70% of third-party deals given to players since NIL became allowable in 2021 would have been denied by the new clearinghouse. All these valuations, of course, are subject to interpretation. It's much easier to set the price of a stock, or a bicycle, than the value of an athlete's endorsement deal. This is where things figure to get dicey. Though the committee has an appeals process, then an arbitration process, ultimately, some of these cases are destined to be challenged in court. "You're just waiting to see, what is a 'valid business purpose' (for an NIL deal), and what are the guidelines around that?" said Rob Lang, a business litigation partner at Thompson Coburn who deals with sports cases. "You can see all the lawyer fights coming out of that." Avoiding court, coordinating state laws are new priorities In fact, elements of all this are ripe to be challenged in court, which might explain why the power conferences drafted the document pledging fealty to the new rules in the first place. For instance, Feldman called a law recently enacted in Tennessee viewed by many as the most athlete-friendly statute in the country "the next step in the evolution" of state efforts to bar the NCAA from limiting NIL compensation for athletes with an eye on winning battles for recruits and retaining roster talent. "What we've seen over the last few years is states trying to one-up each other to make their institutions more attractive places for people to go," he said. "This is the next iteration of that. It may set up a showdown between the schools, the NCAA and the states." Greg Sankey, the commissioner of the Southeastern Conference, said a league spanning 12 states cannot operate well if all those states have different rules about how and when it is legal to pay players. The SEC has been drafting legislation for states to pass to unify the rules across the conference. Ultimately, Sankey and a lot of other people would love to see a national law passed by Congress that does that for all states and all conferences. That will take months, if not years, which is why the new committee drafted the document for the schools to sign. "We are all defendant schools and conferences and you inherently agree to this," Alberts said of the document. "I sat in the room with all of our football coaches, 'Do you want to be governed?' The answer is 'yes.'" ___ AP college sports:https://apnews.com/hub/college-sports

College sports lurches forward, hoping to find a level playing field with fewer lawsuits

College sports lurches forward, hoping to find a level playing field with fewer lawsuits MIRAMAR BEACH, Fla. (AP) — On the one hand, what th...
Capitals: Email about Alex Ovechkin's 'final season' a mistakeNew Foto - Capitals: Email about Alex Ovechkin's 'final season' a mistake

In an email sent to season ticket holders, the Washington Capitals appeared to reveal that all-time NHL goals leader Alex Ovechkin will play his final NHL campaign in 2025-26. "OCTOBER -- the start of Capitals hockey and Alex Ovechkin's FINAL NHL SEASON," read the email sent on Thursday, according to The Hockey Writers. Not so fast, said the team. The Capitals released a statement Thursday afternoon saying that "no decision has been made" on Ovechkin's future beyond next season, blaming one of its employees for the misunderstanding. "An email was sent from an individual with the corporate sales department that mistakenly alluded to next year being Alex Ovechkin's final year," the team posted on X. Ovechkin, who turns 40 in September, said after the Capitals were eliminated from the 2025 Stanley Cup Playoffs earlier this month that he would be back for his 21st NHL season. The Russian winger has one season remaining on a five-year, $47.5 million contract. "I'm going to use those couple months (in the offseason) to rest, enjoy my life, then back to work," Ovechkin said on May 17. In 65 regular-season games this past season, Ovechkin scored 44 goals, with the most significant of those coming on April 6 against the New York Islanders. The 895th goal of his career passed the great Wayne Gretzky for most in NHL history. "I'm looking forward for next year," Ovechkin said. "I'm going to try to do my best to play, and my team is going to help me too. ... I just want to come back next year and see the team who's capable of winning the Stanley Cup." A 13-time All-Star and three-time Hart Trophy winner, Ovechkin enters the 2025-26 season ranked 11th all-time in points (1,623). He needs 19 points to pass Joe Sakic, who is 10th on the points list. --Field Level Media

Capitals: Email about Alex Ovechkin's 'final season' a mistake

Capitals: Email about Alex Ovechkin's 'final season' a mistake In an email sent to season ticket holders, the Washington Capital...
Travis and Jason Kelce's Garage Beer Buys Professional Indoor Football Team St. Joseph GoatsNew Foto - Travis and Jason Kelce's Garage Beer Buys Professional Indoor Football Team St. Joseph Goats

Jesse D. Garrabrant/NBAE via Getty Images Travis and Jason Kelce are now the owners of a professional sports team The brothers, and their Garage Beer company, have purchased the St. Joseph Goats, which is part of the Arena League The news comes nearly a year after the Kelces announced that they had become part owners of the Cincinnati-based beer company TravisandJason Kelceare the proud owners of a pro football team! The brothers, along with their company, Garage Beer, have purchased the St. Joseph Goats, an indoor football franchise that competes in the Arena League, theyannouncedon Thursday, May 29. "It's GOOD to be GOAT," the "Beer Flavored Beer" enterprise wrote alongside a jokey press release which confirmed that the two were now "powered by the same crisp uncomplicated energy." One day earlier, Garage Beer teased that it would join forces with an entity that "involves football." "While we can't share the team name, city, league, mascot, or parking situation just yet, we can say that it involves football — the real kind, with helmets, touchdowns, tailgates, and of course, ice cold beers," Wednesday's post said. The news comes almost exactly a year after the Kansas City Chiefs star, 35, and theMonday Night Countdownanalyst, 37, announced that they had become part-owners of Cincinnati-based Garage Beer. While onNew Heights, the podcasters discussed why they wanted in on the beverage business. "[This] isn't making, like, a fancy slogan or trying to push you to, you know, have less calories and all that," Travis said at the time. "No... if you like good beer, this is a good beer." Jason added: "Our goal... we want this beer to be enjoyed by the guys… and women that drink beer, that enjoy beer." Patrick Smith/Getty Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. The Goats — who were formerly known as the Kansas City Goats and underwent a name change last month — were one of the four inaugural teams when the league launched in 2023, according toThe Kansas City Star. St. Joseph is a familiar venue for Travis. About 50 miles north of Kansas City, the Missouri city has been the site of the Chiefs training camp since 2010. Now featuring six franchises, the AL aims to expand to 12 by 2026, perKWWL. Kansas City Chiefs Hall of Fame running back Christian Okoye, Gates BBQ CEO George Gates II and local sports-radio personality Steven St. John were part of the founding ownership group. Read the original article onPeople

Travis and Jason Kelce's Garage Beer Buys Professional Indoor Football Team St. Joseph Goats

Travis and Jason Kelce's Garage Beer Buys Professional Indoor Football Team St. Joseph Goats Jesse D. Garrabrant/NBAE via Getty Images T...

 

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