Ravens GM warns of first-round talent 'drop-off' in 2026 NFL Draft

TheBaltimore Ravensretained the 14th overall pick in the 2026 NFL Draft after their trade for Las Vegas Raiders edge rusher Maxx Crosbyfell through on the eve of free agency.

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While Ravens general manager Eric DeCosta acknowledged he was"gutted" when the trade was nixed, the 55-year-old explained atan April 15 pre-draft media availabilityhe is excited about where the Ravens are picking. Why?

"There's definitely a drop-off probably midway through the [first] round in terms of talent," DeCosta said.

<ol><li><p style=Arvell Reese, LB/DE, Ohio State

On a defense already dotted with stars, Reese rose from an occasional contributor to a bona fide star in his first full season as a starter. The 6-4, 241-pound linebacker exhibited uncommon fluidity for a player of his size, finding equal comfort dropping back in coverage as bullying his way into the backfield. His pass-rush plan is still rather rudimentary at the moment, but he has the toolkit of a double-digit sack artist. In a league where defenses are constantly taxed against the pass and run, Reese displays a unique aptitude for detonating whatever play an offense might throw at him.

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  • Fernando Mendoza, QB, Indiana

    It's a testament to Mendoza's impeccable body of work that the pre-draft vivisection of his game has largely only turned up questions of how he'll fare operating from under center rather than in the shotgun.

    No one will confuse the 6-5, 236-pound Heisman Trophy winner with the likes of Cam Ward or Drake Maye, as he's not particularly creative or dangerous when a play breaks down. But that's about the only phase in which Mendoza comes up short. He's as precise as any passer you'll find from the college ranks, and he comfortably works through progressions and manipulates coverages. His arm strength isn't otherworldly, but he can attack every level with suitable velocity on his throws. Forcing him off his spot can throw him off his rhythm, but Mendoza rarely loses his cool under pressure and still conjures solutions when things aren't going his way. Beyond the improvisational shortcomings, he's the picture of a top-tier quarterback prospect.

    More: Why Fernando Mendoza won't be at NFL draft: Indiana QB staying home

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  • Jeremiyah Love, RB, Notre Dame

    The hyperbole inherent to NFL draft evaluations doesn't seem so outlandish when it's being attached to Love. For the 6-0, 213-pound Heisman Trophy finalist, everything starts with his game-breaking speed, which allows him to turn the corner with ease or jet through even the narrowest of openings on the interior. And once he has a step on the defense, he's extremely unlikely to be caught. He's far from just a linear threat, however, as his distinct creativity shines through in the open field – particularly when he unleashes his spin move or hurdle. Operating in a different gear than everyone else has created some inconsistencies in his early pacing, but it's rarely something that derails him. His elite skill set also carries over to his work as a pass catcher, where he can further vex defenses that won't likely have an answer when he lines up in the slot or out wide. It's fair to hold onto questions of positional value for running backs, but Love is unquestionably among a select few who deserve to be seen as this class' difference-makers.

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  • Rueben Bain Jr., DE, Miami

    No defender in college football broke open games last season quite like Bain, who led the Football Bowl Subdivision with 83 pressures, according to Pro Football Focus. The 6-2, 263-pounder frequently took the shortest path possible to the quarterback, uprooting anyone who stood in his way. Bain's atypical build for an edge rusher – including his short arms – invited plenty of scrutiny about how he might translate to the pro ranks, but he's already demonstrated he can mitigate the concern. If he's neutralized, it seems unlikely that it'll become a common occurrence.

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  • Sonny Styles, LB, Ohio State

    After arriving at Ohio State as an elite athlete searching for a true position, Styles departs Columbus having developed an unparalleled proficiency for the intricacies of linebacker play. The 6-5, 244-pound former safety could be counted on to be in the right place to plug the run at all times, and he still has room to grow in coverage and as a blitzer. Clean in everything he does, Styles can help be a standard-bearer for whatever defense he joins.

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  • Caleb Downs, S, Ohio State

    From his first snaps at Alabama as a five-star freshman to his final push at Ohio State, Downs put himself in a class all his own at safety. The two-time unanimous All-American repeatedly snuffed out plays before they could get started, particularly against the run or near the line of scrimmage. While he doesn't measure up as a physical marvel like Kyle Hamilton or Derwin James, he could have the same bottom-line effect for a defense, even if he doesn't match their ball production. His position might prevent him from cracking the top five, but he'll force offenses to account for him on every down.

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  • David Bailey, OLB/DE, Texas Tech

    Right off the snap, Bailey gets offensive linemen on their toes. The 6-4, 251-pound edge rusher's explosion off the ball can get blockers off balance in an instant, at which point Bailey can attack them by changing course or unleashing a spin move. Bailey's lean frame can result in him being eradicated in the run game at times, but players who can derail opposing passers with his level of efficiency can't be ignored. It shouldn't be long into his NFL transition before his pressure rate ticks up and he takes his place as one of the league's most threatening matchups off the edge.

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  • Carnell Tate, WR, Ohio State

    He was never the WR1 in the Buckeyes' loaded receiver room, but Tate stands above the rest of the pass-catching options in this class. With subtle shifts in his tempo and sudden breaks in his routes, the 6-2, 192-pound target creates separation without much strain. He settles into open spaces against zone and skies over defensive backs to haul in difficult passes down the sideline. He might not look the part of a go-to target, but he measures up to the title in almost every respect.

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  • Mansoor Delane, CB, LSU

    Not long into his foray into the Southeastern Conference, the Virginia Tech transfer made clear to opponents that he was not to be tested. Delane rapidly earned the title of shutdown corner, with teams almost universally opting to avoid throwing his way. At the next level, he figures to draw comparisons to Trent McDuffie – another cornerback who doesn't let his size or limited ball production prevent him from being recognized as a first-tier cover man.

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  • Makai Lemon, WR, USC

    In an earlier era, Lemon might have been dismissed as a slot receiver not capable of being an offensive focal point. Now, however, there shouldn't be much doubt about how much the Biletnikoff Award winner can shoulder. Lemon is a maestro when it comes to getting open underneath, and he can be counted on to vacuum up any throw that approaches his area. And teams that underestimate his downfield credentials could end up paying if they try to sit on short and intermediate throws.

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  • Jermod McCoy, CB, Tennessee

    A torn anterior cruciate ligament suffered last January kept McCoy out of commission for all of last season and clouded his pre-draft process. But in a stellar pro day showing, the 6-1, 188-pound corner served up a reminder that he has all the trappings of a top-tier cover man. With superlative ball skills and ample tools to stick with receivers throughout their routes, McCoy can grow into a standout in any defensive scheme.

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  • Dillon Thieneman, S, Oregon

    After his impressive performance at the NFL scouting combine, Thieneman rocketed into the discussion of this draft's premier defensive backs. Easy coverage instincts extend his already expansive range, and vigilance is required for any passing attack that throws to his area of the field. He can't measure up to Downs or some of the other safeties in this class when operating closer to the line of scrimmage, but he shouldn't be asked to serve in that capacity too frequently anyway.

  • " style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=13. Olaivavega Ioane, G, Penn State

    Even with everything crumbling around him in Penn State's calamitous season, Ioane still held firm. The 6-5, 320-pound left guard is a brick wall in pass protection, but where he really shines is in his forceful displacements in the run game. Ioane will have to figure out a way to handle quick-twitch defensive tackles who will test his fluidity, but he's one of the more reliable prospects in this class.

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  • Francis Mauigoa, OT/G, Miami

    Solid to the core, the former five-star recruit holds his ground against the pass and forces opposing linemen out of the way with his strong first contact. But while there's not much mystery to the 6-6, 329-pounder's play, there are several unknowns about his projection. A move inside could be in his future to safeguard against concerns that he'll be beaten by rangy edge rushers, but the skill set is there to hang at right tackle.

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  • Spencer Fano, OT, Utah

    Smooth movements allow Fano to conjure answers for even the speediest edge rushers. He still could have trouble with rangier defenders, however, as well as ones who can convert speed to power and knock him off base. Like many offensive tackles in this class, he'll face questions of whether he belongs at the position, with some question of whether he should head to center. 

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  • Monroe Freeling, OT, Georgia

    From his massive frame (6-7, 315 pounds) to his quickness, Freeling checks off some of the most notable boxes for a high-end left tackle. As a one-year starter, his technique is still a work in progress, with some bad habits sapping his efficacy. But he's clearly on an upward trajectory, and teams might be eager to buy on an ascendant blocker. 

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  • KC Concepcion, WR, Texas A&M

    Few receivers are true separators at all three levels. Concepcion qualifies as just that, with more than enough quickness and speed to free himself from coverage at any point on the field. Drops have dogged him, but he could shake the issue in short order. Versatile and dynamic, Concepcion is more refined than he gets credit for, and he could become a vital part of an aerial attack with more polish.

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  • Kenyon Sadiq, TE, Oregon

    The ultimate seam threat, Sadiq accelerates in a manner not seen from 6-3, 241-pound pass catchers. Though he's proven himself after the catch, much of his value remains somewhat theoretical, as his experience and workload in the downfield passing game haven't aligned with his capabilities. But as an instant mismatch creator and aggressive run blocker, he can change the complexion of whatever offense he joins.

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  • Denzel Boston, WR, Washington

    Some will see a 6-4, 210-pound body and assume Boston relies on pulling down jump balls in close quarters. But while tilting those throws in his favor is his best feature, it's far from his only one. Boston has impressive fluidity for a player with his physical make-up, and his tracking and midair adjustments make him an even more confounding coverage assignment.

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  • Emmanuel McNeil-Warren, S, Toledo

    Though he might not be an all-around coverage maven, McNeil-Warren is comfortable exerting his will from several different vantage points. He rallies to the ball in a hurry in run support, working his way through traffic to deliver big hits. And though his 6-4, 201-pound build limits his comfort zone in coverage, he can give both quarterbacks and receivers pause on attempting any throws over the middle.

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  • Jordyn Tyson, WR, Arizona State

    Once seen as the clear-cut favorite to be the first receiver selected, Tyson now might be the most polarizing pass catcher in this class. Quick and crisp when he's dialed in, he has a robust set of maneuvers to beat man coverage from various spots. But medical concerns from various ailments muddle his draft outlook, and he can be inefficient with his footwork. 

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  • Akheem Mesidor, DE, Miami

    Having just turned 25 with an extensive injury history, Mesidor enters the draft with red flags that might tank other prospects' stock. Teams that look past those issues, however, will see an advanced and unrelenting pass rusher with a deep bag of tricks to beat blockers. Mesidor might be one of the most divisive prospects in this class in his projection, but there's not much to object to with the on-field product.

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  • Colton Hood, CB, Tennessee

    With McCoy sidelined, Hood did a commendable job of filling in as the Volunteers' primary asset in coverage. The Colorado transfer kept the competitive juices flowing in shutting down tight-window throws as well as making his presence felt against the run. He can't match McCoy in overall fluidity, but he still sizes up as a meaningful counter in man coverage for bigger receivers.

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  • Omar Cooper Jr., WR, Indiana

    Other receivers are sure to be more vexing coverage matchups than the 6-0, 199-pound target. Cooper, however, has a truly distinct aptitude for slipping tacklers in the open field. His penchant for racking up yards after the catch should carry over to the NFL and endear him to his future quarterback, as should his aggressive approach to fighting through contact and operating in traffic.

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  • Caleb Lomu, OT, Utah

    In a class rife with right tackles and expected guard converts, Lomu stands out as a true blindside protector. Bulking up will be an essential step for the 6-6, 313-pounder to hold his own against more powerful edge rushers, but there's considerable room for growth on top of the enticing glimpses of his potential he's already displayed.

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    Ranking top 25 prospects for 2026 NFL Draft

    1. Arvell Reese, LB/DE, Ohio State

      On a defense already dotted with stars, Reese rose from an occasional contributor to a bona fide star in his first full season as a starter. The 6-4, 241-pound linebacker exhibited uncommon fluidity for a player of his size, finding equal comfort dropping back in coverage as bullying his way into the backfield. His pass-rush plan is still rather rudimentary at the moment, but he has the toolkit of a double-digit sack artist. In a league where defenses are constantly taxed against the pass and run, Reese displays a unique aptitude for detonating whatever play an offense might throw at him.

    DeCosta went on to say the 2026 NFL Draft is a "solid" class but also opined the talent level of the overall group is "maybe a little less than last year." He disclosed the Ravens currently have 197 players with draftable grades this year but did not outline how that compared to last year's board.

    Nonetheless, DeCosta expressed he isn't at all worried about landing an impact player in the first round.

    "Looking at the board, we see tremendous value offensive line-wise, [at] receiver," DeCosta told reporters when discussing the Ravens' top selection at No. 14 overall. "I think D-Line, outside linebacker, edge-type players as well. So, [I] feel like it's a sweet spot for us."

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    2026 NFL DRAFT SLEEPERS:Which players could be this year's hidden gems?

    DeCosta particularly lauded the 2026 NFL Draft's offensive line depth. He noted Baltimore has "a deep board" at the position and that the depth along the interior offensive line – which is regarded as one of the Ravens' biggest needs afterlosing center Tyler Linderbaum in free agency– is "pretty good."

    DeCosta also made it clear that Baltimore's willingness to initially send its first-round pick to Las Vegas in the Crosby trade was not an indictment of this year's class – even despite his acknowledgement of the first-round talent drop-off.

    "I don't think that's really indicative of the draft, that decision," DeCosta said when asked about the failed trade. "I think it's a strong draft. [There are] many different ways to build a team."

    "We're excited to have the pick this year at 14," he added. "We think we're going to get a really good player."

    This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Ravens GM provides hint about team's 2026 NFL Draft plans

    Ravens GM warns of first-round talent 'drop-off' in 2026 NFL Draft

    TheBaltimore Ravensretained the 14th overall pick in the 2026 NFL Draft after their trade for Las Vegas Raiders edge rusher Maxx Crosby...
    Ashley Tisdale, Meghan Trainor

    Meghan Trainorrevisited the mom-group fallout months afterAshley Tisdale French’sviral essay sent fans into guessing mode. The singer said the situation came down to confusion, miscommunication, and internet overreach.

    A new source claimed thatAshley Tisdalelater reached out directly after Trainor’s name was swept into the story. That mattered because the essay never named her, yet the speculation still landed on Meghan Trainor and several other celebrity moms.

    Meghan Trainor reveals Ashley Tisdale apologized to her over mom group drama

    As per theUs Weekly report, Meghan Trainor said she never held a grudge. Instead, she said, “I felt bad for Ashley.” The pop star added that she felt bad, “she was ever that sad.” She also said, “I think it was just a lot of miscommunication and confusion.” That framed the fallout less as a direct feud and more as a messy public guessing game. Earlier this year, Ashley Tisdale French published “Breaking Up With My Toxic Mom Group” in “The Cut.” The essay did not name Trainor, but fans quickly connected the dots online.

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    Meanwhile,Meghan Trainorsaid she responded once the speculation spread. She told Us, “I texted all of them.” Then she shared what Ashley Tisdale wrote back. “Ashley texted me like, ‘I’m sorry, your name got dragged in.’” Trainor said her own reply stayed calm. “It’s all right, girl,” she told her. She then added that “the world’s a silly, crazy place.” According to the singer, that was the real issue. People wanted “something to talk about,” and the mom-group rumor machine took over from there.

    Then Trainor explained why the drama felt so strange from her side. She said she had not seen the group in “a year ago.” She also admitted she was the “bad mom friend” who missed their events. Later, she said another group chat formed without her because she was not around. “That’s totally fine,” she said. Still, the attention became overwhelming. She called it “a nightmare for a lot of moms in that group.” Meghan Trainor also said some women were “devastated” after becoming suddenly searchable online. Even so, she said there was no bad blood withAshley Tisdalenow.

    The postWhy Ashley Tisdale Apologized to Meghan Trainor After Mom Group Dramaappeared first onReality Tea.

    Why Ashley Tisdale Apologized to Meghan Trainor After Mom Group Drama

    Meghan Trainorrevisited the mom-group fallout months afterAshley Tisdale French’sviral essay sent fans into guessing mode. The singer said ...
    Report: LIV Golf on verge of losing funding from Saudi investment fund, putting the tour's future in doubt

    Saudi Arabia’s wealth fund is on the verge of cutting funding for LIV Golf,according to the Financial Times, a blow that would potentially — if not certainly — put an end to the breakaway tour.

    Yahoo Sports

    A formal announcement could come as early as Thursday, according to the report.

    Late Tuesday evening, a social media report put the golf world on notice that something was brewing about the future of LIV Golf.

    Immediately, speculation ran rampant that the breakaway Saudi-backed tour might be abruptly shutting its doors. And why not? Despite the deep pockets of Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund, the now 4-year-old tour is still struggling to find much traction. Television ratings are non-existent, the tour hasn’t signed a marquee player since Jon Rahm three years ago and the proposed union with the PGA Tour has never materialized.

    So, no, a shuttering of LIV operations wouldn’t come as a complete surprise.

    But Wednesday morning, as more speculation surfaced, LIV Golf presented a business-as-usual front, at least publicly, that included social media posts about upcoming tee times for this week’s event in Mexico City, as well as media availability ahead of the tournament, which is scheduled to begin Thursday.

    Enter Sergio Garcia,fresh off his Masters meltdown, who was asked about the rumors.

    “No, sincerely we haven’t heard anything,” Garcia said. “That is not what Yasir told us at the beginning of the year.”

    Yasir would be Yasir Al-Rumayyan, governor of the PIF. Garcia went on to explain that Al-Rumayyan told them prior to this season that “he is behind us with a long-term project.”

    While that could have been true then, things have certainly changed. The defection of Brooks Koepka and Patrick Reed, both of who took the PGA Tour’s offer to return (under certain provisions), certainly signaled that all is not well for those who took the bag to play for LIV.

    Why now?

    Still, given the PIF’s immense bank account — reportedly in the neighborhood of $1 trillion — why now, so abruptly, in the middle of the season?

    Early Wednesday, longtime golf reporter Alan Shipnuck floated a possible explanation:

    Given the contracts LIV is under, including with players like Rahm and Bryson DeChambeau, as well as venues, vendors, sponsors, media outlets and every other entity it takes to run a professional sporting league, using the war in Iran to pull the plug on something you’ve already been considering pulling the plug on actually makes sense.

    The report also comes, coincidentally or not, on the same day the PIF outlined it’s future investment prerogatives, none of which mentioned golf or sport.

    The PIF has reportedly sunk somewhere in the neighborhood of $5 billion into the venture, backed by Al-Rumayyan — an avid golfer. Players such as Rahm, DeChambeau, Koepka, Dustin Johnson and Phil Mickelson all signed massive contracts to leave the PGA Tour and join the Saudi-backed venture. Some of those contracts pushed beyond nine figures.

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    How LIV came to be

    LIV was born in 2022 when a number of concurrent favorable elements aligned at once. Greg Norman, the maverick and outspoken former CEO of LIV, had long wanted to establish an alternative to what he saw as the overly restrictive PGA Tour. Several other entities had proposed a tour with more worldwide focus than the PGA Tour, with team elements included. Some players, such as Mickelson, wanted to retain more control of their own career paths and corporate identities than the PGA Tour would allow.

    Saudi Arabia’s PIF proved to be the key factor that could bind all those disparate elements together into a viable alternative tour. Saudi Arabia has long sought to improve its image on the world stage through investment in sports — a process its critics call “sportswashing” — and through golf, the PIF and Al-Rumayyan, saw a pathway to connect with many of the world’s most influential business leaders and politicians. LIV provided that pathway, at least in theory, and the PIF’s hundreds of billions ensured that the pathway would be as long as the Saudis wished.

    Before LIV Golf’s first tournament even began, the tour faced hurricane-level headwinds and troubles of its own making. Protests about the source of LIV’s funding — that is, the government of Saudi Arabia, responsible for documented human rights atrocities — dominated early coverage. Mickelson didn’t help matters by conceding that anyone who joined LIV was, in effect, sacrificing principle for cash and ulterior motives.

    JOHANNESBURG, SOUTH AFRICA - MARCH 22: Jon Rahm of Legion XIII during day four of LIV Golf South Africa at The Club at Steyn City on March 22, 2026 in Johannesburg. (Photo by Johan Rynners/Getty Images)

    “They’re scary [expletives] to get involved with,” Mickelson told Shipnuck in a now-legendary quote. “We know they killed [Washington Post reporter Jamal] Khashoggi and have a horrible record on human rights. They execute people over there for being gay. Knowing all of this, why would I even consider it? Because this is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to reshape how the PGA Tour operates.”

    The PIF’s billions did lure plenty of notable players, including stars in their prime like Koepka and DeChambeau; notable names like Mickelson, Johnson and Reed; and longtime veterans seeking one more big payday like Ian Poulter, Lee Westwood, Garcia, Bubba Watson. For a brief period, LIV appeared to be an existential threat to the PGA Tour as rumors flew about which players would be next to jump ship.

    LIV: The good and the bad

    LIV’s actual golf was more spectacle than substance. Tournaments were just three rounds of shotgun-start golf rather than the usual four (“LIV” is the Roman numeral for “54,” the number of holes in a LIV tournament). Players wore shorts and music played throughout, giving the entire affair a casual, unserious air … except for the massive payouts going to the players, of course.

    In that inaugural year of 2022, LIV may not have held the best cards, but it clearly held enough chips to bleed out the PGA Tour, if that’s what it took. Several LIV players, including DeChambeau, also filed suit against the PGA Tour for alleged anticompetitive practices. The Tour indefinitely banned all of its players who teed up at a LIV Golf event, but for those players already eligible to play in most or all of the majors, that was a hollow punishment.

    So the golf world was stunned in June 2023 when the PGA Tour and the PIF announced a surprise “joint framework agreement” that halted all legal action between the two. Airy talk of future cooperation between the two entities never materialized, and the “framework agreement” never progressed further than a few dodged press conference questions.

    But for all the criticism of the breakaway tour, LIV did force some dramatic change to the PGA Tour’s entire business model — some of which were exactly what players like Mickelson were politicking for. The tour sought outside investors, and received a $1.5 billion cash infusion from several notable professional sports owners, including the New York Mets’ Steve Cohen and the Atlanta Falcons’ Arthur Blank. The Tour increased its purses dramatically and offered up a series of bonus incentives, including equity, small-field tournaments, and the TGL indoor golf league, designed to funnel more money into loyal players’ pockets.

    LIV, meanwhile, struggled to carry through on its grand promises. Ratings were dismal by any measure. The tour could not convince golf’s powers-that-be to give LIV players Official World Golf Ranking points for their tournaments, meaning LIV players didn’t have pathways into the majors without prior exemptions.

    There were some small successes. Koepka captured the 2023 PGA Championship, the first active LIV player to win a major. Anthony Kim, the former star absent from the public eye for more than a decade, returned to professional golf on a LIV special invitation. LIV events in Australia and, later, South Africa proved phenomenally popular locally, lending credence to the idea that LIV was a better fit as a global tour than a domestic competitor to the PGA Tour. And in December 2023, LIV scored its biggest coup of its existence when it lured Rahm, inarguably one of the greatest players on earth, into its ranks even after Rahm had pledged “fealty” to the PGA Tour.

    But Rahm’s arrival did not spur a second exodus from the Tour, and he remains, more than two years later, the last notable LIV acquisition.

    The beginning of the end?

    More ominously, LIV recently began making news for the players leaving to return to the PGA Tour, starting with Koepka just before Christmas and, later, Reed. The PGA Tour welcomed back Koepka with a designed-on-the-fly “pathway” that skipped right over the year-long ban that other players faced. Reed wound his way through the DP World Tour, and will resume play on the PGA Tour in August, a year after his final LIV event.

    One of the key criticisms of LIV Golf is that it’s not truly a competitive tour. Without a cut, with a shotgun start, with phenomenal paychecks awaiting every player … what exactly is the incentive to play better? Koepka’s PGA Championship win, and later DeChambeau’s 2024 U.S. Open victory, seemed to counter that narrative, at least for the game’s best players. But the woeful performance of LIV’s pillars, Rahm and DeChambeau, at this year’s Masters brought that narrative right back to the forefront.

    So, if this is the end of LIV, what exactly will it’s legacy be, apart from the healthy bank accounts of its players? LIV certainly spurred the PGA Tour into remaking its own entire business model, putting more money in the hands of its own players. And LIV did demonstrate that there is deep, untapped interest in golf all over the world, interest the PGA Tour has no real intention of addressing in the near future. LIV also demonstrated that sportswashing works; although virtually every story on LIV mentioned Saudi human rights violations, virtually every media outlet and fan now simply treats it like any other league, judged on its merits rather than its financial pedigree.

    LIV Golf marked the most significant internationally funded disruption of an American-based sports entity to date. And while LIV may not have succeeded on its own, it knocked down longstanding walls around American sports.

    Report: LIV Golf on verge of losing funding from Saudi investment fund, putting the tour's future in doubt

    Saudi Arabia’s wealth fund is on the verge of cutting funding for LIV Golf,according to the Financial Times, a blow that would potentia...
    Sonia Sotomayor apologizes for ‘hurtful’ public comments about Brett Kavanaugh on immigration

    Justice Sonia Sotomayor issued a highly unusual public apology to a colleague Wednesday, saying her criticism of Justice Brett Kavanaugh for his writing in an earlier immigration case was unfair.

    CNN U.S. Supreme Court Associate Justice Sonia Sotomayor during a group portrait at the Supreme Court in Washington, U.S., October 7, 2022. REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein - Evelyn Hockstein/Reuters

    “At a recent appearance at the University of Kansas School of Law, I referred to a disagreement with one of my colleagues in a prior case, but I made remarks that were inappropriate,” Sotomayor said in a statement. “I regret my hurtful comments. I have apologized to my colleague.”

    Sotomayor’s statement followed remarks she made last week in Kansas in which she criticized Kavanaugh for hisconcurring opinionin a high-profile emergency immigration case dealing with ICE patrols — an exceedingly rare and personal comment directed at one justice by another.

    Justices, particularly those who wind up dissenting, often snip at how their colleagues on the other side of an opinion frame an issue. But both conservative and liberal justices – including Sotomayor – also regularly discuss the comity on the court and how the nine justices get along personally even as they vehemently disagree in many high-profile cases.

    That is what made the tone of Sotomayor’s remarks surprising.

    “I had a colleague in that case who wrote, you know, these are only temporary stops,” Sotomayor said, according to aBloomberg report. “This is from a man whose parents were professionals. And probably doesn’t really know any person who works by the hour.”

    CNN had reached out to Sotomayor and Kavanaugh for comment after the event. Kavanaugh did not immediately respond to a follow-up request for comment about Sotomayor’s apology on Wednesday.

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    Sotomayor, the court’s senior liberal, was speaking last week about an opinion in early September in which the court backed President Donald Trump’s push to allow immigration enforcement officials to continue whatcritics describe as “roving patrols”in Southern California that lower courts said likely violated the Fourth Amendment.

    The court’s majority did not offer an explanation for its decision in that case, which came over a sharp dissent from the three liberal justices.

    But Kavanaugh, a member of the conservative wing who sided with Trump, wrote in a concurrence to explain his thinking. He said the factors the agents were considering “taken together can constitute at least reasonable suspicion of illegal presence in the United States.” Those factors could include a person’s apparent ethnicity, language or their presence at a particular location, such as a farm or a bus stop.

    “To be clear, apparent ethnicity alone cannot furnish reasonable suspicion; under this court’s case law regarding immigration stops, however, it can be a ‘relevant factor’ when considered along with other salient factors,” Kavanaugh wrote.

    “Importantly,” Kavanaugh added, “reasonable suspicion means only that immigration officers may briefly stop the individual and inquire about immigration status.”

    Liberal groups have zeroed in on Kavanaugh’s concurrence and have dubbed the immigration encounters at issue in the case as “Kavanaugh stops.” Immigrant advocacy groups have said the stops are often far lengthier and more intrusive than the justice made them seem in his opinion.

    This story has been updated with additional details.

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    Sonia Sotomayor apologizes for ‘hurtful’ public comments about Brett Kavanaugh on immigration

    Justice Sonia Sotomayor issued a highly unusual public apology to a colleague Wednesday, saying her criticism of Justice Brett Kavanaug...
    Kenley Jansen moves into third place on all-time MLB saves list

    As he's done so many times before, Kenley Jansen preserved a one-run lead in the ninth Tuesday night to nail down a save.

    USA TODAY Sports

    With the potential tying run at second base, the Detroit Tigers closer induced an easy fly ball to center field to complete a 2-1 win over the Kansas City Royals on April 14 for save No. 479 of his career, moving him into third place on the all-time list.

    Only Hall of Famers Mariano Rivera and Trevor Hoffman have recorded more.

    "It's awesome,"Jansen told reporters afterward. "It tells me that no matter the adversity you go through in life, in your baseball career, at some point, you think you're done, but you always have that fight in you. You just have to keep believing in yourself, even if you don't that day."

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    More:LA Dodgers are MLB's melting pot, with complex history to show

    <p style=Cleveland Guardians players warm up as the launch of NASA's Artemis II is shown on the center-field video board at Dodger Stadium on April 1, 2026.

    " style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> Miami Marlins shortstop Otto Lopez (6) and center fielder Jakob Marsee celebrate a victory against the Chicago White Sox at loanDepot Park on April 1, 2026. The Toronto Blue Jays' Kazuma Okamoto gets doused with ice water by teammates after a win over the Athletics at Rogers Centre on March 29, 2026. The Cincinnati Reds' Eugenio Suárez blows a bubble as he waits to bat against the Boston Red Sox at Great American Ball Park on March 28, 2026. The St. Louis Cardinals' JJ Wetherholt is doused with water by teammates after hitting a walk-off two-run single against the Tampa Bay Rays during the 10th inning at Busch Stadium on March 28, 2026. Two F-35C planes from Air Test and Evaluation Squadron NINE Detachment Edwards Air Force Base perform a flyover before the Opening Day game between the Arizona Diamondbacks and Los Angeles Dodgers at Dodger Stadium on March 26, 2026.

    Ballpark vibes and wild celebrations a during 2026 MLB season

    Cleveland Guardians players warm up asthe launch of NASA's Artemis IIis shown on the center-field video board at Dodger Stadium on April 1, 2026.

    The milestone was so important to Jansen that he addressed the team during its postgame celebration.

    "The speech he gave to the team after, it was really cool to listen," said rookie shortstop Kevin McGonigle, who scored the go-ahead run in the eighth that gave Jansen the opportunity. "He talked about his career, and how it was a grind. It’s easy to quit, but never give up. Guys like that, you’ve got to listen, anytime they talk."

    Tigers closer Kenley Jansen celebrates with catcher Dillon Dingler after recording save No. 479 of his career against the Kansas City Royals.

    MLB all-time saves leaders

    1. Mariano Rivera 652

    2. Trevor Hoffman 601

    3. Kenley Jansen 479*

    4. Lee Smith 478

    5. Craig Kimbrel 440*

    6. Francisco Rodriguez 437

    7. John Franco 424

    8. Billy Wagner 422

    9. Dennis Eckersley 390

    10. Joe Nathan 377

    This story was updated to change a video.

    This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Kenley Jansen records 479th career save, now third on all-time list

    Kenley Jansen moves into third place on all-time MLB saves list

    As he's done so many times before, Kenley Jansen preserved a one-run lead in the ninth Tuesday night to nail down a save. With...
    What's going on with Donald Trump and Pope Leo? A timeline

    The contentious back-and-forth betweenPresident Donald Trump and Pope Leo XIVcontinued over the weekend, with the president lashing out at the pope's criticisms of the war in Iran.

    USA TODAY

    The president also appeared to take issue with arecent closed-door meetingbetween the Chicago native and a figure close to former President Barack Obama.

    Here's a breakdown of what's going on.

    How did the situation withDonald Trumpand Pope Leo start?

    The recent friction began Tuesday, April 7, when Trump threatened to wipe out "a whole civilization" in Iran if the nation's capital didn't make a deal to reopen the Strait of Hormuz.

    The threat proved controversial among many, including the pope, who labeled the comment "truly unacceptable."

    "I would invite citizens of all the countries involved to contact the authorities, political leaders, congressman, to ask them to work for peace and to reject war always," the pope said to the press later that day.

    Following the two-week ceasefire deal announced the next day, Pope Leo asked the world to join him in "this moment of delicate diplomacywith prayer."

    "I welcome with satisfaction − and as a sign of living hope − the announcement of an immediate two-week truce," the pope wrote on X. "Only by returning to negotiations can the war come to an end."

    During a prayer service at St. Peter’s Basilica in the Vatican Saturday, April 11, the pope called out the "delusion of omnipotencethat surrounds us and is becoming increasingly unpredictable and aggressive."

    "Enough of the idolatry of self and money!" the pope said. "Enough of the display of power! Enough of war! True strength is shown in serving life."

    Pakistan's Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif shakes hands with U.S. Vice President JD Vance during their meeting, on the day delegations from the United States and Iran are to hold peace talks, in Islamabad, Pakistan, April 11, 2026. Members of the media work as a screen displays news with images of Pakistan's Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif meeting with U.S. Vice President JD Vance and separately with Iranian Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, at a media centre set up for the coverage of the U.S.-Iran peace talks in Islamabad, Pakistan, April 11, 2026.

    See JD Vance in Pakistan for Iran peace talks

    What did Donald Trump write about Pope Leo on Truth Social?

    The president took to social media Sunday to call the pope "WEAK on Crime, and terrible for Foreign Policy."

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    In a lengthy Truth Social post dedicated to the pope, Trump praised the religious figure's brother Louis for being "all MAGA," criticized the Catholic Church's actions during the COVID-19 pandemic and condemned the pope's criticisms of the United State's foreign policy.

    Trump also claimed responsibility for the pope's election, saying, "If I wasn’t in the White House, Leo wouldn’t be in the Vatican."

    "He wasn’t on any list to be Pope, and was only put there by the Church because he was an American, and they thought that would be the best way to deal with President Donald J. Trump," the president wrote.

    Trump targets Pope Leo's meeting with Obama adviser

    Trump also appeared to take issue with a recent closed-door meeting between the pope and Democratic strategist David Axelrod.

    Axelrod served as a senior adviser to former President Barack Obama, stoking speculation among many about a potential meeting between the pontiff and 44th president.

    In his Truth Social post, Trump wrote, "Unfortunately, Leo’s Weak on Crime, Weak on Nuclear Weapons, does not sit well with me, nor does the fact that he meets with Obama Sympathizers like David Axelrod."

    Trump labeled Axelrod "a LOSER from the Left, who is one of those who wanted churchgoers and clerics to be arrested," and continued to say the pope should "focus on being a Great Pope, not a Politician."

    Has Pope Leo responded to Trump's Truth Social post?

    The popeaddressed Trump's commentsSunday as he spoke to reporters on a flight from Rome to Algeria.

    "I have no fear of the Trump administration, or speaking out loudly of the message of the Gospel, which is what I believe I am here to do," he said. "I do not look at my role as being political, a politician. I don’t want to get into a debate with him. I don’t think that the message of the Gospel is meant to be abused in the way that some people are doing."

    When asked for his thoughts on the president's Truth Social comments, the pontiff said: "It’s ironic – the name of the site itself. Say no more."

    CONTRIBUTING:Swapna Venugopal Ramaswamy,Terry CollinsandPhillip M. Bailey, USA TODAY

    This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Pope Leo responds to Trump's Truth Social post. What did it say?

    What's going on with Donald Trump and Pope Leo? A timeline

    The contentious back-and-forth betweenPresident Donald Trump and Pope Leo XIVcontinued over the weekend, with the president lashing out...
    Hockey coach admits using a false COVID-19 vaccine certificate to enter China for Olympics

    ZURICH (AP) — Swiss ice hockey coach Patrick Fischer has admitted he used a certificate falsely claiming he'd been vaccinated against COVID-19 to get aroundChina's travel restrictionsfor the2022 Winter Olympics.

    Associated Press

    In a statement late Monday, Fischer said he made a “serious mistake in this matter” by traveling to Beijing with the Switzerland men's team using false paperwork.

    “I'm very sorry if I've disappointed people with this situation,” Fischer said. “I was in an extraordinary personal crisis because I didn't want to be vaccinated. At the same time I certainly didn't want to let my team down at the Olympic Games.”

    Swiss public broadcaster SRF said it confronted Fischer with documents showing he was fined nearly 39,000 Swiss francs ($50,000) by local authorities in 2023 for document forgery after buying the certificate on social media. SRF said he went public with his admission shortly after.

    Switzerland hosts the world championship next month. Fischer was already due to step down after that and the Swiss Ice Hockey Federation said it considers the matter closed.

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    Fischer is one of Switzerland's most successful hockey coaches ever. He's been in the post since 2015 and took the team to three Olympics as well as winning three silver medals at the world championship.

    His team reached the quarterfinals at the 2022 Olympics, whereCOVID-19 testingwas a requirement and theNHL stayed awaybecause of the pandemic.

    Ahead of the 2022 Olympics, China had some of the strictest COVID-19 rules in the world. It insisted any athletes heading to the Games had to either be vaccinated against COVID-19 or sit out a three-week quarantine in a hotel, asSwiss snowboarder Patrizia Kummerdid.

    The International Olympic Committee didn't immediately respond to a request for comment.

    AP sports:https://apnews.com/sports

    Hockey coach admits using a false COVID-19 vaccine certificate to enter China for Olympics

    ZURICH (AP) — Swiss ice hockey coach Patrick Fischer has admitted he used a certificate falsely claiming he'd been vaccinated again...

     

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