Fantasy Baseball: 'Avoid selling high' on CJ Abrams  — skill vs. luck verdicts for key hitters

When a hitter is performing well or struggling, the first question I ask myself is, “Why and how?” Then I ask, “What’s going on under the hood?” It’s easy to get lost in the weeds with all the advanced metrics available, but the goal is to make this information digestible. Have these hitters been fortunate or unfortunate? Or have any skills changed within their profile? Will these hitters continue finding success? Or will they bounce back from their struggles?

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Reach out on X (@corbin_young21) if you’re interested in me diving into specific hitters.

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CJ Abrams, Nationals (98% Rostered)

After nearly averaging 20 home runs and 30 stolen bases over the past two seasons, CJ Abrams could surpass that in 2026. Abrams has been fortunate, with a career-high BABIP (.336), supporting a career-best batting average. Interestingly, Abrams’ contact rate was a career low (72.6%), making us wonder whether his 10% walk rate can be sustained with similar chase and swing rates in 2026 compared to the career averages. For context, Abrams had a 77.9% contact rate and 35% chase rate throughout his career.

Speaking of luck, Abrams’ home run rate (HR/F) reached a career-high at 16.9% in 2026, mainly supported by his 6.8% barrel rate per plate appearance. Besides the increased barrel rate, Abrams has shown consistent bat speed, pull rates and flyball rates, evidenced by a 21-22% pulled air rate over the past few seasons. Like the rest of Abrams’ profile, his barrel rate was a career high, two percentage points above his career average (4.8%).

Fantasy Baseball: 'Avoid selling high' on CJ Abrams — skill vs. luck verdicts for key hitters

When a hitter is performing well or struggling, the first question I ask myself is, “Why and how?” Then I ask, “What’s going on under t...
Who should the Boston Celtics sign with the midlevel exception?

Who should the Boston Celtics sign with the midlevel exception? The Celtics are set to start retooling the roster after a stinging early exit from the 2026 NBA Eastern Conference Playoffs at the hands of thePhiladelphia 76ers. Celtics President of Basketball Operations Brad Stevens made it clear changes are coming, and the full nontaxpayer midlevel exception of about $15 million is a tool the front office is very likely to use to such an end.

Celtics Wire

The size of the deal will make it possible for Boston to stay under the luxury tax for the second season in a row to shed its repeater status and enable greater spending for the future. What are the team's positions of need -- and which players might be able to fill them at this salary level?

The folks behind the "Green With Envy" YouTube channel put together a clip from a recent episode talking about this issue. Check it out below!

Listen to "Havlicek Stole the Pod" on:

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Blue Wire:https://tiny.ee/CdKp

iTunes:https://tiny.ee/RK47

YouTube:https://tiny.ee/cOW3

This article originally appeared on Celtics Wire:Who should the Celtics sign with the midlevel exception?

Who should the Boston Celtics sign with the midlevel exception?

Who should the Boston Celtics sign with the midlevel exception? The Celtics are set to start retooling the roster after a stinging earl...
Jimmy Kimmel urges viewers to boycott CBS after Stephen Colbert's final show: 'Don't ever watch it again'

Jimmy Kimmel slammed CBS hours before Stephen Colbert will air his final episode of The Late Show.

Entertainment Weekly Stephen Colbert and guest Jimmy Kimmel on 'The Late Show' in 2025Credit: Scott Kowalchyk/CBS via Getty

Key Points

  • "Don't ever watch it again," Kimmel told viewers of the network.

  • Colbert's show is ending over what many suspect was political pressure.

Jimmy Kimmelhas urged viewers to boycott Paramount-owned CBS afterStephen Colbert's finalLate Showbroadcast later Thursday evening.

Hours before the longtime Donald Trump critic's last episode — following what many speculated was CBS' politically motivated cancellation of the show — Colbert's fellow late-night host came to his defense.

"I think you know how I feel about the fact that they're being pushed out," Kimmel told his audience in his monologue for Wednesday night's episode of his own talk show,Jimmy Kimmel Live. "I hope the people who did the pushing feel ashamed of themselves tonight, although I know they probably won't."

He continued, "But, that being said, I think it's most important to congratulate Stephen and the team at theLate Showfor all the great work. It has been a pleasure to work alongside you. I will be watching tomorrow night."

Kimmel then told his audience to turn CBS off for good after Colbert's final episode. "Don't ever watch it again, but watch tomorrow night to wish Stephen and our friends at theLate Showa fond farewell," he said.

"Now let's talk about the a--hole that forced them off the air," he continued, referring to Trump.

Earlier in the monologue, Kimmel praised Colbert and his team for their professionalism over the years.

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"Everyone at that show has always been very gracious to us. We never felt like we were competing against them," Kimmel said. "It was nothing like the old days of late night."

CBS announced in July 2025 that it was canceling theLate Showafter it spent 33 years on the air, and after Colbert regularly criticized Trump and his administration.

Though the network maintained that the cancellation was a "financial decision against a challenging backdrop in late night," a slew of celebrities spoke out against the move, which came amid Paramount's merger with David Ellison's Skydance media group. Many speculated that the end of Colbert's show was the result of political tensions — an effort to minimize complications with the Federal Communications Commission amid the merger deal.

Stephen Colbert and Jimmy KimmelCredit: FOX Image Collection via Getty

David Letterman, who recently visitedThe Late Showto help Colbert say goodbye, slammed CBS in a series of remarks onThe Barbara Gaines Showin 2025, referring to those in charge at the network as the "goons at CBS."

Get your daily dose of entertainment news, celebrity updates, and what to watch with ourEW Dispatch newsletter.

"They did not do the correct thing," he said. "They did not handle Stephen Colbert, the face of that network, in the way he deserves to have been handled. That's what I think."

Entertainment Weeklyhas reached out to a representative for CBS for comment.

Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

Jimmy Kimmel urges viewers to boycott CBS after Stephen Colbert's final show: 'Don't ever watch it again'

Jimmy Kimmel slammed CBS hours before Stephen Colbert will air his final episode of The Late Show. Key Points ...
The United Nations' top court will issue an advisory opinion on the right to strike

THE HAGUE, Netherlands (AP) — The United Nations’ top court is set Thursday to issue a landmark advisory opinion on the right to strike, clarifying whether employees are lawfully allowed to walk off the job.

Associated Press

The 15 judges at theInternational Court of Justicewere asked in 2023 by the International Labor Organization, a U.N. agency, to settle an internal dispute over whether one of the ILO’s conventions gives workers the right to strike.

The convention has been ratified by 158 countries and is incorporated into U.N. labor standards, guidelines from the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development and international trade agreements. The United States is a member of the ILO, but hasn't ratified the convention.

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Advisory opinions aren't legally binding but carry significant weight and the decision could have a worldwide impact on labor regulations.

A number of U.N. agencies can ask the ICJ to weigh in on legal questions and issue advisory opinions. Last year, the court said ina landmark advisory opinionthat countries could be in violation of international law, if they fail to take measures to protect the planet fromclimate change.

During hearings in October, the court in The Hague heard from 18 countries and five international organizations, including the ILO, with a number of other countries submitting written arguments. The majority of participants favored the right to strike.

The United Nations' top court will issue an advisory opinion on the right to strike

THE HAGUE, Netherlands (AP) — The United Nations’ top court is set Thursday to issue a landmark advisory opinion on the right to strike...
Rashee Rice's jail stint could derail knee surgery rehab and cost him millions in contract money

If you thought the worst part about Rashee Rice's poor conduct wastesting positive for marijuana, which broke a condition of his probation and resulted in him being sent to jail, then you'd be wrong.

Fox News

Yes, spending 30 days in jail is obviously not a good experience.

But Rice's timing is atrocious.

And self-defeating on multiple levels.

Rashee Rice Jailed For 30 Days And It Could Get Worse

Wide receiver Rashee Rice of the Kansas City Chiefs being interviewed at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas

That's because Rice is spending the next few weeks in the Dallas County jail until his scheduled release on June 16 at a time he needs to be rehabilitating from knee surgery that he had last week, Fox News and OutKick have confirmed.

Read On The Fox News App

The surgery was a cleanup procedure on his right knee to remove loose bodies that were causing theKansas City Chiefsreceiver inflammation and discomfort. The rehabilitation from the surgery was expected to keep Rice out of the team's offseason program including OTAs and mandatory minicamp for the next two months.

Patrick Mahomes Says He Has To Be Held Back From Pushing So Hard In Injury Rehab, Shares Hopes For Week 1

Rice was nonetheless expected to be ready for thestart of training campin July.

But that was assuming he could stick to the prescribed rehabilitation program that is typical for world-class athletes needing to regain total function of a knee following surgery. That means diligent, intense work with trainers and on equipment not found at most people's homes or gyms.

And certainly not in the Dallas County jail.

Rashee Rice scoring a receiving touchdown in front of Malik Hooker at AT&T Stadium

Rice is in jail the first month of his rehabilitation program and that could adversely affect his timeline for a complete recovery from what was an otherwise routine procedure. One medical source said if it was known Rice would miss the first month of rehabilitation, doctors would have advised he wait on the surgery until after his jail time.

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All of this is happening to Rice because he got caught violating conditions of his probation. Riceknewhe must submit to random urine samples "to determine the use of illicit drugs or alcohol."

Heknewhe was not allowed to "possess, consume, or purchase any alcoholic beverages, or illegalcontrolled substancesduring the term of supervision."

And yet, he tested positive for THC (marijuana).

Rice's probation stems, of course, from his2024 automobile wreckin which he was speeding and left multiple people injured, and his 2025 conviction on two third-degree felony charges — causing a collision involving serious bodily injury and racing on a highway causing bodily injury.

The receiver was sentenced to 30 days in jail and five years' probation for his role in that fateful multi-car crash and the sentence he is serving now is the 30 days from the original sentencing.

The timing of this probation violation and how it may affect Rice's recovery from surgery is also going to affect his wallet.

Rashee Rice walking off the field at Empower Field At Mile High in Denver

The receiver has faced multiple setbacks during his time with the Chiefs. He's had toserve a six-game NFL suspensionbased on his conviction and missed most of the 2024 season with a knee injury.

Click Here To Download The Fox News App

All that no doubt caused the Chiefs to discuss whether or not to give Rice a contract extension this offseason as he heads into the final year of his rookie contract. The possibility of that extension is on hold, at least for now, per a league source.

That means in a league that is paying top 10 wide receivers anywhere from $30 to $42 million per season on average, Rice has hurt himself.

He's cost himself some trust within the Chiefs organization, he's possibly cost himself the ability to be ready for the start of training camp, and he's likely cost himself millions of dollars.

Follow Armando Salguero On X: @Armandosalguero

Original article source:Rashee Rice's jail stint could derail knee surgery rehab and cost him millions in contract money

Rashee Rice's jail stint could derail knee surgery rehab and cost him millions in contract money

If you thought the worst part about Rashee Rice's poor conduct wastesting positive for marijuana, which broke a condition of his pr...
Taylor Swift had a perfect Jerome Bettis description, per Travis Kelce

Taylor Swift may not have been a football expert before starting to date Travis Kelce, but she's becoming one now. The 14-time Grammy winner and 3-time Super Bowl champ started dating in the summer of 2023 before getting engaged in August 2025. Swift has been a mainstay at Kansas City Chiefs home games, turning into the type of fan that yells at big plays andhas opinions on the team's draft picks. Now she's learning about NFL legends like former Pittsburgh Steelers running back Jerome Bettis.

USA TODAY

Kelce relayed a story on the most recent episode of theNew Heightspodcast about running into Bettis at dinner in Florida. "I was like telling Tay about him like, 'That dude was a [expletive] beast.'" Kelce told his brother Jason, who agreed vociferously with the description. "He was [expletive] running dudes over."

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Travis then said he showed his fiancée old highlights of Bettis'. "She was like, 'Why does he look like an offensive lineman running with the football?'"

"Because he was THE BUS," Kelce finished saying. Nailed it in one, Taylor.

This article originally appeared on For The Win:Taylor Swift told Travis Kelce about Jerome Bettis description

Taylor Swift had a perfect Jerome Bettis description, per Travis Kelce

Taylor Swift may not have been a football expert before starting to date Travis Kelce, but she's becoming one now. The 14-time Gram...
Barney Frank, a liberal congressman and trailblazer for gay rights, dies. He was 86

WASHINGTON (AP) — Barney Frank, the longtime Democratic congressman and leading liberal who brought new visibility to gay rights and crafted the most significant reforms to the financial system in a generation, has died. He was 86.

Associated Press FILE - House Financial Services Committee Chairman Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., speaks on Capitol Hill in Washington, July 22, 2010. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon, File) FILE - Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass. gestures during his news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington, Nov. 29, 2011. . (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais, File) FILE - House Financial Services Committee Chairman Barney Frank, D-Mass., presides over the committee's hearing on Capitol Hill in Washignton, Feb. 11, 2009. (AP Photo/Haraz N. Ghanbari, File) FILE - Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., speaks about his impending retirement during an interview with The Associated Press on Capitol Hill in Washington, Dec. 12, 2012. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite, File) FILE - House Financial Services Committee Chairman Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass. speaks during a markup of legislation on Capitol Hill in Washington, Oct. 20, 2009. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh, File)

Obit Barney Frank

Frank died late Tuesday, according to Jim Segel, Frank’s former campaign manager and close friend.

After representing broad swaths of Boston's suburbs in Congress for 32 years, Frank and his husbandmoved to Ogunquit, Maine. He entered hospice there in April with congestive heart failure and is survived by his husband, Jim Ready, and sisters, the longtime Democratic strategist Ann Lewis and Doris Breay, along with brother David Frank.

A self-described “left-handed gay Jew,” Frank was known for his acerbic wit, combative style and focus on marginalized communities. He represented the party's left wing while keeping close with Democratic leaders who sometimes frustrated progressives.

He is best known as a pioneer forLGBTrights. After decades of grappling with his sexuality, he publicly came out as gay in 1987, the first member of Congress to do so voluntarily. With his 2012 marriage to Ready, he became the first incumbent lawmaker on Capitol Hill to marry someone of the same sex.

But in an April interview as he entered hospice, Frank said he hoped he would be remembered for advocating a brand of politics that embraced progressive ideals without forcing them on voters prematurely. It is an approach he feared was being rejected as Democrats prepare for what could be a rollicking primary as they hope to retake the White House in 2028 and move past the Trump era.

“I hope I made the point that the best way to accomplish the improvements in our society that we need, particularly in making it less unfair economically and socially, is by conventional political methods,” Frank said. “The main obstacle to our defeating populism and going further in the right direction is that mainstream Democrats have to make it clear that we oppose that part of the agenda of our friends on the left that is politically unacceptable. They're right about a lot of things but you have to have some discretion.”

“You should not take the most unpopular parts of your agenda and make them litmus tests," he added. “And that's what my friends on the left have been doing.”

Frank's path to public life

Born in 1940 in Bayonne, New Jersey, Frank wrote in his 2015 memoir that he was drawn to public life afterEmmett Till, a Black 14-year-old from Chicago, was lynched by white men in Mississippi. Frank would volunteer in Mississippi during the Freedom Summer of 1964, though he acknowledged the fast-talking style was a challenge in the Deep South.

“My direct organizing of Mississippi voters was limited by the fact that my accent (to this day more New Jersey than New England), my poor diction, and my rapid speech, especially when I got excited, rendered me largely incomprehensible to rural Mississippians of both races,” he wrote.

He entered politics in 1968 as an aide to Boston Mayor Kevin White before winning a seat in the Massachusetts House in 1972. Frank was elected to Congress in 1980, an otherwise dismal year for Democrats as the party lost dozens of seats in the U.S. House and Republican Ronald Reagan won the White House.

Frank's pragmatic style surfaced early in his congressional career. He joined the liberal Democratic Study Group to help push then-Speaker Tip O'Neill, D-Mass., to respond more aggressively to the Reagan administration. But Frank said he found himself more often agreeing with O'Neill's less confrontational approach.

Years later, as Congress prepared to pass a massive tax overhaul package, Frank intended to vote “no,” opposed to the bill's lowering of top tax rates. He changed his mind, however, when he worked out a deal boosting affordable housing tax credits.

“I was happy to sacrifice my ideological purity to improve legislation that was going to become law with or without me,” he wrote.

Rep. Nancy Pelosi, the California Democrat and former House speaker, called Frank an “idealist to the nth degree.”

“The goals, the vision, the promise of it all,” she recalled in an interview. “Nobody could ever surpass what he brought to the table in that regard.”

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Making history in Congress

Through his early years in Washington, Frank led something of a double life.

Privately, he socialized in the city's gay circles and had relationships but did not publicly acknowledge his sexuality. The media at the time rarely reported that someone was gay unless that person was involved in a scandal. When Frank in 1987 invited a reporter to his office to formally ask whether the congressman was gay, Frank responded, “yeah, so what?”

Other elected leaders, perhaps most notably San Francisco's Harvey Milk, had come out years before. Members of Congress, including Rep. Gerry Studds, D-Mass., were previously outed through scandal.

Frank's approach made him the most prominent gay leader in national politics for much of the 1980s and 1990s. He helped secure AIDS funding and pressed the Democratic Clinton administration, unsuccessfully, to lift a ban on gays serving in the military.

But there were low points, too, most notably an overwhelming 1987 House vote to reprimand him for poor judgment involving a male prostitute he hired in 1985. Rep. Newt Gingrich of Georgia, the Republican whip at the time, pressed for the more severe punishment of censure, which was rejected by a large margin.

Frank became something of a punch line among conservative Republicans, with House Majority Leader Dick Armey, R-Texas, calling him “Barney Fag” in 1995. Armey said he misspoke and later apologized from the House floor.

Along the way, Frank became known as one of the most quotable lawmakers in Congress.

Regarding abortion, he said Republicans believed “life begins at conception and ends at birth,” criticizing the party's push to curb social programs. After Ken Starr released a report describing President Bill Clinton's relationship with Monica Lewinsky in sometimes intimate detail, Frank said it required “too much reading about heterosexual sex.”

Rep. Steny Hoyer, D-Md., entered Congress the same year as Frank and he recalled his former colleague: “You may get a blow, but it was softened by the humor that came with it."

To Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass, Frank's "one-liners were wicked and wickedly funny. Barney delivered for working people, and the world is a poorer place without him.”

Presiding over a financial overhaul

By 2007, Frank was the chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, where he would leave his lasting policy mark as the U.S. economy careened toward collapse. He worked with the Republican Bush administration to pass a rescue package, providing vital support to financial institutions but spurring a populist revolt that still courses through American politics.

Once the initial crisis eased, Frank helped develop the most significant reform legislation since the New Deal. Working with then-Senate Banking Committee Chairman Chris Dodd, D-Conn., the Dodd-Frank Act would enhance consumer protections, impose new capital requirements for banks and boost the ability of regulators to monitor risk.

“Barney and I shared a fantastic relationship," Dodd said. "I had many good moments in those 36 years in Congress, but none more significant, joyful, or productive than those almost two years working with Barney on our banking bill.”

During President Donald Trump's second term, his Republican administration has worked to roll back many of the legislation's provisions, arguing they were too onerous.

Frank faced his toughest reelection campaign in years in 2010 as the tea party wave swept over American politics. He opted against running again in 2012, though remained engaged in politics long after leaving Congress, including spending time as a contributor to the conservative Newsmax network.

He remained a fierce critic of Trump. Asked for his prediction on who might succeed the president, Frank said “unfortunately I won't get to vote for it.”

Barney Frank, a liberal congressman and trailblazer for gay rights, dies. He was 86

WASHINGTON (AP) — Barney Frank, the longtime Democratic congressman and leading liberal who brought new visibility to gay rights and cr...

 

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