Category Archives: Sports

Wisconsin after Paul Chryst: Can any candidate top Jim Leonhard? How good is Badgers job?

The Paul Chryst era at Wisconsin is suddenly over. Chryst was fired Sunday, one day after a 34-10 loss to Illinois and former head coach Bret Bielema dropped the Badgers to 2-3. Defensive coordinator Jim Leonhard will take over as interim head coach.

“After a heartfelt and authentic conversation with Coach Chryst about what is in the long-term best interest of our football program, I have concluded that now is the time for a change in leadership,” athletic director Chris McIntosh said in a release. “Paul is a man of integrity who loves his players. I have great respect and admiration for Paul and the legacy of him and his family at the University of Wisconsin.

“I also have confidence in Jim Leonhard to guide the program for the remainder of the season. There is still a lot of season left to play and I know Jim will do a great job while the program is under his leadership.”

Chryst went 67-26 as Wisconsin’s head coach, including 9-4 last season. He won three Big Ten West division championships and reached three New Year’s Six bowl games, winning two of them. The Badgers haven’t been at their standard for a while, though. They are 15-10 over the past three seasons and have lost two home games at Camp Randall Stadium already this year, along with a 52-21 loss at Ohio State.

Chryst’s 67 wins at Wisconsin are the third-most in program history. Bielema is second with 68.



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Skull Session: Ohio State Dominates Rutgers Again, A Fake Punt Fiasco Goes Viral and Miyan Williams Joins Two Buckeye Greats in the Record Books

Happy Michigan State week, Eleven Warriors readers.

Ohio State is 5-0 and on the go after defeating Rutgers, and I’m sure you all know what the best part about being 5-0 is…

Let’s have a good Monday, shall we?

Wait. One more quick thing. Check out this monster block from Cade Stover.

OK, have a good Monday. See you in the comment section.

 CONSISTENT DOMINANCE. When Rutgers became a member institution in the Big Ten in 2014, then-commissioner Jim Delany cited the Scarlet Knights’ “athletic excellence” as one of his driving factors for adding the school.

Eight years later, the only thing I consider excellent about Rutgers is its ability to be a doormat for Ohio State every season. According to ESPN, the Buckeyes’ nine straight performances of at least 49 points against the Scarlet Knights represent the longest streak of any team against a single opponent since 1936.

 FAKE PUNT FIASCO. I can’t bring up Ohio State’s 49-10 win over Rutgers without mentioning the Buckeyes’ fake punt that went viral on Saturday. There’s just too much that happened on and after this play not to talk about it.

With a little over 10 minutes remaining and Ohio State up 39 points, Jesse Mirco was set to punt the football to Rutgers. Instead, the rugby-style punter saw a lane open up in front of him and took off for a 22-yard gain. At the end of the run, Rutgers wide receiver Aaron Cruickshank delivered a late hit. That’s when all hell broke loose.

To be clear, it wasn’t a designed fake. The Scarlet Knights had eight players at the line of scrimmage and sent the house to block the punt. After Ohio State successfully defended the rush, Mirco recognized nobody stood between him and the first-down marker, so he tucked the ball under his shoulder and ran. That’s how his teammate, Noah Ruggles, sees it, at least.

After Cruickshank’s hit and the ensuing scrums, Greg Schiano sprinted across the field to confront Ryan Day and break up the scuffle. The coaches shared some choice words as things got heated in Columbus.

In his postgame press conference, Day said he has “no hard feelings” for Schiano and added that he has “unbelievable respect” for the former Buckeye assistant. Whether or not you believe that is up to you, as is what to make of the fake punt by Mirco.

I won’t go as far as to say that the Ohio State coaches approved of Mirco’s decision to fake the punt, but he must have done something right to earn the program’s special teams player of the week award.

 FEED. MIYAN. How about Miyan Williams’ performance against Rutgers? The third-year running back took his 21 carries for 189 yards and five touchdowns on Saturday. His five scores tied him with Pete Johnson (vs. North Carolina, 1975) and Keith Byars (vs. Illinois, 1984) for Ohio State’s single-game rushing touchdown record.

“It’s a blessing to be up there with them names,” Williams said after the game. “Those are legends here, so it’s definitely a blessing.”

Williams is right about Johnson and Byars being Buckeye legends. Their names are littered throughout the program record book on the football website. While they’re not Archie Griffin – who played with Johnson – or Eddie George, both running backs deserve a seat at the table of the greatest ball carriers in Ohio State history.

Let’s look at how those legends played in their five-touchdown games, starting first with Johnson’s performance against the Tar Heels:

Sept. 27, 1975: Ohio State 32 – North Carolina 7

Pete Johnson: 26 carries, 148 yards, 5 TDs

  • 2Q, 3:20 – Johnson 2-yard TD run
  • 2Q, 0:31 – Johnson 5-yard TD run
  • 3Q, 8:32 Johnson 1-yard TD run
  • 4Q, 13:01 – Johnson 2-yard TD run
  • 4Q, 8:48 Johnson 3-yard TD run

Fun fact: Griffin had 22 carries for 157 yards in this game and won his second Heisman Trophy at the end of the year.

Oct. 13, 1984: Ohio State 45 – Illinois 38

Keith Byars: 39 carries, 274 yards, 5 TDs

  • 2Q, 4:13 – Byars 16-yard TD run
  • 2Q, 0:23 – Byars 4-yard TD run
  • 3Q, 13:40 – Byars 1-yard TD run
  • 3Q, 8:57 – Byars 67-yard TD run
  • 4Q, 0:36 – Byars 3-yard TD run

Fun fact: Byars lost his shoe about halfway through his 67-yard touchdown run in the third quarter. Despite that, he still sped past the Illinois defense and ran all the way to the end zone. As you can imagine, Ohio Stadium went crazy.

Williams was right. Johnson and Byars are Ohio State legends, and these two games from them are only a small part of their stories as Buckeyes. May Williams’ five-touchdown performance against Rutgers be only a small part of his (possibly legendary) story here, too.

 A WISH GRANTED (KIND OF). If Ohio State’s season ended after the Rutgers game, Ryan Day would have his preseason expectations of a top-10 defense met by Jim Knowles and the Silver Bullets.

The Buckeyes have the No. 10 total defense (263.8 YPG) and No. 14 scoring defense (14.80 PPG) in the country through five games. Additionally, Ohio State has the No. 7 passing defense (153.4 YPG) in the NCAA this season.

When using conference-only statistics, Knowles’ unit ranks No. 2 in scoring defense, No. 1 passing defense and No. 8 rushing defense in the Big Ten after Ohio State’s wins over Wisconsin and Rutgers in the last two games.

The Buckeyes will face a spiraling Michigan State team this weekend, which should only improve their defensive standing nationally and in the Big Ten, as the Spartans’ offense has struggled to consistently produce in three consecutive losses.

With that said, Ohio State’s defense is well on its way to meeting Day’s expectations for a top-10 defense. However, it still has some work to do if it wants to meet Knowles’ expectations of a top-five unit. As for Andy Vance, we expected the Buckeye defense to suck 30% less than they did last season, so they’re doing fine in his book.

It’s time for Knowles, Tommy Eichenberg, Steele Chambers and the rest of the Buckeyes to keep this thing moving.

 SONG OF THE DAY. “Cigarette Daydreams” by Cage the Elephant.

 CUT TO THE CHASE. Chesapeake Bay lighthouse auctioned, with strings attached… Moose back on the loose after rescuers free it from fence… Hurricane Ian ‘street shark’ video defies belief… John Stamos looks back on mindset during sobriety struggles.



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Winners and Losers of NFL Week 4

Every week of the 2022 NFL season, we will celebrate the electric plays, investigate the colossal blunders, and explain the inexplicable moments of the most recent slate. Welcome to Winners and Losers. Which one are you?


Winner: Cooper Rush, Perfectionist

The great ones are not undefeated. Tom Brady has lost dozens of games in his career, including multiple Super Bowls. Michael Jordan starred in an iconic Nike commercial called “Failure” about all the game-winning shots he’d missed. Cy Young, the guy the Cy Young Award is named after, is baseball’s all-time leader in losses. Greatness means you stick around for a while, and the longer you stick around, the more impossible it is to be perfect.

Cooper Rush, for now, is perfect. The Cowboys’ backup quarterback has started four games in five NFL seasons, three of them this year—and he’s won all of them. Sunday, he threw for 223 yards and two touchdowns in a convincing 25-10 win over the Commanders:

Things looked bleak for the Cowboys after Week 1. Not only did they get demolished in a 19-3 loss to the Buccaneers, but they lost Dak Prescott to a thumb injury which required surgery. They had failed to score a touchdown with Prescott, their Pro Bowl franchise QB with a $160 million contract—and now they were going to Rush, an undrafted 28-year-old who hadn’t seriously threatened to be a starter at any point in his pro career. The Cowboys actually cut him in 2020 when they signed Andy Dalton to be their backup, and there wasn’t much interest in him—the Giants put him on their practice squad for a few months and then cut him. He found his way back to Dallas and started a game in 2021 when Prescott was injured, but when people produced rankings of the NFL’s backup quarterbacks, he wasn’t even considered one of the mediocre ones.

But Rush has been effective. In each of his three starts this season, he has thrown for at least 200 yards, and he has yet to throw an interception. The Cowboys have scored between 20 and 25 points in each of those games. They have been consistent, if not explosive.

There has been discussion of whether the Cowboys should stick with Rush when Prescott is healthy—including comments from team owner Jerry Jones in which he said he would welcome a quarterback dilemma. (Jerry Jones loves making comments. Nobody makes more comments.) Of course, this discourse dumb: Prescott is a better passer, a better runner, and the Cowboys’ franchise player whose $31 million salary in 2023 is already guaranteed. In The Ringer’s QB rankings, Steven Ruiz has Prescott ranked ninth and Rush 32nd. Prescott has averaged 258 passing yards per game in his career; Rush has yet to throw for 250 yards in his three wins this season—so the best we’ve seen out of him is slightly worse than Dak’s average. When Prescott comes back—which could happen next week—he obviously should start.

And besides, I want Cooper Rush to make history. Right now, Rush holds the record for most quarterback starts without a loss. Entering Sunday’s game against Washington, he was tied at 3-0 with Ed Rubbert, Washington’s QB during the 1987 player strike (and the inspiration for Keanu Reeves’s character, Shane Falco, in The Replacements). Rubbert eventually stopped playing because the strike ended, preserving his perfect record. For Rush to stay undefeated, he probably needs Prescott to come back and reclaim the starting job. The Cowboys are not the 1972 Miami Dolphins: They’ve gone 3-0 with Rush thanks to an easy schedule and a defense which hasn’t allowed 20 points in a game yet this season. If Rush keeps playing, he will eventually lose.

For now, Rush has saved the Cowboys’ season. They’ve gone from 0-1 and rudderless to 3-1 and in the playoff hunt in the weak NFC. And he has a chance to be perfect—which you can only do if you’re not one of the great ones.


Loser: Kenny Pick-it

The Pittsburgh Steelers have turned the page at quarterback, subbing in rookie first-round pick Kenny Pickett for Mitchell Trubisky at halftime in their game against the Jets. Unfortunately, it’s a page from one of those Choose Your Own Adventure books where you turn to page 74 and page 74 simply reads “An anvil fell on your head and you were eaten by a jaguar. You are dead.”

Pickett entered the game with the Steelers trailing the Jets 10-6. The home crowd roared when Pickett took his first dropback, with fans’ anticipation growing as he stood in the pocket and focused his eyes downfield, preparing to throw a massive bomb. That first pass was … poorly thrown, into double coverage, tipped and intercepted:

Things improved quickly from there. Pickett led back-to-back touchdown drives, finishing both with touchdown runs, and the Steelers went up 20-10 in the fourth quarter. But with just over three minutes to go, Pickett threw another pick, this one a high throw that his receiver couldn’t bring in:

The Jets took the ball and took the lead. Pickett had one final chance for a touchdown, but his Hail Mary was intercepted.

Pickett is the 13th QB in NFL history to start his career with a zero-touchdown, three-interception game, joining such legends as Matt Barkley, Brandon Weeden, and Will Grier. (Good news! Matthew Stafford did it too!) However, Pickett is the first player with a zero-touchdown, three-interception debut whose last name is also a homonym for “intercept my pass, please.”

If you’ll allow me to take my hater hat off for just a second: The move to Pickett is indisputably a good one for the Steelers. Pickett means significantly more to the future of the franchise than Trubisky does, so the sooner Mike Tomlin made this move, the better. And there were good early signs: Pittsburgh scored more points and gained more yards with Pickett in the game than Trubisky. Every one of Pickett’s passes that wasn’t intercepted was a completion, and honestly, if we look at them in a vacuum, the interceptions weren’t that bad—at least one could’ve been caught, and one was a Hail Mary. And this is without Pickett getting QB1 reps in practice. He’ll get better.

OK, hater hat back on: The Steelers debuted their first-round pick at QB, and he threw three interceptions in one half and blew a double-digit lead at home against the freakin’ New York Jets. He couldn’t even gain the distinction of becoming the first rookie to throw a touchdown pass this season—that honor went to the Pats’ Bailey Zappe, a fourth-round pick from Western Kentucky who was forced into his first action of the year after Brian Hoyer suffered a concussion. Pickett’s introduction to the NFL is about to get even meaner: Assuming Tomlin keeps Pickett as starter, his next four games will be against the Bills, Bucs, Dolphins, and Eagles.

Winner: Patrick Mahomes

For a while, I thought the most impressive thing about Patrick Mahomes was that he could throw the ball really far. And he can! He might be able to throw it farther than anybody in the NFL, although I’d put money on Josh Allen. There are a lot of other impressive things about Mahomes: His many different arm angles on throws; his ability to throw receivers open; his accuracy on the move, and more.

But I think what it really comes down to is this: At any moment on any play, it’s impossible to know what Patrick Mahomes is going to do. His creativity and improvisation are traits which can be defined by this play, one of five touchdowns the Chiefs scored against the supposedly stout Tampa Bay defense in a 41-31 win Sunday night.

Mahomes outran one defender, hit another with a 360-degree spin, then appeared ready to take off for the end zone. But at the last second, he flicked the ball toward the back of the end zone, leading Clyde Edwards-Helaire to catch a touchdown nobody was expecting. Some compared Mahomes’s play to that of a basketball star—you can picture Steph Curry hitting that spin move/pull-up floater one-two combo. But Mahomes didn’t just have to find the hoop. He had to convince Edwards-Helaire to head to the back of the end zone to make this play. The screenshot is almost more unbelievable than the video:

Mahomes doesn’t just do this stuff because it’s fun. The Chiefs scored 41 points on the Bucs—14 points more than all three of Tampa Bay’s opponents in their first three games combined. The Bucs were leading the NFL in scoring defense before Sunday night, and now they’re tied for fifth.

I don’t know who is the NFL’s best player—and I also know answering that question could cause wars. But I know who is my favorite guy to watch.

Loser: Trevor Lawrence’s Butterfingers

When a running back fumbles the ball, it’s common for coaches to bench them—for the rest of the half, for the rest of the game, maybe for the rest of their career. As the expression goes, ball security is job security. But when a quarterback fumbles the ball? There’s generally no consideration of a substitute. QB1 is QB1.

Which allowed for one of the strangest performances in recent memory on Sunday—a game in which Jaguars star signal caller Trevor Lawrence was unable to hold onto the ball. Yes, it was rainy in Philadelphia—but lots of QBs have played in the rain before, and most of them don’t randomly drop the ball with no pressure from the defense, which Lawrence did in the second quarter.

Lawrence fumbled four times and the Jaguars didn’t recover any of them. Part of the problem was Lawrence’s lack of pocket awareness against a merciless Eagles defense that sacked him four times and forced two strip-sack fumbles, and part of it was bizarre mistakes by Lawrence.

According to ESPN, Lawrence is the first player since 2000 with four lost fumbles in a game. Last year, the NFL’s leaders in lost fumbles had six for the entire season. Trevor had almost a season’s worth of fumbles in one afternoon!

Last week we praised Lawrence as the potential god-king of Jacksonville. This week, the guy couldn’t hold on to the ball. I guess we’ll see whether this is a rainy-day fluke or an ongoing issue for Lawrence, who hadn’t lost any fumbles in Jacksonville’s first three games this year. Maybe the Jags should build a dome over their stadium just in case.


Winner: British Kicking

Anybody who is not American will make the same joke about the game we play here in the States: “Why do you call it football?” they say. “You don’t even use your feet, and it’s not a ball! Shouldn’t it be called handegg?” And you’ve gotta admit, they have a point. Most of the world’s games that are called “football” are almost entirely based around kicking one thing into another thing—this is true in the game we Americans call soccer, as well as Aussie Rules football and Gaelic football. American football involves some kicking, but the most important things to happen on the field are generally big throws, bruising runs, and cool catches. Kicking plays are afterthoughts, the least exciting parts of the game. But Sunday, we killed that joke. We sent England a stunning display of high-intensity kicking the likes of which they’ve never seen.

With the Saints trailing by three with less than two minutes remaining, New Orleans’s kicker Wil Lutz nailed a 60-yard screamer—a stunning equalizer from the halfway line:

The Vikings quickly drove down the field and went back to their talismanic goal-scorer, Greg Joseph, who tallied his fifth score of the match. His magisterial strike put the Minnesota side in front with the game in its dying moments.

The Saints had 24 seconds remaining to get the ball into field goal range for Lutz. Miraculously, they did, setting up a 61-yard attempt for Lutz, only a yard farther than the one he’d just drilled. His kick seemed destined to send the game into extra time: It had the distance, and seemed to be headed for the back of the kicking net.

But it was off the woodwork … and then off the woodwork again. A Double Doink, from distance:

It was essentially a penalty shootout—and like so many of England’s penalty shootouts, it ended with a stunning miss that left all viewers captivated and baffled. It was football at its finest, in the full sense of the word.

Loser: The Ravens’ Late-Game Strategies

The Ravens might be 4-0 right now if they only played normal football games. Two weeks ago, they had a 28-7 lead on the Dolphins, but allowed four fourth-quarter touchdown passes to Tua Tagovailoa and lost 42-38. And Sunday, they had a 20-3 lead on the Bills, putting the Super Bowl favorites firmly against the ropes. But once again Baltimore frittered away the advantage, and the game was tied 20-20 in the fourth quarter.

With four minutes remaining, the Ravens had the ball on Buffalo’s goal line in a tied game. Facing fourth-and-1, the conventional decision seemed simple: Bring out the NFL’s best kicker, Justin Tucker, and kick a field goal to take a three-point lead. But John Harbaugh is not a conventional coach. With league MVP candidate Lamar Jackson under center, he decided to go for six. But Jackson dropped back, and further back, and further back, and under pressure, threw an interception:

The Ravens defense was struggling, and after getting the ball back with 4:09 remaining, the Bills somewhat easily moved the ball the length of the field. As Buffalo entered field-goal range after the two-minute warning, it became clear that the Bills would be able to kick a game-winning field goal, at which point Baltimore attempted the Madden strategy of allowing a touchdown in order to get the ball back. Unfortunately, second-year edge rusher Odafe Oweh didn’t get the memo, and actually tackled the Bills ballcarrier, Devin Singletary, at the three-yard line. It was the worst tackle of Week 4; the Ravens were forced to take a timeout, Buffalo was able to milk the clock, and Tyler Bass kicked the game-winning field goal as time expired.

Harbaugh is one of the NFL’s longest-tenured and most-respected coaches, but his late-game decisions have backfired a few times as of late. Last year, Baltimore started 8-3 and then lost six consecutive games to miss the postseason by a single game. Five of those losses were by three or fewer points. In two of them, Harbaugh asked his team to attempt go-ahead two-point conversions instead of game-tying extra points, missing both times and losing both games by a single point.

Personally, I like the aggressive mindset, especially when you’ve got Lamar Jackson at QB. But every single button Harbaugh presses seems to be the wrong one—and at a certain point, if you’re wrong every time, it may be time to re-evaluate the thinking.

Winner: DK Metcalf, Poop King

Football fans become filled with confusion and despair when we see players go to the locker room, because in a sport as violent as football, it usually means something awful has happened. Is the player hurt? Is his season over? Will he be the same when he gets back? Sometimes, however, the player just needs to poop.

It’s true: NFL players need to poop sometimes. They have digestive tracts and buttholes, just like regular people! They’re capable of peeing on the sideline without too much trouble, thanks to the privacy of the blue medical tent. But pooping? You can either poop in your pants (which happens) or go to the locker room, like Lamar Jackson did in that Monday Night Football game. And if you take option no. 2 for your no. 2, you could end up missing snaps.

So Seahawks receiver DK Metcalf unlocked a bathroom strategy that could change the pooping game: In the fourth quarter of Sunday’s game in Detroit, he hitched a ride on one of the carts intended for injured players:

At first, people were worried, since players on the injury cart are typically injured. But it was quickly reported that Metcalf was just being practical about his bathroom emergency. It’s reportedly a very long trip from the sideline to the locker room at Ford Field, and Metcalf wanted to conserve time and energy. He explained as much in a postgame tweet: “that clinch walk wouldn’t have made it.”

The choice paid off: Metcalf finished with seven catches for 149 yards in Seattle’s 48-45 win, the highest-scoring game of the NFL season. Clearly, facilitating player poops is a competitive advantage. Every NFL team that doesn’t develop convenient and efficient methods of bathroom transportation for its stars is leaving wins on the table.

Loser: Pre-Dawn Fantasy Chaos

A football fan’s Sunday is like clockwork. You settle in on the couch and set your fantasy lineups at around 12:55 p.m. ET right before the games kick off at 1, then watch SEVEN HOURS OF COMMERCIAL FREE FOOTBALL on NFL RedZone, and follow that with a quick break before Sunday Night Football. But a few times per year, the NFL throws a wrench into the mix by playing games in London, on the other side of the Atlantic Ocean. And because London is in a very different time zone, those games often kick off at 9:30 a.m. ET, extending the football fan’s day from 11 to 14 hours. On Sunday, this resulted in fantasy football chaos.

At 8:07 a.m. ET, ESPN’s Adam Schefter revealed that Alvin Kamara was out of Sunday’s game. Kamara, a first-round pick in the average fantasy league, had been listed as questionable with a rib injury, but about 70 percent of players listed as questionable end up playing. (Like last week against the Panthers, when Kamara was listed as questionable with the same injury, but played and ended up having 61 rushing yards.) Most fantasy players—especially those living on the West Coast, where kickoff came before sunrise in California—probably didn’t think to check their fantasy lineups. According to Yahoo Sports, Kamara remained in the starting lineup in 47 percent of leagues, which means millions of people across the country woke up to realize they’d already made a grievous fantasy error. Here is a rundown of what happened in my four leagues (yes, I know, four is too many leagues):

  • League 1: The commissioner of the league slept through his alarm and told the group chat at 10 a.m. ET that he had “intended to wake up to check [Kamara’s] status but fell asleep before setting [his] alarm,” then requested permission to replace Kamara in his lineup despite the fact that the game had already kicked off. Although his plan was initially met with support, protests soon came. At one point, someone distributed a SurveyMonkey poll to determine whether the retroactive substitution would be allowed. As of publication time, it remains unclear whether the commissioner will abide by the result of the SurveyMonkey.
  • League 2: Kamara’s manager lives in Los Angeles, and did not wake up before kickoff, because nobody in California set an alarm clock for 6:15 a.m. to watch Vikings-Saints.
  • League 3: I called my dad, who doesn’t quite get how fantasy football works but is very enthusiastic about it, ten minutes before kickoff to let him know that Kamara was out. He sounded sleepy and confused by the NFL playing a game in London.
  • League 4: Kamara remained in the lineup, scoring zero points.

So in my four leagues, we would’ve gone 0-for-4 on the Kamara decision if it weren’t for me waking up my dad. Consider this segment a PSA: Giants-Packers kicks off at the same time next Sunday.

Winner: Garett Bolles

As a kid playing football video games, I used to make random players on the field dive at random moments. Of course, a player a few miles from the ball would never hurl himself to the ground for no apparent reason, but the video games allowed me to make them do that. “If that was a real person,” I would think in my little tiny brain, “they would look so stupid.”

My tiny little brain would have very much enjoyed this tackle attempt by Denver offensive lineman Garett Bolles:

Bolles ran a 4.95-second 40-yard dash at the NFL combine in 2017, which is absurdly fast for a 300-pound offensive tackle. No other OT in his class came within 0.2 seconds. Maybe when Raiders cornerback Amik Robertson took off toward the end zone on this fumble recovery, Bolles thought he could catch him. And Bolles gave 110 percent—the platonic ideal of a player playing through the whistle. Watching the video, you can tell that he could probably outsprint you and just about anybody you know that didn’t play sports in college.

But he never came close to catching Robertson, a man with faster legs than Bolles and a big head start. All Bolles could do at the end was flop, like one of the unfortunate bundles of pixels who had the misery of playing on one of my virtual teams back in the day:

All that effort and all that athleticism, and the main result was a viral blooper. You know the lesson.



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Wisconsin Badgers fire Paul Chryst, name Jim Leonhard as interim coach

The Wisconsin Badgers have fired their head football coach Paul Chryst, the school announced on Sunday night. Defensive coordinator Jim Leonhard will be the team’s interim coach.

The move represents a stunning turn of events for Chryst, who won at least 10 games in four of his first five seasons while guiding Wisconsin to three Big Ten championship game appearances during that stretch. But the product on the field steadily declined following the 2019 Rose Bowl campaign.

“After a heartfelt and authentic conversation with Coach Chryst about what is in the long-term best interest of our football program, I have concluded that now is the time for a change in leadership,” said Wisconsin athletic director Chris McIntosh. “Paul is a man of integrity who loves his players. I have great respect and admiration for Paul and the legacy of him and his family at the University of Wisconsin.”

GO DEEPERWisconsin job profile with Paul Chryst out: Pluses, minuses and candidates

Wisconsin finished a pandemic-shortened 2020 season 4-3 by rallying to win its final two games. The Badgers were in position to claim the Big Ten West title last season but suffered a 23-13 loss to rival Minnesota in the regular-season finale and went 9-4 overall. Wisconsin opened this season 2-3 and lost all three of its games against Power 5 opponents.

Washington State defeated Wisconsin 17-14 in Week 2 despite the Badgers being 17.



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‘I hope he still loves me’

Things got heated on the Ravens sideline after a collapse from a 17-point lead in Sunday’s 23-20 loss to the Buffalo Bills.

As time wound down ahead of Tyler Bass’ game-winning field goal for the Bills, Ravens head coach John Harbaugh and cornerback Marcus Peters got into it on the sideline. A CBS camera caught Harbaugh saying something to Peters that Peters clearly didn’t appreciate. Peters then slammed his helmet to the turf and had to be held back as he tried to approach the Ravens head coach.

After the game, Harbaugh addressed the incident while telling reporters that he and his All-Pro cornerback are “on the same page.”

“Emotions run high,” Harbaugh said. “We’re on the same page. We’ve got a great relationship. We’ve got an honest relationship. And I love him. I hope he still loves me. We’ll see.”

Harbaugh didn’t address what prompted the exchange or what exactly was said. Peters didn’t speak with reporters after the game.

What sparked Peters’ outburst?

The loss included some strategic Ravens decisions down the stretch that didn’t work out, most notably a late gamble for a touchdown when a field goal would have given Baltimore the lead.

With the game tied at 20-20, Baltimore faced a fourth-and-goal from the Buffalo 2-yard line with 4:16 remaining in regulation. A chip-shot field goal by the game’s best kicker Justin Tucker would have given the Ravens a 23-20 lead. Harbaugh instead opted to go for a touchdown. Lamar Jackson then threw an interception to Bills safety Jordan Poyer in the end zone.

Short of a lengthy return or a pick-six, the result of the play was a worst-case scenario for Baltimore. Coming up short without a turnover would have pinned the Bills inside their own 2-yard line, an outcome that was surely considered in Harbaugh’s decision to roll the dice. Instead, Buffalo started its ensuing drive from the 20-yard line when the turnover resulted in a touchback. The Bills then marched 77 yards and drained the clock before Bass converted a 21-yard field goal as time expired.

Why did Harbaugh pass on field goal?

Harbaugh explained the decision to reporters.

“I felt like it gave us the best chance to win the game because seven [points], the worst that happens is if they go down the field and score — and I think we’ll get them stopped — but if they go down the field and score a touchdown, the worst thing that can happen is you’re in overtime.

“You kick a field goal there, now it’s not a three-down game anymore, it’s a four-down game. You’re putting them out there, you’re putting your defense at a disadvantage because they’ve got four downs to convert all the way down the field and a chance to again score seven, and then you lose the game on a touchdown.”

It was a decision grounded in analytics that didn’t work out for the Ravens on Sunday. Was it the reason Peters was upset? A later decision by the Ravens defense may have also been in play.

Baltimore Ravens head coach John Harbaugh watches from the sideline in the second half of an NFL football game against the Buffalo Bills Sunday, Oct. 2, 2022, in Baltimore. (AP Photo/Nick Wass)

Ravens tackled Singletary instead of letting him score

Had the Bills actively sought a touchdown once they reached the red zone on their final drive, the Ravens could have allowed the them to score with time on the clock to mount a response. An 8-yard run by Devin Singletary to the 3-yard line was Buffalo’s best opportunity to do so and would have left roughly 1:50 on the clock for Baltimore’s offense. But Bills defenders tackled him.

It’s not clear if Singletary would have gone in for the score or had instructions to give himself up short of the goal line to employ a clock-burning strategy. But that’s the strategy the Bills used after his run. They ran multiple plays inside the 3-yard line to burn clock after Baltimore used its final timeout.

It’s also not clear if either or both of the decisions sparked Peters — or if his anger was completely unrelated. But the Ravens have lost two games in three weeks against top AFC competition in games where they held a double-digit lead. They lost to the Miami Dolphins in Week 2 after leading 28-7 at halftime.

It’s easy to see why tensions are running high.

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Braves sweep Mets, magic number one to clinch NL East

ATLANTA — Matt Olson and Dansby Swanson were too young to fully appreciate what Chipper Jones did when the Mets and Braves had last played a significant late-season series in Atlanta. But the two suburban Atlanta natives imitated Jones as they pushed the defending World Series champs a step away from a fifth straight National League East title.

Showing they are primed to enjoy another deep postseason run, the Braves completed a three-game sweep with a 5-3 win over the Mets on Sunday night at Truist Park. Olson and Swanson both homered in each of the three games, and Atlanta maintained control throughout one of baseball’s biggest series of the year.

Games remaining: 3
Standings update: Braves lead by two games
Tiebreaker info: Atlanta owns the tiebreaker by virtue of winning the head-to-head season series (10-9)
Magic number for NL East: One

“When I came to the park on Friday, I told my wife, ‘Well the playoffs start today,’ and that’s what it felt like the whole playoff weekend,” Braves manager Brian Snitker said. “These guys were ready for that. They were ready to fight that fight.”

The Braves entered June 10 1/2 games behind the Mets, and they lost four of five to New York in early August. But this same resilient bunch that won last year’s World Series despite not having a winning record before August once again finished the regular season strong.

With this sweep, Atlanta notched its 100th win, gained a two-game lead with three games remaining and further trimmed its magic number. The NL East race would be decided with any one Braves win in Miami or any one loss the Mets could suffer against the Nationals. 

The only way the Braves would be denied a division title is if they were to lose three in Miami while the Mets win each of their final three games. 

“Nothing’s done yet,” Swanson said. “This is still part of the journey, and there’s still plenty of time left to go. There’s no point in exhaling. I feel like you just got to continue to go out there and compete and perform each and every day.”

Swanson certainly allowed his competitive spirit to shine. The Braves’ shortstop hit the decisive go-ahead home run off Max Scherzer on Saturday and then energized the home crowd again when he homered in Sunday’s first inning against Chris Bassitt. He aided Friday’s win with a homer off Jacob deGrom. 

Swanson became the first Braves player to homer in all three games of a series against the Mets since Andruw Jones in 2006. Five innings later, Olson became the second.  

Olson and Swanson were just five years old when Chipper Jones hit four home runs within the nine at-bats he totaled during a three-game sweep of the Mets in Atlanta near the end of the 1999 season. New York entered that series one game back of the division lead and left it in second place for good. 

With their performances, Olson and Swanson may have rekindled some of that pain Jones created 23 years ago. 

“I grew up in the, I guess you could call it, ‘hatred era’ from New York fans to Chipper,” Olson said. “And they don’t hate you if you’re not doing anything.”

There was plenty for the Braves to appreciate during this series that began with wins against deGrom and Scherzer. Max Fried battled through a stomach bug to throw five strong innings in the series opener and Kyle Wright captured his 21st win after stumbling through the first inning on Saturday. The bullpen also thrived as Kenley Jansen earned three saves and the relief corps allowed just one run over 12 2/3 innings. 

But the most encouraging development came from Olson, who entered play on Monday hitting .102 with one homer and a .353 OPS over his past 25 games. The first baseman has now homered in five of his past six games, including each of the past four.

Olson, Swanson and Austin Riley all struggled at points over the past two months. But like Jones back in 1999, each of them rose to the occasion just in time to once again seemingly crush the Mets’ hopes for a division title. 

“We’re going to enjoy the sweep and then go down to Miami to take care of business,” Olson said.

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Buccaneers vs. Chiefs score: Live updates, game stats, highlights, streaming for ‘Sunday Night Football’

We’re live with the Week 4 edition of Sunday Night Football, where Tom Brady and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers host Patrick Mahomes and the Kansas City Chiefs. This game almost had to be moved to a neutral site due to the potential destruction of Hurricane Ian, but it instead is being played in Tampa, which thankfully avoided the worst-case scenario of the storm. 

Both of these teams are coming off their first loss of the season, and have put together some disappointing offensive performances of late. Which of them can get back on track in this contest — if any — will presumably play a significant role in determining the winner. The Bucs are still dealing with various injuries, which could make things difficult for them, but they also have possibly the best defense in the league, which could make things difficult for Kansas City. 

So, which quarterback can get his team back to form? We’ll find out soon enough. In the meantime, keep it locked to our live blog throughout the evening as we update you with stats, scores, and highlights. 

How to watch 

Date: Sunday, Oct. 2 | Time: 8:20 p.m. ET
Location: Raymond James Stadium (Tampa)
TV: 
NBC | Stream: fuboTV (try for free)  
Follow: CBS Sports App 
Odds: Buccaneers -1, 45.5 (courtesy of Caesars Sportsbook) 

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Wisconsin coaching candidates: Lance Leipold, Jim Leonhard among leading options to replace Paul Chryst

Wisconsin has a coaching vacancy after eighth-year coach Paul Chryst was fired five games into the season, and it immediately becomes one of the most attractive job openings in college football. Once a Big Ten doormat, Wisconsin has been transformed into a Midwestern power in recent decades. From Barry Alvarez’s first season in 1990, through Bret Bielema, Gary Andersen and now Chryst, Wisconsin has won six Big Ten titles and been to 27 bowl games, including seven Rose Bowls.

While Ohio State and Michigan have dominated the Big Ten throughout its history, Wisconsin has emerged as the conference’s West division power and one of its premier programs. It’s a job that doesn’t come open often. Considering its history and the money flowing into the athletic department thanks to the Big Ten’s latest television deal, it’s the kind of job that could pull away sitting Power Five coaches.

So who will be the next coach of the Badgers? Defensive coordinator Jim Leonhard seems to be an obvious favorite, and he’ll get a seven-game tryout of sorts as the interim, but he’s not guaranteed anything. Here’s a short list of names that could garner interest.

Jim Leonhard, Wisconsin defensive coordinator/interim coach: I genuinely think this is Leonhard’s job to lose. He’s been seen as a coach-in-waiting with the Badgers for a while, though most expected his wait to be a little longer. Still, Leonhard has garnered interest from other Power Five jobs — including a few Big Ten gigs — in the past, and the feeling was he was more interested in waiting for the Wisconsin job to open. Now, he’ll get his chance.

Lance Leipold, Kansas coach: Leipold did a wonderful job building a Buffalo program with little history into a program contending for MAC titles, and he already has Kansas ranked in the AP Top 25 for the first time since 2009 in his second season there. But before Leipold did all that, he led Division III Wisconsin-Whitewater to six national titles while going 109-6 in eight seasons. Leipold is a Wisconsin native, and there’s some thought that one of the reasons Wisconsin made a move on Chryst this early was because it wanted to make a run at Leipold before Nebraska could — or before Kansas could lock him up with a new deal. If it’s not Leonhard, I’d choose Leipold as the most likely candidate.

Matt Campbell, Iowa State coach: Some are wondering if Campbell has waited too long to make the jump from Iowa State. Of course, that assumes he’s ever planned to jump at all. While the Cyclones are only 10-8 overall and 5-6 in Big 12 play since the start of 2021, it’s hard to overlook how well he’s done at one of the country’s most challenging Power Five programs. If Campbell decides Wisconsin is the place to be, you have to think he’d win plenty of games there, too.

Dave Aranda, Baylor coach: Gary Andersen didn’t get much right during his short tenure as Wisconsin coach, but he nailed his defensive coordinator hire. Aranda spent three seasons running the Badgers’ defense before leaving for the same position at LSU. After winning a national title with the Tigers, Aranda took the Baylor job and won the Big 12 last season. He’s a California native who has coached all over the country. If Wisconsin called, he’d have to listen.

Sean Lewis, Kent State coach: This would be a departure from what Wisconsin has been, but it’s about time Lewis started getting Big Ten consideration. Lewis’ Kent State teams have consistently produced up-tempo, high-scoring offenses. The Golden Flashes put up 22 points against Georgia two weeks ago and, after playing one of the most difficult nonconference schedules in the universe, opened conference play with a 31-24 win over Ohio. Like Leonhard, Lewis is a Wisconsin alum as a former tight end for the Badgers.

Dave Doeren, NC State coach: Doeren was the defensive coordinator at Wisconsin from 2006 to 2010 before leaving to become the head coach at Northern Illinois. After winning two conference titles in two years there, he went to NC State, where he’s made the Wolfpack one of the ACC’s toughest programs and churned out NFL Draft picks. Still, in his 10th season at NC State and coming off a loss to Clemson, it’s possible Doeren is wondering if he’s reached his ceiling in Raleigh. Maybe it’s time for a fresh start elsewhere?

Matt Rhule, Carolina Panthers coach: Rhule’s NFL tenure has not gone well, and Carolina Panthers fans would likely pay for his plane ticket to Madison, but Wisconsin fans shouldn’t concern themselves with that. Plenty of good college coaches have flopped in the NFL, returned, and won plenty of games. That Nick Saban guy comes to mind. Anyway, Rhule won more games at Temple than anybody should be able to — he went 20-7 during the 2015 and 2016 seasons — and then quickly turned around a Baylor program fresh out of the depths of the Art Briles fallout. I have no doubt he’d win in Madison, too.

Chris Petersen, Fox analyst: Something of an outside-the-box idea, Petersen is one of the great college coaches of recent vintage. He went 92-12 in eight seasons at Boise State, taking the Broncos from a program nobody had ever heard of to America’s favorite Cinderella story. He then won two Pac-12 titles and reached the College Football Playoff in his six seasons at Washington, going 55-26. If he’s looking to get back into coaching, Wisconsin seems like a great place for him to do it.

Dan Mullen, ESPN analyst: Mullen’s time at Florida didn’t go as well as hoped, but he’s still a good offensive mind. He proved with his time at Mississippi State that he’s a pretty dang good head coach, too. While he came to prominence coaching in the SEC, Mullen is a Pennsylvania native who spent plenty of time in the Midwest and Northeast, so coaching at Wisconsin wouldn’t be like coaching in a foreign country. I do wonder how his offense would fare in a cold-weather environment like Wisconsin. Plus, I enjoy him on television, so maybe I shouldn’t even include him?

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Ravens’ fourth-down gamble backfires as Bills win on final play | NFL

Tyler Bass kicked a 21-yard field goal on the game’s final play, and Josh Allen rallied the Buffalo Bills from a 17-point deficit to beat the Baltimore Ravens 23-20 on Sunday.

With the score tied at 20 in the final quarter, the Ravens (2-2) had second down from the Buffalo one-yard line. Two straight runs failed to reach the end zone, and Baltimore decided to go for it on fourth down from the two.

Lamar Jackson had to scramble a bit, then threw a pass into the end zone that was intercepted by Jordan Poyer for a touchback with 4:09 remaining — a disastrous result for the Ravens because it meant the Bills (3-1) weren’t pinned deep like they would have been following an incompletion.

From there, Allen calmly guided Buffalo into field goal range, capping his team’s comeback from a 20-3 deficit late in the second quarter. It was the second straight home game in which Baltimore let a sizeable lead slip away. Miami rallied from a 21-point fourth-quarter deficit to beat the Ravens 42-38 two weekends ago.

Allen threw for 213 yards with a touchdown and an interception, and Jackson passed for 144 yards with a touchdown and two interceptions. The matchup of star quarterbacks didn’t really live up to its potential on a rainy day near the Chesapeake Bay. Jackson and Allen did their usual damage with their legs but were largely limited to short completions.

Jacksonville Jaguars 21-29 Philadelphia Eagles

Miles Sanders ran for 134 yards and two touchdowns, Jalen Hurts threw for 204 yards and ran for a score and the Eagles spoiled former coach Doug Pederson’s return to Philadelphia with a 29-21 win over the Jacksonville Jaguars.

Sanders led an Eagles (4-0) offense that rushed for 210 yards against one of the tightest run defenses in the league. Trevor Lawrence threw for 174 yards and two touchdowns to Jamal Agnew. Lawrence was strip-sacked on the final drive of the game that sealed the win for the Eagles. It was one of four lost fumbles for the second-year quarterback.

Arizona Cardinals 26-16 Carolina Panthers

Kyler Murray threw for 207 yards and two touchdowns and added one rushing and the Arizona Cardinals overcame yet another lackluster first half to defeat the Carolina Panthers.

The Cardinals defense frustrated Baker Mayfield, forcing three turnovers by the 2018 No 1 overall pick – prompting boos from the home crowd in the fourth quarter. Mayfield struggled yet again for the Panthers (1-3).

Seattle Seahawks 48-45 Detroit Lions

Geno Smith threw for two touchdowns and ran for a score in the first half, and the Seattle Seahawks held off the Detroit Lions.

The Seahawks (2-2) were stopped on a third down late in the third quarter, but the Ford Field play clock wasn’t set properly. Seattle took advantage of the second chance and Detroit’s unorganized defense on Rashaad Penny’s 36-yard touchdown run on a third-and-16, opening a 38-23 lead.

TJ Hockenson had eight receptions and set career highs with 179 yards receiving and two touchdowns, the second of which helped the Lions (1-3) pull within three with 5:26 remaining. Smith picked apart Detroit on the ensuing drive, which ended with Penny’s 41-yard touchdown run on third-and-five. Penny finished with 151 yards rushing on 17 carries. Jared Goff’s fourth touchdown pass went to Justin Jackson with 1:06 left, cutting the deficit to three once again. The Lions’ comeback hopes ended when Seattle recovered the onside kick and Penny’s run converted a third-and-five in their territory.

Denver Broncos 23–32 Las Vegas Raiders

Josh Jacobs ran for 144 yards and two touchdowns, Amik Robertson returned a fumble 68 yards for a score and the Las Vegas Raiders won their first game of the season.

After opening their first season under coach Josh McDaniels by losing three straight one-score games, the Raiders (1-3) managed to do enough on the ground with their biggest rushing game in six years and on defense to hold off Russell Wilson and the Broncos (2-2).

Los Angeles Chargers 34–24 Houston Texans

Justin Herbert threw for 340 yards and two touchdowns and Austin Ekeler scored three times as the Los Angeles Chargers built a big early lead and held on for the win over the Houston Texans.

Houston scored 17 straight points to get within three with about eight minutes left. The Chargers (2-2) then put together a 12-play, 84-yard drive, capped by Ekeler’s 14-yard reception, to put the game away and snap a two-game skid.

Washington Commanders 10-25 Dallas Cowboys

Cooper Rush won again filling in for Dak Prescott, throwing a touchdown pass to Michael Gallup in the receiver’s 2022 debut as the Dallas Cowboys beat the Washington Commanders. Rush also had a TD toss to CeeDee Lamb while improving to 4-0.

Tennessee Titans 24–17 Indianapolis Colts

Derrick Henry rushed for a season-high 114 yards and one touchdown and Tennessee’s defense held up late Sunday to preserve the Titans’ victory.

Tennessee (2-2) have won a franchise-record four straight in the series and improved to 11-2 against AFC South opponents since 2020. Indy (1-2-1) have one win in their past six games and blew late three scoring chances that could have cut the deficit to less than seven.

Chicago Bears 12–20 New York Giants

Daniel Jones ran for two touchdowns before injuring an ankle, Saquon Barkley had 146 yards rushing and ran the wildcat offense at times after both New York quarterbacks were hurt in leading the Giants to a 20-12 victory over the Chicago Bears on Sunday.

Jones scored on runs of 21 and eight yards, New York rushed for 262 yards and Graham Gano kicked field goals of 44 and 43 yards as the Giants improved to 3-1 under rookie coach Brian Daboll. It’s their best start since 2011, when they won the Super Bowl.

Jones and backup Tyrod Taylor were injured a roughly 10-minute span in the second half. Jones (8 of 13 for 71 yards and 68 yards rushing) injured an ankle when he was sacked by Jaquan Brisker late the third quarter. Taylor went into the concussion protocol after scrambling for a first down with 8:35 to go.

Jones finished the series that Gano ended with a 44-yarder for a 17-12 lead and Barkley ran the direct-snap offense that Gano finished with his 43 yarder with 5:34 to go. Jones was on the field and lined up as a receiver on those plays and he took the snaps on some of the final series for handoffs.

New York Jets 24-20 Pittsburgh Steelers

Breece Hall ran for a two-yard touchdown with 16 seconds remaining and Zach Wilson and the New York Jets spoiled Kenny Pickett’s debut in Pittsburgh by rallying for a 24-20 victory over the Steelers.

The Jets (2-2) won in Pittsburgh for just the second time in franchise history after Wilson — making his season debut — led them down the field late after the second of Pickett’s three interceptions gave New York the ball back with 3:42 to go.

Wilson took the Jets 65 yards in 10 plays, the final two coming as Hall churned his way across the goal line. The play was initially ruled a fumble, but overturned on review.

Cleveland Browns 20-23 Atlanta Falcons

Dee Alford intercepted Jacoby Brissett’s pass with less than a minute remaining and the Atlanta Falcons held on to beat the Cleveland Browns.

The Falcons (2-2) spoiled the Georgia homecoming of Cleveland’s Nick Chubb, who ran for 118 yards and a touchdown with his high school team watching.

Younghoe Koo’s 45-yard field goal, his third of the game, with 2:28 remaining gave the Falcons the lead. The Browns (2-2) moved past the 50 but on third and 23, Alford picked off Brissett’s pass intended for David Bell.

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Packers vs. Patriots score: Live updates, game stats, highlights; Brian Hoyer ruled out with head injury

The Green Bay Packers and New England Patriots have one half of football in the books. Heading into this matchup, the Patriots were preparing to play a backup quarterback due to Mac Jones being ruled out with an ankle injury, but they’re not playing the one they expected. Veteran Brian Hoyer, who got the start, suffered a head injury in the first quarter and has been ruled out for the rest of the game. That has now thrust rookie Bailey Zappe in under center for New England. 

With Zappe at the helm, the Patriots have taken a surprising lead heading into the halftime locker room. That’s largely due to the defense, especially rookie corner Jack Jones, who recorded a pick-six right before the break. Thus far, Green Bay’s offense has been sluggish with Rodgers attempting just 11 passes. 

So, will the Patriots pull off the upset with Zappe or will Green Bay mount the comeback and to 3-1 on the season? We’re about to find out. Below, you’ll find our live blog of Sunday’s matchup where we’re giving you expert analysis and highlights of all the best plays.  

How to watch 

Date: Sunday, Oct. 2 | Time: 4:25 p.m. ET
Location: Lambeau Field (Green Bay)
TV: 
CBS | Stream: Paramount+ (one month free trial)
Follow: CBS Sports App 
Odds: Packers -9.5, O/U 40.5

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