Vikings keep RB Jones on restructured $5.6M deal

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Mar 11, 2026, 03:04 PM ETOpen Extended Reactions

Veteran running back Aaron Jones Sr. has restructured his deal with the Minnesota Vikings and won’t be released, agent Drew Rosenhaus told ESPN’s Adam Schefter on Wednesday.

His new one-year deal is for $5.6 million, including $5 million guaranteed.

Sources told ESPN earlier this month that the Vikings had informed Jones he would be released barring a trade. He had been scheduled to earn $10 million in 2026, with a cap number of $14.8 million.

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A beloved and respected member of the Vikings’ locker room, Jones was essentially the team’s

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USA’s Quarterfinals Ticket Wasn’t Punched. Now They Don’t Control WBC Destiny.

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HOUSTON – Team USA’s buses were scheduled to leave Daikin Park at 11:30 p.m. on Monday night, but their players weren’t ready to leave. Two hours after avenging their 2023 loss to Mexico, they remained in the clubhouse, chairs turned toward the middle of the room, talking ball, sharing stories and enjoying some extra time to soak in the experience before departing for the team hotel. To the coaches who grew up in a different age, it felt like the old days. 

Had the following night gone differently, everyone would still be looking back at that evening more fondly, another example of how much this World Baseball Classic means to a roster filled with the best players from the best league that the sport has to offer. 

Is it really possible for Aaron Judge and Team USA to be heading home early? (Photo by Alex Slitz/Getty Images) <!–>

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Instead, after Team USA’s All-Stars, MVPs and Cy Young Award winners were stunned in their final pool-play game by a youthful, undaunted opponent, the context of the events leading into one of the most shocking WBC upsets in the tournament’s history has shifted. 

“We played in a different time, where we were staying in the clubhouses till the wee hours in the morning, just having a few beers and talking the game,” USA manager Mark DeRosa said before the Italy game, reminiscing on the previous night’s events. “That has been the most enjoyable part of this for us, just kind of bringing the entire group together. I mean, that not only ended up on the bus, that ended up back at the hotel. There’s some guys dragging today.”

Hours later, it looked that way as Italy pulled off the biggest win in its country’s history against the best U.S. team ever assembled, jumping out to an 8-0 lead and holding on for an 8-6 victory that left Team USA no longer in control of its pool-play fate. 

Now, the attention is on the buses that pushed back an hour later than anticipated as Monday evening bled into Tuesday morning, an offense that was shut out for 4.2 innings by Michael Lorenzen, the tiebreaker formulas that could determine which teams advance from Pool B and the U.S. manager who claimed he misspoke earlier in the day on MLB Network’s “Hot Stove” when he mistakenly said he wanted to beat Italy “even though our ticket’s punched to the quarterfinals.” 

As it turned out, USA’s ticket was not punched — and still isn’t entering the final game of Pool B between Mexico and Italy on Wednesday. The U.S. dream team, against all odds, faces the possibility of getting knocked out in the first round, even after going 3-1. 

After the loss, DeRosa said he “totally misspoke” on the TV show with his buddies, “100%” recognized that his game against Italy mattered beforehand and was informed of his mistake when he got to the park. Nonetheless, it wasn’t a great look considering the events that followed. The comment made the rounds on social media in the midst of USA’s slow start Tuesday night, during which Bryce Harper, Alex Bregman, Byron Buxton and Brice Turang were on the bench and late roster addition Ryan Yarbrough was allowing USA’s third home run of the game to balloon Italy’s lead to 5-0 after four. Some of the decisions ultimately panned out. Pete Crow-Armstrong’s two late home runs sparked a rally that could still matter even in defeat, given the tiebreaker rules that might come into play. 

But in the aftermath, it was hard not to think of the 24 hours that preceded the astonishing result, the seeming lack of urgency and the errors both on and off the field. USA captain Aaron Judge did not believe the letdown was a result of breathing a sigh of relief after the Mexico win, the late night that followed or any reason beyond Italy’s glowing performance. 

“Oh, not at all,” said Judge, who struck out on a changeup from Greg Weissert to end the game while representing the tying run. “It’s just, everybody on this team has been enjoying this experience, getting a chance to have these guys in this clubhouse all in one clubhouse share stories, share at-bats, share just any information to make each other better. That’s kind of what we were doing last night. We had a win and guys were just hanging out a little bit, but we were focused on what we had to do today. Italy is a great team, and they definitely showed it today, but whatever happened yesterday has nothing to do with what happened today.”

Added DeRosa: “I’ll credit Italy more than say we were flat.” 

Whatever the reason for the letdown, USA is no longer in control of what happens next. To move on to the quarterfinals, it needs Mexico to either lose or score at least five runs against Italy on Wednesday.

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These are the potential scenarios: If Italy beats Mexico, Italy and USA advance. If Mexico beats Italy while scoring five runs or more, USA and Mexico move on. If Mexico beats Italy while scoring four runs or fewer, Team USA is eliminated and Mexico and Italy advance. 

“You always like having your destiny in your own hands,” Judge said. “We had it right in front of us, and Italy came out swinging.”

To avoid a complete calamity, the U.S. needs Italy to come out swinging again.

Team USA’s coaches and players plan to watch the deciding game from their hotel, where they’ll be rooting for the team that just delayed — and possibly derailed — their hopes of punching a ticket through. 

“It’s tough,” DeRosa said. “It’s super tough. Guys in there are frustrated. It is what it is, though. I mean, we’ve got to own it, right?”

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Link to Original Article - on Fox Sports

Sources: Colts to re-sign QB Jones to $88M deal

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Mar 11, 2026, 11:30 AM ETOpen Extended Reactions

The Indianapolis Colts and quarterback Daniel Jones reached agreement Wednesday on a two-year, $88 million contract that can be worth up to $100 million, sources told ESPN’s Adam Schefter.

The Colts had placed the rarely used transition tag on Jones before the March 3 deadline. That allowed the Colts to match any offer sheet he might have signed. If he had played on the tender, he would have been paid $37.833 million this season.

That decision allowed top wide receiver Alec Pierce to test free agency, but the Colts

Link to Original Article - on ESPN

Source: NFL exploring Thanksgiving Eve game

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Mar 11, 2026, 09:58 AM ETOpen Extended Reactions

The NFL is exploring the possibility of playing a game the day before Thanksgiving, a source told ESPN’s Adam Schefter.

The added day to the schedule could come as early as the upcoming 2026 season, on Wednesday, Nov. 25, the source told Schefter.

It would mark the latest move by the NFL in recent years to deviate from its traditional schedule in order to add games on or around national holidays.

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The NFL has played Black Friday games since the 2023 season. Commissioner Roger Goodell told the Wall Street Journal in December that the league

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Sources: Ravens pivot, agree to add Hendrickson

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Mar 11, 2026, 09:08 AM ETOpen Extended Reactions

The Baltimore Ravens have agreed to sign free agent defensive end Trey Hendrickson, sources told ESPN’s Adam Schefter, in a high-priced pivot after their canceled blockbuster trade for Maxx Crosby.

The sides agreed to a four-year, $112 million deal that can be worth up to $120 million with incentives, according to Schefter. The deal includes $60 million fully guaranteed and a $20 million signing bonus, sources told Schefter.

The deal keeps Hendrickson, a four-time Pro Bowler with the Cincinnati Bengals, in the AFC North and provides the

Link to Original Article - on ESPN

Source: Commanders agree with LB Chaisson

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Mar 11, 2026, 09:00 AM ETOpen Extended Reactions

The Washington Commanders have agreed to sign K’Lavon Chaisson to a one-year deal worth $12 million, according to NFL Network, adding another edge rusher to their overhauled pass rush.

Chaisson will enter his seventh NFL season in 2026 and is coming off a breakout year with the New England Patriots.

The former first-round draft selection will join a Washington defense that has also added pass rusher Odafe Oweh and linebacker Leo Chenal in free agency this week.

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Chaisson, 26, signed a modest one-year contract in

Link to Original Article - on ESPN

4 Takeaways from Italy’s Stunning World Baseball Classic Upset Over Team USA

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In the fourth inning of Italy’s 8-6 stunner over Team USA, Jac Caglianone hit the Azzurri’s third home run of the game. Returning to the dugout, he put on the Armani jacket waiting for him, downed a shot of espresso and received the due baci greeting from Vinnie Pasquantino, who placed a kiss on each of his Kansas City Royals teammate’s cheeks. 

Italy poured it on early and held on late for the biggest baseball win in its country’s history, putting the best USA roster ever assembled in danger of possibly not advancing out of its World Baseball Classic pool. 

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Here are my takeaways:

1. Behind Lorenzen’s Gem, Italy Gets Biggest Baseball Win Ever

He mixed speeds and quadrants. He threw at least seven different kinds of pitches and got swings and misses on six of them. And for 4.2 innings, departing only after his pitch count ran above the allotted 65-pitch limit, Italy starter Michael Lorenzen blanked a lineup teeming with All-Stars and left them — and the 38,653 fans in attendance at Daikin Park — stunned and stupefied. 

Italy vs. United States Highlights ⚾️ World Baseball Classic on FOX

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Dating back to USA’s five-run outburst in the third inning Monday night against Mexico, the USA offense went scoreless for its next 10 innings until Gunnar Henderson’s solo home run in the sixth inning against Italy ended the drought. Despite a late-inning rally, it wasn’t enough to erase Italy’s early barrage.  

Team Italy has made it to the quarterfinals twice in the WBC, including in the last tournament, but this victory against the USA is unlike anything before in the country’s baseball history and one of the biggest upsets in the tournament’s history. 

2. Long Ball Bites USA’s McLean

(Photo by Alex Slitz/Getty Images) –> <!–>

USA’s first three starting pitchers of the tournament — Logan Webb, Tarik Skubal and Paul Skenes — have combined for six All-Star appearances and three Cy Young Awards over the last two years alone. The fourth member of the stacked rotation had only eight MLB starts to his name, but it was a testament to the preternatural skills of Mets top pitching prospect Nolan McLean that he was included on the roster.

In the first inning Tuesday night, he demonstrated why, striking out the side with a fastball that sat in the high-90s, a masterful sweeper and a devastating curveball. 

But the bottom of Italy’s lineup, and its Southsider contingency, did not relent. 

After McLean got the first two outs of the second inning, White Sox catcher Kyle Teel recorded the first hit of the day for either team by taking a first-pitch fastball out for a solo shot. (Worth noting: He later left the game after getting injured legging out a double). Two batters after Teel started the scoring, White Sox prospect Sam Antonacci also jumped on McLean’s heater, sending a fastball up in the zone 403-feet out to right field. 

The home runs set the tone for an Italy team that continued pouring it on. 

3. Prospects, MLB Novices Carrying Italy’s Electric Offense

  

(Photo by Kenneth Richmond/Getty Images) –> <!–>

Vinnie Pasquantino is the most recognizable name in Italy’s lineup, but it’s a group of less experienced MLB players and prospects who are shining for the Azzurri lineup in the WBC. Dante Nori, a 2024 first-round pick of the Phillies, began the tournament 5-for-7 with two homers and a double. Andrew Fischer, a 2025 first-round pick of the Brewers, went 2-for-4 with a homer in the lone game he played. 

On Tuesday, it was Antonacci, Teel and Caglianone, another recent top prospect and 2025 rookie, delivering the decisive blows. The top five hitters in Italy’s lineup went hitless, but the Nos. 6-8 batters went 6-for-8 with three home runs and five RBI.

Even before Italy’s youthful standouts continued to shine Tuesday night, Pasquantino talked glowingly about the team’s young hitters. 

“For the most part, that’s who’s done most of the damage on offense, is the prospects,” Pasquantino told me ahead of Tuesday’s game. “It’s been great to see the confidence that they have. Fischer is a treat, the way he carries himself. He’s awesome. Dante Nori is awesome. Sam Antonacci is awesome.

“I can’t say enough good things about these guys. It makes me feel old saying this, the game’s in good hands, like with some of the guys coming up that I’ve been able to have the pleasure to get to know the past few days, past week.”

4. PCA’s Two Late Homers Not Enough — But Could Still Matter

Losing at all is a dreadful result for the U.S. and its star-studded roster, but given the runs-allowed tiebreaker that could determine the winner and runner-up of Pool B, USA’s sixth-inning calamity was especially unsightly and potentially costly. 

United States’ Pete Crow-Armstrong hits second home run of game vs. Italy

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Already trailing 5-0, Brad Keller relieved Ryan Yarbrough with one on and one out in the sixth when he walked the first batter he faced. Keller then got the double-play ball he needed to escape the threat, but he bounced the throw into center field. One run scored on the error, then two more came across on a sacrifice fly and a wild pitch, ballooning Italy’s lead to 8-0. 

USA’s ability to battle back with six unanswered runs — including two home runs from Pete Crow-Armstrong — didn’t change the outcome, but every run could be the difference given the potential tiebreakers in play. 

4 ½. What’s Next? 

Chaos, potentially. 

The U.S. (3-1) has played its last pool-play game, so Pool B will all come down to Wednesday’s matchup between Italy (3-0) and Mexico (3-1). 

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If Italy beats Mexico on Wednesday, the U.S. will advance. If Mexico wins, however, get ready to do some math. The first tiebreaker is head-to-head record, but if Mexico beats Italy, then all three teams at the top of the pool will have beaten one another. 

WBC Tiebreakers: How Can USA Advance?

The next tiebreaker is the lowest quotient of fewest runs allowed divided by the number of defensive outs recorded in the game between the tied teams — hence, why every run on Monday mattered. 

 

Link to Original Article - on Fox Sports

World Baseball Classic Tiebreaker Rules: How Can USA Advance To Quarterfinals?

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Two quarterfinal spots, three contenders. Pool B of the World Baseball Classic will go down to the wire with the USA, Mexico and Italy looking to advance to the next round. 

The USA beat Mexico, 5-3, in Monday’s game but trails Italy in Tuesday’s matchup.  Italy and Mexico play each other on Wednesday. The other two teams in the pool (Brazil and Great Britain) are eliminated. 

Team Record
USA 3-0
Italy 2-0
Mexico 2-1
Great Britain 1-3
Brazil 0-4

That could lead to tiebreakers to see who’ll advance.

United States vs. Mexico Highlights ⚾️ World Baseball Classic on FOX

According to the World Baseball Classic rules, these are the tiebreakers: 

The two teams with the highest such percentages in each pool shall advance to the Quarterfinal Round. If, at the end of pool play in Round One of the Tournament, teams within a pool are tied with an identical winning percentage, the tie shall be broken in the following order of priority:

  • The team that won the games between the teams tied shall be given the higher position. If three or more teams are tied and one of those teams won its games against all other teams it is tied with, then it will be placed in the higher spot. Similarly, if one of those tied teams lost its games against all other teams it is tied with, then it will be placed in the lowest spot.
  • The tied teams shall be ranked in the standings according to the lowest quotient of fewest runs allowed divided by the number of defensive outs recorded in the games in that round between the teams tied.
  • The tied teams shall be ranked in the standings according to the lowest quotient of fewest earned runs allowed divided by the number of defensive outs recorded in the games in that round between the teams tied.
  • The tied teams shall be ranked in the standings according to the highest batting average in games in that round between the teams tied.
  • Standings shall be determined by the drawing of lots, conducted by WBCI.

Link to Original Article - on Fox Sports

WBC Daily: Why Did Japan Fans Give Czechia’s Pitcher Getting A Rousing Ovation?

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In a game that featured some top talent, it was the full-time electrician on the mound who shined brightest in Tuesday’s World Baseball Classic game between Japan and Czechia. 

Catching up on Tuesday’s action from around the WBC:

JUMP TO: Japan Rests Ohtani In Win | Israel Wins Over Netherlands

No Ohtani? No Problem For Japan

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Japan gave Shohei Ohtani the day off as the defending champions completed an unbeaten group stage at the World Baseball Classic, beating the Czechia  9-0 on Tuesday night behind a nine-run eighth inning capped by Munetaka Murakami’s grand slam.

Czechia vs. Japan Highlights ⚾️ World Baseball Classic on FOX

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After outscoring opponents 39-9 in going 4-0, Japan advanced to a quarterfinal on Saturday in Miami against Venezuela or the Dominican Republic. Ohtani is hitting .556 with two homers, six RBIs and four walks.

Czech starter Ondrej Satoria, who famously struck out Ohtani at the 2023 tournament, allowed six hits over 4 2/3 innings. The full-time electrician received a standing ovation from the Tokyo Dome crowd as he left the game. 

“I’m sad,” Satoria said before the game, knowing Ohtani was out of the lineup. “I think a lot of fans are sad, too. Maybe he’s resting for the long trip to Miami.”

Israel Defeats Netherlands

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Jake Gelof had three RBIs as Israel defeated the Netherlands, 6-2, with both teams already eliminated from the World Baseball Classic.

The Dutch had taken a two-run lead in the first inning thanks to a fielder’s choice Xander Boegarts and a sacrifice fly by Didi Gregorius, but Gelof’s double brought in Noah Mendlinger in the second inning.

Israel then scored five runs in the sixth inning, with Cole Carrigg and RJ Schreck scoring off Gelof’s single. Matt Mervis would then double to bring Gelof and Medlinger home. 

Link to Original Article - on Fox Sports

Source: Ricard latest to rejoin Harbaugh in N.Y.

Mar 10, 2026, 08:16 PM ETOpen Extended Reactions

Another familiar face is following John Harbaugh to New York, as longtime Baltimore Ravens fullback Patrick Ricard agreed to a two-year deal with the Giants, a source told ESPN’s Jordan Raanan on Tuesday.

Ricard, 31, had been a physical tone-setter for the Ravens, opening holes for their dominant rushing attack.

Nicknamed “Pancake Pat” after repeatedly putting defenders on their backs, Ricard has made the Pro Bowl six times, the seventh most in Ravens history. Since he became a full-time fullback in 2019, Baltimore has produced 20,078 yards on the

Link to Original Article - on ESPN