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Aaron Judge Sets a Deadline for His Yankees Future

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Aaron Judge Sets a Deadline for His Yankees Future

TAMPA, Fla. — The Yankees’ first recreation of the 2022 common season is three weeks away. By then, their largest star, who’s coming into his closing season earlier than free company, hopes to have readability on his future with the crew.

“April 7, we gained’t be speaking about this anymore,” outfielder Aaron Choose stated on Tuesday, referencing the date of the crew’s season opener at Yankee Stadium towards the Boston Crimson Sox.

He added later: “The very last thing I wish to do is be in the course of Might after collection and folks speaking, ‘Oh, you going to signal an extension?’ Or after an 0 for 4, ‘You need to have signed that extension.’ We’ll attempt to get every thing out of the way in which proper now whereas we’re nonetheless prepping and preparing for the season. However as soon as it’s April 7 and a packed home within the Bronx, it’s going to be time to deal with successful ball video games and that’s it.”

That recreation might be Choose’s closing opening day in pinstripes. A primary-round decide in 2013, he got here up with the Yankees in 2016 and was the face of the franchise by 2017. That yr, his first full season within the majors, he was an All-Star, the American League rookie of the yr and runner-up for Most worthy participant.

Accidents have slowed the 6-foot-7, 282-pound Choose at instances, however his manufacturing has not wavered. Although he has missed practically 1 / 4 of the Yankees’ video games (164 of 709 video games) because the begin of 2017 season, he’s the fourth Most worthy participant in Main League Baseball in that span, in keeping with FanGraphs, together with his 24.5 wins above alternative trailing solely Mike Trout, Mookie Betts and Jose Ramirez’s.

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Final season — Choose’s healthiest one since 2017 — he performed in 148 video games and led the Yankees in lots of offensive classes, together with batting common (.287), dwelling runs (39), runs batted in (98) and on-base plus slugging share (.916). He was additionally named an All-Star for the third time.

Choose’s highly effective bat and sharp eye on the plate are well-known. His agility on the basepaths and in proper area, regardless of his measurement, can shock followers. And in a clubhouse that has had its justifiable share of turnover by means of the years — the longtime Yankees outfielder Brett Gardner stays a free agent and catcher Gary Sanchez was traded away days in the past — Choose is among the longest tenured Yankees and often known as a pacesetter.

“It’s been nice taking part in with him and watching him develop as a participant and individual,” stated Giancarlo Stanton, one other slugging outfielder whom the Yankees acquired earlier than the 2018 season. “I hope the remainder of our careers are collectively. And I feel we’ll get it discovered.”

One other important think about any potential contract extension for Choose: his age. He turns 30 subsequent month, so he shall be 31 throughout many of the 2023 season, the primary of no matter new deal he indicators. Whereas groups have more and more shied away from long-term contracts for gamers of their 30s, given the growing older curve, they’ve at the very least been prepared to make exceptions for the sorts of stars who really influence a crew and draw followers to the stadium.

Getting into his closing yr earlier than free company, Choose is estimated to make roughly $17 million by means of wage arbitration. (The date by which to trade wage requests is March 22, and it generally results in long-term offers.) Choose has made it identified for years now, although, that he doesn’t wish to go anyplace else.

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“So long as I’m taking part in baseball, I wish to be carrying pinstripes,” Choose stated on Tuesday, the second day of exercises on the Yankees’ spring coaching facility in Tampa. “It’s been an honor and a blessing to be right here, getting an opportunity to play for this franchise, to be surrounded by so many nice gamers and stroll within the footsteps of so many different former nice gamers which have performed this recreation. There’s no higher place to play on this planet.”

He added later, “I wish to keep right here in pinstripes. If that occurs, that occurs. But when it involves it that it doesn’t, I’ll get pleasure from my recollections right here.”

On Monday, Basic Supervisor Brian Cashman stated the crew had not but talked to Choose and his agent about an extension. And provided that this spring coaching started late and is truncated after a labor dispute that ended simply final week, the Yankees are on the clock, as Cashman put it.

“We’d wish to have him again if we are able to,” Cashman instructed reporters on Monday. “Like every thing else, identical to trades and free company, you must be on the identical web page and customary floor. The one approach to discover out is to have some conversations, before everything. These will occur, and we’ll attempt to hold it as non-public as we are able to.”

He added later, “We’re blissful he’s a Yankee, and it’d be nice if we may make him a Yankee longer.”

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Choose insisted on Tuesday that he wasn’t upset that the Yankees had not but approached him with a proposal to remain longer, nor was he involved that they’d run out of time.

“As a result of, to be trustworthy, there’s so many different holes and positions and stuff that we acquired to fill,” he stated. A type of holes was addressed on Tuesday when the crew agreed to deliver again first baseman Anthony Rizzo on a two-year contract.

Annoyed every postseason that the Yankees fall quick, Choose known as 2022 an vital yr. Like yearly, the Yankees — the franchise with probably the most World Sequence titles (27) in M.L.B. however none since 2009 — wish to lastly finish their championship drought.

Due to a New York Metropolis vaccine mandate for folks performing in-person work, it was unclear if Choose would be capable of play in dwelling video games this season. Whereas the coverage may change, Choose sidestepped a query about his vaccination standing on Tuesday, saying he was extra involved in regards to the first spring coaching video games later this week.

“We’ll cross that bridge when the instances comes,” he stated. “However proper now, so many issues may change. So I’m probably not too fearful about that proper now.”

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By way of his future, Choose’s spring coaching deadline isn’t new. Many gamers have efficiently used that technique previously. (See: Francisco Lindor of the Mets.) So regardless that Choose has said his desire, it will be onerous to think about him ignoring a good or beneficiant deal just because it arrived in, say, Might.

Choose additionally stated on Tuesday that if nothing got here to fruition earlier than opening day, he would discuss to the Yankees after the season. However till then, the Yankees are the one crew allowed to barter with him. Within the subsequent low season, Choose can discuss to the opposite 29 groups.

Cashman famous that gamers usually most popular to have contract extensions carried out earlier than the season so they didn’t have to consider them anymore. “However that’s what brokers are for on the similar time,” he added. “A number of instances you possibly can have conversations, and the participant will not be part of it till the very finish.”

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Byron Leftwich went from future NFL head coach to perceived scapegoat. Now he wants back in

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Byron Leftwich went from future NFL head coach to perceived scapegoat. Now he wants back in

TYSONS, Va. — Byron Leftwich slips into the Northern Virginia brunch spot unrecognized and unbothered.

Lean and broad-shouldered at 6-foot-5, the former NFL quarterback looks like he could still play even though his 45th birthday looms in a couple of weeks. After a nine-year playing career, Leftwich made a meteoric rise up the coaching ranks. As offensive coordinator of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, he helped Tom Brady and Bruce Arians on a storybook Super Bowl march to cap the 2020 season. Leftwich was a legitimate head coaching candidate in the winter of 2022.

But time moves quickly, circumstances change and memories fade. So on this chilly morning in the middle of football season, Leftwich is just another guy lost in the hustle and bustle of the DMV.

He has spent the last two football seasons largely shrouded in mystery — once a virtual lock to lead his own team, then fired, then off the grid. And thanks to his relatively solitary nature, Leftwich’s goals and whereabouts have remained murky.

Influential NFL figures tried to maintain contact with Leftwich to keep him on the radar, but they say their messages and calls went unanswered. Former colleagues relayed conflicting accounts: Some said he was on shortlists for a handful of college jobs; others reported he had largely isolated himself in West Virginia while waiting for an NFL offensive coordinator role to open up; others sensed Leftwich no longer wanted to coach.

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Leftwich is here to clear that up.

“I. Want. To. Coach,” he says emphatically over what’s left of his fried eggs, bacon and a biscuit.

After a year-and-a-half devoted largely to his 14-year-old son, Dominic — making breakfast, dropping off and picking up, traveling up and down the East Coast for a demanding AAU basketball circuit, watching every football practice and game — Leftwich wants back in the coaching game.

“There’s something missing. … I really do feel as though something’s not there, and I’ve got to get back to it,” says Leftwich, who received his son’s blessing to return. “I’m really into helping other players. I want to help them to play the best. I love to teach.”

Leftwich viewed his sabbatical as an exercise in patience. After things ended in Tampa, he promised himself he wouldn’t pounce on any opportunity for the sake of landing a gig. He didn’t direct members of his small circle to drum up a media campaign to keep his name hot and wasn’t about to ask counterparts for handouts. Confident in his body of work, Leftwich maintained a belief that at the right time, the right job would present itself.

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Two hiring cycles quietly came and went, but Leftwich has remained unshaken.

“I didn’t have the opportunities right after and this last year that I thought I would have, but I understand the process, and I understand that the whole world’s trying to get in that league,” Leftwich says. “Nothing should be given to me. Nobody owes me anything. So, I’m going to just work and see if I can have the opportunity to coach in that league again.”

Some league insiders believe Leftwich’s under-the-radar approach may have cost him. But it’s the route he feels most comfortable with, even if his supporters wish he were more outspoken.

“Byron will not push himself out there. He’s going to do it on his work,” says Arians, Leftwich’s offensive coordinator in Pittsburgh and coaching mentor in Arizona and Tampa Bay. “But I’ll say it: I think it’s total bullsh– that he’s not a head coach in this league.”


Tom Brady and Byron Leftwich racked up 31 regular-season wins and one Super Bowl run in three years together in Tampa. (Maddie Meyer / Getty Images)

Arians can’t talk about Leftwich without recalling the November 2002 game in which Leftwich, in his final season at Marshall University, played the fourth quarter with a broken left tibia. Leftwich was unable to walk, but his offensive linemen carried him downfield between pass completions as the quarterback racked up more than 300 passing yards.

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They began working together eight years later when Arians was the OC in Pittsburgh at the end of Leftwich’s playing career. The coach recognized that Leftwich, then backing up Ben Roethlisberger, was among the strongest leaders on the team. Arians became convinced Leftwich would become a strong coach.

“He’s the toughest and one of the smartest, brightest dudes I know,” Arians says. “He was such a bright quarterback, and he had a great rapport with young players. … Guys have questions, he could answer anything and everything: Why and how it’s going to make you better if you do it this way. He just has a great feel for the game.”

“Awesome leadership qualities have always oozed out of him,” Steelers coach Mike Tomlin says. “Some of it comes from the position he played, but he has always had an ease about him when it comes to leadership. He’s comfortable in his own skin and gets along well with people, and he carries himself in a way that commands respect.”

Arians hired Leftwich as a coaching intern with the Cardinals in 2016. A year later, Leftwich was promoted to quarterbacks coach in Arians’ final season in Arizona. A year after that, Leftwich served as interim offensive coordinator for the final nine games of the season before being let go with the rest of Steve Wilks’ staff.

In 2019, Leftwich was reunited with Arians in Tampa Bay. He largely flew under the radar his first season as a full-time offensive coordinator, but the Buccaneers ranked third in the NFL both in total offense (397.9 yards per game) and points (28.6) and first in passing yards (302.8). Arians credits Leftwich’s tutelage for Jameis Winston passing for a league-high 5,109 yards and 33 touchdowns.

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Of course, Winston also threw a league-leading 30 interceptions that season. Leftwich says the biggest regret of his coaching career is that he only got to work with the former No. 1 pick for eight months. He wishes they had more time together to hone Winston’s decision-making skills, but Leftwich couldn’t disagree with the Buccaneers’ decision to pursue Tom Brady.

Life with the GOAT got off to a rocky start. COVID-19 restrictions robbed Brady of the usual acclimation process offered by offseason practices and meetings. Arians says Brady didn’t fully grasp Tampa Bay’s offense until mid-November. He directed Leftwich to blend the aggressive downfield elements of Arians’ playbook with the up-tempo tenets that Brady thrived at executing during his storied Patriots career.

Things started to click in the final month of the season. After entering their Week 13 bye 7-5 and averaging 28.6 points a game, the Buccaneers returned with a revamped offense and reeled off eight straight victories (four to close out the regular season and four more en route to hoisting the Lombardi Trophy) while averaging 33.9 points a contest.

“He’s got a great work ethic, a great football IQ. It’s just been a growing process for both of us,” Brady said when asked about Leftwich during Super Bowl week. “It’s taken some time to get there because we didn’t have a lot of the things that we normally have with football (in the offseason). Over the last couple of months we’ve certainly executed a little bit better.”

Through a spokesperson, Fox Sports declined to make Brady available for this story.

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The Bucs were better in 2021, averaging 406 yards and 30 points per contest. Leftwich believes they should have returned to the Super Bowl. But they fell in the divisional round of the playoffs to the L.A. Rams, who two games later won a championship of their own.

That offseason, Leftwich interviewed for head coaching openings with the Chicago Bears and Jacksonville Jaguars, the team that drafted him No. 7 in 2003. It was widely believed that Leftwich would receive a Jacksonville homecoming as the Jaguars’ head coach. But then came reports that Leftwich turned down the job because he didn’t want to work with general manager Trent Baalke.

Leftwich denies those claims. He says he had a good interview with the Jaguars and didn’t know Baalke.

“The stories started out of nowhere. I thought I was in a good spot, didn’t even talk to anybody. I understand this business, and I’m wise enough to know not to talk about what you’re going through when you’re going through it,” Leftwich says. “I never turned down that job because they never offered it. There were a lot of stories out there and I never spoke on it, but I never turned it down.”

Jacksonville eventually hired Doug Pederson, who had guided the Philadelphia Eagles to a Super Bowl victory five years earlier. Pederson guided the Jaguars to a playoff appearance in Year 1 but missed the playoffs in 2023 and is on the hot seat with Jacksonville at 4-12.

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“I was willing and ready to take that (Jaguars) job,” Leftwich says. “That’s where I played, and I was very interested in trying to help that situation — all hands on deck — really trying to help that situation, because I know that city, I know the fan base and I thought that they had really good players down there that you can win football games with.

“But when I did the interviews … I knew that, ‘OK, at the end of the day, if I don’t get either, I get to go back with Mike Evans, Chris Godwin, and maybe (Brady, who was considering retirement) — people who I built strong relationships with.’ I was like, ‘I just get to go back to that and coach ball.’”

Brady retired, then unretired in February 2022. The next month, Arians retired abruptly, turning the team over to defensive coordinator Todd Bowles. It seemed like a seamless transition plan: Bowles would continue to oversee the defense while Leftwich and Brady ran the offense. But injuries ravaged the Buccaneers’ offensive line, and Brady, who was going through a highly publicized divorce, wasn’t as effective.

Tampa Bay’s offense plunged to 15th in yards (346.7) and 25th in points (18.4). After a first-round playoff exit, Brady retired for good and Bowles fired Leftwich.

“We didn’t score enough points and we didn’t run it well, and at times we didn’t throw it well,” Bowles said at the time when explaining his decision. “When you see something wrong, you have to try and fix it. I’ve been with those guys a long time, so it was a tough decision. But I felt the change had to be made.”

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Arians, who had taken on an advisory role with the team, didn’t agree with the move. He is on record saying Brady’s personal matters hindered the quarterback’s play. And the former coach believes Leftwich became the scapegoat for the Buccaneers’ struggles.

“It looks like it all falls on Byron, and that to me is totally wrong,” Arians says. “I mean, it was just a different philosophy that Todd wanted to go with. … But if there is anyone that puts anything out negatively about Byron, they’re totally full of s—.”

The fallout from that season dramatically altered Leftwich’s coaching trajectory, but he says he understood Bowles’ decision. “I felt it was time to move on,” Leftwich says. “It was the first time we were out of the top five in offense. So the fact that we were 15th allowed people to say, finally, ‘Does that guy really know what he’s doing? Can he do this?’ … That’s the nature of the business.”

Leftwich doesn’t view the 2022 season as a total failure. Given the calamity he and his players faced and all of the mixing and matching he had to do to compensate, he views that season as his best coaching job. It forced him to grow.

“(Arians) always told me, ‘I’ve been fired for winning, I’ve been fired for losing. I’ve been fired for doing my best. I’ve been fired for doing my worst.’ So being fired means nothing,” Leftwich says. “You can’t worry about being fired. Believe in what you believe in, do what’s best for the players, and accept everything they could come with it.”

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Following his Tampa Bay departure, he expected to receive inquiries, but no NFL teams called. He received some interest in college positions, but some of those would have required him to make what he believed were rushed decisions, so he declined. Others didn’t seem like good fits, so he embraced the opportunity to make up for lost time with his son.


Leftwich started 50 NFL games for four franchises after Jacksonville made him a top-10 pick in 2003. (Jamie Squire / Getty Images)

The body clock still chimes at 3 a.m. without the use of an alarm clock, just as it did during his coaching days. Instead of reporting to an office by 3:30 a.m. for film study, practice and game planning, he hits the weights, then the punching bags. By midmorning, after he feeds Dominic and gets him to school, Leftwich finds himself in front of a screen, clicker in hand.

He studies the coaches film of every NFL team. When watching live, he calls plays as if he were in the quarterback’s ear. Sometimes his predictions are correct, sometimes they’re not, but Leftwich makes the next call regardless. He digs deep to expand his knowledge of offensive and defensive patterns and tendencies, “staying sharp and up on what everybody’s doing.”

“He has a 360-degree perspective of the game — not only offense but defense as well,” Tomlin says. “Certain people have the ability to see the game in 3-D, and Byron is one of them.”

Leftwich says Arians taught him just as many nuances about interior offensive line play as he did pass routes and coverages. Arians also helped Leftwich learn the importance of understanding players’ capabilities, believing a firm grasp of each player’s skill set enables a good coach to design more expansive and versatile schemes while drawing greater confidence and commitment out of players.

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“People get hung up on ‘The system this, the system that.’ I don’t care what the system is,” Leftwich says. “I know enough different types of offenses and different types of personnel packages and ways to attack to be able to … be as multiple as possible. And that’s all about preparation.

“It’s how (Arians) raised me. Anywhere I go, we’ll be as multiple as we need to be. We need to be two tight end set this week? Then it’s two tight end set. We need to be a four wide receiver set next week? We’ll do whatever we need to do to win that game. But because of our preparation, we will be able to do everything.”

Both Arians and Tomlin agree that Leftwich should be a member of an NFL coaching staff, if not leading his own. But to return to the NFL ranks, Leftwich has a series of questions he must answer.

A query of six front-office members who are expected to interview for general manager positions — and who are thus forming their own prospective head coach candidate lists — yielded mixed reviews. All agreed Leftwich exhibited great instincts and leadership abilities as a player. Some believed those strengths translated well to coaching and praised the abilities he showcased with Tampa Bay. Others expressed reservations about Leftwich’s independence.

How much of Tampa Bay’s success stemmed from Brady’s greatness, they wondered. How much of the offensive explosiveness was Leftwich responsible for, and how much came from Arians’ expertise and direction? How much of the drop-off in production in 2022 can be attributed to Arians’ absence?

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Leftwich believes a deep dive into his qualifications and responsibilities in Tampa Bay will dispel any doubts. “I was blessed to have that opportunity in Tampa because the guy that hired me put a lot on me and I know how to do things the right way because of that,” he says. “I encourage anybody to do their background checks. Ask anyone who has worked with me.”

“I get a lot of credit for things I didn’t do in Tampa,” Arians says. “Byron called all the plays. Very seldom did I call anything. He did it all, even in the Super Bowl.”

Then there’s the recency question. In a league where head coaching tenures rarely exceed three years, hot prospects shoot up in popularity, then fade quickly into oblivion. Will Leftwich’s name still carry enough clout to garner consideration in a coaching market expected to feature head coaching veterans such as Mike Vrabel and Brian Flores and coordinators Ben Johnson, Aaron Glenn, Joe Brady and Kliff Kingsbury?

Leftwich recently hired a new agent and stressed his desire to aggressively pursue NFL jobs. He believes that if he meets with a team owner or general manager looking for a head coach — or a head coach looking for a coordinator — his credentials will elevate him above competing candidates.

“Just give me the opportunity. Bring me in and see. Communicate with me, see if I’m the right type of leader you want,” Leftwich says. “Do your homework. See if I can lead men. … See if I know my X’s and O’s. See if I know people. See if I know what needs to be done to succeed at the job.”

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(Illustration: Dan Goldfarb / The Athletic; photos: Douglas P. DeFelice, Perry Knotts / Getty Images, Scott Boehm / Associated Press)

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NFL offensive linemen Christmas gifts ranked: Do QBs, teams benefit from their generosity?

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NFL offensive linemen Christmas gifts ranked: Do QBs, teams benefit from their generosity?

Offensive linemen have the most thankless job in the NFL. Go stand in that guy’s way, and if you do a good job, we’ll never talk about it. Screw up and, best case, we’ll publicly shame you. Or we’ll blame you for a loss or injury.

The big lugs need a hug, and that’s why they look forward to the holiday season. Their rich quarterbacks — and sometimes the running backs — reward offensive linemen for their blood, sweat and tears with lavish gifts for Christmas. While they’re not always shared with the public or annoying media types, we were able to compile our list of the top 10 gifts from this year, plus a couple of honorable mentions. (The bottom of the list is best left to one’s imagination, and we were not able to confirm our theory that Houston Texans quarterback C.J. Stroud gave his offensive linemen some rocks to kick.)

Did the quarterbacks, and teams, get immediate dividends from the offensive linemen for their generosity? Let’s take a look at the best gifts along with how those teams fared in Week 17.

1. Cincinnati Bengals

Week 17 result: Beat Denver Broncos 30-24

Joe Burrow asked his linemen what they wanted, and when some said guns, it got him thinking about the coolest weapon — and samurai swords were the obvious answer.

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“Samurai swords, I think, are pretty dang cool,” he told reporters.

He bought authentic Japanese Katana swords, each having a unique backstory of a town or battle, lined them up in a room and had the linemen pick.

“Joe does a great job at buying gifts that are extremely meaningful,” left tackle Orlando Brown Jr. told reporters. “The fact that he bought me a sword, it’s the most ancient form of respect.”

“My favorite gift I’ve ever gotten by far because it’s so different,” guard Alex Cappa added.

Burrow was sacked seven times in the Bengals’ overtime win over the Broncos on Saturday, so maybe less pretend sword fights this week, guys.

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2. Green Bay Packers

Week 17 result: Lost to Minnesota Vikings 27-25

Running back Josh Jacobs wrapped up customized diamond pendants for his 12 offensive linemen. They were commissioned by ZoFrost and Co., a custom jewelry maker based in Houston.

Jacobs is having a huge season but was held to 69 yards and a touchdown on 17 carries in the loss to the Vikings. The Packers did score the last 15 points of the game to make it close, so maybe it just took the linemen a while to stop squinting from all the bling.

3. Philadelphia Eagles

Week 17 result: Beat Dallas Cowboys 41-17

Running back Saquon Barkley, who is vying for the NFL rushing record, was smart and went in with quarterback Jalen Hurts on gifts for the linemen. They bought each one a personalized golf cart, customized with the player’s last name and number. And, of course, the logos for Hurts and Barkley on the back. After all, what’s the point of a gift if there isn’t a constant reminder of who got it for you?

4. San Francisco 49ers

Week 17 result: Lost to Detroit Lions 40-34

Brock Purdy was also smart. He hasn’t gotten his big payday yet, so he turned to corporate sponsorship. Thanks to his friends at Toyota, Purdy gave 10 linemen either a Toyota Sequoia or a Toyota Tundra. Though these are the most expensive gifts on the list, we can’t rank them too high since Purdy was more of a middleman.

5. New York Jets

Week 17 result: Lost to Buffalo Bills 40-14

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You can’t dress up a pig, but that doesn’t mean pigs don’t like to clean up nicely every now and then. Jets quarterback Aaron Rodgers, who has had a miserable season, tried to style up the Jets facility. He had a tailor come in and measure the linemen for a custom Tom Ford suit, which they can wear with their new Tom Ford sunglasses and Tom Ford cologne. They also received a Louis Vuitton passport holder.

And if that was all too much for them, Rodgers threw in a stereo speaker and a bottle of Devils River bourbon.

As for the game, Rodgers benched himself in the fourth quarter with the Jets down 40-0. There is no truth to the rumor that one of the lineman at that point yelled out, “Who the eff is Tom Ford?!?”

6. Detroit Lions 

Week 17 result: Beat San Francisco 49ers 40-34

After all, offensive linemen are a simple lot. Jewelry? Trucks? Nah. Lions quarterback Jared Goff knew his audience.

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“It’s hard when you got guys giving out Toyota trucks to try and keep up with that,” he told reporters, “but I got them a nice Yeti package with a ton of wagyu — steaks and beef. I hope they like it.’”

They did. The only downside is the gift is gone in four days.

7. Pittsburgh Steelers

Week 17 result: Lost to Kansas City Chiefs 29-10

This one should be higher on the list. We are just anti-gift cards. Even if they’re for $10,000 for an Airbnb that can be used worldwide. The Steelers’ Russell Wilson also gave 14 offensive linemen a black and yellow Louis Vuitton duffel bag, custom-made black and yellow Good Man Brand shoes and a bottle of wife Ciara’s Ten To One rum.

The Steelers have lost three games in a row, so clearly vacation-themed gifts were a bad idea.

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8. Kansas City Chiefs

Week 17 result: Beat Pittsburgh Steelers 29-10

This should be higher on the list, as well. But we’re tired of the Chiefs winning everything. And of Taylor Swift. The Chiefs’ Patrick Mahomes gave his bodyguards a red Yeti cooler with a Rolex watch, Oakley sunglasses, Lucchese boots and Normatec recovery boots inside. This after giving them a golf cart last year and a personalized golf bag with clubs the year before.

9. Washington Commanders

Week 17 result: Beat Atlanta Falcons 30-24

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Jayden Daniels is impossible to predict on the field, as he can throw it over defenders’ heads or run by them. But when it comes to buying gifts, the Commanders QB kept it simple. He wrapped up electric scooters for his offensive linemen, “so they don’t have to walk around as much,” he told reporters.

10. Los Angeles Chargers

Week 17 result: Beat New England Patriots 40-7

Justin Herbert got his linemen two gift cards, one from Delta Airlines (along with luggage) and one for wagyu beef from Snake River Farms — to keep their minds off their vacation plans.

The Patriots didn’t show up Sunday, so it didn’t really matter for this study what Herbert got his guys.


Honorable mention

Buffalo Bills

Week 17 result: Beat New York Jets 40-14

In the past, Bills QB Josh Allen gifted his linemen custom scooters, golf clubs and lessons. But his Bills linemen have reversed the trend — since whenever they screw up, Allen just runs by a defensive lineman or trucks a defensive back.

Last year, they gave him an ATV. This season, they decided to let him know what they thought about the pending MVP vote. The linemen gave him a custom diamond necklace of Allen’s No. 17 jersey with “MVP” on the nameplate. The back has the names of the linemen listed. Tackle Dion Dawkins posted the gift on Instagram with the caption, “Merry Christmas to our MVP.”

New York Giants

Beat Indianapolis Colts 45-33

Daniel Jones is living the good life as a practice squad player on the Vikings. But he didn’t forget his former teammates — or hold a grudge for all the beatings they facilitated earlier this season — and sent his old Giants linemen presents. He gifted them a limited edition bottle of Clase Azul tequila. The bottles can range in price from $120 to $19,000.

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Here’s hoping the linemen didn’t Google their respective bottles.

Overall record: 8-4

Moral of the story: Big guys like presents.

(Top illustration: Will Tullos / The Athletic; photos of Jalen Hurts, Joe Burrow and Jared Goff: Emilee Chinn, Dylan Buell and Todd Rosenberg / Getty Images)

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Brenden Aaronson finishes off the ‘perfect team move’ that showed the best of Leeds

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Brenden Aaronson finishes off the ‘perfect team move’ that showed the best of Leeds

It had been a wasteful night for Leeds United before Brenden Aaronson scored a goal-of-the-season contender.

Derby County did their best to frustrate and deny the Championship leaders. They did it well until the 79th minute. But, as they have done all season, Leeds will pass and pass and pass again until they find a minuscule opening capable of hurting their opponents, and so they did with Aaronson’s winner 11 minutes from time.

Leeds had other chances and it threatened to become a costly game in the title race, but the beauty of Aaronson’s goal — which takes his tally to seven for the season and earned him a man-of-the-match award — was worth enduring the frustration up to that point.


It started with Ao Tanaka in the middle (shown below) as he spread the ball wide to Ethan Ampadu.

The captain’s pass into the middle sparked the next string of passes, first to the feet of striker Joel Piroe and then on to Sam Byram wide on the left, completing a swing of possession from one flank to the other.

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Ao Tanaka (No 22, centre) starts the move by spreading play to the right (Sky Sports)

The moment of incision, in a call back to some of the goals scored under Marcelo Bielsa, came with five clinical passes.

Aaronson started the move from a deep position with five of his team-mates ahead of him in the box (shown as he receives a pass from Byram below).


Aaronson (centre, left of referee) starts the five-pass box entry move with team-mates ahead of him

After drawing out two Derby players, Kenzo Goudmijn and Corey Blackett-Taylor, the U.S. international offloaded the ball to Ampadu 10 yards behind him.

Paired with Tanaka in central midfield for the game, Ampadu played the ball wide again to left-back Byram.

Leeds have not been afraid to go back and recycle possession when needed this season, which is helped by creative defensive midfielders like Ampadu and Tanaka and two competent ball-playing centre-backs in Pascal Struijk and Joe Rodon.

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When opponents regularly sit in and try to deny Leeds’ attacking threat, Struijk and Rodon step forward to form a crucial part of attacking moves. United had 61 per cent of the ball against Derby and have only had less than 50 per cent twice this season — in the 0-0 draw with West Bromwich Albion in August and the 4-3 away win at Swansea City in November.

They have become so used to having the ball, more than 70 per cent of it in seven of their 24 league games this season, that unlocking opponents in new ways demands the best of Farke’s attacking players. At times it looks like it will never happen, as was the case against a stubborn Derby, but quality counts and Leeds have it running through their squad.

Substitutes Piroe and Manor Solomon were both involved in the goal. Though he has faced criticism for his subs in the past, Farke has said that “fortune favours the brave” when it comes to calling on his benched players to make an impact. It paid off at Derby.

When Byram received the ball from Ampadu, a quick adjustment of his feet allowed him to play inside to Solomon. The winger’s deft roll to turn inside and ensure he was facing goal as Aaronson began his run into the penalty area was a key trigger in turning the move into a precise attacking moment.

Timing is key here and Aaronson’s movement was proof of his development in the No 10 role in being able to make entries into the area at the right moment.

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As Aaronson made his run, Solomon’s square pass to Piroe drew three Derby players out of shape to allow the Dutchman to poke the ball through for the assist.

There was still work to be done when Aaronson picked up the ball on the edge of the six-yard box, but his calm finish past Jacob Widell Zetterstrom capped off a “perfect team move” in the eyes of his manager.

“In the second half, my feeling was we missed too many chances to win such an away game,” Farke said after the game.

“Even before the goal we had situations with Mateo, Largie, Brenden, Joe Rodon with a free header. But then we scored, for me, the goal of the season, unbelievable. I put it straight away into my poetry album and on such a difficult pitch. A perfect team move, Brenden with a perfect calm finish.”

Patience, quick thinking and a clinical finish made Aaronson’s goal perfect as an isolated move and as a way of wrapping up 2024. Leeds end the year top of the Championship on a high of back-to-back away wins. Poetry indeed.

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(Top photo: Barrington Coombs/PA Images via Getty Images)

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