Sports
Buffalo and Detroit, forever connected, can finally dream of a Rust Belt Super Bowl
There’s a long history of Buffalo and Detroit sharing their inspirational figures.
Joyce Carol Oates and Rick James, Bob Lanier and Pat LaFontaine.
They’ve easily crisscrossed the path around Lake Erie, whether by Interstate 90 or Ontario’s Highway 401, to find a familiar setting on the other end — another vibrant Rust Belt city that’s been kicked in the teeth but refuses to roll over. They’re union towns, hard-drinking towns. They’re poorer than most places their size. On the Canadian border, Tim Hortons is a local coffee shop and Labatt Blue is considered a domestic beer. Their sports teams are oxygen.
And, for generations, the Buffalo Bills and Detroit Lions have deprived them.
There’ve been successes, of course: the Bills with their back-to-back AFL titles in the 1960s and four straight Super Bowl losses three decades back, the Lions with their pre-JFK dominance and Barry Sanders’ resplendence until too much dysfunction made him quit.
Who could have entertained the notion of Buffalo and Detroit playing for the Lombardi Trophy?
“It would be a Super Bowl made in heaven,” said Mary Wilson, widow of Bills founder and Detroit businessman Ralph Wilson. “It would be awesome.”
A possible championship preview will be the chief storyline on Sunday when two ringless franchises meet at Ford Field. The 12-1 Lions have been betting favorites to win the NFC, while the 10-3 Bills last week slipped back to the second-best odds in the AFC behind the Kansas City Chiefs, whom the Bills conquered last month.
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Just three seasons ago, each fan base wanted to lash its head coach to a downriver barge. Lions coach Dan Campbell is the clear favorite for Coach of the Year. Bills coach Sean McDermott locked up his fifth straight AFC East crown with a month’s worth of games remaining.
“There are so many commonalities,” said John Beilein, former basketball coach at Canisius College and the University of Michigan. Beilein, a lifelong Bills fan from nearby Burt, N.Y., is the Detroit Pistons’ senior adviser for player development.
“It’s amazing how these teams have evolved. They’ve each had a renaissance, with their cultures of being good, smart teams that don’t beat themselves. Dan Campbell could run for mayor, governor, senator and he would win.”
Buffalo and Detroit are interchangeable when it comes to the old “drinking town with a football problem” quip.
Their NFL teams matter so much, at least in part, because they savor a happy distraction. Recent data shows they rank similarly among large metros in unionization (Buffalo first, Detroit seventh), poverty (Detroit second, Buffalo third) and excessive drinking (Buffalo fourth, Detroit 13th).
“It’s cold and dreary and gloomy and not a whole lot else to do, so they latch onto their teams,” said former Bills and Lions tight end Pete Metzelaars, who grew up in Michigan between Detroit and Chicago. “They’re towns that fell on hard times and needed to transition, needed to recreate themselves — much like their football teams.
“Buffalo lives and dies and bleeds with the Bills. The city’s hopes and dreams rise and fall whenever the Bills win or lose, walking around Monday morning all wowsy wowsy woo woo. Detroit’s been waiting for years and years and years to have a successful team. Now they’re living and dying with the Lions too.”
Sports examples of Detroit-Buffalo commingling are abundant. Chris Spielman was a heart-and-soul linebacker in both cities. Popular Bills quarterbacks Joe Ferguson and Frank Reich made their final starts for the Lions.
Dominik Hasek, the Buffalo Sabres’ greatest goaltender, lifted the Stanley Cup twice with the Detroit Red Wings. Iconic coach Scotty Bowman stood behind both teams’ benches and never stopped living in suburban Buffalo, usually spending his day with the Stanley Cup there in his backyard. Sabres great Danny Gare later became the Red Wings’ captain. Roger Crozier took the Conn Smythe Trophy with Detroit before becoming the first goalie in Sabres history.
No. 16 hangs from the rafters at each downtown arena. Lanier, the Bennett High and St. Bonaventure legend, is honored by the Pistons in Little Caesars Arena. LaFontaine, the Hall of Fame center who grew up in suburban Detroit, saw his number retired in KeyBank Center.
But it was Ralph Wilson who made the greatest crossover impact.
Wilson was a charter member of the Foolish Club, the group of firebrands who launched the AFL in 1960. The Detroit insurance, construction, trucking and broadcasting magnate owned a minority stake in the Lions and endeavored to be a full NFL owner, but he grew tired of the league’s reluctance to expand and threw in with the AFL instead. Wilson initially tried to put his team in Miami, but when the city refused to lease the Orange Bowl, he shifted to Buffalo.
“The reason Ralph went to Buffalo was because he was told it was such a great sports town, and Buffalo lived up to it,” Mary Wilson said. “Two great football cities. Detroit is an unbelievable sports town, but the greatest fans are the Buffalo Bills’.”
The Lions’ influence on the original Bills was unmistakable. Ralph Wilson hired Lions defensive coordinator Buster Ramsey as the Bills’ first head coach. The Bills also adopted the Lions’ uniform and helmet colors (Honolulu blue, silver and white), but switched to their current colors for their third season. A Bills-Lions summer exhibition was common from 1967 until the NFL took over preseason scheduling from individual clubs a few years ago.
Wilson remained dear friends with Lions owner William Clay Ford Sr. until their deaths 16 days apart in March 2014.
Mary Wilson assumed controlling ownership of the Bills until they were sold. Terry and Kim Pegula made the highest bid at $1.4 billion. It was a formality when NFL owners approved the Pegulas’ purchase at an Oct. 8 meeting that had been on the league’s calendar for over a year.
The date provided a poetic transition. Mary Wilson knew the final game of Ralph’s ownership era would conclude three days before the vote. She was there, sitting in the Lions season tickets Ralph maintained for over half a century, as the Bills won 17-14 in Ford Field.
The last Bills game of the Ralph Wilson ownership era was a 17-14 win against the Lions in Detroit. (Joe Sargent / Getty Images)
Now she helps oversee the Ralph C. Wilson Jr. Foundation, endowed with $1.2 billion from the Bills sale, with a focus on awarding grants in Western New York and Southeast Michigan. A major initiative was committing $200 million to transform underused parks into community destinations. Buffalo’s old LaSalle Park on the Niagara River became the 100-acre Ralph Wilson Park, and Detroit’s derelict West Riverfront Park is being turned into the new Ralph C. Wilson Jr. Centennial Park.
Not since landscape-architect grand master Frederick Law Olmsted created Buffalo’s parks system and Detroit’s Belle Isle Park in the late 1800s have the cities’ green spaces been so enriched.
“The two parks on the riverfront in Detroit and in Buffalo, they’re going to be Ralph’s greatest legacy,” Mary Wilson said.
Ralph Wilson would have emitted that trademark cackle upon learning his Bills were sold to a boyhood Lions fan. Terry Pegula grew up in Northeast Pennsylvania, but he adored Detroit Tigers right fielder Al Kaline. Pegula found it natural to adopt the Lions as his NFL team, too. Although never a Red Wings guy, Pegula tried to apply a heavy dose of “Hockeytown” mystique by branding his Sabres enterprise “Hockey Heaven.” The name didn’t stick.
Pegula has enjoyed substantially more success with his football club. From his first full season as owner, the Bills have a .611 win percentage (compared to a .463 win percentage before), reached the postseason in nine out of 10 seasons and endured just two losing seasons.
Two of the Bills’ victories happened with the Lions’ critical assistance.
Buffalo is the “City of Good Neighbors,” but the Lions twice came to the Bills’ rescue when deadly snowstorms struck Western New York and forced games to be relocated. At Ford Field, the Bills rolled the New York Jets in November 2014 and the Cleveland Browns in November 2022.
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Over the 64 years the Bills and Lions have existed, they’ve made the playoffs in the same season just five times. Before last year, they won a playoff game in the same season once. It happened in 1991, the Lions’ lone postseason victory between their 1957 NFL title and last year.
“My coaching years at Michigan were the same years the Bills were bad,” Beilein said, referring to Buffalo’s 17-year playoff drought that ended in 2017. “They went through three or four coaches, and so did Detroit. I had several guys on my staff and on the team from the Detroit area, and just remember lamenting about our teams and the misery-loving-company I had with all the Detroit fans. It connected us. A new coach, a new optimism, and there we are all over again.”
But the possibility of Detroit and Buffalo playing in the Super Bowl has added significance because somebody finally would win one.
A wonderful feat to win the AFC and advance four straight winters, but the Bills’ inability to cash any of their opportunities is an organizational scar.
From the group of 28 teams that existed upon the NFL’s 1976 expansion, the Lions and Browns officially are the last franchises without a Super Bowl trip, although the original Browns did morph into the Baltimore Ravens, winners of two Lombardi Trophies.
To explore what an NFL championship would mean to Buffalo or Detroit, scant better options exist than Mike Lodish, a native Detroiter and 11-year NFL defensive tackle. Lodish played in a record six Super Bowls. After appearing in all the Bills’ defeats, he earned two championship rings with the Denver Broncos.
“The biggest similarity between the two cities — more than being blue collar and the Great Lakes and all the manufacturing — is how their fan bases have such a desire to win a championship,” Lodish said. “Both Buffalo and Detroit need it because they haven’t had one. The need is monumental.
“If the Tampa Bay Buccaneers can win a Super Bowl, why can’t Detroit or Buffalo? Ultimately, it’s everything.”
Everyone interviewed for this story, however, insisted a championship parade would have greater significance to Buffalo. They’re all rooting accordingly.
Detroit, after all, has reveled in sports glory this century through the Red Wings, Pistons, Tigers, Wolverines and Spartans.
Mary Wilson sold the house in Grosse Pointe Shores, Mich., last month and considers herself a Western New Yorker these days. She got rid of her suite at Highmark Stadium, she said, because she got tired of playing hostess and simply wanted to concentrate on the game. So she has six Bills season tickets out in the crowd now.
She also still has two of Ralph’s six Lions season tickets. Mary will be sitting in Ford Field on Sunday, but cheering for the visitors.
“I’m really looking forward to this game,” Mary Wilson said. “People ask me, ‘Who are you going to pull for?’ I go, ‘Are you kidding?’ I never go against the Bills.”
(Top photo: Andy Lyons / Allsport, Kevin Sabitus, Harry How, Timothy T Ludwig, Mike Mulholland, Leon Halip / Getty Images, Steven King / Icon Sportswire)
Sports
Australia grants asylum to 5 Iranian women’s soccer players amid Iran conflict
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Australia granted asylum to five players from the Iranian women’s soccer team who were visiting for a tournament when the U.S.-Israeli attacks against Iran began.
Australian federal police officers on Tuesday transported the five women from their hotel in Gold Coast, Australia, to a “safe location” after they made asylum requests to meet with Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke and to finalize the processing of their humanitarian visas.
“Last night I was able to tell five women from the Iranian Women’s Soccer team that they are welcome to stay in Australia, to be safe and have a home here,” Burke said on X.
The move comes after the team refused to sing the Iranian anthem before their first Women’s Asian Cup match early last week against South Korea, although they later sang and saluted the anthem in two subsequent matches, including ahead of their final match, when they were eliminated by the Philippines.
IRANIAN WOMEN’S SOCCER FANS SHOW SUPPORT FOR TRUMP AS TEAM APPEARS TO PIVOT ON NATIONAL ANTHEM STANCE
Australian Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke poses with five Iranian women soccer players who have been granted asylum in Australia, Tuesday, March 10, 2026. (Australia Ministry of Home Affairs)
“I don’t want to begin to imagine how difficult that decision is for each of the individual women, but certainly last night it was joy, it was relief,” Burke told reporters after signing the documents. “People were very excited about embarking on a life in Australia.”
The five women said they were happy for their names and pictures to be published, according to Burke, who emphasized that the players wanted to make clear that they were not political activists.
The Iranian team arrived in Australia for the tournament before the war against Iran began on Feb. 28.
After the team was eliminated from the tournament over the weekend, they faced potentially returning to a country still under bombardment. The team’s head coach, Marziyeh Jafari, said on Sunday the players “want to come back to Iran as soon as we can.”
An official squad list named 26 players, as well as Jafari and other coaches.
While only five players were granted asylum, Burke said the offer was given to everyone on the team.
IRAN FLAG REMOVED FROM PARALYMPICS OPENING CEREMONY AFTER SOLE ATHLETE WITHDRAWS OVER TRAVEL SAFETY CONCERNS
Iran players during their national anthem ahead of the Women’s Asian Cup soccer match between Iran and the Philippines in Robina, Australia, Sunday, March 8, 2026. (Dave Hunt/AAPImage via AP)
“These women are tremendously popular in Australia, but we realize they are in a terribly difficult situation with the decisions that they’re making,” Burke said. “The opportunity will continue to be there for them to talk to Australian officials if they wish to.”
It remains unclear when the remaining players will leave Australia.
“Australians have been moved by the plight of these brave women,” Prime Minister Anthony Albanese told reporters. “They’re safe here and they should feel at home here.”
“They then had to consider that and do it in a way that did not present any danger to them or to their families and friends back home in Iran,” he continued.
The asylum offer came after U.S. President Donald Trump on Monday called on Australia to grant asylum to any team member who wanted it.
Trump had blasted Australia on social media, saying Australia was “making a terrible humanitarian mistake” by allowing the team to be “forced back to Iran, where they will most likely be killed.”
Supporters react towards a bus transporting Iranian woman players following their Women’s Asian Cup soccer match against the Philippines on the Gold Coast, Australia, Sunday, March 8, 2026. (Dave Hunt/AAP Image via AP)
“The U.S. will take them if you won’t,” Trump said, despite his administration’s efforts to limit the number of immigrants in the U.S. who can receive asylum for political purposes.
Just hours later, Trump praised Albanese in another post.
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“He’s on it! Five have already been taken care of, and the rest are on their way,” Trump wrote.
Albanese said Trump had called him for “a very positive conversation,” about the issue. The prime minister said he explained “the action that we’d undertaken over the previous 48 hours” to support the women.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Sports
Hawks’ strip club collab became a PR nightmare for the NBA. Now it’s been scrapped
The famed Magic City adult entertainment club won’t be featured at next week’s Atlanta Hawks promotional night, the NBA announced on Monday.
NBA commissioner Adam Silver acknowledged concerns from others in the league on Monday, saying that his decision to cancel the collaboration is in the best interests of the “broader NBA community.”
“While we appreciate the team’s perspective and their desire to move forward,” he said in a statement, “we have heard significant concerns from a broad array of league stakeholders, including fans, partners and employees.”
The Hawks announced its “Magic City Monday” promotion in late February, featuring a halftime performance by Atlanta-based artist T.I., a collaborative hoodie and the offering of some of the club’s popular wings, including the lemon-pepper variety named after former Hawks player Lou Williams.
Hawks principal owner Jami Gertz was a producer on “Magic City: An American Fantasy,” a docuseries that aired on Starz. Still, the team’s decision to collaborate with the Atlanta strip club ruffled some feathers in the NBA.
San Antonio Spurs center Luke Kornet asked the Hawks to cancel the promotional night in a post on Medium last week, saying that it would “reflect poorly on us as an NBA community, specifically in being complicit in the potential objectification and mistreatment of women in our society.”
Others had argued that Magic City is a big part of Atlanta culture and should be celebrated as such.
The Hawks wrote in a statement on Monday that it was disappointed with the NBA’s decision but would respect it.
Rapper T.I. will still perform at halftime, but the live recording of the Hawks AF Podcast featuring Gertz, T.I. and Magic City founder Michael Barney was canceled. Fans who pre-ordered the collaboration hoodie will still receive one, but the sweatshirts won’t be available for purchase at the game, the Hawks wrote on X.
“As a franchise, we remain committed to celebrating the best of Atlanta — with authenticity — in ways that continue to unite and bring us all together,” the Hawks wrote.
Times staff writer Chuck Schilken contributed to this report
Sports
NFL free agency 2026: Dolphins will release Tua Tagovailoa; ‘legal tampering’ set to start
NFL free agency is here!
Well, kind of.
The league’s so-called legal tampering period begins Monday at 9 a.m. PT, when teams are allowed to start negotiating with the agents for players who are about to become unrestricted free agents. No contracts can actually be signed, however, until the the start of the new NFL league year, which is Wednesday at 1 p.m. PT.
So, basically, fans will start finding out what moves their teams make and where various players will land starting Monday morning.
Hours before the legal tampering period started, the Miami Dolphins announced they will release longtime quarterback Tua Tagovailoa. The 2023 All Star will count $99 million against the Dolphins’ salary cap, the biggest dead cap hit in NFL history. The money can be split over the next two seasons if Tagovailoa is designated a post-June 1 release.
In six years with the Dolphins, Tagovailoa went 44-32 as a starter, completing 68% of his passes for 18,166 yards with 120 touchdowns and 59 interceptions. He made the Pro Bowl in 2023.
“Wearing this jersey and representing this city has been one of the greatest joys of my life,” Tagovailoa wrote Monday on Instagram, adding: “I also carry deep regret that I couldn’t get the job done and bring a championship home to this city. Miami deserves that, and I’ll always wish I could have delivered it for you.”
Who are some of the other big names in the free agency market? As far as quarterbacks are concerned, Green Bay Packers backup Malik Willis could be a hot commodity. Daniel Jones is a free agent after a strong season with Indianapolis, although the Colts placed the transition tag on him and can match any offer.
Veteran quarterback Kyler Murray was informed by the Arizona Cardinals last week that they will be letting him go at the start of the new league year. The Atlanta Falcons have made a similar announcement regarding Kirk Cousins. Other available veteran quarterbacks include Aaron Rodgers, Joe Flacco, Russell Wilson and Marcus Mariota.
Teams in need of a running back might be interested in the services of Kenneth Walker III, who will be a free agent just weeks after he was named Super Bowl LX MVP as a member of the Seattle Seahawks. Travis Etienne of the Jacksonville Jaguars could also find a new home.
This also seems to be a big year for free agent edge rushers (including Trey Hendrickson, Jaelan Phillips, Odafe Oweh, K’Lavon Chaisson and Boye Mafe) and wide receivers (including Alec Pierce, Mike Evans, Romeo Doubs, Rashid Shaheed and Jauan Jennings).
Check back here for updates as teams begin making moves.
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