Sports
Chiefs take down Ravens as hunt for 3rd straight Super Bowl starts off on right foot
A sliver of Baltimore Ravens tight end Isaiah Likely’s toe was the difference between overtime in the first game of the NFL season and the Kansas City Chiefs’ first win of the year.
The final play of the game saw Lamar Jackson and the Ravens needing a touchdown to force overtime, and he fired a strike to Likely, who secured it and looked to get two feet in.
However, after review, Likely’s toe was on the back line, and he was ruled out of bounds, ending the game in dramatic fashion in favor of the home team, 27-20.
Ravens head coach John Harbaugh discussed Likely’s performance after the game, calling it a “courageous game” where he “made so many plays, especially down the stretch.” But that one play will be talked about for quite some time, as it appeared Harbaugh was motioning to go for the win with a two-point conversion.
The Chiefs are hunting for NFL history this season as the first team to win three straight Super Bowls, and on the night they unveiled their latest banner, they did what needed to be done – and saw some luck fall their way in the end – to start off on the right foot (no pun intended).
Earlier this year, the Chiefs defeated the Ravens in the AFC Championship Game to get to the Super Bowl in Las Vegas, and they kept that domination alive at home this time in Kansas City.
And while Patrick Mahomes showcased his regular magic on the football field as quarterback for the Chiefs, it was his new weapon, rookie speedster Xavier Worthy, that really shined in his NFL debut.
One of the reasons the Chiefs are expected to have more explosive plays this season is Worthy, the new record holder in the 40-yard dash after posting a 4.21-second run at the NFL Scouting Combine.
That speed was showcased immediately in this game, as he had just three touches on the football, but two of them went for touchdowns.
The Chiefs needed just four plays to get downfield in scoring territory on its first drive of the season, and it was Mahomes hitting his second-year receiver Rashee Rice, who had two catches for 27 yards, his last a 16-yard catch-and-run with a horse collar tackle that added 15 yards on top of that.
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Then, the ball went in the hands of rookie receiver Xavier Worthy, the new record holder in the NFL Combine’s 40-yard dash, for the first time and he didn’t disappoint. The blazing speed was on full display, as he worked his way around the Ravens’ defense and into the end zone for a 21-yard touchdown run – his first touch in the NFL.
The Ravens, though, were the first to put up a touchdown in the new year, and it was their new addition, running back Derrick Henry, plunging in from five yards out for his first end zone trip as a Raven.
After such a hot start, though, the Chiefs and Ravens both punted on their next drives, but we then saw our first turnover of the new year.
Chiefs star defensive tackle Chris Jones, who wreaked havoc all game, got into the backfield and forced the ball out of Jackson’s hands on the first play of the Ravens’ third drive. That set the Chiefs up for another potential touchdown drive, but Juju Smith-Schuster, who rejoined the Chiefs this offseason, couldn’t handle a ball on the goal line.
Harrison Butker kicked his first field goal of the year to take the lead for Kansas City.
It was a lead Kansas City wouldn’t relinquish the rest of the game, as Baltimore just couldn’t get going like they usually did on their way to the best record in the league last season (though their final drive made things interesting). Justin Tucker, who struggled from beyond 50 yards last season, missed his first field goal of the year from 53 yards out.
And despite picking off Mahomes late in the first half, the Ravens had to settle for a field goal to head into the locker room down three points, 13-10.
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The Chiefs created a gap with its first drive in the second half, as Mahomes led the way on a six-play, 81-yard drive that ended with a Pacheco score from one yard out.
But while the Ravens were struggling on offense, we all know it takes just one play to turn things around, and that’s exactly what happened when Jackson simply threw it up for Isaiah Likely, the Ravens’ tight end who shined last year in place of the hurt Mark Andrews.
Likely secured the pass with linebacker Nick Bolton draped all over him, and he started to make the Chiefs miss. After maneuvering around Bolton, he found a couple blocks and started streaking downfield. He hit the brakes just before the goal line and walked into the end zone for a 49-yard touchdown that made it a three-point game again.
However, Worthy’s second touchdown came immediately after Baltimore felt momentum on its sideline again, as Marlon Humphrey thought he had safety help over the top, and Mahomes didn’t miss his rookie on the right side as he waltzed into the end zone for a 35-yard score.
The Ravens would cut the lead to seven with another Tucker field goal, and they were able to get the ball back at the two-minute warning in an attempt to tie, or perhaps win, the game.
Baltimore made its way downfield, as Jackson started dissecting the defense by finding Likely. Then, things got fascinating when Rashod Bateman went up to grab a 38-yard reception to land on Kansas City’s 10-yard line.
With second-and-goal and 10 seconds remaining, Jackson danced around the pocket and fired a pass to a wide-open Zay Flowers, but he threw behind him. Then, the Likely mishap occurred, ending the Ravens’ night in heartbreak.
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Sports
How Premier League footballers have turned two Surrey villages into ‘Beverly Hills of Britain’
Welcome to the ‘Beverly Hills of Britain’, where the only thing missing is sunshine.
There are luxury cars, fancy restaurants, gated mansions and enough high-level professional footballers to create the United Kingdom’s most dominant five-a-side league.
‘Elmbridge Borough Council welcomes you to Cobham’, the sign reads as you enter the village made famous by Chelsea Football Club, whose training ground named after this place is a four-minute drive from its high street (and actually in nearby Stoke d’Abernon).
Chelsea moved to Cobham, part of London’s southern commuter belt, 19 years ago from Harlington, near Heathrow Airport on the western outskirts of the city. Since then, the village itself and surrounding areas, including Oxshott, have become home to footballers past and present, the streets — many of them private roads — lined by multi-million-pound mansions hidden behind security gates.
Over the past two decades, residents have become accustomed to seeing Premier League footballers wandering down the high street (Belgium international Eden Hazard was a regular in the village’s high-end Waitrose supermarket during his 2012-19 spell at Stamford Bridge), stopping for a coffee or enjoying a meal in one of the restaurants.
Even on the gloomy September morning when The Athletic visits, an array of fancy cars — Land Rover Defenders dominate — are passing through or pulling over to park outside one of the local stores.
Just over 20 miles south-west from central London, but away from the glare living in the UK capital would bring, Cobham and Oxshott are two of the most desirable — and expensive — locations in the country, where houses regularly sell for millions of pounds.
On any given day, you could bump into John Terry, the former Chelsea and England captain, or Sir Andy Murray, the British men’s tennis player who retired from that sport after the recent Olympics in Paris.
It is the south of England’s answer to the north’s ‘Golden Triangle’ of villages — Hale, Alderley Edge and Wilmslow — which is home to many Manchester City and Manchester United footballers.
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Welcome to the ‘goldplated’ villages the Premier League elite call home
Nicknamed the ‘Beverly Hills of Britain’ due to the number of celebrities who now call it home, this area has long been popular among London-based stockbrokers and hedge-fund managers. There are elite private schools, fancy hair salons, Pilates studios and yoga classes at the disposal of players and their families.
Trevor Kearney, founder of property company The Private Office Real Estate, sums up what life is like as a Premier League footballer based around here: “If you go to Grappelli on a Saturday night then, no matter who you are, there is always someone more famous than you in the room.”
Grappelli, an Italian restaurant only a couple of hundred yards away from The Ivy Cobham Garden, is frequently visited by footballers and, alongside its pasta dishes, is known for its ebullient front-of-house manager, Eddy, who has become a friend to many of them.
During Eddy’s chat with The Athletic over coffee, several passers-by stop to say hello, while Chelsea player Cesare Casadei parks his Mercedes on the other side of the road before disappearing into a shop. Eddy says Casadei, a 21-year-old midfielder, is a “good guy”.
“Most of the footballers that come here are Chelsea players,” Eddy says. “Lots of old players still live in the area, so we have Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink, Ashley Cole… they are regulars and good friends with the owner.
“We have had John Terry, Ashley Cole, Noni Madueke, (Marc) Cucurella, Roberto Di Matteo, Gianfranco Zola, Andriy Shevchenko, Mauricio Pochettino, Joao Felix, Robert Sanchez… I don’t watch football, but I started following it because I needed to know who they are!”
During our conversation, Ryan Bertrand, the former Chelsea and England defender, pulls up in his car down the road. Yes, Eddy knows him, too. But with the most prominent players away on international duty at the moment, this is a relatively quiet morning in Cobham.
On the day The Athletic visited, Ahmed Alsanawi, a barber with 1.2 million Instagram followers whose social media posts show him cutting the hair of Hazard, Phil Foden, Jack Grealish and Reece James, among others, turned up in his yellow Lamborghini Urus.
“It’s trendy, it’s cool, but it has all the right fundamentals of what makes up a great community and environment,” Kearney says of the area. “When Chelsea arrived at Cobham, there was a mandate that the players need to live in a two-and-a-half-mile radius of the training ground, so that meant Cobham and Oxshott has seen a new breed and type of buyer.
“All of a sudden, you had this new breed of person, wealth and fame injected into it. It transformed it, but it was already headed in that direction.
“Chelsea didn’t change the market, they just turbo-fuelled it.”
Kearney estimates that around 100 footballers are living in this part of the county of Surrey, including the towns of Weybridge and Esher a few miles to the north. Many of them, particularly those of a Chelsea persuasion, reside near Cobham, though.
“Chelsea moved here and then other players at different clubs, let’s say (their west London neighbours) Fulham, who didn’t want to be in central London, saw everyone was in Oxshott or Cobham and moved there instead,” Kearney says. “It’s the same at (south Londoners) Crystal Palace.
“It became the south’s hub for players. If you were at a north London club, you would stay relatively north. But if you lived more towards the south, then you were coming to Cobham or Oxshott.
“Even if you were further south, let’s say at Bournemouth (on the south coast), you would live in Cobham or Oxshott and commute. I had two friends playing for Stoke City (in the Midlands, north of Birmingham) who lived in Oxshott and got the train there because the family didn’t want to move as it was the perfect area for them.
“That shows the allure and pull of the area.”
It became common for the players from other top clubs in London, such as Palace, to make Oxshott their home and they would frequently travel to the training ground together. A Palace contingent of Joel Ward, Gary Cahill, Martin Kelly and Scott Dann, for example, used to link up in the mornings, collecting team-mate Jason Puncheon at the nearby Reigate junction of London’s orbital M25 motorway along the way.
According to data from Foxtons, a UK-based estate agency, the average price of a house in Cobham has doubled since Chelsea made this area their home in 2005. On average, houses were selling for just over £600,000 then, compared to more than £1.2million in 2024. The gated enclaves lining the private roads and populated by footballers are selling for much more than that latter figure.
Including Oxshott, Kearney estimates that footballers are spending around “£4m to £7m” on a house. Houses in Oxshott, though, are, on average, more expensive than those in Cobham, which is under four miles away.
“What Oxshott has is the Crown Estate,” Kearney explains. “The Crown Estate was once Crown land (property of the Royal family) and has an incredibly high-end housing estate with values from £3m to £20m. They are gated enclaves, safe environments, roads that were run by management companies and it is a super-smart setup.
“Oxshott was in that radius and it has an incredible school called Danes Hill. People were training in Cobham and a couple of minutes up the road is an amazing place to live, with knockout houses and a brilliant school, and it works for them.
“Cobham has a few of those estates, too, but not as big or as powerful as the Crown Estate. Oxshott has a little high street, but it hasn’t got an Ivy or a Grappelli’s. People who live in Oxshott would visit Cobham for the coffee spots, hair salons and restaurants.”
In 2022, Didier Drogba, the Ivory Coast international striker who left Chelsea in 2015 to play for Montreal in MLS, put his six-bedroom house on the Crown Estate up for sale for £6.25million, according to the UK’s Daily Mail. In 2014, the same newspaper also reported Terry sold two Oxshott properties for a combined £21.5m.
Players who choose to rent instead of buying, especially if they are arriving from a different country and are reluctant to commit to spending millions on a house, are spending anywhere from £15,000 to £30,000 a month. “The rental market is interesting because there isn’t enough good enough stock to come and rent,” Kearney says. “If I had a house that someone could move into today, it would go instantly.”
When it comes to a player getting a mortgage, banks will consider their career and trajectory before deciding on the terms of a deal.
Kearney notes how a lot of them can “very easily get high-leverage” mortgages, sometimes “up to 100 per cent”. The majority of these are spread over the length of the individual’s club contract, although exceptions can be made if a player is more established or quite clearly on their way to becoming a superstar.
Aside from a modern exterior and interior, along with a big enough garden to install a five-a-side pitch — Kearney says this is a more common request than you may think — the most important thing house-hunting footballers are looking for is safety and security.
Footballers are often deemed easy targets by criminals who will know when a player is likely to be at training or playing in a match, maybe at the other end of the country or possibly overseas, due to their club’s schedule and fixture list.
In recent years, players’ houses have been targeted, including in Oxshott.
Chelsea and England forward Raheem Sterling’s home was broken into in December 2022, leading to him flying back from the World Cup in Qatar.
Four men were jailed in July 2017 after targeting Terry’s home in Oxshott in February 2017, as reported by the BBC, with the former Chelsea defender being told by Judge Susan Tapping in court that it “might have been a mistake to post a family photograph on social media to show that he was away on holiday”.
During that raid, the convicted burglars stole more than £220,000 of jewellery and designer handbags worth £126,000. “His home was deliberately targeted and the master bedroom suite was ransacked,” Judge Tapping said.
According to police.uk data, from October 2021 to the end of June 2024, 193 burglary offences were committed in Cobham and Oxshott, with the most prevalent crimes being violence and sexual offences (1,075) during the same period.
“Safety and security is paramount,” Kearney says. “I’ve also got a company that is a security service around players and that works phenomenally well. If you are buying a new house, they go in and make sure the basics are right, such as intercoms, CCTV, and everything like that, but also layering additional security depending on your needs.”
Safe rooms, panic buttons and patrol dogs have become commonplace. “They want to live really normal, unaffected lives, with the best technology and security systems in their house,” Kearney says.
Given the focus and attention placed on footballers, especially those playing at the highest level, living an ‘unaffected life’ almost seems implausible. But in Cobham, Oxshott and the wider Surrey area, that is something they, within reason, have been able to do. Their fellow local residents have become used to seeing them on a daily basis, whether that is Terry, who played 78 times for England, or the lesser-known ones such as Casadei.
As in Beverly Hills, the Los Angeles district that is home to actors, singers and other A-list celebrities, a Premier League footballer can turn up to a supermarket or restaurant in Cobham and, like Kearney says above, there is a good chance they will not be the most famous person there.
(Top photos: Daniel Sheldon/The Athletic; design: Eamonn Dalton for The Athletic)
Sports
Lions pull off thrilling overtime win over Rams behind breakout game from Jameson Williams
There was only one way to end the first full Sunday of NFL games – overtime.
The Detroit Lions got the season started off right with a 26-20 win over the Los Angeles Rams in a thrilling finish.
Detroit got the ball first in the extra period and didn’t allow Los Angeles to have an offensive play. Two run plays set the tone for the drive. Khalif Raymond picked up a first down on the first jet sweep carry. Then, David Montgomery took the ball 21 yards and into Rams territory.
Jared Goff then threw a pass to Jahmyr Gibbs for a 10-yaad gain. At this point, the Lions could smell the end zone.
Montgomery had a few more carries and eventually found the end zone for the score. He finished with 91 rushing yards. Gibbs added 40 yards on the ground and a touchdown.
Goff was 18-for-28 with 217 passing yards, a touchdown pass and an interception.
The Lions had a pretty commanding lead early in the third quarter. Goff threw a 52-yard touchdown pass to Jameson Williams with 10:29 left in the quarter to put Detroit up 17-3.
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It was at that moment the Rams needed to dig deep and get back into the game.
Stafford led the Rams on an 11-play, 70-yard drive that ended with a Kyren Williams touchdown to cut the deficit down to seven points. Rams kicker Joshua Karty added a 26-yard field goal and then Stafford found Cooper Kupp for a 9-yard touchdown.
In the Lions’ final drive, Goff got Detroit back to within field-goal range and Jake Bates hit a 32-yarder to tie the game. It was 20-20 when the game went into overtime.
Williams finished with five catches for 121 yards.
Stafford had a terrific game for the Rams. He showed up more for Los Angeles in the second half than he did in the first half. He ended the game with 317 passing yards, a touchdown pass and an interception.
The Rams’ offense was hurt early in the game when Puka Nacua left the game with a knee injury. He did not return.
Kupp had to step up in his absence. He had 14 catches on 21 targets for 110 yards and a touchdown. Tyler Johnson had five catches for 79 yards.
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Sports
Rams defense can't stop Jared Goff and Lions late in overtime loss
A remade Rams defense played the Detroit Lions tough through four quarters on Sunday night.
But they could not stop the Lions in overtime.
Jared Goff drove his team 70 yards in eight plays and David Montgomery scored on a one-yard touchdown to send the Rams to a 26-20 defeat before 66,530 at Ford Field.
Rams quarterback Matthew Stafford passed for a touchdown, running back Kyren Williams scored a touchdown and veteran safety John Johnson III had a key interception, but that was not enough.
It was another heartbreaking loss for the Rams and Stafford, who lost here, 24-23, last January in an NFC wild-card game.
Stafford, who played his first 12 seasons in Detroit, completed 34 of 49 passes for 317 yards and touchdown, with an interception.
But Goff, for whom Stafford was traded in 2021, outdueled him again, completing 18 of 28 passes for 217 yards.
It was a costly defeat for the Rams in more ways than one.
Wide receiver Puka Nacua and offensive lineman Steve Avila left the game because of knee injuries, offensive lineman Joe Noteboom an ankle injury.
The rash of injuries in the opener harked to 2022, when the defending Super Bowl-champion Rams lost several offensive linemen during a season-opening rout by the Buffalo Bills, a
The Rams trailed, 10-3 at halftime, and the Lions extended their lead early in the third quarter on Goff’s 52-yard touchdown pass to receiver Jameson Williams, who got behind Rams cornerback Tre’Davious for the long scoring play.
Rams running back Kyren Williams pulled the Rams to within 17-10 late in the quarter with a two-yard touchdown run. Stafford’s 14-yard pass to receiver Demarcus Robinson on a fourth-and-three play at the Lions’ 29 was the key play in the 70-yard drive.
Stafford and receiver Tyler Johnson connected for a long pass play that set up an apparent touchdown run by rookie receiver Jordan Whittington. But a holding penalty nullified the play and the Rams had to settle for a field goal that pulled them to within 17-13.
Johnson’s interception set up an 80-yard scoring drive that Stafford capped with a nine-yard touchdown pass to Kupp for a 20-17 lead with less than five minutes remaining.
The Rams had an opportunity to seal the victory when they got the ball back with just over four minutes left. But they were forced to punt, and the Lions kicked a field goal with 17 seconds left to force the game to overtime.
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