Sports
Here’s why football is all sunshine again for Rams’ Troy Hill after Cleveland detour
Troy Hill watched from afar because the Rams received Tremendous Bowl LVI.
The veteran cornerback was completely happy for the gamers and coaches with whom he bonded throughout 5 seasons with the Rams earlier than signing with the Cleveland Browns in 2021.
“It was a bit robust on the opposite finish too,” Hill mentioned Monday, “as a result of it was prefer it’s at all times that would’ve, ought to’ve, would’ve kind of factor.”
Hill, reacquired by the Rams on Saturday in a draft day commerce, has no regrets about his choice to money in and play for the Browns on a two-year deal that included $4.5 million in ensures.
However Hill, 30, is ecstatic about rejoining the staff with whom he established himself.
“I used to be enthusiastic about with the ability to come again out right here and get a few of this sunshine, issues like that,” Hill mentioned throughout a videoconference with reporters, including that it was additionally a constructive, “with the ability to come again, and seeing all these acquainted faces, being traded to a staff that I do know what to anticipate.”
The Rams traded for Hill moments after they chose South Carolina State cornerback Decobie Durant within the fourth spherical. The Rams additionally drafted Georgia cornerback Derion Kendrick within the sixth spherical to reinforce a place group that features star Jalen Ramsey, fourth-year professional David Lengthy and second-year professional Robert Rochell.
After buying and selling for Hill — the Rams despatched the Browns a 2023 fifth-round decide — coach Sean McVay mentioned that “distance makes the guts develop fonder,” for a participant who didn’t intercept a go for the Browns however scored three touchdowns for the Rams in 2020.
McVay’s selection of phrasing precisely mirrored his emotions as nicely, Hill mentioned.
A local of Youngstown, Ohio, Hill mentioned his return to the state the place he spent a lot of his childhood enabled him to reconnect with household and luxuriate in a uncommon Thanksgiving collectively. However Hill, who moved to Southern California as a young person and attended Ventura St. Bonaventure Excessive, sounded as if he longed for a return to the Rams.
“After I was in Cleveland, I at all times discovered myself attempting to check issues to the way it was accomplished over right here in L.A.,” he mentioned, including, “I don’t know if it was me simply attempting to check so far as that is what a profitable program [does], or if was simply lacking all the pieces that was occurring over right here.”
Hill performed the 2020 season for the Rams underneath former defensive coordinator Brandon Staley. He returned two interceptions and a fumble for touchdowns.
“In our secondary, everyone was able to making performs,” Hill mentioned. “You don’t wish to be the weak hyperlink. So, I imply, that’s type of what my mindset was. I at all times felt like as soon as I had the ball in my hand, I might do one thing with it.”
Hill anticipates transitioning simply into defensive coordinator Raheem Morris’ scheme.
He mentioned he was motivated to indicate that he was value greater than the fifth-round decide the Browns accepted to deal him.
“I really feel disrespected,” he mentioned. “Positively motivated to return out and present what I can do. … Positively plan to return out and play with a chip on my shoulder, for positive.”
Kendrick, chatting with Los Angles reporters for the primary time, mentioned he was wanting ahead to taking part in with Ramsey and different Rams defensive stars.
“That’s one man that I take a look at about every single day and mannequin my recreation after,” Kendrick mentioned of Ramsey, a three-time All-Professional. “Simply due to his angle, swagger, aggressiveness.”
Kendrick mentioned he has grown from his experiences at Clemson and Georgia. Kendrick was faraway from the Clemson program after the 2020 season, reportedly for repeated violations of staff guidelines.
“Everyone has issues they’ve started working on,” he mentioned. “I needed to work on communication, and likewise maturing.”
Sports
Plane appearing to carry Auburn's men's basketball team diverted due to in-flight altercation: report
Auburn and Houston will face off in a battle of top basketball programs Saturday, but one team apparently got a little too rowdy a little too early.
Reports say a pilot turned Auburn’s plane around due to an altercation between players.
WBRC in Birmingham said a plane that appeared to be carrying the Tigers’ men’s basketball team, traveling from Auburn to Houston, was diverted to Auburn several minutes into the flight after the pilot said there were “a bunch of basketball players fighting.”
The outlet reported that staff requested an emergency landing in Montgomery, but the plane instead landed in Auburn 40 minutes after takeoff.
The university did not immediately respond to a request for comment, nor did it confirm the incident.
Another report said no punches were thrown, but “guys got in each other’s faces.”
FlightAware shows a “diverted” flight left the Auburn airport at 2:50 p.m. local time and landed at 3:30 p.m. The site says the final flight from Auburn to Houston Friday was scheduled to leave at 6:55 p.m and land one hour and 53 minutes later.
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Three other flights with the same route earlier in the day went on as planned, according to FlightAware.
Auburn is ranked 11th in the country, and the Cougars are No. 4.
The Tigers were knocked out of the first round of the 2024 March Madness tournament as a No. 4 seed by No. 13 Yale. Houston was a No. 1 seed last year and fell to No. 4 Duke in the Sweet 16.
In 2023, the Cougars, a No. 1 seed, knocked off No. 9 Auburn in the second round.
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Sports
Top-seeded Simi Valley holds off upset bid by Notre Dame in Division 3 playoff opener
There’s little room for error in dealing with the arm and legs of Sherman Oaks Notre Dame’s Steele Pizzella, the fastest quarterback in California.
There was an 80-yard touchdown run Friday night in which his 10.64-second 100-meter speed was electrifying. There were four touchdown passes, three to Luc Weaver.
And yet, top-seeded Simi Valley was able to pull out a 49-47 victory over the Knights in a first-round Southern Section Division 3 playoff opener because it had its own dominating offensive weapon in running back Brice Hawkins, who rushed for 202 yards and scored four touchdowns.
“It was a shootout, and they had the ball last,” Notre Dame coach Evan Yabu said.
Hawkins’ seven-yard run in the final minute earned Simi Valley (10-1) a first down to run out the clock and allowed the Pioneers to have another home game next week against La Habra.
Pizzella passed for 362 yards with two interceptions and ran for 173 yards in his final high school game before heading to Washington State. Simi Valley coach Jim Benkert knew all about Pizzella’s talents, because he was his coach for his first two years of high school.
“Oh my gosh,” Benkert said. “He’s special. He was making great plays with his feet, he was making great plays with his arm.”
Freshman cornerback Micah Hannah, who made an interception for Simi Valley on the Knights’ opening possession, was familiar with Pizzella because his older brother, Malachi, played with Pizzella at Simi Valley.
“He’s a great player,” Hannah said. “He’s real fast.”
Two lost fumbles and an interception in the first half by Simi Valley helped Notre Dame reach halftime trailing only 28-26. There were big plays by the Knights. Weaver had a 66-yard touchdown catch on broken coverage and a 25-yard touchdown. Caden Sliowski returned a fumble 65 yards for a touchdown. Pizzella ran 80 yards up the middle for another touchdown.
Hawkins scored three touchdowns in the first half for Simi Valley. Evan Rodriguez caught a 74-yard touchdown pass from Tripp Harrison to start the third quarter for the Pioneers, and that started a back-and-forth scoring duel. Weaver, a 6-foot-3 junior, was tough to cover. He had eight receptions for 196 yards.
A decisive moment came in the fourth quarter when Jayden Graham came up with an interception in the end zone for Simi Valley after miscommunication between Pizzella and his receiver with Simi Valley ahead 42-40. Hawkins scored on a two-yard run with 4:48 left.
The victory added to a remarkable accomplishment for a Simi Valley program that has beaten four private-school powers this season in the Knights, St. Bonaventure, Bishop Diego and Oaks Christian.
Simi Valley’s coaching staff is filled with prolific former head coaches. There’s Richard Fong (L.A. Baptist), 82-year-old Bob Richards (Thousand Oaks) and defensive coordinator Doug Semones (Kahuku, Hawaii), who lives in Puerto Rico but left his wife and 12 rescue dogs for three months to help Benkert. There’s also 88-year-old tight ends coach Ron Rescigno, a former head coach in New York.
Benkert has won six Southern Section titles at Westlake, Oaks Christian and Simi Valley, where he took over in 2018 and won the Division 6 title last season. He also was the offensive coordinator as a 25-year-old at Crespi in 1986 when the Celts, led by sophomore running back Russell White, won the Big Five Conference championship. “Give the ball to Russell,” was his simple play call, and it worked.
“They believe,” Benkert said of his current players.
Sports
All-Free-Agent Team: Closers and corner outfielders aplenty, harder to fill up the middle
The offseason is built for free-agent rankings. Our resident scout Keith Law compiled his top 50 free agents, and our resident GM Jim Bowden ranked his own top 45. A handful of our writers worked together to develop a collective Big Board of the market’s top 40 free agents.
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But while rankings give a sense of the top talent available, we have to rearrange those lists to better understand where the market is deep and especially thin. Here, then, is a 26-man roster made entirely of free agents, illustrating the ample options for a needy rotation, bullpen or outfield corner, and the relative lack of options for almost any position up the middle.
Lineup
- Willy Adames, SS
- Juan Soto, RF
- Pete Alonso, 1B
- Anthony Santander, DH
- Teoscar Hernández, LF
- Alex Bregman, 3B
- Gleyber Torres, 2B
- Travis d’Arnaud, C
- Harrison Bader, CF
Power in the middle
If you’re in the market for a slugger, this offseason has some options. Five of the 18 players who hit over 30 home runs this season are now free agents (Soto, Santander, Alonso, Hernández, Adames). Bregman also has some pop, and d’Arnaud was top 10 among catchers in slugging percentage. Among the free agents who didn’t make our starting lineup, Randal Grichuk, Joc Pederson, Tyler O’Neill and Kyle Higashioka each slugged at least .475 this year.
Depth at the corners
Our Big Board has enough corner outfielders near the top that we had to stick one of them at designated hitter just to fit them all in our lineup. Even then, there are enough everyday options that a second string could have plenty of impact, with Jurickson Profar (.839 OPS in 2024), Tyler O’Neill (.847) and Joc Pederson (.908) also ranking among our top 26 free agents. Another corner bat, first baseman Christian Walker (.803 OPS, three Gold Gloves), is No. 15 on our list.
Point of weakness
When Cody Bellinger chose to stay with the Chicago Cubs, the free-agent market lost its best center-field option. No other center fielder came particularly close to making our Big Board. For our Free Agents Team we chose Bader (coming off a 1.3 fWAR with the Mets) over other glove-first options Michael A. Taylor and Kiké Hernández. Center field is the market’s thinnest and weakest position, though the market isn’t particularly deep anywhere up the middle.
Bench
- Christian Walker, 1B
- Ha-Seong Kim, SS/2B
- Jurickson Profar, OF
- Danny Jansen, C
Thin in the infield
Positionally, this is not a great way to build a big-league bench. There’s no backup third baseman, no backup center fielder, and we’re not sure when our utility man is going to be ready (or how much his shoulder surgery will impact his ability to play shortstop). But the options — especially in the infield — are limited. First baseman Paul Goldschmidt ranks No. 29, but our Big Board includes no other infielders who aren’t listed here. The ones that came closest are Carlos Santana, José Iglesias, Yoán Moncada and Korean infielder Hye-seong Kim, and there are reasons to wonder about each of those in an everyday role. Second baseman Jorge Polanco could be interesting as a bounce-back candidate, and shortstop Paul DeJong has hit his way back onto the map after a good season.
Options behind the plate
There are no catchers on our Big Board, but d’Arnaud and Jansen did generate some bottom-of-the-list consideration, and the free-agent market also has Higashioka, Carson Kelly, Gary Sánchez, Elías Díaz, Jacob Stallings and others who have been solid big-league catchers in recent years. This market doesn’t necessarily have a standout everyday catcher, but those are few and far between in today’s game. For teams trying to build a catching duo, free agency might offer a few solutions.
Lefty bats
For our backup outfielder, we just went with the highest name remaining from the Big Board (Profar), but the market notably has a decent number of left-handed options that could be useful in a platoon. Joc Pederson (No. 26), Max Kepler (34), Alex Verdugo (38) and Michael Conforto (40) made our Big Board, and Jesse Winker just missed. Jason Heyward is also a free agent after providing some left-handed balance for a few contenders (the Dodgers and Astros) this past season.
Rotation
- Corbin Burnes, RHP
- Max Fried, LHP
- Blake Snell, RHP
- Jack Flaherty, RHP
- Sean Manaea, LHP
Impact starters
Our Big Board’s top 12 includes six starting pitchers, but we didn’t include No. 3 Roki Sasaki in our All-Free Agent rotation because his situation is unique and some of his value is tied to his youth (23 years old) and the fact he’ll have to sign relatively cheap. Among proven big-league starters, this free-agent market includes four of the top 20 in ERA this past season. Burnes is unmistakably the top arm in the class, and the depth of No. 1 starters depends on whether teams believe the recent performances of Flaherty and Manaea are sustainable.
Next tier
Almost half of our top 25 free agents are mid-rotation-or-better arms — Nathan Eovaldi (No. 13 on the Big Board), Yusei Kikuchi (14), Shane Bieber (20), Walker Buehler (21), Luis Severino (23), and Nick Martinez (25) — but they come with a vast array of questions ranging from age to health to recent inconsistency. Bieber, in particular, is interesting given that he’s a Cy Young winner returning from Tommy John surgery and doesn’t turn 30 until the end of May. Martinez is 34, but he’s coming off a career year that saw him pitch well down the stretch as a full-time starter.
A question of age
The bottom of our Big Board is loaded with successful but uncertain starting pitchers. Tomoyuki Sugano, Matthew Boyd, José Quintana and Max Scherzer each rank between 35 and 39 on our list, and all will be aged between 34 and 40 next season. The first player who missed the cut for our Big Board was Charlie Morton, another stater who turns 41 later this month. A few spots below Morton was Justin Verlander, who’s almost 42. Sugano has never pitched in the majors. Boyd’s made 23 starts the past three years combined. Scherzer made just nine starts this season. Which can be trusted to carry a starter’s workload next year?
Bullpen
- Tanner Scott, LHP
- Jeff Hoffman, RHP
- Clay Holmes, RHP
- Carlos Estévez, RHP
- Blake Treinen, RHP
- Kirby Yates, RHP
- Kenley Jansen, RHP
- David Robertson, RHP
Impact at the top
Six of these eight relievers have been All-Stars within the past two seasons. The only exceptions are Treinen (who’s been an All-Star in the past and most recently was the top arm in the Dodgers’ postseason bullpen) and Robertson (another former All-Star who along with Yates, Scott, Jansen, Hoffman and Estévez ranked in the top 20 in Win Probability Added this season). Four other free agents — Chris Martin, Hector Neris, Paul Sewald and Lucas Sims — were top 10 in Win Probability Added in 2023. There’s potential for impact here.
Closers for hire
This free-agent class is especially deep in pitchers with extensive closer experience. Eleven free agents — Jansen, Craig Kimbrel, Aroldis Chapman, Robertson, Will Smith, Neris, Yates, Sewald, Estévez, Treinen and Holmes — rank top 25 in saves among active players, and that list doesn’t include Scott, who’s had double-digit saves the past three years and made the All-Star team last year. Ninth-inning experience is readily available this winter.
From the left side
We chose our bullpen by picking every reliever on our Big Board, plus the two who came closest to making the cut. If we wanted a second lefty, though, Chapman and Danny Coulombe — surprisingly let go by the Orioles — would warrant some consideration. A.J. Minter, Tim Hill and Jalen Beeks are among the other free-agent lefties who could help balance a bullpen.
(Top photo of Pete Alonso: Harry How / Getty Images)
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