Sports
Hernández: Freddie Freeman and Kenley Jansen take similar, bittersweet paths to new teams
Freddie Freeman spent his profession within the Atlanta Braves group.
He wished to re-sign with them.
He additionally wished to be paid.
Kenley Jansen spent his profession within the Dodgers group.
He wished to re-sign with them.
He additionally wished to be paid.
Now, they’ve traded groups, Freeman the brand new first baseman of the Dodgers and Jansen the brand new nearer of the World Collection champion Braves.
Hours earlier than the Braves introduced their one-year, $16-million settlement with Jansen on Friday, the Dodgers launched Freeman at their spring coaching advanced.
Freeman smiled typically.
He spoke about how delighted he was to return to his native Southern California and play in entrance of his 67-year-old father and 86-year-old grandfather.
He laughed about how he was teased by his new teammates for reporting to camp in a swimsuit.
He additionally admitted he was disillusioned the Braves didn’t need him.
Freeman stated he was understanding in Newport Seaside on Monday when he acquired phrase the Braves traded for Matt Olson to switch him as their first baseman.
“To be trustworthy, I used to be blindsided,” Freeman stated. “I believe each emotion got here throughout. I used to be harm.”
Return and re-read that quote in Jansen’s voice.
These might have been Jansen’s phrases about when he realized Freeman agreed to a six-year, $162-million contract with the Dodgers on Wednesday night time.
Jansen most likely will acknowledge feeling one thing comparable within the subsequent couple of days when he’s launched by the Braves.
Freeman sounded genuinely enthusiastic about becoming a member of the Dodgers but in addition as if he have been nonetheless working by his breakup with the one franchise he had recognized.
“I’ve been attempting to think about how this was going to go in my head with these questions,” Freeman stated. “You spend 15 years in a corporation, 12 within the huge leagues, a number of recollections are made.”
Jansen spent 17 years within the Dodgers group, together with the final 12 within the majors.
As Freeman mirrored on the Braves’ efforts to retain him, he sounded disillusioned.
“I didn’t get any calls final offseason, didn’t actually get any calls final spring coaching both,” he stated. “So I used to be fairly certain I used to be going to be a free agent. You continue to assume you’re going to return again at that time. However the doubts began to go when the telephone didn’t ring. I can’t management somebody eager to name. I acquired one name earlier than the lockout, a checking-in name. And that was it. Then after the lockout, a checking-in name once more.”
He was pissed off by what he described as a scarcity of backwards and forwards.
“The final supply, formal supply, I acquired was [at the] commerce deadline,” Freeman stated. “We countered and that was it.”
Freeman couldn’t conceal his anger.
I requested Freeman what he made from the tears shed by Braves common supervisor Alex Anthopoulos when he spoke to reporters in regards to the Olson deal.
Freeman chuckled.
“I noticed ‘em,” Freeman stated. “Yup. That’s all I’ll say.”
In different phrases, he agreed with what I wrote earlier within the week, that Anthopoulos’ tears have been of the crocodilian selection.
No matter whether or not Freeman misinterpret the market or overplayed his hand, his anger was comprehensible.
He was a mannequin of consistency, batting .300 or larger in six of his final 9 seasons with the Braves. In one of many seasons he completed wanting the benchmark, he batted .295 with a career-high 38 house runs and 121 RBIs.
He performed day-after-day, lacking a mixed seven video games over the past 4 years.
He was the signature participant on a Braves workforce that gained the franchise’s first World Collection championship in 26 years final season.
Jansen is proud however delicate, and the guess right here is that he was additionally upset with how his free-agent ordeal performed out.
Earlier this week, he was nonetheless searching for a three-year deal and a assure to shut video games, Occasions colleague Jorge Castillo reported. The Dodgers remained however in shorter offers.
The market proved Jansen’s former workforce proper. That actuality gained’t diminish no matter dejection Jansen skilled.
Jansen departs the Dodgers with 350 profession saves, essentially the most in franchise historical past.
“California Love” was already a preferred track earlier than he selected it as his entrance theme, however he by some means made it his personal in Los Angeles.
Jansen was one of the vital identifiable gamers on a Dodgers workforce that gained the franchise’s first World Collection championship in 33 years.
However gamers like Jansen didn’t make a number of All-Star groups by curling up in a ball when their emotions have been harm.
Earlier than final season, I wrote a few columns by which I asserted Jansen was completed after a few down years and referred to as on the Dodgers to half methods with him. He went on to get pleasure from a bounce-back season.
Across the All-Star break, Jansen advised me, “Your opinions, everyone’s opinions, that I fell off or I’ve acquired to do higher — these are simply motivation.”
The Dodgers’ refusal to supply him a three-year deal will function extra gasoline. Freeman needs to be equally motivated by the Braves’ denial of his request for a six-year contract.
All of which makes for an particularly attention-grabbing collection within the second week of the common season: three video games between the Dodgers and Braves at Dodger Stadium on April 18-20.
Sports
Patrick Mahomes set to play first game as a father of three – How did Tom Brady play in his?
Patrick Mahomes will take the field for the Kansas City Chiefs on Saturday for the first time as a father of three children.
Mahomes and his wife Brittany welcomed their newest daughter, Golden Raye, on Jan. 12. The quarterback was fortunate enough to have earned a bye week for the weekend of Golden Raye’s arrival, but returned to practice just days later.
Now he is set to face the Houston Texans in the divisional round playoff game. He bears the historic pressure of trying to lead his team to a third straight Super Bowl – something no team has ever done – alongside the personal pressure of fathering another newborn girl.
As the only active quarterback with a realistic shot to contend with Tom Brady in all-time legacy discussion, Mahomes faces a much higher-stakes task than Brady did when he took the field as a father of three for the first time.
Brady welcomed his third child, daughter Vivian Lake, on Dec. 5, 2012 – weeks before any do-or-die playoff action.
But the stakes were still pretty high. And like Mahomes, Brady’s first game after having his third child also came against the Houston Texans.
Brady and the New England Patriots welcomed a Texans team that led the AFC at the time with an 11-1 record into Gilette Stadium for a Monday Night Football showdown. Brady had the Patriots at a 9-3 record, as they looked to chase Houston down for the top spot.
And Brady didn’t miss a beat.
TRAVIS KELCE SHARES TAYLOR SWIFT’S THOUGHTS ON CHIEFS STAR’S POSSIBLE RETIREMENT
The former Patriots quarterback had a signature game, throwing for 296 yards with four touchdowns and no interceptions, as New England dominated 42-14. Brady even had a whopping six rushing yards on one carry, which was a good night on the ground for him by his standards in those days.
After the game, Brady relished the win as the perfect ending to the week, as he informed reporters that his then-wife, Giselle Bundchen, was doing well after the birth.
“She is doing very well,” Brady told reporters of Bundchen after the game. “It’s been a great week, a great way to end it.”
Mahomes has a high bar to live up to. But if he does pull off a similar performance to the one Brady did in 2012, his performance may be even more amplified in how it is recognized.
With a divisional round victory, Mahomes and the Chiefs will be just two wins away from taking home their unprecedented third straight Super Bowl title. The spotlight will be even brighter on Mahomes and his wife on Saturday than it was on Brady in 2012, as Taylor Swift is set to attend, possibly alongside Brittany.
And like Brady’s 2012 game, Saturday may be the last time Mahomes ever plays football right after having a child.
“I’m good with three for right now,” he told reporters on Tuesday when asked whether he would have another child. “We’ll see down the line, maybe, but my goal was always three, so we’ve had three, and we’ll stick there for a while and see if we need to come back and get another one later on.”
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Sports
USC names NFL veteran Rob Ryan its linebackers coach, filling Trojans' final vacancy
With its rising star defensive coordinator secured, USC filled the final vacancy on its defensive staff Saturday, naming a longtime NFL defensive coordinator with 35 years of experience its linebackers coach.
Rob Ryan spent 17 years as an NFL coordinator, leading defenses in Buffalo, Oakland, Cleveland, New Orleans and Dallas. In Buffalo, where his twin brother Rex Ryan was head coach, Rob Ryan first worked alongside D’Anton Lynn, who is now USC’s defensive coordinator. They also worked together in 2021 in Baltimore, where Ryan was the inside linebackers coach.
But Lynn’s relationship with the Ryan family traces back even further than that. Rex Ryan was head coach of the New York Jets when Lynn signed as an undrafted free agent in 2012. Lynn played just one season with the Jets, but impressed Ryan enough that he hired Lynn as a scout in 2014. When Ryan left for Buffalo in 2015, he brought Lynn along as an assistant.
“[Rex Ryan] kind of got me into the league, and a lot of things that I do, a lot of the way I see the game always comes back to him,” Lynn said earlier this year.
Ryan was linebackers coach with the Bills during Lynn’s second season in Buffalo. When Rex Ryan was fired, Lynn’s father, Anthony, took over as the Bills’ interim coach.
The relationship remained, even as Lynn coached elsewhere. In 2023, upon his hire as UCLA’s defensive coordinator, Ryan told The Times that he believed Lynn was “a superstar.”
While Lynn bounced from that Baltimore staff to that UCLA staff in 2023, Rob Ryan remained in the NFL, serving as a senior defensive assistant with the Raiders. He worked closely with Raiders star defensive end Maxx Crosby through this season, helping guide him to his fourth Pro Bowl nod.
Now Ryan is set to rejoin Lynn in Los Angeles, replacing linebackers coach Matt Entz, who was named Fresno State’s head coach last month. The hire was made less than 24 hours after USC announced that Lynn had signed an extension to remain at USC after Penn State, his alma mater, made a concerted effort this week to hire him away from L.A.
Ryan will take over a linebacker room that’s light on experience, with two regular contributors from last season now off to the NFL. He does inherit star linebacker Eric Gentry, who will return from a season plagued by concussions, as well as an emerging talent in rising sophomore Desman Stephens.
While he spent the last quarter century in the NFL, Ryan does have some experience at the college level.. He was Oklahoma State’s defensive coordinator from 1997-99. Before that, he led the defense at Hutchinson Community College in 1996.
But it’s his NFL experience that stood out to USC head coach Lincoln Riley.
“Rob Ryan is one of the most accomplished defensive coaches in NFL history,” Riley said in a statement. “With over two decades of NFL experience, he will immediately bolster our staff as we continue our climb here at USC. He has coached some of the NFL’s top players, including numerous Hall of Famers and All-Pro selections. We’re thrilled to welcome Coach Ryan and his family to our program.”
Sports
Expanded College Football Playoff’s unintended consequence: Rivalry games don’t matter
For all of the excitement an expanded College Football Playoff has created, there is at least one unintended consequence that seems to be revealing itself during Ohio State’s incredible postseason tear.
Rivalries no longer matter.
For all the dancing, prancing, flaunting and flag-planting we witnessed during rivalry week this season, Ohio State is proving teams can lose multiple times now — including its last game to its fiercest opponent — and suffer no consequences.
Of course, try telling Ryan Day in the moment that losing to Michigan doesn’t matter. He looked spooked by the ghost of Bo Schembechler walking off the field of Ohio Stadium. Jack Sawyer was ready to fight the entire state of Michigan. We were all still indoctrinated by the old set of rules.
There was a time when losing the last game of the season was a death sentence in college football. Those days ended long ago, but even since the inception of the four-team playoff, no team with two losses ever qualified. A second loss meant the police were showing up to the party. It was time to go home.
Not anymore.
GO DEEPER
What do opposing coaches think about Notre Dame’s chances against Ohio State?
We’ve never seen anything like what the Buckeyes are doing. As a result, it’s time for college football fans to recalibrate what matters and what doesn’t. If the Playoff indeed expands again in the coming years, rivalry games will continue depreciating faster than a used Lincoln.
I considered this while watching the Buckeyes dismantle Oregon in the first half of their quarterfinal game and then again while reading Joe Rexrode’s thoughtful piece this week on Ohio State fans still grappling with the Michigan loss. Ohio State fans have endured every stage of grief and jubilation within a span of about two months.
After the Michigan loss, I thought Ohio State would either lose to Tennessee or win the whole thing. There was really no middle ground, and I probably would’ve leaned more toward losing to Tennessee than winning it all. I was a prisoner of the old guard.
“We could quit, like we knew everyone wanted us to … or be the best team in the country, like we know we are.
We chose Option B.”@jacksawyer33 and @OhioStateFB are one win away. https://t.co/kAnmCf2sq5
— The Players’ Tribune (@PlayersTribune) January 16, 2025
For years, Michigan losses felt like funerals and John Cooper was the caterer at the repast.
“I’m sorry for your loss. Have some baked beans.”
Now Ohio State has lost to Michigan and managed to make the Playoff in two of the last three years. It is a win over Notre Dame away from claiming another national championship.
Suddenly, Michigan doesn’t really seem to be a big deal anymore.
By next November, given what the Buckeyes have already accomplished, will we view Ohio State-Michigan or the Iron Bowl the same way?
Ohio State is practically assured of making the Playoff every year it enters the Michigan game with only one loss. Ohio State fans’ visceral reaction to losing to Michigan was in part because we have been conditioned for generations to believe a two-loss team, particularly when one of those losses occurs in the final game, signals the end of the season.
Alabama lost to Auburn a few years ago and still managed to play for a national championship, but it was the Tide’s only loss.
Imagine how much different Cooper’s legacy in Columbus might look today if 12-team playoffs were a thing in the 1990s? If Cooper had a meaningful chance to right his Michigan wrongs in a postseason tournament?
The Jim Tressel era may never have occurred.
GO DEEPER
Notre Dame, Ohio State already own college football’s worst losses by national champions
A big part of what has made rivalries so romantic in college football is their impact on postseason fate. Teams eliminated from meaningful bowl games could at least wreck your enemy’s house and make them miserable, too. Only we’re starting to realize how the Playoff has stripped away all of those punitive damages.
Day said he was “very, very grateful” for this expanded format. No kidding. His house might be on Zillow without it.
“I do think the new format has allowed our team to grow and build throughout the season,” Day said. “And as much as losses hurt, they really allow us as coaches and players to take a hard look at the issues and get them addressed.”
Still writing our story… 📝 pic.twitter.com/2vg2sk6ODN
— Ohio State Football (@OhioStateFB) January 15, 2025
As college football continues to blur deeper into the professional game, fans of Power 5 teams must also begin altering their expectations.
Does anyone care or even remember that the Green Bay Packers were a wild-card team in 2010? What about the Pittsburgh Steelers in 2005 or the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in 2020? What’s more important, the fact they didn’t win their division or that all three teams won Super Bowls?
The same is true now in college football. How long before the right three-loss SEC team makes the Playoff? Impossible? We might find out if the field ever expands to 16 teams.
Winning the conference doesn’t really matter — all four conference champs were eliminated in their first games. Losing to a rival doesn’t have to matter.
As players rightfully begin to cash in on the riches of the college game, school presidents and athletic directors are finally saying out loud what truly matters most.
Money.
Ryan Day and the Ohio State fan base are forever grateful.
(Photo of Ryan Day and Jack Sawyer celebrating at the Cotton Bowl trophy ceremony: Ron Jenkins / Getty Images)
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