Sports
Inside Florida State’s historic fall from 13-0 to its worst showing in 50 years
Even with 40 minutes left in a lost season, Florida State still had hope. It flashed Saturday when defensive tackle Darrell Jackson Jr. powered past a blocker and bear-hugged Florida quarterback DJ Lagway inside the Gators’ 25. A Seminoles sack could help flip the field in a 7-0 game.
Instead, it was a 10-second encapsulation of Florida State’s worst season in 50 years.
A talented transfer failed to finish a play; Lagway spun out of Jackson’s arms. Another member of FSU’s $2 million defensive line, Patrick Payton, started celebrating a sack that did not happen. Linebacker Omar Graham Jr. stomped his feet and smacked his hands together in frustration after Lagway threw downfield for a first down. The rest of head coach Mike Norvell’s Seminoles did not or could not respond as a competitive game eventually turned into their seventh double-digit loss of the year. Finally, ridicule rained down at FSU’s Doak Campbell Stadium, with visiting fans chanting “D-J LAG-WAY” while the Seminoles staggered to another three-score rout by an in-state rival.
When Florida State’s 31-11 loss was over, one of the biggest collapses in college football history was complete.
The Seminoles’ nosedive from 13-1 and the brink of the College Football Playoff to 2-10 is the second-largest drop in wins ever. Only 2011-12 Southern Miss (which cratered from 12-2 in 2011 to 0-12 after a coaching change) was worse. Florida State joined 1954 Illinois and 1956 Notre Dame and Maryland as the lone teams to begin the season ranked in the top 10 of the AP poll and fail to win at least three games.
The Seminoles’ offense allowed the most sacks in the country and finished in the bottom six in scoring, rushing and completion percentage. Their defense forced the third-fewest turnovers in the nation, and their special teams were second-to-last in punt return average.
The descent is even more striking because there’s no obvious, extenuating cause. There’s no scandal to cite, no major unlucky breaks to blame. The coaching staff that won last year’s ACC championship with a third-string quarterback is the same one that lost to Duke for the first time in program history.
Instead, Florida State crumbled because of a combination of lingering issues that collected slowly and converged suddenly, according to interviews conducted by The Athletic with a dozen people in and around the program and across the sport. Almost all spoke on the condition of anonymity to provide candid responses. FSU did not make Norvell available for this story, and he did not return multiple requests for comment.
“Terrible” recruiting, according to a former staffer, and overconfident evaluating. High-profile quarterback misses because of NIL coffers. Misguided loyalty and a lost bidding war. A perception players were giving up, or at least lacking leadership skills. Under-the-surface problems that were too easy to overlook during the Seminoles’ steady, four-year climb from Norvell’s 3-6 start to his 19-game winning streak in 2022-23.
“High tide covers up ugly rocks,” FSU athletic director Michael Alford told The Athletic, “and low tide exposes them.”
High tide peaked a year ago this week when the Seminoles topped Louisville to win their first ACC title in nine years. Low tide began less than 13 hours later with the push that started a free fall.
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FSU starts 0-2 despite NIL team budget of nearly $12 million
Where it all began: That Playoff snub
The historic stumble began with a historic snub.
Despite FSU’s 13-0 record in a Power 5 conference, the College Football Playoff selection committee nudged the 12-1 Alabama Crimson Tide ahead of the Seminoles for the fourth and final spot. The reason was controversial but defensible: Florida State was no longer one of the four best teams after star quarterback Jordan Travis broke his leg in Game 11.
When the FSU-less bracket was unveiled on ESPN, Norvell froze for three seconds. By the time he rose from his chair to say something, at least a dozen players had already stood up and started walking to the back of the room — or the exit.
“What happened had never, ever happened before in the history of college football, where you went undefeated at a big-name school and don’t make the Playoff,” a former staffer said. “They got the Playoff taken away, and haven’t recovered from that.”
That was obvious at the Orange Bowl, when Norvell acknowledged the raw disappointment “definitely affected” a roster with 20-plus opt-outs that lost 63-3 to Georgia. And in February, when one of last year’s captains, Fabien Lovett, admitted he doesn’t think he’ll ever fully get over the sting. And in April, when the school’s legal counsel stood in a Tallahassee courtroom during a hearing on FSU’s ongoing lawsuit against the ACC and referred to the Seminoles as “what should have been the national champions.” And in September, when receiver Kentron Poitier said the snub was something players still talked about occasionally.
But Florida State considers itself to be one of the sport’s premier brands — a three-time national champion with a strong pedigree and proud fan base. It was a program that should have been built to recover from any heartbreak or humiliation. There was no reason to think one devastating decision would plunge the Seminoles this far.
An established staff had plenty of time to stockpile or replenish talent from a fertile footprint. An NIL budget of about $12 million was big enough to fund a Playoff contender and retain some veterans. Florida State spent more than $1 million giving its 10 assistants proactive raises while keeping Norvell away from Alabama with a new, eight-year contract that made him one of the game’s highest-paid coaches.
“If this is a tailspin that started at 40,000 feet,” said a person affiliated with the team’s decision-making process, “you’ve had numerous opportunities to recover from it.”
Florida State won the ACC last season, but the joy would not last. The pain was just beginning. (Bob Donnan / USA Today)
A staff’s major weakness revealed after several years
“Here’s the storyline for Florida State,” a second former staffer said. “We were terrible in recruiting in 2020 and 2021.”
The complications from those classes — Norvell’s first two — lay deeper than mediocre rankings of 22nd and 23rd in the 247Sports Composite. Some of the early recruiting misses at the root of the problem stem from unfortunate circumstances: Norvell was FSU’s third coach in four seasons and inherited a program that was 18-20 over the previous three years. The pandemic hit three months into his tenure; COVID-19 restrictions hamstrung his staff’s ability to build relationships in a new state. And as the Seminoles rebuilt slowly through Norvell’s first two losing seasons, they couldn’t sell new-coach buzz, like Florida’s Billy Napier and Miami’s Mario Cristobal.
Those two classes were responsible for only seven regular starters this season. Of the 15 blue-chip (four- or five-star) prospects FSU signed those cycles, just five were still on the roster.
The misses created a void on the field and, crucially, in the locker room. Inevitable attrition meant Florida State needed new alphas after Travis, Jared Verse, Braden Fiske and Trey Benson headed to the NFL. But FSU’s roster had only 28 scholarship players who were on the team for at least three seasons.
“There was no one to pass that torch to,” said a source involved with the team’s roster management.
In the aftermath of the Playoff announcement, two of FSU’s most impactful 2020-21 signees, Payton and linebacker DJ Lundy, announced plans to enter the portal. Payton never followed through, and Lundy remained at FSU after decommitting from Colorado. But the fact that two veterans who were game captains this season openly considered leaving within two weeks of the ACC championship was a concerning sign about the program’s leadership. It wasn’t the last. One of FSU’s Orange Bowl captains, leading tackler Shyheim Brown, was suspended for the Memphis game due to a DUI arrest in the summer.
Norvell publicly acknowledged the team’s need for leadership in late September. In 2023, Florida State trailed in the second half against LSU, Clemson, Duke, Miami and Florida. Then the Seminoles outscored them by a combined 103-24.
“What happened in every one of those opportunities?” Norvell asked. “The real ones stood up, and some of those guys that are on this team right now were those guys.”
They, apparently, remained sitting down. A team that was No. 5 nationally in second-half scoring differential last season finished No. 119 this year.
Though Alford said he never saw a drop in effort or change in body language — before or after the CFP snub — some outsiders did. Fox analyst Urban Meyer accused the team of quitting, and multiple people close to the program suggested some players began tuning out coaches.
“There’s only so many times that message (a positive pep talk) can be delivered,” said the person affiliated with team’s decision-making process
The leadership concerns for one person briefed on the team’s roster construction began in the offseason when a veteran twice tried to organize workouts — the kind of voluntary work Travis spearheaded in previous summers. It went nowhere. “Nobody cared (or) wanted to come,” the person said.
And when the Seminoles could finally sell major success last cycle after back-to-back seasons with double-digit wins, they still underachieved. Months after finishing sixth in the final AP poll, Florida State had to cancel a junior day; coaches couldn’t get enough people to campus.
Florida State was among four teams that won at least 23 games in 2022-23 and didn’t change coaches last recruiting cycle. The other three programs’ 2024 classes finished first (Georgia), third (Oregon) and fifth (Ohio State) in the 247Sports Composite.
FSU was 12th.
The Seminoles would have finished higher but lost five-star defensive back KJ Bolden to Georgia on signing day. FSU got a late visit from the nation’s top recruit, receiver Jeremiah Smith, but couldn’t keep the south Florida native away from Ohio State. Smith set freshman receiving records in catches, touchdowns and yards for the No. 6 Buckeyes.
Those late misses are part of a troubling trend. FSU watched its top recruit decommit in 2021 (four-star linebacker Branden Jennings), 2022 (Heisman Trophy favorite Travis Hunter), 2023 (five-star Texas running back CJ Baxter) and 2024 (Bolden, one of Georgia’s top defensive backs). Hunter, like Bolden, was a signing day flip — the kind of 12th-hour battle Norvell has lost more than he’s won.
These were preventable issues. Norvell and most of his assistants arrived at FSU with little experience signing elite national prospects. Norvell’s first recruiting classes were the Seminoles’ four worst since 2007, according to the 247Sports Composite. In the five years before Norvell’s arrival, FSU signed nine five-star recruits. In Norvell’s first five classes, he signed one: receiver Hykeem Williams.
A former Norvell assistant said he’s “shocked that their high school recruiting was just so bad.”
And yet Norvell was largely loyal to his staff. Seven of his 10 assistants at the start of this season had been in those roles since Year 1. The retention made sense as his staff coached, evaluated and developed well enough to improve from three wins to five to 10 and, finally, perfection. But there was a trade-off.
“There’s an institutional lack of appreciation of the importance high school recruiting plays,” said a person affiliated with the team’s decision-making process.
The 2023 Seminoles were able to overcome it with elite transfers and an elite quarterback. The 2024 Seminoles had neither.
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Transfer portal cautionary tales: What lessons can be learned from Florida State, others?
Live by the portal, die by the portal
Florida State made up for its early, unimpressive recruiting classes with a targeted strategy in the transfer portal.
The Seminoles’ 2022-23 transfer classes netted 14 players who started at least five games during the ACC title run. Of those 14 contributors, 12 were relatively proven commodities — veterans at lower levels looking for a fresh start or jump in competition.
Verse was an all-conference edge rusher at Albany whom the Seminoles discovered while watching film of an opponent (Syracuse) Verse had already played. He became a game-wrecker. All-ACC playmaker Keon Coleman was Michigan State’s top receiver in 2022. He papered over the weaknesses of a position group with too many misevaluated or undeveloped high school prospects. Others had great impact on the rebuild, like guards D’Mitri Emmanuel (Charlotte) and Casey Roddick (Colorado) and linebacker Tatum Bethune (UCF).
Florida State’s NIL approach — one of the first to prioritize talent retention and not just acquisition — ensured players like Verse and Bethune stayed for an extra season.
Last cycle, Florida State courted similarly established transfers, too. But when they failed to sign top targets like Kyle Kennard (a Nagurski Trophy finalist at South Carolina), Nic Scourton (one of the SEC’s most disruptive defensive linemen for Texas A&M) and Carter Smith (Indiana’s starting left tackle), the Seminoles had to pivot to the portal’s next tier. They veered further from production and more toward potential.
Six of their 17 transfers were coveted, top-110 national recruits in high school who signed with major programs (Georgia, Alabama) but totaled just four career collegiate starts. Another, receiver Malik Benson, was the nation’s top junior college recruit in 2023 but caught only one touchdown in his 14 games for Alabama.
If Seminoles staffers thought they could fix the talented prospects they unsuccessfully recruited previously, they were wrong. Bama’s backups, it turns out, were backups for a reason; the front office, a former staffer said, “went 1-for-17.”
“They completely failed,” said the source involved with the team’s roster management.
And the Seminoles couldn’t mask the issue because they no longer had a star quarterback.
“The missing piece in all of this was the development of Jordan Travis,” the second former staffer said. “He always gave us a chance to win a game, and then when you put the pieces around him, he became elite.”
Travis was a dual-threat star who could Houdini his way out of trouble. He’s the lone player who ranks in the top 10 on FSU’s all-time list in passing touchdowns (65) and rushing touchdowns (31). He accounted for five touchdowns against LSU, threw the game winner in overtime at Clemson and totaled two touchdowns (one rushing, one passing) in the five-minute, fourth-quarter span that beat Duke.
After Travis broke his leg against North Alabama last November, the Seminoles didn’t throw a touchdown pass in their final three games. Though Brock Glenn showed potential in winning the ACC championship, FSU needed immediate experience to supplement the three-star freshman. The three quarterbacks Norvell signed from 2020-22 had all either transferred or were in the process of transferring.
The Seminoles’ portal options were limited. Riley Leonard was already headed from Duke to Notre Dame. Will Howard was going from Kansas State to Ohio State.
“It wasn’t really who was available,” the second former staffer said. “It was who were the ones willing to listen.”
Two were willing enough to listen in person with mid-December visits: DJ Uiagalelei and Cam Ward. They were veteran passers from the Pac-12 — Uiagalelei from Oregon State, Ward from Washington State — with two major differences.
One was money. FSU, a former staffer said, “didn’t want to spend the money for Cam Ward,” who ended up commanding twice as much as Uiagalelei.
The other was ability — or, more accurately, stability. Ward had tremendous upside but tremendous risk. In two years at Washington State, he threw 16 interceptions and fumbled 23 times (10 lost), according to TruMedia. Uiagalelei — who defeated Norvell’s 2022 team on the road behind four total touchdowns — had a lower ceiling but a higher floor. Clemson and Oregon State went a combined 30-10 over his 40 starts.
Stability figured to be good enough for Florida State. Norvell said this spring that his offensive line had a chance to be the best and deepest of his five seasons and that the running backs could be just as good as the year before, despite losing the second back drafted (Benson). Combine those two factors, and the Seminoles wouldn’t need a quarterback to win games by himself. They needed someone who wouldn’t lose them.
FSU took Uiagalelei. Every assessment was wrong.
FSU’s rushing (2.85 yards per attempt) ranked third-to-last nationally with the program’s worst per-game average (89.92) since 1947.
Before injuring his hand against SMU, Uiagalelei had four touchdown passes, six interceptions and a pass efficiency rating (112.0) worse than any ACC starter. It took less than six full quarters for Florida State fans to call for his benching, chanting “We want Brock” in the home opener against Boston College.
“I don’t know where the delusion came from on their end,” said a second source briefed on the team’s roster construction. “There’s nothing in there (about Uiagalelei) — ‘Wow, I’m blown away.’”
Ward, however, has blown away the competition at FSU’s archrival, Miami. After deciding not to turn pro last offseason, Ward led the nation this regular season with 36 touchdown passes, elevated himself into the conversation to be the first quarterback drafted in April and put Miami in Playoff contention heading into last weekend.
In October, Ward’s Hurricanes beat FSU by 22 points — the Seminoles’ fourth-worst defeat in the rivalry’s past 60 meetings.
Jordan Travis’s broken leg would both end up keeping Florida State out of the Playoff and deepen the cracks in FSU’s foundation. (Morgan Tencza / USA Today)
What next for Mike Norvell?
Almost a year to the day after Norvell pounded a table at the ACC championship to promote his team’s Playoff push, he shook his head and shrugged his shoulders in Tallahassee while confronting the “disappointing ending to an awful season.”
In some ways, one led to the other. Norvell maximized the Seminoles’ 2023 window by adding and retaining game-ready talent to deploy around a standout quarterback.
“Last year was our all-in year,” the person affiliated with the team’s decision-making process said.
And when that still wasn’t enough, they were left with the fallout — an underdeveloped, un-jelled roster that lacked vocal leadership and was positioned to spiral with some help from a few uncontrollable factors.
Every FBS opponent FSU faced this year is bowl eligible; five (Notre Dame, SMU, Miami, Clemson and Memphis) ranked in this week’s Top 25. Last year’s Seminoles were healthy enough that four offensive linemen could start at least 10 games. Injuries forced this year’s team to use nine starting combinations in the first 10 games on one of the worst run-blocking teams in the nation. Agonizing defeats against Georgia Tech (field goal as time expired) and Memphis (incomplete Hail Mary at the buzzer) in the first three games kept FSU and its new lineup from generating any early momentum.
“We were unable to build any of that confidence that we needed to turn it around,” Alford said.
But Alford said he’s encouraged by the young talent Norvell has recruited and begun to develop, though the program must cultivate stronger leaders. He said revenue-sharing — schools paying players directly as soon as next year — can benefit the Seminoles, assuming it levels the playing field in a way NIL did not. Either way, a person briefed on FSU’s roster management said the Seminoles can’t afford to be cheap.
“You want to go back to 13-1?” that source said. “Pay the quarterback.”
Though the full financial strategies won’t become clearer until the transfer portal opens next week, FSU has already shown a willingness to spend its way back to success.
A day after FSU’s 49-point shellacking last month at Notre Dame, Florida State agreed to eat $8 million in buyouts to fire three assistants who had been with Norvell since Year 1: offensive coordinator Alex Atkins, defensive coordinator Adam Fuller and receivers coach Ron Dugans. Florida State has filled two of the openings by poaching a sitting Power 4 head coach (UCF’s Gus Malzahn) as OC and the highest-paid assistant in Nebraska history (Tony White) as DC.
The key remains Norvell. Alford said he could see and feel the defeats wearing on Norvell, but he also saw his coach remain energetic and unwavering.
Former staffers describe Norvell as demanding and organized with the mentality and ability to rebound. He already has. After an 0-4 start in 2021 led to doubts about his future at FSU, he won 28 of his next 34 games.
“I think this was probably just an anomaly of a year for them,” one former Norvell assistant said. “He’ll get it back.”
Even if the Seminoles wanted to fire Norvell — and Alford made it clear they did not — his buyout (north of $60 million) makes it virtually impossible; Texas A&M paying former Seminoles coach Jimbo Fisher $76 million to leave is an industry outlier. Instead, Norvell and the ’Noles must figure it out together.
“The reality now, with the way these contracts are structured, you’re all-in,” one Power 4 athletic director said. “I think the rev-sharing that is coming, you’re probably just gonna have to wear it.”
Norvell has said, repeatedly, that he takes full responsibility for an “absolutely unacceptable” autumn. After Saturday’s season-ending loss to Florida, he apologized to fans, players, alumni and the university for “what showed up throughout the course of the year.”
While Norvell has been vague about some of the layered elements that led to Florida State’s collapse, he has hinted at potential fixes. Recruiting and player relations would be “critical” considerations as he refilled his staff. Coaches, he said Saturday night, must make sure they “evaluate and find the right leaders,” which they’ve “done in spots.” Even relinquishing offensive play-calling duties — Norvell’s best skill — is an option if it helps the program as a whole.
For Alford, this shocking season was “the most extreme example of what a lot of programs are experiencing, especially in this volatile, competitive landscape.” Transient rosters and NIL war chests can cause program’s tides to rise quickly — and fall even faster, exposing whatever has been building under the surface.
“We can never take success for granted,” Alford said. “I have hope for the future, because this is Florida State.”
(Illustration: Dan Goldfarb / The Athletic; Photos: James Gilbert, Jacob Kupferman, Don Juan Moore/ Getty Images)
Sports
Cubs look to build on offensive breakout against struggling Blue Jays starter Patrick Corbin
MLB faces DOJ investigation over Pride hats controversy
Major League Baseball is under a DOJ investigation following controversy over Pride-themed hats. The San Francisco Giants pitchers wrote Bible verses on rainbow caps, prompting an MLB warning and a DOJ statement questioning a ‘double standard’ for ‘Black Lives Matter’ patches versus religious inscriptions. This follows the York Revolution forfeiting a game due to players refusing Pride jerseys, highlighting free speech and religious liberty issues within sports.
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I’m glad we didn’t take the run line yesterday in the baseball game. We had the under eight for the game between the White Sox and Tigers, and it ended 4-3. The Tigers did pull off the win, but as I mentioned, it wasn’t justified that Detroit should be -250, even with Tarik Skubal on the mound. Today, we shift to the Chicago National League team as the Cubs host the Blue Jays.
The Toronto Blue Jays are a team I’ve written about probably more than most squads in the league. That’s not a complaint or anything, it just happens that I see a lot of value in their games. Most of that is because when they are favorites, they aren’t big favorites given their 37-39 record and rash of injuries to their pitching staff. When they are dogs, they are usually pretty small pups, offering little value, but that means the opposing favorite isn’t too high of a price.
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Pete Crow-Armstrong #4 of the Chicago Cubs rounds the bases after hitting a solo home run in the eighth inning during the game between the Chicago Cubs and the St. Louis Cardinals at Busch Stadium on Saturday, May 30, 2026 in St. Louis, Missouri. (Photo by Ali Overstreet/MLB Photos via Getty Images) (Ali Overstreet/MLB Photos via Getty Images)
The Jays were blitzed by the Cubs yesterday, and they will need a strong start today from Patrick Corbin. The once highly touted hurler is just 2-3 with a 4.57 ERA and a 1.48 WHIP. He had a decent year with the Rangers, but seems to be struggling again, as he did in his time with the Nationals. Corbin is a little more reliable on the road, given that he has pitched 10 more innings and has allowed three fewer runs on the road than at home, leading to a 3.57 ERA. He hasn’t given the Blue Jays much lately, going just 11.2 innings in three starts and allowing 11 runs on 17 hits. Cubs hitters are very strong against him, batting .316 against him.
The Cubs are one of the more frustrating teams to watch this season. Perhaps that is me just saying that as a fan of the team, but they’ve had two 10-game winning streaks, and also a losing streak of 10 games. Since May 9, the team has gone 13-24. Sure, some of that can be attributed to injuries to their pitching staff — they have only two healthy starters from the beginning of the year. But, most of this needs to be placed on the hitting of the club. Nico Hoerner is batting .238, Ian Happ is at .228, and Dansby Swanson is a pathetic .177.
Toronto Blue Jays’ Ernie Clement hits a three-run home run during the third inning against the Baltimore Orioles in Toronto on June 6, 2026. (Frank Gunn/The Canadian Press)
Still, the Cubs broke out the bats yesterday, and Pete Crow-Armstrong looks like the five-tool player from the first half of last season. If they can get some pitching, maybe they will be the dominant team we saw earlier this year. Today’s starter is Colin Rea, who has not been very good this month. He has made three starts, allowed 19 hits, and 13 earned runs over 14.2 innings pitched. He has, however, been much better at home with a 3.03 ERA in five starts (six appearances). Blue Jays hitters haven’t seen much of him, but are hitting .176 against Rea in 17 at-bats.
There is a clear player prop to play in this one. However, the bad news is that he is not on the list of options, so you might need to request or find him in a different book other than DraftKings. Michael Conforto is 12-for-36 against Corbin with seven extra-base hits, including five homers. I’d play him at 2+ total bases and at one homer as long as you can get +200 or better for the bases, and +700 for the homer prop.
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Pete Crow-Armstrong #4 of the Chicago Cubs reacts after getting hit by a pitch in the eighth inning against the Chicago White Sox at Rate Field on May 17, 2026 in Chicago, Illinois. (Michael Hirschuber/Getty Images)
If you can’t find it, or they never post it (but I have to imagine they will give options once he is added to the lineup, and he absolutely should be, given his history), I still have a play. I’m taking the Cubs at -130 here. Rea isn’t the most reliable, but he should at least be decent here, and the Cubs will have the fresher bullpen. Give me the Cubs to win this one.
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Sports
Dodgers’ walk-off stuns Orioles as Dalton Rushing helps cap wild comeback
Dalton Rushing was frustrated. He just chased a slider in the dirt — again. And this time, the game was on the line. The Dodgers were down to their last out. He was down to his last strike.
So he took a moment, took a breath, and looked to the Dodgers dugout.
The first person he spotted was Mookie Betts, who had just cut the Orioles’ lead to a run with a solo homer. Betts was locked in with Rushing, brimming with confidence, cheering him on.
“For a guy like that, a guy that’s lived in that moment, he’s succeeded in that moment, he’s failed in that moment, he knows what it feels like, it’s pretty special,” Rushing recounted.
Rushing’s eyes traveled along the railing, noting his teammates all on the top step, all relying on him.
He dug into the box, expecting the slider that Baltimore’s Ryan Helsley threw next — it was high, for a ball. Then Rushing got a fastball he could drive. And he did not miss.
The next moments in the Dodgers’ 6-5 walk-off win Friday were chaos.
Rushing lined a tying single into right field, giving Alex Call time to score from second. Call slid across the plate as the throw from Orioles right fielder Tyler O’Neill took for a long hop to catcher Samuel Basallo.
Basallo misjudged it, taking an unhurried shuffle up the line, before the ball glanced off his glove and rolled toward the Dodgers dugout.
Third base coach Dino Ebel waved home Ryan Ward, who scored standing up.
Manager Dave Roberts, who looked down at his card when the throw was in the air, was already thinking through extra innings when the crowd erupted again. He heard field coordinator Bob Geren shouting something like, “The run counts.”
The Dodgers (49-27) ran onto the field and swarmed Rushing, who had just reached second. They jumped and yelled as the Dodgers Stadium lights flashed around them.
“It was good to get Freddie [Freeman] a night off for being the guy in the middle for a change, you know?” Rushing said with a grin. “No, it’s a great feeling, and I think it honestly just feels great that we won that baseball game.”
For several innings, it looked like they wouldn’t.
Dalton Rushing celebrates after hitting a run-scoring single in the ninth to help lift the Dodgers to a 6-5 walk-off win over the Baltimore Orioles at Dodger Stadium.
(Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)
The Dodgers had jumped out to an early 3-0 lead, on a two-run single from Max Muncy in the first inning and an RBI double from Andy Pages in the second. Then their scoring dried up.
Rushing was having as frustrating of a night as anyone, with a line out and three strikeouts.
His first strikeout was part of a brutal sequence. The Dodgers loaded the bases with no outs in the third. Then Ward, Rushing and Alex Freeland, all went down swinging.
Rushing struck out on a slider in the dirt. And Orioles starter Trey Gibson got him to bite on the same putaway pitch in the fifth.
Rushing’s reactions steadily grew more animated, on the field and in the dugout.
Mookie Betts celebrates as he runs the bases after hitting a solo home run in the ninth inning Friday against the Orioles.
(Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)
Alex Freeland signals safe after sliding past Baltimore catcher Samuel Basallo to score on a double by Andy Pages in the second inning Friday.
(Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)
“He plays with a fire under his ass,” Freeland said. “He gets after it. He expects nothing but the best for himself day in and day out, and that comes with it.”
Said Roberts: “After he … vents, he does a good job of collecting himself to get back into the next play, the next at-bat, catching.”
On Friday, he was catching Roki Sasaki, who faced just one batter over the minimum through five innings. But during the third time through the order, the Orioles finally figured him out and hit back-to-back home runs.
With two outs and a runner on, Sasaki yanked a splitter to the inside edge of the strike zone to Gunnar Henderson, who lifted it over the wall in right field. Pete Alonso then homered to left-center field on an inside fastball about belt high to tie the score.
“I thought he threw the baseball really well,” Roberts said. “I liked the way he competed. The fastball command was good. He was fantastic tonight.”
The Orioles (35-42) pulled ahead against the Dodgers bullpen. Will Klein surrendered a seventh-inning single to Jackson that sent two baserunners, including one inherited from Dodgers left-hander Jack Dreyer, across the plate.
Kyle Hurt and Blake Treinen threw clean eighth and ninth innings.
Finally, in the bottom of the ninth, Betts ended the Dodgers’ scoring drought. Then Muncy — later replaced by the pinch-running Call — and Ward drew walks.
With two outs, Rushing stepped up to the plate, fell behind in the count 0-2 and reset.
“I look in the dugout, and all those guys care about is that next pitch, and the next pitch after that, and the next pitch after that,” Rushing said. “They just want you to win one pitch at a time.”
So, that’s what he did.
Sports
World Cup Red Cards: 2026 Has More Red Cards Than Each Of Last 2 World Cups
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The referees have been active at the 2026 FIFA World Cup.
It took only 27 games across seven days for officials to allocate more red cards than they did during the entire 2018 and 2022 FIFA World Cups. The record for red cards in a single World Cup stands at 28 in 2006. These moments led to penalty kicks, set pieces outside the box and offenses capitalizing on shorthanded opponents.
FOX Sports rules analyst Mark Clattenburg weighed in on the increase in red cards.
“Players are well-behaved, but they’re just making mistakes in and around the penalty area, in maybe a panic,” Clattenburg said. “And not saying the players getting inside the penalty area and conceding the penalties are more than happy to commit a foul and commit a red card, knowing that they miss the next match, but now that they have 26 players on the roster, there are plenty of players to certainly cover [those] positions.”
The record for red cards in a single World Cup is 28 in the 2006 edition of the tournament, and nine of those were straight red cards.
- 2026: 6 red cards (all 6 straight reds)
- 2022: 4 red cards (1 straight red)
- 2018: 4 red cards (2 straight reds)
- 2014: 10 red cards (7 straight reds)
- 2010: 17 red cards (9 straight reds)
- 2006: 28 red cards (9 straight reds)
Here’s a look at every red card and the impact they’ve had on the 2026 FIFA World Cup.
Miguel Almiron was sent off right before halftime in Paraguay’s match against Türkiye after a VAR check determined that he said something while covering his mouth to an opposing player.
Madibo made an ill-timed tackle in the midfield on Canada’s Ismaël Koné. Koné was ultimately stretchered off the pitch as Qatar was reduced to nine men.
With Canada taking an early 2-0 lead, Homam Ahmed’s desperate tackle on Tajon Buchanan just outside the box only made matters worse. Canada scored moments later against a 10-man Qatar side to increase the advantage to 3-0.
Tarik Muharemović tackled Swiss striker Breel Embolo on the precipice of the 18-yard box, preventing a one-on-one between Embolo and the goalkeeper. Switzerland didn’t convert the ensuing set piece, but with Bosnia and Herzegovina down to 10 men, the Swiss went on to score three late goals and close out a 4-1 victory.
As tempers boiled in the opening match, Mexico made it a three-red-card affair. César Montes took down Khuliso Mudau in an attacking position in the second minute of injury time. South Africa couldn’t capitalize on the set piece, and the match ended with a 2-0 Mexico victory.
Themba Zwane was sent off for making contact with Brian Gutiérrez in the head during a South African attack. He put his team in a stick situation, down to nine men. Zwane’s suspension was extended from the normal one game to three after FIFA ruled it fell under Article 14’s rule for violent contact.
In the 2026 FIFA World Cup opening match, Sithole took down Mexico’s Brian Gutierrez just outside the box, earning a red card as the last line of defense between Gutierrez and the goalkeeper. Sithole’s red card led to a free kick from a threatening position, but Mexico couldn’t convert. However, in the 67th minute, Mexico capitalized on the one-man advantage as Raúl Jiménez scored his first World Cup goal.
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