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Lefty QBs used to be an NFL annoyance but Dolphins are flipping the script with Tua

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Lefty QBs used to be an NFL annoyance but Dolphins are flipping the script with Tua

The message reached Mike McDaniel from Steve Young in early spring, 2022.

When you coach Tua Tagovailoa, make sure he feels his left-handedness is an advantage, not a flaw or annoyance.

In 2005, Young became the first left-handed quarterback selected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame. He is one of only 33 to have ever played in the NFL. Tagovailoa became No. 32 in 2020 when the Miami Dolphins drafted him fifth overall.

When McDaniel took over as Miami’s head coach two years later, he’d never considered what it would be like to coach a lefty — but he did know that Tagovailoa’s overall confidence was shot. The quarterback later revealed that during the depth of his struggles over his first two NFL seasons, he used to look at himself in the mirror and ask, “Do I suck?”

So McDaniel put together a reel that spanned hundreds of Tagovailoa’s plays from practices and games, clipping together throws and decisions he believed could help eliminate negative self-talk from his quarterback. “It was in the process of making the tape for Tua, to present to him ‘this isn’t just lip service,’ to present to him why he is extraordinary and what I’m excited about,” McDaniel told The Athletic this spring, that he noticed something. Tagovailoa’s handedness kept tripping him up.

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As McDaniel cut together clip after clip, he began to focus on Tagovailoa’s mechanics instead of the result of the throws, and somewhere in the middle of the film he eventually presented to the quarterback, it clicked. It was as if he were watching Tagovailoa through a mirror — he could see him throw the way he could see right-handed quarterbacks throw.

McDaniel began to daydream. If the coach felt his own brain hesitate ever-so-slightly over the left-handed delivery, would defenders feel the same? Could play formations, blocking and route combinations all accentuate a lefty? Was there a way to turn a visual anomaly into a schematic advantage?

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Young knew what McDaniel knows now: Understanding how Tagovailoa throws could allow McDaniel to design an offense that takes advantage of how the ball comes out of his quarterback’s hand. It could also be a way for McDaniel to show Tagovailoa: I like you for you.

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“What Steve learned is that (being left-handed) felt more like an inconvenience to all parties involved while he was playing, which didn’t help his confidence,” said McDaniel. “He was big on, ‘no, this is a resource, tool or competitive advantage,’ seeing it through that lens.

“Not only was it good advice to approach things with Tua like that, but it was factual.”

A few things naturally change for an offense if the quarterback is left-handed. Some of that irritates teams to the point that many have historically avoided lefties altogether.

For example, a quarterback’s “blind side” (the side of the field he turns his back to during a dropback) switches from the left to the right. The right tackle becomes the blind-side protector on passing plays instead of the left tackle.

Austin Jackson played left tackle after being drafted with Miami’s second first-round pick in 2020 but moved to the right side when McDaniel took over as head coach. “Your mechanics literally change (to) opposite legs,” Jackson said. “My left leg had to become my push leg, my right leg had to become my ‘catch/anchor’ leg that kind of keeps my balance.”

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As he made the change, Jackson’s right leg was significantly stronger than his left. His left hip was strong but way tighter. The Dolphins’ strength-and-conditioning staff installed special programming to rebuild both hips and legs for his new role.

Pass catchers also have to adjust to a southpaw thrower. The ball spins the opposite direction — counter-clockwise — coming out of a left-handed quarterback’s hand, and some receivers have said the spin feels strange and takes some getting used to. Some left-handers’ throws can tend to fishtail at the end of deeper balls, though velocity helps dull the difference. Dolphins coaches and receivers say Tagovailoa doesn’t have that issue.

“It makes it a lot easier to live in a left-handed world when your quarterback has enough pronation, enough spin, that no one even notices,” McDaniel said.


Two years after a head-coaching change altered his career trajectory, Tua Tagovailoa signed a $212 million extension with the Dolphins this July. (Megan Briggs / Getty Images)

Oregon Ducks offensive coordinator Will Stein has become a “lefty-whisperer” of sorts in the college ranks. His starter heading into 2024 is left-handed transfer Dillon Gabriel, and Stein previously coached all-conference lefty Frank Harris at UTSA while working with offensive coordinator Barry Lunney, a former left-handed quarterback himself.

The Ducks have workshopped a type of passing system they call “mid-game” that combines elements of quick-game footwork and corresponding short, fast route concepts with more traditional longer dropback route pairings. They can employ both on one play, splitting the field into sides or even multiple sections based on the quarterback’s progression.

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“It’s kind of a new way of thinking because it does get defenders’ eyes in spots they are not used to,” said Stein. “It’s quick game on one side and dropback on the other. It’s something we have done a lot of last year and in the spring. … I think you’re gonna see it show up a lot more in professional football.”

With a left-handed quarterback, the sides of the concepts can flip — and therein lies an additional challenge for defenders. A left-handed quarterback’s progressions on any passing play are inverted, so his eyes sweep the field for his receivers in the opposite direction as a right-handed quarterback.

Stein’s experiences in the recruiting cycle and at all-star events have led him to believe that more lefties are on the way. Top high school quarterbacks like Jaron Keawe Sagapolutele and Deuce Knight impressed coaches and scouts at this summer’s Elite 11 in Manhattan Beach, Calif. Modern JUGS machines (the apparatus that shoots footballs out for receivers to catch) now even have a “left-handed” setting.

“There’s plenty of them,” Stein said. “I think the old ‘fear of lefties,’ maybe it’s going by the wayside. … I’ve been around guys that have refused to coach lefties, refused to recruit them. It’s kind of wild, I never really understood the logic behind it.”

Of course, modern NFL defenses are savvy enough to adjust to the ball coming out of a quarterback’s left hand over the course of a game. Most defenders say it only takes about a quarter or so to get used to a lefty.

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McDaniel is very clear: He’s not looking for some “Eureka!” moment that changes the sport for left-handed throwers. He just wants to make defenders hesitate — just a little — and maximize production on plays where that happens. It’s why he sought so much speed in his skill players, who are the fastest in the NFL. Against that kind of speed, a fraction of a second’s hesitation could mean death for a defense.

NFL hashmarks are closer to the middle of the field, with wide swaths of grass on either side. Teams that use motion to change formation strength can manipulate the space on one side or the other before the ball is even snapped. Over time, McDaniel realized how many defensive rules are predicated on the quarterback throwing with his right hand.

The Dolphins rank among NFL leaders in using motions and shifts, some of which create new formations that force mismatches with “right side” defenders who suddenly face a flipped play. Rollouts and bootlegs flip sides, too, and the edge defender accustomed to defending those can find himself out of position, creating a natural mismatch for the less-experienced player on the other side.

“What (defensive end) gets used to defending boots the best? Well, the one on the rollout to the right side,” McDaniel said. “OK, well, now you can create schemes to out-flank the defense; to be on the perimeter … and change the pocket. And you’re having players that aren’t used to defending the primary throwing hand of a left-handed quarterback — the (defensive end) on that side — when you fake the boot and go out here, he’s not used to playing (that).”

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McDaniel wondered how Miami’s speed might work in combination with Tagovailoa’s inverted progression, particularly against zone defenders who use visual keys to determine their drops.

The Dolphins also run their own version of the “mid-game” that Stein described at Oregon. The skill players in Miami’s “Chevy” series are so fast that Tagovailoa can use footwork and timing that make it look like he is running quick-game concepts — to the opposite side of the field than usual — before he gets the ball to a receiver on a deeper route.

“Inherently it’s going to hit (defenders) in live football differently, and they are going to be a hair, a fraction … later to react, which is the ultimate advantage of offense,” McDaniel said.

Los Angeles Rams safety Kam Curl, who prepared for Tagovailoa and the Dolphins in 2023 while with the Washington Commanders, said the biggest in-the-moment adjustment a defense needed to make against Tagovailoa’s handedness came when the Dolphins ran a true quick game. The vulnerable short parts of the field flipped sides, so the defensive assignments had to change.

“A right-handed quarterback will catch it — boom to his (right),” Curl said. “But a left-handed quarterback, he’s mainly going to throw it to his (left).”

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And against a left-handed quarterback, the “tells” certain defenders get during a right-handed throw aren’t available. On standard strong-side formations with extra targets on a quarterback’s right side, nickel cornerbacks have to align to their matchup and then aren’t able to read a lefty’s eyes the way they can see a right-handed thrower’s. Instead, they end up looking at the back of Tagovailoa’s helmet as he opens his throw to the opposite side.

“I can feel him, but he can’t see,” Tagovailoa said.


Tua Tagovailoa threw for a league-best 4,624 yards last season with 29 touchdown passes and completed 69.3 percent of his throws. (Jim Rassol / USA Today)

Preparing a scout team for a left-handed quarterback is perhaps the biggest impact on an opponent, especially non-divisional teams that may see a lefty once a year or less. Curl recalled that Washington’s scout team quarterback had to reorder his progressions from back-to-front when presenting looks for the starting defense in practices ahead of the game against Miami last year.

“I just felt like everything was just flipped to the opposite side, every read and stuff like that,” said Curl, “Just trying to get that down in one week? It was a little challenging.”

McDaniel hopes to make the week of game preparation for defensive coordinators just a little harder.

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“Anytime you can’t prepare for something during the week 100 percent so that one element of game day is new, it’s really hard for the opposing team,” he said.

So if the way Tagovailoa throws the ball causes even a fraction of hesitation, or if how McDaniel schemes formations and plays to the opposite side allows him to capitalize before a defense adjusts, he’ll take it.

“If you would have asked me before I started this job about a left-handed quarterback, I would have nothing to say,” said McDaniel. “Through working with Tua in particular, this is stuff that is super tangible that I know to be a competitive advantage.

“If I could clone a human being and I had the choice of primary hand, and if it was the same human being at quarterback, I would go left-handed just because of those factors — if they were an elite thrower, a pure passer.”

Maybe McDaniel and Tagovailoa will find a genuine new edge for left-handed quarterbacks, maybe they won’t. There’s a larger point at work. Entering their third season together, the two have become collaborators, “ideas” people with genuine, mutual trust in each other.

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When Tagovailoa literally wondered, “Do I suck?” and McDaniel responded with a load of tape that he felt argued otherwise, he bought into everything about his quarterback, and he wanted Tagovailoa to know it. Adjusting to his throwing hand was simply the entry point.

In late July, Tagovailoa signed a franchise-record four-year, $212 million contract extension. He said he heard from “several birdies” around the facility that McDaniel advocated for the deal with the front office and team ownership. It further spoke to their bond, which started with the coach wanting to better understand how his quarterback threw and how to build his confidence.

Steve Young was right back in 2022. Or left.

(Illustration: Dan Goldfarb / The Athletic; photos: Mike Stobe, Ryan Kang / Getty Images)

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VAR denies Croatia’s game-tying goal as Cristiano Ronaldo leads Portugal to Round of 16

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VAR denies Croatia’s game-tying goal as Cristiano Ronaldo leads Portugal to Round of 16

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Croatia thought their FIFA World Cup hopes were still alive when they scored the game-tying goal just before the end of stoppage time in the second half.

But a VAR review said Mario Pasalic was offside, and it was Portugal moving on instead.

Gonçalo Ramos’ goal just minutes earlier — a beautiful header into the back of the net in the 94th minute — was the decider in this 2-1 victory for Portugal. And it was only the second time in Portuguese World Cup history the nation needed to come from behind to win, underscoring its resilience on the sport’s biggest stage.

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Luka Modric of Croatia and teammates react after the 1-2 loss during the FIFA World Cup 2026 Round of 32 match between Portugal and Croatia at Toronto Stadium on July 2, 2026 in Toronto, Ontario. (Patrick Smith – FIFA)

It was a controversial ending, though, and one where Croatia tried to argue the ball never hit the head of Igor Matanovic, which made Pasalic offside during VAR review.

It’s also worth noting that a new chip within the ball shows when it is touched, giving more concrete evidence to the referee’s final decision in such a crucial time of the match. This was the 10th goal overruled by VAR thus far in the World Cup.

GABRIEL MARTINELLI’S 96TH-MINUTE GOAL RESCUES BRAZIL FROM JAPAN UPSET IN WORLD CUP ROUND OF 32

So, with the goal annulled, Croatia’s time at the tournament has ended. As a result, Croatian legend Luka Modrić is finishing his fifth World Cup, which will likely be the 40-year-old midfielder’s final one.

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But another older legend on the pitch will move on, as Cristiano Ronaldo made some World Cup history during this match.

When No. 7 stepped foot on the pitch and the ball was kicked, he became the oldest player to participate in a knockout stage match at the World Cup at 41 years and 147 days old. He also became the oldest player to score in a knockout stage match when he saw a penalty situation while Portugal was down 1-0 in the match.

Cristiano Ronaldo of Portugal celebrates after scoring his team’s first goal during the FIFA World Cup 2026 Round of 32 match between Portugal and Croatia at Toronto Stadium on July 2, 2026 in Toronto, Ontario. (Patrick Smith – FIFA)

Ivan Perisic got the first goal of this game and put Portugal’s back against the wall. But after a foul was committed inside Croatia’s box in the 67th minute, it was time for Ronaldo to get his first career knockout goal, and he didn’t disappoint.

Ronaldo was ecstatic, sprinting toward the corner flag and performing his signature “SIU!” celebration, which the crowd bellowed with the score at 1-1. Ronaldo had also seemed to get that first knockout goal just minutes earlier but he was called offside.

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Modrić and Ronaldo, two former teammates on Real Madrid, also made history together, as they were the first two players 40 years or older to play in the same match together.

Luka Modric of Croatia congratulates Cristiano Ronaldo of Portugal after the 2-1 win during the FIFA World Cup 2026 Round of 32 match between Portugal and Croatia at Toronto Stadium on July 2, 2026 in Toronto, Ontario. (Buda Mendes/Getty Images)

It was also an emotional moment after the match, as Ronaldo wore the jersey of late Portugal teammate Diogo Jota, who died in a car accident a year ago. A team photo was taken on the pitch, with Ronaldo holding up Jota’s jersey alongside his squad.

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Now that the job is done in the Round of 32 for Portugal, they face a big challenge against a key rival in the Round of 16.

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Spain, who dominated Austria with a 3-0 finish earlier on Thursday, awaits Portugal at Dallas Stadium on July 6 at 3 p.m. ET.

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Dodgers overcome Roki Sasaki’s poor performance to rout Padres

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Dodgers overcome Roki Sasaki’s poor performance to rout Padres

Roki Sasaki’s abysmal appearance faded away in the Dodgers’ 12-7 win over the San Diego Padres on Thursday night, but only after the National League West leaders rose from a catatonic first inning.

The Dodgers roared back from a 6-0 deficit as Andy Pages skirted a tying double down the left-field line, and Mookie Betts and Max Muncy each drove in runs to give them the lead for good in a four-run fourth inning. All of which sent the sold-out Dodger Stadium crowd into jubilant celebrations, some jumping, others breaking out World Cup chants.

“Thankfully, it played out the way I didn’t expect,” manager Dave Roberts said of the team’s ability to turn the game around, “or the way it started.”

By the time the game ended, Sasaki’s three-inning start seemed like a murky nightmare the Dodgers awoke from in a sweat. Except the Dodgers weren’t dreaming, and the team hadn’t done much to assuage the concerns with Sasaki.

The problem with Sasaki isn’t his stuff. On his best nights, when the velocity and command combine, Sasaki blows past batters with a triple-digit fastball and cutting off-speed pitches. The problem has been how to tick the radar without making the strike zone look like a Jackson Pollock painting — and recently, it has.

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Sasaki’s June swoon, impervious to the calendar change, continued into Thursday’s series opener against the Padres, in which the right-hander gave up three home runs among seven hits before Roberts called it quits going into the fourth inning.

“They were on everything,” Roberts said. “You could see it.”

One possible concern? Tipping pitches. While Roberts and catcher Dalton Rushing said the team would need to do more research into Sasaki’s start, both left the door open to this answer.

“That would be a big explanation as to how they felt like they were on every pitch,” Rushing said.

As San Diego chugged through its lineup, Sasaki struggled to keep up. With his first pitch, he gave up a double to Fernando Tatis Jr., who scored on Manny Machado’s home run that left center fielder Pages staring at the ball’s path as it plopped down on the other side of the blue outfield fence.

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The inning was only a preview of the Padres’ power. Each of the nine San Diego batters got his chance against Sasaki in the second, and the team quickly dug the Dodgers into a six-run hole. He surrendered two home runs in the second inning. Jackson Merrill blasted a ball to left-center field leading off, and, two outs later, Jake Cronenworth drove in two runs with a shot to right-center.

Sasaki said through interpreter Kensuke Okubo that he needed to work on his command, but he felt like his fastball was good.

Roki Sasaki has his head down after giving up a solo homer to Jackson Merrill in the second inning.

(Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)

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“I don’t think my stuff was bad today,” Sasaki said. “Overall, it wasn’t great but a lot of things evolved.”

Part of Sasaki’s issue lies with his approach. Roberts said he wants the second-year pitcher to be aggressive, to play the cat-and-mouse game required to beat batters in the box. But when given the opportunity, Sasaki has shrunken in recent outings, struggling with his command and his ability to pitch deep into games.

“We had a great May, so let’s just get back to competing and making pitches,” Roberts said.

When reliever Will Klein walked out to the mound in the fourth to the aggressive, rambunctious clamor of the Dropkick Murphys’ “I’m Shipping Up to Boston” and collected two scoreless, one-hit innings, the relief was immediate: The Dodgers took the lead.

The lineup already was revving, as Rushing homered in the second inning while Sasaki was still in the game, and both Kyle Tucker and Muncy drove in runs off starter Randy Vasquez in the third, cutting the deficit to two. The Dodgers broke through against the Padres’ bullpen to score six runs in the fourth and fifth innings.

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“The bullpen was fantastic tonight, and then the offense came up big,” Roberts said.

A late catch by Pages helped close out the game after he gloved a ball despite ramming into the padding of the center field wall. A combined effort by Paul Gervase and Tanner Scott shut down San Diego’s ninth-inning momentum after it pushed across a run.

“Turned back around, was able to find the ball and make a really good catch right there,” Tucker said of Pages. “That was a huge out.”

The Dodgers (57-31) beat their division rivals for the fifth time in seven games to open a 13-game lead over both San Diego and Arizona. The Padres, meanwhile, have lost six straight and given up 66 runs over the last six days, the most in such a span in franchise history.

But San Diego’s flaws don’t negate the Dodgers’ as they burned through six relievers in their win. So, while the Dodgers crawled out of the hole with a season-high 17 hits, the steep cost heightens the pressure on the rest of the rotation the rest of the series.

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2026 World Cup Round Of 16 Odds: Who’s Favored To Advance?

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2026 World Cup Round Of 16 Odds: Who’s Favored To Advance?

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In previous years, the Round of 16 was the first knockout stage match, but with an expanded field of 48 teams— it is now the second. 

Let’s check out the odds at FanDuel Sportsbook as of July 2 for which countries are favored to make the Round of 16 and emerge from it.

This page may contain affiliate links to legal sports betting partners. If you sign up or place a wager, FOX Sports may be compensated. Read more about Sports Betting on FOX Sports.

To Reach Round of 16

Argentina: -2000 (bet $10 to win $10.50 total)
Colombia: -550 (bet $10 to win $11.82 total)
Portugal: -340 (bet $10 to win $12.94 total)
Switzerland: -235 (bet $10 to win $14.26 total)
Egypt: -148 (bet $10 to win $16.76 total)
Australia: +122 (bet $10 to win $22.20 total)
Algeria: +186 (bet $10 to win $28.60 total)
Croatia: +260 (bet $10 to win $36 total)
Ghana: +380 (bet $10 to win $48 total)
Cape Verde: +1160 (bet $10 to win $126 total)

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Now let’s check out the odds at FanDuel Sportsbook as of July 2 for the matchups already in place.

SATURDAY, JULY 4

Canada vs. Morocco

To Advance: MAR -300, CAN +225
Moneyline: MAR -130, Draw +240, CAN +420

Paraguay vs. France

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To Advance: FRA -1800, PRY +1140
Moneyline: FRA -600, Draw +600, PRY +1800

SUNDAY, JULY 5

Brazil vs. Norway

To Advance: BRA -245, NOR +196
Moneyline: BRA -120, Draw +260, NOR +340

Mexico vs. England

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To Advance: ENG -134, MEX +110
Moneyline: ENG +145, Draw +210, MEX +200

MONDAY, JULY 6

USA vs. Belgium

To Advance: USA -110, BEL -110
Moneyline: USA +165, Draw +230, BEL +170

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