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Matt Chapman, Logan Webb embrace long-term leadership roles with Giants

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Matt Chapman, Logan Webb embrace long-term leadership roles with Giants

BALTIMORE — Logan Webb was a teenage pitching prospect, just a couple months removed from his high school graduation, when he received his unofficial welcome to professional baseball.

It was not a gracious welcome.

And Matt Chapman delivered it.

Webb was pitching for the Giants’ instructional league team in Arizona in the fall of 2014. It was a scrimmage against the A’s at old Indian School Park on the practice field that featured the same dimensions as the Giants’ waterfront ballpark in San Francisco — complete with the deepest expanse of Triples Alley in right-center field that measured 421 feet at the time.

“We used to have this rule where if you got 0-2, you had to throw a fastball outside,” Webb said. “That was the rule, don’t know why. And so I throw the pitch and Matt Chapman hits it off the 421-foot sign. I was like, ‘All right, this is professional baseball.’ I’d never had someone hit a ball like that off me. So yeah, Chappy actually gave me my first ‘welcome to professional baseball’ moment.

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“And since that moment I was like, ‘I want to play with that guy.’”

Webb got the chance this season. And he’ll continue to have the chance for the better part of the decade. The Giants have plenty of unanswered questions about their direction, their roster construction and the future of their top decision-makers in baseball operations. But Webb, who turns 28 in November, is secured through 2028 after signing a five-year, $90 million extension last season. And now Chapman, 31, is locked in through 2030 after he and the Giants came to terms on a six-year, $151 million extension that includes a full no-trade clause.

The Giants have their unquestioned leaders in place: one on the pitching side, one to represent the position players. And the duo couldn’t be happier about the partnership that they are beginning to form — one that they believe will resonate far beyond the on-field symbiosis that results when you pair a three-time Gold Glove third baseman with a pitcher who routinely ranks among the league leaders in groundball rate.

In separate interviews, Webb and Chapman spoke about their mutual admiration, about the clubhouse culture and team identity that they plan to instill, and even about the personal life changes — a lack of sleep being among them — that they are about to experience together. Chapman and his wife, Taylor, became first-time parents when they welcomed a baby girl on Thursday. Webb and his wife, Sharidan, are expecting their first child to arrive in the first week of October.

“I can’t wait to be a dad,” Chapman said in an interview last week. “The timing is almost perfect, coming right at the end of the season. It’s a dream come true, honestly. I’ve always wanted long-term security just to know where I’m going to play and be able to set some roots somewhere. Now that we’re starting a family, it couldn’t be more perfect. We live in Arizona so spring training is right down the road as well. It’s a perfect setup. I get to play somewhere I really want to be.”

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Chapman received waves of well wishes on Sept. 4, when news of his extension trickled through the clubhouse and he was a late scratch from the lineup so he could take his physical. Webb was among the players to offer congratulations. But there was more he wanted to express. It was something a little too personal to share in front of everyone else.

“So I texted him later that night,” Webb said. “And I told him, ‘The coolest part for me is our kids get to grow up together now.’ That’s awesome. We live five minutes away from each other in the offseason. I couldn’t be more excited for him, for his family, and selfishly, for myself. It’s going to be great.

“He and I have talked about it a lot. He brings a positive change to a lot of things. He and I are excited to keep trying to lead this team. We’re all in the same boat and we’ve got to right the ship. The San Francisco Giants organization is better than this. We see that. I know he sees that. We’ve got to keep pushing forward and signing Chappy is the best start we could have possibly had.”

No matter how the rest of the roster takes shape, or who is doing the shaping, the Giants know that they will have continuity in their clubhouse leadership for the foreseeable future: two players who not only have the emotional intelligence to read a room and the vocal skills to send the right message, but who also lead by example on the field in the simplest and most direct way.

By showing up.

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Chapman, prior to going on the paternity list and missing this past week’s series at Baltimore, had played 95 percent of the Giants’ defensive innings at third base. And although Webb was unhappy with his performance in a five-inning start Thursday, he walked off the mound at Camden Yards as the major-league innings leader with 198 2/3. Even in a season that hasn’t been up to his standards, Webb has delivered 14 starts in which he’s completed at least seven innings while allowing no more than two earned runs. No other major-league pitcher has posted more than 12 of those starts.

“I didn’t realize what kind of competitor he was,” Chapman said of Webb. “Obviously, I knew of his success and that he’s talented, that he knows how to pitch and throw pitches for strikes and keep guys off-balance. But getting to play with him every single day, when he gets on the mound, he’s got that fire in him. I liked when I saw that. It’s everything you want to see in your ace.

“And watching him pitch every five days, I am more and more impressed with his ability to navigate a game and pitch deep into a game no matter what. He could give up runs early or not have his best stuff or he could get hit a little more than he anticipates. But he finds a way to get us deep in the game and have a chance. It’s kind of a lost art, that old-school way of pitching, and it’s been great to watch.”

What has Webb learned to appreciate about Chapman?

“That he’s been everything I heard about and more,” Webb said. “Great leader, gives it his all every single day, one of the best teammates. For me, it’s just exciting to know there’s a like-minded guy for what we want this to look like and he’s here with me for at least the next four years. It’s important you get guys like that. Coming up, I was lucky to be around really great Giants and I think he fits that mold to a T. Everyone saw what Buster (Posey) said about him. That’s the truth.

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“(The front office) has a tough job to do. I don’t know everything that goes on. But from the get-go, BoMel (manager Bob Melvin) and some of the people here pinpointed a guy like Chappy and said, ‘I think that’s something we need here.’ And he’s been exactly that.

“He does all the right things. He runs every ball out. He makes every play. He understands every situation. He’s a brilliant baseball player, which is, I think, the most important thing. I’m just super excited to have a guy like that next to me and be able to share the same feelings and thoughts of what we want this to look like while we’re here.

“That’s a great face of the franchise to have.”


Chapman’s elite defense at third base has been a perfect match for a groundball specialist like Webb. (Andy Kuno / San Francisco Giants / Getty Images)

A shepherd is nothing without a flock to guide and the Giants were deficient in too many areas this season while plunging from contention. They will miss the postseason for the eighth time in 10 seasons since their last World Series championship in 2014. Aside from Webb, there are just a handful of players who remain from the 2021 team that won a franchise-record 107 regular-season games before losing to the Los Angeles Dodgers in a tense and tight NL Division Series. The Giants might have players who expect to win, but they do not have players who are accustomed to winning.

As important as leadership and clubhouse continuity might be, this is a roster that will require a significant infusion of talent — both from free agency and player development — to have consistent designs on October baseball again.

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Chapman and Webb are already strategizing how they can help on that front, too.

“I don’t know if you’ve noticed it, but (Chapman) is saying hi to everyone who gets to third base,” Webb said. “Every player is going out of their way to say something to him. Maybe that’s a small thing. But I think that’s important for us in future offseasons. It’s been tough sledding (with free agents). I’ve been part of the conversations and it’s hard when you put effort into a guy and he goes somewhere else. So having Chappy will help for sure. It won’t just be a right-handed sinkerball pitcher trying to get a position player to come hit here, right? I can’t tell them what it’s going to be like.

“We’re still going to miss on guys. There are 29 teams who won’t sign (a free agent). But he’s very respected around baseball and they see how hard he plays every day and they want to be like that. It’s the same thing you saw with the Brandons and Buster and Longo (Evan Longoria). People around baseball wanted to play with those guys.”

Chapman said his ability to be an effective recruiter was among the reasons that a no-trade provision was a requirement to agreeing to terms. Chapman would have received no-trade protection after the 2028 season anyway once he achieved 10 years of service including five years with his current club. But the blanket security upfront was just as important, especially given the Giants’ recent pattern of transactions under Farhan Zaidi, who traded players like Mitch Haniger and Jorge Soler during or after the first season of a three-year contract.

Once Posey personally offered the no-trade protection while pushing the negotiations forward, the process wrapped up swiftly.

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“It was the most important thing because if I’m going to be able to lead these guys in the clubhouse, I want them to know that I’m staying here,” Chapman said. “If I’m going to tell guys to sign here as free agents, why would they listen to me if I’m not going to be here or they think I might get traded? Being able to have control over that is huge, not just for the baseball side but for my life and for my family, knowing where I’m going to be. When you play long enough, that’s the situation you hope for.”

Webb, when asked in the past about taking a more vocal leadership role in the clubhouse, has expressed reservations because his job is to pitch every five days. He said he respects the everyday effort of position players too much to believe that he’s the right person when someone needs to be called out for a lack of focus or effort.

“He’s not wrong about that,” Chapman said. “I think position players have a bigger responsibility when it comes to leading because you’re in there every single day. Every team I’ve been on, position players have been the driving force, checking in with the guys, making sure we’re bringing it every day. But we can all pull from the same end of the rope. We all have the same goals. So this is exciting for me.

“I’ve never gotten a chance to set my roots somewhere. I knew Toronto was probably temporary and Oakland was temporary even though I gave everything I had every year there in both places. But knowing I get to really sink in here and will be here for the long haul, to be able to earn these guys’ respect and build that winning atmosphere, that’s the goal.

“And I think we bounce off each other well, Logan and myself. He’s got that laid-back personality, which I envy sometimes. I’m the one who’ll sometimes get fired up. It’ll be a good blend, I think.”

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It might come with an official designation. The Giants haven’t had a captain since Jack Clark in 1984 — unless you count Brandon Belt’s unofficial declaration of his captaincy three seasons ago. It’s a mostly bygone tradition these days. But Melvin hasn’t ruled out making Chapman the team’s official captain next season.

The timing wasn’t right to consider anything along those lines this year. Not when Chapman was playing his first season in San Francisco. And certainly not when he arrived in mid-March following a lengthy contract stalemate.

But it’s clear that visibility and presentation are important to Melvin, whose first policy changes this past spring included the request that all players and coaches stand on the field for the national anthem — not as a show of patriotism but to demonstrate to their opponent that they were a united front and prepared to play.

There couldn’t be a more visible way to demonstrate Chapman’s leadership than to stitch a tackle twill “C” on his chest.

“I would love that,” Webb said. “I mean, do we do that here? If a guy like Buster wasn’t a captain, I don’t know how that would work. But if there’s a guy we’d change it for, I think it’d be Chappy. I don’t know who makes that decision, but if they ask my opinion on it, I’d love to have him as the captain.”

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Whether he’s the captain or not, maybe Chapman can help lead in other areas, too. Now that he has a couple weeks’ head start on fatherhood, perhaps he can offer Webb pointers on how to change a diaper.

“They don’t know if they’re having a boy or girl,” Chapman said, smiling. “That’s crazy to me. The suspense would be killing me.”

(Top photo of Webb (left) and Chapman: Suzanna Mitchell / San Francisco Giants / Getty Images)

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LSU, Lane Kiffin set to land star quarterback in transfer portal: report

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LSU, Lane Kiffin set to land star quarterback in transfer portal: report

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LSU Tigers football is reportedly set to land a coveted transfer on Monday to start Lane Kiffin’s tenure as head coach.

Arizona State quarterback Sam Leavitt will likely transfer to the Tigers and play in Baton Rouge next season, ESPN reported. Leavitt is one of the top quarterbacks in the transfer portal and reportedly visited Miami and Kentucky en route to his decision.

ASU Sun Devils quarterback Sam Leavitt (10) scrambles away from Houston Cougars defensive lineman Eddie Walls III (90) at Mountain America Stadium in Tempe on Oct. 25, 2025. (Joe Rondone/The Republic / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images)

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LSU’s Garrett Nussmeier graduated following the 2025 season and Michael Van Buren transferred to South Florida upon Kiffin’s arrival at LSU from Ole Miss. LSU was reportedly also targeting Washington’s Desmond Williams Jr. before he chose to stay with the Huskies.

Leavitt initially transferred from Michigan State to Arizona State following his freshman season in 2023. He became a star under Kenny Dillingham’s tutelage and had the Sun Devils in the College Football Playoff in 2024, only losing to the Texas Longhorns by eight points in the first round.

He only played in seven games in 2025, throwing for 1,628 yards and 10 touchdowns before he suffered a foot injury that required season-ending surgery.

TOP QUARTERBACK IN TRANSFER PORTAL CHOOSES TO PLAY FOR OREGON

Arizona State Sun Devils quarterback Sam Leavitt (10) against the Texas Tech Red Raiders at Mountain America Stadium on Oct. 18, 2025. (Mark J. Rebilas/Imagn Images)

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Upon Leavitt’s decision to enter the transfer portal, Dillingham had warm words for him.

“Big 12 champ, put his name on the map, smart/talented player! Going to succeed wherever he goes,” Dillingham wrote on X in December.

LSU had high expectations for the 2025 season. But the team was only able to muster seven wins. The team fired Brian Kelly in the middle of the year.

LSU head coach Lane Kiffin, left, stands next to Louisiana State Tigers athletic director Verge Ausberry, right, prior to the game against the Houston Cougars at NRG Stadium on Dec. 27, 2025. (Maria Lysaker/Imagn Images)

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Kiffin joined LSU after Ole Miss won its Egg Bowl rivalry game against Mississippi State. The Rebels made the College Football Playoff and got to the semifinals.

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Matthew Stafford dealing with a finger sprain as Rams prepare for Bears

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Matthew Stafford dealing with a finger sprain as Rams prepare for Bears

Matthew Stafford suffered a sprained right index finger in the Rams’ wild-card victory over the Carolina Panthers, but he will be ready for Sunday’s divisional-round game against the Bears in Chicago, coach Sean McVay said Monday.

“He’s as tough as it gets and will be good to go,” McVay said during a videoconference with reporters.

Stafford injured his finger Saturday when his hand hit the helmet of a Panthers player during the Rams’ 34-31 victory in Charlotte, N.C. He played through the issue and passed for 304 yards and three touchdowns, including a game-winner to tight end Colby Parkinson with 38 seconds left.

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Gary Klein breaks down what went right for the Rams in their 34-31 wild-card playoff victory over the Carolina Panthers.

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In his postgame news conference, Stafford said he did not know what happened until he saw video that showed his finger bent backward.

“It wasn’t pleasant. It wasn’t great. We’ll see what it is,” said Stafford, who was not wearing a brace or splint. “Once the ball’s snapped, the adrenaline’s pretty good so we’ll hopefully just keep going.”

Stafford and the Rams are traveling to a cold-weather region, but Stafford has plenty of experience in those conditions, having played 12 seasons in the NFC North.

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Temperatures in Chicago could be in the teens or lower when the Rams play the Bears, who defeated the Green Bay Packers, 31-27, Saturday at Soldier Field.

“Seems like it’s going to be pretty damn cold,” McVay said.

McVay said he was optimistic that offensive lineman Kevin Dotson, who has been sidelined for three games because of an ankle injury, would play against the Bears.

“We’re going to really push that thing and see how he feels with the optimism that there’s a good chance he makes it,” McVay said.

Tight end Terrance Ferguson (hamstring) and defensive back Josh Wallace (ankle) also could return after sitting out the last two games, McVay said. Cornerback Ahkello Witherspoon reinjured his shoulder against the Panthers and will be placed on injured reserve.

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While the Rams are preparing for Sunday’s game, defensive coordinator Chris Shula, offensive coordinator Mike LaFleur and passing game coordinator Nate Scheelhaase will interview virtually with NFL teams hiring head coaches.

According to reports, Shula will interview for the Tennessee Titans, Miami Dolphins, Arizona Cardinals, New York Giants and Las Vegas Raiders head coaching jobs.

LaFleur will interview with the Cardinals and Raiders.

Scheelhaase will interview with the Cleveland Browns, Raiders and Baltimore Ravens.

“I’m not at all concerned about it being a distraction,” McVay said.

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Patriots crush Chargers in Wild Card defensive slugfest, secure first playoff win since 2018

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Patriots crush Chargers in Wild Card defensive slugfest, secure first playoff win since 2018

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The New England Patriots defended home turf in the Wild Card Round, dominating the Los Angeles Chargers in a 16-3 victory to move on in the NFL Playoffs.

New England, winning its first playoff game since their 2018 Super Bowl-winning campaign, will await the victor of the No. 4 Houston Texans and No. 5 Pittsburgh Steelers Wild Card game on Monday night to see who they face in the Divisional Round next week.

This game saw its first touchdown in the fourth quarter, but that was because of how suffocating both defenses were in this contest. But it was clear the Patriots had every answer for Justin Herbert and the Chargers’ offense.

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Drake Maye of the New England Patriots celebrates after a touchdown in the third quarter against the Miami Dolphins at Gillette Stadium on January 04, 2026 in Foxborough, Massachusetts.  (Winslow Townson/Getty Images)

Mike Vrabel’s squad shouldn’t have given up only three points, especially after Drake Maye was picked off on the Patriots’ second drive at his own 10-yard line. However, the Patriots’ defense was relentless all night, and the Chargers couldn’t adjust.

They stopped the Chargers on four plays to turn them over on downs, and ultimately got on the board first thanks to a 93-yard drive that resulted in a field goal.

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Los Angeles was knocking at the door again with a third-and-2 from New England’s three-yard line, but Kimani Vidal was stuffed. Cameron Dicker added a field goal to tie the game, and only another Patriots field goal was added to the score before halftime, a 6-3 lead for New England.

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While the Chargers couldn’t get anything going on offense, their defense kept them in this game, at least for the first three quarters. Maye was strip-sacked by Odafe Oweh while in Chargers territory to keep it a three-point game in the third quarter.

But after another failed drive, a third Patriots field goal split the uprights to make it 9-3.

Stefon Diggs of the New England Patriots talks to teammates in a huddle prior to an AFC wild card playoff football game against the Los Angeles Chargers at Gillette Stadium on Jan. 11, 2026 in Foxborough, Massachusetts. (Kathryn Riley/Getty Images)

The dagger for the Patriots came after yet another Chargers punt, when Maye placed his pass perfectly for tight end Hunter Henry, the ex-Chargers star, for a 28-yard touchdown. The first six-pointer for either team seemingly ended all hopes for Los Angeles.

On the ensuing drive, Herbert was crushed by K’Lavon Chaisson, resulting in a fumble recovered by Christian Elliss, as the Gillette Stadium crowd went ballistic.

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The Chargers tried to get some playoff heroics going, as they dinked and dunked their way down the field into Patriots territory. But on fourth-and-9 from New England’s 34-yard line, Milton Williams ended all hope when he delivered the Patriots’ sixth sack on Herbert to turn them over on downs again. 

In the box score, Maye went 17-of-29 through the air for 268 yards, with running back Rhamondre Stevenson being his top receiver with 75 yards on three catches. Kayshon Boutte also added 66 yards on four grabs, while Henry finished with 64 yards.

Drake Maye of the New England Patriots looks to pass prior to an NFL wild card playoff game against the Los Angeles Chargers at Gillette Stadium on Jan. 11, 2026 in Foxborough, Massachusetts. (Michael Owens/Getty Images)

And Maye was also the Patriots’ leading rusher with 67 yards on the ground on nine carries, as he continuously picked his spots to gash the Chargers’ defense.

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For Los Angeles, Herbert’s playoff woes continue, as he’s now 0-3 after this performance. He had just 159 yards passing and 57 yards rushing.

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