Sports
Panthers' Sam Franklin Jr restrained from running to Bucs locker room, sends threat to player in video
Carolina Panthers captain Sam Franklin Jr. had to be restrained from running toward the Tampa Bay Buccaneers’ locker room following an overtime loss to his team’s NFC South rival.
Franklin was specifically frustrated with Bucs linebacker Jose Ramirez, who he called out in a video that has now gone viral on social media.
“Hey, tell 33 imma see his a–,” Franklin was heard yelling toward other Bucs players. “On my grave, boy!”
It’s unclear what exactly led Franklin to get this angry, as a Panthers staffer had to push him back toward their locker room.
But the animosity between these rivals was also seen in a separate video where veteran Bucs wide receiver Sterling Shepard was shouting expletives toward the Panthers’ locker room immediately after Franklin’s outburst.
RUSSELL WILSON COOKS FOR STEELERS. KIRK COUSINS ON THIN ICE WITH FALCONS?
All of this transpired after a thrilling end to this rivalry matchup, which needed extra time to find a winner. The Bucs would eventually kick a game-winning field goal for the 26-23 victory, but it appeared the Panthers were going to win it all when they got the ball following Chase McLaughlin’s missed 55-yarder earlier in overtime.
However, Chuba Hubbard, who has had a breakout season with Carolina and has been one of their driving forces on offense despite their 3-9 record, fumbled in Tampa Bay territory, and Yaya Diaby recovered the loose ball to give the Bucs another crack at winning the game.
Rachaad White made it so with a long run to get deep into Panthers’ territory, and McLaughlin didn’t miss his second chance, this time from 30 yards out, to win the game.
With the victory, the Bucs are now in a first-place tie for the NFC South lead with the Atlanta Falcons, who lost to the Los Angeles Chargers earlier Sunday.
We saw tons of skirmishes and altercations this weekend in the college football world during their rivalry week, but as the regular season enters the homestretch, the stakes of each game matter that much more.
Clearly, the heat of competition on the field spilled over into the tunnel for this fierce rivalry.
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Sports
Ranking MLB’s worst contracts: Not all megadeals are worth the cost
Stephen Strasburg retired, Patrick Corbin’s deal with the Washington Nationals finally expired and Chris Sale roared back to form in a major way.
That means there are changes to the annual rankings of MLB’s worst contracts. With Black Friday deals in the past and baseball’s hot stove on the verge of heating up, risk-averse executives often point to the league’s underwater contracts as justification for trusting internal development or otherwise standing pat with mediocre rosters.
Such reasoning can amount to an excuse, of course. But there’s no denying free agency can be a gamble. Even lesser deals without massive publicity don’t work out. Think Jeimer Candelario in Cincinnati or Mitch Haniger in San Francisco and now Seattle. In the case of Pittsburgh’s Ke’Bryan Hayes, even the en vogue pre-arbitration extension isn’t looking like a wise investment for a notoriously penny-pinching ownership.
Elsewhere, big-money deals to shortstops like Carlos Correa and Dansby Swanson are fine for now, but hints of injuries or regression leave room for serious concern about the future.
Some deals, however, are already outright flops with higher salaries and much higher stakes.
Those stand alone as the worst contracts in the league.
Original deal: Five years, $100 million
Remaining years:
2025: $20 million
2026: $20 million
Castellanos was fresh off the best season of his career when the Phillies signed him in March 2022. In the three years since, Castellanos’ time with the Phillies has provided doses of nearly every emotion. Frustrations have been offset by heroic moments, colorful quotes and charming shots of Castellanos celebrating with his son.
Despite being part of thrilling playoff runs, the Phillies have yet to win it all with Castellanos aboard. And his tenure has ultimately not been worth near his salary. Castellanos has been worth only 1.4 fWAR over the past three seasons. His first year was a struggle. His 29 homers in 2023 seemed like a step in the right direction. But even when the power shows up, Castellanos has remained free-swinging and prone to severe slumps. Despite playing 162 games in 2023, Castellanos was worth 0.4 fWAR. His 105 wRC+ was only a tick above league average. Over the past three years, his minus-28 defensive runs saved is the worst total among all MLB outfielders.
Now there are whispers of the Phillies trying to trade Castellanos as they look to retool their roster. But the question looms: Will they have any takers?
Original deal: Six years, $162 million
Remaining years:
2025: $27.833 million
2026: $27.833 million
2027: $27.833 million
2028: $27.833 million
Rodón’s big-money deal looked like a disaster after he posted a 6.85 ERA in 2023, his first year in the Bronx. Rodón made small steps toward redemption this past season, throwing 175 innings with a 3.96 ERA and averaging 10 K/9. Although Rodón was much improved from that disastrous 2023, he has a long way to go to live up to the high AAV the Yankees will pay him for four more seasons.
Rodón was worth only 1.7 fWAR this past season and lasted only 3 1/3 innings in his lone World Series outing. The good news is that Rodón had a 2.91 ERA in the second half and saw his strikeout numbers return to near-elite levels after the All-Star break. However, the 31 home runs Rodón surrendered in 2024 tied for the second-highest total in the majors.
Original deal: 11 years, $280 million
Remaining years:
2025: $25,454,545
2026: $25,454,545
2027: $25,454,545
2028: $25,454,545
2029: $25,454,545
2030: $25,454,545
2031: $25,454,545
2032: $25,454,545
2033: $25,454,545
When the San Diego Padres signed Bogaerts at Winter Meetings in 2022, it was immediately a polarizing decision. On one hand, it was another aggressive move to bring another All-Star to San Diego. On the other hand, 11 years is an awfully long time. Bogaerts is only two seasons into this contract, and though he’s still an above-average player, there are already signs of decline.
In 2024, Bogaerts’ wRC+ fell to 95, below the league average of 100, for the first time since 2017. He homered only 11 times in 111 games. And worse from a value standpoint, Bogaerts has already moved away from shortstop, playing 85 games at second base this past season. Bogaerts returned to shortstop in September, but he’s never graded well at the position. Going forward, the Padres are also paying Manny Machado more than $39 million annually through 2033, so they must hope Bogaerts can fend off further decline as he enters his age-32 season. San Diego will pay him until he is 40.
Original deal: Five years, $185 million
Remaining years:
2025: $40 million
2026: $38 million
2027: $37 million
2028: $37 million (mutual option)
The Rangers have already paid Jacob deGrom $70 million for only nine starts. The deal has so far been a predictable money pit for a pitcher who has not surpassed 92 innings since 2021.
When healthy, deGrom has still looked like one of the best pitchers in the sport. He returned from the second UCL reconstruction of his career and allowed only two earned runs in three starts with the Rangers this past season. Over his 41 innings with the Rangers, he has a 2.41 ERA and has averaged 13 K/9.
Getting deGrom back on the mound this season was a positive step, even if it took longer than initially hoped. Although deGrom enters the offseason healthy, he is now 36, and the Rangers are paying him top-shelf money for several more seasons.
Original deal: 12 years, $426 million
Remaining years:
2025: $37,116,666
2026: $37,116,666
2027: $37,116,666
2028: $37,116,666
2029: $37,116,666
2030: $37,116,666
With all the money left on the table, there’s a real argument for Trout to be No. 1 on this list. But because he is Mike Trout and because, when healthy, he’s still had a 134 OPS+ over the past two seasons, we will resist such a harsh assessment for now. Still, 2025 could be a crucial year for Trout to prove he’s still among the game’s stars.
Trout’s career path has come to mirror Ken Griffey Jr.’s in ways good and bad, an all-time talent who keeps succumbing to injuries. Even if Trout keeps hitting, his speed and defense may never again be the tools they once were. While the Angels wrestle with even bigger problems, they’ve also discussed Trout moving away from center field and spending more time at the outfield corners or DH. We’ve got a long way to go before 2030.
Original deal: Six years, $140 million
Remaining years:
2025: $22.5 million
2026: $25 million (opt-out)*
2027: $25 million
(*If Story opts out after 2025, the Red Sox can opt back in by activating an additional $25 million in 2028.)
It was still April when Trevor Story dove for a ball and landed awkwardly. As Story grimaced, Red Sox nation groaned. The left shoulder dislocation cost Story the majority of the year, and now three years into a deal marred by injuries, the Red Sox must hope there’s still something left in Story’s bat.
In only 163 games over the past three years, Story has a mere .296 on-base percentage and an 89 OPS+. He made a surprise return from the shoulder injury and hit .270 with two home runs in September, providing a small glimpse of hope. But after all the injuries, the chances of Story taking his opt-out after this coming season are slim. As the Red Sox look to return to contention, they must hope Story can stay healthy and find his form of old even as he enters his age-32 season.
Original deal: 13 years, $325 million
Remaining years:
2025: $32 million
2026: $29 million*
2027: $25 million*
2028: $25 million (club option)*
(*Marlins will pay $10M.)
If you watched the MLB postseason, you know Giancarlo Stanton can still change a baseball game. We are still witnessing a potential Hall of Famer with majestic power. There’s still a place for him on the Yankees. But the harsh truth is he’s not worth anywhere near his enormous salary these days. For as much as playoff heroics — seven home runs and a 1.048 OPS — might have calmed some of the outcry, Stanton has been worth only 1.3 fWAR over the past three seasons.
Although his power still looms large, he hasn’t had an on-base percentage over .300 since 2021. Mostly a DH, Stanton played 33 games in the outfield last season and was worth minus-3 defensive runs saved. Stanton is 35 and already among the slowest players in the league. FanGraphs estimated Stanton’s production to be worth $6.2 million this past season, but the Yankees will pay him much more for the next three years.
Original deal: Six years, $140 million
Remaining years:
2025: $25 million
2026: $24 million
2027: $24 million
The Story contract still looks good in comparison with Báez. The two shortstops signed for identical amounts in the 2021-22 offseason. Báez has played far more games (360), which has only elevated the reasons for dismay. Over the past two years, Báez’s 56 wRC+ is the fourth worst among players to receive at least 500 plate appearances. Although he’s still capable of magical plays in the field, he was worth minus-4 defensive runs saved and minus-1 outs above average in 2024.
Báez finally underwent hip surgery in August. Tigers president of baseball operations Scott Harris said Báez is expected to “have a fighting chance to be ready for Opening Day,” and it seems he is in Detroit’s plans once again in 2025. He may be a mere platoon player next season, and it is still difficult to envision Báez finishing this contract as the Tigers improve their trajectory. Perhaps the oddest part: The notoriously strikeout-prone Báez has actually cut his K-rate sharply since coming to Detroit, from 33.6 percent in 2021 to 23.9 percent last season. In turn, however, Baez’s power has been zapped and his ability to hit fastballs has greatly diminished.
Original deal: Seven years, $182 million
Remaining years:
2025: $27 million
2026: $27 million
2027: $27 million
2028: $27 million
Javier Báez’s contract is an albatross. The Yankees declined their option on Anthony Rizzo. And still no member of the once-great Cubs core is struggling more than Kris Bryant. The player who won an MVP at 24 has played only 159 games over three seasons with the Rockies. His performance at the plate has declined in each of those three seasons. A negative WAR player over the past two years, Bryant has battled plantar fasciitis and multiple back issues. Now dealing with severe arthritis, Bryant has indicated he hasn’t had any thoughts of retirement. At the same time, he’s well aware of how rough the situation has become.
“I’m not going to sugarcoat it, it’s been terrible,” he told reporters in September. “It’s been terrible on me, physically and emotionally. I feel like I’ve let a ton of people down.”
Original deal: Seven years, $245 million
Remaining years:
2025: $38 million
2026: $38 million
The good news here: There are only two seasons left. But even though there are longer deals worth more money, no one is getting less bang for their buck than the Angels for Anthony Rendon. The third baseman who was among the toasts of the 2019-20 free-agent class has never played more than 58 games in a season for the Angels. This past season he hit a grand total of zero home runs in 206 at-bats. FanGraphs had him as a negative WAR player for the first time in his career.
Worse, Rendon’s not-so-subtle disinterest leaves almost no room for hope. Rendon will be paid handsomely, and eventually the Angels will be able to move on from what will go down as one of the worst contracts in MLB history.
Might that day be coming sooner rather than later?
“When Anthony has played, he hasn’t been productive,” Angels general manager Perry Minasian said in September. “He’s going to have to come in and earn it. There are no handouts. We’re starting to create some depth. … The best players are going to play.”
Honorable mention
José Berríos, Toronto Blue Jays: Four years, $86.9 million remaining, with an opt-out after 2026
Robbie Ray, San Francisco Giants: Two years, $50 million remaining
Lance McCullers Jr., Houston Astros: Two years, $35.4 million remaining
DJ LeMahieu, New York Yankees: Two years, $30 million remaining
Jung Hoo Lee, San Francisco Giants: Five years, $105.2 million remaining, with an opt-out after 2027
Jordan Montgomery, Arizona Diamondbacks: One year, $22.5 million remaining
Starling Marte, New York Mets: One year, $20.75 million remaining
(Top photo of Anthony Rendon and Mike Trout: Kevork Djansezian / Getty Images)
Sports
USC quarterback Miller Moss announces he's entering transfer portal
Ever since he was a boy, Miller Moss dreamed of being USC’s starting quarterback. He followed that dream as a touted prospect into a crowded quarterback room at USC. And he waited three years as a backup, biding his time as many others in his class bolted for the transfer portal instead.
Moss’ chance to lead USC’s offense lasted through one outstanding bowl performance and nine games of an up-and-down season before Moss was replaced by his own backup, and the window at his dream school had closed suddenly.
By Monday morning, three weeks after he was replaced, Moss made it official that he plans to enter the transfer portal, leaving USC after four seasons.
“Being a USC Trojan was a lifelong dream of mine,” he wrote. “I poured everything I have into this — body, heart, mind and soul — and am humbled by and proud of what my teammates and I accomplished, and fought tooth and nail for.”
Through nine games as USC’s starter this season, Moss threw for 2,555 yards and 18 touchdowns, totals that ranked among the best in the Big Ten on paper. But with Moss at the helm, the Trojans’ offense also proved much less dynamic than previous iterations. In all five of USC’s losses, critical mistakes from Moss down the stretch would prove incredibly costly.
The circumstances at USC weren’t exactly ideal for Moss, either. The Trojans offensive line struggled mightily in the first half of the season, while Moss was often asked to do too much to lift the offense. In three different games, he threw 50 passes or more, despite USC having one of the best running backs in the Big Ten in the same backfield.
USC slid to 4-5 with Moss as the starter, before Lincoln Riley opted to take the offense in a different direction. He replaced Moss with Jayden Maiava, a transfer from Nevada Las Vegas, whose dual threat skill set more closely mirrors other quarterbacks who have excelled under Riley.
In an interview with ESPN on Monday, Moss said he’d had “a rough last three weeks” since he was benched. But he expressed gratitude for his four years at USC. Moss will now have one year of eligibility to use elsewhere as a graduate transfer.
It’s possible Moss could stay within the same conference — and perhaps even face off with USC sometime next season. Several Big Ten teams find themselves in serious need of a quarterback. Moss considered Michigan as a recruit and said earlier this season that he’d enjoyed his visit to Ann Arbor. UCLA, in desperate need of a starting caliber quarterback, could even consider making that call.
He first came to USC in January 2021, with Clay Helton as coach and fellow four-star quarterback Jaxson Dart in the same class. But when Riley arrived, Dart and previous starter Kedon Slovis left. Moss stayed, even after Riley brought highly touted transfer Caleb Williams with him from Oklahoma. It would be two more years, as Williams brought home a Heisman Trophy, before Moss was handed the reins.
Moss will have no shortage of suitors now lining up to offer him that shot this offseason in spite of how his tenure ended at USC.
It started on the highest possible note, as Moss led the Trojans to an impressive season-opening win over Louisiana State in which he threw for 378 yards and led a game-winning drive in the fourth quarter. The Tigers’ defense didn’t allow more than 300 yards passing in any game the rest of the season.
In the Holiday Bowl, nine months earlier, he was even better as Moss threw for six touchdowns in a storybook debut win over Louisville.
In the aftermath of that game, as fireworks exploded over the field at Petco Park in San Diego, Moss beamed. Teammates called for his coronation as quarterback, and Riley, in his post-game press conference, joked that Moss had probably scared off any potential transfers anyway.
But a year later, Riley had chose a new direction. Now it was Moss who was leaving USC.
Sports
Rivalry games emotional enough without planting flags. Winners must act with class, too
The most activity Raheem Anderson and Tavierre Dunlap enjoyed Saturday occurred after The Game, when the two teammates joined together to plant their giant Michigan flag in the center of Ohio Stadium.
The reaction from Ohio State players was predictable, inciting a type of ugly brawl rarely seen in the 127-year history of this great series.
If Ohio State and Michigan have been two of the standard bearers across college football for generations, then so they were again this weekend in ways no one should be proud to watch.
The Disease of Me, the social media generation of young adults trying to go viral spread to football fields across the country this weekend.
Disrespecting an opponent’s logo certainly isn’t new, but to watch at least four of them occur on the same day within hours of each other on rivalry weekend cannot be a coincidence.
GO DEEPER
College football rivalry weekend heats up with fights, chaotic flag plants
The nation watched Anderson and Dunlap plant the Michigan flag after the Wolverines’ stunning 13-10 upset in the biggest of all the rivalry games.
Hours later, Arizona State’s Jacob Kongaika, a former Arizona defensive end before transferring, planted the Sun Devils’ spear in the center of Arizona’s logo.
Why? The Sun Devils entered as 9-point favorites and won by 42. Since when do the Globetrotters throw parades for beating the Washington Generals?
ASU plants the fork in Arizona Stadium 😈🔱@ASUFootball pic.twitter.com/F1sU4qJugA
— FOX College Football (@CFBONFOX) November 30, 2024
Florida’s George Gumbs Jr. planted the flag on Florida State’s field after the Gators won 31-11, igniting another fight. Florida State coach Mike Norvell was the one to tear the flag out of the ground.
College football today 😳
Florida planted its flag on FSU’s field 😬 pic.twitter.com/zIs7AMVgRl
— SportsCenter (@SportsCenter) December 1, 2024
North Carolina State entered as a slight underdog on the road at North Carolina and celebrated its 35-30 win with an attempted flag plant at midfield. It ended similarly to Ohio State-Michigan with a brawl between the two teams.
There was little at stake, other than NC State’s becoming bowl-eligible. Part of the heightened emotions might have been because it was Mack Brown’s final home game at North Carolina, so Tar Heels players did not appreciate the show of disrespect on an important day.
Tempers flare when NC State tries to plant the flag at UNC. The Tar Heels won’t leave the logo until field is cleared. pic.twitter.com/am9FHOraf6
— TheWolfpackCentral (@NCStateRivals) December 1, 2024
Even Texas players headed toward the logo at Texas A&M after beating the Aggies 17-7. Safety Andrew Mukuba got a few stomps in before Longhorns coach Steve Sarkisian rerouted his players back toward the end zone. And again, police were standing by to protect midfield.
There is a simple solution to all of this. The NCAA can fine teams and suspend any players who attempt to denigrate the logo, emblem or property of an opposing team.
Is it heavy-handed and childish? Perhaps. But so are the actions that led us here.
There certainly have been other moments similar to this in the Ohio State-Michigan series — Ohio State players tore down Michigan’s banner in 1973, David Boston and Charles Woodson scuffled on the opening series in 1997 — but none of the previous incidents involved police and pepper spray.
Talk about being heavy-handed. Police on the field began spraying players from both teams as things escalated, a wild overreaction and unnecessary use of force. Next time, let the coaches handle it. Coaches have been breaking up fights between teams for decades.
Ohio State police issued a statement confirming officers from Ohio and Michigan deployed pepper spray against the players. Just incredible.
USA: Brawl Erupts at Michigan-Ohio State Game After Wolverines Defeat OSU and Attempt to Plant Their Flag at Midfield! INSANE VIDEO! pic.twitter.com/7MouiL84ny
— News Of The Globe (@NewsOfEarthTr) November 30, 2024
There was a time when former Ohio State coach Jim Tressel spoke frequently about the respect Ohio State and Michigan shared for each other. It was a fierce rivalry, but it was usually clean. Fights and cheap shots were rarely part of it. Until now.
The Buckeyes had 60 minutes to fight on the field and chose to wait until after the game to throw their best punch. An embarrassing loss to a mediocre Michigan team Saturday officially stamps OSU coach Ryan Day as the new John Cooper — a good coach and an excellent recruiter who couldn’t beat his biggest rival. It also turned this rivalry to a degree we haven’t witnessed in 30 years.
Michigan won the last three games in this series with excellent teams that competed for national championships (and won one). This Wolverines team didn’t have a quarterback capable of throwing for even 100 yards — and it still won the game. Ohio State seniors who returned to school for the expressed purpose of winning this game now depart campus with nothing but a few more college credits.
GO DEEPER
Ryan Day went all in on beating Michigan — except when it mattered most
“For such a great game, you hate to see stuff like that after the game,” Michigan running back Kalel Mullings told the Fox broadcast crew moments after the players were separated. “It’s just bad for the sport, bad for college football. But at the end of the day, some people gotta learn how to lose, man. You can’t be fighting just because you lost the game.”
His Wolverines teammates could use a tutorial on how to win, too.
“You hate to see stuff like that after the game. It’s just bad for the sport, bad for CFB… They gotta learn how to lose man. You can’t be fighting.”@JennyTaft speaks with Michigan’s Kalel Mullings after a fight broke out between Ohio State and Michigan after the game ⬇️ pic.twitter.com/z6rmxu2YJQ
— FOX College Football (@CFBONFOX) November 30, 2024
I’ll give Mullings the benefit of the doubt. In that moment, maybe he didn’t realize all the problems Anderson and Dunlap created for everybody else. Both are seniors who rarely play outside of special teams. Both are also Academic All-Big Ten selections, but the choice to take the flag to midfield and plant it after already winning the game and dominating this rivalry wasn’t exactly a dean’s list decision.
There is class in losing. There is class in winning, too.
“These guys are looking to put a flag on our field and our guys were not going to let that happen,” Day said. “This is our field and certainly we’re embarrassed at the fact we lost the game, but there’s some prideful guys on this team that weren’t going to just let that happen.”
GO DEEPER
College Football Playoff 2024 projections: What now for Ohio State? No. 3 seed Boise State?
Logos and emblems are sacred across sports. Denigrating them has been an instant firestarter for years.
Jackson State and Southern engaged in a similar fight three years ago when Jackson State players planted their flag on Southern’s logo after a win.
Michigan linebacker Devin Bush ran to midfield at Michigan State in 2018 and began stomping on the “S” while trying to tear out the turf with his cleats before a rivalry game.
Baker Mayfield planted Oklahoma’s giant flag at midfield of Ohio Stadium after a Sooners upset at Ohio State. Buckeyes players were already back in the locker room when Mayfield did it. They were on the field singing the alma mater when Michigan did it Saturday.
A healthy level of dislike between teams doesn’t have to be a bad thing. The professional levels have become too sanitized. Only a few genuine rivalries are left, and most are in college sports.
But certain actions immediately lead to fights. Flag planting is one of them.
“I had said two years ago that (flag planting) was disrespectful,” Brown said on his final night as North Carolina’s coach. “I said all week you need to compete, but you need to do it with composure. So it’s another learning experience. You can’t fight, but you’ve got to win the game.”
Sometimes, it’s up to the winners to act with composure, too.
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