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Plaschke: Jaime Jaquez Jr.’s ankle injury brings scary twist to UCLA’s NCAA tournament trail

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Plaschke: Jaime Jaquez Jr.’s ankle injury brings scary twist to UCLA’s NCAA tournament trail

Welcome, UCLA, to the Bittersweet 16.

On a day the place the Bruins’ highly effective coronary heart pounded out an NCAA match second-round victory over St. Mary’s, that coronary heart dropped.

In a recreation the place the Bruins’ sturdy spine got here collectively to fluster and flummox a disciplined Gaels crew in a 72-56 victory, that spine crumpled.

It occurred with 6:58 left in Saturday’s recreation. It occurred beneath the St. Mary’s basket. It was sight that stuffed the Moda Middle stands with clutched foreheads and lined mouths.

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Jaime Jaquez Jr. went down and stayed down. The child who has been carrying this crew all season on two tortured ankles lastly collapsed.

He had been preventing for a rebound. His proper ankle misplaced the struggle. He ended up flat on the hardwood writhing in ache. He grabbed his decrease leg. Coach Mick Cronin rushed to his facet.

Jaquez finally walked off below his personal energy, however with a scary limp whereas putting solely restricted and clearly painful weight on the ankle.

After briefly disappearing into the tunnel, he returned to look at the remainder of the sport from the bench. When his teammates gathered round throughout timeouts, he stayed seated. When the sport ended and everybody lined as much as shake fingers, he limped again to the locker room.

The official phrase is that Jaquez is each day with a proper ankle sprain.

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The unofficial phrase is, maintain your breath.

The Bruins are well-built and well-coached and have overcome numerous moments of adversity throughout a season that has landed in a second consecutive Candy 16.

However face it, they desperately want their chief to get well in time for Friday’s East Regional semifinal showdown in Philadelphia in opposition to North Carolina.

“What he provides to our crew … he’s among the finest gamers within the nation,” Cronin mentioned plainly.

Jaime Jaquez Jr. (24) is helped off the court docket by Bruins teammate Logan Cremonesi (20) after Jaquez was injured Saturday. Jaquez scored 15 factors and is taken into account day-to-day.

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(Craig Mitchelldyer / Related Press)

Powering by way of the paint whereas combining a steamroll assault with a feathery contact, Jaquez scored 15 Saturday in a primary half that principally determined this recreation, and it was nothing new. He scored 80 in a three-game stretch on the finish of the season. He’s their most constant presence, their most bodily attacker, their hardest defender, Cronin personified.

“He brings defensive grit. … Offensively he’s a matchup nightmare,” mentioned Tyger Campbell, Saturday’s main scorer with 16. “He’s only a actually good all-around participant, and he brings toughness to our crew.”

UCLA can take consolation in that, this season, the Jaquez toughness has turn out to be legendary.

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In November, Jaquez completed a recreation after his face absorbed a minimize that trickled blood. Quickly thereafter he was pulled out of a recreation within the first half when he fell exhausting on his head. Then there’s his ankles, each of which have been beforehand injured such that he has performed with braces on each because the center of February.

“He’s had so many sprained ankles, I don’t understand how a lot he can sprain it anymore,” Cronin mentioned.

However Jaquez has frequently climbed again up such that he’s missed just one begin. And Cronin isn’t going to cease believing now.

“We obtained till Friday to play and belief me, if he can stroll, he’ll play,” Cronin mentioned. “I do know him … most guys which have what he has would have sat the remainder of the season out. So, we’ll see.”

Cronin, who led the crew to its first consecutive Candy 16 appearances in six years, was fast to level out that the Bruins have the depth to exchange Jaquez — particularly defensive whiz Jaylen Clark and infrequently sensible freshman Peyton Watson. To make sure, the place some thought Jaquez’s harm may encourage the Gaels, the Bruins really outscored St. Mary’s 17-9 after Jaquez departed.

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“Clearly, we play by way of [Jaquez] quite a bit on offense,” mentioned Cronin. “However I simply instructed Jaylen Clark and Peyton … these guys obtained expertise and these guys are nonetheless taking part in. So clearly, you need Jaime to be wholesome, but when he’s not, we obtained different guys we will play.”

Each subs performed 10 minutes Saturday and each did nicely, with Clark recording a plus-12 and Watson making his solely shot with a rebound and a steal.

“All we will do is come collectively,” Campbell mentioned.

UCLA's Jaylen Clark defends St. Mary's Tommy Kuhse during the first half March 19, 2022, in Portland, Ore.

UCLA defensive stalwart Jaylen Clark, who was a plus-12 on Saturday, guards St. Mary’s Tommy Kuhse in the course of the first half.

(Craig Mitchelldyer / Related Press)

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As soon as once more Saturday, they confirmed a togetherness that may be essential in Jaquez’s absence. After struggling to make performs early within the recreation, their crew protection tightened up and made an unbelievable push, climbing down the Gaels’ jerseys and harassing them into bricks and iron. With UCLA trailing 20-13 halfway by way of the half, the Bruins went on a 15-2 run throughout which the Gaels missed 12 consecutive photographs whereas committing three turnovers.

The Gaels threw up blind layups in opposition to double groups, distant loopy three-pointers with fingers of their face, and buzzer-beating hurls that by no means had an opportunity.

All this time, with the St. Mary’s basket immediately in entrance of the UCLA cheering part, the Gaels offense was surrounded by fixed roars that appeared to shake them.

UCLA, in the meantime, made 11 of its final 17 photographs of the half to take a 36-29 halftime lead that was by no means threatened.

In the meantime, whereas Jaquez’s situation was the large query, this recreation may need additionally supplied a solution. Perhaps, simply perhaps, beforehand injured and out-of-sorts Johnny Juzang has rediscovered his contact. He made six of 11 photographs. He grabbed eight rebounds. He smiled.

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“The togetherness has been nice,” Juzang mentioned. “You’ll be able to simply really feel it. I do know all of us can … it’s the most effective feeling, man. Particularly in March, man … we’ve a lot enjoyable.”

They’re actually carrying the correct mindset right into a troublesome regional semifinal, the place they’ll face a North Carolina crew that has trailed for less than 3:49 of 85 minutes within the first two rounds. The Tar Heels beat Marquette by 32, and led Baylor within the second half by 25, and are taking part in their greatest basketball of the season coming into a Wells Fargo Middle that shall be certainly full of their followers.

“You’ll be able to’t be taking part in higher than Carolina is taking part in,” Cronin mentioned.

As they confirmed Saturday, the Bruins seemingly have each instrument to take down the Tar Heels … besides one … for now.

The eight-clap cheer that stuffed the Moda Middle early Saturday night was overshadowed by three-word want directed on the participant who couldn’t participate within the postgame celebration, maybe their most essential participant of all, one Jaime Jaquez Jr.

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Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner play tennis. Their Australian Open rivals see a different sport

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Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner play tennis. Their Australian Open rivals see a different sport

MELBOURNE, Australia — Just as it did 12 months ago, the tennis gods gave the Australian Open the men’s singles draw it craved. On the steps of Margaret Court Arena, Jannik Sinner and Carlos Alcaraz emerged in opposite halves, setting up the possibility of a first Grand Slam final duel for the matchup that defines tennis on the ATP Tour.

The 23-year-old Italian and the 21-year-old Spaniard split the four majors 2-2 in 2024. They hit the ball as hard as anyone and cover every inch of the court, laterally and vertically, inside the lines and out.

For their opponents, their tennis feels like a different sport to the one they signed up to at the start of their journey to the professional circuit.

They also do not lack for confidence.

“I’m an ambitious guy,” Alcaraz said during a visit to New York in December for an exhibition at Madison Square Garden. “I’m sure sooner or later I’m going to be the Australian Open champion.”

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Sinner said his goal last year was to gain a better understanding of what he might be able to achieve in his career. With two Grand Slams triumphs and the No. 1 ranking he got some hints, though ticking those boxes was not a specific goal.

“It’s going to be the same next year,” he said after winning the ATP Tour Finals in Turin and finishing the season 73-6. “Whatever we can catch, we take, and the rest we learn.”

Sinner and Alcaraz have intermittently played tennis like it’s a fantastical computer game since their 2022 U.S. Open quarterfinal and its five hours and 15 minutes of spellbinding shotmaking. In 2024, they fully reconfigured the sport, overtaking the baseline call and response honed by Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic and the reactive development of players like Alexander Zverev and Daniil Medvedev, who arrived armed with huge serves and counterpunching groundstrokes.

Sinner and Alcaraz have reconfigured tennis into a hyper-aggressive game of chicken. To hit a neutral ball is to be on defense and to be on defense is to lose (against each other) or to steal the point (against pretty much everybody else). Their ATP Tour rivals, from Zverev and Medvedev to Taylor Fritz, Casper Ruud and all the way down, are at a loss. The tennis they knew has vanished before their eyes.

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Tennis mailbag part one: Challenging Sinner and Alcaraz, baseline boredom, coaching change


Great players win lots of matches and championships. The greatest ever players change how their sport is played, redrawing the tennis court to create new shots and angles that few thought were possible before. Think of the way the basketball stars Steph Curry and Caitlin Clark normalized three-pointers from way beyond the stripe, extending defenses, creating offensive space where it wasn’t supposed to exist, and redesigning the toolkit that top-level basketball required.

Sinner and Alcaraz are having a similar impact on their sport. Tennis courts are still 78 feet long and 27 feet wide. They have not grown. These two just make it seem like they have.

In most tennis rallies, the player that forces their opponent into or outside the tramlines — where the width of the singles court expires — is likely to win the point. Either the ball won’t come back because the angle is too sharp, or it will come back soft and floating, ready to be dispatched into space.

There is a massive difference in what happens when Sinner and Alcaraz are outside the tramlines. This supposed zone of no return is where they can show off. It’s where Alcaraz can display his blazing speed and rocketing forehands blasted on a full sprint over or around the net post. It’s where Sinner embodies the junior skiing champion he once was, bending low as he swings his racket then pushing back into the court like he has just come around a slalom gate on icy slope.

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Jannik Sinner and Carlos Alcaraz have pushed each other to extremes since their 2022 U.S. Open quarterfinal (Julian Finney / Getty Images)

Far more often than the rest of the tour, Sinner and Alcaraz are winning points or getting on the attack from places where they are supposed to lose. It has created a paradox, most visibly with Alcaraz, in which stressing and pressing them is a bad idea. They win one impossible point, and then another, lifting the crowd and pointing to their ears, and the avalanche starts to rumble down the mountain.

Zverev, who knows he is world No. 2 in rank but not in spirit, knows what this feels like. He rarely gets tired during tennis matches, even the longest five-set duels at Grand Slams. The 2024 French Open final against Alcaraz was different. By the fifth set, his legs were gone, his body wilting from the relentlessness of the challenge that he expects will shape tennis for many years.

“Everybody talks about how great they are defensively,” Zverev said after defeating Alcaraz at the ATP Tour Finals in Turin. He doesn’t buy it.

“Tennis is not about defense anymore,” he added.

“It used to be a few years back, but I think those guys, 90 percent of the time they’re only playing offense. It’s about making sure that you can keep up offensively with them, being able to keep up with their speeds of groundstrokes as well. That’s the No. 1 thing. Not backing off, going for your shots in the most important moments. That’s maybe where I struggled, as well, in my career, trusting my shots and going for them when I need to.”

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He and just about everyone else. This is where Sinner and Alcaraz are taking tennis. Movement, specifically in and out of the corners, has become as important as the serve and the return. Ben Shelton has realized his 150mph serve and lashing forehand will only take him so far, hiring Gabriel Echevarria, a movement specialist, early last year. Naomi Osaka hired a ballerina to help her gain more surety and speed in the corners. Nearly every player wants to master an open-stance backhand, to save a split second on the pivot back to the center of the court.

Fritz, who has long known that he struggles outside the singles line, spent much of the off-season working on moving out to the farthest reaches of a tennis court to chase down balls. His coach, Michael Russell, has seen a version of this movie before. At 46, he’s three years older than Roger Federer, eight years older than Nadal and nine years older than Djokovic. He watched those three players change the sport’s equation, just as Sinner and Alcaraz are doing now.

“There’s no room for uncharacteristic errors,” he said during an interview in Italy in November. “Literally, they’re not giving you an inch.”


Carlos Alcaraz thrives on winning points from seemingly impossible positions (Julian Finney / Getty Images)

When Russell uses the word “error,” he’s not talking about a ball that flies long or dumps into the net, unforced or not. He’s talking about any ball that doesn’t have enough speed, depth, or width to stop Sinner and Alcaraz from exploiting it. For decades, a first principle of tennis has been resetting a point, changing its state from attack to neutral, or defense to neutral. Sinner and Alcaraz don’t allow for this. There’s a reason Fritz and Zverev, the two players closest to Sinner and Alcaraz in the rankings, have spent so much time the past months learning how to dictate the terms of engagement.

“Even if it’s only one or two points a match, that can be the differential. Applying that psychological pressure that the guy can’t just float the ball back and reset,” Russell said.

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This is what Alcaraz and Sinner do so well and so much better than their ATP Tour contemporaries.


That flip of a point from defense to attack has been codified by data specialists TennisViz and Tennis Data Innovations as a “steal score,” measuring how often a player wins a point from defense. Alcaraz is top. Sinner is not far behind.

Across the ATP Tour, players are hitting shots outside the singles sidelines around 17 percent of the time, but Sinner and Alcaraz win around 45 percent of the points they play from there. Their opponents win around 30.

From outside the doubles lines, Alcaraz wins 43 percent of points and Sinner 42. Alcaraz’s opponents win around 22 percent; Sinner’s around 29.

Casper Ruud, who like Zverev and Fritz spent most of 2024 with his head spinning, doesn’t recognize the tennis that took him to three Grand Slam finals in 12 months in 2022 and 2023. After spending years perfecting his balance between patience and a lethal forehand, he could feel Sinner and Alcaraz making tennis pass him by. Those deep, looping shots he has long used to hang in points simply don’t work against them. He needs to change, or perish as a force at the top of the game.

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“They can turn around the point with one shot on the run, even from the forehand or backhand,” he said in an interview Italy in November. “I feel like that is something definitely missing in my game on the faster hard court.

“That’s something in the next weeks and months I’ll try to keep working on. But I’m not going to change my game in one day or one week. It’s going to take time.”


Jannik Sinner and Carlos Alcaraz’s meetings inevitably descend into games of tennis chicken (Clive Brunskill / Getty Images)

Ruud is 26. Fritz and Zverev are 27. They and the rest of their contemporaries, who have spent most of their tennis lives banging on the Big Three ceiling, are now having to make a mid-career adjustment based on how two youngsters who have achieved their dreams before them play the sport.

Younger players, even juniors, may be at an advantage. Just as so many of them are trying to master Alcaraz’s drop-shot-lob combinations, they are growing up knowing what they have to be able to do to reach the top of tennis. For the rest of the ATP Tour, it can feel like climbing a mountain that dissolves just before the apex, then re-forms with new terrain and a higher summit.


Sinner and Alcaraz are remaking tennis for everybody else, but what happens when the unstoppable force goes up against the immovable object? What would the Australian Open final that everybody wants to see look like?

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“You have more tension. You have more eyes on us because this is a match most people want to see,” Sinner said Friday in a Melbourne news conference.

“First, you have to arrive to this stage where you play against Carlos, which is a very difficult part to go through. When this happens, the feeling — I think he also feels the same way — it’s a bit different. We usually play a high-quality match because when two players face each other and you bring out your best, the quality of the match usually is very high.”

Sinner spent most of the year as the world No. 1, even though Alcaraz holds a 6-4 edge in their rivalry. Alcaraz won all three of their meetings last year, most recently in the final of the China Open in Beijing, edging Sinner 6-7(6), 6-4, 7-6(3) from 3-0 down in the deciding tiebreak with seven points from another galaxy.

Alcaraz said in New York in December that he and his friends think it’s pretty funny that Sinner is No. 1 without beating him last year. Sinner is besting him on serve right now; Alcaraz is the better player in the forecourt, with the vertical movement to go with the lateral magic tricks they share.

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Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner go head to head in their own tennis galaxy

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That might have a little bit to do with the edge he holds in the nether reaches of the tennis court. They are about even in their performance on points when they move each other beyond the singles line, with Alcaraz winning 36 percent of those points and Sinner 38 percent.

Outside the doubles lines, Alcaraz has a clear advantage, winning 36 percent of the points against 30 percent for Sinner. In general, their pushing each other to greater heights also forces them to lose a few points that they would win against anybody else.

Once they get in attack, they are the two best players on the ATP Tour at closing out the point. Sinner wins 74 percent of the time; Alcaraz 73.

Against each other though, when they are pulling off their acrobatics on points that send the opponent off the court, those rates drop. However, Alcaraz’s doesn’t drop as much. He converts 66 percent of the time against Sinner, while Sinner converts 62 percent of the time from his end of the court.

That still leaves a sizable number of those highlight reel points, when they both put on a version of tennis as escape art. It’s their ability to do the extraordinary against the only other player in their orbit — though don’t count Djokovic and his 24 Grand slam titles out just yet.

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“Insane,” Fritz said in Turin.

He’s the one who has to try and beat them.

(Top photos: Getty Images; design:Will Tullos)

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Tom Brady partners with Gopuff to deliver $250K in free water to those affected by Los Angeles wildfires

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Tom Brady partners with Gopuff to deliver 0K in free water to those affected by Los Angeles wildfires

As those in Southern California continue to deal with wildfire devastation, NFL legend Tom Brady is doing his part to help out the relief efforts. 

Brady partnered with Gopuff to deliver $250,000 of free water to those impacted by the wildfires. 

The Los Angeles Department of Water and Power continues to send out alerts saying that unsafe water is in the area due to fire-related toxins in tap water. 

Tom Brady (Joe Nicholson-Imagn Images)

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So, customers of Gopuff, which has thousands of employees, 160-plus BevMo! Stores and a corporate office in California can use the code “CAStrong” at checkout to have fresh, and free, still water delivered up to $10.

Also, 30% off essentials, including food, batteries, electrolytes and more, is being offered by the company that also announced a donation of $150,000 worth of essentials last week.

LOS ANGELES WILDFIRES DEATH TOLL RISES TO 16 AS GAVIN NEWSOM FACES NEW FIREFIGHTING FUNDING SCRUTINY

“Our hearts are with the thousands and thousands of people impacted by the devastating wildfires in Los Angeles,” said Yakir Gola, Gopuff co-founder and co-CEO, in a statement. “We are extremely grateful for first responders’ round-the-clock efforts to keep our communities safe and for our team leaders’ tireless efforts to support our employees in the area. 

“To do our part to support first responders and anyone who’s impacted locally, we’ve partnered with Tom Brady to give away $250K worth of water to those in the LA area and will continue to monitor the situation and support however we can.”

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Brady joined Gopuff in June 2024 in a multiyear strategic partnership in which he said he would be hands-on with the instant commerce leader. 

Tom Brady smiles

Fox Sports broadcaster Tom Brady smiles on the field prior to the game between the Chicago Bears and the Green Bay Packers at Soldier Field on November 17, 2024, in Chicago. (Kevin Sabitus/Getty Images)

“Since my first time using Gopuff, I’ve been amazed by how fast and seamless the deliveries are, offering so many different options right at your fingertips,” said Brady in an official press release of the partnership announcement. “I’m excited to be working with the Gopuff team to continue to drive innovation and help create an even better experience for their customers.”

California authorities have confirmed a new death toll of 16 as the wildfires continued to rage around Los Angeles on Sunday. Thousands have lost their homes as first responders continue to try to get control over the flames. 

Gov. Gavin Newsom has invited President-elect Donald Trump to visit California amid the wildfires and fighting over budget decisions. The governor has faced criticism for approving a budget that slashed $100 million in firefighting and fire prevention funding.

Tom Brady walks on field

Tom Brady walks across the field before the game between the San Francisco 49ers and the Green Bay Packers at Lambeau Field on November 24, 2024, in Green Bay, Wisconsin. (Patrick McDermott/Getty Images)

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Newsom did issue an executive order on Sunday to remove some regulatory hurdles and procedures to accelerate rebuilding homes and business faster.

Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.

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Khalil Mack unsure if he will be back with the Chargers next season

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Khalil Mack unsure if he will be back with the Chargers next season

After a devastating 27-point playoff collapse two seasons ago nearly sent Khalil Mack into sudden retirement, the Chargers’ star edge rusher plans to revisit the decision about his football future with more care this offseason as he’s slated to become an unrestricted free agent for the first time in his career.

Still wearing the wounds of the Chargers’ AFC wild-card round exit to the Houston Texans, Mack said Sunday he will prioritize his family while evaluating his next career move. The father of two will make sure to discuss it with his wife. He knows how impressionable his sons, aged 2 and 3, are at this age. They love watching highlights of their father’s football career, and spending time with them is of utmost importance.

But the 11-year professional who could be in the running for the Hall of Fame one day is still chasing not only his first championship, but his first playoff victory.

“I also don’t want to go out with a L, just based on who I am as a man and a person,” Mack said. “I’m a competitor, man. I’m the ultimate competitor.”

The 33-year-old Mack is one of many impending free agents who will weigh their football futures after the Chargers were bounced from the playoffs by the Houston Texans. But the annual threat of roster churn came with additional optimism in El Segundo on Sunday as the Chargers looked toward a bright future under coach Jim Harbaugh.

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“Just understanding what he’s done in the short time he’s been here, and the potential of the guys that are in the building, you see the growth is inevitable,” Mack said. “It’s only a matter of time.”

The Chargers went from five wins last year to 11 in Harbaugh’s first season, the best single-season turnaround for the franchise in two decades. In the process, Harbaugh “made football fun again,” said cornerback Kristian Fulton, who is slated to hit free agency again after signing a one-year deal with the Chargers.

“Honestly one of my favorite teams I’ve ever been on,” safety Derwin James Jr. said.

James is already trying to keep the band together.

Amid final team meetings, exit interviews and locker clean out Sunday, the All-Pro safety gave Mack his pitch to keep the edge rusher in L.A. The pair of defensive leaders earned Pro Bowl nominations this season as James notched a career-high 5½ sacks. Mack, who restructured his contract last offseason to take a pay cut and stay with the Chargers, earned his ninth Pro Bowl appearance, tallying 39 tackles and six sacks.

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Khalil Mack walks off the field after a Chargers win over the New England Patriots on Dec. 28.

(Vera Nieuwenhuis / Associated Press)

Although it was a decrease from when he revitalized his career with a career-high 17 sacks and 74 tackles, his highest total since 2017, Mack said his body is in “tip-top shape.” After missing one game this season because of a groin injury, Mack said the bigger consideration is the mental toll of a season and the time it takes away from his family.

The Chargers’ third Pro Bowl selection Rashawn Slater is under contract through 2025 after the organization picked up the left tackle’s fifth-year option last May, but could be due for a long-term extension soon. The 25-year-old had the second-highest blocking grade among tackles this season, according to Pro Football Focus, and earned his second Pro Bowl appearance.

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Despite coming off such a strong season, Slater said he has not engaged in any extension talks.

“I’ve always just been focused on ball and kind of let the thing happen how it happens,” Slater said. “But I love playing here and that would be great.”

In addition to Mack, the Chargers also face free agency decisions on starters, including center Bradley Bozeman, running back J.K. Dobbins, defensive backs Fulton, Elijah Molden and Asante Samuel Jr. and defensive linemen Poona Ford and Morgan Fox.

Samuel was placed on injured reserve Oct. 12 with a shoulder injury that he likened to a stinger Sunday, his first comments to local media since he was sidelined. He aggravated the injury during a collision in practice and was on the injury report for Week 1 but continued to play until it flared up heading into the Chargers’ Week 6 game against the Denver Broncos. Doctors advised him to take a cautious approach. He said both shoulders are affected, but the left one is more severe. It didn’t require surgery and he expects to be ready for the offseason program wherever he lands next year.

After the Chargers drafted him 47th overall in 2021, Samuel said it was “hurtful” to not be on the field while his team turned into one of the NFL’s best defenses. Under first-year defensive coordinator Jesse Minter, the Chargers finished the regular season as the NFL’s top-ranked scoring defense, allowing 17.7 points per game.

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“The first year is a lot of bumps and bruises, but I feel like next year they’re going to be top tier,” Samuel said. “We was already top tier this year. So I feel like next year is going to take another step, and it’ll keep taking steps and getting better each and every year. We have a great coaching staff. We have a great staff in general, just the whole organization. … So we have all the pieces we need here.”

Those pieces could be a key in Mack’s ultimate decision. Past his initial estimate of a 10-year professional career, Mack has made it clear that if he’s playing, he intends to be competing for a championship.

For the first time in a while, the Chargers might truly fit the bill.

“As long as Justin Herbert is your quarterback, Derwin James and all these guys, man, that love the game of football, and you got Jim Harbaugh coaching you,” Mack said, “you know you always have a chance to win.”

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