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Sean McVay dug deep in his bag of tricks to persuade Davante Adams to sign with Rams

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Sean McVay dug deep in his bag of tricks to persuade Davante Adams to sign with Rams

Davante Adams’ arrival in Los Angeles to play for the Rams has roots at the Kentucky Derby.

Several years ago the three-time All-Pro receiver and Rams coach Sean McVay chatted at Churchill Downs, where McVay told Adams how much he admired his work.

“He was just like, ‘Look man, I’ve got a lot of respect for your game,’” Adams said Thursday, “‘and it would be amazing at some point to be able to team up, join forces and figure it out together on the same team.’”

This month when Adams hit free agency for the first time, McVay stepped up the recruiting pitch. He sent Adams a few highlight tapes of the receiver that he personally narrated and communicated with him constantly while Adams was traveling in Japan.

Davante Adams celebrates after scoring a touchdown for the New York Jets against the Houston Texans in October.

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(Frank Franklin II / Associated Press)

“I thought he was out there too,” Adams quipped during an introductory news conference in Woodland Hills, “just based off, I was talking to him more than I was talking to my wife. He definitely showed a lot of interest.”

Adams, who signed a two-year contract that includes $20 million in guarantees this year, is clearly happy to be back in California, where he attended high school in Palo Alto and played at Fresno State.

Adams, 32, starred for the Green Bay Packers for eight seasons before playing two-plus seasons for the Las Vegas Raiders and 11 games last season for the New York Jets. When they released him, Adams said the possibility of joining the Rams “was already something that was on my radar.”

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After speaking with McVay, Rams players and other team personnel, “it was clear that this is where I needed to be,” said Adams, who has 957 receptions for 11,844 yards and 103 touchdowns.

Adams joins a Rams receiving corps that includes third-year pro Puka Nacua and speedster Tutu Atwell, whom the Rams re-signed to a one-year, $10-million contract. The Rams released veteran Cooper Kupp on Wednesday.

Adams said he has long admired Rams quarterback Matthew Stafford, who also joined the recruiting pitch.

“I don’t know if he was quite as eager as Sean was,” Adams said, “but it was still a good feeling knowing the quarterback wants you to be there too.”

Adams is eager to begin working with a quarterback who ranks among the top 10 in several categories, and a team that advanced to the NFC divisional round last season.

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“Being able to be with a contender at this point in my career is something I’ve been waiting for for a while now,” he said. “I’ve been putting the work in to make it happen, but now we got it so it’s exciting.”

Adams will continue to wear No. 17. Nacua announced this week that he was switching to 12 to honor his family and return to the number he wore growing up. Adams said he had not communicated with Nacua about the change.

“For everybody out there that wants to hate me for making them buy new jerseys, I did not tell him, I didn’t pay him, I didn’t do anything,” Adams said, grinning. “That was out of the kindness of his heart and what he wore in college, so I guess it made sense.”

Rams guard Coleman Shelton during his first stint with the Rams in December 2023.

Rams guard Coleman Shelton during his first stint with the Rams in December 2023.

(Terrance Williams / Associated Press)

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Offensive lineman Coleman Shelton was not a marquee acquisition for the Rams, but he also could play a vital role in McVay’s offense.

Shelton, a Southern California native, played center and guard for the Rams from 2019 to 2023. Last season he played with the Chicago Bears and worked with rookie Caleb Williams, the former USC star who was the top pick in the draft.

“Very excited to be able to get back to work with Matthew and hit the ground running,” Shelton said. “Caleb, being able to work with him was an awesome opportunity. He’s a great guy, he’s a great competitor and I only see success in his future.”

New defensive tackle Poona Ford played five seasons for the Seattle Seahawks and one with the Buffalo Bills before playing for the Chargers last season. He joins a front that includes lineman Braden Fiske and edge rusher Jared Verse, the NFL defensive rookie of the year.

“They’re young and they’re hungry,” Ford said. “I’m just looking forward to getting to know everybody and building chemistry on and off the field.”

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NBA Awards Watch: Rookie of the Year race leaves a lot to be desired

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NBA Awards Watch: Rookie of the Year race leaves a lot to be desired

We’re doing our NBA Awards Watch every Thursday until the end of the regular season, and each week we’ll emphasize a new award. This week, we’ve got Rookie of the Year.

Sandwiched between the class with Victor Wembanyama and the upcoming Cooper Flagg sweepstakes, this rookie class has been one we’ve known isn’t likely to deliver a future star or franchise-changer for a while. But there are still some good role players in the mix. That has made me wonder whether we’ve seen similar ROY races in the past. We’ll get into that below.

For the criteria I use for each award, check out our initial Awards Watch from this season. It explains how I, and a lot of the voting history, look at the six major individual awards. We’ll go heavy on Rookie of the Year here and give quick-hit thoughts for the other awards. All betting odds are courtesy of BetMGM.


Rookie of the Year

We haven’t had a lot of duds when it comes to the Rookie of the Year winners. By duds, I mean players who eventually ended up being mediocre or afterthought players in the NBA. Let’s take it back 40 years to 1985 when Michael Jordan won the award. In the last four decades, the worst Rookie of the Year winners are probably Chuck Person (1987), Mike Miller (2001), Tyreke Evans (2010), Michael Carter-Williams (2014) and Malcolm Brogdon (2017).

Person, however, had a 13-year career and put up 19.0 points per game in his first six seasons with Indiana. Miller had a 17-year career, averaged double-digit scoring, was named Sixth Man of the Year and won two titles with the Miami Heat. Evans had a historic start to his career, but eventually, foot and knee issues and a suspension for violating the antidrug program cut his career short. Carter-Williams was traded the year after winning Rookie of the Year, and we all knew his rookie numbers were inflated by the Trust the Process Sixers. He was quickly relegated to a supporting role and didn’t last in rotations very long after.

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The example most akin to what we’re seeing in this 2024-25 rookie class is what happened with the Rookie of the Year campaign in 2016-17. That was the year a second-round pick ended up winning the award because a Philadelphia 76ers rookie simply didn’t play enough games to garner enough votes to justify taking home the trophy.

Do you see how we’re already starting to connect the dots? That was Joel Embiid’s third season in the NBA but first year on the court due to injuries. Embiid only played 31 games in that season, but he averaged 20.2 points, 7.8 rebounds, 2.1 assists and 2.5 blocks in just 25.4 minutes per game. It was the equivalent of averaging 28.7 points, 11.1 rebounds, 3.5 blocks and 3.0 assists if he played 36 minutes a night. That’s historic!

Embiid was the best rookie in the class, and it was a legitimate conversation of whether 31 games was enough to be named Rookie of the Year. Jaylen Brown and Jamal Murray were in that class, but they didn’t have significant rookie seasons. Embiid’s biggest competition was Dario Šarić, Brogdon and the concept of availability. Embiid finished third in ROY voting that season, garnering 23 of the 100 first-place votes and 177 of the 900 voting points.

Šarić received only 13 first-place votes but was on more ballots to give him 269 voting points. Brogdon ran away with the award with 64 first-place votes and 414 voting points. Brogdon was the 36th pick in the draft, and his numbers didn’t blow anybody away. He averaged 10.2 points, 4.2 assists and 2.8 rebounds in 26.4 minutes per game. He also was very efficient with 45.7/40.4/86.5 shooting splits, and he started 28 of the 75 games he played in for the Milwaukee Bucks. No offense to Brogdon, but it felt like he won by default — because he played, not because he played the best.

Fast-forward to this season, and we’ve got a similar thing happening. Jared McCain is not Embiid by any stretch, but he does look like he’s capable of being a great role player. McCain is by far the best rookie we’ve seen this season, but he’s played 23 games and is out for the season with a knee injury. He averaged 15.3 points in 25.3 minutes with a 58.9 true shooting percentage. No other rookie can really approach that level of production.

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This year, once again, we might end up seeing a second-round pick take the award.

Two honorable mentions: Zaccharie Risacher, Atlanta Hawks | Kel’el Ware, Miami Heat

3. Zach Edey, Memphis Grizzlies (Last week: 3)

Edey has a pretty good case across the board for being the pick, although we’re not certain he’s even the best rookie on his own team. His numbers have been really good for most of the season. He’s averaging 9.2 points, 7.9 rebounds and 1.2 blocks in 20.9 minutes. And generally, the Grizzlies are good with him on the floor, so he’s not some rookie taking away from what a good team is trying to do. What hurts his case is he missed 15 games this season and probably needs to play at least half the game to truly get into the mix. He’s good, though. Edey has the fourth-best odds at +2200 behind Risacher (+2000).

2. Stephon Castle, San Antonio Spurs (Last week: 2)

Aside from McCain, I think Castle has shown the highest ceiling and peak during the rookie campaigns. He’s started about half the games he’s played in, and his production as a starter is really good. Castle averages 15.1 points and 4.2 assists in 29.7 minutes as a starter. Compare that with 12.1 points and 3.0 assists in 21.8 minutes coming off the bench. Castle might be peaking at the right time to take the award. Over his last 26 games, he’s averaging 17.5 points, 4.3 rebounds and 3.3 assists while making 46.8 percent of his shots in 26.7 minutes. Some of that has been boosted by Wemby being out for the season, but he’s also only started 10 of those games. The issue for Castle is twofold. 1. He wants to be a primary playmaker, and now he’s on a team with both Chris Paul and De’Aaron Fox, so he has to adjust. 2. Castle has struggled to make shots consistently this season. In the first 36 games of the season, Castle made just 38.3 percent from the field and 25.4 percent from 3.

In such a weak rookie class, Castle’s recent surge the last two months appears to be enough to take the award for a lot of voters. He’s the most recognizable name, and he has the best odds at -450 to win the award. He’s my favorite player from the class, but that doesn’t mean he should win.

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1. Jaylen Wells, Memphis Grizzlies (Last week: 1)

I’m sticking with the consistency of Wells. At least for now. I’m open to Castle’s continuing his play in the final month of the campaign and ending up with the award. However, Wells deserves to get credit for remaining steady.

His numbers aren’t going to blow you away. He’s averaging 11.0 points, 3.3 rebounds and 1.7 assists. He plays 26.1 minutes per game and has started 60 of the 65 games he’s played in. Wells has been a fixture in the lineup for a really good team (something we’ll get back to in a minute). Wells is holding the second-best odds at +1000 to win Rookie of the Year and was the favorite a couple of weeks ago.

Wells’ game is less about production and more about maintaining impact on both ends. Edey does something similar for the Grizzlies, as does anybody coach Taylor Jenkins is asked to plug and play. Wells is seeing a bad shooting month, and it’s coming at the same time as Castle’s rise. If your argument is that Wells hasn’t been good enough to stave off a run like Castle’s, I don’t necessarily fault it. That kind of stuff happens in a rough rookie class without any true remarkable (healthy) candidates. But at least for now, I’m valuing the consistency of Wells, and with all things relatively equal at this point, I do believe his contributing to the better team gives him the slight edge over Castle. We’ll see whether that holds.


Most Valuable Player

5 honorable mentions: Steph Curry, Golden State Warriors | Jalen Brunson, New York Knicks | Anthony Edwards, Minnesota Timberwolves | Jayson Tatum, Boston Celtics | Alperen Şengün, Houston Rockets

5. Giannis Antetokounmpo, Milwaukee Bucks (Last week: 4)

Quick-hitter: The toughest decision for me right now is trying to decide whether Giannis or Tatum belongs here. I have been leaning toward there’s no way you can leave Tatum off the ballot, and it still might go that way in a month when it’s time to vote. As of right now, Antetokounmpo’s numbers and the necessity of his being on the court for the Bucks to be good are ahead of Tatum. But I don’t feel great about it. Ultimately, Tatum’s team success combined with his play will probably win out.

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4. Donovan Mitchell, Cleveland Cavaliers (Last week: 3)

Quick-hitter: I do not see how Mitchell can be left off any ballots. He’s averaging 24-4-4 with 58.5 percent true shooting, and he’s on a historically great team. It’s mostly due to his being willing to sacrifice his own personal numbers and ego for the greater good of the team that made the Cavs greater now and should hopefully set them up for playoff success they couldn’t previously attain. That’s value and leadership.

3. LeBron James, LA Lakers (Last week: honorable mention)

Quick-hitter: This groin injury might end up removing James from the final ballot if he ends up missing more than the one to two weeks he’s expected to be out. We know he’s been great all season long on offense, but the uptick in his defensive performance is what brings him back into this MVP balloting for me. James had been a pretty bad defender the previous few seasons, and so often we’d see a wide-open dunk in the lane when the weakside help should have come from James. We’ve seen an uptick this season in his defense, but especially since the Luka Dončić acquisition. James has more energy to put toward that end of the floor, and it shows.

2. Nikola Jokić, Denver Nuggets (Last week: 2)

Quick-hitter: Check out these bars from Marcus Thompson II:

Jokić has so normalized ridiculousness as to desensitize the present community from appropriate reverence. He’ll need six MVPs and 10 championships and a five-minute highlight reel of epic moments to help those who didn’t experience him to process his elitism.

You should absolutely read Marcus talking about Big Honey here. We’ll have more about Jokić next week when we dive back fully into MVP, a month after our initial check-in.

1. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Oklahoma City Thunder (Last week: 1)

Quick-hitter: Something that is bothering me about fans who want to be dismissive of what Gilgeous-Alexander does is that they’re likening him to the “foul merchanting” James Harden became so infamous for. I’m not sure I can get there in terms of the logic and the reasoning for it. Gilgeous-Alexander goes about his foul-drawing in a much different way. For the most part, he drives to the hoop way more than Harden typically did. Gilgeous-Alexander has learned how to be physical on his drives, and it either creates a shot for him or creates contact that leads to fouls. The refs call it for him, but it’s not the same as Harden’s constantly flailing or bringing his arms under the hand of the defender.

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This race is still completely neck and neck, and I’m excited to get into it next week.


Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and Donovan Mitchell lead two of the better teams in the NBA. (Jason Miller / Getty Images)

Defensive Player of the Year

Two honorable mentions: Jaren Jackson Jr., Memphis Grizzlies | Draymond Green, Golden State Warriors

3. Lu Dort, Oklahoma City Thunder (Last week: honorable mention)

Quick-hitter: The Thunder have the best defense in the league, by far, and with Jackson injured, it felt right to bring Dort into the mix. He’s one of the best defensive players in the league, and he should definitely be first-team All-Defense. Dort is a monster on that end.

2. Dyson Daniels, Atlanta Hawks (Last week: 2)

Quick-hitter: Daniels is averaging 3.0 steals, and no player has done that since Alvin Robertson in 1990-91. He already has 184 steals on the season. No player has reached that total since Ricky Rubio in 2013-14, when he had 191 steals. Rubio played all 82 games that season. Daniels has played 61 games and still has 16 left.

1. Evan Mobley, Cleveland Cavaliers (Last week: 1)

Quick-hitter: He’s still not the big favorite, at least not what we were seeing with Victor Wembanyama versus the field. Mobley is -250 to win with Daniels (+450) as his closest competition. That’s close to the same distance in the odds as SGA (-425) and Jokić (+300). I just can’t imagine anybody making a big enough push to unseat Mobley, as long as he stays healthy.

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Sixth Man of the Year

Two honorable mentions: Naz Reid, Minnesota Timberwolves | Ty Jerome, Cleveland Cavaliers

3. De’Andre Hunter, Cleveland Cavaliers (Last week: honorable mention)

Quick-hitter: Since joining the Cavaliers, Hunter’s scoring average has gone from 19.0 a game with the Hawks to 14.3 in Cleveland. However, the efficiency is through the roof. It was already great with a 61.6 percent true shooting in Atlanta. Now he’s hitting half of his shots and half of his 3-pointers, and we’re seeing a 68.9 percent true shooting in Cleveland.

2. Malik Beasley, Detroit Pistons (Last week: 2)

Quick-hitter: If Beasley doesn’t miss another game this season, he’s going to end up having played 80 games. If he keeps this pace up with shooting 3-pointers, he’ll finish with 313 made 3-pointers. Only Stephen Curry (five times) and James Harden (once) have made more in a season.

1. Payton Pritchard, Boston Celtics (Last week: 1)

Quick-hitter: He’s averaging 14.2 points per game with 64.5 percent true shooting. The Celtics are better when he’s on the floor, and his usage rate is below 20 percent. That means he’s just hyperefficient in how he affects the game with his scoring. There were times I tried to talk myself into Beasley over him, but it’s Pritchard’s to win.


The Celtics are a better team with Payton Pritchard on the floor. (Brian Fluharty / Getty Images)

Coach of the Year

Two honorable mentions: Taylor Jenkins, Memphis Grizzlies | JJ Redick, LA Lakers

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3. Mark Daigneault, Oklahoma City Thunder (Last week: honorable mention)

Quick-hitter: I know this team was great last season and the No. 1 seed, so we dismiss some of what’s happening with the success of the Thunder. However, we shouldn’t dismiss the fact they have the highest margin of victory in league history. Nobody has ever been this dominant. They lost a little recently, and they still hold this mark over the 1971-72 Lakers. I doubt Daigneault will finish in the top three in voting, but we shouldn’t ignore him.

2. J.B. Bickerstaff, Detroit Pistons (Last week: 1)

Quick-hitter: It’s kind of jarring to see the Pistons house the Washington Wizards on Tuesday night and think about where these two teams were a year ago. I mean … the Wizards were in the same place and on their way to the worst season in franchise history, something they can tie if they only win two more games or set if they win fewer than two more games. The Pistons were a complete joke, too. But this year, they are fighting for home-court advantage in the first round. They aren’t in the top six in the Eastern Conference by default. They’ve earned it. That’s mostly Bickerstaff’s coaching them properly.

1. Kenny Atkinson, Cleveland Cavaliers (Last week: 2)

Quick-hitter: An impressive outpouring of Cavs fans did not read what I wrote last week and just reacted to the ranking. With that I say, thank you for clicking! But Atkinson is back in the lead position in a tight race because the Cavs keep winning. So do the Pistons, but not like this. The Cavs became the sixth team in league history to have two 15-game win streaks in the same season, and they might win 70 games. They’re on pace to get to 69 wins, and this streak doesn’t even end when Mitchell sits.


Most Improved Player

Two honorable mentions: Dyson Daniels, Atlanta Hawks | Payton Pritchard, Boston Celtics

3. Ty Jerome, Cleveland Cavaliers (Last week: unmentioned)

Quick-hitter: Jerome went from a fringe role player, bouncing around a couple of teams in his first few seasons, to being integral on the best team in the NBA. He has become indispensable for Cleveland. That’s remarkable improvement, even though he has no chance of winning this award.

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2. Cade Cunningham, Detroit Pistons (Last week: 2)

Quick-hitter: Cunningham is the favorite (-275), and I might end up voting for him by season’s end. He has made solid improvements across the board while becoming much more serious about defense and applying all of this to winning. He has a great case. I just feel like we saw a lot of the skill improvements last season.

1. Evan Mobley, Cleveland Cavaliers (Last week: 1)

Quick-hitter: Mobley probably has no chance of winning this, but I do think he’s shown the most improvement. He’s +8000 to win the award, putting him behind Cunningham, Daniels, the Denver Nuggets’ Christian Braun and the Miami Heat’s Tyler Herro on BetMGM. But look at Mobley last year, and look at him this year. The Cavs weren’t running offense through him like this, and he wasn’t defending like this. He’s shown the highest level of improvement to me.

(Illustration: Demetrius Robinson / The Athletic; photos: Matt Slocum / AP; Michael Reaves, Nathaniel S. Butler / NBAE via Getty Images; David Gonzales / Imagn Images)

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California high schooler begs state officials to ban trans athletes from girls sports at contentious meeting

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California high schooler begs state officials to ban trans athletes from girls sports at contentious meeting

As California continues to defy President Donald Trump’s executive order banning transgender athletes from girls sports, residents across the state are standing up to pressure officials to comply. 

The California Interscholastic Federation, which is under investigation by the U.S. Department of Education over potential Title IX violations, had its meeting Thursday crashed by protesters advocating for the protection of girls and women in sports. 

Multiple protesters spoke to CIF officials at the meeting, pleading with them to ban trans athletes from girls sports, citing their own experiences. 

TEEN GIRLS OPEN UP ON TRANS ATHLETE SCANDAL THAT TURNED THEIR HIGH SCHOOL INTO A CULTURE WAR BATTLEGROUND 

One of those speakers was St. Francis High School track and cross-country student-athlete Jordan Brace, who fears potential injuries from competing against a biological male. 

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“Allowing a biological male to compete against a female athlete that does not have the same kind of build or physical abilities is completely unfair and unsafe for women, and that can lead to so, so, so many injuries,” Brace said. 

“How many more injuries, which are sometimes permanent, will it take for everyone to realize how important it is for women to feel safe and for young girls to feel like they have fair competition.” 

Transgender athlete supporter Kyle Harp, left, of Riverside holds the progress pride flag as “Save Girls Sports” supporters Lori Lopez and her dad, Pete Pickering, both of Riverside, listen to debate outside a Riverside Unified School District meeting Dec. 19, 2024.  (Allen J. Schaben/Los Angeles Times)

Former high school volleyball player Payton McNabb is a female athlete who says she sustained permanent injuries from a trans opponent. McNabb says she sustained long-term physical and mental injuries in 2022 when she was spiked in the face by a transgender athlete allowed to compete on a girls team because of a policy put in place by North Carolina’s high school athletic association. 

The United Nations released study findings saying that nearly 900 biological females have fallen short of victories because they have been defeated by transgender athletes. 

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The study, “Violence against women and girls in sports,” said more than 600 athletes did not medal in more than 400 competitions in 29 different sports, totaling over 890 medals, according to information obtained up to March 30, 2024.

“I want to know that I’m facing … someone who’s the same gender as me,” Brace said. “That I’m not being beat by someone in a race that has more physical capabilities than me, that’s naturally going to be faster than me, more muscular. I don’t think that anyone, anywhere, any young women, should have to deal with that, should have to fear that they aren’t safe or that they are being discriminated against in their sport.

“This is a matter of women’s safety.” 

California mother Riece Morris, who has five children who compete for schools in the state, implored CIF officials to “do the right thing,” while expressing her belief the officials have “good intentions.” 

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“Good intentions do not make good policy. Good intentions do not absolve you from being complicit in robbing the girls of California of fair competition and single-sex privacy,” Morris said. 

“Sacrificing girls sports by admitting boys was never a good idea. It was never going to last. So, I’m asking you to read the room, read the data and do the right thing. Do not let your legacy be that you had to be dragged kicking and screaming to do the right thing for girls after everyone else. Please stand up now and do the right thing.” 

California has allowed trans athletes to compete in girls’ sports since 2014, and the policy has resulted in multiple controversies over the last year alone. 

Martin Luther King High School in Riverside, California, is embroiled in one of the most contentious disputes on the issue.

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A Dec. 19 Riverside Unified School District meeting included a parade of parents berating the board for allowing a trans athlete on the Martin Luther King girls cross-country team. A lawsuit filed by two girls on the team alleges their “Save Girls Sports” T-shirts in protest of that player were compared to swastikas. 

The father of a girl who lost her varsity spot to the trans athlete previously told Fox News Digital his daughter and other girls at the school were told “transgenders have more rights than cisgender[s]” by school administrators when they protested the athlete’s participation.

Stone Ridge Christian High School’s girls volleyball team was scheduled to face San Francisco Waldorf in the Northern California Division 6 tournament but forfeited just before the match over the presence of a trans athlete on the team.

cif protests

Protesters gather outside the California Interscholastic Federation offices to advocate for the protection of female athletes against transgender athletes. (Courtesy of Beth Bourne)

A transgender volleyball player was allegedly booed and harassed at an Oct. 12 match between Notre Dame Belmont in Belmont, California, against Half Moon Bay High School, according to ABC 7. Half Moon Bay rostered the transgender athlete.

The state continues to allow transgender athletes in girls sports at the risk of losing federal funding by defying Trump’s executive order, and Gov. Gavin Newsom recently admitted trans athletes competing with girls is “deeply unfair.” 

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But Newsom also won’t take a decisive stand opposing transgender inclusion, arguing transgender people are “poor people” who are “more likely to commit suicide, have anxiety and depression.” 

California state lawmakers have introduced two bills to block trans athletes from competing in girls sports. 

California Assemblyman Bill Essayli introduced one such bill Feb. 14, while fellow Assembly member Kate Sanchez announced Jan. 7 she is introducing a bill to ban trans athletes from competing in girls and women’s sports.

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

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Tiger Woods says he’s recovering after surgery to repair a ruptured Achilles

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Tiger Woods says he’s recovering after surgery to repair a ruptured Achilles

Right as his inaugural TGL season concluded and he started to ramp up for Masters prep, Tiger Woods announced he ruptured his left Achilles tendon this week.

One month after the death of his mother and weeks after a crucial White House visit for negotiations with the Saudi investment fund, the injury adds another painful element to Woods’ roller-coaster year. It will likely end the 15-time major winner’s 2025 campaign before it began.

Woods underwent surgery in West Palm Beach, Fla., on Tuesday morning. Dr. Charlton Stucken said in a statement from Woods that it went smoothly, and he expects the golfer to make a full recovery.

“I am back home now and plan to focus on my recovery and rehab,” Woods said. “Thank you for all the support.”

This is the 13th documented procedure for Woods since 2002, and his 12th since 2008 when he underwent two knee surgeries while winning the U.S. Open. Woods famously returned from many of his injury issues to win the 2019 Masters for what remains his last major championship. But two years later, he was in a violent car crash that resulted in his right leg and ankle being severely broken. It required emergency surgery including an inserted rod into his tibia and screws and pins into his foot and ankle.

Still, Woods was able to return for the 2022 Masters just 14 months later, and again, he made the cut. Despite more surgeries since then, Woods made the Masters cut again the next two years to extend his record cut streak to 24.

Woods played all four majors in 2024, a feat he hadn’t accomplished since 2019. But he missed the cut at the PGA Championship, U.S. Open and Open Championship. He then underwent another surgery in September to relieve back spasms, and he planned to return to the PGA Tour for the Genesis Invitational in February until he decided he wasn’t ready after his mother Kultida’s death.

When his TGL team, Jupiter Links, was eliminated on March 4, Woods was asked about his status.

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“This is the third time I’ve touched a club since my mom passed, so I haven’t really gotten into it,” he said. “My heart is not really into practicing right now. I’ve had so many other things to do with the Tour and trying to do other things.”

What becomes of Woods’ future remains unclear. He has maintained he still believes he can win tournaments, and he’ll continue to play until he doesn’t feel that way. According to The Ohio State University College of Medicine, the recovery from Achilles repair can range from six to nine months, while a return to a sport might be closer to nine to 12 months in the best of outcomes.

(Photo: Michael Owens / Getty Images)

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