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Good morning to everyone but especially β¦
WILL HOWARD AND OHIO STATE
Ohio State has its next quarterback. Will Howard has his next home. The former Kansas State signal-caller is headed to Columbus as the Buckeyes reload β and perhaps improve β under center after Kyle McCordtransferred to Syracuse.
Howard threw for 24 touchdowns and ran for nine more with the Wildcats last year and had interest in the portal from USC and Miami in addition to Ohio State. With the Buckeyes, heβll likely compete with Devin Brown for the starting job, though Howard will have one key advantage, notes Dean Straka.
Straka:βHoward may not be a showstopper when it comes to quarterbacks, but his presence does give coach Ryan Day a QB1 option with Power Five starting experience in 2024 β a luxury the team didnβt have last year when the choices were McCord and Brown. With a full offseason at his disposal, Howard should be well versed in Ryan Dayβs system by the time Week 1 rolls around.β
Honorable mentions
LeBron James andΒ Giannis Antetokounmpo are leading the pollsΒ in NBA All-Star Game fan voting.
The Warriors were cruising to their best win of the year. They ended up with one of their most soul-crushing regular-season losses not just of the year, but of the Stephen Curry era.
Nikola Jokicbanked in a half-court buzzer-beater (watch it here) to lift Denver to a 130-127 win over host Golden State in a matchup of the last two NBA champions.Β The Nuggets finished the game on a 25-4 run over the final 6:34.
Ward-Henninger:βWhat was poised to be a celebratory, potentially transformative night for the Warriors devolved into yet another jagged lump of evidence suggesting that the unparalleled mojo of the Steph Curry-Klay Thompson-Draymond Green dynasty is rapidly nearing β and perhaps past β its expiration date.β
Oh yeah, that Jokic fella isnβt half bad, either.
Itβs here. Week 18, in all of its glory. Sixteen games β 13 with playoff implications, three with draft implications. It starts tomorrow, first with the Steelers facing the Lamar Jackson-less Ravens, followed by a win-and-in Texans-Colts showdown.Β Tyler Sullivan says β¦
Sullivan:Β βC.J. Stroud is the X-factor. He gives Houston the clear advantage at quarterback overΒ Gardner Minshew and was solid in his return from his concussion last week against Tennessee. With the rust dusted off of him for this matchup against the Colts, he should find success against a defense that he threw for 384 yards against back in Week 2. The Texans are also 7-0 SU and ATS in their last seven divisional road games.Β Projected score: Texans 28, Colts 24. The pick: Texans +1β
Sunday, the Packers have their own win-and-in game against theΒ Bears. John Breech says β¦
Breech:βThe Bears are one of the hottest teams in the NFL and theyβll be going into Green Bay with a rushing attack that averages 145.3 yards per game, which is the second-best in the NFL. And theyβll be going up against a Packers defense that has been horrible at stopping the run this season.Β The pick: Bears 30-27 over Packersβ
Justin FieldsΒ has made his case to be βthe guyβ long-term, but how about this defense?! Since Week 10, the Bears lead the league in defensive success rate. So Iβm with John here.
Last week I went three for three on my picks, so weβll try it again. In addition to Bears over Packers, Iβm going β¦
Remember one month ago when NCAA president Charlie Baker proposed a pay-for-play planΒ that would revolutionize college sports and create a new subdivision of D-I schools? It may be coming sooner than you think.
Jeyarajah:Β βMembership in the new subdivision would be voluntary, but would require an investment of at least $30,000 per year into an educational trust fund for at least half of its total number athletes. β¦Β The football-based subdivision would be independent of the FBS and FCS dichotomy.Β Teams at either level are eligible to opt into the football subdivision. However, teams that opt in will ultimately be able to exist at a different level than the rest of college football. The group could decide different roster sizes, recruitment practices, transfer or NIL rules, even while competing against other members of FBS or FCS working under the existing rules.β
More details:
Bakerβs plan would add many benefits powerhouse programs might have sought by breaking away from the NCAA, while remaining under the NCAA umbrella.
Athletes would be directly compensated without them being designated (or protected) as employees.
The educational trust fund would be in addition to scholarships.
The remaining FBS schools would still have access to the College Football Playoff.
Several top athletic directors have voiced support for the proposal.
Per Dennisβ reporting, the NCAA Council will meet in April to discuss, in June to finalize recommendations and in August to act on the recommendations β and potentially institute them by next football season. The creation of a new subdivision could come by January 2025.
What itβs like to play alongside Tyrese Haliburton
Getty Images
βDiabolical.β
Thatβs how one ofTyrese Haliburtonβs teammates described Haliburtonβs passing to Jack Maloney. And itβs a fair way to put it. Haliburton is the NBAβs assists leader at 12.7 per game. Only six players have ever averaged a dozen assists. And itβs not just that Haliburton racks up the assist numbers. Itβs the lack of turnovers, too. No one has ever averaged 12 assists with a 5.0 assist-to-turnover ratio, as Haliburton is doing currently.
Diabolical indeed.
Jack has a wonderful story on what itβs like to play alongside Haliburton, as told by his Pacers teammates. Some of my favorite descriptions?
βShit, heβs artistic, man.β
βHe makes it flashy, but itβs the right play every time.β
βItβs just Tyrese.β
If you didnβt catch Haliburtonβs star rise during the In-Season Tournament, Iβm sorry. The good news is itβs not too late. He and the Pacers host the Hawks tonight and the NBA-best Celtics tomorrow and Monday.
What weβre watching this weekend
Friday
Knicks at 76ers, 7:30 p.m. on ESPN No. 9 Illinois at No. 1 Purdue (M), 9:30 p.m. on FS1 Grizzlies at Lakers, 10 p.m. on ESPN
Saturday
Β No. 7 Marquette at Seton Hall (M), noon on CBS Sports Network Β No. 8 North Carolina at No. 16 Clemson (M), noon on ESPN2 Β TCU at No. 2 Kansas (M), 2 p.m. on CBS Β Steelers at Ravens, 4:30 p.m. on ABC/ESPN Β No. 22 Ole Miss at No. 5 Tennessee (M), 6 p.m. on SEC Network Texans at Colts, 8:15 p.m. on ABC/ESPN
Sunday
No. 3 NC State at No. 13 Virginia Tech (W), noon on ACC Network Mississippi State at No. 1 South Carolina (W), 1 p.m. on ESPNΒ Jaguars at Titans, 1 p.m. on CBS Falcons at Saints, 1 p.m. on CBS Buccaneers at Panthers, 1 p.m. on Fox No. 7 LSU at Ole Miss, 3 p.m. on ESPN Cowboys at Commanders, 4:25 p.m. on Fox Β Eagles at Giants, 4:25 p.m. on CBS Bears at Packers, 4:25 p.m. on CBS Seahawks at Cardinals, 4:25 p.m. on Fox Bills at Dolphins, 8:20 p.m. on NBC