No. 20 Arkansas clinches SEC double bye, rolls past Texas

Darius Acuff Jr. had 28 points and tied a season high with 13 assists, senior Trevon Brazile scored a career-high 28 points in his final home game and No. 20 Arkansas clinched a double bye in the Southeastern Conference tournament with a 105-85 win over Texas on Wednesday in Fayetteville, Ark.

Field Level Media

D.J. Wagner scored 15 points and Meleek Thomas added 13 points for the Razorbacks (22-8, 12-5 SEC), who bounced back strongly after a 111-77 loss at then-No. 7 Florida on Saturday.

Acuff was well on his way to his fifth double-double with 19 points and eight assists in the first half, and Brazile had 17 points when the Razorbacks built a 56-34 lead at the break.

Matas Vokietaitis scored 21 points, Tramon Mark added 18 points and Dailyn Swain had 16 points, nine rebounds and six assists for the Longhorns (18-12, 9-8).

Arkansas, averaging 89.8 points per game, recorded its seventh 100-point game of the season and finished 16-1 at home.

The Razorbacks shot 58.3% and made 11 of 19 3-point attempts after hitting a season-low 40.0% from the floor against Florida. Acuff had four 3-pointers and Brazile and Wagner each made three.

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Brazile was 9 of 11 from the field and had seven rebounds. Billy Richmond III recoded eight points and nine rebounds.

Acuff's 3-pointer gave the Razorbacks their biggest lead at 72-44 just under five minutes into the second half, and Texas never got closer than 15 after.

Texas point guard Jordan Pope, averaging 13.1 points per game, did not score and played only four minutes due to foul trouble. He picked up his third foul eight minutes into the game and his fourth less than 10 seconds into the second half.

Arkansas is projected as a No. 5 seed in the NCAA Tournament by several ranking systems.

Swain made two free throws in the first minute before the Razorbacks went on a 19-2 run to take early control. Acuff and Brazile made 3-pointers, and Acuff had four assists during that stretch.

Acuff scored 11 consecutive Arkansas points in the final five minutes of the first half to extend the lead to 47-30, and Brazile added six straight points for a 53-34 advantage. Acuff's three in the final seconds increased the lead to 56-34 at halftime.

--Field Level Media

No. 20 Arkansas clinches SEC double bye, rolls past Texas

Darius Acuff Jr. had 28 points and tied a season high with 13 assists, senior Trevon Brazile scored a career-high 28...
Report: Jon Rahm jet carries seven LIV Golf players out of Dubai to Hong Kong tournament

A midnight flight out of bordering Oman on a jet arranged by Jon Rahm brought seven players out of a war zone and into safety 24 hours before the start of LIV Golf Hong Kong, according to Golf.com.

Field Level Media

LIV Golf was set to begin play in the annual event in Hong Kong on Thursday and made an attempt to arrange travel from Dubai, which has been struck repeatedly during an escalating conflict involving Iran, Isreal and the United States.

U.S. officials called for American citizens to evacuate 14 Middle East nations, but only after damage had already been done around Dubai International Airport, grounding flights. Several LIV Golf players and caddies live in the United Arab Emirates.

According to the report, Rahm's plan required players to coordinate from different locations in the Middle East to travel toward Oman. The driving distance from downtown Dubai to the border is more than 90 minutes. The usual flight time from Oman to Hong Kong is approximately seven hours.

Golf.com reported Lee Westwood, Anirban Lahiri, Thomas Detry, Sam Horsfield, Tom McKibbin, Adrian Meronk and Caleb Surratt and a caddie traveled in a shuttle van to the Oman border under the cloak of darkness before switching to another shuttle for transportation to an airstrip where the aircraft waited to fly the crew to Hong Kong.

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"It was terrifying," Surratt told Golf.com via text on Tuesday. "But since then, it's been OK. It was bad Sunday and Monday here with missile interceptions, but all day today was fine."

McKibbin and Surratt are teammates on Rahm's Legion XIII.

They landed just before midnight local time and all are expected to participate in the event this weekend.

Multiple reports indicated Laurie Canter, an eighth LIV Golf player who was in Dubai, was not on the flight but was expected to arrive in time for the start of the event. By late Wednesday, a limited opening of the main airports in Dubai and Oman was permitted.

--Field Level Media

Report: Jon Rahm jet carries seven LIV Golf players out of Dubai to Hong Kong tournament

A midnight flight out of bordering Oman on a jet arranged by Jon Rahm brought seven players out of a war zone and in...
Who won the Trent McDuffie trade? Grading blockbuster Rams-Chiefs deal

TheLos Angeles Ramsand Kansas City Chiefs have swung the first major trade of the NFL offseason.

USA TODAY Sports

The Chiefsare trading cornerback Trent McDuffieto the Rams in exchange for the No. 29 overall pick in April's NFL Draft, along with fifth- and sixth-round picks this year and a third-round pick in 2027, a person with knowledge of the deal told USA TODAY Sports' Tyler Dragon. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because the trade could not become official until the start of the new league year on March 11.

The deal significantly changes the landscape for two teams desperate to claw back to the front of the pack in their respective conferences. For Los Angeles, it serves as the latest marquee veteran addition – at perhaps the most pressing area of need – for a team seeking to capitalize onNFL MVP Matthew Stafford's return. The Chiefs, meanwhile, receive more ammunition for resetting a roster that still has several needs and is undergoing some salary cap-related shifts.

But who came out ahead in the deal? Here are grades for each team:

Rams trade grade: B

Turns out Rams general manager Les Snead wasn't kidding about trying to maximize Stafford's competitive window.

After the 38-year-old quarterback announced after taking home the league's top individual award that he would be returning for the 2026 season, Snead later suggested that the team was intent on catering its offseason to "make the most of the time we have" with the passer. On Tuesday, Snead seemed to tease the possibility of using one of his two first-round picks to swing a splashy deal.

"Is there an All-Pro that you could add?" Snead told reporters. "That would be nice."

Less than 24 hours later, he has one in the former Chiefs standout.

McDuffie's arrival shores up the back end of a Rams defense that unraveled down the stretch, culminating with Sam Darnold torching the group for 346 yards and three touchdowns in Los Angeles' NFC championship game defeat. Coverage performance can be volatile, but the four-year veteran has reliably clamped down on opposing receivers. And parting with the latter of the Rams' two first-rounders and holding onto their payoff from the Atlanta Falcons' ill-conceived gamble last year was a nice touch from Snead.

Still, this is a fairly considerable compensation package – including the a likely extension that should be costly – for a player not in an elite tier at his position group. And there are at least a couple areas of concern.

At 5-11 and 193, McDuffie doesn't solve Los Angeles' lingering problem of matching up with bulkier receivers. Those size limitations led Kansas City to place the 2022 first-round pick in the slot early in his career, and the result was an All-Pro campaign in 2023. Staying there full-time with the Rams might be a non-starter given how much the team gave up to land him, but moving him inside at least occasionally should be a consideration.

McDuffie also struggled last season with the Chiefs tilting more toward zone coverages, allowing a career-worst catch rate of 67.9% and a passer rating of 96.3 when targeted, according to Next Gen Stats. That might seem like a bad fit for defensive coordinator Chris Shula's scheme, which tends to live in zone looks. Maybe the move indicates the team wants to deploy more man coverage to better combat the likes of Jaxon Smith-Njigba and other top-flight targets capable of burning the secondary.

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There's plenty to like about the configuration the Rams have to make this work, including the presence of Jimmy Lake, McDuffie's college coach at Washington, as the newly appointed defensive backs coach and pass game coordinator. And perhaps this was merely an overdue investment for Snead, who had largely scoured the bargain bin at cornerback since parting with Jalen Ramsey in 2023.

Still, as Snead somewhat returns to his "(expletive) them picks" roots, it seems clear that the Rams paid a premium to address their most glaring deficiency with a proven entity rather than one of the draft's top cover men. Whether that apparent overpay will be justified in the end won't become clear until at least next January.

MORE:Latest NFL free agency news, rumors, trade buzz and more

Chiefs trade grade: A-

The knee-jerk reaction for many in Kansas City might be best summed up by Patrick Mahomes.

"Damn," the Chiefs quarterback wrote after news broke of McDuffie being sent packing.

Some disappointment is only natural for an organization attempting to reclaim its status as the AFC's alpha after falling to 6-11 last season, the franchise's worst mark in a decade-plus. Viewed through the proper lens, however, this deal might actually help fast-track a resurgence.

That general manager Brett Veach bailed on paying yet another standout cornerback should come as no surprise. Veach previously walked away from both L'Jarius Sneed and Charvarius Ward rather than pay them top-of-market contracts.

If McDuffie wasn't in Kansas City's long-term plans, offloading him before he reaches free agency might simply have been good business. Not only do the Chiefs not have to worry about fitting him into a cap-crunched roster this year and beyond, they can now focus on re-signing fellow cornerback Jaylen Watson, whoranked 13th on Nate Davis' top 100 free agent rankingsand likely would not have been able to return without the secondary's sea change.

But the big boon here is the draft picks. As Kansas City gets set to make its earliest selection (No. 9) since 2013, the breadth of the team's needs at premium positions is rather imposing. Yes, a wide receiver to assist Mahomes would be of massive value. Then again, a massively disruptive defensive end or defensive tackle could also be required. And don't forget about the lackluster outlook at running back, safety and potentially tight end if Travis Kelce retires.

With a second Day 1 selection and additional draft resources in hand, Veach now is well-positioned to build something formidable for the latter half of Mahomes' career rather than merely cling on to the vestiges of a bygone era. And going this route was necessary given what Kansas City faced with its salary cap.

Pressure on Veach, however, ramps up considerably in April. Describing the general manager's draft track record as uneven would be charitable, and his various missteps in evaluating young talent have played a central role in Kansas City's roster becoming so lopsided.

But Veach has also displayed a shrewd sense for when to sell high on his existing veterans, and he might have timed the market correctly again here.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Trent McDuffie trade grades: How Rams, Chiefs fared in huge NFL deal

Who won the Trent McDuffie trade? Grading blockbuster Rams-Chiefs deal

TheLos Angeles Ramsand Kansas City Chiefs have swung the first major trade of the NFL offseason. The Chiefsa...
Jayson Tatum's return now would be ahead of the norm. Is that a good thing?

It was early December in 2013 when the Los Angeles Lakers' Facebook page posted atwo-minute video of a jersey floating in the wind. Tens of thousands of captivated fans couldn't wait to reshare and comment as dramatic music played over the social media post.

Yahoo Sports

The No. 24 jersey hung in the sky as sunshine pierced through some clouds. Then, over the course of the next 120 seconds, a thunderous storm battered the jersey until it tore in half.

Finally, after a beam of light, the jersey was made whole.

The symbolism relayed the message: Kobe Bryant wasback. "Seasons of Legend. The Lakers announce Kobe's return," the post's caption read. The then 35-year-old Bryant, who had torn his Achilles less than eight months prior, was returning in near-record time, missing just 21 Lakers regular-season games with an injury that infamously had ended NBA careers.

Unfortunately, Bryant's comeback season lasted only six games. Just nine days after his return, Bryant suffered a serious knee injury in the same leg of his torn Achilles, quickly dimming all the excitement over his fast return. His season was over and Bryant's playing abilities were never the same.

(Grant Thomas/Yahoo Sports Illustration)

Boston Celtics star Jayson Tatum has idolized Bryant and his Mamba Mentality ever since Tatum was a child. The 28-year-old has said Bryant's story has driven him to become the NBA player he is today. As Tatum nears his own return from an Achilles tear, he should continue to take lessons from Bryant's career. The Lakers star's historic 2013 return offers a cautionary tale about what could happen in a highly anticipated and quick midseason return.

Tatum should also take heed of the rehab schedule of another NBA legend, one that tells the greatest Achilles tear story of all time: Kevin Durant.

Kobe vs. KD: A contrast in Achilles recoveries

Watching Kevin Durant dominate in the year 2026, an uninformed observer would never guess the Houston Rockets All-Star tore his Achilles tendon just as he entered his thirties. Durant's injury occurred in the 2019 NBA Finals while playing for the Golden State Warriors and he took the next season off as he joined his new team, the Brooklyn Nets.

While Bryant struggled to return to his pre-Achilles form, Durant's superstar status hasn't wavered. The 37-year-old is averaging an unthinkable 27.6 points with white-hot efficiency in the six seasons since the longest tendon in the human body snapped in his leg. His post-Achilles-tear résumé, consisting of six All-Star appearances and two All-NBA nominations, shines brighter than most players' entire careers.

ORLANDO, FLORIDA - FEBRUARY 26: Kevin Durant #7 of the Houston Rockets goes to the basket against Wendell Carter Jr. #34 of the Orlando Magic during the second half of the game at Kia Center on February 26, 2026 in Orlando, Florida. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Julio Aguilar/Getty Images)

To be clear, no two Achilles tears are the same. Different mechanisms of injury, different bodies and all that. Beyond the difference in age between Bryant and Durant at the time of their injuries — Bryant was 34, Durant was 30 — the most interesting dynamic is a contrast of time in another dimension: recovery time.

Durant's absence from NBA games lasted 18 months, more than twice that of Bryant's eight months.

We will never know if Durant would have fared as well in the back nine of his career if he returned midseason in 2019-20. Complicating matters was the COVID-19 pandemic that disrupted everything in March of that season, including Durant's injury rehab process with the Nets. Durant decided not to pursue a comeback in The Bubble when the Nets resumed the season in late July. Instead, he took extra time to get himself ready for the following season, which would begin in December 2020.

In aninterviewwith Andscape's Marc J. Spears, Durant said the decision to not play in the 2019-20 season was made well before the pandemic hit.

"My season is over," Durant said in June 2020. "I don't plan on playing at all. We decided last summer when it first happened that I was just going to wait until the following season. I had no plans of playing at all this season. It's just best for me to wait. I don't think I'm ready to play that type of intensity right now in the next month. It gives me more time to get ready for next season and the rest of my career."

Though Durant missed some time in 2020-21 dealing with various injuries, his play on the floor didn't seem to suffer at all. Leading the Nets in the postseason, the long layoff may have paid dividends. He scored a scorching 34.3 points per game in the playoffs, the most of any player who suited up at least 10 games during that postseason.

Plenty of speculation has surrounded Tatum about when he may return this season, if at all. If Tatum decides to sit out the season, he would give himself about 17 and a half months of a layoff before next season kicks off in mid-October — basically the Durant timeline.

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Should Tatum suit up for the Celtics this week, though, he'd be returning about 10 months after he went down in the closing minutes of Game 4 of last year's Eastern Conference semifinals against the New York Knicks. In this sense, he's given himself two months of a buffer behind Bryant's timeline when the Laker legend got back on the floor in December following his April injury. But it still would be a remarkably quick timetable in the modern era. A 10-month return would mark the shortest post-Achilles absence for a starting player since the 2015-16 season when Rudy Gay came back in under nine months with the Sacramento Kings.

For another comparison, Tatum can look at fellow former All-Star Dejounte Murray.

Achilles recovery timelines are getting longer lately

Last Tuesday, the New Orleans Pelicans guard scored 13 points in a home win over the Warriors, making his return from his Achilles tear suffered in January of the 2024-25 season. Thirteen is also a notable number because it represents the number of months that it took for the former All-Star to get back on the floor.

Murray's timeline is increasingly becoming the norm. According to Yahoo Sports research supported by injury expert Jeff Stotts of Instreetclothes.com, Murray marks the 30th player since 2005-06 to return to playing NBA games after suffering an Achilles tear in the league. The Pelicans guard headlines a growing number of players who are taking longer than a year to return from the major tendon rupture.

In the decade between the 2005-06 and 2014-15 seasons, there were 12 instances of an NBA player returning from an Achilles injury and, on average, those players spent 10.4 months away from the game. Bryant took only eight months. Same went for Elton Brand and Mehmet Okur, who barely took eight months to hit the hardwood again following their Achilles tears. In 2015, Wes Matthews took 7.7 months to return from his Achilles tear and still enjoyed an impactful nine-year post-Achilles run in the NBA while playing for several playoff teams until he was 37 years old.

At the time of Brandon Jennings' Achilles tear, he was averaging 15.4 points as a 25-year-old with the Detroit Pistons. As one of the more talented young players in the game, Jennings took a little over 11 months to return, getting back on the floor in December. The Pistons moved him later that season and, after bouncing around the league for three years, he never averaged double-digit points again.

Lately, the timelines have gotten longer. In the Achilles ruptures from 2015-16 to 2024-25, the timeline stretched from 10.4 months on average to 13.6 months. In that sample, only two of the 18 players (Rudy Gay and Dru Smith) returned well ahead of the 10-month mark, something that happened with regularity in the previous decade.

Klay Thompson spent nearly 14 months away from the NBA floor after he tore his Achilles in November 2020, perhaps delayed because of his earlier ACL injury. More recently, Brandon Clarke and Thanasis Antetokounmpo also saw more than 12 months pass before they took the floor again.

It's not as simple as to say that longer is always better. DeMarcus Cousins, who was a four-time All-Star before he tore his Achilles in January 2018 with the Pelicans, came back the following January with the Warriors. He needed 12 months to get back onto the court, but never regained his All-Star status and was out of the league by 2022.

Recovery timelines don't always lend themselves to perfect apples-to-apples comparisons. Nothing about injury data is squeaky clean. A return to play could be artificially delayed because the player is waiting for the start of the season. COVID and lockout-shortened seasons could also affect an NBA player's recovery time in ways out of his control. But in general, as we await Tatum's return, it does seem that players are taking longer to get back onto the court.

Tatum and Boston's ticking clock

For Tatum, there are positive signs that he's on track to a full recovery. Because his surgeon, Dr. Martin O'Malley, was in New York at the time of the injury in a game that happened to be at Madison Square Garden, Tatum was able to have his Achilles stitched in quick order. According to Tatum'sdocumentary seriesaired on NBC, O'Malley had an opening in his calendar at 3 p.m. the next day and made time for Tatum.

"There's pretty strong data," O'Malley said, "that if you do [Achilles surgery] within 24 hours [of injury], patients have better outcomes."

In O'Malley's view, Tatum's recovery was headed in the right direction early on. "I don't think I've seen a person's calf look as strong as his,"he said in September."At six or eight weeks he was doing double heel rises. He worked his calf so hard that the side effect of loss of strength, I don't think he's going to have any."

The Celtics have been tight-lipped about possible return dates. The team confirmed he has been practicing with the team and the G League Maine Red Claws when the opportunity arises.

While other players could decide to return in 12 or 13 months, Tatum may not have that luxury. The Celtics' season could be over by then. There are 21 games left in Boston's regular season, which ends in a little over a month on April 12. That would mark 11 months since the injury. As the No. 2 seed in the East, the Celtics are expected to make a deep playoff run that could reach the NBA Finals in June. But if they're a first-round out, a 12-month timetable for Tatum goes out the window, with his return rolling over to October. It's worth noting that of the 30 Achilles returns to play since 2005, none came during the playoffs when gradual ramp-ups aren't as easy.

If the Durant plan is in place, Tatum would eye next season for his debut. But if Tatum and his medical team believe he's ready to go now, he wouldn't be copying KD. Or Kobe. He'd be writing his own story.

Jayson Tatum's return now would be ahead of the norm. Is that a good thing?

It was early December in 2013 when the Los Angeles Lakers' Facebook page posted atwo-minute video of a jersey floati...
Aaron Rodgers says Steelers haven't given him deadline to make decision about playing in 2026

It's the first week of March, and Aaron Rodgers is in no hurry.

Yahoo Sports

The 42-year-old Rodgerstold "The Pat McAfee Show"on Wednesday that the Pittsburgh Steelers haven't given him a deadline to decide if he wants to play next season, what would be his 22nd in the NFL.

"I want to say that anybody on here who's expecting me to make some big decision, just turn it off now. Just leave," Rodgers said bluntly.

Host Pat McAfee then said that he understands the weight of the call Rodgers has to make on his NFL future, but McAfee also noted that he imagines the four-time league MVP has done some daydreaming about what another chapter with current Steelers and former Green Bay Packers head coach Mike McCarthy could look like.

While Rodgers praised McCarthy, and the Steelers for hiring him, the veteran quarterback didn't tip his hand about his plans for a potential reunion during the 2026 season.

"We're sitting here, it's March 4th. Free agency starts in a week," Rodgers explained.

"I've been spending a lot of time with my wife. We went on a ski trip, just been laying low. ... But I've talked to Mike, I've talked to [general manager] Omar [Khan]. There's been no deadline that's been put in front of me. There's no contract offer or anything, so there's nothing that I'm having to debate between.

"I'm a free agent. And, again, I'm enjoying my time with my wife and enjoying this part of the offseason, and I think there's conversations to be had down the line, but right now there hasn't been any progressive conversations."

Aftercontemplating retirement last offseason, Rodgers signed aone-year dealahead of Steelers minicamp.

He went on to lead Pittsburgh to an AFC North title — the franchise's first since 2020 — but the Steelers once again went one-and-done in the playoffs. They're still searching for their first postseason win since the 2016 season.

Mike Tomlin stepped down from his post as head coach, and the Steelers filled his vacancy with McCarthy, who overlapped with Rodgers from 2006-18 before coaching the Dallas Cowboys for five seasons. The pair won a Super Bowl together during the 2010 season, ironically against the Steelers.

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During McCarthy's introductory news conference in January,he told reporters that he "definitely" wants Rodgers back.

Then, in early February,NFL Network's Tom Pelissero reported that the "odds are increasing" Rodgers comes back to play for the Steelers in 2026.

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Later that month, at the NFL scouting combine,Khan said at the podium that Rodgers would be welcomed back next season. He also indicated that Rodgers' decision wouldn't drag on like it did a year ago.

But with free agency looming, and a thin quarterback draft class on the horizon, it's fair to wonder just how long the Steelers will be willing to wait this time around.

Rodgers had plenty of good things to say about McCarthy

Rodgers emphasized that, at the moment, he's spending a lot of time with his wife, whose identity is still undisclosed. The two got married last offseason.

He spoke about her Wednesday, but he also effused about McCarthy.

"Yeah, Mike's one of the great guys in the league," Rodgers said on "The Pat McAfee Show." "Just an absolutely exceptional human being with a huge heart. We had a lot of great years together, a lot of fun. He really cares about the players, but he also holds guys accountable and creates a lot of structure and details in the process."

The Steelers bringing in McCarthy bucked their trend of hiring 30-something-year-old defensive coaches to lead the franchise. Plus, on a league-wide scale, the decision went against the grain, in terms of an NFL pattern established in recent coaching cycles.

Rodgers believes the league is cyclical and thinks football lifers like McCarthy remain valuable.

"I don't give a s*** about how old he is, how long he's been in the league or the trend of the new young play-caller who's been on the staff of one of the Shanahan disciples," Rodgers said. "It seems like that's kind of the hot thing. I get that. There's a lot of great scheme in there, but there's something to an old-school organization ... bringing in a guy not only who brings accountability in a program that's proven to work at multiple places now, but he's a f***ing yinzer."

Rodgers added: "Mike bleeds Pittsburgh, Pa."

Aaron Rodgers says Steelers haven't given him deadline to make decision about playing in 2026

It's the first week of March, and Aaron Rodgers is in no hurry. The 42-year-old Rodgerstold "The Pa...

 

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