The Bengals have placed the franchise tag on wide receiver Tee Higgins for the second straight year.
Author: Michael
The NFL’s franchise tag deadline is Tuesday at 4 p.m. ET. Minnesota’s going one way with Sam Darnold, Cincy’s going the other with Tee Higgins. Get the latest here.
Here’s the latest news and everything you need to know about the first major wave of NFL player movement this spring.
Embiid has had two surgeries on his troublesome left knee. It’s swelling again — and no one knows why. What he does next could determine the future of the 2023 NBA MVP.
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When President Donald Trump signed an executive order titled “Keeping Men out of Women’s Sports,” that wasn’t just for show.
Trump vowed during his campaign to ban males from competing in girls’ and women’s sports and his order threatened the loss of federal funding to states that refused to comply.
Since then, several states have openly defied the order and Trump’s Department of Education is not letting that slide.
Previously, the DOE announced Title IX investigations into California, Minnesota and Maine.
The Ohio State women’s basketball lost its regular season finale on the road at Maryland on Sunday, and Buckeyes’ leading scorer Cotie McMahon elected to show her frustration in a rather unique and wildly vulgar way.
McMahon scored 18 points and snagged five rebounds in Ohio State’s overtime loss, but fouled out with 14 seconds left in the extra fame. After grabbing a seat on the bench, McMahon appeared to hear something from the opposing fans that she didn’t appreciate and flipped the double bird in their direction.
Nate Tice and Charles McDonald spent last week at the 2025 NFL combine. Here’s their sixth mock draft of this year’s cycle.
Buddy Hield helped the Golden State Warriors create enough space to exhale and walk out of Spectrum Center with a 119-101 victory over the Charlotte Hornets on Monday.
Earlier this month, ESPN informed MLB that it would opt out of the final three years of its $550 million annual rights agreement after this year. At the time, MLB tried to save face, calling the breakup mutual.
It wasn’t.
A new report from the Wall Street Journal details how ESPN was, however, willing to keep the package–but for $350 million less per year.
At $200 million annually, ESPN would have paid less for MLB than it does for the NHL ($400 million).