| T | |
|---|---|
|
Austria
|
3 |
|
Jordan
|
1 |
| T | |
|---|---|
|
Portugal
|
1 |
|
DR Congo
|
1 |
| T | |
|---|---|
|
England
|
4 |
|
Croatia
|
2 |
| T | |
|---|---|
|
Ghana
|
1 |
|
Panama
|
0 |
| T | |
|---|---|
|
Uzbekistan
|
1 |
|
Colombia
|
3 |
| T | |
|---|---|
|
Austria
|
3 |
|
Jordan
|
1 |
| T | |
|---|---|
|
Portugal
|
1 |
|
DR Congo
|
1 |
| T | |
|---|---|
|
England
|
4 |
|
Croatia
|
2 |
| T | |
|---|---|
|
Ghana
|
1 |
|
Panama
|
0 |
| T | |
|---|---|
|
Uzbekistan
|
1 |
|
Colombia
|
3 |
![]()
PHOENIX (AP) A’ja Wilson had 33 points and 11 rebounds Wednesday night, and the Las Vegas Aces beat the Phoenix Mercury 86-76 in a rematch of the 2025 WNBA Finals to clinch a spot in the Commissioner’s Cup championship.
The Aces (11-4), who lost 96-66 at Dallas on Monday to snap their six-game winning streak, play June 30 at New York for the Commissioner’s Cup title.
NaLyssa Smith scored 21 points and Jackie Young added 20 points and nine assists for Las Vegas, the defending WNBA champion.
Young had a career-high five steals and Wilson added four as the Aces finished with 18 – tied with Toronto for the most in a WNBA game this season.
Kahleah Copper scored 26 points and Alyssa Thomas had 11 assists to go with 10 points for the Mercury (4-11).
Phoenix has lost four in a row.
The Mercury shot 60% (18 of 30) from the field, including 7 of 10 from 3-point range, in the first half and led 49-45 at the break.
Las Vegas’ Chennedy Carter (illness) was not with the team for the second consecutive game.
Phoenix beat the Aces 99-66 in the season opener.
Aces: Host Golden State on Sunday.
Mercury: Host Seattle on Sunday.
—
AP WNBA: https://apnews.com/hub/WNBA-basketball
Copyright 2026 STATS LLC and Associated Press. Any commercial use or distribution without the express written consent of STATS LLC and Associated Press is strictly prohibited.
| BENCH | PTS | REB | AST | PF |
| C. Parker-Tyus | 2 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
| B. Turner | 2 | 3 | 0 | 1 |
| J. Loyd | 0 | 3 | 1 | 3 |
| K. Bell | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Total | 86 | 29 | 25 | 13 |
| STARTERS | PTS | REB | AST | PF |
| K. Copper | 26 | 4 | 3 | 4 |
| A. Thomas | 10 | 5 | 11 | 5 |
| M. Akoa Makani | 4 | 3 | 1 | 1 |
| N. Brochant | 4 | 3 | 1 | 0 |
| N. Mack | 0 | 8 | 0 | 3 |
| BENCH | PTS | REB | AST | PF |
| J. Nogic | 12 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
| D. Bonner | 10 | 3 | 1 | 2 |
| L. Held | 7 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
| K. Linskens | 3 | 2 | 0 | 0 |
| V. Ayayi | 0 | 1 | 1 | 3 |
| Total | 76 | 30 | 18 | 19 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| R | H | E | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 6 | 2 | |
| 8 | 11 | 0 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|

We’re ticking down the days until the NFL is back at the forefront of our lives, but we’re still a few months away from routinely parking ourselves on the couch on Sundays. While we still have the summer months ahead of us, football season will be here before you know it, and if you’re like most fans, you’re daydreaming about the possibilities of what the 2026 season may bring.
Could this finally be the year your team hoists the Lombardi Trophy? Or is fear of the floor falling out from under the franchise starting to seep in? These are the sorts of questions pinging around the heads of just about every fan as they let the burgers cook a little too long on the grill.
Well, they’re also questions we’re asking ourselves. So, we’re going to run through every team in the NFL and present a best- and worst-case scenario for each heading into the 2026 season.
Best-case: Year 1 of the Mike LaFleur era gets off to a splendid start. Not only does LaFleur prove himself to be one of the bright young coaches in the NFL, but third-round rookie Carson Beck solidifies himself as the quarterback of the future. Now, the Cardinals have their two pillars in place, thrusting their rebuild into hyperdrive.
Worst-case: The Cardinals become rudderless. Beck doesn’t show any signs of being a franchise centerpiece, leaving them with no long-term answer under center. Arizona struggles mightily in a stout NFC West and ends up with the worst record in the NFL.
Best-case: The quarterback battle and change of scenery bring out the best in Tua Tagovailoa, who becomes the latest veteran to enjoy a late-career resurgence. With a new regime in place, headlined by first-year coach Kevin Stefanski, Atlanta gets the most out of its highly skilled roster and wins the NFC South for the first time since 2016.
Worst-case: One of Tagovailoa or Michael Penix Jr. wins the upcoming quarterback battle by default, with neither truly rising to the occasion. That leaves the QB room muddled and leads to yet another in-season change at the position. Nothing sticks, and the Falcons continue to be held back by inadequate play under center.
Best-case: The arrival of Jesse Minter as head coach does exactly what Ravens brass hoped it would: fix the defense. With Minter reestablishing Baltimore’s DNA on that side of the ball, the organization dominates the conference, leading to an AFC North title and the No. 1 seed. Lamar Jackson stays healthy and finally gets over the hump to win the Super Bowl.
Worst-case: Baltimore’s defense doesn’t make the strides it hoped for under Minter, with Trey Hendrickson, the team’s offseason prize to bolster the pass rush, looking like a player past his prime at age 31 and coming off a season-ending hip injury in 2025. Derrick Henry finally starts to show cracks, lowering the offense’s ceiling. That leads to the Ravens missing the playoffs for the second straight year.
Best-case: After losing ground in the division, Buffalo climbs back atop the AFC East, and Joe Brady proves to be exactly the right choice at head coach. He has the Bills playing to their talent level, Josh Allen remains the best quarterback in the NFL, and DJ Moore becomes the second coming of Stefon Diggs in this offense. That leads to a deep playoff run that ends with the Bills winning Super Bowl LXI.
Worst-case: Brady doesn’t move the needle the way the organization hoped, and Buffalo continues to come up short of its ultimate goal of reaching the Super Bowl. To make matters worse, the Bills continue to look up at New England in the division and let another year of Allen’s prime slip away.

Best-case: Carolina doesn’t just back into a division title as it did in 2025; it takes it by force. The offseason additions of edge rusher Jaelan Phillips and linebacker Devin Lloyd help make the Panthers defense one of the more feared units in the conference. Bryce Young also continues to build on the momentum he generated last season and leaves no doubt that he is a quarterback Carolina can build around for the foreseeable future. The Panthers win back-to-back division titles for the first time since the 2014-15 seasons and finish above .500 for the first time since 2017.
Worst-case: Young regresses from his career-best season in 2025. That leads to another sub-.500 season for Carolina and, this time, others in the division don’t allow the Panthers to sneak into the playoffs or win the NFC South. To make matters even more dire, they are firmly on the hunt for a new quarterback next offseason.
Best-case: After going 11-6 and winning the NFC North last season, Chicago builds on that success in Year 2 of the Ben Johnson era. Caleb Williams emerges as a legitimate MVP candidate, wins double-digit games once again and leads the Bears to consecutive division titles for the first time since 2005 and 2006.
Worst-case: The breakout 2025 campaign proves to be more flash than substance, with Chicago falling behind the Lions and Packers in the NFC North race. That results in the Bears missing the playoffs for the fifth time in six seasons.
Best-case: First and foremost, the dynamic trio of Joe Burrow, Ja’Marr Chase and Tee Higgins stay healthy, keeping the team’s floor high. Beyond that, the changes Cincinnati made to its defense effectively turn the unit around overnight. The additions of Dexter Lawrence and Boye Mafe provide some much-needed veteran leadership, while in-house players like Myles Murphy and Shemar Stewart also rise to the occasion. The Bengals win the AFC North for the first time since 2022, return to the Super Bowl and win it.
Worst-case: One or more pieces of the Burrow-Chase-Higgins trio miss extended time yet again, dramatically altering expectations for the season. While there are new faces on defense, it’s the same result for Cincinnati on that side of the ball, leading to the Bengals missing the playoffs for the fourth straight year. That becomes the straw that breaks the camel’s back and results in Zac Taylor being fired.
Best-case: The QB battle between Deshaun Watson and Shedeur Sanders ends with Sanders on top. Not only does Sanders win the Week 1 job, but the second-year signal-caller runs with it and gives Cleveland the long-term answer at quarterback it has been starved for. Sanders and first-year coach Todd Monken begin building a strong foundation that changes how the rest of the league views Cleveland going forward. Suddenly, the Browns have a stellar young core with a 24-year-old quarterback at the center of it.
Worst-case: Watson wins the job over Sanders, but neither puts together an awe-inspiring training camp. Monken leans toward the veteran, but Watson continues to look like the version he’s been throughout his time in Cleveland. That results in the Browns finishing last in the AFC North and owning one of the worst records in the NFL, leading to Monken being one-and-done. They enter the 2027 offseason once again searching for a new head coach and a new quarterback.
Best-case: With George Pickens back on the franchise tag, Dallas continues to have one of the best one-two punches at receiver alongside CeeDee Lamb. That helps Dak Prescott keep the offense among the most prolific in the league. The biggest changes come on the defensive side of the ball. First-round rookies Caleb Downs and Malachi Lawrence contribute at a high level from Day 1, as do the veteran additions. The Cowboys now have a defense that can match the offense’s ceiling and get back atop the NFC East. They also finally make a deep playoff run, advancing as far as the NFC Championship Game for the first time since 1995, the last time they won the Super Bowl. Could this finally be the year?
Worst-case: The defense remains a work in progress, which continues to put pressure on the offense to produce points. That’ll be more difficult in 2026 if Pickens is unhappy with his contract situation and holds out. That derails Dallas, and it misses the playoffs for the third straight year.
Best-case: Bo Nix doesn’t skip a beat after recovering from the season-ending ankle injury he suffered last postseason. In fact, he’s better than ever after the Broncos gave him another top-tier pass-catching weapon in Jaylen Waddle this offseason. With RJ Harvey taking a leap in Year 2, Denver’s backfield improves and the offense becomes a high-powered machine. When paired with the defense, the Broncos earn the No. 1 seed for the second consecutive year and find themselves playing in Super Bowl LXI.
Worst-case: Nix is ready to go for Week 1 but is less than 100% because of his ankle. He struggles to get on the same page with Waddle, and the running game continues to be nonexistent, as it was down the stretch last season. As talented as the defense is, its numbers dip slightly from last year, tipping the scales in a negative direction. Kansas City bounces back and knocks Denver off its perch atop the division standings.
Best-case: After a down year in 2025, the Lions get right back into the thick of the Super Bowl conversation. The secondary returns healthy after an injury-riddled campaign, while the offense hums with Jahmyr Gibbs playing at an Offensive Player of the Year level. Detroit reclaims the NFC North, winning the division for the third time in four seasons.
Worst-case: The arrow continues to point in the wrong direction in the Motor City. Jared Goff starts to look like a quarterback entering the latter stages of his career, and the hiring of offensive coordinator Drew Petzing doesn’t result in any substantial improvements. The defense again ranks in the bottom half of the league in key categories, and the Lions miss the playoffs for the second straight year, begging the question of whether their window has closed entirely.
Best-case: After beginning the year on the PUP list, Micah Parsons returns to the Packers in mid-October, and the defense doesn’t look back. The star pass rusher is fresh, healthy, and has Green Bay fielding arguably the top unit in the league. When paired with an offense that has Jordan Love playing at a high level — thanks to the emergence of second-year wideout Matthew Golden and Christian Watson establishing himself as a true No. 1 option after inking a lucrative extension this offseason — the Packers win the NFC North for the first time since 2021 and reach the NFC Championship Game for the first time since 2020.
Worst-case: Parsons returns to the field but isn’t the same player he was before tearing his ACL, lowering the defense’s ceiling. Meanwhile, the offense continues to deal with durability issues from Watson, limiting its explosiveness. Their division rivals all find success, dropping Green Bay to last place in the NFC North for the first time since 2005.
Best-case: C.J. Stroud looks more like the quarterback he was during his rookie season. With his confidence restored, better protection along the offensive line and a stable running game with David Montgomery in the backfield, the offense erupts with Stroud at the helm. With the offense finally complementing the star-studded defense, the Texans win the AFC South and reach the AFC Championship Game for the first time in franchise history.
Worst-case: Stroud continues to crater, and his playoff woes bleed into 2026. It gets so bad that Davis Mills makes an appearance with Stroud on the bench, firmly shattering hope that he can turn things around. Because of that, the Texans miss the playoffs and face existential questions next offseason.

Best-case: Daniel Jones is ready to roll for Week 1 despite suffering an Achilles tear last season, and the Colts quarterback picks up where he left off. Jones continues to enjoy his late-career revival in Indy and has the team atop the AFC South standings for the first time since 2014, when Andrew Luck was playing quarterback.
Worst-case: The resurgence Jones enjoyed before his injury last season never returns. He isn’t able to rekindle the magic from the first half of 2025, and it shakes confidence in him as Indy’s long-term option at quarterback. The organization falls out of the playoff race and finds itself in the familiar position of wondering whether its franchise quarterback is even on the roster.
Best-case: The train keeps moving in Duval County. After a 13-4 regular season that led to an AFC South title in 2025, the Jaguars repeat as division champions for just the second time in franchise history and for the first time since the 1998-99 seasons. Trevor Lawrence continues to thrive under Liam Coen, as do several key pillars on the depth chart. Brian Thomas Jr. bounces back and looks more like the top-tier wideout we saw as a rookie, and Travis Hunter settles into his role as a two-way player and begins living up to his draft status.
Worst-case: Trevor Lawrence doesn’t take a Year 2 leap in Coen’s system and instead levels off from a production standpoint. Bhayshul Tuten doesn’t elevate in an expanded role out of the backfield to replace Travis Etienne, and Jacksonville’s ground attack struggles because of it. When paired with Thomas Jr. and Hunter continuing to struggle, the offense isn’t nearly as prolific as it can be, and the Jaguars fall behind in the AFC South and miss the playoffs.
Best-case: Patrick Mahomes is ready to go for Week 1 after tearing his ACL late last season, and he returns to being the top quarterback in the NFL. Mahomes brings Kansas City back atop the AFC West after a brief one-year hiatus, thanks in part to the Chiefs adding some explosiveness to the running game with Kenneth Walker III. Rookie corner Mansoor Delane is a force in the secondary from Day 1, allowing the defense to easily absorb the departure of Trent McDuffie. Kansas City not only gets back atop the division but is fully reinserted into the Super Bowl conversation.
Worst-case: Mahomes gets on the field, but it takes him longer than expected to return to his true form. It doesn’t help that the wide receiver room isn’t developing as the team had hoped, and Travis Kelce looks more like a player on the doorstep of retirement. The defense also struggles without McDuffie and Jaylen Watson in the secondary. With Denver and Los Angeles on the upswing, Kansas City is on the outside looking in on the playoffs yet again.
Best-case: Fernando Mendoza is the savior. The No. 1 overall pick brings the magic he sprinkled at Indiana to Sin City, leading the Raiders to the playoffs in Year 1. Klint Kubiak proves to be the right man for the job as head coach and has the offense humming with Mendoza under center. The defense also shines with Maxx Crosby leading the charge.
Worst-case: The Raiders slow-play it with Mendoza, allowing Kirk Cousins to start the season at quarterback. When they do turn the keys over to Mendoza, the top pick endures some rookie growing pains, and the Raiders once again miss out on the playoffs.
Best-case: Los Angeles gets its starting offensive tackles, Rashawn Slater and Joe Alt, back healthy, and it makes all the difference. Justin Herbert is no longer under constant pressure, and that allows him to elevate the offense, particularly skill-position players like Ladd McConkey and Omarion Hampton. The defense doesn’t trip up following the departure of coordinator Jesse Minter, and the Chargers win the AFC West. Not only that, but L.A. notches its first playoff win with Herbert.
Worst-case: Even with a healthier roster, Justin Herbert continues to falter in high-stakes moments, and the Chargers continue to look up at both the Broncos and Chiefs in the division, with the Raiders even nipping at their heels.
Best-case: It’s 2021 all over again, with the Rams hoisting the Lombardi Trophy as Super Bowl LXI champions. The powerhouse roster L.A. built this offseason lives up to the hype, with Myles Garrett and Trent McDuffie elevating the defense into one of the best units in the league. Matthew Stafford continues to play at an MVP level, making the Rams the wire-to-wire best team in the NFL.
Worst-case: The defense improves with Garrett and McDuffie, but not as much as the Rams hoped. After winning the MVP award last season, Father Time starts to chip away at 38-year-old Stafford and 33-year-old Davante Adams. That brings the Rams down a notch, opening the door for both the Seahawks and 49ers to leapfrog them in the NFC West race.
Best-case: Malik Willis proves to be “the guy” for Miami. The stellar numbers he put up in spot starts with the Packers bear out over a full season. In a similar vein, Jeff Hafley endears himself as head coach, solidifying the two biggest pieces of the Dolphins‘ rebuild. After being spunky with Willis in 2026, Miami is armed with plenty of assets to springboard into 2027 now that it has its quarterback intact.
Worst-case: Willis is not up to the task of being a full-time starter in the NFL, and the Dolphins struggle mightily because of it. The team struggles out of the gate and never recovers, finishing with one of, if not the worst, records in the NFL.
Best-case: The pressure of the quarterback battle produces a diamond. Either Kyler Murray is Sam Darnold 2.0, giving the Vikings a veteran capable of competing for an NFC North title, or J.J. McCarthy stabilizes and rises to the occasion to fend off Murray. Either way, the quarterback question is definitively answered, and Minnesota suddenly is back where it was in 2024, battling for the division crown and the No. 1 seed.
Worst-case: Kyler Murray wins the job after an uninspiring camp, and his injury issues (he has missed 30 of a possible 68 games over the past five seasons) persist. That throws McCarthy into the lineup cold, and the results look similar to the abysmal ones from 2025. Minnesota continues to be held back by poor quarterback play and finishes last in the NFC North.

Best-case: Despite a tougher schedule, the Patriots continue to pile up wins in the AFC. Their improved roster from last season’s Super Bowl run proves to be the real deal, and Drake Maye continues his ascent as one of the top quarterbacks in the league, especially after being armed with A.J. Brown at receiver. They win a second straight AFC East title, fending off Buffalo in the process, and are once again in the Super Bowl conversation.
Worst-case: The tougher road in 2026 proves New England was a product of its schedule last season and reveals the Patriots are still a couple of steps behind the AFC’s elite teams. While Brown brings name value to the receiver room, the soon-to-be 29-year-old starts showing his age, and the offense doesn’t take the leap many hoped for. Protection also continues to be a problem for Maye, with Will Campbell proving he is not a starting-caliber left tackle just two years after being selected No. 4 overall. After reaching the Super Bowl last year, the Patriots find themselves on the outside looking in on the playoffs entirely in 2026.
Best-case: After showing flashes down the stretch last season, Tyler Shough’s breakout campaign is in full effect in 2026. New Orleans was correct in building around its 2025 second-round pick, and he takes the NFC South by storm. Shough’s emergence is aided by Travis Etienne being a steady presence in the backfield, along with first-round rookie wideout Jordyn Tyson making a Brian Thomas Jr.-like splash in Year 1. The Saints win the division for the first time since 2020, when Drew Brees was still playing.
Worst-case: Tyler Shough falters. The optimism surrounding the second-year quarterback as the full-time starter proves to be unfounded. His inconsistent play makes it clear that New Orleans will need to look for a new quarterback next offseason, and its five-year playoff drought will continue.
Best-case: The Giants are this year’s Patriots. They see their second-year quarterback, Jaxson Dart, emerge as an MVP candidate and their first-year head coach, John Harbaugh, stabilize the organization en route to a surprise playoff run. New York wins the NFC East for the first time since its Super Bowl-winning season in 2011 and does so with a stable of young talent on both sides of the ball.
Worst-case: Dart doesn’t learn from his issues last season and continues to put himself in harm’s way by fighting unnecessarily for extra yardage. That leads to the second-year quarterback continuing his visits to the blue medical tent and lowers the ceiling for what New York can accomplish in Year 2 of his tenure.
Best-case: In his second act with the franchise, Geno Smith looks more like the quarterback from Seattle than he did with the Raiders last season. With better protection along the offensive line and an array of young skill-position players, the Jets offense becomes respectable. Meanwhile, the slew of changes they made defensively prove to work, with Demario Davis, Minkah Fitzpatrick, Joseph Ossai and rookie David Bailey all helping turn the tide on that side of the ball. Everything falls into place for the Jets and, with the fifth-easiest strength of schedule (by projected win totals), they remarkably snap their 15-season playoff drought.
Worst-case: Same old Jets. Yes, they have young pieces in place, but the organization is held back by poor quarterback play and poor coaching. Smith struggles and effectively plays his way out of the NFL, while Aaron Glenn is fired midseason, sending New York into yet another reset.
Best-case: The A.J. Brown trade proves to be addition by subtraction. Philly no longer has tension surrounding the offense, and the passing attack moves along just fine with DeVonta Smith as the No. 1 option and first-rounder Makai Lemon emerging early as a rookie. Saquon Barkley continues to be one of the top three backs in the NFL, and the defense builds on the momentum from late last season, with offseason addition Jonathan Greenard establishing himself as a top pass rusher. The Eagles win the NFC East and are back playing for a Lombardi Trophy.
Worst-case: Brown’s departure is noticeable. Smith isn’t quite able to take the reins as the true top option in the passing game, and neither is Lemon. That makes Philly’s offense a bit more one-dimensional and creates difficulties for both Jalen Hurts and Barkley on the ground. Greenard doesn’t have the same impact as Jaelan Phillips did off the edge, and Philly loses ground in a competitive NFC East and is forced to fight for wild-card positioning if it wants to make the postseason.
Best-case: Aaron Rodgers has just enough fuel left in the tank to make another push toward a second straight AFC North title. The 42-year-old is reunited with head coach Mike McCarthy, and they pick up where they left off in Green Bay. They put together impressive numbers, especially now that Pittsburgh has a legitimate No. 2 option in the passing game with Michael Pittman Jr. complementing DK Metcalf.
Worst-case: Rodgers looks like a quarterback in his early 40s who already has one foot out the door. Pittsburgh’s roster looks too old and less explosive than some of its division rivals, and the Steelers are left in the dust by both the Ravens and Bengals. They are on the outside looking in on the playoffs, and a below-.500 season is how Rodgers’ career comes to a close.
Best-case: The 49ers get some positive injury luck, and the bulk of the roster stays relatively healthy in 2026. That allows San Francisco to simply play to its talent level, which is good enough to win the NFC West, earn the No. 1 seed and win Super Bowl LXI. Mike Evans is the missing link for this high-powered offense to reach the next level and helps Brock Purdy play his way into the MVP conversation.
Worst-case: The Niners’ pass rush continues to struggle even with standouts like Nick Bosa and Mykel Williams back healthy. Mike Evans doesn’t make the impact San Francisco hoped for in the receiver room, which lowers the ceiling of the offense as a whole. The 49ers again find themselves behind both the Seahawks and Rams in the NFC West, wondering whether this core will ever get over the hump.
Best-case: The 2026 Seahawks do what the 2014 Seahawks could not: repeat as Super Bowl champions. The key pillars of what made Seattle champions last season are still intact, so this franchise still has the ceiling to win it all. The Seahawks even found solid replacements where needed, including in the backfield, where they drafted Jadarian Price in the first round after Kenneth Walker III left in free agency. Seattle remains the class of the NFL, earning the No. 1 seed and again being the last team standing.
Worst-case: Seattle suffers a bit of a Super Bowl hangover and faces tougher sledding in 2026 with a bigger target on its back. Not only that, but the division race could easily slip through its fingers. The Rams and/or 49ers could jump the Seahawks in the standings, making a path to the playoffs more challenging and potentially forcing them to go on the road to get back to the Super Bowl.
Best-case: Following an 8-9 season that saw Tampa Bay’s five-season playoff streak and four straight division titles come to an end, the Buccaneers get back on track. Even with Mike Evans gone, the passing game spearheaded by Baker Mayfield is strong, especially with Emeka Egbuka making a Year 2 leap for the ages. He becomes the new go-to weapon on offense, while rookie pass rusher Rueben Bain Jr. and rookie linebacker Josiah Trotter help usher in a new era on defense. Tampa Bay takes back the NFC South and returns to the playoffs.
Worst-case: The second-half struggles from Baker Mayfield (14 touchdowns and 10 interceptions over his final 11 games in 2025) persist in 2026. The young pieces the Buccaneers were hoping would rise up — like Egbuka and Bain Jr. — aren’t ready for that responsibility just yet. That allows the rest of the division to continue closing the gap, with Atlanta and New Orleans both catching lightning in a bottle in their respective quarterback rooms. For the second straight year, the Bucs miss the playoffs, putting Todd Bowles’ job firmly at risk.
Best-case: The new leadership in Nashville works. Robert Saleh’s second stint as a head coach proves far more successful than his first with the Jets. Cam Ward thrives with Brian Daboll as his offensive coordinator, especially with first-round wideout Carnell Tate exploding out of the gate. Ward enjoys a strong Year 2 leap after flashing that potential during the second half of last season. With better coaching, Ward’s emergence and a defense improved by key offseason additions like Jermaine Johnson II and Alontae Taylor, Tennessee becomes a wild-card team in the AFC playoff picture.
Worst-case: Ward doesn’t take the leap everyone is hoping for in Year 2, and the coaching staff doesn’t seem up to the task. Saleh confirms that he is a great defensive coordinator but doesn’t have what it takes to lead an entire franchise, and the Titans finish last in the AFC South for the fourth season in a row.
Best-case: Following an injury-riddled sophomore season, Jayden Daniels stays healthy in 2026, and that helps Washington look more like the team that reached the NFC Championship Game during his rookie season. The Commanders get MVP-level play from Daniels, while the defense rebounds thanks to its offseason additions. First-round rookie linebacker Sonny Styles immediately bursts into stardom, winning Defensive Rookie of the Year. Meanwhile, Odafe Oweh and K’Lavon Chaisson provide Washington with some much-needed pass-rushing help. The Commanders win the NFC East for the first time since 2020 and are again playing for a chance to advance to the Super Bowl.
Worst-case: Even if Daniels stays healthy, there isn’t enough firepower in Washington’s offense to make a dent in the NFC East race. Terry McLaurin looks like an aging player, and no one else truly steps up in the receiver room. As for the defense, the new cast of characters produces similar results to the unit that struggled in 2025. Washington misses the playoffs for the fifth time in six seasons.

Keytron Jordan, CBS Sports
You may have heard the 2027 draft class is a special one. I’m here to agree. The sheer number of stone-cold blue-chip prospects already in this class means it could give the historic 2021 and 2011 draft classes a run for their money.
The biggest question that still needs answering, though, is how the quarterback class will shake out. There’s plenty of talent at the position in college football, but nearly all of the top quarterbacks still have multiple years of eligibility remaining. If we don’t see major leaps from many of those prospects, they could easily return to school for 2027.
Three signal-callers hear their names called in this mock draft — all in the top five.
Note: The draft order was determined using the reverse Super Bowl odds at DraftKings Sportsbook. The Jets have three first-round picks: their own, the Cowboys‘ from the Quinnen Williams trade and the Colts‘ from the Sauce Gardner trade. The Cowboys have the Packers‘ selection from the Micah Parsons trade.

It’s inevitable. The next-generation Manning is going high in the draft. No one wants to be the GM who passes on a Arch Manning, especially when the alternative is Carson Beck. Manning came on strong down the stretch in 2025 after a rocky start. If he maintains that level of play for a full season, you can put his name down in ink at No. 1 overall.
Jeremiah Smith’s blend of size, explosiveness and ball skills is the best we’ve seen since Calvin Johnson. Even if Malik Willis isn’t an overnight success in Miami, this pick could still make sense over a quarterback because of how much Smith moves the needle. A lot of quarterbacks will look good throwing jump balls to Smith.
There’s a strong chance Dante Moore would have been a Jet had he declared last year, but now he gets another year of seasoning at Oregon. Moore is a silky-smooth pocket passer who can hit throws at every level of the field. He just needs to improve his play under pressure this season.
Drake Lindsey is an up-and-comer more people need to know about because of his certified rocket launcher for a right arm. He’s right there with South Carolina’s LaNorris Sellers for the strongest arm in college football. Unlike Sellers, Lindsey has shown the ability to throw with multiple speeds and layer passes beautifully over the middle. He’ll need to improve his accuracy and pocket presence this year, but I like his chances of doing just that in Year 2 as a starter.
Dylan Stewart is the rare 6-foot-5, 245-pounder who moves like a wide receiver. He’s so athletic that he regularly wins reps untouched. Stewart needs to add more moves to his arsenal, but it won’t take much for him to become an impact player in the NFL.
Cam Coleman is a wildly explosive 6-foot-3, 200-pound wideout who spent the past two seasons stuck with poor quarterback play at Auburn. That changes this year as he heads to Texas to pair with Arch Manning. He should be a household name by season’s end.
Trevor Goosby could have been a first-rounder had he declared last year, but he returns for a potential national title run. He’s a high-end athlete who mirrors speed with ease. That’s exactly what Cam Ward needs on the blind side.
Leonard Moore’s sophomore tape was special. The only things keeping him from being a top-five pick are positional value and an exceptionally strong class. He looks like a Day 1 lockdown corner in the NFL.
Colin Simmons is a twitchy edge-rusher who runs circles around college offensive tackles. Despite being undersized, he flashes speed-to-power and holds up well against the run. He would have been a slam-dunk top-five pick in this past class.
Jordan Seaton started the past two years at Colorado before transferring to LSU this spring. His pass protection was especially impressive, allowing only seven pressures all season. He’d slot in at right tackle and could help give the Giants one of the NFL’s best offensive lines.
Nick Marsh may not get the same glow-up Fernando Mendoza did after transferring to Indiana, but he’ll gain plenty of fans after leaving Michigan State. At 6-foot-3 and 213 pounds, Marsh is a bully, That’s especially true after the catch, as he tied former Hoosier Omar Cooper Jr. with 28 broken tackles last season.
A’Mauri Washington was a potential first-rounder who returned to Oregon hoping to push his stock closer to the top 10. That won’t be easy in this class, but 330-pounders with his explosiveness don’t come around often, and players like that usually get drafted very high (see Caleb Banks last year).
Zach Lutmer plays in the slot at Iowa — where he secured three interceptions and six pass breakups last season — but he’s shown the all-around ability to translate to corner or safety in the NFL. His versatility would be a perfect fit in Brian Flores’ defense.
With Cam Heyward turning 38 next offseason and Keeanu Benton entering free agency, the Steelers address the interior defensive line again. David Stone’s versatility and complete skill set should make him highly coveted. He wins with both quicks and power on tape.
Greg Johnson is the top returning true guard in the country. He’s a well-built 325-pounder with experience at all five offensive line spots, though left guard is his best fit.
I thought Jacksonville would add more interior pass-rush juice in this past draft, but it looks like that may have to wait until 2027, when more options should be available. Will Echoles is a quintessential three-technique whose game isn’t too dissimilar from former Ole Miss first-rounder Walter Nolen III.
Ben Johnson finally gets his lead dog in the backfield. Ahmad Hardy has been a chore to bring down since he stepped on a college campus, recording more than 90 broken tackles in each of the past two seasons. While he looked like a first-round talent on tape last year, his future remains uncertain after he was the victim of a shooting last week.
Kelley Jones is the ideal press corner for Aaron Glenn’s defense because he possesses one of the longest wingspans you’ll ever see at the position. His ability to disrupt reps before they start showed up against some of the best competition in the country last year.
Ryan Williams didn’t put his best foot forward in 2025 and has struggled with drops throughout his career, but his ability to get open one-on-one is undeniable. He’s an incredibly gifted all-around athlete and remains exceptionally young, as he won’t turn 20 until February.
Justin Scott got overlooked on an incredibly deep Miami defensive line last season, but he’s a high-end disruptor in his own right. The Broncos continue reloading their defensive line through the draft.
Even though the Lions used a second-round pick on defensive end Derrick Moore in April, they could still address the position next spring to maintain a healthy rotation up front. Matayo Uiagalelei is a power end who sets the edge well in the run game.
Kewan Lacy had the second-most rushing touchdowns in college football last season with 24 while surpassing 1,500 rushing yards in his first year as a starter. He’s a true bell-cow back despite lacking prototypical size, leading college football with 307 carries last year.
Jadan Baugh is the kind of size-speed athlete Kyle Shanahan has historically loved at running back. At 231 pounds, he’s a load to bring down once he gets rolling. Just ask Florida State, which watched him rush for 264 yards in last season’s finale.
Elijah Paige could have been a first-rounder this past spring if injuries hadn’t cost him much of his junior season. It doesn’t take much more than one rep of him pulling across the formation to see his first-round athletic traits. He just needs to stay healthy.
The Chargers appear intent on recreating Miami’s dominant 2025 defensive line, which isn’t a bad strategy. Ahmad Moten Sr. is a prototypical three-technique who can penetrate the backfield with his twitchy get-off.
Charlie Becker went from backup to Fernando Mendoza’s favorite target over the course of the 2025 season. He offers an exceptional blend of size, speed and ball skills. On 34 catches last year, he didn’t drop a single pass, making him an ideal deep threat for Drake Maye.
The Eagles love twitched-up edge rushers, and Jaleel Johnson fits that mold. At 6-foot-4 and 270 pounds, he explodes off the edge. While he’s a bit of a linear athlete, he can do serious damage as a bull-rusher.
It’s become an annual tradition to mock Kansas City a Travis Kelce replacement. Jamari Johnson may not offer Kelce’s YAC ability, but he can certainly match his catch radius. The Oregon tight end has a massive frame and plucks the ball out of the air with ease.
It’s only fitting that Tyler Linderbaum’s long-term replacement is another undersized Hawkeye. Kade Pieper may be even more athletic, with some insane reps tracking down linebackers in space. After playing out of position at guard last year, his stock should soar as he takes over at center.
With David Edwards now in New Orleans and O’Cyrus Torrence entering a contract year, Buffalo reloads along the offensive line. Cayden Green plays left tackle at Missouri, but I think he’ll fit better at guard in the NFL, where his natural power should shine.
It’s unlikely that Cooper Kupp reaches the third year of the deal he signed last offseason, which could leave Seattle needing another receiver. Jordan Faison’s precise route-running would feast opposite Jaxon Smith-Njigba.
Wyatt Young was the third-leading receiver in college football last season as a sophomore, posting 1,264 yards at North Texas. He followed his quarterback and head coach to Oklahoma State this spring, where I expect him to keep putting on a show. He’s a ridiculously shifty route-runner with prototypical slot traits, making him an ideal fit for the Rams.
PHOENIX (AP) Corbin Carroll hit a grand slam, Eduardo Rodriguez earned his 100th career win on the mound and the Arizona Diamondbacks beat the Los Angeles Angels 8-1 on Wednesday.
The D-backs won two of three games in the series.
Carroll’s fifth career grand slam landed just over the right field wall, giving the D-backs a 5-1 lead in the second inning. It was the two-time All-Star’s 13th homer of the season.
Rodriguez (6-2) scattered six hits and three walks, giving up just one run over his seven innings. The veteran left-hander struck out five, lowered his ERA to 2.45 for the season and became just the ninth Venezuelan-born pitcher to reach 100 wins in the big leagues.
Ketel Marte added a two-run double while rookie Tommy Troy had two hits – including a triple – and two RBIs. Gabriel Moreno contributed a three-hit day and reached base four times.
Angels left-hander Sam Aldegheri (2-2) lasted just three innings and gave up six runs. Shortstop Zach Neto led off the game with a solo homer. It was Neto’s 15th long ball of the season and second in two days.
The D-backs host the Twins for a three-game series beginning Friday. Arizona sends RHP Michael Soroka (8-3, 3.11) to the mound while the Twins counter with LHP Connor Prielipp (2-4, 5.26) in the first game.
The Angels travel to face the Athletics in a four-game series starting Thursday. Pitching matchups haven’t been announced.
—
AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/mlb
Copyright 2026 STATS LLC and Associated Press. Any commercial use or distribution without the express written consent of STATS LLC and Associated Press is strictly prohibited.
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | R | H | E | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 6 | 2 | |
| 0 | 5 | 1 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | X | 8 | 11 | 0 |
| HITTERS | AB | R | H | RBI | AVG |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Z. Neto SS | 3 | 1 | 2 | 1 | .228 |
| M. Trout DH | 3 | 0 | 1 | 0 | .234 |
| J. Adell RF | 4 | 0 | 0 | 0 | .253 |
| O. Peraza 2B | 4 | 0 | 1 | 0 | .259 |
| V. Grissom 1B | 4 | 0 | 0 | 0 | .239 |
| D. Guzman 3B | 4 | 0 | 1 | 0 | .265 |
| J. Siri CF | 3 | 0 | 0 | 0 | .300 |
| L. Porter C | 2 | 0 | 1 | 0 | .250 |
| W. Meckler LF | 3 | 0 | 0 | 0 | .282 |
| HITTERS | AB | R | H | RBI | AVG |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| K. Marte DH | 4 | 1 | 2 | 2 | .258 |
| G. Perdomo SS | 4 | 1 | 1 | 0 | .246 |
| C. Carroll RF | 5 | 1 | 1 | 4 | .275 |
| J. Barrosa RF | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | .172 |
| G. Moreno C | 3 | 0 | 3 | 0 | .277 |
| N. Arenado 3B | 4 | 0 | 0 | 0 | .235 |
| I. Vargas 2B | 2 | 2 | 0 | 0 | .261 |
| J. Lawlar CF | 4 | 2 | 2 | 0 | .294 |
| L. Groover 1B | 4 | 0 | 0 | 0 | .161 |
| T. Troy LF | 4 | 1 | 2 | 2 | .234 |
| PITCHERS | IP | H | ER | BB | SO | ERA |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| S. Aldegheri(L, 2-2) | 3.0 | 6 | 6 | 3 | 1 | 4.50 |
| J. Fermin | 1.0 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 4.76 |
| B. Kerry | 4.0 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 2 | 4.50 |
| PITCHERS | IP | H | ER | BB | SO | ERA |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| E. Rodriguez(W, 6-2) | 7.0 | 6 | 1 | 3 | 5 | 2.45 |
| T. Clarke | 1.0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 2.05 |
| J. Morillo | 1.0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2.48 |
PHOENIX (AP) Mike Trout hit a two-run home run and an RBI double for the Los Angeles Angels in a 7-0 shutout of the Arizona Diamondbacks on Tuesday night.
Trout’s 436-foot two-run shot to center came in the fifth inning and gave the Angels a 5-0 lead, and his sixth-inning double drove in Denzer Guzman.
Reid Detmers (3-5) worked seven innings for the Halos, allowing no runs on three hits and striking out three. He has allowed three or fewer earned runs in each of his last five outings and nine of his last 10.
Wade Meckler hit an RBI single in the second to get the Halos on the board first, followed by a solo home run by Zach Neto in the third. Donovan Walton hit an RBI single in the fourth and a ground-rule double in the eighth to bring Logan O’Hoppe across.
The Angels combined for 14 hits, paced by O’Hoppe’s 3-for-4 night.
Adrian Del Castillo got the first hit of the game for the D-backs in the third inning. Ketel Marte and Geraldo Perdomo both singled in the sixth, and Corbin Carroll had a one-out infield base hit in the ninth. Arizona went 0-for-3 with runners in scoring position and stranded five baserunners.
Kirby Yates and Chase Silseth combined for two scoreless innings of relief to close out the game.
Merrill Kelly (5-6) gave up 11 hits and six earned runs in 5 1/3 innings for the D-backs. He struck out four and walked one.
D-backs LHP Eduardo Rodriguez (5-2, 2.55 ERA) will take the hill opposite Angels LHP Sam Aldegheri (2-1, 2.12) in the series finale.
—
AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/mlb
Copyright 2026 STATS LLC and Associated Press. Any commercial use or distribution without the express written consent of STATS LLC and Associated Press is strictly prohibited.
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | R | H | E | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 7 | 14 | 1 | |
| 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 4 | 0 |
| HITTERS | AB | R | H | RBI | AVG |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Z. Neto SS | 5 | 2 | 2 | 1 | .223 |
| M. Trout CF | 5 | 1 | 2 | 3 | .233 |
| N. Schanuel 1B | 4 | 0 | 1 | 0 | .254 |
| J. Adell RF | 5 | 1 | 1 | 0 | .256 |
| N. Madrigal 2B | 5 | 0 | 0 | 0 | .293 |
| W. Meckler LF | 3 | 0 | 1 | 1 | .294 |
| a- J. Siri PH-LF | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | .319 |
| D. Guzman 3B | 4 | 2 | 2 | 0 | .267 |
| L. O’Hoppe C | 4 | 1 | 3 | 0 | .235 |
| D. Walton DH | 4 | 0 | 2 | 2 | .323 |
| HITTERS | AB | R | H | RBI | AVG |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| K. Marte 2B | 4 | 0 | 1 | 0 | .254 |
| G. Perdomo SS | 4 | 0 | 1 | 0 | .246 |
| C. Carroll RF | 4 | 0 | 1 | 0 | .277 |
| L. Gurriel LF | 4 | 0 | 0 | 0 | .220 |
| N. Arenado 3B | 4 | 0 | 0 | 0 | .239 |
| I. Vargas 1B | 3 | 0 | 0 | 0 | .263 |
| J. Lawlar CF | 3 | 0 | 0 | 0 | .267 |
| A. Del Castillo C | 3 | 0 | 1 | 0 | .186 |
| L. Groover DH | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | .185 |
| a- P. Smith PH-DH | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | .152 |
| PITCHERS | IP | H | ER | BB | SO | ERA |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| R. Detmers(W, 3-5) | 7.0 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 3 | 3.68 |
| K. Yates | 1.0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 4.05 |
| C. Silseth | 1.0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 1.71 |
| PITCHERS | IP | H | ER | BB | SO | ERA |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| M. Kelly(L, 5-6) | 5.1 | 11 | 6 | 1 | 4 | 5.81 |
| R. Thompson | 0.2 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 2.22 |
| B. Garcia | 1.0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 2.87 |
| D. Jameson | 2.0 | 2 | 1 | 0 | 3 | 4.76 |
|
| PLAYERS OF THE GAME | |
|---|---|
![]() |
J. Luzardo PHI P7.0 IP, 5 H, 2 ER, 9 SO, 2 BB |
![]() |
B. Marsh PHI LF1-3, 2 R, 1 HR, 2 RBI |
|
| PLAYERS OF THE GAME | |
|---|---|
![]() |
N. Nunez WAS 2B2-2, 3 R, 1 RBI |
![]() |
F. Griffin WAS P6.0 IP, 6 H, 1 ER, 6 SO, 2 BB |
|
| PLAYERS OF THE GAME | |
|---|---|
![]() |
D. Cease TOR P5.0 IP, 4 H, 7 SO, 4 BB |
![]() |
G. Springer TOR DH2-3, 1 R, 1 HR, 3 RBI |
|
| PLAYERS OF THE GAME | |
|---|---|
![]() |
G. Cole NYY P6.0 IP, 3 H, 2 ER, 6 SO, 2 BB |
![]() |
R. Yarbrough NYY P3.0 IP, 1 H, 3 SO |
|
| PLAYERS OF THE GAME | |
|---|---|
![]() |
B. Singer CIN P5.0 IP, 3 H, 1 ER, 5 SO, 3 BB |
![]() |
T. Santillan CIN P1.0 IP, 1 H, 2 SO |
|
| PLAYERS OF THE GAME | |
|---|---|
![]() |
R. Gasser MIL P5.2 IP, 2 H, 5 SO, 2 BB |
![]() |
S. Cecconi CLE P5.2 IP, 3 H, 1 ER, 4 SO, 2 BB |
|
| PLAYERS OF THE GAME | |
|---|---|
![]() |
A. Pallante STL P7.0 IP, 4 H, 2 ER, 6 SO |
![]() |
R. O’Brien STL P1.0 IP, 1 BB |
|
| PLAYERS OF THE GAME | |
|---|---|
![]() |
B. Castano COL P1.1 IP, 1 SO |
![]() |
J. Hill COL P1.0 IP |
|
| PLAYERS OF THE GAME | |
|---|---|
![]() |
Z. Matthews MIN P7.0 IP, 8 H, 2 ER, 4 SO |
![]() |
K. Clemens MIN RF2-4, 2 R, 1 HR, 3 RBI |
|
|
| PLAYERS OF THE GAME | |
|---|---|
![]() |
L. Gilbert SEA P7.0 IP, 2 H, 1 ER, 10 SO, 1 BB |
![]() |
A. Munoz SEA P1.0 IP, 1 H, 1 SO |
| R | H | E | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 7 | 14 | 1 | |
| 0 | 4 | 0 |
|
| PLAYERS OF THE GAME | |
|---|---|
![]() |
R. Detmers LAA P7.0 IP, 3 H, 3 SO |
![]() |
M. Trout LAA CF2-5, 1 R, 1 HR, 3 RBI |
|
| PLAYERS OF THE GAME | |
|---|---|
![]() |
B. Reynolds PIT LF4-5, 3 R, 2 HR, 3 RBI |
![]() |
Z. Gelof ATH 3B3-3, 2 R, 1 HR, 2 RBI |
|
| PLAYERS OF THE GAME | |
|---|---|
![]() |
J. Wrobleski LAD P6.0 IP, 3 H, 5 SO |
![]() |
D. Rasmussen TB P7.0 IP, 6 H, 1 ER, 7 SO |
When the Golden State Warriors added Kevin Durant to their 73-win team in 2016, there was a sentiment around the NBA that teams would be best-served punting the next couple of years, allowing Golden State to stack a few inevitable championships, and wait for the Warriors to become more vulnerable before spending their assets to try to improve. The NBA’s best general managers disagreed.
“They are not unbeatable,” then-Rockets GM Daryl Morey told ESPN in June 2017. “There have been bigger upsets in sports history. We are going to keep improving our roster.” Then-Celtics general manager Danny Ainge actually played for one such unbeatable team, the 67-win 1986 Boston Celtics, and understands how fragile those situations truly are. “Something can happen that nobody foresees,” Ainge told ESPN. “I don’t look at it as doom and gloom right now.”
Well, we know what happened. Morey acquired Chris Paul and the Rockets pushed the Warriors to the absolute brink. Boston signed Gordon Hayward in 2017 and traded for Kyrie Irving in 2018. It went south due to a combination of injuries and locker room factors, but Vegas actually pegged the Celtics as Golden State’s biggest preseason threat in the 2018-19 season. Toronto, after trading for Kawhi Leonard, ultimately knocked Golden State off in the 2019 Finals. That victory triggered an unparalleled stretch of ongoing NBA parity. We’ve had seven different champions in the last seven seasons.
I bring all of this up because there are surely a lot of fans feeling that doom and gloom Ainge brushed off almost a decade ago. There isn’t one unstoppable juggernaut anymore. There are two. The Oklahoma City Thunder and San Antonio Spurs are the most talented teams in the league, the most asset-rich teams in the league and among the youngest in the league. Even after San Antonio’s Finals loss to the New York Knicks, and even in light of the eight different champions we’ve seen over the past eight years, dual dynasties seem almost inevitable.
It’s never that simple, or at least, the people running the other 28 teams won’t let it be that simple without a fight. It’s going to be quite the opposite. The Spurs and Thunder have created an arms race. “We are used to long odds,” Morey said back in 2017. “If Golden State makes the odds longer, we might up our risk profile and get even more aggressive.”
In other words, you can expect a very active 2026 offseason trade market, and now that the playoffs have concluded, we can really start digging in on who might be available on that market. Below are the top 50 trade candidates for the summer of 2026.
These are not the 50 players likeliest to be traded. Rather, these are the players who will define the market, the ones who can make a substantial difference for the teams that acquire them or are necessary outgoing pieces for significant teams looking to improve. In short, these are the players to watch with the offseason now at hand. The 50 players are divided into nine tiers and listed in order of salary
1. Giannis Antetokounmpo, $58,456,566: Look, it’s either happening now, or it’s not happening at all. Antetokounmpo is extension-eligible in October. The Bucks have made it clear that Antetokounmpo will either be extended or traded this offseason, and if he doesn’t signal a willingness to extend quickly, the Bucks would prefer to get something done before the draft so they could use any picks they acquire to start rebuilding for the post-Antetokounmpo era.
2. Jaylen Brown, $57,078,728: Boston just won 56 games with Brown as its best player. The Celtics proceeded to blow a 3-1 first-round lead in a way that suggested this team is much further away from true contention than it hoped. Brown is Boston’s ticket to a significant addition, and some odd Twitch streams after the season didn’t exactly scream harmony between player and team. If he’s moved, it’s likely for another All-Star with a different skill set or a bounty of cheaper assets.
3. Kawhi Leonard, $50,300,000: No matter what the Aspiration investigation finds, the partnership between Leonard and the Clippers has reached its logical endpoint. They traded James Harden and Ivica Zubac for youth and flexibility, so cashing out on Leonard after an unusually healthy and productive season is the logical play. With only one year left on his contract, though, he’ll have some say in where he winds up.
4. Donovan Mitchell, $50,105,628: Mitchell just made the first conference finals of his career. If the goal is a championship, well, his noncompetitive loss to the Knicks suggests Cleveland still isn’t close. Mitchell can become a free agent in 2027 and, like Antetokounmpo, is entering an “extend or trade” offseason. Cleveland traded Darius Garland for James Harden in part to appease Mitchell, so the Cavaliers will probably do whatever it takes to convince Mitchell to stay. He has similarly expressed a desire to remain in Cleveland. Until that extension is actually signed, though, we can’t rule anything out. What is said publicly and what is intended privately don’t always align. If Cleveland is less certain about its ability to contend with Mitchell, or if Mitchell sees a more desirable situation elsewhere, anything should be treated as possible. That’s what happens when an all-in team gets embarrassed as thoroughly as the Cavaliers were against the Knicks.
5. Evan Mobley, $50,105,628: Mobley is about as good as supporting players get. A monster defender and a sorely underrated passer, he even shot well from 3-point range in the playoffs after a down year. But he hasn’t grown into the sort of alpha superstar Cleveland hoped he’d be. Antetokounmpo is that player, and if the Cavaliers think they need one, Mobley is their only realistic path there.
6. Jaden McDaniels, $26,200,000: McDaniels was one of the breakout players of the postseason. He’s young, cheap and on the same timeline as Anthony Edwards. But Tim Connelly is one of the most aggressive general managers in the NBA, and he tried for Giannis in February. Any hope Minnesota has surely involves McDaniels, but letting him go would surely be gutting for a team that has watched him grow into one of the NBA’s best two-way wings.
7. Paolo Banchero, $41,250,000: The fit with Franz Wagner has always been strange. Neither shoots consistently. The lineup data tends to favor Wagner-led units over groups both are a part of or that Banchero leads separately. The Magic just hired Sean Sweeney as their next head coach. He was an assistant in Milwaukee early in Antetokounmpo’s career, and the two were reportedly close. Orlando’s top decision-makers, John Hammond and Jeff Weltman, both worked in Milwaukee when Antetokounmpo was drafted in 2013. There are dots to be connected here if the Magic feel they are an Antetokounmpo away from contention.
8. Anthony Davis, $58,456,566: The Wizards traded for Davis in February. His quotes about the situation have seemed… less than enthusiastic. Now the Wizards have the No. 1 pick in the NBA Draft. They’re less dependent on a splashy name like Davis to carry them next season. Davis seems to want to play for a win-now team. Few can deal with his contract, and his injury history remains a concern.
9. Zion Williamson, $42,166,510: Speaking of injury histories, Williamson is coming off a remarkably healthy year. He’s also playing on a team that no longer needs him as rookie Derik Queen occupies a very similar role. The Pelicans have signaled a desire to keep Williamson, but for the right offer, given Queen’s presence, they’d be crazy not to consider a deal.
10. Kyrie Irving, $39,491,282: He’s 34, he’s expensive and he’s coming off a torn ACL, but if you need a playoff bucket, there aren’t many players out there better equipped to get you one than Irving. With Dallas operating on the Cooper Flagg timeline and short several draft picks, sending Irving to a win-now team makes plenty of sense.
11. Ja Morant, $42,166,510: The Grizzlies launched a rebuild by trading Desmond Bane and Jaren Jackson Jr. within the past year. They’ve tried to move Morant as well, but given his injuries, his salary, his off-court behavior, his defensive vulnerabilities and his limitations as a shooter, well, there are a lot of reasons why that hasn’t happened. Some team is going to talk itself into the idea that if the front office builds an offense around him, he can recapture the rim-pressure that once made him a star. The numbers don’t support that idea, but maybe a change of scenery could get him back on track.
12. Jalen Suggs, $32,400,000: The Magic are basically at the second apron for next season, and with Anthony Black’s rookie extension coming, the financial crunch in Orlando is about to become a problem. Suggs is one of the NBA’s very best defenders. He’s also played 60 games or shot above 34% on 3s just once in his career. He’s expensive, but his contract descends in annual value. If you can keep him healthy and get his shot right, he’s still a very impactful player.
13. Joel Embiid, $57,985,752: We saw the Embiid dilemma play out in fairly succinct fashion in the playoffs. He missed the first three games of the Boston series, then returned for Game 4 and was spectacular in the last three. Then he got hurt again against the Knicks and wasn’t the same. He’s still capable of All-NBA-level play. He also has three supermax years left on his contract. The 76ers would presumably love to escape those years if anyone wants to take a swing at the things he’s capable of when healthy.
14. Paul George, $54,126,380: The same principle applies to both Embiid and George: still productive, frequently hurt, old and expensive. George has only two years left on his deal, and as a wing, he’s much easier to fit onto most other rosters. It would still probably cost Philadelphia something to get off of him, but doing so would be easier than trading Embiid.
15. Domantas Sabonis, $45,472,000: The NBA has never been harder for centers who neither protect the basket nor make 3s, especially when those centers are making max money and coming off of unhealthy seasons. The Kings are presumably about to start a rebuild, so if a team with the shooting and defense to cover up his weaknesses wants him, he’s probably pretty gettable.
16. DeMar DeRozan, $25,740,000: He’s still productive, and only $10 million on his contract is guaranteed. But he’s going into his age-37 season, and the Kings will want to give his minutes and shots to younger players. He’ll likely be waived. It’s just a matter of who’s eating that $10 million guarantee before doing so.
17. Jakob Poeltl, $19,500,000: The Raptors signed him to a totally unnecessary extension last offseason, and when they needed movable salary at the deadline, found that the market liked him less than they did. He has three expensive years left on his deal and probably isn’t a starter on a good team anymore, but centers are in demand right now, so with an asset attached or as part of something bigger, Poeltl is plausibly movable.
18. Jarred Vanderbilt, $12,428,571: As one of the few guaranteed contracts left on the books for the Lakers, if they try to trade one or more of their three available first-round picks, Vanderbilt’s money will probably be in the deal. It’s not a huge contract, but he’s not offensively viable in the playoffs, so it will be treated as a clear negative.
19. De’Aaron Fox, $49,500,000: The Spurs traded for him before they knew they’d be able to draft Dylan Harper. Now Harper appears destined for stardom, and Fox’s four-year max extension kicks in this offseason. He had a disastrous Finals, and if he’s on the team next year, he really should be relegated to third-guard status behind Harper and Stephon Castle. The Spurs have signaled that they plan to keep him, and the market will be far cooler now than it was when they got him at the 2025 deadline, but after the series we just witnessed, it’s hard to imagine San Antonio isn’t at least open-minded.
20. Lauri Markkanen, $46,113,154: It would be downright cruel of Utah to hold Markkanen through a four-year rebuild only to trade him right when the light starts to shine at the end of the tunnel, but Danny Ainge is utterly devoid of sentiment. The Jazz are about to get expensive with new deals for Walker Kessler and Keyonte George looming. They have Jaren Jackson and Ace Bailey at forward, and could conceivably wind up with either AJ Dybantsa, Cam Boozer or Caleb Wilson in the draft, even if a guard, Darryn Peterson, is the favorite at No. 2. Don’t count on a Markkanen trade, but for the right offer, circumstances could create one.
21. Kevin Durant, $43,902,439: So… we never did get to the bottom of those burners, did we? The Rockets didn’t exactly look like a harmonious team last season. More to the point, Durant is 37 and ready to contend now. Houston has to decide if the present is even worth pursuing with the Thunder and Spurs so far ahead of the pack. The Rockets could likely recoup most of the value they paid for Durant a year ago if they wanted to reorient around their younger players.
22. Jamal Murray, $50,105,628: The Nuggets have confirmed that anyone but Nikola Jokić is gettable this offseason, but how many players on their roster are really desirable for other teams? Murray is the bait if they want to drastically rethink their roster. The Nuggets have a second-apron crunch and a virtually nonexistent defense to consider. There’s no single type of Murray trade to watch out for. A package could center around another star, youth, even picks that could be redirected. Everything is on the table for Denver, including running most of last year’s team back.
23. Franz Wagner, $41,754,690: The Magic were up 3-1 on the Pistons with Wagner. They lost three straight without him. Is the message there that Wagner is what makes their team viable, or that his injuries over the past two seasons make him unreliable? You could argue either side, but with such a dire financial situation, the Magic have to consider the most drastic options to improve upon last season’s disappointment.
24. Brandon Ingram, $40,000,000: The Raptors got Ingram to be the half-court scorer they needed next to Scottie Barnes. Then he disappeared in the playoffs before getting hurt, and Barnes soared without him. His impact has never matched his raw scoring or talent. If the Raptors go star-hunting this offseason, Poeltl and Immanuel Quickley have such negative contracts that Ingram or RJ Barrett almost have to be the matching salary. Barrett’s playoff performance keeps him off the list. Ingram didn’t earn that reprieve.
25. Rudy Gobert, $36,500,000: The Gobert trade created the most successful period in Timberwolves history. It’s also left Minnesota bereft of assets and stuck below the Thunder and the Spurs in the West. Gobert might need to go as part of a big win-now swing, or he might have to get traded for youth and assets the Wolves can use later, but Minnesota doesn’t currently have a championship-caliber team, and Gobert is one of the few real positives they can deal to try to build one.
26. Dejounte Murray, $32,785,071: He would’ve been a bad contract a year ago, and he’s still probably overpaid, but Murray looked great coming off a torn Achilles last season. The Pelicans could keep him, but you don’t spend the No. 7 overall pick on a guard like Jeremiah Fears to keep him in a timeshare with a $30 million veteran. The version of Murray we saw at the end of last year could really help the right, older team, though fitting in his salary would be tricky.
27. Aaron Gordon, $31,978,037: He’s somewhat similar to Suggs in that he’s an enormously impactful player when he’s healthy, but lately, he’s just rarely been healthy. It’s a shame, too, because the shooting he’s developed over the past two seasons has really rounded out his game. He’s probably more valuable to Denver given his remarkable chemistry with Jokić than he is to any other team, but Murray is probably the only other non-Jokiċ player on the roster with more trade value than Gordon. If they want to reshape the team, he’s an obvious candidate to get moved.
28. Jarrett Allen, $28,000,000: He’s coming off his best playoff run. Does Cleveland want to keep its two big men together next season? The Cavaliers haven’t derived the rebounding benefits of playing two bigs that most teams hope for, and their defense slipped this season. Allen-for-a-wing trades have been rumored for years, so if Cleveland thinks Mobley is ready to be a full-time center and wants to prioritize shooting and perimeter defense, exploring such moves now makes sense.
29. Michael Porter Jr., $40,806,150: The Nets have a bit of a track record when it comes to trading high-level forwards. Everyone tells them to deal those players at the deadline. They decline to do so, instead waiting for the perfect offer. Then they get it over the summer. It happened for Mikal Bridges. It happened for Cam Johnson. Will it happen for Porter? We’ll see. The Nets don’t control their first-round pick next year, so there’s no impetus to trade him, but if they’re blown away as they have been in the past, they’ll certainly listen to offers.
30. Trey Murphy, $27,000,000: The apple of the entire trade market’s eye. Athletic wings who can shoot and have affordable long-term contracts are worth their weight in gold. Offers here would be substantial, but to this point, New Orleans has resisted all overtures. At a certain point, it will get too hard to keep resisting. The Pelicans are far enough away that they are unlikely to benefit as much from that contract as teams closer to competing now.
31. Myles Turner, $26,584,164: Turner was signed specifically to fit alongside Antetokounmpo. If Antetokounmpo is gone, well, the tough year he just had, coupled with some of his inflammatory public comments, make an obvious trade candidate. Enough teams want a center who can shoot that the Bucks should be able to get off his pricey, long-term deal with relative ease if they want.
32. Nic Claxton, $23,320,738: There is, again, less impetus for the Nets to force a veteran trade without control of their 2027 pick, but given the league-wide center shortage at the moment, there will be a market for Claxton on his reasonable contract. If they’re going to continue to slow-play their rebuild, taking offers for Claxton now, while he’s in his prime, makes sense, and Brooklyn still has Day’Ron Sharpe and Danny Wolf in the building as replacements.
33. PJ Washington, $19,813,044: He’s only 27, so there aren’t really timeline concerns with Cooper Flagg. Wings are just in such short supply, and the Mavericks are so desperate for draft capital they can use later, that a win-now team will probably value Washington more than they do.
34. Daniel Gafford, $17,263,584: Dereck Lively is extension-eligible, and while his injuries complicate those negotiations, he’s still the center of the future here. Gafford is making starter money, and though the Mavericks can afford to pay two bigs for now, the new front office won’t have the same attachment to him that Nico Harrison did. If someone else wants Gafford as a starter, the Mavericks should be able to get strong value in return.
35. Herb Jones, $14,898,786: He’s among the most valuable defenders in the entire NBA and on the very short list of players who can truly guard anyone. It’s his durability (106 missed games over the past two seasons) and his offense (only one season as a league-average shooter) that raise question marks. Jones was once treated as something of a peer to Murphy in terms of value. Now, he’s dipped, especially in light of the problems offensively bereft wings like Dean Wade and Ausar Thompson have had in the 2026 playoffs. The market is probably closer to one or two first-rounders than three or four, so we’ll see if the Pelicans are comfortable moving him at a low point.
36. Naji Marshall, $9,428,571: A lower-cost Jones alternative. Marshall can defend several positions. He’s a deceptively useful ball-handler in an era that increasingly demands that out of supporting players. He’s not a star and probably shouldn’t start, but he can help anyone given his affordable contract. He’s never played on an especially reliable offense, so there’s room to believe he could improve as a shooter in a better system.
37. Isaiah Hartenstein, $28,500,000: The Thunder, as of now, are almost $40 million above the projected second apron for next season. They don’t have to duck it but, for a variety of reasons, doing so will probably be the goal. That will mean shedding salary. Hartenstein has a team option at $28.5 million. Ideally, the Thunder would decline that option and re-sign him to a longer-term deal at a lower rate. Thomas Sorber‘s torn ACL delayed his timetable as a possible replacement, so Hartenstein is still absolutely necessary here. If Hartenstein isn’t amenable to such an arrangement, though, they’d get meaningful draft capital for him in a trade.
38. Lu Dort, $18,222,222: Dort is the likeliest odd man out in Oklahoma City. He, like Hartenstein, has a team option. Unlike Hartenstein, the Thunder have enormous redundancy in his role. Between Cason Wallace, Alex Caruso and Jalen Williams, Oklahoma City has more than enough perimeter defense to survive without Dort. Almost anywhere else, though, he’d be by far the best perimeter defender on the team.
39. Isaiah Joe, $11,323,006: Joe, like Dort, is a redundancy risk. Oklahoma City added Jared McCain to play Joe’s role, and he’s playing it better than Joe is right now. McCain has two cheap years left on his rookie contract. Joe is still relatively affordable, especially to more normal teams, but if things are tight for the Thunder, he’s an area they can afford to trim.
40. Sam Hauser, $10,848,215: Hey, someone who doesn’t play for the Thunder! The Celtics have a $27.6 million trade exception thanks to the Anfernee Simons deal in February, but even if they shed some non-guaranteed money, they’re only looking at about $14 million in room below the luxury tax. The Celtics will prioritize staying below the tax line next season, as doing so will reset their repeater tax clock. Trading Hauser is a way for them to both use that trade exception to absorb an expensive player and stay below the tax line in the process.
41. Anthony Black, $10,106,316: Is Black a long-term starter in Orlando? It’s hard to imagine the answer is yes as long as Suggs, Bane, Wagner and Banchero are in place. He’ll presumably ask for starter money in extension negotiations and, with the second apron looming here, he’s unlikely to get it. If the Magic want to avoid potentially contentious negotiations, a proactive trade could do that. This team isn’t exactly short on intense defenders with shaky jump shots.
42. Aaron Wiggins, $9,224,300: The last obvious Thunder cost-cutting candidate, Wiggins is a viable two-way wing who could probably start on the right team. He’s just fallen too far down the Oklahoma City pecking order specifically to stick around at a salary substantially above the minimum, even if he’s probably worth more in a vacuum.
43. Jimmy Butler, $56,832,773: If Golden State wants to trade for a star, it basically has to be centered around Butler unless they’re giving up every other notable non-Stephen Curry player. Kawhi Leonard is the most common name mocked as one of their targets, but the Warriors are known for casting a wide net in trade talks. It’s not his fault he tore his ACL, but the Warriors may not be able to wait to get him back.
44. Jalen Green, $36,251,166: Neither Green nor Devin Booker is a point guard, making them a somewhat awkward fit together offensively. If the Suns want to pursue any sort of big name this offseason, with Morant being the one most commonly rumored, Green becomes the obvious matching salary even after his handful of impressive postseason performances.
45. Jerami Grant, $34,206,898: Portland has a new owner, and new owners often want to shake things up with a big trade. Trading Jrue Holiday rarely goes well for the teams giving him up, so if Portland swings big, Grant is the contract they’d probably prefer to include. With two expensive years left, teams likely wouldn’t be eager to take him, but Portland has enough draft capital to grease the wheels on almost anything.
46. Julius Randle, $33,333,334: Randle was a disaster in the playoffs a year after fading against Oklahoma City in the conference finals. The ship has sailed on him as a playoff-viable No. 2 option. The Timberwolves will probably go hunting for that sort of player, and many we’ve listed above fit the bill. Gobert is far more desirable as matching salary for Minnesota, but he’s too foundational to their identity to move if avoidable. More likely, the Wolves try to use Randle as the bulk of their matching salary if they’re trading for a big-name guard or scorer this offseason. Even if they don’t seek out another big name, Naz Reid is more than ready to step in as a starter, so a Randle trade makes a lot of sense.
47. Tyler Herro, $33,000,000: He’s been in trade rumors basically his entire career. The Heat determined late last season that they simply couldn’t play Herro and Norm Powell together. Powell is a free agent, whereas Herro can be traded. If the Heat take a big swing, expect them to ship Herro out and merely retain Powell as their lone defensively vulnerable guard.
48. Miles Bridges, $22,826,087: The Hornets had a dominant starting five after their 4-14 stretch, but the three-man perimeter core of LaMelo Ball, Kon Knueppel and Brandon Miller is untouchable. If someone is going to be imported to improve the perimeter defense, Bridges is the odd man out. If the Hornets are going to match salary on a high-profile center, there’s a good chance Bridges is in the deal. He fits their up-tempo style well, but Charlotte’s defensive needs are big enough to put even big-name starters on the table in trades.
49. Donte DiVincenzo, $12,535,000: His torn Achilles tendon was a brutal break, especially given his history. His health cost him a hefty rookie extension from Milwaukee years ago, and after getting his career back on track, he was in line for a big extension in Minnesota. Now he’ll likely miss next season, and the Timberwolves can’t afford to wait to get him back. He’s a salary that could be used in a deal, and if some team is in a better position to be patient with his recovery, he could be a bargain if he’s willing to tack another year or two onto his contract for some long-term security.
50. Moses Moody, $12,500,000: Another injury case. He tore his patellar tendon during the season, but he’s also one of the few mid-sized contracts Golden State has to trade with. The Warriors need a guard who can defend with De’Anthony Melton also potentially leaving in free agency, but we know the priority here will be a star addition, so if Moody is needed to make such a deal possible, he’s a potential casualty of Golden Sta
By Matt Norlander of cbssports.com contributing
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — On Tuesday afternoon in northern New Jersey, one of the planet’s most famous athletes did what all the greatest do so often: deliver when they’re expected to, even when the opponent is doing everything it can to prevent it from happening.
It’s an exhilarating thing to watch, made all the more beautiful to see on a flawless 75-degree day alongside more than 80,000 other witnesses.
Kylian Mbappé is already one of the game’s elites, and yet there’s still so much more of his phenomenal career to go. It’s easy to forget as he embarks on his third World Cup (with a winner’s trophy and runners-up medal to his name already) that he’s still only 27 years old. That’s what makes this, right now, such a special moment for the World Cup on American soil. On Tuesday, he promptly announced his return to the grandest stage in soccer in emphatic fashion, putting on a second-half showing that reminded us yet again that the best of the best in every sport just have that knack for finding a way to Do Their Thing, leaving us slack-jawed as they change what’s hoped for into what is.
Mbappé deftly scooted home the first goal of France’s game against Senegal in the 66th minute, breaking the seal in Group I’s first match. But it was the balletic blitzer’s second goal that boomed home from around 30 yards out in the game’s final minute of extra time, to make it 3-1 France, that sets him apart from most of the rest of the sport.
After Senegal scored a late goal in stoppage time to make the game 2-1, it took Mbappé less than two minutes to end the matter with the World Cup’s most bombastic goal through the first six days of this 48-team tournament. His beautiful clinching boot was a thunderclap message to the rest of the World Cup field and doubly set the tone for France in its first game of what’s hoped to be a strut to the World Cup final in this very stadium a little more than a month from now, on July 19.
As someone who attended both, I can also say: Tuesday’s showing was the best performance at MetLife Stadium since Oasis’ epic two-nighter here last summer. On this day, Mbappé would not acquiesce.
It was riveting for the spectacle, but special for the historic element. Mbappé’s two goals lifted him atop the all-time French table. His lifetime tally of goals for the French national team now logs at 58, placing him above France’s longtime stalwart, Olivier Giroud for most in that country’s history.
Mbappé is also, now, at 14 World Cup goals, tied for third-most all-time with Gerd Müller and only trailing Ronaldo’s 15 (for now) and Miroslav Klose’s 18. He’s got an outstanding chance to hold the record by the start of the knockout stage, let alone at the end of the tournament … if Lionel Messi doesn’t relent. The Argentinian legend matched Mbappé less than six hours later on Tuesday by dropping two goals in the late game against Algeria in Kansas City.
And as for the scenes? If you have the means to attend at least one World Cup match, you have to. As I made my way through the crowds on the concourse level and into the seats, I saw kits from at least a dozen countries. In what’s fast becoming a running theme, Mexico was particularly prominent here. But of course, the crowd was heavily draped in blue, red and white. The French showed up early, taking over MetLife Stadium.
I typically cover basketball games for CBS Sports, but living in the northeast, I’ve been to a handful of NFL games as a fan at both MetLife Stadium and its predecessor, Giants Stadium. I was in the stands on a Sunday night in 2006 when Chicago Bears speedster Devin Hester brought back the second-most famous return of his Hall of Fame career, a 108-yard house call after a missed field goal.
I remember the roar and awe of the crowd on that night as it watched the most brilliant return man in NFL history tap into his greatness.
That roar and awe was even greater on Tuesday, and it was like that not just because of the World Cup — but because of Mbappé. The event’s return to the United States for the first time in 32 years is going to reignite this country’s passion not just for soccer (potentially on a level that’s never been seen here), but for the epic theater that this incredible global event will provide — and its stars will make it marquee.
Mbappé has a keen sense for the moment. France got off to a terrible start, only managing one shot on goal in the first half to Senegal’s five.
By the game’s end, it was 11-6 in France’s favor. The expected goal battle tilted toward the favorite, with France pulling ahead 1.79 to 0.56. Despite a slow start, France was clearly the dominant side by match’s end.
xg-race-france-vs-senegal.png
CBS Sports
That’s because France is arguably the most loaded team in this event. They are stacked with attackers. They can sub in some of the most gifted players in the world. Bradley Barcola of Champions League winners Paris Saint-Germain scored France’s second, the other substiute for France, Premier League runner-up Rayan Cherki. While other highly rated countries have been a tad sluggish to start, with other top-tier favorites Brazil and Spain dropping points, Les Bleus are immediately off and booming.
It all starts with Mbappé, whose celebrity reach was palpable around the stadium from start to finish. The crowd’s collective response every time the ball hit his foot was like a jerk to the senses. He practically tilts the field while simultaneously flaring your attention. There is a magnetism to him that few athletes carry.