Solo Ball, No. 3 UConn blow past Columbia with first-half surge

Solo Ball scored a team-high 23 points to lead No. 3 UConn to an 89-62 win over Columbia on Monday night in Storrs, Conn.

Ball and Alex Karaban (20 points, six rebounds, four assists) combined for 5 of the 10 3-pointers for the Huskies (3-0), who shot 56.6% from the floor and led by as many as 29.

The UConn lead was 50-27 at halftime before Tarris Reed Jr. scored 13 of his 19 points after the break while pulling down eight rebounds and recording two blocks and three steals.

Jayden Ross (10 points) rounded out double-digit scorers for UConn, which has won 36 straight non-conference home games including three in a row to begin this season.

Miles Franklin and Blair Thompson scored 10 points apiece, and Mason Ritter pulled down seven rebounds for Columbia (1-1).

Columbia trailed just 14-13 after an early 6-2 lead on the strength of back-to-back 3-pointers by Thompson and Zine Eddine Bedri.

The middle of that span featured the first key swing in UConn's direction though, with Karaban scoring seven straight points to begin an 8-0 spurt.

A 14-0 run across six-plus minutes changed the game for good, giving the hosts a 28-13 lead with 6:30 left in the half. Ross hit two threes during the segment, including a transition shot to trigger a timeout for Columbia, which was in the midst of an 0-for-10 stretch.

After the visitors sank two of the next three baskets, the Huskies extended their lead to 24 with another double-digit run of 11 straight points. Three UConn players nailed a 3-pointer before Karaban made a steal and dunk in transition to extend the advantage to 41-17.

The Huskies were 6-of-8 at the foul line in the first four minutes of the second half. Reed highlighted that stretch with a tough driving finish.

Just past the halfway point of the half, Franklin scored consecutive Columbia buckets including a two-handed, fastbreak dunk with 7:49 left, temporarily bringing the deficit inside 20 points at 69-50.

Ball's steal-and-score helped a late 10-2 run back UConn's way. He banged in a 3-pointer for a 29-point Husky lead with 2:25 left.

--Field Level Media

Solo Ball, No. 3 UConn blow past Columbia with first-half surge

Solo Ball scored a team-high 23 points to lead No. 3 UConn to an 89-62 win over Columbia on Monday night in Storrs, ...
Rob Gronkowski smiles and yells while wearing his old Patriots uniform. He is surrounded by others in Patriots gear

Rob Gronkowskispent nine years as a member of the New England Patriots.

On Wednesday, that stint will become nine years and one day as thefun-loving and ever-popular tight endwill sign a one-day contract with the Patriots so he can officially retire as a member of the team with which he won three ofhis four Super Bowl rings.

"I am signing a one-day contract with the Patriots this week coming up to retire as a Patriot and be a Patriot for life," the "Fox NFL Sunday" analyst announced during this week's broadcast.

Are@RobGronkowskiand@TomBradygoing for the Bucs or Pats today?!Gronk says he's rooting for New England ahead of signing his one-day contract this week to retire a Patriot! 🙌pic.twitter.com/OUOxnOfhwy

— FOX Sports: NFL (@NFLonFOX)November 9, 2025

The next day, the Patriots revealed when the ceremonial signing would take place.

"The greatest tight end in @NFL history is retiring a Patriot!" the team posted Mondayon X. "Watch @RobGronkowski sign his one-day contract this Wednesday at 12:15 PM LIVE on Patriots digital & social."

A second-round draft pick for New England in 2010, Gronkowski quickly became a key and beloved member of a Patriots dynasty that was already going strong under coach Bill Belichick and quarterback Tom Brady. He retired after the 2018 season but returned to the NFL in 2020 to join Brady with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. Two seasons and one Super Bowl victory later, Gronk retired again.

Last summer, theidea of Gronkowski re-retiring with the Patriotswas floated publicly by Susan Hurley, the founder and president of the CharityTeams fundraising firm for nonprofits. Speaking at a ribbon-cutting ceremony forGronk Playgroundin Boston, Hurley threw in a personal plea toward Patriots owner Robert Kraft, who was also in attendance.

Read more:Rob Gronkowski says he will sign a one-day contract to retire (again) as a Patriot

"Can we just make it official and sign [Gronkowski] for a day so he can retire as a Patriot?" Hurley asked. "What do you say?"

Kraft and Gronkowski both indicated their approval in the moment, with Gronkowski telling reporters that Hurley was the spark behind the idea of his ceremonial signing.

"The reason we're really going to do that is because of Susan Hurley," Gronkowski said. "She wants to see that happen and has been dreaming about it happening for a while."

Hurley died Nov. 1 at age 62 after a long battle with ovarian cancer.

Patriots spokesperson Stacey James told The Times in a statement that the Patriots were initially planning on honoring Gronkowski's "legendary contributions to our franchise and the bond he shares with Patriots Nation" with a ceremonial contract upon his induction to the team's Hall of Fame. Gronkowski is eligible for that honor starting next year.

However, James said, "we chose to expedite the honor when Susan Hurley, a former Patriots cheerleader and dear friend of Rob's, made it her dying wish to see Rob retire a Patriot. Her love for the team and for Rob was deeply moving, and we were looking forward to hosting her for the announcement. Sadly, she passed earlier this month. While she won't be present, her presence will surely be felt."

Gronkowski posted a lengthy tribute to Hurley last week on social media.

"We lost a good one over the weekend,"Gronkowski wrote. "Susan Hurley has known my family and I for a long time, she became a good friend of ours and supported our foundation more than words can express over the years.

Read more:Chargers make Aaron Rodgers look like a 41-year-old QB in defense-driven win

"But even beyond our team, Susan took care of so many charity teams for the Boston Marathon and their bibs, helping raise so much money to give back to charities. She always did it out of love, her love of the game, her love of people, her love of helping others, and her love for the kids.

"She always had a smile on her face and the utmost positivity, staying an inspiration for runners and charities every single day, even while she was fighting cancer. Her strength and resilience were truly inspirational, and she will be greatly missed.

"Without Susan, there would be no Gronk Playground. I'm thankful that her legacy can live on through the playground, making a huge impact not only on all the Gronk Nation Youth Foundation kids she helped, but all the kids she continues to inspire every day."

Get the best, most interesting and strangest stories of the day from the L.A. sports scene and beyond from our newsletter The Sports Report.

This story originally appeared inLos Angeles Times.

Rob Gronkowski will be 'a Patriot for life' after signing one-day contract this week

Rob Gronkowskispent nine years as a member of the New England Patriots. On Wednesday, that stint will become nine years and one day as th...
Heisman moment? Indiana's Fernando Mendoza now co-favorite

Fernando Mendoza's "Heisman moment" may have come with his game-winning touchdown pass to Omar Cooper Jr. in Indiana's last-minute victory over Penn State on Saturday.

The dramatic win pulled Mendoza even with Ohio State counterpart Julian Sayin at BetMGM, where the rival Big Ten quarterbacks are the co-Heisman Trophy favorites at +175. Sayin is still the slight +165 favorite at DraftKings ahead of Mendoza at +185.

The pair has separated from Alabama's Ty Simpson and Texas A&M's Marcel Reed, who have the next shortest odds at both books.

HEISMAN TROPHY ODDS*

PLAYER, POS, TEAM, OPEN, WEEK 11, CURRENT

Fernando Mendoza, QB, Indiana (+5500), (+225), (+175)

Julian Sayin, QB, Ohio State (+2000), (+175), (+175)

Ty Simpson, QB, Alabama (+5500) (+350), (+550)

Marcel Reed, QB, Texas A&M (+4000), (+750), (+750)

Jeremiah Smith, WR, Ohio State (+1300), (+4000), (+2500)

Diego Pavia, QB, Vanderbilt (+12500), (+2500), (+2500)

Gunner Stockton, QB, Georgia (+3500), (+2000), (+3000)

Jeremiyah Love, RB, Notre Dame (+5000), (+4000), (+4000)

It has been a meteoric rise for Mendoza, who opened at +5500 at BetMGM. He began his rise rapidly and has lingered around the top list of favorites for the better part of the past two months. Sayin also opened as a longshot at +2000 but has steadily climbed while guiding Ohio State to a 9-0 record.

Simpson has spent time at the top of the Heisman list as well, but currently sits at +550 at BetMGM, where he is the book's biggest liability. Simpson leads all players with 16.1% of the money backing him to win the Heisman. Second is Ohio State wide receiver Jeremiah Smith, who has drawn 12.6%. While Smith has the shortest odds among non-quarterback, he currently sits as a +2500 longshot along with Vanderbilt quarterback Diego Pavia.

There are now only eight players with odds shorter than +10000 at the book.

Texas quarterback Arch Manning, who began the season as the Heisman favorite, is still a +25000 longshot despite leading the Longhorns back into the Top 10 of the AP Top 25 poll this week.

--Field Level Media

Heisman moment? Indiana's Fernando Mendoza now co-favorite

Fernando Mendoza's "Heisman moment" may have come with his game-winning touchdown pass to Omar Cooper ...
Aaron Rodgers' off night leaves Steelers clinging to AFC North lead as Ravens heat up

PITTSBURGH (AP) —Aaron Rodgershas been doing this for a long time. A really, really long time.

Still, there have been few nights during his Hall of Fame-caliber career more frustrating than what he and thePittsburgh Steelersendured in a25-10 lossto the Los Angeles Chargers on Sunday that trimmed his team's AFC North lead to one game over theresurgent Baltimore Ravens.

"I was just a little bit off," Rodgers said after completing 16 of 31 passes for 161 yards with a touchdown and two picks.

In more ways than one. His vaunted accuracy abandoned him, never more so than when he missed a streaking DK Metcalf in the first quarter for what would have been a touchdown, had not Rodgers overthrown the 6-foot-4 wide receiver by a good 5 yards.

More startling, however, was his lack of feel inside the pocket. The four-time MVP's ability to float between defenders as he scans downfield is one of the reasons he's lasted 21 seasons. Yet he seemed surprised when he looked over his right shoulder in the first quarter and saw the Chargers' Khalil Mack closing in. Rodgers stumbled trying to escape, bobbled the ball and then fell on it in the end zone for a safety.

"I should have just thrown the ball at someone's feet there," he said.

Rodgers has long understood that when things don't go well for a team, the quarterback shoulders a chunk of the blame, regardless of how well he plays.

This was one of the times when it wasn't just window dressing, though — as coach Mike Tomlin pointed out afterward — there was plenty of blame to go around.

"We certainly got to be better," Tomlin said.

The Steelers don't have a choice if they want to avoid another late-season collapse like the one they endured a year ago, when 10-3 turned into 10-7 and then a hasty exit from the playoffs.

While it's true that the 41-year-old Rodgers looked like the oldest active player in the league for the first time all season, it's also true that his play during the opening eight weeks is one of the main reasons Pittsburgh is atop an underperforming AFC North.

Rodgers is on pace to threaten Ben Roethlisberger's single-season franchise record of 34 touchdown passes set in 2018, and his decision-making has helped the Steelers become more efficient in the red zone.

Yet three times in the last month, Pittsburgh has been given the national spotlight with a chance to prove that this year's group is different than the "pretty good but nowhere near great" teams that have become the franchise's norm over the last decade.

All three times, they've failed. The defense came up empty againstJoe Flacco and the Bengals, the entire teamturtled in the second halfof a loss to Green Bay, and the offense disappeared in the mid-autumn Southern California twilight.

Yes, the Steelers have wins over division leadersIndianapolisandNew England. Both of those victories, however, came under a very specific set of circumstances. The defense kept forcing turnovers (11 combined), and Rodgers and the offense converted most of those mistakes into touchdowns.

That didn't happen against the Chargers. In fact, not much happened at all for an offense that hasn't topped 300 yards in a game in going on a month.

Just before the end of his postgame media session Sunday, Rodgers — who lives in Malibu, California — was asked about it being perhaps his final game in the Golden State. Rodgers pointed out that it could be his final game in Southern California, a nod to the Super Bowl being in Northern California in February.

The Steelers have shown the briefest of flashes of being able to make a run at it. To those flashes into something more, all involved need to be better.

The quarterback who didn't look like the Rodgers of old, but merely an old Rodgers on Sunday night, perhaps most of all.

What's working

Getting Jaylen Warren the ball.

Two months after signing a contract extension, Warren has more than upheld his end of the bargain. After a sluggish start, Warren is averaging 4.2 yards per carry on the season, including nearly 5.0 yards per carry over his last four games.

The issue might be that Warren isn't getting the ball enough. He's had 20 touches or more just twice this season.

What needs help

Play execution on first and second down. One of the main reasons the Steelers are 26th in the league in third-down conversion rate (36%) has been their inability get in manageable third-down situations. Only one of Pittsburgh's first nine third-down attempts — all of which failed — was less than 4 yards.

When outside linebacker Nick Herbig thrived while subbing for an injured Alex Highsmith earlier this season, it was fair to wonder if Highsmith's days as Robin to T.J. Watt's Batman were numbered.

Obviously not. Highsmith has four sacks, a pass defensed and a forced fumble over his last two games.

The Steelers opted not to search for an upgrade at wide receiver at the trade deadline, choosing to hold on to one of the higher-round draft picks (third or better) they would have had to part with to land one.

While it was a sound business decision — and the club did sign two-time Super Bowl winner Marquez Valdes-Scantling to the practice squad last week — the play of Calvin Austin III (who had a pass smack off his hands for an interception) and the rest of the group behind Metcalf did little to provide confidence this year's team can get by without another playmaker.

CB Darius Slay exited with a concussion, adding the six-time Pro Bowler to a lengthy injury list for the secondary that includes S DeShon Elliott, S Jabrill Peppers, and S Chuck Clark. Veteran LG Isaac Seumalo sat out with a pectoral injury.

21 — The percentage of third downs the Steelers have converted (7 of 33) over the last three games.

Hope for a rebound this weekend when the well-rested Bengals visit Acrisure Stadium.

AP NFL:https://apnews.com/hub/nfl

Aaron Rodgers' off night leaves Steelers clinging to AFC North lead as Ravens heat up

PITTSBURGH (AP) —Aaron Rodgershas been doing this for a long time. A really, really long time. Still, there ha...
MLB, sportsbooks cap bets on individual pitches in response to pitch rigging scandal

Major League Baseball said its authorized gaming operators will cap bets on individual pitches at $200 and exclude them from parlays, a day aftertwo Cleveland Guardianswere indicted and accused of rigging pitches at the behest of gamblers.

MLB said Monday the limits were agreed to by sportsbook operators representing more than 98% of the U.S. betting market. The league said in a statement that pitch-level bets on outcomes of pitch velocity and of balls and strikes "present heightened integrity risks because they focus on one-off events that can be determined by a single player and can be inconsequential to the outcome of the game."

"The risk on these pitch-level markets will be significantly mitigated by this new action targeted at the incentive to engage in misconduct," the league said. "The creation of a strict bet limit on this type of bet, and the ban on parlaying them, reduces the payout for these markets and the ability to circumvent the new limit."

MLB said the agreement included Bally's, Bet365, BetMGM, Bet99, Betr, Caesars, Circa, DraftKings, 888, FanDuel, Gamewise, Hard Rock, Intralot, Jack Entertainment, Mojo, Northstar Gaming, Oaklawn, Penn, Pointsbet, Potawatomi, Rush Steet and Underdog.

Cleveland pitchers Emmanuel Clase and Luis Ortiz were indicted Sunday in U.S. District Court in Brooklyn on charges they took bribes from sports bettors to throw certain types of pitches. They were charged with wire fraud conspiracy, honest services wire fraud conspiracy, conspiracy to influence sporting contests by bribery and money laundering conspiracy. The indictment says they helped two unnamed gamblers in the Dominican Republic win at least $460,000 on bets placed on the speed and outcome of certain pitches, including some that landed in the dirt.

Ortiz's lawyer, Chris Georgalis, said in a statement that his client was innocent and "has never, and would never, improperly influence a game — not for anyone and not for anything." A lawyer for Clase, Michael J. Ferrara, said his client "has devoted his life to baseball and doing everything in his power to help his team win. Emmanuel is innocent of all charges and looks forward to clearing his name in court."

The U.S. Supreme Court in 2018ruled the Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act of 1992 was unconstitutional, allowing states to legalize sports betting.

Ortiz appeared Monday in federal courtin Boston. U.S. Magistrate Judge Donald L. Cabell granted Ortiz his release on the condition he surrender his passport, restrict his travel to the Northeast U.S. and post a $500,000 bond, $50,000 of it secured. Ortiz was ordered to avoid contact with anyone who could be viewed as a victim, witness or co-defendant.

Last month, more than 30 people, including Portland Trail Blazers head coach and Basketball Hall of FamerChauncey Billupsand Miami Heat guardTerry Rozier,were arrested for their alleged roles in a purported scheme for gamblers to use inside information.

Billups' attorney, Chris Heywood, issued a statement denying the allegations and Rozier's lawyer, Jim Trusty, said in a statement his client is "not a gambler" and "looks forward to winning this fight."

AP MLB:https://apnews.com/hub/MLB

MLB, sportsbooks cap bets on individual pitches in response to pitch rigging scandal

Major League Baseball said its authorized gaming operators will cap bets on individual pitches at $200 and exclude them ...

 

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