Inglewood, CA, Sunday, November 30, 2025 - Los Angeles Chargers quarterback Justin.

ChargersquarterbackJustin Herbertunderwent a surgical procedure Monday to stabilize a fracture in his non-throwing hand and his status for next Monday night's game against Philadelphia will be determined later in the week, the team announced.

Herbert sustained the injury in the first quarter ofSunday's victory over Las Vegaswhen the back of his left hand apparently collided with the helmet of Raiders safety Jeremy Chinn. The quarterback threw a touchdown pass the play after the collision in question.

After that, he left the game briefly and had a cast applied in the locker room. He soon returned to the game and wound up leading three more touchdown drives, operating exclusively out of the shotgun formation because taking snaps under center is extremely difficult with a cast.

Coach Jim Harbaughcited Herbert's toughness and ability to keep throwing accurate passes after the injury.

"He's almost otherworldly when it comes to that," the coach said. "There's huge respect for that."

The Chargers said Herbert's return to play is considered "day to day," although the quarterback said after the game that the only way he wouldn't play is if the team doctor told him it would be "very unwise" to do so.

One issue that could be a concern is handing off the football, especially on runs to the right side when a quarterback typically would be using his left hand.

"I think ball security is paramount," Herbert said after the game. "I think I did a good enough job of that today in the pocket. Just get involved with the running backs. So it's just stuff to work on."

Read more:Chargers sweep Raiders, but Justin Herbert's hand injury could complicate playoff push

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This story originally appeared inLos Angeles Times.

Justin Herbert considered day to day after undergoing hand surgery

ChargersquarterbackJustin Herbertunderwent a surgical procedure Monday to stabilize a fracture in his non-throwing hand and his status for...
Will Stein grew up 'die-hard' Kentucky fan. Now, Oregon OC will coach Wildcats, report

Fewer than 24 hours after firing 13-year head coachMark Stoops, Kentuckyreportedly named his replacement Dec. 1.

Oregon offensive coordinator Will Stein, a Louisville alum, will be taking the reins in Lexington as a first-time head coach,per a report from ESPN.He will take over a 5-7 Wildcats team that just lost 41-0 to Stein's alma mater, as he attempts to right the ship.

Stoops was the all-time winningest coach at Kentucky, racking up 82 wins. He barely finished his career there above .500, going 82-80 in that span. Kentucky missed bowl games in consecutive years for the first time in 10 seasons, exacerbating the urgency to show Stoops the door.

Why was Mark Stoops fired at Kentucky?Buyout, record for former Wildcats coach

Virginia Tech hired James Franklin as its next head coach. Franklin was fired earlier this season at Penn State. He replaces Brent Pry, who was fired midseason by the Hokies. Oklahoma State hired Eric Morris from North Texas to be the Cowboys next head coach. Morris replaces longtime OSU coach Mike Gundy, who was fired earlier this season. Colorado State hired Jim Mora Jr. as its new head coach. Mora led UConn to back-to-back nine-win seasons and replaces Jay Norvell, who was fired midseason. Oregon State hired Alabama co-offensive coordinator JaMarcus Shephard as its head coach, replacing Trent Bray who was fired after an 0-7 start this season.

These college football coaches are on the move. See who found new home

The timing of firing Stoops was puzzling, with Jon Sumrall accepting the Florida job earlier on Nov. 30. Sumrall, who played at Kentucky, was a popular name being tied to the job as an alum. But the subsequent timing of Stein's hiring indicates he was a priority target for Kentucky athletic director Mitch Barnhart and the Kentucky brass.

Oregon is preparing to likely host a first round game at Autzen Stadium in the College Football Playoff. However, in another interesting wrinkle, Stein will get to do what Lane Kiffin could not for Mississippi: coach his 2025 team with a new destination in 2026 set,per Thamel.

The seeds for Stein to Kentucky have been cultivated for over a year.

"I grew up a die-hard Cats fan, actually. My dad played there, so I went to every game at Commonwealth Stadium. I grew up in really SEC football,"Stein said ahead of the 2024 season, per On3.

Now, Stein will have an opportunity to prove he can thrive in SEC football as well, as he looks to do what Clark Lea has done at Vanderbilt and help one of the more difficult jobs in the conference turn things around.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Kentucky to hire Oregon offensive coordinator Will Stein as new head coach

Will Stein grew up 'die-hard' Kentucky fan. Now, Oregon OC will coach Wildcats, report

Fewer than 24 hours after firing 13-year head coachMark Stoops, Kentuckyreportedly named his replacement Dec. 1. ...
Inside Lane Kiffin's villainous exit from Ole Miss, hero's arrival at LSU

BATON ROUGE, LA – Verge Ausberry had secured the greatest booty ofcollege football's coaching carousel, but LSU's athletic director still had to travel behind enemy lines to retrieve it.

No trouble, right? Fly into Mississippi. Pick up the package. Fly out.

Ha. Nothing abouthiring Lane Kiffincould ever be so easy.

The initial plan had been that LSU's plane would pick up Kiffin from the Tupelo airport, 50 miles from the University of Mississippi. At least that would provide some distance between the LSU envoy and theOle Miss fans furious by Kiffin's heel turn.

Once aboard the plane, Ausberry learned plans had changed. They'd be flying into Oxford, ground zero itself, to secure LSU's prize.

"I said, 'We're goingwhere? Oxford?They'll be shooting missiles at us,'" Ausberry said.

News media arrive before a press conference by LSU's new head coach Lane Kiffin at South Stadium Club at Tiger Stadium in Baton Rouge on Dec. 1, 2025. A sign is seen before a press conference by LSU new head coach Lane Kiffin at South Stadium Club at Tiger Stadium in Baton Rouge on Dec. 1, 2025. LSU new head coach Lane Kiffin is introduced at South Stadium Club at Tiger Stadium in Baton Rouge on Dec. 1, 2025. LSU new head coach Lane Kiffin speaks at South Stadium Club at Tiger Stadium in Baton Rouge on Dec. 1, 2025. LSU new head coach Lane Kiffin speaks at South Stadium Club at Tiger Stadium in Baton Rouge on Dec. 1, 2025.

See Lane Kiffin's LSU introductory press conference in Baton Rouge

No missiles fired, butOle Missstudents and fans who gathered at the airport gave the LSU plane and anyone who boarded it a middle-finger salute.

As Ausberry waited for Kiffin to arrive, the pilots asked him if he wanted to deplane and use the restroom.

"I said, 'That's OK. I'll hold it,'" Ausberry said.

Smart thinking.

Kiffin had concerns of his own, and why shouldn't he? He'd made his choice to leave Ole Miss on the playoff's doorstep, but he still had to get out of Dodge.

Ole Miss had hired Kiffin when powerhouse schools like LSU didn't want him. The Rebels had given Kiffin the opportunity to relaunch his career inside the SEC and rebuild his image.

The relationship became gloriously beneficial for both parties for six seasons, but Kiffin couldn't resist the itch to coach another blue-blood. He left Ole Miss at the worst possible moment — with the Rebels on the verge of their first playoff appearance.

As Kiffin made for his exit route, Ole Miss fans wanted to give him the sendoff he'd earned.

Kiffin claims people tried "to run us off the road" on his drive to the airport. Kiffin had his son, Knox, in the vehicle with him. Kiffin, concerned for their safety, says he called a cop friend for help.

At the Oxford airport, fans were lined up at the fence line, waiting to jeer Kiffin and flip him the bird. Not your ordinary job change, though perhaps a bit familiar for Kiffin.

Even after Kiffin boarded the plane, he wondered to himself: Had he made the right choice to leave?

And then he landed in Baton Rouge.

A king's welcome awaited. Fans cheered and hollered his name. The savior had arrived. Kiffin noted the time. He'd been in town for six minutes.

"There's the (LSU) fans, just all of them out there at the airport, and their excitement and their passion … as we're going to the office, and you go by Tiger Stadium, and it's lit up, and you are like, I absolutely made the right decision," Kiffin said, "and (those bad feelings) all went away."

This is how it goes in the South's college football hotbeds. They'll worship you when you arrive. If you win big, they'll worship you more. You'll become more than a king. You'll be agod. What a power trip. Just ask Nick Saban.

If you fail, they'll holler for your firing.

And, buddy, if you leave for a hated rival, well, good luck getting out of town. Because, that's not just a job change. That's betrayal.

One town's traitor becomes another's hero.

"That's the SEC," Kiffin said. "I've been around it long enough to know that, and it's just the passion of the SEC."

Kiffin admitted that hearing what Ole Miss fans said as he left and seeing their reaction hurt him. It got to him. He also took it as a compliment: If they were that incensed at him leaving, that must have meant he'd done the job well while he was there.

When Kiffin returns to Ole Miss next season on the LSU sideline, it'll be the hottest game on that weekend's calendar. Don't forget to bring the mustard, Rebels.

Much has been said and written lately about what Kiffin's exit means for his legacy. At Ole Miss, his name is forever tarnished, but I'm not sure Kiffin's legacy is all that changed, on the whole.

Thisis his legacy. He's arguably the most polarizing figure in college football history.

Years ago, he left a great SEC job in the middle of the night but not undetected. Tennessee fans gathered in protest and literally burned objects in the street.

He's the lightning rod with enough charisma and talent to make everyone in one state love him, even as everyone in another hates him after he twisted the knife on them.

Of course Kiffin would become the first college football coach to ever leave his team and not coach it in the playoff. And for anyone who thought a coach would never do that, and skip out on a chance to win a national championship, well, you've never met Kiffin. He's the rebel who doesn't bend to norms.

He likes to say he doesn't just think outside the box. He builds a new box.

Stay and pursue a national championship at Ole Miss? That would sound nice to some, but, sorry, that's Baton Rouge calling. Kiffin would have liked to accept the LSU job and have still coached Ole Miss in the playoff. When Ole Miss brass made him choose, he cast his lot with LSU.

And when more coaches repeat this move in the future, Kiffin will take pride in knowing he was the pioneer. He steamrolled the path for all the renegades who'll inevitably follow.

You'll hear plenty about how this moment — a coach leaving one team on the playoff's doorstep to move up the perceived food chain — is awful for the sport.

Is it? Or is it the epitome of this sport.

These past 48 hours and the scenes emanating from Oxford and Baton Rouge could be a dang infomercial for college football, especially within the SEC, or at least a YouTube tutorial for those who don't understand this zany enterprise.

College football's never been about the postseason, and certainly not about the College Football Playoff. Heck, the playoff is younger than Kiffin's youngest son.

College football peaks in the fall, when the rivalries burn hottest, when fans storm the field seconds after an upset ends, not worrying about who they might trample along the way, when games radiate from college towns, inside ancient 100,000-seat cathedrals instead of the glitzy NFL stadiums that hijack the games in the playoff.

No matter how big the bureaucrats make the playoff, college football isn't about the playoff.

It's about loving your team, hating your rivals, worshipping your heroes while you revile the heels.

At the heart of college football are the rivalries that burn as hot as the sun.

And at the center of those rivalries, are the coaches.

Even as college athletes celebrate more power and recognition than they've ever had before, the coaches are college football's stars in ways they are not in the pro leagues.

And there's never quite been a coach like Kiffin. Everyone feels some type of way about him, and they'll feel those feelings deeper after these past three days.

In Oxford, their former king disgusts them now. That's fine. He'll be feted at LSU.

Blake Toppmeyeris the USA TODAY Network's senior national college football columnist. Email him atBToppmeyer@gannett.comand follow him on X@btoppmeyer.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Inside Lane Kiffin's villainous exit from Ole Miss, hero's arrival at LSU

Inside Lane Kiffin's villainous exit from Ole Miss, hero's arrival at LSU

BATON ROUGE, LA – Verge Ausberry had secured the greatest booty ofcollege football's coaching carousel, but LSU'...
USA Gymnastics and Olympic sports watchdog failed to stop coach's sexual abuse, lawsuits allege

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — Two gymnasts who say they were sexually abused at an elite academy in Iowa filed lawsuits Monday against the sport's oversight bodies, alleging they failed to stopSean Gardnerfrom preying on girls despite repeated complaints about the coach's behavior.

The lawsuits allege USA Gymnastics and the U.S. Center for SafeSport were told about "inappropriate and abusive behaviors" in December 2017, including that Gardner was hugging and kissing girls and engaging in other grooming behaviors while coaching at a Mississippi gym.

The organizations failed to properly investigate, revoke Gardner's coaching credentials, report him to law enforcement or take other actions to protect athletes, the lawsuits allege. They claim the inaction enabled Gardner to get a job at Chow's Gymnastics and Dance Institute in West Des Moines, Iowa, in 2018, where the gymnasts say they and other preteen and teenage girls were abused despite additional complaints about Gardner.

The institute was founded by prominent coach Liang "Chow" Qiao, who is known for producing Olympic champions and was also named as a defendant in the lawsuits.

Lawsuits are first filed since Gardner's arrest

The lawsuits, filed in Polk County, Iowa, are the first civil cases brought in an abuse scandal that came to light in aseriesofreportsby The Associated Press after the FBI arrested Gardner in August. They allege USA Gymnastics and SafeSport, the watchdog created by Congress to investigate misconduct in Olympic sports in the aftermath of the Larry Nassar sexual abuse scandal, missed repeated opportunities to stop Gardner.

"It illustrates in my view that the culture of money and medals over child safety is still alive and well in USA Gymnastics and the Olympic system," said California attorney John Manly, who represented Nassar's victims and is part of the legal team that filed the Iowa cases. "What he did was profoundly evil and they let him do it."

SafeSport said Monday it had not been served with the lawsuit and typically does not comment on litigation. It noted that its 2022 temporary suspension of Gardner came "upon receiving the first report of sexual misconduct" against him and was published in itsonline database of disciplinary action. That was "the only reason Gardner was barred from coaching young athletes in the years until his arrest," it said.

Gardner's sanction escalated from "temporary suspension" to "ineligible" on Sept. 12 due to his arrest.

Responding to questions in August about the original AP reporting, the center said it had been notified by USA Gymnastics that a gym where Gardner worked had resolved a 2018 case involving the coach that didn't pertain to sexual misconduct. The center said coaches at Chow's were aware of subsequent allegations involving sexual misconduct but failed to report them.

USA Gymnastics spokesperson Jill Geer said Monday the organization appreciates "the seriousness of this case" but declined further comment.

Gardner faces federal child pornography charges for allegedly placing a hidden camera in a bathroom at a gymnastics studio in Purvis, Mississippi, between December 2017 and April 2018 to record his students. Investigators say he created videos showing close-up images of at least 10 minors naked or undressing, which they recovered from his computers last year while investigating reports of sexual abuse.

Gardner has pleaded not guilty and has been jailed pending trial, which is scheduled for next month. His attorney didn't return a message seeking comment.

Plaintiffs in lawsuits are now college students

The lawsuits allege the plaintiffs were 11- and 12-year-old trainees at Chow's who dreamed of one day competing in the Olympics when they began training under Gardner in 2018. They say they were subjected to "physical, emotional, and sexual abuse, harassment and molestation" until they quit the gym years later.

The plaintiffs include Iowa Stategymnast Finley Weldon, who reported claims of abuse by Gardner to police and later went public in an AP interview. The other is 19-year-old University of Iowa student Hailey Gear, who also wants to go public with her allegations, according to her attorney, Elizabeth Pudenz. They seek unspecified damages for their injuries and treatment expenses. Several other former gymnasts have reported abuse, and more lawsuits are expected.

The AP generally does not identify victims of sexual abuse unless they come forward publicly.

In addition to USA Gymnastics and SafeSport, the defendants named in the lawsuit are Qiao, the former Chinese gymnast who opened Chow's in 1998 and coached Olympic gold medalists Shawn Johnson and Gabby Douglas; Qiao's wife, Liwen Zhuan, a coach who helps run the gym; and their family corporations that own the business and the property on which it sits.

Lawsuits detail concerns over Gardner's 'grooming behavior'

The lawsuits allege all the defendants were negligent in how they responded to reports of Gardner's misconduct.

The parents of a gymnast filed reports with USA Gymnastics and SafeSport in December 2017 alleging Gardner required girls to give him long hugs after every training in Mississippi and that he kicked one girl out who refused, the lawsuits claim. He allegedly had an improper closed-door meeting with a girl whom he verbally abused, kissed gymnasts on their foreheads, drank alcohol excessively in front of them, made sexual jokes to girls and inappropriate comments on social media, and stalked one girl who he was instructed to stop contacting, the lawsuits claim.

Gardner's then-boss also reported to USA Gymnastics in January 2018 that Gardner had engaged in "grooming behaviors," but he was allowed to continue coaching.

The lawsuits allege SafeSport received another report from a parent at Chow's "concerning improper behaviors" by Gardner in September 2020 but failed to investigate.

The lawsuits allege Qiao and Zhuan failed to conduct an adequate background check before hiring Gardner and continued to employ him even after receiving complaints that he inappropriately touched girls while spotting them during exercises.

Qiao and Zhuan didn't return a message left at Chow's. The gym has said that Gardner passed a standard background check, and it fired Gardner after he was suspended by SafeSport in July 2022, even though "there had been no finding of misconduct at that time."

Pells reported from Denver.

USA Gymnastics and Olympic sports watchdog failed to stop coach's sexual abuse, lawsuits allege

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — Two gymnasts who say they were sexually abused at an elite academy in Iowa filed lawsuits Monday ...
Helsley, Orioles finalize $28 million, 2-year deal that gives reliever option for 2027

BALTIMORE (AP) — Reliever Ryan Helsley and the Baltimore Orioles finalized a $28 million, two-year contract on Monday, a deal that includes a player option for 2027.

Helsley gets a $14 million salary next year and has a $14 million player option for 2027. If traded, the two-time All-Star would receive a $500,000 assignment bonus from the acquiring team.

Helsley and the team hadagreed to termsover the weekend, pending a physical.

Orioles closer Félix Bautista is expected to miss much of next seasonfollowing surgery in Augustto repair a torn rotator cuff and torn labrum.

Now 31, Helsley became one of baseball's best relievers while spending his first six-plus seasons with St. Louis, making the All-Star team in 2022 and 2024. The right-hander went 3-1 with a 3.00 ERA and 21 saves in 26 chances this year before he was traded by the Cardinals to the Mets onJuly 30.

Helsley struggled in New York, going 0-3 with a 7.20 ERA in 22 appearances. He allowed four homers and 16 earned runs in 20 innings and was 0 for 4 in save chances.

Baltimore has been active as it looks to bounce back from a last-place finish in the AL East. The Orioles won the division in 2023 and made the playoffs as a wild card in 2024.

Outfielder Taylor Ward was acquiredin a tradewith the Los Angeles Angels on Nov. 18.Bautistaagreed to a $2.25 million, one-year contract on Nov. 21, avoiding arbitration.

Helsley had his best season in 2024, finishing with a 2.04 ERA and a major league-best 49 saves. He also struck out 79 in 66 1/3 innings.

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

Helsley, Orioles finalize $28 million, 2-year deal that gives reliever option for 2027

BALTIMORE (AP) — Reliever Ryan Helsley and the Baltimore Orioles finalized a $28 million, two-year contract on Monday, a...

 

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