Texas Christian running back Jeremy Payne breaks multiple tackles on his way to scoring against USC in the Alamo Bowl.

For a nine-win team such asUSC, once again on the outside looking in at theCollege Football Playoff, the bowl season can feel a bit like purgatory. One foot in the past season, the other in the future, your team trapped somewhere in-between.

There were glimpses of each Tuesday night for USC in a brutal30-27 overtime defeatto Texas Christian in the Alamo Bowl. There were equal reminders all night both of what could have been this season, had USC ever played at its best for long, and also flashes of why it never managed to be.

In one moment, there was freshmanTanook Hines, sprinting to catch a deep ball in stride, announcing himself as a rising star. In another, a TCU running back was busting his way through tackles on third-and-long, rumbling improbably into the end zone, deflating any such delusions of grandeur.

But after oscillating between those opposing poles, the final minutes against TCU took the Trojans on a tour of all their most glaring concerns from the 2025 season, from the leaky defense to the missed opportunities on offense.

The Trojans saw a two-score lead evaporate in the final minutes of regulation. They got all the way to the five-yard line in overtime, only for the offense to stall and settle for a field goal. They even sacked TCU quarterback Ken Seals on second and 10, pushing the Horned Frogs out of field-goal range and forcing a third and 20.

All signs in that moment pointed toward the Trojans securing their 10th win, a feat they achieved only once over the past eight years. But then, against a three-man USC rush and with eight defenders in coverage, Seals checked down to running backJeremy Paynein the flat.

"We did everything right defensively to put them in that position,"USC coach Lincoln Rileysaid.

Nothing, though, went right for USC after that. Payne broke through a tackle from cornerbackMarcelles Williams. Two defenders, linebackerJadyn Walkerand safetyKennedy Urlacher, collided as they reached Payne next, missing him entirely. Then, he slipped through safetyChristian Pierce's hands and was suddenly sprinting free 35 yards for the win.

"Wasn't a lot of time this year that we missed multiple tackles on a play," Riley said. "It just happened in the worst time possible."

Read more:Meet the Hanson family, the secret to USC's offensive line success

That's how most of the fourth quarter and overtime felt for USC, as TCU racked up 159 yards and 17 points over its final three drives.

Of course, there had been multiple chances before then for USC to put the game away, just like there were multiple chances for USC to make more of its 9-4 finish this season. The Trojans averaged nearly a full yard per play more than TCU. They racked up eight plays of 20 yards or more — a reminder of how explosive they could be.

In the red zone, though, the offense unraveled. QuarterbackJayden Maiava, who was inconsistent most of the night, threw a third-quarter interception in the end zone, just as USC looked primed to push down the gas pedal.

Four other times, the Trojans stalled inside of TCU's 25-yard line and settled for field goals. In the process, kickerRyon Sayeriset the USC record for field goals in a season at 21.

"We just did not execute good enough in the red zone on either side of the ball," Riley said. "If we did that, it's probably a different feeling."

Instead, the Trojans will have to carry this bitter taste into the offseason, with questions already looming about what comes next. Not the least of which being what direction USC will take its defense, after coordinatorD'Anton Lynn departed for Penn Statejust before the game.

USC running back King Miller is stopped short by the Texas Christian defense.

Riley wouldn't comment on why Lynn was replaced as playcaller the day of the bowl game. But when asked how he felt about the future of his defense, Riley projected a particularly sunny outlook.

"I feel fantastic," he said. "But those who really study the game and watch how we've played and the way we've been able to improve, the arrow is just pointing straight up."

Of all the questions raised Tuesday, how USC might replace its No. 1 wideout next season was not one of them. Hines had already done his part to earn that role, but declared it to the world anyway in a six-catch, 163-yard performance.

King Miller also continued to solidify his place in a tandem with Waymond Jordan in 2027, as he rushed for 99 yards and a touchdown, coming up just short of the 1,000-yard mark in a season he started as a walk-on.

USC coach Lincoln Riley, right, greets TCU coach Sonny Dykes after the Trojans' overtime loss in the Alamo Bowl.

But the silver linings largely stopped there, even if the circumstances made for an unusually uphill climb with USC's roster. Over a dozen starters or would-be starters sat out. Three of the Trojans' starting offensive linemen didn't dress. Both of their top receivers and top tight end were in street clothes, having declared for the NFL draft. Twenty-five players listed in USC's two-deep Tuesday were either freshmen or redshirt freshmen.

Without Lynn calling plays, which a source described as "a mutual agreement", defensive line coach Eric Henderson stepped into the role.

It went quite smoothly at first. USC held TCU to two straight three-and-outs — and just 11 total yards in two drives — to open the game.

Read more:USC defensive coordinator D'Anton Lynn takes Penn State defensive coordinator job

But on the ensuing possession, Maiava threw into heavy coverage and was intercepted, his first of two on the day. The momentum USC had built up early dissolved almost instantly.

The defense's strong start faded into disarray. And while it came roaring back after halftime, forcing an interception and limiting TCU to just 35 yards in the third quarter, USC's offense couldn't fully capitalize. A one-handed touchdown pass to Jaden Richardson nearly did the trick, giving the Trojans a 21-14 lead that seemed primed to balloon from there.

But it never did. And in the final, stunned moments of its season, Riley was left offering the same assurances that USC will soon be out of purgatory.

"When you've been in those programs and been a part of those teams that have done those things, you feel what it's like," Riley said. "And this place is doing all the things that you need to do to put yourself in position to go bust that door down and do it."

TCU players celebrate after beating USC in the Alamo Bowl on Tuesday night.

Sign up for more USC news with Times of Troy. In your inbox every Monday morning.

This story originally appeared inLos Angeles Times.

No. 16 USC suffers shocking, walk-off loss to TCU in overtime of Alamo Bowl

For a nine-win team such asUSC, once again on the outside looking in at theCollege Football Playoff, the bowl season can feel a bit like p...
Big Ten dunks on SEC in college football coaching carousel. That's the cold truth

TheBig Ten is thrivingso far this postseason. (OK, so maybe Southern Cal's tackling isn't thriving, but the rest of theB1Gis doing just fine.)

With a couple of exceptions, theSEC is wilting.

And what of the coaching carousel? Did the Big Ten club theSECthere, too? You could make that case.

LSU scored the big fish by securingLane Kiffin. Mostly, though, SEC schools hired promising but largely unproven up-and-comers, while Big Ten schools like Michigan and Penn State landed veteran winners with solid resumes.

On this edition of "SEC Football Unfiltered," a podcast from the USA TODAY Network, hostsBlake ToppmeyerandJohn Adamsevalute which conference did it better in this hiring cycle.

Subscribe to SEC Football UnfilterediTunes|Google Play|Spotify

They also debate which conference has the better complete roster of coaches. And they discuss which SEC schools would have been well-served by hiringKyle Whittingham, who wound up at Michigan.

Coaching hires in the SEC

Overview:LSU made the splashiest hire of this coaching cycle, plundering Kiffin from a conference rival and luring him away from a playoff team. Elsewhere, three SEC schools hired coaches from the American Conference, while two schools went the coordinator route.

TOPPMEYER:How can Ole Miss get revenge on Lane Kiffin? By proving him wrong

ADAMS:Tennessee football goes out with a whimper against Illinois

Coaching hires in the Big Ten

Overview:This marks a sharp pivot from the SEC's strategy of raiding the American. UCLA went the Group of Five route with Chesney, but the other three Big Ten schools making hires turned to veterans. Whittingham is the winningest coach in Utah history. Campbell is the winningest coach in Iowa State history. Fitzgerald is the winningest coach in Northwestern history.

Which conference hired better?

Advantage goes to the Big Ten. Bravo to LSU for securing Kiffin, but the rest of the SEC hired less proven coaches than Whittingham, Campbell or Fitzgerald. That doesn't mean someone like Sumrall or Golesh won't succeed, but any of the SEC's hires not named Kiffin seems riskier than someone who's as accomplished as Campbell.

Which conference has better roster of coaches?

Toppmeyer:The Big Ten has the better full roster of coaches. At the top, the SEC is just as good. I'd put an SEC five-pack of Kirby Smart, Kalen DeBoer, Kiffin, Steve Sarkisian and Josh Heupel up against the Big Ten's Ryan Day, Curt Cignetti, Dan Lanning, Whittingham and Campbell.

In the middle of the conferences and in the lower-third, I give the nod to the Big Ten. Consider, Bret Bielema (Illinois) probably ranks somewhere in the No. 8 range of the Big Ten's pecking order of coaches. Bielema beat South Carolina and Tennessee in bowl games in the past two seasons. He's won 19 games with the Illini the past two years. That's no small feat, and he's just one example of the Big Ten's solid collection of down-ballot coaches.

A few years from now, we might say the SEC's coaches are as good or better than the Big Ten's, but we can't say that now. Too many unproven figures.

Adams:Toppmeyer is right. The Big Ten enjoys the edge.

The SEC remains strong at the top, but it can't match the Big Ten's quality in the middle or lower ranks. The Big Ten upgraded its roster of coaches in this hiring cycle. The SEC took ambitious shots on younger candidates. That might work, so we reserve the right to re-evaluate this in a couple of years. For now, I'd take the Big Ten's coaching roster.

Later in the episode

∎ The hosts unpack theCollege Football Playoffquarterfinal matchups, includingwhat's at stake for Kalen DeBoerin Alabama-Indiana and whetherMississippi plays with house moneyin a rematch with Georgia.

Where to listen to SEC Football Unfiltered

Blake Toppmeyeris the USA TODAY Network's national college football columnist.John Adamsis the senior sports columnist for the Knoxville News Sentinel.Subscribe to theSEC Football Unfilteredpodcast, and check out theSEC Unfiltered newsletter, delivered straight to your inbox.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Big Ten beats SEC in college football coaching carousel

Big Ten dunks on SEC in college football coaching carousel. That's the cold truth

TheBig Ten is thrivingso far this postseason. (OK, so maybe Southern Cal's tackling isn't thriving, but the rest...
The NFC South, the NFL's weirdest division, will end the year on a perfectly ridiculous note

The battle for the NFC South will come down to a game between the division's top two teams on Saturday …but the title itself might not be decided until Sunday.

The Panthers (8-8) face the Buccaneers (7-9) on Saturday night in Tampa. If the Panthers win, end of story, Carolina takes the division. (More on that in a moment.) If the Bucs win, though, the two teams would be tied at 8-9 … and they'd have to wait until the outcome of Sunday's Falcons-Saints game. If the Falcons win, you'd have three teams tied at 8-9 … and thePantherswould win by a series of tiebreakers.

For any other division in football, this would be a ridiculous, borderline unbelievable turn of events. For the NFC South, it's called "a season."

The NFC South is the point on the NFL map where the border with the college football universe is the thinnest, and consequently a whole lot of SEC crazy tends to seep into the water supply. The four teams that make up the NFC South — Atlanta, Carolina, Tampa Bay and New Orleans — are the most ramshackle collection of weirdos in the NFL.

You don't want to play any NFC South team at any point in the year, because you never quite know how it's going to go (see:Monday night's Rams-Falcons game). These four teams shoot themselves in the foot with numbing regularity, but they might just be standing on your foot when they fire.

TAMPA, FLORIDA - DECEMBER 29: Baker Mayfield #6 of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers hugs Bryce Young #9 of the Carolina Panthers after the game at Raymond James Stadium on December 29, 2024 in Tampa, Florida. (Photo by Julio Aguilar/Getty Images)

Five of the NFL's eight divisions have sent all four members to the Super Bowl. (Sorry, AFC South and AFC/NFC Norths.) No division has sent all four teams to the big game more recently than the NFC South (New Orleans 2009, Carolina 2015, Atlanta 2016, Tampa Bay 2020). And yet, almost every time an NFC South team manages to reach the big game, it faceplants for a few seasons afterward, like a pageant winner ascending the podium and then immediately falling off the back as soon as she receives her crown.

In other words, you must take the NFC South seriously, even though it is a profoundly unserious division.

Consider how this season alone has gone:

  • The Falcons' backup quarterback is on a $180 million contract. They have one of the game's three best running backs, a vicious pass defense, a young and hungry receiving corps, and yet have lost nine games already this season. They've beaten both the Rams and Bills in prime time … and lost to both the Dolphins and Jets. They might well finish with a record equal to the division winner … and they were eliminated from the playoff picture weeks ago.

  • The Panthers are the odds-on favorite to win the division — a 78 percent chance, per The Athletic — and yet nobody's quite sure if their quarterback will be around much longer. Bryce Young has engineered six game-winning drives this season, second in the league only to Bo Nix's seven, but the fact that the Panthers have won only eight games total is a sign that this is a team that needs game-winning drives a little too often. And again, Carolina being a division winner with a below-.500 record is very much on the table.

  • The Bucs are the four-time defending division champs, and after starting the season 5-1, appeared headed to an easy fifth. But they've lost seven of their past eight, including four in a row. They've won exactly one game since before Halloween — and that was a three-point victory over the woeful Arizona Cardinals. Everybody on the entire team is injured, including two separate players since you started reading this sentence.

  • The Saints somehow built an entire 2025 team and forgot they might need an NFL-caliber starting quarterback. They immediately proceeded to go 1-8 to start the season. But they've swept the season series against the likely division winner, and they're on a four-game winning streak. Of course.

This is the division victimized by 28-3 andthe Minneapolis Miracle, the division where Cam Newton capped an MVP season with an LVP Super Bowl, where a creamsicle-clad team lost its first26games. Sub-.500 teams have won the divisiontwicein the past 11 seasons. So are you at all surprised that the 2025 season might end in a three-way 8-9 tie?

The chaos of the NFC South is glorious to behold, yes. But it might be time to institute some changes. Idea: After this season, relegate the entire division to the SEC and promote some replacements. Bringing Georgia, Alabama, Ole Miss and Texas into the NFL couldn't be any weirder than what we're dealing with now.

The NFC South, the NFL's weirdest division, will end the year on a perfectly ridiculous note

The battle for the NFC South will come down to a game between the division's top two teams on Saturday …but the titl...
NFL playoff picture: Projected AFC, NFC brackets, wild-card matchups

The final week of the 2025 NFL season has arrived, and the league's playoff picture looks a lot different from what most anticipated it would when thePhiladelphia Eagleshosted the Dallas Cowboys to open the season.

Notably, theKansas City Chiefswere eliminated from playoff contention in Week 16, marking the first time since 2015 they failed to win the AFC West. Instead, theDenver Broncoshave emerged with that division title. They will be battling the New England Patriots – who had a terrific turnaround in Mike Vrabel's first season working withDrake Mayeand Co. – and theJacksonville Jaguarsfor the conference's No. 1 seed.

If that isn't topsy-turvy enough, the NFC's No. 1 seed from 2024, theDetroit Lions, failed to make the playoffs.Instead, the No. 1 seed will go to either the Seattle Seahawks, who have emerged as a legitimate Super Bowl threat after inkingSam Darnoldin free agency, or theSan Francisco 49ers, who are back in the postseason for the third time in the last four seasons.

<p style=Week 1: Detroit Lions wide receiver Isaac TeSlaa (18) makes a catch for a touchdown against the Green Bay Packers during the fourth quarter at Lambeau Field. The play was originally ruled an incomplete pass, but the call was overturned. Despite TeSlaa's effort, the Packers won the game 27-13.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> Week 1: The New England Patriots' Robert Spillane (14) and Christian Elliss (53) tackle Las Vegas Raiders tight end Michael Mayer (87) during the second half at Gillette Stadium. The Raiders won the game, 20-13. Week 1: New York Giants quarterback Russell Wilson (3) fumbles the ball on a tackle by Washington Commanders safety Will Harris (3) during the first quarter at Northwest Stadium. It was a rough Giants debut for Wilson (17 of 37 passing for 168 yards) as the Commanders won the game, 21-6. Week 1: Fireworks go off before the NFL Kickoff Game between the Philadelphia Eagles and Dallas Cowboys at Lincoln Financial Field. The defending Super Bowl champion Eagles opened the season with a 24-20 victory over their longtime NFC East rivals.

Best images of the 2025 NFL season

Week 1: Detroit Lions wide receiver Isaac TeSlaa (18)makes a catch for a touchdownagainst the Green Bay Packers during the fourth quarter at Lambeau Field. The play was originally ruled an incomplete pass, but the call was overturned. Despite TeSlaa's effort, the Packers won the game 27-13.

A total of 12 playoff berths have been wrapped up entering Week 18. The final two will be decided by head-to-head matchups in the season's final week, while many teams are playing for seeding scenarios as the campaign closes.

Here's how the NFL's playoff picture and bracket look ahead of Week 18.

NFL playoff picture

*=team has clinched a playoff berth.

AFC playoff picture

  1. Denver Broncos (13-3, AFC West winners)*

  2. New England Patriots (13-3, AFC East winners)*

  3. Jacksonville Jaguars (12-4, AFC South leaders)*

  4. Pittsburgh Steelers (9-7, AFC North leaders)

  5. Houston Texans (11-5, wild card No. 1)*

  6. Los Angeles Chargers (11-5, wild card No. 2)*

  7. Buffalo Bills (11-5, wild card No. 3)*

In the hunt:Baltimore Ravens(8-8)

While six of the AFC's playoff berths have been clinched entering Week 17, none of the teams have yet clinched a specific seed. That means the conference's pecking order could change quickly during the final week of the 2025 NFL season.

NFC playoff picture

  1. Seattle Seahawks (13-3, NFC West leaders)*

  2. Chicago Bears (11-5, NFC North winners)*

  3. Philadelphia Eagles (11-5, NFC East winners)*

  4. Carolina Panthers (8-8, NFC South leaders)

  5. San Francisco 49ers (12-4, wild card No. 1)*

  6. Los Angeles Rams (11-5, wild card No. 2)*

  7. Green Bay Packers (9-6-1, wild card No. 3)*

In the hunt: Tampa Bay Buccaneers (7-9)

The Packers are the lone team to clinch a specific seed in the NFC playoff race. They are locked into the No. 7 slot. Week 18 results could change the rest of the standings.

NFL wild-card matchups, full bracket

Here are the wild-card round games in each conference entering Week 18.

AFC wild-card matchups

No. 1 Denver Broncos: BYE

The Broncos can clinch the No. 1 seed in the AFC and a coveted first-round bye with a victory over the Chargers in Week 18. Los Angeles is planning to sit some of its starters, including top quarterbackJustin Herbert, with the team locked into a wild-card berth, which should benefit Denver in its quest.

No. 2 New England Patriots vs. No. 7 Buffalo Bills

The Patriots have won the AFC East for the first time since 2019 and will be guaranteed a top-three seed in the conference. They would need the Broncos to lose (or tie) to overtake them for the No. 1 seed, so New England seems more likely to play on wild-card weekend.

Currently, the Patriots are set to face the Bills in what would be the third matchup between the teams this season. New England won the first meeting 23-20 in Week 5 before Buffalo bounced back with a come-from-behind 35-31 victory in Week 15 to snap a 10-game Patriots winning streak.

The Bills can be seeded anywhere from No. 5 to No. 7 in the AFC. It isn't yet clear whether they will play starters in Week 18 against the New York Jets asJosh Allen nurses a lingering foot injury.

No. 3 Jacksonville Jaguars vs. No. 6 Los Angeles Chargers

The Jaguars have an outside chance to catch the Broncos for the No. 1 overall seed, but they will likely be more focused on staving off the Texans for the AFC South title. So long as Jacksonville can beat the 3-13 Tennessee Titans, Liam Coen's team will have at least one home playoff game.

Meanwhile, the Chargers are set to rest their starters in Week 18, so it's unclear whether they will be able to hold onto the No. 6 seed. If they do, they will get a chance to avenge their 31-30 loss to the Jaguars in the 2022 wild-card round. Los Angeles held a 27-0 lead in that game before Jacksonville came storming back to earn the narrow victory.

No. 4 Pittsburgh Steelers vs. No. 5 Houston Texans

The Texans have a wide variety of potential outcomes in Week 18. They could be seeded as high as No. 3 overall in the conference, while they could slip all the way to No. 7, pending the results of the Week 18 games. Houston has a lot for which to play, as the Texans can catch the Jaguars in the AFC South race, so they will likely keep their starters in for Week 18.

Meanwhile, the Steelers are playing a winner-take-all game against the Ravens. The winner will take home the AFC North title and the conference's No. 4 overall seed. The loser will go home. Pittsburgh would make it into the postseason field in the event of a tie, but it appears to be a true 50-50 proposition for Mike Tomlin's squad to make the playoffs.

NFC wild-card matchups

No. 1 Seattle Seahawks: BYE

The Seahawks are playing the San Francisco 49ers in Week 18. The winner of that game will be the NFC West champion and the No. 1 seed in the NFC playoffs. The loser will lock down either the No. 5 or No. 6 seed in the conference. The Seahawks have a slight edge in the contest, as they will be the No. 1 seed in the event of a tie.

No. 2 Chicago Bears vs. No. 7 Green Bay Packers

The Bears' narrow loss to the 49ers on "Sunday Night Football" in Week 17 guaranteed they would be either the No. 2 or No. 3 seed in the NFC playoff race. A win over the Detroit Lions would set the Bears up with their third date against the Packers, who are locked into the conference's No. 7 seed.

Chicago and Green Bay have split their season series to date. The Packers won the first game 28-21 afterCaleb Williamsthrew an interception in the end zone while trying to mount a game-tying drive in the game's final minute. A couple of weeks later, Williams threw a 46-yard touchdown toDJ Moorein overtime to cap off a big-time fourth-quarter comeback that positioned the Bears to win the NFC North for the first time since 2018.

The Packers and Bears last met in the postseason in 2011. Aaron Rodgers led the No. 6-seeded Packers to a 21-14 victory en route to Green Bay winning its fourth Super Bowl title.

No. 3 Philadelphia Eagles vs. No. 6 Los Angeles Rams

The Eagles will be either the No. 2 or No. 3 seed in the NFC playoff picture, while the Rams will be either the No. 5 or No. 6 seed. It all depends on how they fare in Week 18 and how the teams ahead of them in the standings – the Bears, Seahawks and 49ers – fare.

An Eagles-Rams matchup would be a repeat of the teams' Week 3 meeting. Philadelphia won that one 33-26, but it's worth noting that Los Angeles led in the fourth quarter. However, a couple of field goal blocks allowed the Eagles to stave off defeat and improve to 3-0.

Would the Eagles be so lucky again? Maybe, but the game would figure to be tight. The two teams did meet in the playoffs last season, after all. Philadelphia earned a 28-22 win amid snowy conditions at Lincoln Financial Field but Los Angeles nearly executed a 13-point comeback over the final five minutes before the Eagles came up with one final stop.

No. 4 Carolina Panthers vs. No. 5 San Francisco 49ers

The NFC South title remains up for grabs. The winner will likely be the victor of the Panthers vs. Buccaneers game in Week 18, but there remains a scenario in which Tampa Bay wins and the Atlanta Falcons beat the New Orleans Saints head-to-head to create a three-way tie in the division that will send Carolina to the postseason. Either way, the Panthers have the edge to win the divisional crown.

Meanwhile, the No. 5 seed is also in flux. All that's presently known is it will belong to one of the three NFC West teams. The 49ers are presently slotted in there, but they could move up to the No. 1 seed with a win over the Seahawks.

If the Panthers and 49ers meet in this game, it would be a rematch of their "Monday Night Football" meeting in Week 12. San Francisco won that defensive slog 20-9, a game in which it forcedBryce Younginto multiple turnovers.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:NFL playoff picture: Projected AFC, NFC brackets in Week 18

NFL playoff picture: Projected AFC, NFC brackets, wild-card matchups

The final week of the 2025 NFL season has arrived, and the league's playoff picture looks a lot different from what ...
Marlins acquire outfielder Esteury Ruiz from World Series champion Dodgers

LOS ANGELES (AP) — The Miami Marlins acquired outfielder Esteury Ruiz from the Los Angeles Dodgers on Monday night in a trade for minor league right-hander Adriano Marrero.

The speedy Ruiz led the American League with 67 stolen bases for the Athletics in 2023. He is a career .241 hitter during four major league seasons with four teams, but excels as a baserunner and a defender.

The Dodgers acquired Ruiz from the A's last April, and he was a little-used reserve when he was in the majors forthe back-to-back World Series champions. Ruiz batted .190 in 19 games for Los Angeles, largely playing as a defensive replacement or a pinch runner.

The Marlins designated infielder Eric Wagaman for assignment to make room on their 40-man roster for Ruiz. The trade opened a spot on the Dodgers' 40-man roster.

As a capable backup outfielder, Ruiz could be the Marlins' replacement for Dane Myers, who was traded to Cincinnati last weekend.

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

Marlins acquire outfielder Esteury Ruiz from World Series champion Dodgers

LOS ANGELES (AP) — The Miami Marlins acquired outfielder Esteury Ruiz from the Los Angeles Dodgers on Monday night in a ...

 

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