US Speedskating was right to change qualifying procedures | Opinion

MILWAUKEE, WI — No matter what he did at the Olympic trials, Jordan Stolz was assured of going to the Milano Cortina Games.

A stumble in his best event, the 1,000 meters, was a reminder of why that is. And why it's a good thing.

Stolz qualified for the 1,000 meters, one of four individual events in which he'll be favored to win gold, with a third-place finish Saturday. But in a sport where quota limits sometimes require countries to make hard choices, it was eerily reminiscent of the scenario four years ago that nearly kept Erin Jackson out of the 500 meters, the distance where she would win Olympic gold.

"Jordan's a really awesome skater, so I'm really glad he was protected in that moment," said Jackson, who will race both the 500 and 1,000 meters in Milano Cortina afterwinning the latter distanceearlier Saturday.

"He still ended up getting third, but yeah, it's nice to have those protections," Jackson added. "We want to have our medal contenders out contending for medals at the Games."

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US Speedskating was right to change qualifying procedures | Opinion

MILWAUKEE, WI — No matter what he did at the Olympic trials, Jordan Stolz was assured of going to the Milano Cortina Gam...
NFL fines Rams' Jared Verse $11K for flashing peace sign during blocked FG return for TD against Falcons

Jared Verse was scared of both being called for a penalty and what his coach's reaction would be after flashing the peace sign at the Atlanta Falcons' bench during his 76-yard blocked field goal return for a touchdown Monday night.

The Los Angeles Rams linebacker wasn't flagged on the play, nor was he chewed out by Sean McVay after the touchdown during their27-24 losstothe Falcons.

Verse, the 2024 NFL Defensive Rookie of the Year, was fined by the league, however, with the NFL announcing Saturday it isdocking him $11,593for "unsportsmanlike conduct [taunting]."

BLOCKED! JARED VERSE TAKES IT ALL THE WAY BACK FOR SIX!LARvsATL on ESPN/ABCStream on@NFLPlusand ESPN Apppic.twitter.com/4NQmlP4wy7

— NFL (@NFL)December 30, 2025

"I was scared as [expletive],"Verse said earlier this week about potentially taking a penalty. "I was like, 'Sean's going to kill me.' I was like, 'It's bad.' I got to the end zone and was like, 'They're not going to review it? Alright, bet.'"

The NFL has fined players for using the peace sign before, with the gesture falling under unsportsmanlike conduct.

Tyreek Hill hasbeen finedmultiple timesfor using the gesture. One occurrence happened during thelegendary "13 seconds" gameagainst the Buffalo Bills in January 2022 while the receiver was with the Kansas City Chiefs. He was $10,300 lighter in the wallet after a 64-yard touchdown run.

The following season,Odell Beckham Jr. was fined $10,927during a touchdown run while he was with the Baltimore Ravens.

NFL fines Rams' Jared Verse $11K for flashing peace sign during blocked FG return for TD against Falcons

Jared Verse was scared of both being called for a penalty and what his coach's reaction would be after flashing the ...
Miami coach Mario Cristobal dismisses hype around his team as he prepares for Fiesta Bowl

CORAL GABLES, Fla. (AP) — Mario Cristobal doesn't want to hear any of the incessant "The U Is Back" stuff.

Yes, the Miami Hurricanes are in the College Football Playoff semifinals after being given almost no chance of making the 12-team field after a pair of losses around the midseason point and hearing plenty of pundits saying they don't belong. Yes, they've tied a school record with 12 wins. Yes, they're two wins from what would be their first national championship since the 2001 season — and one victory away a title-game appearance that would just happen to come on their home field.

Save it, at least around Cristobal. None of those words matter to him right now. Saturday was just another day in Coral Gables, which is consistent with what he's been preaching since he returned to his alma mater four seasons ago. Miami (12-2, No. 10 CFP) takes on Mississippi (13-1, No. 6 CFP) in the Fiesta Bowl on Thursday night in Glendale, Arizona.

"There aren't really distractions. You create your own distractions," Cristobal said Saturday. "And I think the mentality — the DNA of our guys as it gets stronger and better, as our older guys realize that it's their time, it's their legacy and that they have to take control of the locker room and how we think and how we go about things — I think all that has improved in a dramatic fashion.

"We hammer it every single day and so far, we feel like we're getting a pretty good result. But you get on it, and you stay on it. I think if you come off it for a second, you're going to leave a window open and you're going to let a rat in there."

Ah, the rat.

He means rat poison, a term his old boss — former Alabama coach Nick Saban — used at times in the final years of his coaching career. Rat poison, in Saban-speak, is what is detrimental to teams that start believing their hype and losing focus on the controllables like working as hard as possible every day.

And every coach left in the race for this CFP title knows exactly what Cristobal means — since they all worked for Saban. Cristobal worked under Saban at Alabama from 2013 through 2016. Ole Miss coach Pete Golding was with Saban for five seasons, from 2018 through 2022. Oregon coach Dan Lanning was a graduate assistant on Saban's staff in 2015. And Indiana coach Curt Cignetti did his time under Saban from 2007 through 2011.

All four of those coaches left Alabama with at least one national title from their time with the Crimson Tide. They have a chance to win their own now.

"I think most people who went through and were fortunate enough to be around coach Saban understand, number one, (the) lifeblood of the program is recruiting," Golding said Saturday. "And then you've got to have sound schemes on both sides. You want to keep stability within those schemes for the development of players. And there's a toughness component, a competitive character component to hold these guys accountable and hold them to a high standard. And I think that's pretty consistent with whoever is playing right now."

It's certainly a tie that binds Cristobal and Golding going into this CFP semifinal.

There are a few of those linking the Hurricanes and the Rebels: the Saban ties, expectations, the juggling act that comes with handling the transfer portal being open and prepping for a CFP semifinal simultaneously, even the aftereffects of getting into the tournament field after being among the teams that just missed the 12-team cut last year.

And Ole Miss is still dealing with the fallout from losing coach Lane Kiffin to LSU and the will-they-or-won't-they questions about assistant coaches who — at some point — will be following him to Baton Rouge. Some came back for Ole Miss' win over Georgia in the CFP quarterfinal; whether they'll all be at the Fiesta Bowl is still a bit of a mystery.

Again, Cristobal sees it all as a distraction, and he insists that distractions — even the Ole Miss staff situation — must be ignored.

"It has zero impact on our preparation, and I think it'd be safe to say that it doesn't impact their preparation as well," Cristobal said. "They're a great football team with great coaches that are in place, and they're preparing just as hard for this as they have for any game."

Get poll alerts and updates on the AP Top 25 throughout the season. Sign uphere. AP college football:https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-football-pollandhttps://apnews.com/hub/college-football

Miami coach Mario Cristobal dismisses hype around his team as he prepares for Fiesta Bowl

CORAL GABLES, Fla. (AP) — Mario Cristobal doesn't want to hear any of the incessant "The U Is Back" stuff....
Blue Jays finally land a Japanese star with Kazuma Okamoto — but where does he fit on the roster?

The defending American League champion Toronto Blue Jays, having already spent more in free agency than any other major-league club, have made another big splash to start the new year,signing 29-year-old Japanese slugger Kazuma Okamoto to a reported four-year, $60 million deal.

Just weeks after their crushing Game 7 defeat to the Dodgers in the World Series, it was the Blue Jays who executed the first big move of the offseason by signing right-hander Dylan Cease to a seven-year, $210 million deal, an enormous commitment that still stands as the largest contract given to a free agent this winter. That turned out to be just the start of Toronto's efforts to strengthen its pitching staff, as two more considerable deals followed in December, with another starter in Cody Ponce (3 years, $30M) and one of the top relievers available in Tyler Rogers (3 years, $37M).

But for all Toronto accomplished early in the offseason on the mound, monumental questions remained about its plans to fill out its position-player group, particularly in the wake of homegrown star Bo Bichette reaching free agency. Such speculation was driven by not only the question of whether the Blue Jays would retain Bichette but also the franchise's newfound status as one of the league's biggest spenders, making them potential suitors forseveral of the top free-agent bats on the market. That includes the top position player available, outfielder Kyle Tucker, whoreportedly paid a visitto Toronto's spring training complex in Dunedin, Florida, in early December, andanother premium infielderin Alex Bregman, whose decision will massively impact the division-rival Red Sox.

Meanwhile, the signing deadlines mandated by the 45-day posting windows for the top Japanese free agents drew closer, offering a deadline to spur some action on the free-agent market. As it turned out, the teams involved in the pursuit of these three NPB stars — slugger Munetaka Murakami, right-handed pitcher Tatsuya Imai and, finally, Okamoto — remained uncertain until the very end of their posting processes. The rebuilding White Sox stunned first by landing Murakami on a two-year deal. Then the contending Astrosswooped in to sign Imai on a similar short-term pact. As Okamoto's deadline neared, reports consistently identified the Padres, Angels and Pirates as most involved in his market, but based on the opaque nature of the previous two postings, it seemed only right that a mystery team would surface at the final hour for Okamoto.

Sure enough, the Blue Jays emerged as that mystery team, securing a fascinating addition that raises further questions about the club's offseason strategy. At first glance, before contemplating his exact role on the roster, Okamoto is a natural fit for Toronto asan advanced hitter who has paired strong contact skills and power production throughout his illustrious NPB career. He's the style of slugger that Guerrero and Bichette have long embodied for Toronto and that helped define the club's surge to the 2025 division title and a magical run through October. That Toronto, amid its search for offensive reinforcements, would be attracted to Okamoto as a player comes as no surprise.

But how exactly Okamoto fits on Toronto's roster is a challenging question to answer, considering how much unfinished business the Blue Jays seem to have this winter, not to mention the position players already on the roster. Team context aside, most evaluators consider Okamoto viable at third base, though unlikely to be a plus defender at the hot corner at the major-league level and likely profiling better at first base long term. Okamoto also has some experience in the outfield, having made 68 starts in left over the course of his NPB career.

[Get more Toronto news: Blue Jays team feed]

For the Blue Jays, the obvious place to begin is acknowledging that even if scouts view first base as Okamoto's ideal spot on the diamond, that will not be an option for him anytime soon; Guerrero's presence means first base in Toronto is about as spoken for as any single position in the entire league. It's also worth noting that at-bats might be hard to come by at DH — at least in 2026 — with veteran star George Springer under contract for one more year and Toronto surely preferring to limit his exposure to the outfield as he enters his age 36-season.

As such, the only logical conclusion at this stage is that Toronto is comfortable with Okamoto at third base, and a realistic path to playing time in the outfield exists as well. For the 2025 Jays, third base was largely occupied by Addison Barger and Ernie Clement, with Clement earning the bulk of the reps in the postseason. Both players shined in October, affirming that they could be core pieces of the Jays' offense moving forward. Each player has also demonstrated defensive versatility, with Clement capable of bouncing around the infield and Barger's rocket arm and athleticism proving ultra-valuable in right field.

That flexibility should open the door for Okamoto to be the primary third baseman, with Barger spending more time in right and Clement perhaps moving to second base in the event that Bichette departs (with Andrés Giménez sliding to shortstop). There could also be at-bats available in the outfield for Okamoto, perhaps as a right-handed complement to Nathan Lukes in one of the corner spots. How the switch-hitting Anthony Santander — entering his second year as a Blue Jay after a total failure of an introductory campaign — fits into the equation is another worthwhile question at this juncture, particularly if Toronto pursues another outfield addition such as Tucker.

The addition of Okamoto would seem to take Toronto out of the market for Bregman, but a reunion with Bichette could still be in store, as could an agreement with Tucker, thanks in large part to the versatility of some of the incumbent position players — and as a response to some of those players' weaknesses. However it shakes out, it's clear that Toronto valued Okamoto highly enough to bring him into the fold and figure the rest out later. That's a refreshing strategy in an era when so many risk-averse teams are acting with extreme caution at this time of year.

And while his fit on the roster remains to be seen, Okamoto joining Toronto is unquestionably an enormous organizational victory for the Blue Jays following their ill-fated pursuits of Shohei Ohtani and Roki Sasaki the past two offseasons. Toronto has not been shy about its intentions to expand its footprint internationally, and adding a player who starred for the Yomiuri Giants, one of the most prominent and historically successful teams in NPB, is a solid step in that direction. While there have been a few Japanese players to appear for the Blue Jays over the years, including affable utilityman Munenori Kawasaki and left-handed pitcher Yusei Kikuchi, just once in the franchise's history has it signed a player directly from NPB: right-handed pitcher Shun Yamaguchi, whose transition to MLB was upended by the pandemic, making his lone season in 2020 particularly challenging.

— Toronto Blue Jays (@BlueJays)January 3, 2026

More broadly, and however Toronto proceeds from here, adding Okamoto is a bold reminder of the Blue Jays' fresh status as one of baseball's certified behemoths. Cease's deal alone makes Toronto the top spender in free agency this winter, but remove his megadeal completely, and the Blue Jays' combined commitments to Cease, Rogers and Okamoto ($127M) stillplace them third in MLBin free-agent spending, behind Baltimore and Philadelphia, the only two other teams to hand out nine-figure contracts this winter.

All together, it's a remarkable display of aggression and urgency in the wake of the franchise's devastating near-miss at a championship, and it's a welcome follow-up in financial investment after the $500 million extension bestowed on the face of the franchise in April.

A punchline in previous offseasons after coming up short in pursuit of top free agents, the Blue Jays have definitively flipped the narrative. Adjust your expectations accordingly — because Toronto might just have another splash (or two) coming before Opening Day.

Blue Jays finally land a Japanese star with Kazuma Okamoto — but where does he fit on the roster?

The defending American League champion Toronto Blue Jays, having already spent more in free agency than any other major-...
Notre Dame coach Micah Shrewsberry watches from the sideline during the first half of the team's NCAA college basketball game against Duke on Saturday, Jan. 6, 2024, in South Bend, Ind. (AP Photo/Michael Caterina)

A disputed call near the end of his team's 72-71 loss at Cal on Friday night caused Notre Dame men's basketball coach Micah Shrewsberry to lose his composure.

Shrewsberry charged off the floor in pursuit of referee Adam Flore as soon as the final horn sounded. Multiple players and staffers had to restrain Shrewsberry as the third-year Notre Dame coach continued to shout at Flore and point in his direction.

Another angle of Notre Dame HC Micah Shrewsberry chasing a ref after the loss to Cal:https://t.co/L7EwQoMHUrpic.twitter.com/SteSpRBFAZ

— Joaquin Ruiz (@WalkingRuiz)January 3, 2026

Flore became the target of Shrewsberry's rage when he controversially awarded Cal the chance for a go-ahead four-point play in the final seconds.

With Notre Dame leading by three and 9.9 seconds to play, Shrewsberry instructed the Fighting Irish to foul before Cal could attempt a game-tying 3-pointer. Notre Dame guard Logan Imes twice swiped at Cal guard Dai Dai Ames as he crossed mid-court but no foul was called. The third time, Imes got the timing wrong, reaching at Ames just before he rose and buried a 3-pointer from the left wing.

Flore initially ruled it an and-1 opportunity. Then the referees overturned that call and said the foul occurred before the shot. Then the referees huddled together once more and reversed the call a second time, deeming the basket good and sending Ames to the foul line to attempt the go-ahead free throw with 5.5 seconds remaining.

This is what prompted it: A foul on Logan Imes, ruled to be in the act of shooting.Notre Dame was trying to foul up three. The officials called this a shooting foul, reversed it and then reversed it back.pic.twitter.com/qkWGPcvqi9

— Jack Soble (@jacksoble56)January 3, 2026

"I thought there was a foul going up," Cal coach Mark Madsen told reporters after the game. "I saw the official signal it. They conversed a couple times and they allowed it. There's so much emotion in that gym, for the officials, for me, for the other team. I was grateful Dai Dai rose up and made the shot and I was grateful Dai Dai had the maturity and the huge presence of mind and the composure to knock down the free throw."

After Ames sank the go-ahead foul shot, Notre Dame had one final chance to win, but Braedon Shrewsberry's 3-point attempt clanked off the front rim.

In a statement released Saturday morning, Micah Shrewsberry apologized for his behavior after the final buzzer, calling his actions "inappropriate and not symbolic of the leader I strive to be and what Notre Dame expects of its coaches and educators."

"I will learn from this lack of judgement and be better in the future," he added.

A Statement from Head Coach Micah Shrewsberry:"I want to apologize for what took place immediately after the Cal game last night. My actions were inappropriate and not symbolic of the leader I strive to be and what Notre Dame expects of its coaches and educators. I will learn…

— Notre Dame Men's Basketball (@NDmbb)January 3, 2026

Shrewsberry apparently will avoid suspension for his postgame actions. The ACC called the matter closed on Saturday after publicly reprimanding Shrewsberry for violating the league's sportsmanship policy.

"Shrewsberry aggressively confronted a member of the officiating crew following the game," the ACC's statement said. "The unsportsmanlike behavior that was displayed is unacceptable and tarnishes the on-court play between these institutions."

Notre Dame coach Micah Shrewsberry charges at official after controversial call

A disputed call near the end of his team's 72-71 loss at Cal on Friday night caused Notre Dame men's basketball coach Micah Shrews...

 

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