Ka'imi Fairbairn's 6 FGs help Texans beat Colts, lock up No. 5 seed

Ka'imi Fairbairn kicked a career-best six field goals, including the go-ahead 43-yarder with 12 seconds remaining, as the host Houston Texans defeated the Indianapolis Colts 38-30 on Sunday afternoon.

The victory was the ninth in a row for Houston (12-5), which will be the No. 5 seed in the AFC and will visit the fourth-seeded Pittsburgh Steelers in the wild-card round on Jan. 12.

The loss was the seventh straight for the Colts (8-9). Blake Grupe kicked a 22-yard field goal with 2:39 remaining to give Indianapolis a 30-29 lead.

Houston was in the running for the AFC South crown, but the Jacksonville Jaguars pounded the Tennessee Titans 41-7 to win the title.

With the Jaguars well ahead in their game, the Texans rested several starters in the second half, including C.J. Stroud, who completed 14 of 23 passes for 169 yards and one touchdown in the first half. Davis Mills was 3-of-9 passing for 36 yards in the second half.

"Of course, I saw the score of the game and Jacksonville was up," DeMeco Ryans said of Houston pulling some starters in the second half. "We got a few guys out, I guess. That's the whole thing about... Everybody talking about resting starters. It's hard to take everybody out. You only get 48 guys to go play on game day, so it's hard to take everybody out. But when we saw where they (the Jaguars) were in that game and they were up and had a pretty big lead. So, I pulled out selected guys when I could."

Jayden Higgins caught a touchdown pass for Houston. Tommy Togiai scored on a 17-yard fumble to end the game when Indianapolis' lateral-fest backfired. It was Togiai's first career touchdown.

Riley Leonard completed 21 of 34 passes for 270 yards, two touchdowns and one interception for the Colts in his first NFL start. Colts coach Shane Steichen said Leonard "did some good things," but the end result sparked a familiar feeling in the postgame locker room.

"It was frustrating. Yeah, the last half of the season for sure, that's what it's been," Steichen said. "Not finding ways to finish. We have to work tirelessly to get that fixed."

Alec Pierce caught four passes for 132 yards and two touchdowns before being ejected late in the third quarter for making contact with an official.

"He was just talking to the official, they said he bumped into him and that was a call," Steichen said. "Obviously, Alec did not mean to do that. Alec's character is top of the line, one of the best dudes on our team. Just an unfortunate situation."

Leonard scored on a 1-yard run on the Colts' drive to open the third quarter as his team took a 24-23 lead. Fairbairn kicked a 43-yard field goal to put Houston ahead with 6:53 left before Grupe booted a 39-yard field goal for a 27-26 Colts edge with 1:42 left.

An interception by Alijah Huzzie gave Houston great field position at the Colts' 33-yard line but the Texans settled for Fairbairn's 44-yard field goal and a two-point lead with 11:15 left in the game.

Stroud accounted for two touchdowns in the first half as the Texans led 23-17 at the break.

On his first pass attempt of the day, Leonard fired a 66-yard touchdown pass to Pierce between Fairbairn field goals of 51 and 48 yards. Grupe kicked a 50-yard field goal to give the Colts a 10-6 lead with 34 seconds left in the first quarter.

Stroud threw an 11-yard scoring pass to Higgins to give the Texans the lead with 9:34 left in the first half.

Houston's Danielle Hunter sacked Leonard and forced a fumble that Henry To'oTo'o recovered at the Indianapolis 2-yard line. Stroud scored on the next play to make it 20-10 with 8:32 remaining.

Leonard hit Pierce on an 8-yard scoring pass with 1:25 left before Fairbairn booted a 29-yard field goal on the final play of the half.

--Field Level Media

Ka'imi Fairbairn's 6 FGs help Texans beat Colts, lock up No. 5 seed

Ka'imi Fairbairn kicked a career-best six field goals, including the go-ahead 43-yarder with 12 seconds remainin...
Ravens have a long offseason to think about where to go next after stunning loss to Steelers

PITTSBURGH (AP) — Lamar Jackson thought it was over. That the Baltimore Ravens' unwieldy season would end up in a familiar spot: the playoffs.

Then, rookie kicker Tyler Loop's potential game-winning field goal from 44 yards out drifted a little right. And then a little further right. And then a little further right still.

By the time it fluttered well wide of the goalposts, the playoffs were gone. So was Jackson's certainty aftera 26-24 loss to Pittsburghon Sunday night sent the Ravens into what could be a turbulent offseason.

"I'm definitely stunned, man," Jackson said. "I thought we had it in the bag. ... I don't know what else we can do."

Jackson, who never really seemed fully healthy during his eighth season as he battled one thing after another, did his part. The two-time NFL MVP passed for 238 yards and three touchdowns, including two long connections with Zay Flowers in the fourth quarter that put the Ravens (8-9) in front.

It just wasn't enough. Baltimore's defense, which played most of the second half without star safety Kyle Hamilton after Hamilton entered the concussion protocol, wilted against 42-year-old Steelers quarterback Aaron Rodgers.

Rodgers passed for a season-high 294 yards, including a 26-yard flip to a wide-open Calvin Austin with 55 seconds to go after a defender slipped, symbolic of a season in which Baltimore's defense only occasionally found its form.

Still, the Ravens had a chance when Jackson found Isaiah Likely for a 28-yard gain on fourth down from midfield. A couple of snaps later, the 24-year-old Loop walked on to try to lift Baltimore to its third straight division title.

Instead, the rookie said he "mishit" it. Whatever it was, it never threatened to sneak between the goalposts.

"It's disappointing," Loop said.

Loop was talking about the game. He might as well have been talking about his team's season.

The Ravens began 1-5 as Jackson dealt with injuries and the defense struggled to get stops. Baltimore found a way to briefly tie the Steelers for first in late November, only to then split its next four games, including a home loss to Pittsburgh.

Still, when Jackson and the Ravens walked onto the Acrisure Stadium turf on Sunday night in the 272nd and final game of the NFL regular season, Baltimore was confident. The Ravens drilled Pittsburgh in the opening round of the playoffs a year ago behind the ever-churning legs of running back Derrick Henry.

When Henry ripped off a gain of 40-plus yards on the game's first offensive snap, it looked like it was going to be more of the same. While Henry did rush for 126 yards and joined Hall of Famer Barry Sanders as the only running backs in NFL history to have five 1,500-yard seasons, he was less effective in the second half.

Even that first run was telling of what night it was going to be, as an illegal block by wide receiver Zay Flowers cost Baltimore some field position. The Ravens ended up scoring on the drive anyway, thanks to a 38-yard fourth-down flip from Jackson to a wide-open Devontez Walker, but it started a pattern that was hard to shake as several steps forward were met with one step back on a night the Ravens finished with nine penalties for 78 yards.

"We were having a lot of penalties, which kept stopping drives," Jackson said. "But I'm proud of my guys because we kept overcoming. We kept overcoming adversity and situations like this. Divisional games (can) be like that sometimes."

Particularly when the Steelers are on the other side of the line of scrimmage. Pittsburgh has won 10 of the last 13 meetings. And while a handful of them have been in late-season matchups with the Ravens already assured of reaching the playoffs, the reality is the Steelers have been able to regularly do something that most others have not: found a way to beat Jackson.

"It comes down to situations like this," Jackson said. "Two-point conversion one year. Field goal another year. And again this year. Just got to find a way to get that win here."

And figure out who is going to be around to help get it.

Head coach John Harbaugh's 18th season in Baltimore ended with the Ravens missing the playoffs for just the second time in eight years. Jackson turns 29 this week and is still one of the most electric players in the league.

Yet Harbaugh and Jackson have yet to find a way to have that breakthrough season that Harbaugh enjoyed with Joe Flacco in 2013 when the Ravens won the Super Bowl.

There was hope when the season began that the roadblocks that have long been in the franchise's way — Kansas City and Patrick Mahomes chief among them — would be gone.

While the Ravens did get their way in a sense — theChiefswill watch the playoffs from afar for the first time in a decade after a nightmarish season of their own — it never all came together.

Jackson declined to endorse Harbaugh returning for a 19th season, saying the loss was still too fresh to zoom out on what it might mean for the franchise going forward.

Harbaugh, for his part, certainly seems up for running it back in the fall.

"I love these guys," he said afterward. "I love these guys."

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

Ravens have a long offseason to think about where to go next after stunning loss to Steelers

PITTSBURGH (AP) — Lamar Jackson thought it was over. That the Baltimore Ravens' unwieldy season would end up in a fa...
NFL wild-card preview: Which 6 teams have the most juice heading into their Round 1 matchup?

The NFL postseason is upon us.

While the No. 1 seeded Seattle Seahawks and Denver Broncos each get to kick back and relax this coming weekend, 12 other teams will battle in the wild-card round.

Here's a look at the six games, which includes: a team that backslid into the postseason despite not hitting the .500 mark; a hot NFC North rivalry; the emergence of a former No. 1 NFL Draft pick; the defending Super Bowl champion showing vulnerability; an MVP candidate in only his second season and jaw-dropping magic from Aaron Rodgers and the Steelers.

(5) Los Angeles Rams at (4) Carolina Panthers

Why the Panthers can win

Week 13 of the regular season, thePanthers beat this Rams team 31-28 in Charlotte. So why not again? The key will be getting Los Angeles quarterback Matthew Stafford off his game again, which is what Carolina did in the first match. In that one, Stafford uncharacteristically turned the ball over three times, including a first-quarter pick 6 that was ultimately the difference in the loss. Carolina quarterback Bryce Young was also efficient and opportunistic, and hit the big fourth-quarter pass when it mattered on a game-deciding, 43-yard touchdown to rookie Tetairoa McMillan.

Why the Rams can win

Wideout Davante Adams could be back in the lineup and that would make the Rams an extremely difficult team to boat race between Adams, receiver Puka Nacua, the very effective two-headed running back rotation of Kyren Williams and Blake Corum, and Stafford coming off a nice four-touchdown pass game in theregular-season finale win over the Arizona Cardinals. Safety Quentin Lake returning to the lineup for the playoffs is also a massive development. L.A.'s defense was playing some of its best football into mid-November when he went down, and he was sorely missed in multiple big games down the stretch. He missed the first matchup with the Panthers and will absolutely make a difference in this one.

Who has the juice going in

Without question, the Rams are feeling much better after getting their offense on track in the season-ending win over the Cardinals and a defensive performance that produced six sacks of Jacoby Brissett from five different players. Yes, it was against the Cardinals, but the Rams had something to play for and they showed it. They also know their defense is getting Lake back this week. There are a lot of positive feelings in Los Angeles. The Panthers backed into the playoffs, falling in their regular-season finale against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and then needed help from the Atlanta Falcons to get in. Carolina is also 8-9 and its offense has been a roller coaster. The Panthers are at home, but it's hard to know what Panthers team you're going to get.

(7) Green Bay Packers at (2) Chicago Bears

Why the Packers can win

Quarterback Jordan Love will be back from a concussion and was playing some of his best football of the season before thePackers' loss to Denver on Dec. 14. Green Bay is also facing a feast-or-famine Chicago defense that has been too reliant on turnovers over the course of the season and is struggling to get to the quarterback over the past month while giving up massive amounts of yardage.

Why the Bears can win

Despitelosing the season finale to the Detroit Lions, Chicago's offense has some intriguing young talent that is blossoming at the right time. Tight end Colston Loveland is a significant matchup problem and wideout Luther Burden III is versatile and more comfortable than ever in his role. The Bears also may get wideout Rome Odunze back from lingering foot issues.

Who has the juice going in

The Bears, only because the Packers have absolutely fallen flat on their face over the past month. They've lost four straight games to end the season, lost Micah Parsons to a season-ending injury and have Love banged up to close the season. Chicago has lost three of its past five, but the Bears' offense has shown signs of life and the ability to be balanced. Chicago also gets the benefit of playing in front of a home crowd that hasn't been this excited about its team since the 2018 season.

(6) Buffalo Bills at (3) Jacksonville Jaguars

Why the Jaguars can win

Trevor Lawrence is on an absolute heater over his past six games. He has 19 total touchdowns in a corner-turning run inside head coach Liam Coen's offense. Granted, a lot of the sparks have come against some bad teams, but it also included one of the biggest regular-season wins of Lawrence's career in a34-20 road victory over the Denver Broncos on Dec. 21. It feels like an arrival of sorts for Lawrence — including a bit of playing with some arrogance (in a good way) — although there is still going to be suspicion about whether it can be replicated in the postseason. If the Bronco buster Lawrence is the real Trevor, the Jaguars can play with anyone in the postseason.

Why the Bills can win

In Josh Allen, the Bills have got the best veteran quarterback in the AFC playoff field and he's in his prime. He's also a pain to bring down and is going against a Jaguars defense that can pressure quarterbacks but is in the league's bottom five in sacks. And now Allen has a legitimate partner in the backfield to carry the playoff load in James Cook, who put up some big games against three AFC playoff teams (the Houston Texans, Pittsburgh Steelers and New England Patriots) since November. The 13-12 clunker defeat to the Philadelphia Eagles in Week 17 wasn't inspiring, but it's better that Buffalo got that wakeup call in late December than January.

Who has the juice going in

The Jaguars have it, winning eight straight and nine of 10 games since their bye week. And the lone loss came on the road against a Houston Texans team that rounded into a high-end defense and playoff team down the stretch. Lawrence hitting another level as a quarterback might have the fan base as excited as it has ever been, and that will show up in the home-field advantage. On the other side of the ledger, it's hard for the Bills since their last full-strength impression was that loss to the Eagles where Allen was sacked five times. Buffalo head coach Sean McDermott being 0-5 in playoff road games is also concerning.

(6) San Francisco 49ers at (3) Philadelphia Eagles

Why the 49ers can win

If San Francisco — and this is an overwhelming "if" — has its full suit of offensive players for this game, the Niners can challenge the Eagles' defense. But afterseeing the 49ers' struggles against a similarly talented (and well-coached) Seattle Seahawks defensein the 13-3 loss in Week 18, it's clear offensive tackle Trent Williams and wideout Ricky Pearsall really need to be back up and running for this game. Running back Christian McCaffrey missed that tandem in the Seahawks' loss. While we won't know the update on that pair until midweek, that seems like a stretch right now.

Why the Eagles can win

Their offense is inconsistent and frustrating and there's no certainty that the running game will show up consistently in the postseason, but this defense has the elite talent to drag out wins. When defensive coordinator Vic Fangio put together a game plan that battered Josh Allen andheld the Buffalo Bills to 12 points in Week 17, it showcased at least half of a Super Bowl-worthy team. Conversely, the 49ers' pass rush has had issues getting to quarterbacks, which should make life for Jalen Hurts — and the performance of his uncharacteristically unpredictable offensive line — a bit easier.

Who has the juice going in

Oddly, even banged up and losing the regular-season finale to Seattle and getting sent on the road in the wild card, the 49ers had their chances against the Seahawks … and both quarterback Brock Purdy and the offense were smoking hot going into that game. Meanwhile, theEagles rested their starters and lost out on the No. 2 seed in the NFC in the process, which was deflating and left the lasting memory of their offense being a putrid second half against the Bills. And frankly, between head coaches Kyle Shanahan and Nick Sirainni, it's Shanahan who has put together a masterpiece this season despite playing in a brutal NFC West.

(7) Los Angeles Chargers at (2) New England Patriots

Why the Patriots can win

Quarterback Drake Maye turned a runaway MVP race into an absolute photo finish — and he did it by stressing defenses with his accuracy, deep-ball wizardry, ability to scramble and a poise that made him look like a 10-year veteran this season. He's going to give the Chargers problems. And now he has a very potent two-headed running attack backing him up with TreVeyon Henderson and Rhamondre Stevenson really coming together over the past month of the season. Defensive tackle Milton Williams and offensive tackle Will Campbell are also back in the fold right when New England needs them most. That's a lot of up arrows.

Why the Chargers can win

The New England run defense has had its issues down the stretch and the Chargers continually remixed offensive line could absolutely use the help. The return of Milton Williams will certainly help the Patriots, but you can't count on consistent betterment in the front seven until you see it materialize. That said, QB Justin Herbert getting a running game out of Omarion Hampton — combined with Herbert's own ability to scramble or create in designed runs — can certainly hurt New England. Especially in the rare occasions Herbert hasn't gotten beaten up by the pass rush.

Who has the juice going in

The Patriots are flying right now and are only a terrible second half against the Buffalo Bills from going into the playoffs on a 14-game winning streak. They'll have to settle for being 13-1 in their last 14, but they obliterated  the New York Jets and Miami Dolphins in their past two games. Yes, they've feasted on a lot of non-playoff teams down the stretch, but good teams should beat and at times dominate bad teams, and that's what New England did. The Chargers have lost their last two. And while Week 18 was a rest game for their starters, Herbert absorbed 16 sacks in three of his four games in December. He's getting hit too much and still has an injured non-throwing hand. That's concerning.

(5) Houston Texans at (4) Pittsburgh Steelers

Why the Steelers can win

If ever there was an emotional high and some magical dust sprinkled onto a team in its regular-season finale,Pittsburgh got it with its 26-24 win over the Baltimore Ravens to get into the postseason. But it wasn't a fluke. After the Ravens took a 17-13 lead midway through the fourth quarter, Steelers quarterback Aaron Rodgers and the surrounding offense went blow-for-blow the rest of the way — and did it without DK Metcalf, who was in the final game of his suspension. Yes, it took a horribly missed field goal by the Ravens to win and get into the playoffs. But everything is a new lease now. The all-in gamble on making Rodgers work got the Steelers back into the postseason on an emotional high.

Why the Texans can win

Houston started 0-3 but leaned on a hellacious defense to finish the season on 12-2 run that has seen its offense show signs of life down the stretch. That includes a 9-0 run to end the season. Aside from the Indianapolis Colts putting up a fight in Week 18 against the Texans (who began sitting starters as the game went on), this defense does not give up points to opponents. Houston also throttled a very mobile Justin Herbert in Week 17 with five sacks and will be staring at Rodgers like he's a potted plant in this one. Among the playoff quarterbacks in the AFC field, the Texans beat Herbert, Trevor Lawrence and Josh Allen during their 9-0 run. That speaks loudly.

Who has the juice going in

This might be a coin flip, but for somewhat different reasons. Houston gets the edge via a 9-0 run, but the Steelers got the gift of playoff life when it looked like the postseason had been extinguished in their regular-season finale. That gift and playing at home gives Pittsburgh plenty of juice. But the Texans get the overall edge because of the aforementioned AFC playoff quarterbacks they've cut down on their way into the postseason. And the Steelers' elation to have won their finale could turn out to be more relief than confidence. We will see.

NFL wild-card preview: Which 6 teams have the most juice heading into their Round 1 matchup?

The NFL postseason is upon us. While the No. 1 seeded Seattle Seahawks and Denver Broncos each get to kick bac...
USMNT weekend roundup: Brenden Aaronson nets lone goal for Leeds in draw vs. Man United

In the 62nd minute of Leeds United's clash with Manchester United on Sunday,Brenden Aaronsonwon over the Elland Road crowd with his first goal in more than two months.

The English Premier League match would end ina 1-1 draw,leaving Leeds in the bottom five, but for both the West Yorkshire club and the 25-year-old American midfielder, the goal was another bright moment after a November swoon.

Just six weeks ago, Leeds manager Daniel Farke was so concerned about the relentless social-media criticism aimed at Aaronson that he spoke out with great passion. With Leeds unbeaten in seven straight and the U.S. men's national team veteran playing well, both have been able to breathe easier.

Aaronson provided the lead Sunday, slipping into defender Ayden Heaven's blind spot to pounce on Pascal Struijk's well-weighted throughball. The New Jersey native then warded off Heaven before coolly finishing into the far corner for his second Premier League goal of the season.

The Red Devils answered three minutes later, but the result was good enough to extend Leeds' run to 2-0-5 since a four-match losing streak in November. The Whites (5-8-7) sit in 16th place but eight points clear of the relegation zone.

"It is great for the team to stay unbeaten," Aaronson said, "but of course we wanted three points."

Describing the goal, he said, "I just was kind of just running in behind to see if I could get lucky. Sometimes you have to take a chance. The ball came to me. I think that the centre back didn't know I was going to be kind of running off his shoulder like that. It was a good touch, and then it is just about putting it on target."

Since being demoted to the bench for four consecutive matches, Aaronson has started four in a row. Last weekend, he assisted in a 1-1 draw at Sunderland. His three assists lead the team and, combined with his two goals, he is tied for second in goal contributions.

It was a very different situation in late November, when fan anger prompted Farke to come to the American's defense.

"I'm just worried how we are as a society, with social media stuff, how we are as human beings," he said at the time. "You just see the negative comments. If you see 5,000 negative comments about yourself as a 25-year-old guy, you think the whole world is on your shoulders.

"I could make my life easy and also slam him and then everyone would say, 'Yes, Daniel, great, we don't like him anyway.' But I protect human beings. This is what I do. I work with human beings. I don't work with robots. I also see what this lad is doing. And he is always a fantastic teammate. He works his socks off."

Farke added, "Judge his performances, be at least a little bit fair. And if you don't want to do this in terms of relationship, come on, be a bit respectful with a young lad of 25 years old. And then, otherwise, we don't have to have all this mental-health awareness days, and we can put it into the bin."

By maintaining his good form, Aaronson is on pace to earn an invite to U.S. training camp in March for friendlies against Belgium and Portugal in Atlanta — the final assembly before coachMauricio Pochettinonames his World Cup squad in late May.

Soccer Football - Premier League - Leeds United v Manchester United - Elland Road, Leeds, Britain - January 4, 2026  Leeds United's Brenden Aaronson celebrates scoring their first goal Action Images via Reuters/Craig Brough EDITORIAL USE ONLY. NO USE WITH UNAUTHORIZED AUDIO, VIDEO, DATA, FIXTURE LISTS, CLUB/LEAGUE LOGOS OR 'LIVE' SERVICES. ONLINE IN-MATCH USE LIMITED TO 120 IMAGES, NO VIDEO EMULATION. NO USE IN BETTING, GAMES OR SINGLE CLUB/LEAGUE/PLAYER PUBLICATIONS. PLEASE CONTACT YOUR ACCOUNT REPRESENTATIVE FOR FURTHER DETAILS..

A member of the 2022 World Cup team, Aaronson appeared in eight matches last year, with three starts, one goal (against Trinidad & Tobago at the Gold Cup) and one assist. He was left off the September roster, made one sub appearance in the October friendlies and, a month later, started against Paraguay and came in late against Uruguay.

With midfielderTyler Adamsand center backChris Richardsinjured, Aaronson was among just two Americans in Premier League action over the weekend.Antonee Robinson, Fulham's left back/wing back, went the distance ina wild 2-2 home draw with Liverpool. Both teams scored in second-half stoppage time.

Since recovering from a knee injury, Robinson has played every minute of six consecutive matches across all competitions.

In the second-flight English Championship, central midfielderAidan Morrisplayed 90 in Middlesbrough's 4-0 win over Southampton, a result that trimmed the gap with first-place Coventry City to six points.

ForwardHaji Wrightentered in the 67th in Coventry's 3-2 loss at Birmingham City, extending the frontrunner's winless streak to three matches.

ForwardPatrick Agyemang(60 minutes) went scoreless for the third consecutive match as Derby County fell 2-1 to Wrexham. ForwardJosh Sargentlogged 89 minutes in a 2-0 loss to Stoke City.

Italy

MidfielderWeston McKenniescored his first Serie A goal of the season, connecting from close range in the 50th minute in a 1-1 draw with Lecce. He has scored twice in the Champions League.

Just four minutes into the second half, Weston McKennie sweeps in the equalizer for Juventus 🔥🇺🇸pic.twitter.com/eHKvb94Jci

— CBS Sports Golazo ⚽️ (@CBSSportsGolazo)January 3, 2026

Amid a stretch of six matches in 22 days, AC Milan top scorerChristian Pulisiccame off the bench in the 79th minute of a 1-0 victory over Cagliari.

MidfielderYunus Musahcontinues to struggle for starting roles, entering in the 59th minute of Atalanta's 1-0 win over Roma.

France

StrikerFolarin Balogun'saccidental assistwas the lone highlight of slumping Monaco's 3-1 home loss to Lyon. With Balogun spun around by a defender while in transition just before halftime, the ball nicked his foot and fell into the path of Mamadou Coulibaly for the one-timer.

MidfielderTanner Tessmannentered in the 66th minute for Lyon, which has won four straight in all competitions.

Wing backTim Weahplayed 90 for third-place Olympique Marseille, which lost two players to first-half red cards and lost to Nantes 2-0 snapping a three-game winning streak across all competitions.

Center backMark McKenziewent the distance in Toulouse's 3-0 home loss to first-place Lens. He has started 15 of 17 league matches.

Others

In Glasgow's Old Firm derby, center backAuston Trustyplayed 90 minutes in Celtic's 3-1 home loss to Rangers — the sixth defeat in eight matches under former Columbus Crew boss Wilfried Nancy. Trusty missed an early scoring chance and didn't perform well in the second half. "Overworked and underskilled," The Times wrote. …

In Spain's La Liga, midfielderJohnny Cardosoplayed the last half-hour of Atletico Madrid's 1-1 draw at Real Sociedad. …

The German and Dutch leagues are on winter break, impacting eight U.S. national team candidates. Mexico's Liga MX will resume this coming weekend. MLS preseason camps will open this month.

USMNT weekend roundup: Brenden Aaronson nets lone goal for Leeds in draw vs. Man United

In the 62nd minute of Leeds United's clash with Manchester United on Sunday,Brenden Aaronsonwon over the Elland Road...
Bears home dogs, Rams biggest wild-card favorite

The Los Angeles Rams will travel cross country as the No. 5 seed in the NFC to play at a division champion in the wild-card round, and they will do it as a double-digit favorite.

The Carolina Panthers (8-9) backed into the playoffs courtesy of Atlanta's win over New Orleans, and their reward as the NFC South champions is a date against a team that has been among the Super Bowl favorites all year. The Rams (12-5) were installed as a 10.0-point favorite by DraftKings for the wild-card opener on Saturday -- nearly a touchdown bigger spread than in any of the other five games.

By contrast, Saturday's second game will pit Chicago against bitter division rival Green Bay. The Bears are the No. 2 seed in the NFC, but opened as a +1.5-point home underdog against the Packers. The teams split their regular-season meetings, with the Bears winning 22-16 in overtime at home in Week 16.

Despite Green Bay closing the regular season on a four-game losing streak, the Packers were installed as one of four road favorites in the first round.

Sunday will feature two of the marquee matchups of wild-card weekend.

Jacksonville (13-4) will play host to Buffalo (12-5), with the Bills opening as a 1.5-point road favorite against the AFC South champions. The game also features the highest total points line at 51.5.

The Bills and Jaguars will be followed by the reigning Super Bowl champion Philadelphia Eagles (11-6) playing host to the San Francisco 49ers (12-5). Philadelphia opened tied as the second biggest favorite of the weekend at -3.5.

That equals the line for the New England Patriots (14-3), who will close out Sunday's trio of games at home against the Los Angeles Chargers (11-6).

The first round of the playoffs will conclude will the fourth road favorite. Pittsburgh (10-7) was the last team into the postseason on Sunday night courtesy of a missed field goal on the final play of the regular season, and the Steelers were immediately installed as a 3.0-point home underdog against the Houston Texans (12-5).

Along with the Packers-Bears, the Chargers-Patriots are tied for the lowest total points line of the weekend at 45.5.

Despite facing a potential three road-game gauntlet to reach the Super Bowl, the Rams enter the postseason with the second-shortest Super Bowl champion odds at +425. That's behind only the Seattle Seahawks (14-3), who claimed the No. 1 seed in the NFC and a first-round bye.

The AFC's top seed, the Denver Broncos (14-3), own the third-shortest title odds at +650.

SUPER BOWL CHAMPION ODDS*

Seattle Seahawks (+340)

Los Angeles Rams (+425)

Denver Broncos (+650)

New England Patriots (+950)

Philadelphia Eagles (+1000)

Buffalo Bills (+1000)

Houston Texans (+1200)

Jacksonville Jaguars (+1400)

Green Bay Packers (+2200)

Chicago Bears (+2200)

San Francisco 49ers (+2800)

Los Angeles Chargers (+2800)

Pittsburgh Steelers (+5000)

Carolina Panthers (+15000)

*DraftKings

--Field Level Media

Bears home dogs, Rams biggest wild-card favorite

The Los Angeles Rams will travel cross country as the No. 5 seed in the NFC to play at a division champion in the wi...

 

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