Titans QB Cam Ward closes out rookie season with shoulder injury vs. Jags

Tennessee Titans rookie quarterback Cam Ward made an early exit from Sunday's 41-7 loss at Jacksonville due to a right shoulder injury which The Athletic later reported was a Grade 3 sprain to the AC joint.

Ward sustained the injury while being tackled on a 7-yard touchdown run and landing on his throwing shoulder in capping off the Titans' opening drive.

After being examined on the sideline, Ward walked to the locker room with members of the training staff for further examination. He was ruled out for the rest of the game.

Ward did not speak to reporters after the game, which concluded the Titans' season at 3-14. Interim coach Mike McCoy said that Ward will undergo testing on Monday in Nashville.

"We'll do more testing," McCoy said of Ward's injury. "Until they do more testing ... I'll give you a better answer down the road."

Brandon Allen took the field to begin Tennessee's second series, marking the first missed snap of Ward's rookie season after he was selected with the No. 1 overall pick the 2025 draft.

Ward, 23, went 3-for-3 on Sunday for 52 yards and two carries for 11 yards and the score -- his second of the season. He completed 59.8% of his passes (323 of 540) for 3,169 yards and 15 touchdowns with seven interceptions in 17 games.

Allen, 33, was selected by the Jaguars in the sixth round in 2016 NFL Draft. His last action came in 2024 with the San Francisco 49ers. He was 17 of 30 on Sunday for 72 yards and one interception that was returned for a touchdown.

--Field Level Media

Titans QB Cam Ward closes out rookie season with shoulder injury vs. Jags

Tennessee Titans rookie quarterback Cam Ward made an early exit from Sunday's 41-7 loss at Jacksonville due to a...
'This is why he's here': Steelers' upset of Ravens validates their acquisition of Aaron Rodgers. Now how far can they go?

PITTSBURGH — When the Pittsburgh Steelers regained possession, down 24-20, 2:20 remained in the game. Perhaps, fans in Acrisure Stadium wondered, 2:20 remained in the Steelers' season and even in Aaron Rodgers' career.

So the 42-year-old, four-time-MVP quarterback gathered his offense for a huddle. With three quick passes, they marched down to the 26-yard line before Rodgers missed on two straight throws.

Third-and-10 now threatened, with 1 minute to play. Rodgers began preparing receiver Calvin Austin for a backside hitch-and-go route.

On the sidelines, his teammates realized they were not worried.

"It was a weird, no-panic feeling," edge rusher T.J. Watt said. "Just calm. It was just confident. We've seen him work a two-minute drill so many times. We've seen those ball-at-the-2-yard-line, seven-shot type plays so many times. Just complete confidence in him and the offense.

"He's here for a reason. This is why he's here. This is the best dude in the NFL for this moment."

Rodgers validated that belief as he hit Austin for a go-ahead, 26-yard touchdown with 55 seconds to play. A 44-yard missed field goal by the Ravenshelped buoy the Steelers to the 26-24 win. But even before then, at a series of intervals throughout the game, Pittsburgh believed their quarterback would help carry them to victory.

"When I broke down [the huddle], I saw it was man to man, I had a good hope that the ball was going to come my way if I ran the route and executed," Austin told Yahoo Sports from the postgame locker room.  "Know it's cover zero, ball going to be up and down quick, so just get open and win.

"We're just so blessed — to be able to continue to play and continue to give 8 [Rodgers] a season."

The go-ahead touchdown to Austin was the last of Rodgers' magic on a 31-of-47, 294-yard night featuring one passing touchdown and another 20 yards rushing.

Every ounce of it was needed to ward off a Lamar Jackson vintage performance to the tune of 171 yards and two touchdowns in the fourth quarter alone.

Aaron Rodgers on Lamar Jackson: "Lamar was making some wild plays tonight, which you expect because he is such a talented player. He's going to be a gold jacket when it's all said and done."pic.twitter.com/HqyMSn9sEF

— Jori Epstein (@JoriEpstein)January 5, 2026

But as the Steelers triumphed, delaying questions about the futures of Rodgers and head coach Mike Tomlin for at least eight more days, excitement was not their only reaction tohosting the Houston Texans in a Monday night wild-card game. Much of the team was also surprisingly even-keeled — resolute to work and prepare avidly, but managing their energy in the way their quarterback modeled through the night.

"Sometimes in those intense moments, everyone can get pretty intense and loud and energetic," receiver Adam Thielen told Yahoo Sports. "But he really has a calmness and a softness of how he calls the plays and just keeps everybody calm."

Finding a quarterback of that demeanor for the Steelers is no accident. It was by design when Pittsburgh recruited Rodgers all last spring until he officially joined in June, and it's by design that he'll lead them into the playoffs.

"This was the vision in the spring when we pursued him," Tomlin said. "That's why you do business with a 41-, 42-year-old guy. Been-there, done-that guy with a résumé like his. He's not only capable; he thrives in it.

"I think he put that on display tonight."

Rodgers led second-half rebound to edge Steelers past Ravens

Rodgers' resilience shined most strongly in the second half.

The first half seemed shaky as Rodgers led an offense down top receiver DK Metcalf to suspension and big-bodied tight end Darnell Washington to a broken arm suffered a week prior.

Most of Rodgers' completions were quick gains and screen passes that couldn't pace Ravens running back Derrick Henry's early explosions and 112-yard first half. And at times, glimmers of doubt surfaced about Rodgers' future: When an early second-quarter pass to Jonnu Smith sailed high above the wide-open tight end, was Rodgers' accuracy and timing slipping? A play later, Rodgers' escaped the pocket to his right and tried to scramble. But his 42-year-old legs did not advance past the line of scrimmage before he was downed for a sack.

The Steelers entered halftime trailing 10-3, a Watt interception-gifted short field not enough to convert in the red zone. But after halftime, Pittsburgh found a rhythm. Take the second-and-8 rope that Rodgers threaded to veteran receiver Thielen for 28 yards three minutes into the second half.

Earning Aaron Rodgers' trust is a valuable skill. Adam Thielen did that immediately after arriving late in season, and it shows as Rodgers trusts him with this 28-yarder.pic.twitter.com/SH1DFL935X

— Jori Epstein (@JoriEpstein)January 5, 2026

Thielen tried to move at the top of his route to counter tight coverage. The gain continued what would be a game-tying drive for the Steelers — and it also earned Thielen a reassuring gesture from Rodgers.

"Usually it's a little look and a little point knowing that I made him proud," Thielen told Yahoo Sports. "So I like those moments. I like when I see that face rather than the disappointed face."

Rodgers would warrant his own affirmation throughout a second half featuring six lead changes. The Steelers scored on a literal brotherly shove as Cam Heyward added to his defensive tackle responsibilities to help push his brother, Connor, into the end zone. Kenneth Gainwell scored around the right end of an immaculately blocked 2-yard score after Rodgers hit tight end Pat Freiermuth for 31 yards on third-and-8 up the middle. Rodgers had recommended Freiermuth fake his defender that he was breaking out before going down the middle, taking his time along the way. The tight end executed so in line with his quarterback's high standards that Rodgers laughed.

There are moments when Aaron Rodgers' age and health seem to show glimpses. And then there are ropes like this and what he threw to Adam Thielen…that make you wonder whether he'll keep playing next year.pic.twitter.com/ekwhv1bd3h

— Jori Epstein (@JoriEpstein)January 5, 2026

"I'm literally throwing it kind of laughing to myself because I'm like, 'This is it. See, I've been talking about it forever,'" Rodgers said. "Just little things that you talk about in Latrobe and you hope show up… I'm just really proud of him.

"I can't say enough good things about Pat."

Nor could Steelers teammates say enough good things about Rodgers after he helped them turn their end-of-year luck after a 10-7 season. The record was identical. But last year, the Steelers lost their final five games, including a wild-card exit.

Against the same Ravens team that dealt two of those five losses last year, including the playoff elimination, Pittsburgh secured a different result, including a sweep of Baltimore.

"Last year, the playoffs, going to Baltimore, we were really hurt by that," Cam Heyward said. "I remember me and T.J. just sitting in the training room, just kind of scratching our heads.

"To get out here and play the same team, had some success in difference ways…

"This is what we've all been waiting for."

Texans are up next as Steelers players 'want to be able to have some hardware'

Amid a postgame locker room cocktail of blaring music, cheers for top performers and pungent celebratory cigars, a group of Steelers players FaceTimed Metcalf.

The receiver wasn't in the locker room receiving his "Been There, Won That" AFC North champion shirt. He wasn't on the field when the Steelers' offense could have used him against the Ravens on Sunday night, nor was he on the field when the Steelers' offense could have used him in their Week 17 loss to the Cleveland Browns that blew their first chance to clinch the division.

Metcalf had texted receivers Sunday morning, multiple players said, telling them they had the manpower they needed to win without him but he was nonetheless emotional he could not join as heserved a two-game suspension from an in-game altercation with a Detroit Lions fan.

Rodgers wasn't the only player this group longed to ensure saw another game this season in a Steelers uniform.

"We were playing so we could get DK back and we did," Austin told Yahoo Sports. "He's our leader. He's our energy. He's the guy."

The Steelers have many "guys," from Metcalf, who they will get back, to Watt whose interception was just one element of his several-pronged impact against the Ravens.

They had a guy in a headset on their sideline coaching, too. Supporters emphasized that Tomlin's 19 seasons at the Steelers helm do not include even one losing season. Critics will be intimately aware next week that nine years have elapsed since Pittsburgh last won a playoff game.

Steelers HC Mike Tomlin: "We are AFC North champions, and that sounds good and it feels good. But we didn't come here for that. We came here for what lies ahead, and so excited about that."Thankful."pic.twitter.com/42YJAR56QJ

— Jori Epstein (@JoriEpstein)January 5, 2026

The Texans opened as 3-point favorites at Pittsburgh, per BetMGM.

There is a restlessness to change the history among players who have lived it.

Fifteen years into his Steelers tenure, Heyward did not put on his AFC North champions hat as his teammates did.

"I want a different hat," he said. "Hopefully I have a chance to win a championship… I want to be able to have some hardware one day."

Steelers division champion shirts say "been there, WON that" 🔥pic.twitter.com/dl72CowUYp

— Jori Epstein (@JoriEpstein)January 5, 2026

Heyward spoke of the doubt he believes the NFL world has in the Steelers' chances. He spoke also of why the Steelers believe in their 42-year-old quarterback more than they think most would.

"To have a guy that has seen every type of defense allows you to go into a lot of gunfights and feel like you have a chance," Heyward said. "He's able to steer the ship."

Can Rodgers do it again next week? The Steelers know they were one 44-yard field goal attempt away from the frustration and devastation that Jackson instead described. They may have been a cornerback keeping his footing away from not scoring their final touchdown, and a concussion to star Ravens safety Kyle Hamilton away from the offensive uptick they experienced.

For now, they won't question it.

"If my aunt has male parts, she would be my uncle," Tomlin quipped in dismissing the value of hypotheticals.

The Texans are riding a nine-game winning streak. Rodgers brought up that his lone Lombardi Trophy followed a 10-6 season that included a one-score divisional win in the regular-season finale. He's not afraid of the odds against him, and his calm appears to be permeating the franchise.

"We were underdogs at home tonight against our division rival," Rodgers said. "It's going to give us some belief.

"The belief level in the locker room after a win like this is exponentially greater."

‘This is why he’s here’: Steelers' upset of Ravens validates their acquisition of Aaron Rodgers. Now how far can they go?

PITTSBURGH — When the Pittsburgh Steelers regained possession, down 24-20, 2:20 remained in the game. Perhaps, fans in A...
Bayern's 17-year-old prodigy Lennart Karl calls Real Madrid his 'dream club'

MUNICH (AP) — Bayern Munich's latest young sensation is already thinking about a future elsewhere.

Lennart Karl, the 17-year-old midfielder who became Bayern'syoungest Champions League scorerin October, prompted laughs, criticism and confusion Sunday with an admission he dreams of moving to Real Madrid.

During a question-and-answer session at a small-town fan gathering Sunday, the sort of visit that's a new year's tradition for the club's players, Karl was asked if he had a "dream club" other than Bayern.

"Bayern's a very, very big club in any case, and it's a dream to play there, but some day I'd definitely like to go to Real Madrid. That's my dream club, but that stays between us," Karl said, to laughter from the Bayern fans in the audience, in comments broadcast by Sky Sport in Germany.

"But obviously Bayern is something very, very special and it's lots and lots of fun at the club."

While the fans in the audience seemed to take Karl's comments with good humor, the young midfielder faced criticism from Bayern supporters online questioning his loyalty to the club.

Karl came through Bayern's youth academy and made his first-team debut in a 10-0 thrashing of Auckland City at the Club World Cup in June before becoming a regular this season, with six goals in 22 games.

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

Bayern's 17-year-old prodigy Lennart Karl calls Real Madrid his 'dream club'

MUNICH (AP) — Bayern Munich's latest young sensation is already thinking about a future elsewhere. Lennart...
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...

 

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