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  • Florida’s Billy Napier and Auburn’s Hugh Freeze are facing pressure after multiple disappointing seasons.
  • Wisconsin’s Luke Fickell has not met expectations, with the team in danger of a second straight losing record.
  • USC’s Lincoln Riley and UNC’s Bill Belichick are also listed among the most overpaid coaches.

The clock is ticking for some of college football’s highest-paid coaches.

That includes Florida’s Billy Napier, who was on the verge of being fired last season before earning a reprieve that hasn’t paid off for the Gators.

Another coach under fire is Wisconsin’s Luke Fickell, who arrived with massive expectations after a historic run at Cincinnati but is in danger of posting back-to-back losing records. That hasn’t happened in Madison since 1991-92.

And a third is Auburn’s Hugh Freeze. Despite a long track record of success, including during his previous stint at Mississippi, Freeze has been unable to transform the Tigers into anything resembling an SEC contender.

∎ View the entire 2025 college football coach salary database here

This group leads USA TODAY Sports’ list of the most overpaid head coaches in the country:

Lincoln Riley, Southern California

Riley earned $11.5 million during the 2023 calendar year, including bonuses and the value of various benefits, according to the private school’s most recently available federal tax records. That ranks him third among coaches is our survey behind Georgia’s Kirby Smart ($13.3 million) and Ohio State’s Ryan Day ($12.6 million). While Smart and Day have won three of the past four national championships, Riley has gone just 11-7 since USC joined the Big Ten last season. The results over his four seasons since moving from Oklahoma have simply not been there despite Riley’s massive salary.

Bill Belichick, North Carolina

Belichick is one of nine coaches in our survey making at least $10 million in total compensation. While UNC might’ve felt the need to break the bank to hire a six-time Super Bowl champion, the 73-year-old Belichick’s decades of success had not translated to the college game. The 2-3 Tar Heels have looked like one of the weakest teams in the Power Four in games against TCU, Central Florida and Clemson.

Luke Fickell, Wisconsin

This seemed like the perfect marriage: Fickell’s program at Cincinnati embraced the same physical style that helped turn Wisconsin into one of the most consistently successful programs in the Power Four. The results have been shockingly poor. The Badgers went 7-6 in 2023, dropped to 5-7 last season and are 2-3 so far in 2025. While the roster is young, the lack of on-field success could make this a three-and-out coaching tenure. Fickell is making $7.8 million in total compensation as part of a deal that runs through the 2031 season, with a current buyout of $27.5 million.

Billy Napier, Florida

At 21-22 overall, Napier could become the first non-interim Florida coach to post a losing record since Raymond Wolf from 1946-49. While last November’s decision to bring Napier back for another year sparked a strong close to last season, the Gators have continued to be one of the most frustrating teams in the SEC and one of the biggest disappointments in the Power Four despite his $7.5 million in total compensation. Napier’s current buyout is $20.4 million.

Hugh Freeze, Auburn

Unless his team’s underperforming offense gets in gear, Freeze could become the first Auburn coach with three losing seasons in a row since Earl Brown from 1948-50. Before being hired by the Tigers, Freeze had just one losing season in 10 years as a Bowl Subdivision head coach. Barring a strong second half, Auburn will be conducting its third coaching search since the end of the 2020 season. Freeze is earning $6.7 million in total compensation this season with a school buyout of $15.4 million.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

  • Colorado’s athletic department expenses are rising significantly, but the university has not yet determined where the money will come from.
  • Despite the financial uncertainty, Colorado increased Sanders’ pay and expanded the football support staff.
  • While Sanders has generated massive media exposure and revenue for the university, the athletic department still relies on substantial financial support from the school.

BOULDER, CO – To help protect their massive investment in coach Deion Sanders, University of Colorado officials agreed to pay for his personal security by putting his bodyguard on the school payroll.

That bodyguard, Michael Rhodes, is a former police officer who is paid $48,880 and is part of a football enterprise at Colorado that has expanded from 48 to 57 coaches and support staff since last year, according to records obtained from Colorado by USA TODAY Sports.

That includes Rhodes in the role of “private security to the head coach.”

“Officer Rhodes is a trusted and invaluable member of Coach Prime’s security team and has been an important addition to CU Athletics’ overall security efforts since his arrival,” the university said.

The cowboy-hatted Rhodes screens Sanders’ mail and follows him around, protecting a prized employee who now is one of 10 college football coaches making at least $10 million annually, according to the newly released coaches’ pay database from USA TODAY Sports.

That’s up from only two coaches making at least $8 million in 2019 − Alabama’s Nick Saban and Clemson’s Dabo Swinney, both of whom had won multiple national championships by then. This year, seven of those $10-million coaches never have won a national championship, including Sanders, whose pay was increased by Colorado from $5.7 million in 2024.

Yet schools keep throwing that kind of money at these coaches anyway, even as another massive new cost has been added to their athletics budgets this year starting July 1 − up to $20.5 million in additional benefits for players, including payments for their names, images and likenesses (NIL).

All of which raises a fundamental question: Where is the money coming from to pay for all of this?

Colorado says revenue sources are ‘TBD’

Some schools can answer that question more easily than others. Texas, for example, generated $332 million in athletics revenue in fiscal 2024, the most in the nation among public schools. That level of resources helped Texas increase the pay of coach Steve Sarkisian from $5.45 million in 2021 to $10.8 million now.

At Virginia Tech, the governing board on Sept. 30 approved a plan that provides $229 million in additional support for athletics over the next four years.

At Michigan, the university has offered athletics a $15 million loan to help pay rising costs in athletics.

In Colorado’s case, it’s a mystery.

“TBD,” Colorado’s athletic department recently stated on an estimated budget revenue form for fiscal year 2026, which started July 1.

TBD stands for “to be determined.”

In fiscal 2024, Colorado athletics generated only about a third of the revenue that Texas did, $115 million.

Meanwhile, the academic side of campus is straining for resources. In 2024, CU projected a small but growing budget deficit starting in fiscal 2027. As a result, it told faculty and staff to move forward by “being comfortable with being uncomfortable.”

“As someone who is a teaching professor, I find it interesting that this budget crisis has occurred since Deion Sanders has come to CU,” said Sigman Byrd, an associate teaching professor at Colorado. “That the university will be perhaps giving even more money to athletics makes it worse. It frustrates me, angers me. Why is Sanders and the football team getting the money? That the university may not be transparent in the way it’s paying its bills concerns me, too.”

Colorado’s statement on where the money is coming from

USA TODAY Sports has submitted several requests to Colorado since May for records that show the athletic department’s revenue and expense estimates for the current fiscal year. In response, Colorado said it didn’t have documents responsive to these requests. The university then provided a document on Sept. 10 that shows estimated expenses for the current fiscal year at $164.9 million, about $24 million more than the estimated expenses for fiscal year 2025 and $27 million more than fiscal 2024.

Most of that increase can be attributed to football expenses and the new $20.5-million cost for players, under terms of the legal settlement for the House vs. NCAA lawsuit.

But Colorado said it doesn’t have anything to provide in writing that spells out where it’s getting the money to pay for that and Sanders’ new contract.

In previous years, the university has supported its athletic department with substantial funding to help to cover costs. In fiscal 2023, the university provided $31.89 million to athletics, according to documents obtained by USA TODAY Sports. In fiscal 2024, which included Sanders’ first season at CU, the university also provided $31.9 million to athletics, including $1.7 million from student fees. In fiscal year 2025, CU athletics estimated getting at least $26 million in support from the university.

But for fiscal 2026, the university said school support for athletics is “TBD,” like the rest.

“The FY26 budget is currently in development and is not finalized,” CU Athletics said in a statement to USA TODAY Sports in September. “Due to new opportunities presented by the House settlement, the budget for FY26 has required extensive conversations with our campus partners as well as our Board of Regents. CU Athletics is preparing for House implementation with a singular focus on revenue generation, which includes donations, multi-media rights, outside events and other sources, particularly the immense ancillary benefits the university receives thanks to head football coach Deion Sanders.”    

The chair of the Board of Regents declined comment through a CU spokesperson.

CU media exposure from Sanders valued at $3.2B

In other words, Colorado is partly hoping its investment in Sanders pays off with increased revenues. It already has in many ways. Colorado sold out every home game in 2023 and had a record $31.2 million in football ticket sales in fiscal 2024.

His team is 2-4 this year without a Big 12 Conference win and was 9-4 last year after finishing 1-11 before Sanders was hired in 2022. Almost all of its games are now televised on national television, unlike before Sanders’ arrival, which has helped gain the university $3.2 billion in advertising equivalency value as measured by Cision, CU’s media monitoring company.

By those metrics, Sanders is arguably underpaid compared to what he brings in. Colorado football by itself reported $64.7 million in operating revenues in fiscal 2024, compared to $38.5 million in expenses.

But there are limits to his money-making magic. The value of its media exposure under Sanders isn’t cash revenue, though it has helped boost enrollment to a record last fall of more than 38,000, up by 3.4% from the year before. In 2019, it was about 35,500. Factors other than athletics obviously boost and cap enrollment.

Sanders’ health has also been a concern. He was scheduled to undergo another surgery to remove blood clots in his left leg on Oct. 7 but is expected to return to his job this week.

Meanwhile, Colorado’s athletic department still has needed the university’s financial support since his arrival. It has 16 other sports to pay for, most of which don’t generate much revenue, if any. Football helps pay for them. And now the expenses are going up in fiscal 2026 without a clear new revenue source to cover them.

“In the absence of new revenue and assuming the expenses are accurate, then the campus will be on the hook for something approaching $50 million in subsidy of the athletic department,” said Roger Pielke, an emeritus professor at Colorado who previously taught sports governance in the CU athletics department. “That probably explains the sensitivities.”

The subsidy gap in college football

Colorado serves as a high-profile example of a school investing heavily in football at a time when uncertainty looms over future funding and a growing revenue gap divides college football.

One way to measure that divide is by whether athletic departments generate enough revenue on their own to pay the bills or need financial support from their universities to cover costs, such as direct payments from the university and student fees.

Only 24 of 236 Division I athletic departments received less than $4 million in university allocations in fiscal year 2024, the most recent year available for all schools, according to public records collected by USA TODAY Sports in conjunction with the Knight-Newhouse College Athletics Database at Syracuse University. That list includes big-revenue football schools in the Big Ten and Southeastern Conference such as Ohio State, Penn State, Texas, LSU, Michigan, Georgia, Oregon and Alabama.

Those athletic departments can afford to give their coaches big paychecks without getting help from the other side of campus. Of the nine public school coaches making $10 million, six work for athletic departments getting less than $4 million in support from their universities, including Ohio State’s Ryan Day, whose pay jumped from $10 million last year to $12.5 million now.

High subsidies at other schools

On the other end of the spectrum, 33 athletic departments received at least $30 million in university support, including Colorado ($31.9 million), Houston ($38.4 million), Arizona State ($51.7 million) and South Florida ($63.7 million).

This was all before the new $20.5 million settlement cost kicked in, along with increases related to football pay, such as at Arizona State, where coach Kenny Dillingham is making $7.4 million, up from $3.95 million last year.

“It doesn’t seem that the new model that includes new institutional NIL compensation for college athletes is moderating the growth rate of college coaching salaries and the excessive buyouts in their contracts,” said Amy Perko, CEO of the Knight Commission on Intercollegiate Athletics.

To address this, Perko said Congress should reconsider how to curb excessive pay for coaches at tax-exempt universities. She also noted that nearly 80% of Division I university leaders expressed concern about their athletics departments’ future reliance on institutional funds and student fees to cover expenses, according to a national survey conducted by Elon University Poll and the Knight Commission.

Why Colorado committed to the new expenses

If Colorado didn’t commit to these new expenses, it would risk falling into the abyss of irrelevancy in sports. Every school in major college football feels this pressure.

In Colorado’s case, the years before Sanders’ hiring showed what happens when you don’t keep up in sports, especially football. A bad team led to apathy and despair among fans and donors.

The University of Colorado’s Board of Regents referenced the competition in March when it approved Sanders’s new contract. The board’s agenda said it was necessary “in light of the prevailing market conditions and competitive employment agreement practices nationwide for head coaches.”

But even with Sanders packing the stadium and drumming up national attention on television every week, paying the bills is still more challenging in the Big 12 than in the revenue-rich Big Ten or SEC. In the Big 12, most schools got about $39.5 million each in fiscal year 2024, compared to $63 million for members of the Big Ten.

How other schools are paying for it

Another Big 12 school, Houston, is getting a new revenue boost at the same time its player expenses are going up. The Cougars previously got almost a half share of Big 12 revenue distributions, starting in 2023 when they joined the league. This year, they get a full share of around $36 million, athletics director Eddie Nunez said. That increase of around $18 million is dedicated to paying the $20.5 million for players.

It helps that coach Willie Fritz is making $4.5 million, the same as last year.

“For us, it was a little bit easier,” Houston athletics director Eddie Nunez told USA TODAY Sports. “We have this revenue coming in that we have not been living off of.”

That’s not the case at Colorado, which already was living off of a full revenue share in the Pac-12 and Big 12 conferences.

Other schools are tackling the new expense in different ways with cost reductions, fundraising efforts and university support.

∎ At Virginia Tech, the Board of Visitors on Sept. 30 approved a new $229-million planned investment in athletics over the next four years, including $48.3 million in institutional support, $21.3 million in student-fee revenue, $120 million in planned donations and $39.6 million in bridge funding, which the school said would come from university cash assets.

∎ In June, the Board of Governors for the State University System of Florida granted permission for state universities to give a $22.5 million annual lifeline to their athletics programs through at least June 2028.

∎ At West Virginia, the schools’ board of governors is taking steps to significantly boost funding for athletics and put it in the “top funding tier” in the Big 12, with more details to come.

∎ Even in Michigan’s big-revenue athletics department, athletics director Warde Manuel said the Wolverines faced a projected deficit of $27 million for the 2025-26 academic year, including the $20.5 million for players. He cited a planned 10% reduction in staff while the university has also offered the department a loan of up to $15 million, spokesman Dave Ablauf said.

‘We’ve got to figure out how’

USA TODAY Sports requested interviews with Colorado athletics director Rick George and Chancellor Justin Schwartz but was told they weren’t available. The athletic department said Sanders declined to comment. He previously addressed his new contract by saying he loves Colorado and wanted to get more resources for his program first.

Otherwise, he said, “I don’t like talking about my stuff.”

In July, George appeared on the athletic department’s YouTube channel with host Mark Johnson, an employee of the university.

“Where’s this money coming from?” Johnson asked in reference to the big new cost of revenue-sharing with players.

“Well, look,” George said, “like a lot of times, we’ve got to figure out how we’re gonna get to that point.”

George then said his department has tried to minimize expenses and maximize revenues but didn’t offer a clear solution that would cover these huge new costs in fiscal 2026.

University regents approved a student athletics fee increase this year from $28.50 to $90 per semester, but it’s being phased in gradually and only netted athletics about $1.7 million annually before the increase.

George cited a rare seventh home football game this season instead of the usual six, which could add around $5 million more than normal. He also said the new artificial turf at Folsom Field might lead to more events, such as a concert in October. He even said he hoped his football team hosted a College Football Playoff game in December. Ohio State, for example, netted $5.1 million for its playoff home game in 2024. But that is not likely this season for the Buffaloes.

“We absolutely need more support from our donors if we can,” George said then.

Colorado’s estimated donations for fiscal 2026 are like the rest: TBD.

Follow reporter Brent Schrotenboer @Schrotenboer. Email: bschrotenb@usatoday.com

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Cooper Flagg has a lot to live up to after the Dallas Mavericks selected the Duke All American and Naismith College Player of the Year winner with the No. 1 overall pick in the 2025 NBA Draft.

There’s a long legacy of Hall of Famers produced from that spot atop the draft order, with players like Elgin Baylor (1958), Oscar Robertson (1960), Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (1969), Magic Johnson (1979), Shaquille O’Neal (1992) and Tim Duncan (1997) among those who serve as proof of what can happen to a franchise when it gets the No. 1 pick right. There have also been plenty of busts born from terrible injury luck or a team’s front office making the wrong choice.

Flagg is in the unusual position of playing a big role for a potential contender immediately as a rookie, rather than learning the NBA with a rebuilding team like most recent No. 1 picks are forced to do. With the 2025-26 NBA season fast approaching, USA TODAY Sports ranked all the No. 1 picks since 2000 as Flagg prepares to begin his rookie campaign.

Flagg and all No. 1 picks before the 2000 NBA draft were not included in this exercise. Here’s how the rankings turned out:

25. Anthony Bennett, 2013

Cleveland Cavaliers

  • Career: 4 seasons, 151 games
  • Stats: 4.4 points, 3.1 rebounds, 0.5 assists

What’s worse for a team than a No. 1 pick who didn’t live up to the billing because of injury? A No. 1 pick who didn’t live up to the billing because the team completely bungled the evaluation process. That’s the fate of Anthony Bennett after the Cavaliers shocked everyone when it chose the the UNLV forward with the No. 1 pick only for him to be discarded by the team the next year. Bennett ended up playing four NBA seasons with four different franchises and has since carved out a lengthy career in the G league and overseas.

24. Greg Oden, 2007

Portland Trail Blazers

  • Career: 3 seasons, 114 games
  • Stats: 8 points, 6.2 rebounds, 1.2 blocks

Oden missed more NBA seasons than he played after being drafted No. 1 in 2007 as a one-and-done star from Ohio State. He played in 61 games in his 2008-09 rookie season (after sitting out his first season following the draft), and then appeared in just 44 games the rest of his career due to foot and knee injuries.

23. Markelle Fultz, 2017

Philadelphia 76ers

  • Career: 9th season, 270 games
  • Stats: 10.4 points, 4.4 assists, 3.2 rebounds, 1.1 steals

A mysterious shoulder ailment that affected Fultz’s shooting motion fundamentally altered the trajectory of his career and led to a failed stint with the Sixers after Philadelphia used the No. 1 pick on him. Fultz forged a rotation role with the Orlando Magic in recent seasons and played 21 games with the Sacramento Kings last year. He is currently a free agent.

22. Kwame Brown, 2001

Washington Wizards

  • Career: 12 seasons, 625 games
  • Stats: 6.6 points, 5.5 rebounds, 0.9 assists

Michael Jordan’s notorious No. 1 pick with the Wizards wound up playing for seven teams in the NBA after coming to the league straight from high school. His best statistical season came playing alongside Jordan with the Wizards, and he was later a rotation player on Lakers’ playoff teams starring Kobe Bryant.

21. Zaccharie Risacher, 2024

Atlanta Hawks

  • Career: 2nd season, 75 games
  • Stats: 12.6 points, 3.6 rebounds, 1.2 assists, 12.2 PER

It’s tough to judge the Hawks’ top pick based off one season. The intriguing wing was a solid defender and more efficient offensively after the All-Star break, showing enough flashes to make the all-rookie team in 2025.

20. Andrea Bargnani, 2006

Toronto Raptors

  • Career: 10 seasons, 561 games
  • Stats: 14.3 points, 4.6 rebounds, 1.2 assists

Bargnani settled in as more of a role player after the Raptors used the No. 1 pick on him. The Italian 7-footer had three-straight seasons in which he averaged at least 15 points per game while shooting better than 34.5% from 3-point range.

19. DeAndre Ayton, 2018

Phoenix Suns

  • Career: 8th season, 443 games
  • Stats: 16.4 points, 10.5 rebounds, 1.6 assists, 1.0 blocks, 20.0 PER

Ayton is already on his third team and getting another fresh start with the Los Angeles Lakers this season. He made the NBA Finals with Phoenix in 2020, but this 7-footer with a wealth of offensive tools has yet to fully realize that potential. He had an underwhelming campaign with the Portland Trail Blazers last year before negotiating a buyout.

18. Kenyon Martin, 2000

New Jersey Nets

  • Career: 15 seasons, 869 games
  • Stats: 12.3 points, 6.8 rebounds, 1.9 assists, 1.2 steals, 1.1 blocks, 15.0 PER

Martin was a one-time All-Star and a key starter on a Nets team that went to the NBA Finals in back-to-back seasons. He carved out a 15-year career as a role player coveted for his interior defense, rebounding and toughness.

17. Ben Simmons, 2016

Philadelphia 76ers

  • Career: 8th season, 422 games
  • Stats: 13.1 points, 7.4 rebounds, 7.2 assists, 1.5 steals

The toll Simmons’ injury issues, outside shooting woes and attitude concerns have taken on his reputation have overshadowed some of the productive seasons he had after being selected No. 1 by the Sixers. The 2018 NBA Rookie of the Year earned one All-NBA nod, led the league in steals in 2020 and was named to the NBA All-Defensive teams twice. He played for the Los Angeles Clippers last season and remains a free agent after indicating on social media recent retirement rumors were inaccurate.

16. Andrew Wiggins, 2014

Cleveland Cavaliers (traded to Minnesota Timberwolves)

  • Career: 12th season, 810 games
  • Stats: 18.5 points, 4.5 rebounds, 2.3 assists, 1.0 steals, 14.7 PER

Drafted No. 1 by Cleveland and then included in the trade that sent LeBron James back to the Cavaliers, Wiggins is now on his third team (the Miami Heat) since starting his career with the Timberwolves. The 2015 NBA Rookie of the Year was a key starter on the Golden State Warriors’ 2022 championship team.

15. Zion Williamson, 2019

New Orleans Pelicans

  • Career: 7th season, 214 games
  • Stats: 24.7 points, 6.6 rebounds, 4.3 assists, 1.0 steals, 25.1 PER

Williamson is lower than some of his relative peers on this list ‒ despite better production when he actually plays ‒ since the two-time All-Star has yet to make an All-NBA team with the Pelicans because of his injury and availability issues. An in-shape Williamson could be poised to make a leap this season.

14. Andrew Bogut, 2005

Milwaukee Bucks

  • Career: 14 seasons, 783 games
  • Stats: 9.6 points, 8.7 rebounds, 2.2 assists, 1.5 blocks, 16.4 PER

The Australian center once led the league in blocks (2011) and eventually earned a third-team All-NBA nod and a spot on the All-Defensive team after being drafted No. 1 overall by the Bucks. He was also a prominent role player on the Golden State Warriors when they won the 2015 NBA championship.

13. Cade Cunningham, 2021

Detroit Pistons

  • Career: 5th season, 214 games
  • Stats: 22.1 points, 7.5 assists, 5.4 rebounds, 1.0 steals, 16.9 PER

Cunningham enjoyed a breakthrough in his fourth season in Detroit in 2025, earning third-team All-NBA honors while leading the Pistons to a playoff win for the first time since 2008.

12. Paolo Banchero, 2022

Orlando Magic

  • Career: 4th season, 210 games
  • Stats: 22.4 points, 7.1 rebounds, 4.6 assists, 17.1 PER

The sophomore campaign for the 2023 NBA Rookie of the Year was rockier than expected due to injury, but Banchero is already one of the league’s most promising inside-outside threats and has been the leading scorer of a postseason team both seasons since being drafted No. 1 by the Magic.

11. John Wall, 2010

Washington Wizards

  • Career: 11 seasons, 684 games
  • Stats: 18.7 points, 8.9 assists, 4.2 rebounds, 1.6 steals

Wall led the Wizards past the first round of the playoffs three times in four years during his prime after the franchise had accomplished the feat just once in the previous 30 years. The athletic point guard, who last played in an NBA game in January 2023 and officially announced his retirement last month, earned All-NBA and All-Defense honors one time apiece during his career.

10. Victor Wembanyama, 2023

San Antonio Spurs

  • Career: 3rd season, 117 games
  • Stats: 22.5 points, 10.8 rebounds, 3.8 assists, 3.7 blocks, 23.5 PER

If Wembanyama lives up to the hype and potential of his first two seasons, he could quickly leap into the top-5 of this list. Nonetheless, Wembanyama was already the Rookie of the Year and a member of the NBA’s All-Defensive team with the Spurs in 2024, and he’s led the league in blocks twice. Getting San Antonio to the playoffs is the next step now that the 7-foot-3 center has been medically cleared after deep vein thrombosis in his shoulder cut last season short.

9. Yao Ming, 2002

Houston Rockets

  • Career: 8 seasons, 514 games
  • Stats: 19 points, 9.2 rebounds, 1.9 blocks, 1.6 assists, 23.0 PER

The 7-foot-6 Chinese center became one of the best centers in the NBA with the Rockets but had his run as an elite player cut short due to injury. Ming earned All-NBA honors five times but only once did his teams in Houston advance past the first round of the playoffs.

8. Karl-Anthony Towns, 2015

Minnesota Timberwovles

  • Career: 11th season, 695 games
  • Stats: 23.1 points, 11.1 rebounds, 3.2 assists, 1.2 blocks, 23.8 PER

The 2016 NBA Rookie of the Year earned third-team All-NBA honors last season for the third time in his 10-year career. One of the best 3-point shooting big men in league history, Towns helped the Timberwolves win a playoff series for the first time in 20 years and was a force on the New York Knicks’ team that made a run to the Eastern Conference Finals in 2025. He’s poised to move up this list with the Knicks expected to contend for a title again.

7. Derrick Rose, 2008

Chicago Bulls

  • Career: 15 seasons, 775 games
  • Stats: 17.4 points, 5.2 assists, 3.2 rebounds, 18.0 PER

Rose would be ranked higher based on his brief rise and peak as an NBA player, when he won the 2009 Rookie of the Year award and the 2011 MVP award in his third season after the Bulls took him No. 1 overall. Injuries derailed Rose’s time in Chicago after a run to the 2011 Eastern Conference Finals, though he did carve out a lengthy career as a role player. His only All-NBA honor came during his MVP season.

6. Blake Griffin, 2009

Los Angeles Clippers

  • Career: 13 seasons, 833 games
  • Stats: 19 points, 8 rebounds, 4 assists, 21.0 PER

Griffin didn’t play during his first year in the NBA due to injury, but he won NBA Rookie of the Year in 2011 as part of a strong run of seasons during the first portion of his career with the ‘Lob City’ Clippers. Griffin was a five-time All-NBA selection, including one nod later with the Detroit Pistons.

5. Anthony Edwards, 2020

Minnesota Timberwolves

  • Career: 6th season, 423 games
  • Stats: 23.9 points, 5.3 rebounds, 4.2 assists, 1.3 steals, 17.7 PER

Edwards is this high in the rankings, in part, because he could be poised to climb even higher based on the potential he showed during his first five years in the NBA. He’s already a two-time All-NBA selection and led the Timberwolves to the Western Conference Finals in 2025. The two-way threat is expected to be among the league’s elite players for the next decade.

4. Kyrie Irving, 2011

Cleveland Cavaliers

  • Career: 15th season, 875 games
  • Stats: 23.7 points, 5.6 assists, 4.1 rebounds, 1.3 steals, 22.2 PER

Irving was the 2012 Rookie of the Year after the Cavaliers chose him with the No. 1 overall pick and then won an NBA championship alongside LeBron James in 2016. He’s a three-time All-NBA selection (and did so with three different teams) and made the NBA Finals with the Dallas Mavericks in 2024. Irving will miss the beginning of the 2025-26 season with the Mavericks after suffering a torn ACL last March.

3. Anthony Davis, 2012

New Orleans Hornets

  • Career: 14th season, 847 games
  • Stats: 24.1 points, 10.7 rebounds, 2.6 assists, 2.3 blocks, 26.8 PER

Davis ranks behind Dwight Howard on this list even though he was the NBA Finals MVP on the team Howard won a championship with because of how Davis’ tenure with the team that took him No. 1 went. He had one playoff run with New Orleans before demanding a trade to the Los Angeles Lakers. Davis nonetheless became arguably the best two-way big man of his generation, and the argument is only due to the injuries that sidelined him over the years. Now entering his first full season with the Dallas Mavericks, Davis is a five-time All-NBA selection (including four first-team nods), a five-time All-Defensive pick and led the NBA in blocks three times.

2. Dwight Howard, 2004

Orlando Magic

  • Career: 18 seasons, 1,367 games
  • Stats: 15.7 points, 11.8 rebounds, 1.8 blocks, 1.3 assists, 21.3 PER

His career numbers don’t do justice to his run as one of the league’s most dominating players during his prime years after being picked No. 1 by the Magic. The recent Hall of Fame inductee was an 8-time All-NBA selection (including five first-team nods), named Defensive Player of the Year three times, led the league in rebounding five times and led the NBA in blocks twice. Howard won an NBA championship as a role player with LeBron James and the Lakers in 2020 after leading Orlando past James and into the NBA Finals as a star 11 years earlier.

1. LeBron James, 2003

Cleveland Cavaliers

  • Career: 23rd season, 1,854 games (regular season plus playoffs)
  • Stats: 27.0 points, 7.5 rebounds, 7.4 assists, 26.9 Player Efficiency Rating (PER)

The NBA’s all-time leading scorer is a no-brainer No. 1 choice for the best No. 1 pick since 2000. The four-time MVP, four-time Finals MVP and four-time NBA champion is entering his record-breaking 23rd season in the league and still seems to have more left in the tank. He just earned second team All-NBA honors with the Los Angeles Lakers as a 40-year-old. Though his initial run in Cleveland as its No. 1 pick ended in his controversial ‘decision’ to leave for Miami, James led the Cavaliers to the NBA Finals and then returned to Cleveland to win an NBA championship in 2016. He also won consecutive championships with the Heat in 2012 and 2013 and guided the Lakers to the 2020 championship.

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After trading Joe Flacco to the Cincinnati Bengals on Tuesday, the Cleveland Browns appeared likely to elevate Shedeur Sanders as the team’s primary backup quarterback.

Coach Kevin Stefanski, however, isn’t ready to make that call yet.

Speaking Wednesday for the first time since the trade, Stefanski said he was not yet prepared to name the second-string option behind Dillon Gabriel for Sunday’s game against the Green Bay Packers.

‘I always have to be mindful of our players and our players’ development,’ Stefanski said when asked whether Sanders had officially been installed as the backup. ‘I want to make sure I’m always doing what’s best for our players, and of course our team. … These are young players that you’re so invested in their development, so I’ll let the week play out and make a decision later on then.’

In addition to Sanders, the Browns also have Bailey Zappe on the practice squad. The fourth-year passer started eight games for the New England Patriots from 2022-23 and also took the reins for the Browns in last season’s finale against the Baltimore Ravens. He re-signed with the team in August after Cleveland traded Kenny Pickett to the Las Vegas Raiders.

Stefanski opened by saying the team was taken aback by the Bengals’ pursuit of Flacco, who was benched last week after throwing six interceptions in his first four starts.

‘The Joe trade took us by surprise,’ Stefanski said. ‘That was not something we saw coming. They called us, and it happened very fast.’

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The 49ers sit atop the NFC West at 4-1 with a perfect 3-0 record in divisional games. San Francisco would be the No. 2 seed in the NFC if the playoffs started today, thanks to a perfect 4-0 record in conference games.

Despite this success, the team is plagued by injury issues throughout the roster, especially at quarterback. Starter Brock Purdy suffered toe and shoulder injuries in a Week 1 win over the Seattle Seahawks and missed the next two games. Backup Mac Jones filled in nicely and led the team to wins over the Saints and Cardinals in Weeks 2 and 3, respectively.

Jones was injured in Week 4 – a game against his old team, the Jacksonville Jaguars – so Purdy made his second start of the year but did not look fully healthy. Jones took over the starting role again in Week 5 and led the 49ers to a thrilling overtime win over NFC West foe Los Angeles on ‘Thursday Night Football.’

So, who will be the starting quarterback for the 49ers in Week 6 on the road against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers – Purdy or Jones? Here’s what we know about Purdy ahead of Sunday’s game in Tampa.

Brock Purdy injury update

Purdy did not practice today in the 49ers’ first session of the week, per multiple reports. He was one of three starters to miss practice with an injury, along with wide receivers Jauan Jennings and Ricky Pearsall. Jones was limited in practice as well.

It’s not a good sign for Purdy’s status in Week 6 that he did not practice at all today, but it’s not a definitive answer. The 49ers will have practices on Thursday and Friday ahead of Sunday’s game and his status will be more important on those days.

It’s also important to note that the team has not placed him on injured reserve (IR). If the team thought he’d miss at least four weeks, they would’ve done that.

San Francisco has back-to-back NFC South matchups with the 4-1 Buccaneers in Week 6 and the 2-2 Atlanta Falcons in Week 7 at home on ‘Sunday Night Football.’

49ers QB depth chart

  • Brock Purdy (injured)
  • Mac Jones
  • Adrian Martinez (practice squad)

Martinez was moved to the active roster in Week 5 in case Jones left the game with an injury. If Purdy isn’t good to go for Week 6, Martinez will likely suit up once again.

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The friendly match between Argentina and Puerto Rico, originally scheduled for next week in Chicago, has been relocated to Florida. This significant change is due to an anticipated immigration crackdown in the city, according to The Associated Press.

The match between Argentina and Puerto Rico, originally scheduled for Monday, Oct. 13, at Soldier Field in Chicago, has been moved to Chase Stadium in Fort Lauderdale. President Trump has vowed to send National Guard troops to the Chicago because of the ongoing immigration situation, with the first group of soldiers having reached an Army training center outside the city on Tuesday. According to The Associated Press, more than 1,000 immigrants have been detained in the Chicago area since last month.

Argentina is scheduled to play Venezuela in a friendly match on Friday, Oct. 10, at Hard Rock Stadium in South Florida, with Inter Miami star Lionel Messi expected to participate in both matches. These friendly matches are a part of Argentina’s preparation ahead of the 2026 World Cup, which begins on June 11 and will be hosted in the United States, Mexico and Canada.

USA TODAY Sports’ 48-page special edition commemorates 30 years of Major League Soccer, from its best players to key milestones and championship dynasties to what exciting steps are next with the World Cup ahead. Order your copy today!

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Two of Spanish soccer’s strongest sides will play a historic competitive match in Miami, with Barcelona and Villarreal set to play an official La Liga game at Hard Rock Stadium on Dec. 20.

While European soccer teams have staged dozens of summer friendlies and exhibitions all over the world, this match would be the first instance of any of Europe’s biggest leagues holding an official league match in another country.

‘This is a landmark moment for La Liga and for world football,” La Liga president Javier Tebas said in a news release. ‘By bringing an official match to the United States, we are not only connecting with millions of fans across North America, but also reinforcing Spain’s leadership as a global soccer powerhouse. With the support of all relevant institutions, this initiative is bold, historic, and designed to inspire both our fans abroad and those at home in Spain.’

The match will pair two of Spain’s best teams, with both clubs participating in this season’s edition of the UEFA Champions League. Barcelona, with teen phenom Lamine Yamal leading one of soccer’s most star-studded rosters, is widely regarded as one of the sport’s most famous clubs. While Villarreal rather infamously hail from one of the smallest Spanish cities to host a top-flight club, the team has managed 11 top-five La Liga finishes over the last quarter-century.

A pre-sale event for tickets will open on Tuesday, Oct. 21, while sales to the general public will begin at 10 a.m. ET on Wednesday, Oct. 22.

Barcelona vs. Villarreal in Miami: Can La Liga play matches outside of Spain?

When it comes to national teams or international club tournaments in soccer, it is not entirely uncommon to see a match played in a neutral location. Political instability, sanctions against a club or country, or stadium problems have forced competitive games to be staged in a nation neither participant hails from.

There are also examples of a club from one country playing in another nation’s league. AS Monaco, who play in the French top flight, is the best-known example around the world, while MLS has three Canadian teams. Similar situations exist for microstates like Liechtenstein and San Marino. All of those instances have required approval from FIFA.

However, the idea of staging domestic league matches outside of the country the two clubs are from has drawn significant pushback over the years. Players have cited the increased travel as compounding the issues presented by a relentless global soccer calendar, while committed local fans object to having home games staged abroad.

UEFA issued a statement Monday, with the European governing body explaining that FIFA’s vague guidelines left little option but to ‘reluctantly’ approve two such matches. Along with the Barcelona vs. Villarreal clash in Miami, Italian clubs AC Milan and Como are set to face off in Perth, Australia in February 2026.

‘League matches should be played on home soil; anything else would disenfranchise loyal match-going fans and potentially introduce distortive elements in competitions,’ said UEFA president Aleksander Čeferin. ‘While it is regrettable to have to let these two games go ahead, this decision is exceptional and shall not be seen as setting a precedent.’

Still, the situation may be out of the hands of soccer’s traditional power brokers. In 2019 event promoter Relevent brought an antitrust suit against U.S. Soccer and FIFA after attempts to stage Spanish and Ecuadorian domestic league play in the United States were rebuffed. Relevent’s plan was to promote a game between Barcelona and Girona, again in Miami.

That suit was settled in April of this year, effectively opening the door for leagues who are willing and able to make the necessary arrangements. La Liga has a long-term partnership with Relevent, which like host venue Hard Rock Stadium is owned by real estate magnate Stephen M. Ross.

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The 2026 NHL free agent class is one of the strongest in years, but teams have been taking care of business early.

The Vegas Golden Knights and Jack Eichel have agreed to an eight-year contract with a $13.5 million cap hit, according to multiple reports on Wednesday, Oct. 8. He won a Stanley Cup with Vegas in 2023 and set a franchise record with 94 points last season.

That’s the latest signing since Minnesota Wild star Kirill Kaprizov got things moving on Sept. 30 with a eight-year, $136 million extension that will make him the highest-paid player.

Since then, Edmonton Oilers star Connor McDavid re-signed, going another route by agreeing to a team-friendly two-year deal extension that didn’t include a raise from his current $12.5 million cap hit.

‘It’s about winning and that’s always what I preached and I think this deal gives both sides what they’re looking for,’ he told reporters.

But there is plenty of talent left. Here’s a ranking of remaining potential unrestricted free agents:

10. Anders Lee, New York Islanders

He has been the Islanders captain since 2018 and is good for 20-plus goals. He had 29 last season. Current cap hit: $7 million.

9. Alex Ovechkin, Washington Capitals

The NHL’s all-time leading goal scorer is 40. He’ll either re-sign with Washington or retire. Current cap hit: $9 million.

8. Jacob Markstrom, New Jersey Devils

He helped stabilize the Devils’ goaltending last season and get them back to the playoffs. Current cap hit: $6 million.

7. John Carlson, Washington Capitals

Carlson is the Capitals’ all-time leader in scoring among defensemen and is a key to their power play. He’s the one who sets up Ovechkin’s one-timers. Current cap hit: $8 million.

6. Sergei Bobrovsky, Florida Panthers

The goalie has won back-to-back Stanley Cup titles and two Vezina Trophies. He’ll be 38 next season. Current cap hit: $10 million.

5. Nick Schmaltz, Utah Mammoth

He keeps improving every year. Right now, the second-line winger gets 20-plus goals and 60-plus points. Current cap hit: $5.85 million.

4. Alex Tuch, Buffalo Sabres

He can score (two 36-goal seasons) and also kills penalties. He wants to stay in Buffalo. Current cap hit: $4.75 million.

3. Martin Necas, Colorado Avalanche

He arrived in last season’s Mikko Rantanen trade and plays on the top line with Nathan MacKinnon. He scored two goals in the season opener. Current cap hit: $6.5 million.

2. Artemi Panarin, New York Rangers

The 33-year-old forward scored 120 points two seasons ago, and although he and the rest of the team dropped off last season, he still had 89 points. He’s often in the 90-point range. Current cap hit: $11,642,857.

1. Adrian Kempe, Los Angeles Kings

The winger has two 35-goal seasons and a 41-goal one. The Kings will need to hang on to that type of production, especially with Anze Kopitar retiring after this season. Current cap hit: $5.5 million.

Which 2026 free agents have signed extensions recently?

  • Minnesota’s Kirill Kaprizov, eight years, $136 million, a record for its total amount and $17 million cap hit.
  • Edmonton’s Connor McDavid, two years, $25 million. The $12.5 million cap hit equals his current one and places him second on the team behind Leon Draisaitl.
  • Edmonton’s Jake Walman, seven years, $49 million
  • Winnipeg’s Kyle Connor, eight years, $96 million, richest contract in team history.
  • Edmonton’s Mattias Ekholm, three years, $12 million.
  • Vegas’ Jack Eichel, reported eight years, $108 million.

This story has been updated with new information after the Jack Eichel signing.

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In case anyone missed it, Las Vegas Aces forward A’ja Wilson is stacking up the awards this postseason.

Wilson was one of five player picked for the WNBA’s All-Defensive team. Wilson was joined on the first team by co-Defensive Player of the Year, Minnesota Lynx forward Alanna Smith. Lynx teammate Napheesa Collier, Seattle Storm forward Gabby Williams and Phoenix Mercury forward Alyssa Thomas are also on the first team.

‘The No. 1 thing we go over in practice, is the biggest thing is defense,’ Wilson said after the Aces’ Game 1 victory over the Phoenix Mercury in the WNBA Finals. ‘… We have to come together and have layers to our defense. And, that’s honestly what you see when you see Aces basketball right now.

‘On the defensive side, we are trying to make the right plays and be smart.’

Wilson, who averaged a league-high 2.3 blocks along with 7.9 defensive rebounds per game, continues her quest for a third WNBA title. Game 3 of the WNBA Finals is Wednesday, Oct. 8 (8 p.m. ET, ESPN) at Mortgage Matchup Center in Phoenix. The Aces hold a 2-0 lead in the best-of-seven series.

Golden State Valkyries guard Veronica Burton, Indiana Fever center Aliyah Boston, Atlanta Dream guard Rhyne Howard, New York Liberty forward Breanna Stewart and Seattle Storm forward Ezi Magbegor make up the All-Defensive second team.

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  • The procedure on Tuesday was Sanders’ 16th surgery in the past few years for various health issues.
  • Sanders has a history of blood-circulation problems, which he has stated are hereditary.
  • Despite the recent surgery, an observer noted Sanders was walking around as normal during practice.

Colorado football coach Deion Sanders returned to the job Wednesday, Oct. 8 and attended his team’s morning practice, less than a day after he underwent surgery to remove arterial blood clots in his left leg.

An observer at practice said he was not in a wheelchair but was walking around as normal. Sanders’ team is 2-4 this season and hosts Iowa State on Saturday at 3:30 p.m. ET.

“He looked like he looked last week at practice,” said Christopher Neely of the Thee Pregame Network, one of Sanders’ favored YouTube channels.

Neely has followed Sanders since his days as coach at Jackson State, when he also was hospitalized with blood-circulation issues.  Neely said on The Morning Run podcast on Wednesday that Sanders was “involved” and ‘engaged’ at practice but also added a cautionary reminder that “there ain’t no damn way he ain’t hurting” after surgery.

Deion Sanders’ surgery history

The procedure on Tuesday in Colorado was Sanders’ 16th surgery in the past few years, as noted in a video posted on YouTube by his son Deion Jr.

A few days earlier, Sanders said he was ‘hurting like crazy’ during his team’s 35-21 loss at TCU on Saturday, Oct. 4. The surgery aimed to improve circulation and ease his pain. He was accompanied to the surgery Tuesday by Deion Jr., his eldest son, his friend Adam “Pacman” Jones, the former NFL cornerback, and apparent girlfriend Karrueche Tran, the actress, as seen on the video.

In May, Sanders also had his bladder removed after a cancerous tumor was discovered during a medical appointment related to his vascular issues.

Before that, Sanders had clots removed from his legs in 2023. He missed a Pac-12 Conference media event that year because of it but did not miss any games as coach.

In 2021, when he was coach at Jackson State, he missed three games while he battled issues related to blood clots and compartment syndrome. He had two toes amputated from his left foot and parts of his left calf removed before returning to the sideline in a motorized wheelchair.

Follow reporter Brent Schrotenboer @Schrotenboer. Email: bschrotenb@usatoday.com

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