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By Marc Lawrence
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Thursday, April 30 |
LET’S PLAY TAG

The Pittsburgh Steelers aren’t leaving this to chance—they’ve played the ultimate leverage card on Aaron Rodgers.
By slapping the transition tag on the 42-year-old, Pittsburgh now owns the right to match any offer that comes his way. Translation: if Rodgers plays in 2026, the Steelers control the board.
The price tag? Roughly $15 million for a one-year encore. If another team bites higher, Pittsburgh gets five days to say, “Not so fast.”
But here’s the twist—Rodgers hasn’t committed. Retirement still lingers, as it has in recent offseasons. The clock is ticking, too: if he’s unsigned by training camp, Pittsburgh becomes his only negotiating partner.
Meanwhile, the Steelers hedged smartly. After waiting until Round 6 for Will Howard last year, they got aggressive—grabbing Drew Allar in Round 3 of the 2026 draft.
Bottom line: Rodgers holds the spotlight—but Pittsburgh holds the leverage. If he walks, the next act becomes a full-blown quarterback cage match. |
ON TODAY'S SCORECARD
Going, Going, Gone

The long-term funding for LIV Golf, the Saudi-backed breakaway golf tour, has been in question for several weeks, ever since Saudi officials outlined a financial future that did not mention ongoing sports investment. Now, according to the Wall Street Journal, players will be notified Thursday that funding is officially coming to an end.
The Saudi Public Investment Fund (PIF), which has poured billions into the tour over its four-plus years of existence, will end its funding as of the end of this season. The loss of PIF backing would all but certainly end LIV Golf in its current incarnation, with small fields of highly-paid players competing for massive tournament purses.
LIV began in the early 2020s as a breakaway golf league offering players as much as nine-figure signing bonuses, and a significant number of notable players, primarily those on the back half of their careers, jumped at the opportunity for one more major paycheck.
But LIV was also able to attract several stars in the primes of their careers — Brooks Koepka, Bryson DeChambeau and Jon Rahm — and, for a moment, appeared to be a viable competitor, and even an existential threat, to the PGA Tour itself.
If LIV loses its Saudi PIF backing, it’s virtually impossible that the tour will be able to make up the shortfall by more traditional means like sponsorships and ticket sales. Whether that means the tour would fold up operations, operate at a downsized capacity, or merge with another existing tour is a question for down the road, as is the fate of LIV’s players who could be left without a tour after this season.
Earlier this year, a small set of LIV players that included Koepka, DeChambeau and Rahm was offered a one-time pathway back to the PGA Tour. Only Koepka took it. Reed opted not to re-sign with LIV and instead will sit out a year of PGA Tour events before he’s reinstated. The question of what, if any, pathway back for those who remained with LIV is still up in the air.
Yes, it appears the handwriting is on the wall.

Order yours today before they are gone!
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GRINDING OUT THE PROFITS
Rank ‘Em Up

With May just around the corner, a few teams have separated themselves as clear contenders atop Yahoo Sports’ latest rankings, while others have plummeted into shocking pits of struggle that won’t be easy to dig themselves out from.
Top 5: Here’s the cream of the crop....
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Dodgers (20-10: Los Angeles leads the majors in most offensive statistics thanks to Shohei Ohtani and Co. The starting rotation also ranks among the league's best thanks to, well, Shohei Ohtani and Co.
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Braves (21-9): Drake Baldwin is one of the best catchers in baseball, Ozzie Albies is enjoying a bounce-back season, Michael Harris II is on fire and Matt Olson looks like the elite 2023 version of himself. Once Ronald Acuña Jr. heats up, watch out.
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Yankees (20-10): As with the Dodgers, there's dominance on all sides of the ball in the Bronx. Aaron Judge and Ben Rice are pacing the offense, while Max Fried and budding ace Cam Schlittler lead a dynamite rotation that will only get stronger once Gerrit Cole and Carlos Rodón return in the next month or so.
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Padres (19-10): San Diego's pitching has powered its hot start. While all-world closer Mason Miller gets most of the attention, it's been a full team effort as the staff ranks near the top in several key metrics including whiff rate, chase rate and more.
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Cubs (18-12): Chicago's defense not only leads the majors in most metrics, but also routinely passes the eye test with Pete Crow-Armstrong dazzling in center, Nico Hoerner and Dansby Swanson manning the middle, Alex Bregman locking down the hot corner and Ian Happ pushing for his fifth consecutive Gold Glove in left field.
6-10: Reds (19-10), Pirates (16-14), Rays (18-11), Tigers (15-15), Diamondbacks (15-13)
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TRENDING TODAY
Cowboys, Eagles and Pickens

Move over, A.J. Brown and Aaron Rodgers. George Pickens has just joined you atop the NFL’s pile of unfinished offseason business.
This comes on the heels following last week’s NFL Draft as the rest of the league begins readying to shore up remaining roster holes,
The confusion — and Pickens’ lack of signing the tag — potentially sets up another roller-coaster summer for the Cowboys, who spent last offseason grappling with contract extension and trade reports surrounding star pass rusher Micah Parsons. Parsons and Pickens share the same agent, David Mulugheta of Athletes First. Parsons was ultimately traded to the Green Bay Packers prior to the season, after rounds of public jousting between the Cowboys and their edge rusher.
Now Pickens’ contract situation will come into acute focus over the next several weeks and months. He has until July 15 to negotiate a long-term deal with the Cowboys. After that point, he will have to play out the 2026 season on a one-year fully-guaranteed deal for $27.3 million.
Of course, he’s not the only headlining player who is going to draw a spotlight heading toward the June mandatory camps. Brown is still in a holding pattern with the Eagles as he awaits an anticipated trade to the New England Patriots, while the Pittsburgh Steelers are still waiting on word from Rodgers about his plans for the 2026 season.
Let the soap operas begin. |

Marc is red-hot hot in this postseason and is currently the No.1 ratedhandicapper by the
Sports Monitor
in Oklahoma. |
STAT OF THE DAY
$30 Million |
The total amount of line of credit money RedBird and Weatherford Capital
are underwriting for Big 12 schools over the
next five years.
RedBird is a New York-based investment management
firm with
$15 billion in assets.
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QUOTE OF THE DAY |
"All Moanday, Tearday, Wailsday, Thumpsday, Frightday,
Shatterday eventually us to Sunnyday."
- James Joyce |
PERCOLATING
Next Up
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The Spurs dominated early and held on late for a 114-95 series-clinching victory over the Trail Blazers, sending San Antonio to the second round of the playoffs for the first time since 2017.
What's next: Awaiting the Spurs in the conference semifinals are either the Timberwolves (up 3-2) or Nuggets, two teams who held rare winning records over San Antonio this season. Denver went 3-1 against them; Minnesota went 2-1. |
BETCHA DIDN’T KNOW
Offensive Rookie of the Year
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The 2026 NFL Draft is behind us, which means there is plenty of time to analyze the strength and weaknesses of each team’s draft classes, along with diagnosing which rookies will make the biggest impact on their new teams.
Sportsbooks have already released odds for the 2026-27 AP Offensive Rookie of the Year, and Arizona Cardinals running back Jeremiyah Love (+300 at BetMGM) is the favorite, followed by No. 1 overall pick and Las Vegas Raiders QB Fernando Mendoza.
Tennessee Titans wide receiver Carnell Tate and New Orleans Saints WR Jordyn Tyson have the next-best odds at +700, followed by the No. 32 pick, Seattle Seahawks RB Jadarian Price, at +750. Price steps into a Seahawks backfield with Zach Chabonnet returning from injury and Kenneth Walker III gone to Kansas City in free agency.
No other player currently has single-digit odds.
Cardinals QB Carson Beck (30-1) has the next-best odds for a quarterback to win the award. Los Angeles Rams QB — and first-round pick — Ty Simpson has 66-1 odds. Pittsburgh Steelers QB Drew Allar is at 80-1; it’s still unknown if Aaron Rogers will return to be the presumptive starter in Pittsburgh.
A wide receiver has won the award in three of the past five seasons, including Carolina Panthers WR Tet McMillan last season (70 receptions, 1,014 yards, 7 TDs).
New York Jets No. 2 overall pick David Bailey (+500) is the favorite to win Defensive Rookie of the Year, just ahead of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers’ Rueben Bain Jr. (+550). Browns linebacker Carson Schwesinger (67 solo tackles, 2 INTs) won the award last season. |
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Coffee In One Hand. Confidence In The Other. The Coffee Club Way.
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