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Arsenal stun Man City to boost UWCL hopes, keep WSL title race alive
LONDON, England — Arsenal‘s hopes of UEFA Women’s Champions League qualification next season got a major boost on Sunday with a 1-0 victory over champions-elect Manchester City that has opened the door ajar on the Women’s Super League (WSL) title race that many assumed was over last weekend.
Nothing in the WSL is ever set in stone. City’s first loss since the opening weekend of the season proved that even after a 5-1 demolition job of reigning champions Chelsea — which led many to assume the title race was done and dusted — there is still hope that City’s eight-point gap at the top of the table could be closed.
Arsenal’s early pressure and a reshuffled attack allowed Olivia Smith, playing as a striker rather than her regular position on the wing, to score what proved to be the winner after 17 minutes. The Canada international shook off Rebecca Knaak, who seemingly gave up a little too easily in her pursuit, to weave around goalkeeper Ayaka Yamashita and finish into the empty net.
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For a team that gets significant joy on the ball and relies heavily on possession for that style of play to be effective, City were suffocated by Arsenal’s press. It quashed their ability to enact the game plan that has been so effective in their unbeaten run since their last loss in September at Chelsea.
Alessia Russo, dropping into the midfield to allow Smith to play more centrally, forced veteran defensive midfielder Yui Hasegawa into small pockets and tight spaces. By removing City’s lynchpin, the visitors couldn’t play through the middle and were forced to look at other avenues. But as City tried to force the ball out wide the Arsenal fullbacks, Katie McCabe in particular, were inverting, putting added pressure on Kerolin, making it significantly harder to build attacks.
Arsenal coach Renée Slegers’ tactical nous proved fundamental to unravelling City’s effectiveness. They are the only team to have sussed out the league leaders and found the formula to get the upper hand.
The hosts had a couple of second-half scares. First, Mariona Caldentey clumsily brought down Lauren Hemp from behind on the edge of the box. City called for a free kick, and thought the Spain international deserved a red card for the challenge, but referee Melissa Burgin declined to give either.
Then former Gunners striker Vivianne Miedema did have the small contingent of travelling fans at the Emirates thinking she had scored an equaliser, but a soft foul on McCabe by the Netherlands international meant the whistle was blown before the subsequent strike had hit the back of the net. Since a 0-0 stalemate with Manchester United, the 2-0 victory over Chelsea and the capture of the FIFA Women’s Champions Cup — earning them the title of world champions to add to their European crown — have given Arsenal a new lease of life.
“We come away from the Chelsea win, very happy, very pleased, clean sheets and winning away,” Slegers said postmatch. “And then we have the Champions Cup, where we win. So there’s two really positive moments for us as a team.
“The challenge is to stay in the controlled middle, not too high, not too low, especially not too high after those moments. And then we have a week to prepare to play against the number one in the table, City, who have been so good — a lot of respect for how they’ve performed so far in the season.”
Perhaps the winter break was exactly what Arsenal needed. They look rejuvenated and galvanised compared to the lacklustre figures that trudged across the pitch at the end of 2025. They’ve now taken seven points from the top three in their last three WSL games.
“We have three clean sheets in the WSL now against top opposition. Now it’s about staying here, working really hard to stay here, keep developing and keep on pushing for as much as we can rest of the season.
“I think there’s a lot of things going into why we’re doing well at the moment. We also want to write it down, make it specific, make it tangible, because then we know what it is, and we can keep it going.”
This result adds further pressure on Chelsea, who, in the week when The Blues were sparked by back-to-back losses to Arsenal 2-0 and then the 5-1 humbling by City, backed Sonia Bompastor with a new contract until 2030 — replacing the deal which was due to expire in 2028. It does not alleviate all their problems, and the risk of fracture between manager and club still lingers.
Arsenal clinching all three points over City gives the Gunners a boost in their hopes of finishing in the top three, but adds significant pressure to Chelsea, who could now finish outside of Champions League qualification for the first time since the 2019-20 season.
It is not disastrous for City, who have given themselves enough of a cushion to afford a loss, even two if they are unable to bounce back.
“I don’t think [the loss] is going to affect the players,” City manager Andrée Jeglertz said afterward. “We are fully aware of the situation we are in, and we are still in a very good position in the league. We still have confidence in what we have done so far, and it’s important how you analyse this game and move on as quickly as possible, but I’m not worried about the future.”
Having been the side in control for almost all of the season, charging ahead on points — even with this loss, they are eight points clear of second-placed Manchester United, and with a goal difference of +41 — City’s inability to break through was compounded by an unfamiliar frustration that likely hasn’t been felt under Jeglertz’s leadership and not since the ending of last season.
Providing this result does not lead to a calamitous panic behind the scenes and begins what would be the biggest collapse in WSL history, City remain in the driving seat, and it is still their title to lose.
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Ice dance will incorporate queer culture unlike in any other Olympics
Officials asked teams to open their millennial playlists and skate their first program to music from the ’90s.
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Lindsey Vonn crashes at Olympics, has surgery on broken leg
Lindsey Vonn‘s defiant bid to win the Winter Olympic downhill at the age of 41, on a rebuilt right knee and a badly injured left knee, ended Sunday in a frightening crash that left her with a broken leg and saw her taken to safety by a rescue helicopter for the second time in nine days.
Vonn lost control within seconds of leaving the start house, clipping a gate with her right shoulder and pinwheeling down the slope before ending up awkwardly on her back, her skis crisscrossed below her and her screams ringing out soon after medical personnel arrived.
She was treated for long, anguished minutes as a hush fell over the crowd waiting far below at the finish line. Vonn was strapped to a gurney and flown away, possibly ending the skier’s storied career. As medical staff attended to Vonn, she could be heard crying out.
Vonn was taken to a clinic in Cortina then transferred to a larger hospital in Treviso, a two-hour drive to the south. She was being “treated by a multidisciplinary team” and “underwent an orthopedic operation to stabilize a fracture reported in her left leg,” the Ca’ Foncello hospital said in a statement.
The U.S. ski team said in an earlier statement that Vonn was “in stable condition and in good hands with a team of American and Italian physicians.”
“She’ll be OK, but it’s going to be a bit of a process,” said Anouk Patty, chief of sport for U.S. Ski and Snowboard. “This sport’s brutal, and people need to remember when they’re watching [that] these athletes are throwing themselves down a mountain and going really, really fast.”
Breezy Johnson, Vonn’s teammate, became only the second American woman to win the Olympic downhill after Vonn did it 16 years ago. The 30-year-old Johnson held off Emma Aicher of Germany and Italy’s Sofia Goggia on a bittersweet day for the team.
“I don’t claim to know what she’s going through, but I do know what it is to be here, to be fighting for the Olympics and to have this course burn you and to watch those dreams die,” said Johnson, whose own injury in Cortina in 2022 ruined her hopes of skiing in the Beijing Olympics. “I can’t imagine the pain that she’s going through, and it’s not the physical pain — we can deal with physical pain — but the emotional pain is something else.”
Johnson added that Vonn’s coach told her: “Lindsey was cheering for me from the helicopter.”
Vonn’s crash was “tragic, but it’s ski racing,” said Johan Eliasch, president of the International Ski and Snowboard Federation.
“I can only say thank you for what she has done for our sport,” he said, “because this race has been the talk of the Games and it’s put our sport in the best possible light.”
Vonn had family in the stands, including her father, Alan Kildow, who stared down at the ground while his daughter was being treated after just 13 seconds on the course where she holds a record 12 World Cup titles.
Others in the crowd, including rapper Snoop Dogg, watched quietly as the star skier was finally taken off the course. Fellow American star Mikaela Shiffrin posted a broken heart emoji on social media.
“It’s like the man in the arena, she dared greatly,” Vonn’s sister, Karin Kildow, told NBC. “She put it all out there. She always goes 110 percent, there’s never anything less, so I know she put her whole heart into it. Sometimes things happen. It’s a very dangerous sport.”
All eyes had been on Vonn, the feel-good story heading into the Olympics. She had returned to elite ski racing last season after nearly six years, a remarkable decision given her age, but she also had a partial titanium knee replacement in her right knee. Many wondered how she would fare as she sought a gold medal to join the one she won in the downhill at the 2010 Vancouver Games.
The four-time overall World Cup champion stunned everyone by being a contender almost immediately. She came to the Olympics as the leader in the World Cup downhill standings and was a gold medal favorite before her crash in Switzerland nine days ago, when she suffered her latest knee injury. In addition to a ruptured ACL, she had a bone bruise and meniscus damage.
Still, no one counted her out even then. She has skied through injuries for three decades at the top of the sport. In 2006, ahead of the Turin Olympics, Vonn took a bad fall during downhill training and went to the hospital. She competed less than 48 hours later, racing in all four events she had planned, with a top result of seventh in the super-G.
Cortina has had many treasured memories for Vonn beyond the record wins. She is called the queen of Cortina, and the Olympia delle Tofane course had always suited Vonn. She tested out the knee twice in downhill training runs over the past three days before the awful crash on Sunday in clear, sunny conditions.
“This would be the best comeback I’ve done so far,” Vonn said before the race. “Definitely the most dramatic.”
The drama was of a different sort this time. Not since perhaps Hermann Maier‘s cartwheeling crash at the 1998 Nagano Games had there been such a high-profile and spectacular fall in Alpine skiing at the Olympics.
“Dear Lindsey, we’re all thinking of you. You are an incredible inspiration, and will always be an Olympic champion,” International Olympic Committee president Kirsty Coventry said.
News of the crash spread quickly, including to the fan zone down the mountain in Cortina.
“It’s such a huge loss and bummer,” Megan Gunyou of the U.S. said. “I feel like hearing her story and just like the redemption of her first fall and like fighting to come back to the Olympics this year, I mean, I feel so sad for her.”
Dan Wilton of Vancouver, Canada, watched the race from the stands.
“It was frightening,” he said. “Really, your heart goes out for such a champion who is coming to the end of her career. Everyone wanted a successful finish.”
ESPN’s Alyssa Roenigk and The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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Super Bowl champion Sam Darnold’s deferred destiny
TWO YEARS AGO, Sam Darnold sat at a small round table in a Hilton ballroom just outside of Las Vegas. Several reporters visited the table he shared with another San Francisco 49ers teammate throughout the week of Super Bowl media availability, but many more maneuvered around it on their way to talk to someone more important. Darnold was just a backup hidden in a maze of dozens of tables. He wasn’t the star anymore, and he had chosen to fade into the background for his own good.
As Darnold sat unbothered at his table, a reporter asked if he had given thought to the best way to develop a quarterback. What had he learned in the six NFL seasons after he left college early and was drafted No. 3 by the New York Jets, saw “ghosts,” got dumped by the Jets and started over twice since? What does a young quarterback need?
“Just consistency in the organization, and trusting, too,” Darnold said in 2024. “If things don’t go well — which, having a rookie quarterback — they’re not all going to be C.J. Stroud. You’re not just going to go out there and ball out. It takes a really special coach and leadership to be able to have trust and keep everything together for at least a couple years. Let the kid grow into his skin, and after a couple years, you kind of know, if everything’s the same and if you have the same people, GM, coaches.”
That combination of consistency and trust was something Darnold, who had four head coaches in his first five seasons, hadn’t known in the NFL up to that point, and wouldn’t have it until he signed a three-year contract to be Seattle’s starting quarterback in March. He was comfortable enough that for the first time, he bought a house.
“You’d like to think patience is the lesson [from Sam’s career],” Seattle offensive coordinator Klint Kubiak said, “but the NFL is not about patience. It’s not a fair league. … Sometimes, you get your tail fired, and then you get to go try somewhere else, and you just make sure that you got better from that last experience. … That’s what Sam’s done.”
The NFL’s draft structure routinely welcomes the most talented young quarterbacks to the worst-run organizations. Their rights are usually controlled by bottom-dwelling teams that lack the patience to figure out how to win, and like clockwork, the coaching staff tasked with developing them is fired. Despite the Jets’ best attempts to develop Darnold, once he left the organization, he strategically pieced together the foundation he had not been afforded at the start of his career.
When then-Niners quarterback coach Brian Griese called Darnold during the early 2023 offseason to recruit him for a reset season as Brock Purdy‘s backup, Griese asked Darnold how he viewed himself coming out of the tough times.
Griese said Darnold answered, “I like who I am.”
“That really cemented for me that he was the right guy,” Griese said. “New York was brutal. … If I had sat down with him and talked with him and he didn’t believe in himself, then I don’t think we would have been interested in San Francisco. So, the fact that he went through what he did, and he came out on the other side with his emotional resilience intact, that gave him a chance.
“What he was seeing on his reads and how he was supposed to play, there was uncertainty there, and that uncertainty is a death sentence for quarterbacks. But he never lost confidence in himself.”
Although Seattle’s offense reached the end zone only once, Darnold’s escapability was the X factor for the offense in the Seahawks’ 29-13 win Sunday night. He dodged and spun out of pressure from the New England Patriots‘ defense multiple times.
Those who know Darnold well say he isn’t motivated to prove the haters wrong, but to prove his teammates and family right. He found that trust and consistency that he said is crucial for quarterback development. He was a Super Bowl-losing backup quarterback then, and now he’s a Super Bowl champion.
WHEN DARNOLD’S FORMER coaches and teammates are asked to describe him, the same word continues to come up: resilient.
Darnold’s private quarterback coach, Jordan Palmer, who played seven years in the NFL, said that Darnold’s resiliency is the reason he has resurrected his career.
Quarterbacks who play through physical injuries are typically considered the toughest, Palmer said, but “I actually don’t think that’s hard.”
“Going through what Sam went through for four or five years, not all these tough guys that can take a hit can live through that. Sam’s one of the toughest quarterbacks I’ve ever been around, and it has nothing to do with his physical toughness.”
Palmer thinks Darnold first started improving in 2022, during his second season in Carolina, which gave up a second-round pick in a trade for him despite three subpar seasons with the Jets. Darnold lost the QB competition to Baker Mayfield and started the season on injured reserve because of an ankle sprain. Coach Matt Rhule was fired, and then Darnold came back from injury to go 4-2 as the Panthers’ starting quarterback for the final six games of the season, and kept Carolina in the hunt for the NFC South title.
Carolina’s offensive coordinator at the time was Ben McAdoo, who, despite now working for the Super Bowl rival Patriots, still considers himself “a big fan of Sam.”
Darnold, then in his fifth season, “was still a raw player in a lot of ways,” McAdoo said. He worked with him on tying his feet to his eyes, so that Darnold could eliminate the hesitancy in his progressions and let his footwork tell him when to move off his first read.
“We tried to break the feet down, and build him back up,” McAdoo said. “Spend a little more time on fundamentals than he did in the past.”
McAdoo said Darnold proved to him that he could reclaim his career during two plays in Carolina’s Week 17 game at Tampa, with the NFC South title on the line. The Panthers lost the game, but Darnold threw a touchdown pass to receiver DJ Moore on third down from the Buccaneers’ 24-yard-line, a pass that McAdoo said was a checkdown off his first read. And later in the red zone again on third down, Darnold made “a tremendous read” to find Shi Smith, his third option, on a dig route for another touchdown.
“Everything happens faster in the red zone,” McAdoo said. “It’s a tough read and a long way to go to get through that progression, and he was on it. I was like, ‘This guy has a chance!'”
After that 2022 season, Darnold became a free agent. McAdoo said he hoped Carolina would hire interim head coach Steve Wilks permanently and re-sign Darnold to keep building off the progress McAdoo had seen, but Carolina moved on from both.
“A lot of the time, the quarterback takes the blame, and the quarterback gets the blame,” said backup quarterback P.J.Walker, who also started games for Carolina that season. “But not a lot of things was on Sam specifically. That situation was tough. It never was a mesh of offense, defense and special teams all playing well. You never could put it all together.”
AS SAN FRANCISCO’S QBs coach, Griese studied all the free agent quarterbacks ahead of the 2023 offseason. It didn’t take him long to realize Darnold was “head and shoulders above” the rest of the class, he said, and “physically, one of the top two or three throwers of the ball in the league.”
Starting quarterback Brock Purdy was coming off elbow surgery, and the team wasn’t certain when he’d be ready to play, so the 49ers needed a “bona fide” backup.
“As I started digging into his tape, I saw that there was not a whole lot of foundation and structure that he had been given in his first three, four years in the league,” Griese said. “I knew that he was made of the right stuff. I knew he had the right talent. It was just a matter of, could we convince him to come to San Francisco to be a backup?”
Griese and Palmer said Darnold had multiple opportunities with other teams that offseason to compete for starting jobs, but chose San Francisco to take a year to learn from Kyle Shanahan instead.
“He takes a huge pay cut to go there,” Palmer said. “Myself, his agent, a couple of us were big on, you need a redshirt year. It’s like going to Harvard, or night school, you need to go sit in a room with [Kyle] Shanahan.”
Griese said he was honest with Darnold during his recruiting call about what he needed to improve. Darnold turned the ball over — a lot. He threw 55 interceptions and fumbled 35 times in 46 games during his first five seasons.
“He was erratic at times,” Griese said, “and it’s impossible to play this position in the NFL when you have any uncertainty or any doubt in your mind. I could see that on the tape, and we talked about that, and he confirmed it.”
Griese’s pitch was convincing: The Niners’ coaching staff and Shanahan’s offensive scheme could help Darnold find confidence in what he was seeing on the field.
“I told him that he needed to refocus and take more of a 30,000-foot view of where he was in his journey,” Griese said. “To understand what his strengths were and to understand the situations that he had been in, and how we could create a foundation underneath him that was solid enough that he could see how good a player he could be. That’s what he bought into.”
Even though he was headed into his sixth season, he was only 26 years old, and the Niners’ staff still thought he had room to grow.
“He just understood, I got another 10 plus years to play, and I want to be able to be good for a long time. That was awesome, just so rare, for any player,” a source close to the Niners said.
In the Niners’ first QB meeting during the offseason program, Griese said he asked the QBs why they play. When it was Darnold’s turn, Griese said he talked about his relationships with his teammates during his Jets career and how hard it was to come back into the locker room week after week after losing games. “When you work your ass off as hard as you possibly can, and you don’t see progress and then the scaffolding around you starts to fade and crumble and crash,” Griese said.
Seattle run game coordinator Rick Dennison was the Jets’ offensive line coach during Darnold’s rookie season in 2018. During Super Bowl media availability in San Jose, California, he described that year like this: “Whereas teams figure out how to win, we figured out how to lose.”
Darnold said during a Super Bowl week news conference that his Jets era taught him to “flush bad plays, flush bad games.”
“Early in my career, I was really hard on myself,” he said. “After a bad rep or a bad practice, I would let it affect my attitude a little bit. … It’s football, we’re not always going to be perfect. Jerry Rice has a quote that he never had a perfect practice or a perfect game.”
Darnold’s detailing of his Jets trials was an important perspective for Purdy to hear, Griese says, because the second-year starter and last pick of the 2022 draft wore rose-colored glasses. Purdy started as a rookie midseason after Jimmy Garoppolo got hurt, played well right away and in his first season, the Niners made it to the NFC Championship Game.
“But we have unbelievable support systems around him from an organization standpoint,” Griese says. “It’s easy for a young player to think, ‘Oh, this is how it should always go.'”
Griese said the Niners staff saw Darnold’s potential immediately during OTAs and training camp, particularly Darnold’s “underrated” athleticism.
“His ability to roll left and to get his body in position to make throws while he’s rolling against his throwing arm was really special,” Griese says. “When you see him on these bootlegs, which Klint [Kubiak] loves to run to the left with Sam, his ability to contort his body is not natural. He makes it look easy.”
Darnold only played one game that season, a meaningless Week 18 matchup against a Los Angeles Rams team that was also resting its starters, but he’d shown enough that season in his support role that multiple sources said Niners assistant general manager Adam Peters, who was hired that January as the Washington Commanders general manager, tried hard to sign Darnold with his new club.
But the Commanders had the No. 2 overall pick in 2024 and would be drafting a quarterback, so Darnold chose to sign a one-year deal with the Vikings, who also would be drafting a quarterback, but later in the first round.
Then, rookie J.J. McCarthy tore his meniscus during the preseason and Darnold started the entire season, taking the Vikings to a playoff berth and his first postseason appearance.
Darnold and the Vikings won 14 games, but lost the last game of the regular season at Detroit with a playoff bye at stake. The next week, Minnesota exited the playoffs in the wild-card beatdown at the hands of the Rams, who sacked Darnold nine times.
“A lot was put on his shoulders to really lead the team to 14 wins,” then-Vikings backup quarterback Nick Mullens says. “And now that he’s got a complete football [team], I’m not totally surprised. The run game is really good in Seattle.”
The back-to-back losses in the most important games of the season tested the Vikings’ trust in Darnold, as many analysts began another round of questioning whether Darnold could ever win a big game.
“It was not only Sam’s fault,” Mullens says. “To say that two weeks before those games, he was a top desired, top-dollar free agent, and then he plays two bad games after winning 14, and then he’s, a ‘I don’t know if he truly is the guy or not.’ To go from that high to that low, I think, is an unfair judgment.”
Minnesota let Darnold leave after his career year and decided to roll with McCarthy for 2025. Vikings coach Kevin O’Connell said Darnold had “earned the right” to explore free agency.
“Man, to win 14 games in the NFL and not know if you’re good enough?” Mullens says. “That’s brutal. Like, what do you want, undefeated?”
ON SATURDAY NIGHT before each game, Darnold, Seattle backup quarterback Drew Lock and QB3 Jalen Milroe get together at a table in the team hotel ballroom about an hour before the team dinner opens. The three quarterbacks review each play on the call sheet together, especially the ones that aren’t printed on the wristband.
“I’ll call it out to him,” Lock says. “He’ll call it back to me, and we’ll talk through all of our cans and alerts. I would vouch for any quarterback to do it.”
The group Saturday night study session is new to Lock. Before this season with Darnold, Lock used to study on his own at home in the afternoon before reporting to the team hotel.
Wide receiver Cooper Kupp comes an hour early too, and brings the quarterbacks each an order of pho, the Vietnamese soup dish. Kupp is responsible for finding the pho spot for each road trip, and the group ranks and reviews Kupp’s choices like a trio of food critics after they’ve finished reviewing the call sheet.
“We get another dinner together,” Lock says. “It’s also good because a lot of guys get there early and they see you working, putting a little extra time in.”
Griese said Darnold picked up the QB group study habit from Purdy’s preparation during his year in San Francisco, and he has taken it with him since.
“What does a guy that has been in the league five years and experienced what [Sam] has, have to learn from a second-year player?” Griese says. “But Sam did that.”
In March, Seattle general manager John Schneider traded quarterback Geno Smith to the Raiders and signed Darnold in free agency, a move that wasn’t unanimously seen as an upgrade.
“All I knew is that people were writing him off,” said Seattle linebacker Ernest Jones IV, after Seattle won the NFC title game. “Once he signed to us, we were immediately supposed to be worse than we were the year before.”
Jones — and many of his teammates — have taken on the role of Darnold defender. Kupp wore an “I <3 Sam Darnold” shirt to a Super Bowl media availability. When Darnold threw four interceptions against the Rams in Week 11, Jones dropped an F-bomb to let everyone know how serious he was about Darnold.
“Sam’s been balling,” Jones said postgame. “If we want to try to define Sam by this game, Sam’s had us in every f—ing game. So, for him to sit there and say, ‘That’s my fault,’ no it’s not.
When Darnold’s high school football coach Jaime Ortiz saw the clip of Jones IV, he mailed him a San Clemente Tritons football T-shirt with a note that said, “Thanks for having Sam’s back.”
“Watching a guy stand up for Sam, it was good to see, because Sam takes ownership when his team doesn’t do well,” Ortiz said.
“He’s my QB, you don’t put hands on my QB,” Jones said during Super Bowl week. “From the first day we met him, regardless of what he was labeled as before he got here, he got a clean slate with us and he has shown and proved why we believe he would get us to this point.”
On the Thursday ahead of Seattle’s first playoff game against San Francisco, Darnold injured his left oblique at practice. Lock says he didn’t throw again until the game, and Macdonald said he barely practiced the following week ahead of Seattle’s NFC Championship Game win against the Rams when he threw for three touchdowns and 346 yards. He was limited in eight practices until the Thursday before the Super Bowl.
Lock has had a similar oblique injury, so he has an appreciation for what Darnold has been playing through.
“You feel it in everything you do,” Lock says. “Especially throwing. We were both front side obliques, so pulling into it, turning into it, it’s gnarly.”
Lock said his own oblique injury was bad enough that he took a Toradol shot on gameday even though he was a backup — just in case he had to play. “Those obliques are nothing to mess with.”
Because Darnold has played well through the injury and downplayed it publicly, Lock said no one outside the team is appreciating what Darnold has done in the last two games before the Super Bowl. “You can tell how good Sam is mechanically, to be able to go out, trick your brain into thinking nothing’s going on, and still be able to deliver the football,” Lock says. “It’s extremely hard.”
0:36
Sam Darnold throws the 1st TD of Super Bowl LX to AJ Barner
Sam Darnold finds AJ Barner in the end zone for a 16-yard Seahawks touchdown.
THE VIKINGS FIRED general manager Kwesi Adofo-Mensah the Friday after Darnold went toe-for-toe with Matthew Stafford and led his team to a Super Bowl appearance. The suspiciously late timing of the firing, after Adofo-Mensah spent the week at the Senior Bowl, made it impossible not to connect the dots with Darnold’s success for another club. Since Adofo-Mensah’s firing, several Vikings players, including receiver Justin Jefferson, have done press tours singing Darnold’s praises and wishing he were still their quarterback.
“I definitely feel like we would have done better [with Darnold],” Jefferson told USA Today.
“I felt like we had everything we needed [last year],” Vikings running back Aaron Jones said on the Nightcap podcast. “But we are not GMs, that’s outside of us. When you got a group of guys behind a QB, and he wants to stay somewhere, I think you should try to make it work.”
Jamal Adams, who played with Darnold his first two seasons in New York, called Minnesota’s decision a “headscratcher.”
“Why would you let him go?” he told ESPN.
And former Jets GM Mike Maccagnan told ESPN, “You would think, after winning 14 games, they would’ve figured out a way to hold on to him. I personally would’ve done that. At the end of the day, you can’t have enough good quarterbacks.”
There’s a lesson in Darnold’s career for both clubs and quarterbacks, if they’re open to receive it.
“You can’t write him off right away,” says the source close to the Niners. “The Baker Mayfields and Sam Darnolds and those guys that have that confidence, the belief in themselves and the mental toughness. If they have the talent, don’t give up on them.”
“It’s easy to say, this guy’s a bust,” says the same source close to the Niners. But the whole environment around him plays into why he didn’t have initial success.”
Darnold didn’t let the turbulent situations doom or define him. He looked inward, had hard conversations with the people who supported him and came to tough conclusions. Eight seasons later, he saved himself by finding patience in his own development and trust that his unconventional choices would work.
It’s not a coincidence that Mac Jones, another first-round pick (2021) and “bust” who is represented by the same agency as Darnold, is following the same playbook as a Niners backup quarterback.
And for those who are still unconvinced, Darnold isn’t bothered, and his Darnold defenders know there’s more to come.
“This is not out of nowhere,” Palmer says. “It started out his last year in Carolina. It led into what he did every day in practice. You talk to the Niners guys off the record, they’re like, yeah, we thought this would happen. We watched him every single day in practice. Everyone was trying to get Sam that year, and he chose the Vikings, and then Kevin O’Connell gets [NFL] Coach of the Year and gets all the credit. How about some credit for Sam?”
“This is a repeatable pattern. Wait until you see how good the Seahawks are going to be in three years when he’s not learning the system like he did all offseason. Anybody who thinks it all came together this year, no, this is how dynasties start.”
–ESPN Jets reporter Rich Cimini contributed to this story.
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