Sports
Commanders activate WR McLaurin off PUP list

ASHBURN, Va. — The Washington Commanders have activated Terry McLaurin off the physically unable to perform list, the team announced Saturday.
The move is the next step in his progression and is unrelated to contract negotiations, coach Dan Quinn said.
“Definitely separate,” Quinn said. “This is about his getting ready.”
McLaurin is now eligible to practice, though the Commanders typically have players activated off PUP work with trainers on a separate field first.
Washington likes to run a lot of no-huddle and hurry-up on offense — it was the second-fastest offense in terms of time between snaps last season, according to ESPN Research — so it wants to give McLaurin three weeks of conditioning before the opener.
Quinn pointed out that PUP is focused on rehab; the Commanders can now focus on McLaurin’s return to the field. It’s doubtful that he would play in the third and final preseason game a week from today vs. Baltimore. The goal has been to get McLaurin ready for the Sept. 7 season opener vs. the New York Giants.
Quinn said that it was “important” to activate McLaurin and that this begins the process of getting him work in walk-throughs, then continuing to hit markers that suggest he’s ready for a full workload. McLaurin has been at the facility since July 27, rehabbing an ankle issue that has plagued him at various times in his career — including at the end of last season.
Quinn, when asked whether it was a mutual decision by both sides for McLaurin to come off PUP, said they were just following the guidelines.
“He’s on the same trajectory as everybody else, [receiving treatments] doing workouts and making good strides,” Quinn said.
McLaurin has served as a captain for most of his Washington tenure and remains highly respected in the locker room.
“I can’t say enough great things,” center Tyler Biadasz said. “Hopefully he comes back on the field and we get him back. We’re always excited for it.”
The Commanders placed McLaurin on the PUP list, citing an ankle injury that bothered him late in the season, when he reported to camp July 27 following a four-day holdout. McLaurin was fined $200,000 for missing that time. By reporting, he could no longer be fined.
If he were to sit out games, McLaurin would lose a game check for each week missed, including the bye week. McLaurin would forfeit $861,111 for each week missed. There’s not yet any indication McLaurin would sit out.
The two sides have been far apart in negotiations since they started discussing a deal earlier in the offseason, according to sources with knowledge of the situation. McLaurin had said in an interview a week before camp opened that he would not return to the field until there was “progression” in the talks.
McLaurin has one year remaining on a three-year, $68 million extension he signed in 2022. According to multiple reports and league sources, McLaurin has targeted the deal DK Metcalf received from the Pittsburgh Steelers — four years at $33 million per season with $60 million guaranteed.
Washington has not come close to that per year figure, sources said. Some in the league believe the Commanders could eventually get to $28 million per year.
McLaurin requested a trade July 31, but team sources have said over the past several months that they have no intention of trading him.
Though he was at the facility, McLaurin would only emerge after practice to sign autographs for fans. But he did watch from the sideline during the team’s burgundy-and-gold intrasquad scrimmage Tuesday, along with other injured players. Before that session, he spoke with general manager Adam Peters on the sideline.
McLaurin, coming off his second Pro Bowl appearance, was second in the NFL with a career-best 13 touchdown receptions — as well as 10 red zone scoring catches — in 2024. He has topped 1,000 yards for five consecutive seasons, although he has not yet surpassed 1,200 yards.
Last month, in a 30-minute interview with reporters, McLaurin expressed deep frustration with the lack of progress in their talks.
“I want to continue my career here. I’ve created my life here. My wife and I bought our first home here. So this has been somewhere I’ve always wanted to be. Just to see how things have played out has been disappointing,” he said. “I understand everything’s a business. But at the same time, I want to put myself in a position where I’m valued, I feel appreciated and things like that. Unfortunately, that hasn’t transpired the way I want it to.”
Sports
Best (and worst) men’s college basketball offseason moves

Over the past six months, college basketball has once again experienced another offseason full of coaching changes, staff moves, portal action and recruiting gains and losses. As a result, the landscape is stacked with teams that have seemed to master the new Moneyball approach to restructuring teams every spring and summer. There are others who did not make the improvements they may have anticipated, which means there are winners and losers in this conversation.
Our 2025-26 superlatives list attempts to make some sense of what just unfolded and sort the victors from those who might have missed out this offseason.
Best overall offseason
After winning the national title, Todd Golden lost the best backcourt in America. Departures included the NCAA tournament’s Most Outstanding Player in Walter Clayton Jr. and two more players who were selected in the 2025 NBA draft (Alijah Martin and Will Richard) — but that’s only part of the story. The return of Golden’s frontcourt wasn’t a guarantee as key players flirted with the NBA draft.
But the Gators enter the season with a strong case to be the No. 1 team in the country after securing the returns of Thomas Haugh, Alex Condon and Rueben Chinyelu. They also added former five-star recruit Boogie Fland and all-Ivy League guard Xaivian Lee. In this turbulent climate, few teams have managed to lose the core of a championship squad and bounce back the way this team has ahead of the 2025-26 campaign. Florida won’t look exactly like the title-winning team did, but it will be similarly equipped to chase another ring.
The chemistry the Gators foster over the course of the season will matter the most. Lee and Fland will have to share ballhandling responsibilities. Golden wants Haugh to be an inside-outside threat. And Condon is an SEC Player of the Year candidate who will have to deal with the pressure that comes with that attention. These are all good problems to have because it means Florida has the pieces to be the best team in America again.
Strongest overall transfer class
Rick Pitino made New York City fall in love with St. John’s basketball again with a run to the Big East conference and tournament championships last season. The Red Storm shouldn’t lose any ground as a result of Pitino again hitting the reset button in the portal, with a transfer class headlined by Ian Jackson (North Carolina), Bryce Hopkins (Providence), Oziyah Sellers (Stanford) and Joson Sanon (Arizona State) — all of whom averaged double figures at their previous stops.
Now, there are questions. Will Jackson be a consistent presence this season? He demonstrated his ability to impact a game at a high level only in spurts at North Carolina. Will Hopkins stay healthy? He has battled injuries in recent years. Will Sellers and Sanon continue to build on strong seasons a year ago? It certainly seems possible. But the questions don’t supersede the potential for this stacked group of transfer talent to excel under Pitino.
There’s also Dylan Darling — a star at Idaho State who scored 35 combined points between matchups against UCLA and USC last season — could be a hidden gem. And Dillon Mitchell is a veteran at his third school.
Pitino won big with a similar group a year ago. The same thing could happen in 2025-26.
Most impactful transfer commitment
Last year, Will Wade won 28 games at McNeese State and led the Cowboys to the second round of the NCAA tournament before he left for NC State — his first power conference job since being fired by LSU in 2022 as a result of recruiting violation allegations. He hit the ground running in Raleigh by adding some of the best players in the portal, including Williams.
The former Texas Tech star scored 23 points as the Red Raiders nearly knocked off Florida in the Elite Eight. Averaging 15.1 points, 5.5 rebounds, 3.6 assists and 1.3 steals in 2024-25, Williams is one of America’s most versatile players. His arrival gives Wade a chance to put his team in the NCAA tournament conversation a year after the program won just 12 games.
Biggest transfer portal loss
P.J. Haggerty, from Memphis to Kansas State
Penny Hardaway had his most successful season as coach at Memphis when Haggerty — an Associated Press second-team All-American and AAC Player of the Year — helped the Tigers win 29 games en route to capturing the regular-season and conference tournament championships in 2025-26 while averaging 21.2 PPG.
Haggerty isn’t the only star that the Tigers lost in the portal, but he is the most pivotal prospect who departed. Now a Memphis team that ended last season as a trendy pick to reach the second weekend of the NCAA tournament — until a foot injury that Tyrese Hunter sustained during the AAC tournament changed the Tigers’ outlook — will have to rebuild without one of the country’s top returning players.
Strongest recruiting class
Cameron Boozer is the obvious headliner for Jon Scheyer’s program, but Duke is stacked with young talent that will once again put the Blue Devils in the Final Four conversation.
Boozer, a 6-foot-9 do-it-all talent, is a two-time Gatorade National Player of the Year who could be the most polished freshman in the country. His twin brother Cayden Boozer could also leave his mark on this program. Nikolas Khamenia, a top-15 prospect, had a great offseason on the USA Basketball circuit. And Dame Sarr is a 6-foot-8 former EuroLeague standout who could be a major addition, too — he was ranked as a lottery pick in ESPN’s latest NBA 2026 mock draft.
With 6-foot-8 Sebastian Wilkins — who reclassified from the 2026 class to the 2025 class — also in the fold, the Blue Devils will have the size and versatility to compete with any team in America. Yes, they are young, but they won’t have talent disparities against most opponents.
Best freshman*
*after top-three recruits AJ Dybantsa, Darryn Peterson and Cameron Boozer
Nate Ament, Tennessee Volunteers
Since 2019, Rick Barnes has coached 11 players who were drafted by NBA teams. He knows talent. And he called five-star freshman Ament, a 6-foot-11 small forward, the “No. 1 player in the class” this past April.
Ament is not as physically ready as the three players ahead of him — Peterson, Dybantsa and Boozer — in ESPN’s latest 2026 NBA mock draft. But Ament’s ceiling is high in a scheme that has produced elite players such as Dalton Knecht, Chaz Lanier and Grant Williams in recent years. Ament is big, can play and guard multiple positions, and will continue to grow throughout the season as he begins to understand this level of basketball. His coach will help him get there.
Barnes has shown a willingness to adapt by allowing his elite players to get the shots they want when they are on the floor, rather than being married to a system. That’s how Knecht earned SEC Player of the Year honors two years ago before he was selected 17th overall by the Los Angeles Lakers in the 2024 draft. Ament could follow the same path.
Most surprising recruiting miss
Darius Acuff Jr. choosing Arkansas over Michigan
The No. 7 recruit in ESPN’s 2025 rankings is the top-rated point guard in the class, and was also a high school superstar in the state of Michigan until he ended his prep career at IMG Academy in Florida. The Detroit native had three great choices for the next chapter of his career, ultimately selecting Arkansas over Kansas and Michigan, in part because John Calipari has produced a fleet of high-level point guards who became standouts in the NBA (John Wall, De’Aaron Fox, Derrick Rose).
Bill Self had already landed Peterson, who is in the running to be the No. 1 pick in the 2026 draft, but Dusty May missed a chance to turn the in-state star into the next great point guard for the Wolverines. Michigan is still a threat to reach the Final Four, of course. With Acuff, however, May’s squad would have been in a different tier entering this season.
Highest-upside coaching hire
Sean Miller, Texas Longhorns
During a 20-year coaching career that includes two stints at Xavier and a stop at Arizona, Sean Miller has won at least 20 games in 15 season (or 75% of his coaching tenure). That consistency over a stretch that includes the most transformative chapter in college basketball history with the introduction of NIL deals, revenue sharing and the transfer portal has demanded consistency that is difficult to attain. Yet, Miller managed to lead three different programs to the Sweet 16 or beyond.
At Texas, Miller’s standards and expectations will remain. While the SEC has been one of the country’s strongest conferences in recent years, Miller has proved that he can elevate the Longhorns to the same heights Arizona once reached under his watch.
Sports
After USMNT firing, Berhalter leads Chicago to record season — but not vindication, he says

MIAMI — It was a little more than a year ago that Gregg Berhalter led the U.S. men’s national team to a historically disappointing Copa America run, becoming the first ever host-nation of the CONMBEBOL tournament to be eliminated in the group stage. The team’s two losses and one win prompted the U.S. Soccer Federation to fire Berhalter, forcing the coach’s second exit from the national team.
As #BerhalterOUT inundated social media, questions about his future in the game naturally began. With a resume that included head coaching stints with the USMNT, Columbus Crew and Hammarby in Sweden, many wondered what, if anything in the coaching realm, was next for him. And, less than four months after his firing, Chicago Fire FC announced Berhalter would become the club’s new head coach and director of football for the 2025 season.
It marked Berhalter’s return to MLS, the league where he won two titles as a player and, in doing so, he was undertaking the task of rebuilding a fallen franchise. The Fire had not qualified for the MLS Cup playoffs since the 2017 season and finished the 2024 campaign in last place of the Eastern Conference.
Berhalter quickly responded to the challenge, transforming the perennial contenders for the Wooden Spoon — the infamous, and unofficial, award for the worst overall record in the MLS regular season — to a team that clinched a 2025 MLS playoff spot with a thrilling 5-3 win over Inter Miami CF and Lionel Messi. Along the way, he has also set a Chicago Fire record for away performances.
Simultaneously, as the Chicago Fire makes history under Berhalter, the U.S. men’s national team continues to struggle under new manager Mauricio Pochettino, having fallen short in both the Gold Cup and the Nations League earlier this year. But Berhalter insists he feels no vindication in seeing the USMNT continue to descend while he reaches new heights with Chicago.
“No, because I never thought it was me,” Berhalter told ESPN. “It’s always a combination of forces. When you look at my record, you know, I think I’m the winningest coach of all time in U.S. soccer history. So, it’s not like I did a poor job.
“It was a young team and we qualified [for the 2022 World Cup], we did well at the World Cup and we were building. But I also understand decisions and I never took it personally. I never needed vindication. For me, it’s about wherever I go trying to be successful and doing my best.”
And he is doing just that with the Fire.
1:04
Keller: USMNT haven’t improved under Pochettino
Kasey Keller says he can’t see any changes for the USMNT since Mauricio Pochettino has replaced Gregg Berhalter.
A team united in Chicago
Berhalter understood the challenges the Fire posed, but he saw potential in the team’s ownership and the city around him. Having lived in Chicago for six years while coaching the national team, the Fire’s new manager learned to listen to the city’s cry for MLS success and took on the “civic duty” of making that happen.
Despite low expectations, Berhalter faced immense pressure to perform. But instead of shying away from the emerging demands, he channeled his previous experiences in order to prevail.
“Pressure is something that I learned with the national team,” Berhalter said. “The stakes at the national team level are really, really high. When you’re coaching in a World Cup and you’re facing potential elimination, if you lose to England, you have to be able to deal with pressure.”
Before the season, Berhalter created a roadmap to success for the club that included a complete shift in staff and player culture. He hired new staff — including a director of performance and a head of strategy — and recruited players in the winter transfer window who fit into the new identity he wanted for the club.
Though the team previously chased after bigger names like Xherdan Shaqiri and Bastian Schweinsteiger to come in with international experience, Berhalter knew one star player could not reignite the flame of the Fire. Instead of a world-renowned Designated Player, he looked for players who embodied three characteristics Berhalter identified as key: growth, togetherness, and accountability. After working with the national team, Berhalter knew the importance of centering a team around the concept of camaraderie instead of one or headline players.
“Trying to help fit everyone into a team is something I learned from working with top talented players, working with bigger type egos,” said Berhalter.
In his director of football role, Berhalter is not willing to rule out to the arrival of an international sensation, but he would only consider the signing if the player fit the culture he is building.
“We are about the collective — it’s about how our 11 players plus the substitutes that come in can help the team play together. And that’s really the strength of our group. That’s what the whole playing system is now built around,” said Berhalter.
His concept of a collective fight was on full display with that impressive win in Miami to secure their postseason berth. Each of Chicago’s five goals in the 5-3 win was scored by a different player, with D’Avilla Djé, Jonathan Dean, Rominigue Kouamé, Justin Reynolds and Brian Gutiérrez, illustrating Berhalter’s main point: no single player can lead this team. That collective under Berhalter has the Fire standing second in the league for most goals scored with 66, behind only Messi’s Inter Miami (76).
Brian Gutiérrez has been with the Fire since 2020, and he says Berhalter’s approach is more than just talk.
“The most important thing he’s changed is culture, and having a bond with the entire team,” Gutiérrez said. “In recent times we didn’t have that comradery, and now it shows on the field.”
Getting ‘so mad’ and creating a ‘huge shift’
The Chicago Fire concluded 2024 in last place of the Eastern Conference table with just 30 points and seven wins in 34 games. But the season’s disappointments felt familiar, as the team failed again to crack the top 10 of the East — the last time they had done so was in 2019, when the East only had 12 teams. A team that once reached soaring heights — winning the 1998 MLS Cup and multiple U.S. Open Cups in the early 2000s — was nowhere to be found.
Decades of mediocrity plagued Chicago and seemed to extend to any player who arrived at the club. Though players wanted to win and improve, draws and loses especially during away games became an accepted norm, Chicago Fire player Andrew Gutman told ESPN.
“MLS is such a hard league, especially to play away, you know, with the travel and the time change in different climates. There’s a lot of variables that go into it, so the team sometimes just plays for draws away — for whatever reason, that was the mindset,” Gutman said.
Berhalter immediately saw the need to set higher expectations on every level on and off the field.
“We don’t want complacency,” said Berhalter. “No matter who you are, what age you are, you know, we believe you can still improve. So that’s a really important value of ours.”
The Fire kicked off 2025 with a 4-2 loss to the Columbus Crew before enjoying a five-game undefeated streak. The results began to mirror the team’s evolution under Berhalter, slowly approaching a form of consistency. But before the Berhalter could feel like he turned the page into a new chapter for the club, the game against the New York Red Bulls on April 5 at Sports Illustrated Stadium proved a stark reminder of the mediocrity he was trying to overcome.
Though Chicago took the lead early in New Jersey, the Red Bulls rallied to win 2-1. The normally cool-headed coach didn’t hold back, unloading his disappointment onto his players so they understood that the standards of the past were no longer acceptable.
“The one game in particular that I remember was the Red Bull game away from home, and that was one of the moments,” Berhalter told ESPN. “There’s been a few moments in the season where I go to the next level. I’m very even-keeled, but that was one of those moments.
“It was really about expectations because I was trying to communicate to the team about wherever we go, no matter where we go, we should have the expectation to win the game. And I didn’t like that game, it felt it was missing a little. Like we’re okay with two or one draws or a loss. And I was like, guys, ‘It’s not good enough. We can do so much more.’ And so that was a big moment in the group of saying that like, expectations need to be different.”
That game served as a turning point for the Fire, Gutman said. While players previously understood the coach’s philosophy about high expectations and the need for excellence, the defeat provided tangible evidence on the dangers of complacency.
“He was so mad at us because he knew that we were the better team, and he felt like we only lost because of our mentality,” Gutman said. “And so from that game, I felt like there was a huge shift in the players realizing, ‘OK, we’re going to go win, away or wherever it is, we don’t care.’ Every single away game, he always reinforces the fact that we’re here to win, we’re here to get three points. And if we don’t win, it’s unacceptable.”
After that game, the Fire rattled nine away victories this regular season — an all-time Fire record. Chicago’s 41 goals on the road leads the league for most goals scored in away games. With one regular season matchday left, the Fire sit behind only Cincinnati and San Diego (11 each) for the most away wins in MLS. In just one season, Berhalter has propelled Chicago to almost as many away victories as the team had in the previous three seasons combined.
Even when entering the game against Inter Miami at Chase Stadium and facing the likes of Messi, Luis Suárez, Sergio Busquets and Jordi Alba, Gutman told ESPN the team felt confident due to the confidence Berhalter instilled in them.
“We’re going to need to play Miami away to clinch a playoff spot — like, we didn’t really feel the pressure,” Gutman said afterward. “We almost felt like we should win this game. We felt like we were set up perfectly to do exactly what we did… I was like, ‘Why am I not feeling anxious or something that we’re about to kind of break this playoff streak, you know?’ But it was just like the day-to-day expectations that were put on us — like, ‘We got it.’ “
In just over a year with Berhalter as head coach and director of football, the transformation in Chicago is evident. Now the next challenge awaits: The MLS Cup playoffs.
The Fire have clinched at least a wildcard spot in the East, but depending how this weekend’s Decision Day plays out, the Fire could earn a bye to the first round. Despite struggles in recent years, expectations continue to soar for Chicago and the players are aiming for the MLS Cup.
“I knew it was going to change under Gregg — you could just see as soon as he walked in the room that we had finally got someone within the club that’s going to bring it back to where it was,” said Gutman.
Thanks to a new culture, shift in expectations and a collective mentality, Berhalter is driving Chicago towards a possible first MLS Cup since 1998.
Sports
Knicks star Josh Hart celebrates rise of Christianity across America

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New York Knicks star Josh Hart made a post on social media celebrating the rise of Christianity on Wednesday.
Hart re-shared a Fox News clip that highlighted an increase in Bible sales, downloads of religious mobile apps, and streams of contemporary Christian music, with celebratory emojis.
Hart received praise and support for his celebration by some users, who defended him from criticism.
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New York Knicks guard Josh Hart speaks to the media during a media day press conference at the Madison Square Garden training center on Sept. 23, 2025. (Brad Penner/Imagn Images)
“I hope you’re ignoring all the backlash in the replies. Remember what Jesus said: ‘and you will be hated by all for My Name’s sake. But the one who endures to the end will be saved.’ Matthew 10:22,” one user wrote.
Another user wrote, “The amount of people in the comments that view Josh posting this as a bad thing is alarming.”
JOEL EMBIID REVEALS FALLOUT WITH FORMER 76ERS TEAMMATE JAMES HARDEN AFTER UGLY EXIT: ‘IT HURTS’

Josh Hart walks off the court after losing to the Indiana Pacers 130-109 in Game Seven of the Eastern Conference Second Round Playoffs at Madison Square Garden on May 19, 2024, in New York City. (Elsa/Getty Images)
Other users criticized Hart for posting the clip and celebrating the statistical trends.
“Josh out here magnifying right wing tweets,” one critic wrote.
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Josh Hart of the New York Knicks looks on in the fourth quarter against the Indiana Pacers in Game Seven of the Eastern Conference Second Round Playoffs at Madison Square Garden on May 19, 2024, in New York City. (Elsa/Getty Images)
Hart had a career year with his big minutes for the Knicks during the 2024-25 campaign, averaging 13.6 points, 9.6 rebounds, 5.9 assists and 1.5 steals per game. He also shot 52.5% from the field.
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