Sports
‘We’re all using it as motivation’: LSU aims to shake off last season and win again
AS CHEERS FILLED the air at Dickie’s Arena in Fort Worth, Texas, one corner of the floor was uncannily quiet.
Several minutes — and what felt like much, much longer — passed after UCLA’s Emma Malabuyo stuck her beam dismount, the final routine for the Bruins. The eyes of virtually everyone in the arena were glued to the scoreboard.
But the gymnasts on the LSU team already knew what the result would be. They stood in near-silence by the vault, tears streaming down their faces, exchanging drawn-out hugs with one another.
When Malabuyo’s 9.975 finally flashed it was official. The Tigers, the No. 1 seed and the defending national champions, were going home. UCLA and Utah were advancing to the NCAA championship finals.
“It was really heavy and crushing at the time,” LSU associate head coach Courtney McCool Griffeth told ESPN in November. “And that stays with you.”
Eventually, the team was able to find perspective and, according to McCool Griffeth, take the emotion out of it. Now, all these months after that day in April, the Tigers have been able to learn from the experience — and let the sting of disappointment make them even better this season.
“The past is in the past, but I think it’s important to reflect on the bad moments that we did have and try to learn from those moments because that is important,” junior Konnor McClain told ESPN ahead of the season. “You don’t want to repeat what happened. … But I think we’re all using it as motivation, even the newcomers and our transfers. … It’s like, ‘Okay, how can we be even better this time around?'”
MCCLAIN AND HER teammates didn’t waste any time in getting ready for 2026.
The Tigers returned to the gym in June, nearly seven months before their opening meet at the star-studded Sprouts’ Farmers Market Collegiate Quad on Saturday against three of the top four teams from last season — Oklahoma, UCLA and Utah (4 p.m. ET, ABC).
While being back in the practice gym was a familiar comfort for McClain, the LSU team has a new look overall. Six gymnasts graduated at the end of last season — including individual NCAA champions Haleigh Bryant and Aleah Finnegan and fan favorite Olivia Dunne. There were a number of new faces to get to know, and McClain didn’t know what to expect at first when she walked into the team’s first unofficial summer practice.
“The energy was 100% different,” McClain said. “This team is so young, but so funny. From the moment you walk in, everyone is just cracking jokes, and it’s like that the whole practice. … When you’re having fun, it just makes everything easy.”
Since those early sessions, the team has continued to bond, both inside and outside of the gym. They had a weekend retreat at the start of the fall semester in Gulf Shores, Alabama, and held make-your-own dip nights and pumpkin-carving parties. McClain said the vibe in the gym has remained upbeat and even downright silly at times as the season rapidly approaches.
And the team should once again challenge everyone in the country. McClain said she is back to full health after an Achilles tear last year, and hopes to compete on all four events this season. She claimed the SEC beam title her freshman year, and scored three perfect 10s (twice on beam, once on floor).
Sophomore Kailin Chio was the SEC freshman of the year in 2025 after an incredible debut season and won the NCAA vault title. And junior Amari Drayton, another former elite gymnast, has been a major contributor on vault and floor. Sophomores and fellow former national team gymnasts Kaliya Lincoln and Lexi Zeiss are expected to contribute in multiple lineups, and the team has high hopes for freshmen Nina Ballou, who won four floor national titles at the club level, and Haley Mustari, who won four national bar titles in club.
Chio said the closeness of the team has been a large part of their preseason focus — and everyone has made it a point to get to know one another individually. Chio was mentored by Bryant, now an assistant coach on the team, during her first season and is already trying to return the favor to the new group of freshmen.
“I went through so much during my freshman year, especially being away from home, so I know what it’s like,” Chio told ESPN. “I just try to tell all of them, ‘This is supposed to be fun. I know it’s really hard, but just try to enjoy every moment because it does go by fast.'”
Such relationships have been vital to the team’s success in recent years. After several seasons of being a perennial contender, the Tigers won their first NCAA championship title in 2024. It was an incredible accomplishment to be sure, and one that was celebrated by the team and its fans with a victory parade in Baton Rouge. But it was business as usual for those involved with the program.
In fact, in an interview with ESPN last year, head coach Jay Clark said they had done “nothing” differently ahead of the 2025 season.
“The only thing that changes are the things that change year over year regardless, because you have personalities and attributes and gymnastics that leave, and then you have personality and attributes and gymnastics that come, and you have to figure out how do you backfill those voids, whether it’s personality traits or leadership traits,” Clark said. “You have to let each team develop its own personality, but the destination is always the same.”
That all remains true, but the team did make a slight change this fall. They’ve utilized “accountability partners” for the past several seasons, matching teammates with one another to help each other throughout the season, and this year the idea has been supercharged into “Tiger Teammates.” Per McCool Griffeth, members of the team are assigned to a different partner every month and they are tasked with getting to know each other and encourage one another as much as possible during that time. They also created “Motivation Monday,” in which the team picks a different word for the week and comes up with something they can do together to emphasize the word.
While that idea is new, Mondays have always been the most crucial day of the week for the team. During the season, no matter what has happened over the weekend — whether it’s a big victory or a challenging loss — everyone gathers in the meeting room to reflect on the week that was and set the tone for the one to come. A pyramid is posted on the wall as a reminder of what the team decided to make its core values at the start of the season. This year, the words, “With each other, for each other” sit at the very bottom as the foundation for everything else.
“We do it every single week,” McCool Griffeth told ESPN. “There are so many crucial things we can see visually, and hear and talk about, and the consistency of that is something we believe in a lot.”
And it’s not just rehashing who scored what on which event, or often about scores at all. It’s usually the little things that carry the most weight.
“We do shout outs in the meeting room, and we hear the things even [the coaches] don’t see,” McCool Griffeth said. “[The gymnasts] will often share what their teammates have done, and what they appreciated, and all the ways they have gone out of their way for one another. We try to emphasize that everyone has the ability to influence in so many ways, and really acknowledge what everyone brings to the team.”
Everyone on the team was heavily recruited and highly successful before arriving in Baton Rouge — but with 21 members on the team this season and with just six competing on each event, not everyone will have the chance to compete every week. And for some, they rarely will crack an event lineup throughout their four years. Even Dunne, a former junior national team member and arguably the most famous collegiate gymnast in recent memory, only consistently made the lineup on one or two events during her career. (An injury sidelined her most of her fifth year in 2025.) It can be a challenge for young gymnasts, used to being the star at their club, to accept a different role.
Even for those, like McClain and Chio, who immediately make an impact in their first season, adjusting to being part of a team after years of primarily competing only as an individual can feel like culture shock. McClain said she wasn’t fully comfortable with the all-for-the-team approach until the end of last season. Her Achilles’ injury ironically helped her in that regard as she had to find a different niche for herself when she wasn’t able to practice for several months, and then it was sealed after the devastation in Fort Worth. The switch, as she said, was flipped.
“In the summer, after the season didn’t go the way I wanted it to, I was like, ‘Okay, this is my time,'” McClain said. “I am finally going to put everything I have into this team no matter how the year looks for me. I just want to do what’s best for the team.”
In addition to likely being one of the team’s most consistent and important gymnasts this year, McClain has embraced a leadership role and hopes her own personal growth will help some of the underclassmen reach that point sooner than she did.
For McCool Griffeth, Clark and the rest of the coaching staff, being a gifted gymnast is just part of the equation when it comes to one’s value to the team, and sometimes in conversation about the team and its priorities, it almost feels secondary. Because for the Tigers, being part of the team — and buying into that idea fully and completely — is what is most important.
And while McCool Griffeth will tell you the coaching staff is most focused on process-based goals, and improving week after week throughout the season, the emphasis on the team and what it means to be a part of it — no matter one’s role — might just be the extra edge that gets the Tigers past the defeat of 2025 and back to where they feel they belong in the spring.
“Our goal is to win a national championship,” Chio said. “It’s LSU, I think that’s just kind of a given. And I just want everyone to be as close, and bonded, as possible. These are my sisters, and we will have fun, and just keep grinding every second, until we reach the top together.”
Sports
Frank Lampard’s Coventry City promoted to Premier League
Coventry City will return to the Premier League for the first time in 25 years after securing their promotion from the Championship with a 1-1 draw at Blackburn Rovers on Friday.
A founding member of Premier League in 1992-93, Coventry have not been back since relegation in 2000-01.
– How does manager Lampard compare to others from England’s ‘Golden Generation’?
The West Midlands side will now rejoin the elite after a stunning campaign in the second tier under manager Frank Lampard.
Lampard’s side only needed a point from Friday’s match at Ewood Park to seal promotion but looked like being denied after Ryoya Morishita gave Blackburn the lead, before Bobby Thomas rose highest to head in from a free kick in the 84th minute.
The goal and the final whistle minutes later prompted wild celebrations from the more than 7,000 travelling Coventry supporters packed in to the away end in Lancashire.
The Sky Blues’ lowest ebb came when they dropped into the fourth-tier League Two in 2017 but they have fought their way back and, after losing to Luton in the playoff final in 2023, have stormed the Championship under Lampard this season to secure their Premier League return with three matches to spare.
They will have to wait to secure the title, with second-placed Ipswich now 11 points behind with five matches to play.
Friday’s result also means a return to the Premier League for Lampard. The former England international, who won three Premier League titles as a player with Chelsea, spent 18 months as manager at Stamford Bridge followed by a year in charge of Everton.
He last coached in the top flight during nine games as Chelsea interim manager at the end of the 2022-23 season.
Coventry spent 34 straight years in England’s top division and garnered a reputation for a series of dramatic escapes from Premier League relegation before finally succumbing to the drop in 2001. The club won their only major trophy with the FA Cup in 1987.
PA contributed to this report.
Sports
WWE star Danhausen says Mets ‘curse’ isn’t exactly lifted as team drops ninth straight game
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LAS VEGAS – WWE star Danhausen has been an eccentric delight since he joined the company and made his debut at the Elimination Chamber back in February.
Danhausen has the knack for “cursing” his WWE opponents. Stars like Dominik Mysterio, Kit Wilson and The Miz have all felt the effects of Danhausen’s abilities, and it seems like the New York Mets are also suffering.
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Danhausen enters the arena before his match against Kit Wilson during SmackDown at SAP Center in San Jose, Calif., on April 10, 2026. (Eakin Howard/Getty Images)
Former WWE head writer Brian Gewirtz, a long-suffering Mets fan, told Danhausen earlier this week on social media that if he could lift the “curse” on the Mets, he would “do everything in my power to get his face on the side of a (WWE production) truck.”
Danhausen said that Gewirtz had a deal and wanted to have his face on the truck immediately. However, it appears that deal has not come to fruition.

New York Mets manager Carlos Mendoza stands for the Star-Spangled Banner before a baseball game against the Chicago Cubs in Chicago on April 17, 2026. (Erin Hooley/AP Photo)
“I did un-curse the Mets. But it didn’t work because, I believe it was Brian Gewirtz who did not pay Danhausen. He did not send me my money so it did not take full effect,” Danhausen told Fox News Digital on Friday morning. “Once I have the money, perhaps it will actually work because right now it’s probably about a half of an un-cursing. It’s like a layaway situation.”
Hours later, the Mets lost their ninth straight game to the Chicago Cubs 12-4.

Danhausen enters the ring during Monday Night RAW at Golden 1 Center in Sacramento, California, on April 13, 2026. (Rich Freeda/WWE)
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The Cubs dealt with the “Curse of the Billy Goat” for years before winning the World Series in 2016. It appears the Mets have to deal with the Danhausen curse, at least for now.
Meanwhile, for Danhausen, he’s set for his first WrestleMania appearance in some capacity. Reports have indicated that he will have at least one segment with John Cena at WrestleMania 42.
Sports
Greg Olsen’s advice for NFL Draft first-round picks on handling high expectations
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The 2026 NFL Draft is less than a week away, and prospects from all over are hoping to hear their names called, especially on Thursday night in the first round.
Having the “first-round pick” tag next to your name in the NFL is a rite of passage – teams believed you were worthy enough for their top slot, hoping you can be an immediate impact player for the franchise.
But that pick also comes with high expectations – the player is expected to perform right away and do so with Pro Bowl and All-Pro nods along the way. It can be hard for those rookies, as they’re trying to get acclimated to the speed and physicality the NFL has compared to college football.
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Broadcaster Greg Olsen looks on before the game between the Seattle Seahawks and the San Francisco 49ers at Lumen Field in Seattle, Washington, on Sept. 7, 2025. (Steph Chambers/Getty Images)
Greg Olsen, the three-time Pro Bowl tight end and FOX Sports NFL analyst, was once in that position being the 31st overall pick of the 2007 NFL Draft by the Chicago Bears. And while he knows that each situation is different depending on the franchise the prospect lands with, the expectations are the same – fans want to see you perform.
So, how does one deal with that?
“Handle your business, be a great teammate,” Olsen told Fox News Digital, while also discussing how he’s taking his analyst duties to the next level with NFL IQ. “Earn the trust of your teammates, earn the trust of your coaches first and foremost. Because, at the end of the day, if you play well and the guys in that locker room believe in you and you continue to get opportunities, the fan support will come. As the team wins and you play well, all of that takes care of itself.”
For Olsen, he recalled thinking perhaps the New York Jets or Carolina Panthers would take him in the first round after a successful career at Miami. But, when the Jets traded up to nab first-ballot Hall of Famer Darrelle Revis, and the Panthers later selected his Hurricanes teammate, linebacker Jon Beason, he didn’t know what was happening.
That’s the beauty of the NFL Draft, though, as the Bears took him despite Olsen not really interacting with their staff during the pre-draft process.

Greg Olsen speaks on radio row prior to Super Bowl LIX at the Ernest Morial Convention Center on February 06, 2025 in New Orleans, Louisiana. (Aaron J. Thornton/Getty Images)
In today’s NFL Draft world, Olsen understands the information these prospects have is much more vast. In turn, fans have the same knowledge given the world of social media, and how reports, mock drafts and expert analysis shapes their understanding of how front offices think during this exciting time of the football season.
With that, comes a challenge Olsen knows he didn’t have to deal with as a rookie, but these first-round picks next week will have to weather that storm.
“In today’s day and age where everyone is so worried about outside opinion, they’re so worried about articles being written and social media and what’s being posted, you could lose track of, ‘Well, while you’re worried about that, you’re not taking care of home base.’ I think it’s more challenging today than 20 years ago when I came into the league, but I think that’s something guys have to hunker down and understand it’s not easy, but you control you and typically things fall into place,” Olsen said.
Olsen added it will be a “very complex, stressful day” for all those involved next week, but first-round pick or not, it’s the fulfillment of a life-long dream. That’s all that matters.
“You hear your name get called and a life-long dream, something you’re excited to embark on, became real. I got drafted by one of the premier franchises in all of football, coming off a Super Bowl appearance a couple months earlier. It was a really great place to start my NFL career,” he said.

Greg Olsen, the Chicago Bears’ first-round draft pick, talks to reporters after a summer training camp practice on July 30, 2007, at Olivet Nazarene University in Bourbonnais, Ill. (Jonathan Daniel/Getty Images)
INSIDE THE FRONT OFFICE MIND
While Olsen enjoyed 14 years in the NFL, his next chapter of the game is providing keen analysis for FOX Sports broadcasts during the year.
To help him do that in the offseason while looking at the NFL Draft and free agency pickups by each franchise, Olsen has been using NFL IQ, the new interactive hub created by the league and AWS (Amazon Web Services), powered by Amazon Quick.
Ahead of the draft, NFL IQ transformed raw data from the NFL Combine, as well as team needs, free agency moves made and more, for this hub that provides fans access to key insights and puts them in the shoes of front office decision makers. Whether it’s the casual fan or a top analyst like Olsen, NFL IQ is an easy-to-use way to deepen football knowledge, especially at a crucial roster-building time like the draft is.

General shot of NFL IQ, the new interactive hub from the league and Amazon Web Services, powered by Amazon Quick. (NFL IQ)
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“This is the most educated fan base in NFL history, and I think that’s a good thing,” Olsen said.
“Fans actually have a way to access the exact same data, the exact same information that the teams and everyone are using for their own interest, whether it’s something casual or for people who really want to dive into the nitty gritty. I think it’s a really fun set of tools for the wide array of people who touch the NFL space. I know firsthand as a fan, and now a professional in the industry, it’s a huge part of my interaction of the game.”
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