Browns' rookie RB Quinshon Judkins fractures fibula, dislocates ankle in loss to Bills

Cleveland Browns running back Quinshon Judkins left Sunday's game against the Buffalo Bills on a cart with a leg injury.

Head coachKevin Stefanski told reporters after the gamethat Judkins had suffered a fractured fibula and a dislocated ankle, leaving the rookie running back with potential long road to recovery ahead of the 2026 season. The injuries will require surgery.

The painful play took place late in the second quarter. Judkins got tackled on a screen pass in the open fieldand his lower right leg twisted in the wrong direction. He was down in immediate pain, and athletic trainers tended to him on the field.

Judkins left on a cart shortly after the injury, andthe Browns quckly ruled him outfor the game. The Browns trailed 20-10 at the time of his injury and eventually lost, 23-20.

A second-round pick in April's NFL Draft, Judkins had a productive season on the field during a largely disappointing campaign for the Browns. In 13 games prior to Sunday's, Judkins had tallied 805 rushing yards and seven touchdowns on the ground. He added 142 yards on 21 receptions as Cleveland's most reliable offensive player.

Raheim Sanders took over at running back and led the Browns in rushing attempts Sunday with 11 for 42 yards.

The Browns fell to 3-12 and are in last place in the AFC North.

Browns' rookie RB Quinshon Judkins fractures fibula, dislocates ankle in loss to Bills

Cleveland Browns running back Quinshon Judkins left Sunday's game against the Buffalo Bills on a cart with a leg i...
Bills' Josh Allen injures foot, but returns to game against Browns

CLEVELAND (AP) — Buffalo quarterback Josh Allen remained in Sunday's game against the Cleveland Browns after suffering an injury to his right foot during the second quarter.

The reigning NFL MVP was favoring the foot after being sacked by Cleveland's Myles Garrett and Alex Wright for a 22-yard loss to the Buffalo 1-yard line with 60 seconds remaining in the first half. The half-sack gave Garrett 22 on the season, and needing one more to pass Michael Strahan and T.J. Watt for the single-season mark.

Allen went up the middle for a 1-yard gain on the next play before the Bills punted.

Allen came to the sideline and took off his right shoe before going to the locker room. The Bills announced X-rays on Allen's foot were negative and he was cleared to return.

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Bills' Josh Allen injures foot, but returns to game against Browns

CLEVELAND (AP) — Buffalo quarterback Josh Allen remained in Sunday's game against the Cleveland Browns after sufferin...
J.J. McCarthy gets injured as the Vikings hand the Giants their ninth loss in a row

EAST RUTHERFORD,N.J. (AP) — J.J. McCarthy had alreadyinjured his right, throwing handby the time he ran for a touchdown. Minnesota Vikings coach Kevin O'Connell asked the rookie quarterback if he was OK, though the discomfort eventually made McCarthy unable to grip the ball.

McCarthy exited just before halftime, and backup Max Brosmer helped the Vikings win their third game in a row, beating the New York Giants 16-13 on Sunday in a matchup of teams eliminated from playoff contention.

"I'm just glad that this whole, entire team has continued to stay with it, continued to fight to the end of the season, because we don't lay our heads down and we definitely don't give up," said receiver Justin Jefferson, who had six catches for 85 yards.

Minnesota's victory came aftermechanical issues led pilots to turn aroundon the way and a second plane was needed to get players and staff to northern New Jersey on Saturday.

"It was an interesting 24 hours or so for our team," O'Connell said. "But I'm really proud of the way the guys handled a little bit of the adversity yesterday and then found a way to win a football game."

It's unclear if McCarthy will be able to play in either of the final two games of the season.

O'Connell said X-rays were negative for McCarthy, whose last play was a strip sack by Brian Burns in the final minute of the first half, when it appeared the Vikings (7-8) were going to let the clock run out. Instead, Burns forced McCarthy to fumble with a crushing hit and Tyler Nubin returned it 27 yards for a touchdown.

After entering in relief, Brosmer led a go-ahead scoring drive in the fourth quarter that ended with Will Reichard making a 30-yard field goal. The rookie completed 7 of 9 passes for 52 yards in his fourth NFL appearance and firstsince throwing four interceptionsNov. 30 in a 26-0 loss at Seattle.

"I'm just happy that he had the confidence in himself to go in there with a cool, calm and collected mind and to lead this team to where we would like to go, which was a win," Jefferson said. "Definitely proud of him."

Before getting hurt, McCarthy completed 9 of 14 passes for 108 yards and had a would-be pick-6 negated by an offside penalty on Abdul Carter. After havinghis entire rookie yearwiped out by a torn meniscus in his right knee, the 2024 No. 10 pick has missed time this season because ofa concussionand asprained right ankle.

The Giants (2-13) lost their ninth consecutive game and fifth since Mike Kafka took over as interim coach whenBrian Daboll was firedon Nov. 10. They have not won since Oct. 9.

"This is a new experience for me," rookie QB Jaxson Dart said. "It hasn't been easy. I'm just trying to stay positive."

Dart did not attempt a pass until 1:44 left in the second quarter and finished 7 of 13 for 33 yards and his fifth career interception, which came when his throw bounced off Theo Johnson's hands and into Byron Murphy's. Dart was sacked five times, including by Andrew Van Ginkel on fourth and 3 with two minutes left, and those yards lost gave the Giants 13 net yards

"I trust the game plan," Dart said. "I understand it. My job is to go out there and execute it."

Ben Saul made two field goals in his debut, and New York failed to score an offensive touchdown for the second time in as many games against the Vikings' defense run by Brian Flores after choosing Daboll over him in 2022sparked a lawsuitalleging racist hiring practices. The unit's longest play was 18 yards, and Darius Slayton's drop late elicited boos from some of the fans who remained in the stands at the Meadowlands.

Vikings: Running back Jordan Mason was carted to the locker room after injuring his right ankle in the first quarter. ... Center Ryan Kelly was concussed in the second. It's his third this season and the sixth documented concussion of his NFL career. ... O'Connell said Aaron Jones played through an ankle injury.

Giants: Left tackle Andrew Thomas limped off early in the second quarter because of a hamstring injury. ... Center John Michael Schmitz injured his right hand in the third. ... Cornerback Cor'Dale Flott left with a knee injury.

Vikings: Host Detroit on Thursday in one of the NFL's three Christmas Day games.

Giants: Visit Las Vegas next Sunday in a game that could determine who gets the No. 1 pick in the draft.

AP NFL:https://apnews.com/hub/NFL

J.J. McCarthy gets injured as the Vikings hand the Giants their ninth loss in a row

EAST RUTHERFORD,N.J. (AP) — J.J. McCarthy had alreadyinjured his right, throwing handby the time he ran for a touchdown. ...
Canucks outlast Bruins in marathon shootout for victory

Liam Ohgren scored the only shootout goal in the seventh round after tallying a goal and an assist in regulation, lifting the visiting Vancouver Canucks to a come-from-behind 5-4 win over the Boston Bruins on Saturday night.

Kevin Lankinen broke an 0-5-1 drought with a 38-save performance, making six stops in overtime before pitching a shutout in the shootout. The win is Vancouver's fourth straight on a five-game trip.

Also for the Canucks, Linus Karlsson registered his first career two-goal game and added an assist, while Max Sasson also scored.

Morgan Geekie had a goal and an assist, while Pavel Zacha, Tanner Jeannot and Andrew Peeke also lit the lamp for Boston, which is 1-2-1 in its last four games and lost its first game in extra time this season.

Peeke's point shot that went in off the post with 3:44 left forced overtime.

Jeremy Swayman made 18 stops in his fourth straight start for Boston, which had a 42-22 advantage in shots including 13-4 in the first period and 6-2 in overtime.

Boston turned a dominant start into a 1-0 lead, as Geekie buried a one-timer from the left circle for a power-play goal at 11:37. Geekie became the third Bruin to reach the 25-goal milestone before the holiday break, joining Hockey Hall of Fame member Phil Esposito and current teammate David Pastrnak.

Sasson brought the visitors even with 15 seconds left in the first, scoring a wrist shot from the slot off Ohgren's centering feed.

Vancouver's power play flipped the score 4:22 into the second period. Swayman was caught out of position as Evander Kane slipped a pass from the corner that Karlsson tapped into an open net.

Lankinen made key saves after the Canucks took a 2-1 lead, including a point-blank shot from Mason Lohrei less than 30 seconds after the go-ahead goal.

In the same minute as Swayman stopped former Bruin Jake DeBrusk's breakaway at 4-on-4, Casey Mittelstadt and Nikita Zadorov connected on passes that led to a Zacha back-door finish to tie the game again at 9:41.

Boston regained the lead at 12:05. Mark Kastelic made a great spinning pass through the crease to Jeannot to finish as he drove to the bottom of the right circle.

Vancouver appeared to make it 3-3 with 2:44 left in the second, but Marcus Pettersson was deemed to have used his glove to deflect the puck over Swayman.

In the third, the Canucks followed up a successful penalty kill with a tying goal that counted. Karlsson snapped off a shot from high on the left circle at 3:53.

Ohgren redirected Pettersson's drive from the center point to lift Vancouver at the 7:34 mark. But Vancouver being unable to convert on overlapping power plays, including a short 5-on-3 halfway through the third, helped set up Peeke's goal.

--Field Level Media

Canucks outlast Bruins in marathon shootout for victory

Liam Ohgren scored the only shootout goal in the seventh round after tallying a goal and an assist in regulation, lift...
James Madison puts up valiant fight, but Group of Five teams still have much to prove in CFP

EUGENE, Ore. (AP) — Perhaps it was James Madison going for it twice on fourth down on its first drive of the game.

Or, maybe it was coach Bob Chesney calling for a wide receiver pass on the Dukes' second series of the evening. Even 12th-ranked James Madison successfully pulling off a fake punt could have adequately explained what the scoreboard failed to convey.

It was clear that the fifth-ranked Oregon Ducks were in a different class than their visitors in a 51-34 win in a College Football Playoff first round matchup Saturday at Autzen Stadium. Oregon led 48-13 midway through the third quarter before the Dukes added three late touchdowns to make the final score appear closer than the game really was.

"I think the scoreboard itself, every time we got down there we kind of shot ourselves in the foot," Chesney said. "If we did not do that, if we did not end with 13 penalties, is this a little bit of a different game? Maybe. But at the same point in time, that's a tough offense to stop, and I think it's tough for a lot of teams in the entire country to stop."

With James Madison's loss, Group of Five teams fell to 0-4 all-time in CFP games. No. 17 Tulane fell 41-10 to No. 6 Mississippi on Saturday, too, while Penn State beat Boise State 31-14 in last year's Fiesta Bowl.Alabamatopped Cincinnati 27-6 in a 2022 CFP semifinal at the Cotton Bowl.

Following their loss to Ole Miss, Green Wave head coach Jon Sumrall brushed aside any notion of his team not belonging among the last 12 standing.

"We're our conference champion and the rules are what they were, and I think there should be access for at least one G5 team moving forward," Sumrall said. "I do. I think you should have given the American champion an opportunity before the ACC champion this year because we beat the ACC champion. So Duke won the ACC Championship; we beat them."

To Sumrall's point, Tulane beat a pair of Power Four teams in Northwestern and Duke, but those schools combined to go 14-11 in 2025.

James Madison, meanwhile, lost to its only Power Four opponent this season, with Louisville beating it 28-14 in a game in which the Dukes mustered just 263 yards of total offense. Most of the season, James Madison ran with the ball with ease against its opponents, rushing for over 300 yards in a game five times and over 200 yards in a game nine times.

But on Saturday, the Dukes mostly abandoned the run after quickly falling behind, and instead often turned to Sun Belt Player of the Year and quarterback Alonza Barnett III, who attempted a career-high 48 passes in the contest. Even so, Barnett was confident his team belonged in the CFP over other Power Four schools.

"I believe people saw that we were meant to be on this level. When you look at the Power Four teams and whatever, the destiny is really — the ball is in your court. You control your own destiny," Barnett said. "Most of those teams that didn't make it, they controlled their own destiny, and we handled what we could handle and we didn't give into outside noise."

Among Group of Five schools, James Madison did fare the best of any of them on offense in the CFP. The other three programs scored a combined 30 points in their respective playoff games, a total James Madison eclipsed against the nation's eighth-ranked scoring defense.

But where the Dukes fell flat was slowing down the Ducks' ninth-ranked scoring offense. Oregon ran the ball with ease, averaging more than 7.7 yards per attempt against James Madison's run defense that entered the contest allowing the second-fewest yards per game in the country.

As has often been the case in matchups between Power Four and Group of Five teams, the greatest discrepancies existed in the trenches. To a man, James Madison could not adequately match up with Oregon, just as Tulane couldn't with Ole Miss and many other Group of Five programs before them both failed to do.

"I think there were moments today where I feel like we could play with them," Chesney said. " And I think that today, the complimentary football, and us playing in the way we needed to just did not exist."

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James Madison puts up valiant fight, but Group of Five teams still have much to prove in CFP

EUGENE, Ore. (AP) — Perhaps it was James Madison going for it twice on fourth down on its first drive of the game. ...
Miami surprises Texas A&M in CFP with defense, Malachi Toney touchdown

The home teams were dominant in the first year of theCollege Football Playoff. This year? Not so much

No. 10 seed Miami used an opportunistic defense and got enough offense topull out a 10-3 win at No. 7 Texas A&M. The victory by the Hurricanes came one day afterAlabama rallied for a historic comeback defeat at Oklahoma.

Miami with its first victory in its first playoff appearance advances to the quarterfinals and a meeting with Ohio State in the Cotton Bowl on Dec. 31.

"I think it was important, first, to get in the playoff," Hurricanes coach Mario Cristobal said. "Then to go and win at a place like this, right, 100 plus thousand people, on the road, a team that was arguably top 2 or 3 until their last game, and to get it done in this type of environment, we needed that."

Miami running back Mark Fletcher Jr. breaks free on a run against Texas A&M during the first round of the 2025 College Football Playoff at Kyle Field.

The defensive struggle was scoreless at halftime. Amid windy conditions at Kyle Field, the first 30 minutes included a lost fumble and missed field goal by Texas A&M and two missed field goals by the Hurricanes.

The first drive of the second half produced points. Three completions by Carson Beck got Miami into Texas A&M territory. A 24-yard run by Mark Fletcher created a goal-to-go situation before the Hurricanes settled for a 21-yard kick from Carter Davis.

RAISING CANES:Miami throws Texas A&M into fire in CFP game for sickos

The Hurricane defense was stingy throughout. An interception of Aggies quarterback Marcel Reed on the next possession set up Miami in scoring range, but that threat was thwarted by another missed field goal by Davis.

The Aggies needed 52 minutes to register their first score. A methodical 16-play drive of 67 yards stalled at the Miami 17. Randy Bond split the uprights from 35 yards to tie the game at 3 with just more than eight minutes left in regulation. It was his 71st career field goal for Bond, tying the school record.

A minute later, the Texas A&M defense made its biggest play of the day with Dalton Brooks stripping Miami receiver Malachi Toney near midfield. Daymion Sanford pounced on the ball for first turnover by the Hurricanes. It was just the second lost fumble of the season by Miami.

But defensive lineman Reuben Bain sacked Reed on third down to force a punt. It was one of seven sacks for Miami as its defensive line was difficult for Texas A&M to block in the run and pass game.

On the first play of the ensuing play, Fletcher sprinted 56 yards to Texas 30. It was the longest run of Fletcher's career.

"I just told the O-line and the wide receivers and tight ends, just put a hat on somebody and I'm going to be gone," Fletcher said of the run. "I'm going to be gone. I'm going to handle the rest. That's the reason it opened up like that."

Fletcher, who finished with 172 yards on 17 carries, then ripped off a 12-yard run to put Miami into field-goal range. But they didn't need a field goal as Toney, who was upset after his earlier turnover, took a short pass from Beck and ran around the end for a 15-yard touchdown on third down for the game's first touchdown with 1:44 left.

"You saw the entire team just go right to him after the fumble," Cristobal said. "Everybody trusts him. A lot of the reason why we're here today is because of his play making ability. He brings so much energy to the team. They trust him. They love him.

Texas A&M drove deep into Miami territory before an interception by Bryce Fitzgerald in the end zone fittingly ended the last threat by the Aggies. It was Fitzgerald's second pick of Reed in the game.

"They were able to find a drive and we were able to respond, and we just weren't able to finish," Texas A&M coach Mike Elko said. "We weren't able to get it done. We came up five yards short. That's something we'll have to live with throughout the offseason."

Beck finished with modest numbers, completing 14 of 20 for 103 yards.

Texas A&M outgained the Hurricanes 326-278. Reed threw for 237 yards in the team's second loss in a row after opening the season with 11 consecutive wins and rising to No. 3 in the US LBM Coaches Poll.

"You hurt for those kids because you know how hard they work, you know what they put into this thing," Elko said. "People will try to knock at what they did and what they accomplished, and that won't be fair to them, and they'll have to deal with that."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Miami defeats Texas A&M in CFP with defense, Malachi Toney touchdown

Miami surprises Texas A&M in CFP with defense, Malachi Toney touchdown

The home teams were dominant in the first year of theCollege Football Playoff. This year? Not so much No...
Rams fire special teams coordinator Chase Blackburn, AP source says

The Rams have fired special teams coordinator Chase Blackburn after his unit made several mistakes inLos Angeles' loss at Seattleon Thursday, a person with knowledge of the decision told The Associated Press.

The person spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity Saturday because the playoff-bound Rams (11-4) hadn't publicly announced Sean McVay's first significant in-season staffing change in his nine-year tenure. Assistant Ben Kotwica is expected to replace Blackburn, who was in his third season in the job.

The Rams' special teams have been generally poor all season, and the team alreadychanged kickers and long snappers last monthafter Joshua Karty and his unit missed multiple opportunities to win games against Philadelphia and San Francisco.

Special teams then played a major role in the Rams' 38-37 overtime loss to Seattle, a defeat that likely will prevent the Rams from winning the NFC West or earning the No. 1 seed.

The Rams led 30-14 in the fourth quarter when they gave up a touchdown on a 58-yard punt return by Seattle's Rashid Shaheed following a poor punt by Ethan Evans.

Harrison Mevis then missed a 48-yard field goal attempt with 2:07 to play, preventing the Rams from taking the lead.

Mevis took over after Karty missed five field goals and three extra-point attempts, and he hadn't missed a kick all season before this crucial field-goal attempt went barely wide right.

Blackburn was a linebacker for the Giants and the Panthers before beginning his coaching career.

AP NFL:https://apnews.com/NFL

Rams fire special teams coordinator Chase Blackburn, AP source says

The Rams have fired special teams coordinator Chase Blackburn after his unit made several mistakes inLos Angeles' los...

 

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