Jim Harbaugh predicts brother John will return to NFL coaching soon but he hopes it's in the NFC

EL SEGUNDO, Calif. (AP) — The NFL is down one Harbaugh in its coaching ranks, although Los Angeles Chargers coach Jim Harbaugh doesn't expect his older brother to be out of a job for long.

"He'll be a head coach next year," Jim Harbaugh said Wednesday. "We'll be playing against him in some form or fashion."

John Harbaugh was firedas coach of the Baltimore Ravens a day earlier after 18 seasons that included a Super Bowl championship in which he famously beat Jim, who coached the San Francisco 49ers at the time. The Ravens were 8-9 and missed the playoffs this season.

Jim Harbaugh will guide the visiting Chargers (11-6) against the New England Patriots (14-3) in the AFC wild card game on Sunday.

Asked if he was surprised at his brother's dismissal, Jim Harbaugh said, "Yeah, as were many."

"John Harbaugh's the best coach I know, the best coach I've ever seen. I'm his brother, so I might be biased," a smiling Jim Harbaugh said.

John Harbaugh went 193-124 in Baltimore, including the postseason. He led the Ravens to the AFC championship game four times, including their Super Bowl season.

"It's great seeing that kind of outpouring of support," Jim Harbaugh said. "It's so cool to see all my brother's accomplishments and be recognized for that."

John Harbaugh certainly isn't alone on the NFL's unemployment line. The league hasseven head coaching jobs open, including AFC spots in Cleveland, Las Vegas, Tennessee and of course, Baltimore. The available NFC jobs are in Arizona, Atlanta and New York.

"As I told him, whatever team he goes to is going to be formidable," Jim Harbaugh said. "Just hope it's in the NFC."

John Harbaugh, older than Jim by 15 months, is 3-0 coaching against his younger brother.

"He'll be attacking with an enthusiasm unknown to mankind the next opportunity," Jim Harbaugh said.

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

Jim Harbaugh predicts brother John will return to NFL coaching soon but he hopes it's in the NFC

EL SEGUNDO, Calif. (AP) — The NFL is down one Harbaugh in its coaching ranks, although Los Angeles Chargers coach Jim Har...
WNBA CBA Deadline Looms, LSU Struggles, Unrivaled Tips Off & Te-Hina Paopao Joins Hoops 360

Hoops 360 hosts Caroline Fenton and Cassandra Negley break down the latest developments in the WNBA CBA negotiations as the third deadline looms. Where do the league and the WNBPA stand—and is a strike on the horizon? The hosts also dive into the tipoff of Unrivaled and ask a big question: what will the Lunar Owls look like without star forward Napheesa Collier?

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Plus, Atlanta Dream and Athletes Unlimited guard Te-Hina Paopao joins the show! Te-Hina talks about her transition from South Carolina to the professional game and shares her goals and excitement heading into the AU season.

Got questions or topics for Hoops 360? Email us at hoops360@yahoosports.com and you could hear them on the show!

01:05 - What's the latest on the WNBA CBA?

05:05 - How far apart are the WNBA and the WNBPA?

07:39 - How would a WNBA strike impact new emerging leagues?

11:28 - What does Napheesa Collier's absence mean for Unrivaled?

20:33 - Atlanta Dream and Athletes Unlimited guard Te-Hina Paopao joins the show

39:07 - College hoops: Who's rising and falling in conference play?

39:56 - Is it panic time for LSU?

46:10 - Have we been sleeping on Vanderbilt?

48:59 - Is it panic time for Notre Dame?

53:09 - Upcoming college hoops and Unrivaled matchups

🖥️Watch this full episode on YouTube

Check out the rest of the Yahoo Sports podcast family athttps://apple.co/3zEuTQjor atyahoosports.tv

WNBA CBA Deadline Looms, LSU Struggles, Unrivaled Tips Off & Te-Hina Paopao Joins Hoops 360

Hoops 360 hosts Caroline Fenton and Cassandra Negley break down the latest developments in the WNBA CBA negotiations as t...
Jerry Jones wants to be the owner with the most Super Bowls, but the Cowboys have a long way to go

FRISCO, Texas (AP) — Jerry Jones hasn't even sniffed an NFL championship in the past 30 of his 37 years as owner, president and general manager of the Dallas Cowboys.

Yet the 83-year-old still has the goal of retiring as the owner with the most Super Bowl titles, despite New England's Robert Kraft having twice as many as Jones' three.

"Got work to do," son Stephen Jones, the executive vice president of personnel, said at the club's season-ending news conference Wednesday.

"I've got work to do," Jerry Jones repeated. "But at least I'm up to the second rung of the ladder. My goal is to have retired and won a Super Bowl as an old man."

First things first, though.

Dallas is the only team that hasn't reached an NFC championship game since 1996. The Cowboys have missed the playoffs the past two seasons — Mike McCarthy's last as Dallas head coach andBrian Schottenheimer's first.

The defense is pretty much a mess, soon to have itsfourth defensive coordinator in four seasonsafter Matt Eberflus became the third since 2020 to last just one year.

The offense is among the NFL's best, with Dallas (7-9-1) missing the playoffs in a full season from quarterback Dak Prescott for the first time since 2019. It was one of Prescott's best seasons, too — third in yards passing and fourth in touchdowns.

The Cowboys like to believe they have some foundational pieces on defense, and standout defensive tackle Quinnen Williams surely counts as one. Any others are debatable at best.

Prescott is going into his 11th season, and the Cowboys have two first-round draft picks in April after the trade that sent star pass rusher Micah Parsons to Green Bay a week before the season started.

As far as the Dallas defense is concerned, this draft will be among the most important in the tenure of Jerry Jones, particularly if the Pro Football Hall of Famer really does want to believe he can catch Kraft.

"I don't have that many drafts left," Jones said as reporters around him chuckled. "The bottom line is that, yes, this is very important. We want to while Dak is playing the game and got it down the way he's got it, we want to get out here and basically do better than what we did this year. So the combination of those things give us the incentive to, dare I say it, bust the budget to try to get something done now, yes. We'll do some dramatic things."

The Cowboys haven't done anything dramatic in free agency in years, and the top priority this offseason will be keeping receiver George Pickens. Whether it's a franchise tag or a long-term deal, Pickens will cost in the neighborhood of $30 million per season. Dallas also wants to keep running back Javonte Williams, who will be an unrestricted free agent.

Defensive tackle Kenny Clark came in the Parsons trade, and provided the consistency and accountability that Schottenheimer often preaches. The reality is, Clark has a $20 million salary cap hit on a contract with no more guaranteed money, so a reworked deal makes the most sense.

Assuming Clark returns — and Cowboys sound as if they want him back considering he was part of the Parsons trade — that will be a huge investment at defensive tackle with Williams and Osa Odighizuwa included. Dallas will need to hit on the first-rounders if the choices end up being defensive players.

"I'm not saying for sure we're gonna pick defense," Stephen Jones said. "But we've got to see that vision for where you bring in two No. 1 picks and get them contributing right away."

Winning three Super Bowls came quickly for Jerry Jones when Dallas became the first team to do that in a four-season span, and before his 54th birthday. Kraft's six might be out of reach, so the focus for the time being is on four.

"I know whether it's his gold jacket, all the things he's accomplished from the value of this franchise, I think he'd give a lot of that up for one more Super Bowl," Stephen Jones said of his dad. "Everybody in this organization wants to get the job done. Certainly what we want to do is get one more for sure."

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

Jerry Jones wants to be the owner with the most Super Bowls, but the Cowboys have a long way to go

FRISCO, Texas (AP) — Jerry Jones hasn't even sniffed an NFL championship in the past 30 of his 37 years as owner, pre...
NFL Power Rankings: Among the 14 playoff teams, which is the most likely to win Super Bowl LX?

In terms of how many teams can feasibly win the Super Bowl, this could be the deepest NFL playoff field we've ever seen.

Part of that is the lack of a truly transcendent team. But it's unique to see a 14-team field in which a reasonable case can be made for 12 of the teams making or even winning the Super Bowl (yeah, there are two teams in which it would take a miracle). The Los Angeles Chargers are probably the strongest No. 7 seed we have ever seen in the current 14-team format, unless it's the Green Bay Packers over in the NFC.

You can pick just aboutany combination of teams from each side of the bracket to face off in Super Bowl LXand it wouldn't sound wild. Here are the power rankings as we start the playoffs, from least likely to most likely to win the Super Bowl:

14. Carolina Panthers

If the Panthers make the Super Bowl, they'd be the weakest team ever to get in. By a mile. Congratulations to the Panthers for making it in the field, but they're an 8-9 team that would be big underdogs in any remaining game they'd play. They have a -69 point differential, the fourth-worst for a playoff team in NFL history,according to NFL researcher Tony Holzman-Escareno. They do have wins over the Packers and Rams, so maybe there's a tiny bit of hope for an upset win, but it's obvious which team ranks last on this list.

13. Pittsburgh Steelers

The Steelers have a better shot than the Panthers to make a Super Bowl, but that doesn't mean it's a good shot. Their offense is limited and the defense has taken a step back from previous years. The Steelers won 10 games, somehow, but with an offense that finished 25th in yards gained and a defense that finished 26th in yards allowed. It's a cool story for Aaron Rodgers to make it back to the playoffs, and would be amazing if he reached the Super Bowl, but we can safely cross the Steelers off the list.

12. San Francisco 49ers

Heading into Week 18, the 49ers needed one win to get the No. 1 seed in the NFC. Would it be that unbelievable for the offense to heat up again, after a bad finale against the Seahawks, and make a deep playoff run? Any offense that averaged 42.3 points in December is capable. The reason the 49ers rank this low is because their defense, which already was without Fred Warner and Nick Bosa and just lost Warner's replacement Tatum Bethune, probably isn't good enough to win three straight road games. They finished 27th indefensive DVOA. But it says something about the depth of the field that the 49ers rank 12th and still have a feasible chance to win it all.

11. Green Bay Packers

The Packers' story is similar to the 49ers' story. If they were healthy, they might be No. 1 on this list. But they're not. They're without linemen Micah Parsons and Devonte Wyatt on defense and tight end Tucker Kraft on offense, among others. That's a reason they lost four in a row to finish the season. There's some nuance to that losing streak — a Week 16 loss to the Bears was very fluky and Green Bay rested starters in Week 18 — but this team's ceiling has gotten much lower, especially after the Parsons injury. But for a No. 7 seed they have a decent argument to make a run and win the NFC, a much better case than practically any No. 7 seed before them (other than perhaps the Green Bay team in 2023 that throttled Dallas in the wild-card round).

10. Los Angeles Chargers

Usually the No. 7 seeds have been happy to be in the playoffs, and then are predictably blown out in their postseason opener. The Chargers are not that team. Los Angeles was 11-5 before resting starters in Week 18, and still almost beat a Broncos team chasing the No. 1 seed in the AFC. A great head coach/QB combo can go a long way, and the Chargers have that with Jim Harbaugh and Justin Herbert. L.A.'s defense, led by coordinator andtop head-coaching candidate Jesse Minter,was top five in yards allowed and has given up more than 20 points in a game just once since Oct. 19. The flaw is the offensive line, which lost both standout tackles to season-ending injuries. If the Chargers were healthy this might be the unquestioned top team in the NFL because everything else is impressive.

9. Chicago Bears

The Bears have had a bit of a weird season. Until a Black Friday game, they were living off close wins against bad teams. They blew out the Eagles the day after Thanksgiving and played better for a few weeks. Then down the stretch they had a miracle win against the Packers, lost to the 49ers and then lost at home to the Lions after Detroit had been eliminated from the playoffs. They have had a fine season, getting the No. 2 seed. Their inconsistency is a reason they're not higher on the list. They're probably one good offseason away from being a more reliable pick.

8. Philadelphia Eagles

It's hard to shake the idea of the Eagles making a run. The talent is still impressive. We remember how good they were last season and particularly in the Super Bowl win over the Chiefs. Yet the offense has been maddening most of the season. The last time we saw the starting offense, it had 16 yards and no completions as it barely held on to a win over the Bills in Week 17. It is hard to buy the Eagles' offense playing well enough for four weeks in a row to repeat as Super Bowl champions. The Eagles were 23rd in passing yards and 18th in rushing yards; last season's team did everything at an efficient level on offense and this season's unit does nothing well. Still, look at the roster. You can't count the Eagles out, especially with their stellar defense.

7. Buffalo Bills

The quarterback-centric crowd will all pick the Bills to win the AFC. That's fine. Josh Allen is fantastic. But the Bills also have blowout losses to the Falcons and Dolphins on their résumé. The run defense is bad, allowing 5.1 yards per carry this season. There's no alpha playmaker in the passing game. Their leading receiver was Khalil Shakir, with 719 yards. There are some things to like, such as a solid pass defense and NFL rushing champion James Cook, but picking the Bills to win it all is a pick on Allen putting the team on his back for a month. Which can happen.

6. Houston Texans

The people picking the Bills to make the Super Bowl might have missed the Thursday night game in Week 12. The Texans destroyed the Bills' offense in a 23-19 win. Houston sacked Josh Allen eight times. Seattle and Denver could argue, but this is the best defense in the NFL. The offense isn't great, but with some help from key rookies in the second half, it did improve. And C.J. Stroud is a good quarterback, albeit one without much help. Also, Houston has a much easier matchup than the Bills or any other AFC team playing on wild-card weekend, as it faces a mediocre Pittsburgh team. In a wide-open AFC, the team with a great defense and an NFL-best nine-game winning streak is as good of a pick as any.

5. Jacksonville Jaguars

Maybe the Jaguars should be higher. Trevor Lawrence had his best season, accounting for 38 touchdowns. The Jagurars' defense ranked 11th in yards allowed and eighth in points allowed. Jacksonville was sixth indefensive DVOA, thanks in large part to 31 takeaways, which was second-best in the NFL. The Jaguars were fifth in EPA (expected points added) per play allowed as well. Jacksonville has won eight in a row, and somehow is still an underdog in its playoff opener against Buffalo. Make no mistake: The Jaguars can win it all.

4. New England Patriots

If you've paid even the slightest bit of attention to the MVP debate, you know the Patriots had a very easy schedule. They beat one team that finished above .500, knocking off the Bills in Week 5. It ranked as the third-easiest schedule since 1978,according to DVOA. Here's the thing: The two teams that faced an easier schedule, the 1991 Bills and 1999 Rams, both made the Super Bowl. This isn't college football in which every conference has a gimme or two; going 14-3 against NFL competition is hard. It's OK to question the Patriots, but they have an MVP candidate quarterback in Drake Maye and a Coach of the Year candidate in Mike Vrabel. There isn't a team in the field they can't beat, even if they didn't stack many quality wins during the regular season.

3. Los Angeles Rams

Many will be picking the Rams to win the Super Bowl. Getting the No. 5 seed and a matchup against the Panthers, the weakest team by far in the playoff field, certainly helps. The Rams are a very good team that didn't play its best late, but Sean McVay should be able to fix whatever issues there were over the past three weeks when Los Angeles lost twice. Matthew Stafford is the probable NFL MVP, though Drake Maye could win it instead in a close vote. There's no reason to believe the Rams can't win the Super Bowl, though the likely path of three road wins in a row won't be easy to navigate. That's why they didn't crack the top two.

2. Denver Broncos

Maybe you don't like the Broncos this season. Understandable. They had a ridiculous 11 wins by eight or fewer points. The offense has some remarkably bad performances. But this is a 14-3 team that is two home wins from a Super Bowl. The advantage of having a bye can't be overstated. Since the NFL changed the playoff format to give only one team in each conference a bye, five of 10 No. 1 seeds have made a Super Bowl. Over the past three seasons it's four of six. There's a massive edge having to win only two playoff games instead of three, as everyone else in the AFC has to do. Even if you believe the Broncos aren't the best team in the AFC, it's impossible to deny they have the easiest path to the Super Bowl.

1. Seattle Seahawks

TheSeahawks were the NFL's best team in the regular seasonand it's hard to debate otherwise. Now a defense that was arguably the best in the NFL this season and had an unbelievable performance in Week 18 against the 49ers needs just two home wins to reach the Super Bowl. The stumbling block will be Sam Darnold, who needs to prove he can play well on a big stage. But Darnold's teams are 28-6 over the past two seasons and he's a big part of that success. He has been good for Seattle most of this season. And the Seahawks don't need him to carry the load, they just need him to get the ball to Jaxon Smith-Njigba, avoid mistakes and let a fantastic defense do the rest. There are plenty of good options for your Super Bowl pick this season, but Seattle is your most likely champion.

NFL Power Rankings: Among the 14 playoff teams, which is the most likely to win Super Bowl LX?

In terms of how many teams can feasibly win the Super Bowl, this could be the deepest NFL playoff field we've ever se...
Cubs acquire right-hander Edward Cabrera in a trade with the Marlins

CHICAGO (AP) — The Chicago Cubs added Edward Cabrera to their rotation on Wednesday, acquiring the right-hander in a trade with the Miami Marlins in their first major offseason move.

Chicago sent outfielder Owen Caissie and infield prospects Cristian Hernandez and Edgardo De Leon to Miami for Cabrera, who went 8-7 with a 3.53 ERA in a career-high 26 starts and 137 2/3 innings last year.

Caissie, 23, could compete for a starting job with the Marlins after making his major league debut in August. Caissie, a second-round pick in the 2020 amateur draft, hit .192 in 12 games with the Cubs, but he batted .286 with 22 homers and 55 RBIs with Triple-A Iowa last season.

Cabrera is eligible for arbitration and cannot become a free agent until after the 2028 season.

The Cubs finished second in the NL Central last year with a 92-70 record. They made it to the playoffs for the first time since 2020 before they were eliminated by Milwaukee in a five-game NL Division Series.

Cabrera, who turns 28 in April, joins a deep rotation that also includes Matthew Boyd, Shota Imanaga, Cade Horton and Jameson Taillon. Colin Rea and Javier Assad are two more starting options, and Justin Steele is coming back fromleft elbow surgeryon April 18.

The 6-foot-5 Cabrera made his major league debut with Miami in 2021. He is 25-29 with a 4.07 ERA in 87 career starts and two relief appearances.

Cabrera arrives in Chicago with some injury concerns, including recurring blisters on his right middle finger. He also was placed on the 15-day injured list on Sept. 1 witha right elbow sprain. He returned on Sept. 23 and pitched five shutout innings against the New York Mets in his final start of the season on Sept. 28.

While the addition of Cabrera strengthens Chicago's rotation, Caissie was expected to compete for time in right field. Kyle Tucker is expected to leave the Cubs in free agency.

Miami went 79-83 in its first season under manager Clayton McCullough, a 17-game improvement from its last-place finish in 2024. Sandy Alcantara and Eury Pérez lead the team's rotation.

Hernandez, 22, batted .252 with seven homers and 53 RBIs for High A South Bend last year. De Leon, 18, played for the Cubs' team in the Arizona Complex League in 2025, hitting .276 with five homers and 15 RBIs in 43 games.

Also Wednesday, the Cubs claimed left-hander Ryan Rolison off waivers from the Chicago White Sox. Rolison made his big league debut with Colorado in May.

AP MLB:https://apnews.com/MLB

Cubs acquire right-hander Edward Cabrera in a trade with the Marlins

CHICAGO (AP) — The Chicago Cubs added Edward Cabrera to their rotation on Wednesday, acquiring the right-hander in a trad...
49ers' Trent Williams and Ricky Pearsall miss practice, playoff status uncertain

SANTA CLARA, Calif. (AP) — Pro Bowl left tackle Trent Williams and receiver Ricky Pearsall both missed practice Wednesday for the San Francisco 49ers, putting their status for thewild-card playoffgameagainst the Philadelphia Eaglesin question.

Coach Kyle Shanahan said Williams' hamstring that he hurt on the first snap of a Week 17 game is still bothering him and that Pearsall had aggravated a knee injury that game and was unable to practice.

He expressed hope they could return to the field Thursday, but didn't rule out them playing in the playoff game Sunday even if they can't practice this week.

"I don't have any rule with that in the regular season either," Shanahan said. "It just usually depends on the guy and whether they've done it before, what the history is of the player and stuff like that. But whatever gives us best chance to win on Sunday we will without a doubt do."

The San Francisco offense struggled last week against Seattle's stout defense without Williams and Pearsall as the running game never got going and there were few open receivers downfield.

The Niners have averaged just 2.8 yards per carry running to the left side since Williams got hurt on the opening snap of the win against Chicago on Dec. 28.

Pearsall leads San Francisco with eight catches on throws at least 20 yards downfield. Quarterback Brock Purdy didn't attempt a single deep pass last week in his absence.

The 49ers also were without linebacker Dee Winters (ankle) and defensive lineman Keion White (groin, hamstring) for practice on Wednesday and also placed linebacker Tatum Bethune on injured reserve with a groin injury.

San Francisco signed linebacker Eric Kendricks from the practice squad to take Bethune's spot on the roster and plan to start him on Sunday.

Kendricks was signed to the practice squad in late November and played 46 snaps on defense the past three games after being promoted each week to the game day roster. The 33-year-old Kendricks has started 143 regular-season games and six playoff games since entering the league with Minnesota in 2015.

The Niners also signed veteran linebacker Kyzir White to the practice squad and he could be an option as well this week after playing only one game all season back in September for Tennessee. The 29-year-old White has started 73 games over his eight-year career.

"I've always had a lot of respect for his game," Shanahan said. "I played him at a number of different places, a number different teams. ... He's a very smart, instinctual linebacker that no matter what scheme he was in."

The 49ers also opened the practice window for receiver Jacob Cowing, who has been out since injuring his hamstring in training camp. Shanahan said Cowing wasn't an option to play this week.

Tight end George Kittle (ankle), defensive lineman Yetur Gross-Matos (knee) and linebacker Luke Gifford (quadriceps) were all limited.

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

49ers' Trent Williams and Ricky Pearsall miss practice, playoff status uncertain

SANTA CLARA, Calif. (AP) — Pro Bowl left tackle Trent Williams and receiver Ricky Pearsall both missed practice Wednesday...
Baseball Hall of Fame voting update: Carlos Beltrán and Andruw Jones on track for induction — will anyone else join them?

In two weeks, the National Baseball Hall of Fame will announce its Class of 2026. We already know one member of the class, and we have a pretty good idea about two others. After that, it's hazy at best.

The past couple of years have had some fairly obvious first-ballot inductees in Ichiro Suzuki (2025) and Adrian Beltré (2024). There are no such players this year. Instead, any inductees will be benefiting from the slow drift of BBWAA votes, through which a player such as Billy Wagner can go from 10.5% voting in his first ballot in 2016 to a triumphant 82.5% in his final year of eligibility last year.

That's wherethe Hall of Fame Ballot Trackercomes in. The helpful spreadsheet is run by the team of Ryan Thibodaux, Anthony Calamis and Adam Dore, who track every publicly available BBWAA ballot (and some privately indulged ones). As of Wednesday, 140 ballots had been tracked out of an estimated total of 424, enough that we can get a pretty solid idea of which way the wind is blowing.

As a reminder, players need to receive at least 75% of the BBWAA vote to be inducted into the Hall. They get 10 years on the ballot to get there but automatically fall off if they ever receive less than 5% of the vote. After that, they can still get in through the Hall's Era Committees if they don't make it via BBWAA.

Here's how all 27 players on the ballot are doing so far, with numbers as of Wednesday.

Already in

Kent was the lone player to emerge from the Contemporary Era Committee's vote in December, on a ballot that also included Barry Bonds, Roger Clemens and Carlos Delgado. Kent fell off the BBWAA ballot in 2023, receiving 46.5% of the vote in his final year, but he immediately got in through the committee.

On track for this year

Carlos Beltrán (88.4% of vote, 4th year of eligibility)Andruw Jones (83.0%, 9th)

Both Beltrán and Jones are accomplished outfielders who are ahead of the pace needed to reach induction, but that doesn't mean this is over. BBWAA voters who never reveal their ballots tend to be harsher judges than the public ones, which is how Beltrán went from 73.6% of known ballots to 70.3% in the final vote last year.

Both men also have off-field issues that could come up in voting, notably Jones' domestic violence arrest in 2012 and Beltrán's central role in the Astros cheating scandal. Those are obviously very different situations, but both are relevant in a world in which the character clause has become a major deciding factor in these votes.

On track for sometime in the future

Chase Utley (66.7%, 3rd)Félix Hernández (58.5%, 2nd)Cole Hamels (32.0%, 1st)

These guys would all need miracles ranging from minor to major to reach Cooperstown this year, but they should still probably expect plaques at some point in their futures. Very few players who get a majority of votes in their first three years on the ballot end up not making it eventually.

Utley and Hernández both had Hall of Fame primes, then fell off a bit due to age and injury, but the voters don't seem too worried about what those two did in their 30s. And for Hamels, 32% is a fine starting number in his first year on the ballot.

Who will join Jeff Kent in the 2026 Baseball Hall of Fame?

Could go either way

Andy Pettitte (55.8%, 8th)Dustin Pedroia (25.2%, 2nd)David Wright (19.7%, 3rd)

Only Hernández has gained more returning votes than Pettitte so far this cycle, and the southpaw is also doing well with first-time voters, at 70%. Those are encouraging signs. But you have to wonder how much resistance against Pettitte has calcified due to his alleged steroid use. With only two years remaining on the ballot, he needs a lot of people to come around quickly.

Pedroia and Wright are both one-team infielders who didn't quite have Hall of Fame longevity but could ultimately get in if future voters look kindly upon them.

Staying alive

Bobby Abreu (38.8%, 7th)Jimmy Rollins (25.9%, 5th)Mark Buehrle (22.4%, 6th)Omar Vizquel (12.9%, 9th)Francisco Rodriguez (12.9%, 4th)Torii Hunter (4.8%, 6th)

It's hard to imagine any of these guys getting the boost they need at this stage of their candidacy, but they will probably make it to the next ballot. Hunter went from 4.8% of public votes last year to 5.1% in the final count, so a similar bump would keep him in the safe zone this time around.

Vizquel remains a notable case given that he appeared to be a lock for induction at one point, after he reached 52.6% in his third year of eligibility in 2020, but domestic abuse and sexual harassment allegations have since made him a non-candidate.

Alex Rodriguez

Alex Rodriguez (47.6%, 5th)

With Bonds and Clemens both out of Hall of Fame consideration until 2031, the most controversial candidate is now Rodriguez, whose multiple steroid scandals didn't prevent him from getting a job at Fox Sports but do appear to be a significant barrier for the Hall of Fame.

His 47.6% number is at least a significant jump from where Rodríguez has been hovering in his first four years of eligibility — from 34.3% in 2022 to 27.1% in 2025 — but his lack of progress with first-time voters (46.7% this year) means the tides are not yet turning the way he needs them to.

It's over

Manny Ramirez (43.5%, 10th)

With no more ballots after this one, the Boston Red Sox great can start crossing his fingers that the Contemporary Era Committee doesn't mind his PED use as much as the BBWAA clearly does.

Hello, goodbye

Ryan Braun (2.7%, 1st)Edwin Encarnacion (1.4%, 1st)Shin-Soo Choo (0.7%, 1st)Hunter Pence (0.7%, 1st)Gio Gonzalez (0%, 1st)Alex Gordon (0%, 1st)Matt Kemp (0%, 1st)Howie Kendrick (0%, 1st)Nick Markakis (0%, 1st)Daniel Murphy (0%, 1st)Rick Porcello (0%, 1st)

It is extremely difficult to make the Hall of Fame. The above players have a combined 1 MVP award, 1 Cy Young Award, 27 All-Star selections, 13 Gold Gloves, 10 Silver Sluggers and 5 World Series rings, but it looks like none of them will get a second look from voters. Braun's admitted PED use obviously looms largest here.

Baseball Hall of Fame voting update: Carlos Beltrán and Andruw Jones on track for induction — will anyone else join them?

In two weeks, the National Baseball Hall of Fame will announce its Class of 2026. We already know one member of the class...

 

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