Patriots QB Drake Maye says he won't need offseason shoulder surgery: 'Time is the best healer'

Drake Maye says he will not need offseason surgery on the right shoulder that drew lots of attention ahead ofSunday's Super Bowl LX loss to the Seattle Seahawks.

Yahoo Sports

"Just get some time off. Time's the best healer," Maye told reporters on Tuesday. "Definitely just need time off. Nothing that needs anything to be done. Just some time away and time to get some rest and time away from football."

Maye said after the gamethat he received shoulder injectionsand that he "was good to go" and "it felt all right."

Heading into the Super Bowl, Maye waslimited in practice with a shoulder injuryhe suffered in the AFC championship game win over the Denver Broncos. On the team's initial injury report, the 23-year-old quarterback was listed as questionable with a shoulder injury and an illness thatcaused him to miss a practice.

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Despite being removed from the injury report and telling reporters he felt well heading into the game, Maye struggled against Seattle. He completed 27-of-43 passes for 295 yards, 2 touchdowns,2 interceptions and a fumble,with most of his passing yards coming in the fourth quarter. Maye's second interception was returned for a touchdown and all but closed the game.

"I think it's a case of having one hit in the AFC championship game that was just kind of unfortunate," Maye said. "Unfortunate timing, the two weeks (before the Super Bowl) was great to have off to have a chance to be out there for my guys. You can't blame things on injuries. Things happen like this all the time in the league. ... You can't (blame) it on one little thing, the shoulder. ... I was feeling like I was able to make throws in the game and was myself."

Maye had a strong second NFL season, making his second Pro Bowl and being named a second-team All-Pro while also finishing second in the MVP race. The Patriots ended their three-season playoff drought and flipped their record from the 4-13 finishes from the past two seasons to 14-3 and AFC East champions in 2025.

The 2025 season just concluded, but Maye is already eager to begin preparing for 2026.

"Ten weeks until we're back here," Maye said in a final message to Patriots fans. "That don't sound too far away. It turns around quickly on you. I'm looking forward to it."

Patriots QB Drake Maye says he won't need offseason shoulder surgery: 'Time is the best healer'

Drake Maye says he will not need offseason surgery on the right shoulder that drew lots of attention ahead ofSunday's...
LIV Golf players surge in world rankings despite complaints

Several LIV Golf members enjoyed a surge in the world rankings this week following the season-opening tournament in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

The Official World Golf Rankings (OWGR) announced last week that players in the Saudi-backed circuit would start receiving rankings points for the first time, although the benefits are limited to each event's top-10 finishers.

LIV Golf rookie Elvis Smylie of Australia jumped from 133rd in the rankings to 77th after winning his LIV debut in Riyadh.

"It's a by-product of the great work I'm doing with my team and the good golf that I'm playing," said Smylie, 23. "If I continue to do that, then all that stuff will take care of itself. But it's definitely motivating for me to try to get into the Masters."

Riyadh runner-up and former World No. 1 Jon Rahm of Spain climbed from 93rd to 67th. Also seeing significant rises were Sebastian Munoz of Colombia (767th to 566th), Abraham Ancer (616th to 449th) and Thomas Pieters of Belgium (564th to 419th).

The lone exception was LIV rookie Thomas Detry, who finished seventh in Riyadh. He fell form 62nd to 63rd while not defending his maiden PGA Tour victory at the WM Phoenix Open.

OWGR points are critical for earning entries into the season's four major tournaments. The top 50 the week before the Masters (rankings released March 30) will earn entries to Augusta, as will the top 60 ahead of the U.S. Open (May 18) and the top 50 for The Open Championship (May 25). The OWGR does not have an official exemption for the PGA Championship, where the top 100 typically are invited.

LIV Golf has been seeking OWGR points since its debut season in 2022. However, Rahm and CEO Scott O'Neil were among those who were highly critical of the league only receiving points for top-10 finishers.

"Yeah, it's fantastic that we're getting points," Rahm said on LIV's broadcast after the first round in Riyadh. "It's fantastic that we're being recognized in a way. With that said, I don't like how we're not being treated the same as every other tour.

"It seems like the rules that have been in place aren't really applied to us, with only 10 of us getting points, it doesn't seem fair. There are small fields out there throughout the course of the year that get full points, or full players get points, right? So, there's work to be done."

LIV moved from a 54-hole format to 72 holes this season in an effort to obtain OWGR points, but issued a statement making the league's discontent with the depth of points available clear.

"We acknowledge this long-overdue moment of recognition, which affirms the fundamental principle that performance on the course should matter, regardless of where the competition takes place," LIV Golf said in a statement last week.

"However, this outcome is unprecedented. Under these rules, a player finishing 11th in a LIV Golf event is treated the same as a player finishing 57th. Limiting points to only the top 10 finishers disproportionately harms players who consistently perform at a high level but finish just outside that threshold, as well as emerging talent working to establish themselves on the world stage-precisely the players a fair and meritocratic ranking system is designed to recognize.

"No other competitive tour or league in OWGR history has been subjected to such a restriction. We expect this is merely a first step toward a structure that fully and fairly serves the players, the fans, and the future of the sport.

"We entered this process in good faith and will continue to advocate for a ranking system that reflects performance over affiliation. The game deserves transparency. The fans deserve credibility. And the players deserve a system that treats them equally."

--Field Level Media

LIV Golf players surge in world rankings despite complaints

Several LIV Golf members enjoyed a surge in the world rankings this week following the season-opening tournament in Ri...
Making transition from SEC to MLB, new Giants manager Tony Vitello enters 1st season ready to learn

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. (AP) — Tony Vitello walked up the dugout stairs to meet with reporters about 15 minutes later than he was expecting because of a team meeting that went longer than planned.

The new San Francisco Giants manager had a lot to say on the first day of spring training.

He also knows he's got a lot to learn.

"I rambled today," Vitello said, grinning. "The guys might ban me from any more meetings before this thing is over, but you want to set a vibe for what you want your team to be. We can throw out a T-shirt or put something on the locker room door, but it's also going to require some daily interactions."

The 47-year-old Vitello is one of the more fascinating stories in baseball this spring, with the manager making therare jump straight from a college dugout to Major League Baseball. Before coming to the Bay Area, he built the Tennessee Volunteers into a national powerhouse in the vaunted Southeastern Conference.

Vitello's college credentials are nearly impeccable: He went 341-131 over eight seasons, reaching the College World Series three times and leading the Vols to the program's first national championship in 2024.

Now it's time to find out if that translates to MLB success. Vitello said he has no excuses.

"There are so many people who are willing to help," Vitello said. "The biggest thing is our guys need to use these resources. You have everything you need. That reflects on my situation, too."

Vitello's coaching staff has a few people that should help with the transition, including former Padres manager Jayce Tingler and former Rangers and Angels skipper Ron Washington.

Tingler will be the bench coach while the 73-year-old Washington is the infield coach.

The two coaching veterans are helping Vitello adjust during his crash course on adjusting to MLB life. San Francisco has multiple position competitions to sort out over the next six weeks while preparing for the regular season, including a potential role for star first base prospect Bryce Eldridge.

"I think, at the root of it, there's definitely some boxes that need to be checked," Vitello said. "You'd like to see guys do well. If you're keeping score, you want to win. But I'll rely on Coach Tingler and Wash about what boxes we need to check before this thing is over with."

The Giants fired manager Bob Melvinin September after they went 81-81 in his second season and missed the playoffs for a fourth straight year. San Francisco hasn't reached the postseason since winning the NL West with a franchise-record 107 victories to edge the rival Dodgers by one game in 2021 under Gabe Kapler.

Buster Posey — the Giants' president of baseball operations — made the surprise move to target a college coach to become the franchise's next leader. While very successful, Vitello had a colorful and combustible reputation.

The NCAA suspended Vitello twice during his Tennessee tenure, first for spending too much time arguing a call in 2018. During that two-game suspension, he raised money for charity with apizza and lemonade standwhile the Vols played.

Chest-bumping an umpirein 2022 led to a four-game suspension, and Vitello spent that time working with aTennessee fraternityoffering achest bumpto anyone donating $2 to the Wounded Warriors Project.

It remains to be seen how Vitello's style will translate to the long professional baseball schedule. The college regular season is 56 games while MLB's slate is a marathon with 162 contests stretching from late March to late September.

Five-time Gold Glove third baseman Matt Chapman — who played in college at Cal State Fullerton from 2012 to 2014 — said he was looking forward to Vitello's energy.

"He was handling NIL money and things like that, so the college game is probably a lot closer to professional baseball than when I was playing," Chapman said. "Winning baseball looks the same. It's pitching and defense, knowing how to run the bases, managing personalities and managing guys.

"He has a lot of experience doing that. There's going to be a learning curve in some areas. You can't fully know how to run a major league clubhouse unless you've been in one, but I don't think it'll be foreign to him. He's a baseball guy, he's done things at a high level, so I think the transition will be smooth."

AP Baseball Writer Janie McCauley in San Francisco contributed to this report.

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

Making transition from SEC to MLB, new Giants manager Tony Vitello enters 1st season ready to learn

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. (AP) — Tony Vitello walked up the dugout stairs to meet with reporters about 15 minutes later than he w...
Winter Olympics 2026: U.S. curler Rich Ruohonen speaks out against ICE presence in his home state: 'What's happening in Minnesota is wrong'

On a day when Korey Dropkin and Cory Thiesse made U.S. curling history withan Olympic silver medal in mixed doubles, U.S. curler Rich Ruohonen used the platform to turn the spotlight on his home state of Minnesota.

Ruohonen, a St. Paul native, spoke in a news conference about the recent Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) presence in his home state that's resulted inthe shooting deaths of U.S. citizens Renee GoodandAlex Pretti by agents.

Those killings and ICE's aggressive enforcement tactics on the streets of Minneapolis have prompted outrage andprotest in Minnesota and beyond. Ruohonen, a lawyer, cited the U.S. Constitution to declare that "there's no shades of gray" and that "what's happening in Minnesota is wrong."

'What's happening in Minnesota is wrong'

Ruohonen opened his statement by saying he's "proud to be here to represent Team USA and to represent our country."

He then turned his attention to Minnesota.

"This stuff is happening right around where we live," Ruohonen said. "I am a lawyer, as you know, and we have a constitution, and it allows us freedom of press, freedom of speech, protects us from unreasonable searches and seizures and makes it that we have to have probable cause to be pulled over.

"And what's happening in Minnesota is wrong. There's no shades of gray. It's clear. I really love what's been happening there now — people coming out, showing the love, the compassion, integrity and respect for others that they don't know and helping them out. And we love Minnesota for that."

MAGAs are now mad and USA curler Rich Ruohonen for speaking out against ICE…not a single thing he's saying here is wrong:"What's happening in Minnesota is wrong. There's no shades of grey. It's clear"pic.twitter.com/hLF1EdjXFc

— Wu Tang is for the Children (@WUTangKids)February 10, 2026

Ruohonen, 54, is a two-time national champion curler who's twice competed for Team USA in the curling world championships (2008, 2018). He's never competed in the Olympics.

He's an alternate at the Milan Cortina Games for the men's curling team helmed by skip Danny Casper. He's not guaranteed to compete. But if he plays, he'll become the oldest U.S. athlete to ever compete in the Winter Olympics.

He went on to speak about what it means to have the opportunity to compete in the Olympics.

"I want to make it clear that we are out here, we love our country," Ruohonen continued. "We're playing for the U.S., we're playing for Team USA, we're playing for each other, and we're playing for our family and our friends that sacrificed so much to get here today. ...

'What the Olympics means is excellence, respect, friendship, and we all, I think, exemplify that. And we are playing for the people of Minnesota and the people around the country who share those same values."

Winter Olympics 2026: U.S. curler Rich Ruohonen speaks out against ICE presence in his home state: 'What's happening in Minnesota is wrong'

On a day when Korey Dropkin and Cory Thiesse made U.S. curling history withan Olympic silver medal in mixed doubles, U.S....
Justin Verlander returns to the Detroit Tigers on a $13 million, one-year contract

LAKELAND, Fla. (AP) — Justin Verlander is going back to his first big league team, agreeing to a $13 million, one-year contract with the Detroit Tigers on Tuesday.

Associated Press

Verlander, who turns 43 on Feb. 20, is looking to rebound from a frustrating year with San Francisco. The deal for the three-time AL Cy Young Award winner includes $11 million in deferred payments starting in 2030.

Verlander's 266 victories are tied with Bob Feller and Eppa Rixey for 34th on baseball's career list, while his 3,553 career strikeouts are eighth and closely trailing Don Sutton with 3,574.

Verlander said he needed a "relentless pursuit of finding something, anything to make it click" in turning his struggles around last year with the Giants. His 2.60 ERA from July 23 through the remainder of the season ranked fourth in the National League with a minimum of 60 innings pitched.

Verlander returned June 18 after being sidelined for a month bya strained right pectoral muscle. The right-hander wants to keep pitching after a disappointing season in which he began 0-8 and was winless in his initial 16 outings before a win at Atlanta on July 23.

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He went on to finish 4-11 with a 3.85 ERA and 137 strikeouts over 29 starts spanning 152 innings. He has 266 wins, still far off from joining the 300-win club but something he could approach with a strong, healthy 2026.

"First half, quite difficult. Happy I was able to find some mechanical fixes to kind of get back in the right direction and pitch well in the second half," Verlander said following his final outing Sept. 27. "I think obviously you'd always rather it go well, but it's nice to be able to turn it around, especially after a few months it gets really draining and it's tiresome. You've just got to come in every day and have a positive mindset and keep working hard."

Verlander signeda $15 million, one-year contractwith San Francisco last January andhad a forgettable home debut for the Giants. The Giants often struggled to provide him with enough run support.

The second-half turnaround mattered to Verlander, who limited foes to a .228 average over his final 13 appearances. He allowed two or fewer earned runs in 10 of his last 13 starts.

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

Justin Verlander returns to the Detroit Tigers on a $13 million, one-year contract

LAKELAND, Fla. (AP) — Justin Verlander is going back to his first big league team, agreeing to a $13 million, one-year co...
Klint Kubiak wants Maxx Crosby to be part of Raiders' success: 'That's a no-brainer'

Maxx Crosby wasn't happy with how this past season ended. Not only did his Las Vegas Raiders finish 3-14, butthey also shut him down for their final two games.

To Crosby's dismay, the Raiders placed the five-time Pro Bowl defensive end on injured reserve because of a knee injury that ultimately required surgery. Hewent on to post a video of him playing basketball and photos of him on a trampoline, as the Raiders' spiral toward the No. 1 pick,which he notably didn't care for, continued.

That whole situation strained the relationship between Crosby and the Raiders,according to The Athletic's Dianna Russini, who reported on Jan. 3 that Las Vegas was expected to be open to trading Crosby this offseason. It was reported last week that Crosby told minority owner Tom Brady he won't be playing for the Raiders again. The star edge rusher isexpected to attract a massive amount of interest in the trade marketif that's the case.

But perhaps Crosby and the Raiders have ironed some things out.

After the Las Vegas Raidersfired Pete Carroll last month, Crosbyshared plenty of kind words about the head coach. And now he's already met his new one, Klint Kubiak.

Coming off a dominant win over the New England Patriots in Super Bowl LX, the former Seattle Seahawks offensive coordinator was introduced as the Raiders' frontman on Tuesday.

Kubiaktold reportersthat he got a cup of coffee with Crosby that morning.

"Love talking ball with him and look forward to continuing those conversations," Kubiak said. "I think he was the first one in here this morning working out, so that fired me up."

Kubiak was then asked about how important it's going to be for Crosby to quickly buy into Kubiak's head-coaching vision, given how much credibility the defensive stalwart has in the Vegas locker room.

"We want him to be a part of our success going forward," Kubiak said. "There's no doubt about that. He's one of the best players in the NFL. So that's a no-brainer to get to work with Maxx and to see him continue to have success with this organization."

Last year,the Raiders signed Crosby to three-year extension reportedly worth $106.5 million, a deal that, at the time, made him the highest-paid non-quarterback in NFL history.

That title has since been passed multiple times.

Crosby has been with the organization for seven seasons. The Raiders selected him out of Eastern Michigan in the fourth round of the 2019 draft. They were still in Oakland back then.

He's finished with at least 10 sacks four times, including during the 2025 campaign, despite its premature end.

Klint Kubiak wants Maxx Crosby to be part of Raiders' success: 'That's a no-brainer'

Maxx Crosby wasn't happy with how this past season ended. Not only did his Las Vegas Raiders finish 3-14, butthey ...
Gui Santos makes go-ahead layup late, scores 16 as Warriors rally to beat Grizzlies 114-113

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Gui Santos made a go-ahead layup with 19 seconds left and Al Horford stole the ball from Cam Spencer moments later after he rebounded a Memphis miss, and the Golden State Warriors rallied late to beat the Grizzlies 114-113 on Monday night.

Pat Spencer had 17 points and seven assists, leading seven players in double figures for a Warriors team missing Stephen Curry for the fourth straight game because of alingering right knee injurythat coach Steve Kerr said would keep him out of the All-Star Game on Sunday.

De'Anthony Melton's layup with 2:46 left pulled the Warriors within 113-110 and Moses Moody made it a one-point game with 2 minutes remaining. Brandin Podziemski, Santos and Horford each scored 16 points, and Moody 15.

Earlier in the day, Curry's backcourt mate,Jimmy Butler, underwent surgeryin Los Angeles for a torn anterior cruciate ligament in his right knee that ended his season last month.

Ty Jerome scored 14 of his 19 points in the first half and also dished out seven assists for Memphis, outscored 11-0 to end the game after Jaylen Wells' jumper with 4:17 to go.

Jahmai Mashack scored 17 points off the bench, Taylor Hendricks had 15 points and 10 rebounds and Kentavious Caldwell-Pope contributed 15 points — and the Grizzlies reserves scored 68 points, most Golden State has given up to an opponent's backups this season.

Memphis lost its third straight and ninth of 11. The Warriors won the first meeting 131-118 on Oct. 27 at Chase Center — and have won the last eight meetings overall at home dating to a 104-101 defeat at Chase Center on Oct. 28, 2021.

Golden State cut Memphis' lead to 54-53 on a layup by Spencer with 2:58 remaining in the second quarter, then the Grizzlies closed the half with an 11-4 run for a 65-57 lead at the break — getting five straight points from Scotty Pippen Jr. during the stretch.

Draymond Green scored 14 points with four 3-pointers and moved past Latrell Sprewell (8,032) for 14th place on the Warriors' franchise scoring list.

Grizzlies: At Denver on Wednesday night to wrap up a five-game trip before the All-Star break.

Warriors: Host San Antonio on Wednesday night.

AP NBA:https://apnews.com/NBA

Gui Santos makes go-ahead layup late, scores 16 as Warriors rally to beat Grizzlies 114-113

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Gui Santos made a go-ahead layup with 19 seconds left and Al Horford stole the ball from Cam Spencer...

 

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