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As evidenced by the 2025 College Football Playoff final four, quarterback play is extremely important to win a national championship.

All four finalists ― Indiana, Oregon, Ole Miss and Miami ― used the NCAA transfer portal to find their ‘franchise quarterback’ to guide them to the semifinal round of the CFP bracket. That’s why the position will be just as important this offseason for filling out a future CFP berth.

CFP semifinalists like Indiana and Miami need a QB for the 2026 season, while Oregon could be in the market, depending on Dante Moore’s NFL draft decision. Penn State, Florida and LSU are three teams with coaching changes in need of a new signal caller.

And of course, don’t discount another Trinidad Chambliss committing to a program as a potential backup and emerging as a superstar, as Chambliss has during Ole Miss’ run to the CFP semifinal.

Here’s a look at our tracker for the top quarterbacks in the portal this season, according to the 247 Sports Transfer Portal Rankings.

1. Sam Leavitt

  • Old team: Arizona State
  • New team: TBD
  • Eligibility remaining: 2 years

Leavitt is the No. 1 overall player in the 2026 transfer portal rankings. He threw for 1,628 yards, 10 touchdowns and three interceptions in 2025.

2. Brendan Sorsby

  • Old team: Cincinnati
  • New team: Texas Tech
  • Eligibility remaining: 1 year

The Cincinnati QB is the No. 2 overall player in the portal, as well as the No. 2 QB. Sorsby is expected to be one of the most impactful players in the portal this cycle. He has totaled 5,613 passing yards, 1,027 rushing yards and 63 total touchdowns in two seasons with the Bearcats. Sorsby will take the baton from Behren Morton under center for the Red Raiders.

3. Drew Mestemaker

  • Old team: North Texas
  • New team: Oklahoma State
  • Eligibility remaining: 3 years

Mestermaker opted to follow his North Texas football head, Eric Morris, to Oklahoma State. He led the Mean Green to a 12-2 record during the 2025 college football season and to the American Conference Championship game.

4. Dylan Raiola

  • Old team: Nebraska
  • New team: TBD
  • Eligibility remaining: 2 years

Raiola suffered a season-ending broken right fibula against USC in early November, but should be ready to contribute to his next team in 2025. The former 5-star QB was originally committed to Georgia before flipping to have an opportunity to play as a freshman with the Cornhuskers.

5. Josh Hoover

  • Old team: TCU
  • New team: Indiana
  • Eligibility remaining: 1 year

Hoover has been entrenched as the Horned Frogs’ starting QB since his redshirt freshman season, making 31 straight starts for TCU. He has 9,629 career passing yards and 71 passing touchdowns, which lead all returning QBs in 2026. However, he needs to cut down on his turnovers, with 33 career interceptions thrown.

6. Rocco Becht

  • Old team: Iowa State
  • New team: Penn State
  • Eligibility remaining: 1 year

Like Mestemaker, Becht followed his former head coach, Matt Campbell, to his new destination at Penn State. He has made 39 career starts and could be someone to plug in right away in the Big Ten and play well.

7. DJ Lagway

  • Old team: Florida
  • New team: TBD
  • Eligibility remaining: 2 years

Lagway seemed to be the player who would save Billy Napier and the Florida program. However, following an injury-plagued 2025 season, Lagway is in the portal following Napier’s firing and the hiring of Jon Sumrall.

8. Byrum Brown

  • Old team: USF
  • New team: TBD
  • Eligibility remaining: 1 year

Brown could follow his head coach, Alex Golesh, from USF to Auburn. He has been the perfect fit in Golesh’s offense with an FBS-best 42 touchdowns during the regular season. With 32 career starts, Brown is one of the most experienced QBs in the portal this cycle.

9. Deuce Knight

  • Old team: Auburn
  • New team: TBD
  • Eligibility remaining: 3 years

Despite showing flashes of his potential for Auburn, Knight is in the portal and will play for a new team in 2026, with Alex Golesh taking over as the head coach. Knight finished 17-of-25 passing for 259 yards with two touchdowns and added 13 rushes for 178 yards and four scores as a true freshman.

10. Kenny Minchey

  • Old team: Notre Dame
  • New team: Nebraska
  • Eligibility remaining: 2 years

Minchey completed 20 of 26 passes for 196 yards and rushed for 84 yards and a touchdown as the backup to CJ Carr after losing the QB competition this season. The redshirt sophomore could likely step in as a starter at Nebraska, who needs to replace Dylan Raiola.

11. Aidan Chiles

  • Old team: Michigan State
  • New team: TBD
  • Eligibility remaining: 1 year

Chiles has never lived up to the promise he showed as a freshman with Oregon State, but he did show flashes with Michigan State under Jonathan Smith. He is in a prove-it year in his final year of eligibility and could still prove to be a good addition.

12. Beau Pribula

  • Old team: Missouri
  • New team: TBD
  • Eligibility remaining: 1 year

The 2025 season was a trying one for Pribula, but he showed off his talent and toughness. He led Missouri to a 5-0 start behind 1,941 and 17 total touchdowns, but suffered a dislocated left ankle. Pribula returned in less than a month from the injury and started the final two games for the Tigers.

13. Colton Joseph

  • Old team: Old Dominion
  • New team: Wisconsin
  • Eligibility remaining: 2 years

The Sun Belt Offensive Player of the Year committed to Wisconsin on Sunday, Jan. 4. He threw for 2,624 yards and 21 touchdowns, while adding 158 rushes for 1,007 yards and 13 touchdowns, for the Monarchs in 2025.

14. Aaron Philo

  • Old team: Georgia Tech
  • New team: Florida
  • Eligibility remaining: 3 years

In two seasons with the Yellow Jackets, Philo has made just eight career appearances, but has shown flashes as Haynes Kings’ backup. However, with offense coordinator Buster Faulkner leaving for the Gators, Philo will continue his career in Gainesville, Florida.

15. Austin Simmons

  • Old team: Ole Miss
  • New team: TBD
  • Eligibility remaining: 2 years

Simmons began the 2025 season as the starter for Ole Miss, but lost his spot not due to poor play, but because of the emergence of Trinidad Chambliss following an injury to Simmons. The left-hander is expected to stick with Ole Miss for its playoff run before heading to Missouri.

16. Ethan Grunkemeyer

  • Old team: Penn State
  • New team: TBD
  • Eligibility remaining: 3 years

The redshirt freshman stepped into a starting role following a season-ending injury to starter Drew Allar. He started the final seven games, which included four straight wins to end the season. Grunkemeyer finished his first year with 1,341 passing yards, nine total TDs and four interceptions.

17. Lincoln Kienholz

  • Old team: Ohio State
  • New team: Louisville
  • Eligibility remaining: 2 years

Kienholz competed with freshman Julian Sayin for the starting position for the Buckeyes this past season. However, with Sayin’s strong season, the path for Kienholz is closed. He committed to Louisville and playing for coach Jeff Brohm on Jan. 3.

18. Cutter Boley

  • Old team: Kentucky
  • New team: Arizona State
  • Eligibility remaining: 3 years

Cutter Boley committed to Arizona State on Jan. 3 and will be in line to replace Sam Leavitt. As a redshirt freshman in 2025, he threw for 2,160 passing yards with 15 touchdowns and 12 interceptions. Boley started the final 10 games for Kentucky this season.

19. Katin Houser

  • Old team: East Carolina
  • New team: Illinois
  • Eligibility remaining: 1 year

The former Michigan State QB threw for 3,300 yards with 28 total TDs and 10 turnovers and led ECU to an 8-4 record. With his performance with the Pirates, he will to return to the Big Ten for his final year of eligibility at Illinois, replacing Luke Altmyer.

20. Jaden Craig

  • Old team: Harvard
  • New team: TCU
  • Eligibility remaining: 1 year

The Harvard star threw for 2,869 yards, 25 touchdowns and seven interceptions in 2025. Over his career, he has been a 24-game starter with 6,074 career passing yards with 63 career total touchdowns and 12 interceptions. He could prove himself for the NFL with a strong performance in the Power 4 conferences. He’ll replace Josh Hoover, who entered the portal and committed to Indiana.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The Las Vegas Raiders are No. 1 − and former owner Al Davis would doubtless be sick about it.

But the Silver and Black’s current Commitment to Excellence unfortunately extends only to summiting the apex of the 2026 NFL draft order, the Raiders clinching − for lack of a better term − the spot Jan. 4 when the New York Giants, who cruised past Las Vegas 34-10 in Week 17, defeated the Dallas Cowboys in their regular-season finale. The Giants’ victory locked the Raiders into the league’s worst record, even though they improved to 3-14 by beating the Kansas City Chiefs on Sunday afternoon. But Las Vegas’ .538 strength of schedule, the weakest among the four 3-14 clubs, kept it in the top spot.

2026 NFL Draft first-round order

  1. Las Vegas Raiders (3-14, .538 strength of schedule)
  2. New York Jets (3-14, .552)
  3. Arizona Cardinals (3-14, .571)
  4. Tennessee Titans (3-14, .574)
  5. New York Giants (4-13)
  6. Cleveland Browns (5-12, .486)
  7. Washington Commanders (5-12, .507)
  8. New Orleans Saints (6-11, .495)
  9. Kansas City Chiefs (6-11, .516)
  10. Cincinnati Bengals (6-11, .521)
  11. Miami Dolphins (7-10)
  12. Dallas Cowboys (7-9-1)
  13. Los Angeles Rams (from Atlanta Falcons (8-9, .495))
  14. Baltimore Ravens (8-9, .507)
  15. Tampa Bay Buccaneers (8-9, .529)
  16. Jets (from Indianapolis Colts (8-9, .538))
  17. Detroit Lions (9-8, .490)
  18. Minnesota Vikings (9-8, .514)

(Note: Spots 19 through 32 in Round 1 will be determined by when teams exit from the playoffs, wild-card round losers slotting 19 through 24.)

Who will the Raiders draft first in 2026?

That will likely be a topic of some debate over the next four months, but Heisman Trophy-winning quarterback Fernando Mendoza from Indiana University will likely be the prohibitive choice − whether the Raiders use the pick or trade it.

Have the Raiders picked No. 1 overall before?

Yes, the then-Oakland Raiders chose QB JaMarcus Russell No. 1 overall in 2007 in one of the worst draft decisions in NFL history. Who could they have taken instead? Calvin Johnson, Joe Thomas, Adrian Peterson, Patrick Willis, Marshawn Lynch and Darrelle Revis all came off the board in the first half of Round 1.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

SACRAMENTO, CA – The Sacramento Kings lost their fifth consecutive game as they saw the return of guard Zach LaVine but lost key pieces, forward Keegan Murray and guard Keon Ellis, on Sunday night against the Milwaukee Bucks at Golden 1 Center.

Kings guard Keon Ellis injured his left thumb in the first half and did not return. Later forward Keegan Murray left the game with a left ankle injury with 4:01 left in the third quarter after colliding with Bucks center Myles Turner on a drive to the basket and landing awkwardly. The Bucks went on to win, 115-98.

Kings head coach Doug Christie told reporters he didn’t have an update on his injured players, but was understandably deflated that they went down, especially after getting Murray back on the court from a previous injury.

‘I don’t know yet. It’s not even for me to speculate,’ Christie told reporters after the game. ‘Obviously, we’ll get everything. You guys will know as soon as we do.’

Short in his response, Christie added: ‘It’s hard man. … it’s just difficult.’

Russell Westbrook led the Kings with 21 points. and LaVine had 20 points in 35 minutes off the bench in his first game back since Dec. 18.

‘I told Doug, I think I’ll be available for today. The last couple of games they’ve been asking me if I’m thinking about it or not,’ LaVine told USA TODAY Sports. ‘He told me he had me coming off the bench today and I said ‘OK’. I haven’t done it in a while but it was fine.’

LaVine added that his ankle is fine and he’s more worried getting conditioned and back in basketball shape.

‘Tired,’ LaVine said. ‘I haven’t played full court in an NBA game in nine games. My ankle feels fine. That’s why I wanted to make sure I was 100% before I came back.’

Giannis Antetokounmpo had a game-high 37 points and 11 rebounds. Kevin Porter Jr. recorded a double-double with 25 points and 10 assists.

‘I thought our non-Giannis minutes in the first half were phenomenal and that actually opened up the game for us because it allowed us to sit Giannis a little longer,’ Bucks head coach Doc Rivers said to reporters after the game. ‘I thought that was key. And then I thought overall we just were playing the right way.’

Kings vs. Bucks highlights

Sacramento trailed after the first quarter, 28-26, despite getting eight points a piece from Keegan Murray and DeMar DeRozan.

Zach LaVine came off the bench in his first game since Dec. 18. He scored five points in five minutes of action in the first.

Bucks opened the second quarter with a 9-0 run in 1:40. The Bucks’ lead climbed to as many as 20 in the first half. Sacramento, as a team, scored 18 points in the second quarter.

The Bucks led 62-44 after 24 minutes.

Milwaukee continued to pour gasoline on the flame. As they opened the third quarter on a 11-4 in first four minutes of the period, their lead grew to 25.

Kings forward Keegan Murray went down with an injury in the third quarter with 4:01 left after colliding with Bucks center Myles Turner on a drive to the basket. Murray received help from the medical staff as he limped off the court to the locker room.

Sacramento cut the lead down to 16 at the end of the third quarter. Bucks hung on to a lead, 85-69.

Kings looked to mount a comeback in the fourth quarter, as they turned up their defensive intensity.

They opened the quarter on a 12-0 run.

They cut the deficit down to 10 following back to back three-pointers from Dennis Schroder and Zach LaVine to open the period. They trailed 85-75 with 11 minutes left.

It was cut to a single-digit game on a Westbrook block and slow-step layup on the other side. That was followed by Schroder, who fired a midrange to bring the deficit down to six with under 10 minutes in the game.

Westbrook then stole the ball from Antetokounmpo and led the breakaway to find LaVine for a double-pump two-hand slam to bring the Kings within four points.

Westbrook forced a back court violation on Bucks guard Ryan Rollins as Kings continued to take advantage of their newfound life.

Momentum was halted briefly when Schroder fouled Kevin Porter Jr. on a three-point attempt with 8:22 left in the game.

The Bucks managed to extend their lead back to 10, as Antetokounmpo continued to get whatever he wanted in the paint and Porter from the outside.

Milwaukee ran the score back up and would win the game, 115-98.

Recap: Kings keys

  • Ryan Rollins can score: Rollins is rolling this season. He averages a little more than 17 points per game and shoots 42% from deep. Someone will have to take on the challenge of slowing him down. Rollins was slowed down, compared his previous games. He scored 12 points.
  • Greek Freak presence: Giannis Antetokounmpo is going to dominate the paint, as he usually does. He leads the league with 20.1 points in the paint per game. Make it tough, play physical and force him to earn those easy buckets at the free throw line. Antetokounmpo, indeed, did dominate this game, scoring a game-high 37 points and 11 rebounds.
  • Get defensive stops: This team likes to score, but they will also allow other teams to score as Milwaukee allows 116 points per game. Offense shouldn’t be a question, can Sacramento get stops defensively? Kings looked good defensively for a stretch in the fourth quarter, but it was short-lived. Overall, Sacramento had 10 steals and seven blocks. Westbrook, alone, had four steals and three blocks.
  • Compete for 48 minutes: Going to repeat this point of emphasis because it’s usually one quarter where the Kings have a lapse or lose focus or just simply don’t compete for 12 minutes and it costs them the game. It happened again against Phoenix. They have to fix that to have a chance to win. The game was arguably lost in the second quarter when the Kings were outscored 34-18. They even fought back from a 26-point lead to bring the game within three.

Kings next five games

  • Jan. 6 vs. Dallas Mavericks
  • Jan. 9 at Golden State Warriors
  • Jan. 11 vs. Houston Rockets
  • Jan. 12 vs. Los Angeles Lakers
  • Jan. 14 vs. New York Knicks
This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The college football transfer portal opened Friday, Jan. 2, and players are flying off the shelf. The portal runs through Jan. 16, with an extra five-day window (Jan. 20-24) for teams playing in the national championship.

We’ll keep you posted with daily live updates of portal commitments.

Transfers by conference: SEC | Big Ten | ACC | Big 12

HIT REFRESH FOR UPDATE.

Today’s transfer portal commitments

QB

  • Alonza Barnett III: James Madison to UCF
  • Rocco Becht: Iowa State to Penn State
  • Cutter Boley: Kentucky to Arizona State
  • Jaden Craig: Harvard to TCU
  • Drew Dickey: Vanderbilt to Arkansas State
  • Billy Edwards Jr.: Wisconsin to North Carolina
  • Josh Hoover: TCU to Indiana
  • Katin Houser: East Carolina to Illinois
  • Colton Joseph: Old Dominion to Wisconsin
  • Lincoln Kienholz: Ohio State to Louisville
  • Alex Manske: Iowa State to Penn State
  • Mason McKenzie: Saginaw Valley State to Boston College
  • Kenny Minchey: Notre Dame to Nebraska
  • Aaron Philo: Georgia Tech to Florida
  • Jaylen Raynor: Arkansas State to Iowa State
  • Brendan Sorsby: Cincinnati to Texas Tech
  • Marcelis Tate: South Florida to Tennessee State

RB

  • David Avit: Villanova to Arizona State
  • Landen Chambers: Central Arkansas to UCF
  • Bill Davis: Louisiana to Virginia Tech
  • Jalen Dupree: Colorado State to Kansas
  • Jerrick Gibson: Texas to Purdue
  • Carson Hansen: Iowa State to Penn State
  • Caleb Hawkins: North Texas to Oklahoma State
  • Makhi Hughes: Oregon to Houston
  • Jekai Middlebrook: Middle Tennessee to Virginia
  • Turbo Richard: Boston College to Indiana
  • Abu Sama: Iowa State to Wisconsin
  • JaQuali Smith: Sacramento State to Colorado

WR

  • Karon Brookins: Iowa State to Penn State
  • Tychaun Chapman: Southern Miss to Memphis
  • Miles Coleman: North Texas to Oklahoma State
  • Brett Eskildsen: Iowa State to Penn State
  • RJ Garcia II: Bowling Green to FAU
  • Jayden Gibson: Oklahoma to South Carolina
  • Jackson Harris: Hawaii to LSU
  • Cody Jackson: Tarleton State to Iowa State
  • Marquis Johnson: Missouri to Mississippi State
  • Jalen Jones: Alabama State to Texas Tech
  • Donte Lee: Liberty to Texas Tech
  • Terrence Lewis: North Texas to Oklahoma State
  • Nick Marsh: Michigan State to Indiana
  • Christian Neptune: South Florida to Auburn
  • Kory Pettigrew: South Florida to Auburn
  • Jahmari Powell-Wonson: Maryland to FAU
  • Shamar Rigby: Oklahoma State to Wisconsin
  • Danny Scudero: San Jose State to Colorado
  • Victor Snow: Buffalo to NC State
  • Prince Strachan: USC to West Virginia
  • Raiden Vines-Bright: Washington to Arizona State
  • Wyatt Young: North Texas to Oklahoma State

TE

  • Richie Anderson: Fresno State to Texas A&M
  • Gabe Burkle: Iowa State to Penn State
  • Jayvontay Conner: East Carolina to Vanderbilt
  • Hayden Hansen: Florida to Oklahoma
  • Jacob Harris: Bowling Green to Wisconsin
  • Nate Kurisky: Louisville to Duke
  • Ryan Schwendeman: Southern Illinois to Wisconsin
  • Michael Smith: South Carolina to Syracuse
  • Mason Williams: Ohio to Ohio State

OL

  • Xavier Bausley: West Virginia to Marshall
  • Trevor Buhr: Iowa State to Penn State
  • Malachi Breland: Memphis to Arkansas
  • Nicholas Cruji: Maine to Charlotte
  • Johnny Dickson: North Texas to Oklahoma State
  • Coen Echols: LSU to Texas A&M
  • Valen Erickson: NC State to Liberty
  • Shadre Hurst: Tulane to Houston
  • Toriyan Johnson: UConn to Colorado State
  • Austin Kawecki: Oklahoma State to Wisconsin
  • Maasai King: Akron to Iowa State
  • Kuol Kuol II: Iowa State to Penn State
  • Desmond Magiya: North Texas to Oklahoma State
  • Logan Moore: UAB to Baylor
  • Ben Murawski: UConn to Michigan State
  • Braydon Nelson: North Texas to Oklahoma State
  • Netinho Olivieri: Penn to Pitt
  • Sione Perkins: Iowa State to Northern Arizona
  • Gavin Proudfoot: Northern Iowa to Iowa State
  • Connor Stroh: Texas to Kansas
  • Drew Terrill: Miami (Ohio) to Houston
  • Andrew Threatt: Charleston Southern to North Carolina
  • Will Tompkins: Iowa State to Penn State
  • Bennett Warren: Tennessee to Minnesota
  • Brady Wayburn: UConn to UCF
  • Christian Young: Emory & Henry College to Southern Miss

DL

  • Demetrius Ballard: Buffalo to Boston College
  • Justus Boone: Arkansas to Wisconsin
  • Ahmad Breaux: LSU to Kentucky
  • Josh Burnham: Notre Dame to Indiana
  • Blake Burris: SMU to FAU
  • Alijah Carnell: Iowa State to Penn State
  • Esean Carter: Toledo to UConn
  • Christian Davis: Louisiana Tech to SMU
  • Malachi Davis: Toledo to Rutgers
  • Ian Geffrard: Arkansas to Texas
  • Nate Henrich: Gannon to San Diego State
  • Carter Janki: Penn to Illinois
  • Daniel Jennings: Penn State to Virginia Tech
  • Lamont Lester Jr.: Monmouth to Colorado
  • Jonathan Maldonado: Nevada to Ole Miss
  • Dylan Manuel: Appalachian State to Colorado
  • Andrew Marshall: Eastern Michigan to Minnesota
  • Ryan McCulloch: Cal to UCLA
  • Antonio O’Berry: Gardner Webb to Kentucky
  • Tobi Osunsanmi: Kansas State to Indiana
  • Chidera Otutu: UTSA to Cincinnati
  • Khamani Potts: Grand Valley State to Colorado State
  • Kevin Roberts: West Florida to James Madison
  • Wisdom Simms: North Carolina Central to Purdue
  • Eamon Smalls: UAB to Kansas
  • Jordan Walker: Rutgers to Georgia Tech
  • Landyn Watson: Kentucky to Kansas
  • Solomon Williams: Texas A&M to Cal

LB

  • Caleb Bacon: Iowa State to Penn State
  • Cael Brezina: Iowa State to Penn State
  • Nylan Brown: Kent State to Washington State
  • Deven Bryant: Washington to USC
  • Ray Coney: Tulsa to Texas A&M
  • Kooper Ebel: Iowa State to Penn State
  • Jon Jon Kamara: Kansas to Wisconsin
  • Isaiah Patterson: UNLV to West Virginia
  • Austin Romaine: Kansas State to Texas Tech
  • Montreze Smith: Austin Peay to Iowa State
  • Keaton Thomas: Baylor to Ole Miss
  • Tavion Wallace: Arkansas to Kentucky

DB

  • Khalil Barnes: Clemson to Georgia
  • Tawfiq Byard: Colorado to Texas A&M
  • MJ Cannon: Bowling Green to Cincinnati
  • Nehemiah Chandler: South Alabama to Florida State
  • Tyran Chappell: UConn to Michigan State
  • Caleb Chester: Texas to Arizona State
  • DJ Coleman: Baylor to Florida
  • Jay Crawford: Auburn to Ole Miss
  • Jameel Croft Jr.: Kansas to Charlotte
  • Keshawn Davila: Arkansas to Kansas State
  • Zahmir Dawud: Villanova to Rutgers
  • Sharif Denson: Florida to Ole Miss
  • Christian Ellis: Virginia Tech to Virginia
  • Caleb Flagg: Missouri to UCF
  • Dylan Flowers: Western Kentucky to Duke
  • Quinton Hammonds: North Texas to Oklahoma State
  • Christian Harrison: Cincinnati to Arkansas
  • Anthony Hawkins: Villanova to Iowa
  • A’Mon Lane-Ganus: Auburn to South Florida
  • Kyon Loud: Montana to Duke
  • Darius Malcolm Jr.: Wofford to Memphis
  • Nateen Mitchell: New Mexico State to Colorado
  • Qua Moss: Kansas State to Tennessee
  • Marcus Neal: Iowa State to Penn State
  • Anthony Rogers: Nicholls State to Tulane
  • Jiquan Sanks: Cincinnati to Indiana
  • Hasaan Sykes: Western Carolina to Kentucky
  • Jaylen Thomas: San Jose State to Washington State
  • Devin Vaught: Maine to Michigan State
  • DJ Waller Jr.: Kentucky to Louisville
  • Keyon Washington: Bowling Green to Iowa State
  • Jontez Williams: Iowa State to USC
  • Lavon Williams: East Texas A&M Commerce to Illinois
  • Preston Zachman: Wisconsin to Indiana

K

  • Braeden McAlister: Georgia State to Arkansas
  • Max Gilbert: Tennessee to Arkansas
  • Eli Ozick: North Dakota State to Iowa
  • Gianni Spetic: Memphis to Texas

P

  • Mac Chiumento: Florida State to Texas

LS

  • Hudson Powell: Miami (Ohio) to Auburn
  • Dalton Riggs: UCF to Ohio State

College football 2026 transfer portal dates: When does transfer portal open, close?

The portal period now runs from Jan. 2-16, with an extra five-day window (Jan. 20-24) for teams playing in the national championship. The spring portal window in April is no longer a part of the schedule, so January is the only open window for teams to add via the portal in 2026.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The lithium market heads into 2026 after one of its most punishing years in recent memory, shaped by deep oversupply, weaker-than-expected electric vehicle (EV) demand and sustained price pressure.

In 2025, lithium carbonate prices in North Asia sank to four year lows, forcing production cuts and project delays as the industry grappled with the consequences of years of aggressive supply growth.

The second half of the year saw a rebound as lithium carbonate began a slow ascent. By December 29, prices had risen 56 percent from their January start position of US$10,798.54 per metric ton to US$16,882.63.

While volatility and brief price rallies highlighted the market’s sensitivity to sentiment and policy signals, analysts increasingly see the sector’s first-half downturn as an inflection point. With high-cost supply under strain and inventories gradually tightening, expectations are building that 2026 could mark the start of a rebalancing phase, supported by long-term demand tied to electrification, energy storage and the broader energy transition.

Battery energy storage systems to drive lithium growth

Energy storage is emerging as the fastest-growing pillar of battery demand, with major implications for the lithium market heading into 2026. Indeed, according to Benchmark Mineral Intelligence’s Iola Hughes, growth in this segment is accelerating well ahead of the broader battery market.

“We’re expecting about 44 percent growth (in 2025),” she said. That’s compared with roughly 25 percent growth across total battery demand. As a result, energy storage is set to account for about a quarter of total global battery demand in 2025, a share that is rising rapidly. The shift is even more pronounced in the US, where Hughes expects storage to make up a significant “35 to 40 percent of battery demand in the next few years.”

That growth is being driven by falling costs and the growing role of lithium iron phosphate (LFP) chemistry, which Hughes described as the dominant technology in stationary storage.

“It very much is the story of LFP right now,” she said, pointing to recent innovation and lower costs, which have helped to make LFP “the best chemistry” for most storage applications.

Globally, deployment remains highly concentrated. China and the US account for roughly 87 percent of cumulative grid-scale storage installations, but new markets are emerging quickly.

Saudi Arabia, Hughes noted, has surged from effectively zero to the world’s third largest market in a matter of months, deploying around 11 gigawatt-hours in the first quarter alone. “That really goes to show just how early this market is in its story,” she said; it also indicates how quickly new sources of battery demand can materialize.

Cost declines sit at the core of the expansion. Fully integrated storage systems in China are now approaching, and in some cases falling below, US$100 per kilowatt-hour. Hughes said this has fundamentally changed the economics of storage, making deployments viable even as policy support tightens. “The prices are so much cheaper, the economics are a lot stronger, even in a normal, unsubsidized environment,” she said.

In the US, growth remains concentrated in a handful of states — led by California and Texas — but Hughes stressed how early stage the market still is. New Mexico, now the fifth largest storage market, is built on just a few projects.

At the same time, the scale of energy storage projects is increasing rapidly. Giga-scale installations, defined as projects larger than 1 gigawatt-hour, are moving from novelty to norm.

Hughes said nine such projects are expected to come online this year, accounting for about 20 percent of battery demand, with more than 20 in the pipeline for next year, representing close to 40 percent.

Policy remains a key variable. While investment tax credits for storage remain in place in the US, Hughes warned that tighter sourcing and eligibility rules are reshaping supply chains, particularly for LFP. The pipeline of announced LFP gigafactories has grown sharply this year — up more than 60 percent — led largely by Korean manufacturers.

“We’re in a much better position when it comes to sourcing of cells for energy storage than we were even three months ago,” she said, though challenges remain around production tax credits and heavy reliance on Chinese cathode supply.

Underlying the storage boom is a broader shift in electricity demand.

After more than a decade of stagnation, US power demand is rising again, driven by data centers, AI, electrification and reshoring of manufacturing. Hughes said estimates now point to electricity demand rising 20 to 30 percent by 2030, placing energy storage at the center of energy security planning. “Storage has become a central topic in the energy security conversation,” she said, adding that its role will only grow.

Looking ahead, Hughes said LFP is likely to dominate shorter-duration storage, while sodium-ion and other battery technologies compete in longer-duration segments.

For the lithium market, the message is clear: as storage scales up in size, geography and strategic importance, it is becoming one of the most powerful demand drivers shaping the sector’s outlook for 2026 and beyond.

Lower costs driving LFP adoption

Howard Klein, RK Equity co-founder and partner, argued that falling costs remain a central driver of LFP battery adoption, reflecting a familiar economic dynamic: as prices decline, demand accelerates.

While lithium is a key input, he suggested that ongoing manufacturing efficiencies and economies of scale are likely to continue pushing LFP battery costs lower over time, potentially offsetting upward pressure from higher lithium prices.

Klein emphasized that even if LFP costs rise modestly, battery storage will remain highly competitive as a source of grid power. Compared with conventional generation options such as gas or coal, storage already offers a compelling cost and performance proposition, he said, and does not rely solely on subsidies to remain economically viable.

Geopolitical instability on the rise

Critical minerals are increasingly at the center of US foreign policy, and that shift is set to reshape the lithium value chain through 2026, according to Klein. He noted that geopolitics now underpins many of Washington’s strategic priorities, from Eastern Europe to Africa and the Arctic.

“The entire foreign policy agenda is largely being driven by critical minerals,” Klein said, citing regions including Ukraine, Russia, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Greenland and Canada.

China’s willingness to weaponize its dominance in key supply chains has sharpened that focus.

On that note, Klein pointed to Beijing’s renewed rare earths export restrictions in October, noting that these measures were applied globally, not just against the US.

“They showed that they wield a significant negotiating stick, and they’re willing to use it,” he said.

In Klein’s view, that move has triggered a forceful response from western governments. “I think they’ve overplayed their hand to some degree, because now you’ve had this very big reaction from the US.”

That reaction is translating into a renewed push to localize and reshore critical mineral supply chains — an effort that has gained rare bipartisan backing in Washington.

“Unlike so many other things in America, which are hyper-partisan, both sides agree we need to resolve this,” Klein said, adding that the policy momentum will continue to shape the lithium industry.

While rare earths remain the immediate pressure point, Klein said the policy lens is widening. The US recently added 10 minerals to its critical minerals list, which now stands at a total of 60. Lithium, he said, sits high on that agenda, not out of enthusiasm for the metal itself, but because of its role in batteries.

“It’s an understanding by the government that batteries and battery technology are very, very important, and the entire battery supply chain needs to be supported,” Klein said. That support extends beyond lithium to graphite, manganese, nickel, cobalt and battery components such as anodes and cathodes.

The approach is increasingly coordinated across western economies. Klein described it as “a G7 effort,” with the EU and Canada aligned alongside the US through a mix of bilateral and multilateral initiatives.

That coordination is already translating into capital flows. He pointed to US-backed progress at Thacker Pass, EU funding for Vulcan Energy Resources (ASX:VUL,OTC Pink:VULNF) and a 360 million euro grant for European Metals Holdings (LSE:EMH,ASX:EMH,OTCQB:EMHLF) as early examples. Canada, he added, is also ramping up support.

“Canada announced C$6 billion over 26 investments,” Klein said, adding that more announcements are likely by the time the Prospectors & Developers Association of Canada convention rolls around in March.

Klein sees geopolitics, industrial policy and supply chain security converging into powerful lithium tailwinds. “This is a super hot topic,” he said, and one that is likely to drive increased lithium-related activity well into 2026.

Should the US build a strategic lithium reserve?

To dilute China’s grip on the sector, Klein is advocating for a strategic lithium reserve in the US as a more effective and market-neutral alternative to company-specific subsidies. He argues that the industry’s core challenge is not demand, but extreme price volatility caused by global oversupply and what he describes as non-market behavior, which has driven prices below sustainable levels and distorted investment signals across the sector.

“The problem in lithium is volatile prices — prices below the marginal cost, catastrophically low prices that put companies out of business,” he said, pointing to persistent oversupply as the primary distortion.

In Klein’s view, a reserve would act as a counterweight by creating steady, large-scale demand that stabilizes prices within a sustainable range. “The main focus is to stabilize price … not at a super high level, but at a level where companies can make an economic return,” he said. That stability, he added, is essential to incentivize investment in mines, processing and conversion facilities across the US, Canada and allied jurisdictions.

Unlike targeted government support, Klein said a reserve would allow the market to determine which projects succeed.

“I want the market to decide which projects and companies are the best, not necessarily the government,” he said, noting the diversity of competing lithium resources, from US clay and brine projects to Canadian hard-rock deposits.

A more predictable price environment with fewer large swings would lower the cost of capital and give private investors greater confidence to finance viable projects.

Klein stressed that a lithium reserve should not be confused with a stockpile.

“People use ‘stockpile’ and ‘reserve’ like they’re the same thing, and they’re not,” he said. While a stockpile focuses on availability for emergencies, a reserve is designed as a market-stabilizing mechanism that can buy and sell material to smooth volatility. Availability, he said, is a secondary benefit.

He sees the concept as most relevant for mid-sized, fast-growing markets like lithium, graphite and other battery materials that lack deep futures markets and long-term hedging tools.

“Those are the markets that could be amenable to a reserve,” he said, contrasting them with large, liquid commodities like copper or very small, niche minerals tied mainly to military use.

Looking longer term, Klein said a lithium reserve aligns closely with the growth of EVs, energy storage, data centers and grid electrification, as well as geopolitical efforts to diversify supply chains away from China.

“This is no longer just a renewables or EV thing — this is national security, clean energy and building an electro-state,” he said, arguing that reducing volatility would make it easier for automakers, utilities and manufacturers to commit capital without fear of being caught on the wrong side of wild price swings.

North American cooperation key for lithium

Gerardo Del Real, publisher at Digest Publishing, also highlighted the impact of geopolitics on the lithium value chain, emphasizing the need for North American coordination to reduce reliance on dominant producers like China.

“I think this is the path towards that. It has to happen,” he said, noting that collaboration between the US, Canada and potentially Mexico could strengthen regional supply security and reduce vulnerability to global disruptions.

Del Real framed the issue in broader energy terms, pointing to the strategic value of domestic resources: “If we are serious as a country and as a region in being somewhat independent from China and from the Russians … we have a luxury of resources in the US, in Canada … there could be a very powerful path forward.”

On market dynamics, he suggested investors are focused on timing and catalysts, with policy shifts, demand surprises or supply disruptions likely to drive sentiment in 2026.

He also warned that the market may be underestimating the importance of coordinated regional supply initiatives as a factor shaping pricing and project economics.

Securities Disclosure: I, Georgia Williams, hold no direct investment interest in any company mentioned in this article.

This post appeared first on investingnews.com

Amanda Serrano finished the night with a badly swollen right eye. Drenched in sweat. On a night she was expected to dominate.

But she also finished the night as the reigning WBO and WBA featherweight champion. She retained her titles with a victory over Reina Tellez by unanimous decision Saturday, Jan. 3 in San Juan, Puerto Rico.

Tellez, a 22-year-old who took the fight on two weeks’ notice, connected with enough punches to nearly shut Serrano’s right eye. Tellez got the call after Serrano’s originally scheduled opponent was removed from the card after an “atypical’’ drug test, stepping in despite inexperience.

“She’s a warrior,’’ Serrano said.

The two embraced before the final round and after the fight ended.

Serrano, 37, used her skill and experience during the 10-round fight. The judges scored the fight 98-92, 97-93, 97-93.

Serrano improved to 48-4-1. Tellez suffered her first loss and her record fell to 13-1-1.

What Amanda Serrano said after fight

Serrano not only was back on her home turf for her first bout of 2026, but also fighting at her preferred weight – the 126-pound featherweight division.

“It feels amazing,’’ Serrano said. “… It’s been two years since I fought this way (as a featherweight). So the next fights are going to be much, much better, but I feel good.”

She had to gain approximately 10 pounds for each of her three fights against Katie Taylor, and lost all three of those fights.

What Reina Tellez said after fight

For the first time, Tellez fought 10 rounds and, on top of that, three-minute rounds.

“I just did that with one of the best in the world,’’ she said. “Somebody I’ve idolized my whole life and I stood in there and I fought to the end.’’

Jake Paul provides update on jaw

Jake Paul, co-promoter for the boxing card, sat ringside and provided an update on his broken jaw during an interview on the DAZN broadcast. He had surgery Dec. 20, the day after Anthony Joshua broke the jaw in two places with a knockout punch.

“I got four (titanium) plates in my jaw but that’s part of the sport,’’ Paul said. “And the healing process has been a little bit tough. I’m a little bit tired. It’s hard to sleep. I go under the pillow and then my jaw torques up to the left when I wake up.’’

But Paul called his knockout loss to Joshua Dec. 19 “an amazing night and I learned a lot and gained a lot of experience and we’re on to more fights this year.’’

Paul provided no additional information about what fights might be in the works.

Amanda Serrano def. Reina Tellez by unanimous decision: Analysis

Round 1: Reina Tellez, who weighed in 0.6 pounds over the featherweight limit of 126 pounds, does not look fit. Amanda Serrano, as usual, looks to be in championship shape. Serran comes out behind the jab. Tellez looks a tad tentative. But she connects with a right. That is, as Serrao charges in and fires away. Serrano stalking, but Tellez catches her wit ha punch to the face. Tellez doesn’t look scared at all, although she just ate a hard left. Serrano 10, Tellez 9.

Round 2: Tellez might not be nearly as skilled as Serrano, but she looks game. Serrano is punching at a high rate, and Tellez is standing her ground. Serrano connects with two hard lefts. Now she’s charing forward, delighting the crowd. Serrano 20, Tellez 18.

Round 3: Tellez scores with a left, but Serrano keeps firing. Tellez lands three punches and Serrano definitely felt it. Serrano is winning the output battle, but Tellez has Serrano’s attention. Serrano 30, Tellez 27.

Round 4: Tellez connecting, but not with the volume and consistency of Serrano. But the real question wasn’t if Serrano could wn the fight. It was whether she could get the knockout. And she lands some bic shots, only for Tellez to respond. Tellez cut under the right eye. Serrano 40, Tellez 36.

Round 5: Serrano remains the aggressor, and the crowd is ready for fireworks. Serrano is attacking the body and Tellez is backing away. Serrano really digging into the body. Those body shots clearly are doing damage. But she nailed Serrano with two lefts. Serrano 50, Tellez 45.

Round 6: Serrano showing significant swelling under her right eye. Yes, Tellez has connected. But Serrano on the attack again. Tellez still landing shots, but far fewer than Serrano. Serrano scoring with both hands and the crowd cheers. Serrano 59, Tellez 55.

Round 7: Serrano’s pace appears to slow. Tellez scores with a right and a left. Serrano’s right eye looks badly swollen. Tellez doing what she can to worsen it. Serrano closes strong. Serrano 69, Tellez 64.

Round 8: Serrano lands a couple of combinations, and with authority. Then she unfurls a straight left and looks to be in control. But Tellez fights back. Serrano 79, Tellez 73.

Round 9: She’s not known for her defense, but Serrano dodges a couple of big punches. Tellez still is swinging hard and at times connecting. But she’s yet to stun Serrano, who’s sticking to her game plan — fire away with the left, to the body and head. Serrano 89, Tellez 82.

Round 10: Serrano initiates a hug as the round begins. Serrano stalking again, with three minutes left to score the knockout. The two trade big shots and Serrano is pouring it on. Tellez backing up and trying to stay on her feet. TEllez fighting back, at risk of eating a KO punch. Tellez survies, and the two boxers embrace again as the crowd roars. Serrano 99, Tellez 91.

Stephanie Han def. Holly Holm by unanimous decision

Holm is a legendary fighter, but she’s not a champion.

Her bout with Han, the reigning WBA world lightweight champion, ended in the seventh round after an accidental headbutt. But Han, who was bleeding badly after the clash of heads, clearly won the fight.

The judges scored it 69-65, 69-64, 68-65 in favor of Han, who landed almost three times as many punches as Holm.

The fight ended at 1:44 of the seventh round after the ringside doctor examined the cut and ruled the bout should be halted.

Holm, 44, saw her record fall to 34-3-3. Han, a 35-year-old police officer, improved to 12-0.

  • Round 1: Holly Holm quick to fire a jab, and the two women mix it up early. Han lands an overhand right. And Holm answers with a straight left. Holm scores with a big right and shows aggression as he unloads again. Up goes the chant: ‘Holly! Holly!” Holm 10, Han 9.
  • Round 2: Han opens with a straight right. Holm riding bursts of energy toward Han. Han looks more measured. Nice exchange of shots. Trading more shots. Han gets hit and almost tumbles before regaining her footing. Holm 19, Han 19.
  • Round 3: Holm making good use of the left. But Han connects with a big counter It’s action packed, and Han landed the big shots. Han 29, Holm 28.
  • Round 4: Holm still attacking with the left, and Han is matching her power and energy. Holm finishes strong, but too late. Han 39, Holm 37.
  • Round 5: Holm is 44, but fighting like a much younger boxer. Unfortunately for her, she’s up against a worthy world champion. Han drills Holm with a right. Han 49, Holm 46.
  • Round 6: Holm looks a little more tentative. She knows she’s vulnerable when she throws her big punches. Han also stepping forward more behind her shots. Han 59, Holm 55.
  • Round 7: Holm comes out aggressive with her left. Han cut on the forehead as a result of a head cut. The ring doctor inspects the damage and halts the fight! The referee collects the scorecards, which will include scores from seventh and final round. Han 68, Holm 65.

Krystal Rosado vs. Tania Walters, bantamweight

Rosado returned to action after suffering the first loss of her pro career. She proved she was too much for Walters and still has star potential.

Scoring with power and speed, she beat Walters by unanimous decision in six-round bantamweight bout.All three judges scored it 60-54 in favor of Rosado, the 23-year-old Puerto Rican who improved to 7-1. Her only loss came in October against Shurretta Metcalf by unanimous decision.

Walters, a 38-year-old Canadian, fell to 7-4.

  • Round 1: The fighters are letting their fists fly early. Tania Walters showing more aggression and Krystal Rosado showing composure. Rosado looks more measured and strategic. Rosado starting to find the right distance. Rosado 10, Walters 9.
  • Round 2: Walters comes out with the same energy, and Rosado responds with more quickness and power. Rosado looks sharp as she fires counter punches and then goes on the attack. Rosado 20, Walters 18.
  • Round 3: Walters remains feisty, but Rosado looks truly elite as she fires back a flurry of punches. She attacking Walters with bursts of punches and looks to have slowed down Walters. Walters, under a hailstorm of punches, snuck in a nice shot. Notable but not nearly enough to win the round. Rosado 30, Walters 27.
  • Round 4: Walters willing to mix it up despite the fury coming her way. Rosado slows down. Well, for about three seconds. No zip on Walters punches. Rosado 40, Walters 36.
  • Round 5: The action subsides. But Rosado is getting the best of it, of course. She closes the round with fury. Rosado 50, Walters 45.
  • Round 6: Walters walks toward Rosado and pays the price. Rosado’s left and right are serious weapons. Walters strikes with a left, but Walters unable to follow it up. Rosado unloads as the bell sounds. Rosado 60, Walters 54.

Alexis Araiza def. Ebanie Bridges by unanimous decision

It was the mother of all battles, an eight-round brawl between two moms.

Bridges, who put her stellar boxing career on hold for motherhood, fought for the first time in two years. She ran into another tough mom.

Araiza pummeled Bridges, who fought back – but not well enough. After the fight, she held her young son in her arms. Araiza turns out to be a mom of three children and was a big winner after the bantamweight bout.

The judges scored it 80-72, 78-74, 78-74 for Araiza, s 35-year-old American. Bridges, the 39-year-old Australian, saw her record fall to 9-3.

  • Round 1: Ebanie Bridges, who put her boxing career on hold after having a baby, returns to the ring for the first time in more than two years. Alexis Araiza looks to send her back to full-time parenthood. Bridge bulls forward behind an assortment of punches and Araiza fires back with more precision and power. Araiza 10, Bridges 9.
  • Round 2: Araiza getting through Bridges guard and connecting with Bridges head. But now Araiza is bleeding from the nose. Araiza 19, Bridges 19.
  • Round 3: The blood is flowing and so is Araiza. She lands a couple of nice uppercuts and a right hook. She lands a few more big shots as the round comes to an end. Araiza 29, Bridges 28.
  • Round 4: This is an active fight, and they two women come out swinging again. Bridges keeps marching forward — right into Araiza’s punches. Bridges getting in shots, too. The slugging continues, with Araiza landing the best shots. Araiza 39, Bridges 37.
  • Round 5: Bridges herself early, but Araiza slows her down with a right hook. The fight turns furious with a big exchange at the end. Araiza 49, Bridges 46.
  • Round 6: Almost non-stop action, and Araiza connects with a big uppercut. Another exhange and Araiza getting the best of it, including a sharp left as the round ended. Araiza 59, Bridges 55.
  • Round 7: There’s no letup here. Araiza’s face looks like a mess with that bloodied nose, but Bridges is the one taking a beating. She’s getting rocked midway through the round before Bridges finally responds. Araiza 68, Bridges 65.
  • Round 8: It’s rock ’em sock ’em and the crowd loves it. Bridges bulling foward behind big punches. Araiza looks exhausted, but both find the energy for aa big finish — especially from Araiza. Araiza 78, Bridges 74.

Jonathan Gonzalez def. Yankiel Rivera by unanimous decision

Gonzalez had a chance to end the fight early. Instead, he let it go the distance – and still walked away with the WBA interim world flyweight championship belt.

Gonzalez knocked down Rivera in the second round and Rivera looked to be in trouble. But he kept marching toward Gonzalez. His courage exceeded his ability, as Gonzalez relied on his counter punching.

The judges scored it 14-113, 116-111, 117-110 in favor of Gonzalez, the 34-year-old Puerto Rican who improved to 29-4-1. Rivera, a 28-year-old Puerto Rican, suffered his first loss and his record fell to 7-0-1.

  • Round 1: Jonathan Gonzales opens with a fury, and Yankiel Rivera is under seige but hanging in — or hanging on. Gonzalez lands a hard straight right. Gonzalez 10, Rivera 9.
  • Round 2: Gonzalez drops Rivera with a hard left. Rivera is up but looks to be in trouble. He survives the round. Gonzales 20, Rivera 17.
  • Round 3: Rivera emerges with some risking taking as he goes at Gonzalez. It seems to help neutralize Gonzalez’s power but not reverse the momentum. Gonzalez 30, Rivera 26.
  • Round 4: Rivera comes out aggressively and goes after Gonazalez’s body. It’s a worthy effort even though Gonzalez possesses the more impressive power. Gonzalez 39, Rivera 36.
  • Round 5: This is no longer a one-sided fight. But Rivera will have to turn things up even more if he’s got any chance to win it. Gonzalez lands a hard right. Gonzalez 49, Rivera 45.
  • Round 6: Rivera’s left eye is swollen, evidence that Gonzalez’s punches have landed. Yet he continues to show newfound aggressiveness. Gonzalez content to throw effective counter punches. Gonzalez 59, Rivera 54.
  • Round 7: Gonzalez again letting Rivera stalk and setting up for counterpunches. But he’s no longer got Rivera on the ropes — figuratively. But Rivera fails to capitalize. Gonzalez 69, Rivera 63.
  • Round 8: Gonzalez unleashes his power again, and Rivera feels it. Rivera fights back with a flurry of punches, but Gonzalez lands two hard left. Down goes Rivera, but the punch landed on the back of Rivera’s head and the refere waves off the knockdown. Gonzalez 79, Rivera 72.
  • Round 9: Rivera not backing down and lands a flurry of shots. But Gonzalez responds with heavier punches. He connects wit ha hard left and manages to stay on his feet. Gonzalez 89, Rivera 81.
  • Round 10: Gonzalez back to retreating and setting up the counterpunches. Am I alone and wanting Gonzalez to exert some dominance and dispatch Rivera. Intead, Rivera is loading another flurry of punches — none rock Gonzalez but many that score. Gonzalez 98, Rivera 91.
  • Round 11: Rivera lands a strong shot early as Gonzalez is back up against the ropes. But the threat fades pretty quickly. Gonzalez slips a few punches and then lands a few of his own. Gonzalez 108, Rivera 100.
  • Round 12: It’s more of the same, with Rivera stalking and Gonzalez fighting (well) off his back foot. He connects with a laser left as he tries to load up. They trade punches in a corner, and Rivera needs a miracle. No miracles, but he wins the round with energy and output. Gonzalez 117, Rivera 110.

Jan Paul Rivera def. Alfredo Cruz by majority decision

Jan Paul Rivera stayed undefeated at 14-0 with a victory over Alfredo Cruz by majority decision. And he had to earn it in the eight-round featherweight bout.

Rivera, the 24-year-old Puerto Rican, fell behind early as Cruz stayed on the move and landed more punches. But Rivera picked up the pace – and showed more power as the fight progressed.

One judge scored the fight 75-75 and the two other judges scored it 77-75 for Rivera.

Cruz, a 24-year-old from Puerto Rico, fell to 10-4-1.

  • Round 1: Alfred Cruz on the move and strikes with a jab, as Jan Paul Rivera stalks. Cruz connecting early with the jab. Rivera picks up the pace and connects with hard right hands. Cruz fights back with the jab and Rivera misses with big overhand. Cruz 10, Rivera 9.
  • Round 2: Cruz stays on the move and Rivera leans in and wraps him up. Cruz scores with the jab, but Rivera landing combinations. Rivera marches in and pushes down Cruz’s head. But the punches are flying — and landing. Cruz’s is winning the war of punching output. Cruz 20, Rivera 18.
  • Round 3: Cruz stays busy with the jab. Rivera exhibits power but has yet to stun Cruz. But he breaks through the high guard and scores. Then lands a couple of solid shots and smothers Cruz. Cruz swinging and missing before landing a big right. But Rivera landed more power shots. Cruz 29, Rivera 28.
  • Round 4: Spirited fight with both fighters landing punches, and Rivera asserts himself behind power shots. He attacks Cruz to the body as the two exhange meaningful shots. Cruz 39, Rivera 37.
  • Round 5: Cruz snaps back Rivera’s head with a left, but Rivera keeps marching forward. Fatigue may be setting in, but suddenly they’re trading punches again. Cruz finishes strong. Cruz 49, Rivera 46.
  • Round 6: Cruz still on the move and you got wonder how long those legs will hold up. Rivera lands a bevvy of combinations. Things are heating up again as the two trade shots. Crus hits the gas, but Rivera sufficently dominated the round early. Cruz 58, Rivera 56.
  • Round 7: Cruz scores to the body, and Rivera responds with a firestorm of punches. Cruz looks weary as Rivera pounds away. Cruz still running — and maybe not fast enough to evade Rivera. Cruz 67, Rivera 66.
  • Round 8: Cruz slips and hits the canvas. But he’s up and trying to elude Rivera again. Cruz hits the deck again, apparently pushed. Rivera attacking and Cruz holding on to Rivera — and for dear life. Cruz landsd a big right and unloads, only to get caught by a big right from Rivera. Cruz 76, Rivera 76.

Serrano vs Tellez fight results: prelims

  • Caleb Tirado def. Justin Hill by TKO, bantamweight
  • Yandiel Lozano def. Johniel Ramos Cotto by unanimous decision, super featherweight
  • Abner Figueroa def. Edwin Rodriguez by unanimous decision, bantamweight
  • Elise Soto def. Liliana Martinez by TKO, super featherweight
  • Alexis Chapparo def. Augusto Leal by unanimous decision, middleweight
  • Chris Echevarria def. Gabriel Bernardi by unanimous decision, super bantamweight
  • Henry Lebron def. Juan Tapia by TKO, super featherweight

What time is Amanda Serrano vs Reina Tellez fight card?

Serrano vs Tellez starts at 8 p.m. ET on Saturday, Jan. 3.

When is the Serrano vs Tellez main event ring walk?

The main event between Serrano and Tellez has an estimated start time of 11 p.m. ET.

Amanda Serrano vs Reina Tellez price: How much to watch fight

The fight available on DAZN with a monthly plan of $29.99.

Amanda Serrano stats

Amanda Serrano is 47-4-1 with 31 KOs. She has lost her last two fights, both to Katie Taylor by way of decision.

Amanda Serrano vs Reina Tellez fight card, odds

  • Amanda Serrano (-3000) vs. Reina Tellez (+900); Featherweight, for the WBA and WBO title
  • Stephanie Han (+160) vs. Holly Holm (-225); Lightweight, for the WBA title
  • Krystal Rosado vs. Tania WaltersBantamweight
  • Ebanie Bridges vs. Alexis AraziaBantamweight

Amanda Serrano age

Amanda Serrano is 37. Her opponent, Reina Tellez, is 22.

Holly Holm fight

Holly Holm, the legendary boxer and MMA fighter, will be making her second appearance in the boxing ring since signing with Jake Paul’s Most Valuable Promotions. This time, the 44-year-old Holm will be fighting for a world title against Stephanie Han, the reigning WBC lightweight champion.

In June, Holm boxed in her first pro bout since 2013 and defeated previously unbeaten Yolanda Vega by unanimous decision.

Anthony Joshua friends honored

The main card event opened with a 10-bell salute for Latif Ayodele and Sima Ghami. They were the close friends close friends of Anthony Joshua and members of the boxer’s training team who died in a car accident Dec. 29 in Nigeria while riding with the former heavyweight champion.

The names of Ayodele and Ghami also were embossed on canvas of the boxing ring at Coliseo Roberto Clemente, site of MVP’s 13-fight card.

Amanda Serrano chasing history

Before she retires, Serrano said this week, she has two goals. One: break the record for all-time knockouts for a woman. Entering the fight against Tellez, Serrano has 31 knockouts heading into her fight with Tellez. The record is 32, held by Hall of Famer Christy Martin. The second goal: 50 all-time victories. Serrano had 47 before fighting Tellez. Martin has 49 and Regina Halmich, a retired boxer from German, had 54 victories.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The red-hot San Francisco 49ers offense has finally discovered its Kryptonite. It comes in the form of a Seattle Seahawks defense that stymied it in a 13-3 Week 18 victory.

Mike Macdonald’s stop unit kept San Francisco’s offense off-balance all night at Levi’s Stadium. Brock Purdy and Co. racked up just 173 total yards in addition to their three points after averaging 373.2 yards per game and 35.7 points over their six-game winning streak.

As a result, the Seahawks clinched the NFC West title, their first since 2020, and secured the No. 1 overall seed in the NFC playoff race. That will give Seattle a much-needed first-round bye and a chance to recharge as the team looks to make the Super Bowl for the first time since the 2014-15 NFL playoffs.

Seattle’s victory will also be a monkey off the back of Sam Darnold, who failed to deliver in a similar divisional battle for the NFC’s No. 1 seed last season with the Minnesota Vikings. Darnold completed 20 of 26 passes for 198 yards, but most importantly, did not turn the ball over in the victory.

Darnold got a lot of support from his running game, as Kenneth Walker and Zach Charbonnet combined to rack up 171 yards on 33 carries. If the talented duo can perform similarly in the postseason, Seattle’s all-around balance will make it a very tough out in a wide-open playoff bracket.

USA TODAY Sports provided live updates, highlights and more from the 49ers-Seahawks game on Saturday in Week 18.

49ers vs. Seahawks takeaways Week 18

  • Sam Darnold did exactly what was needed in win. Nobody will call Darnold’s performance against the 49ers flashy. He threw for less than 200 passing yards and didn’t log a touchdown, after all. But after coming up short in a similar spot with the Vikings last season, Darnold did well to learn from his shortcomings and avoided turnovers and negative plays while delivering a key win for the Seahawks. Darnold acknowledged in a postgame interview with ESPN his ability to ‘stay calm in the pocket’ made a difference for him in this one. So long as he can keep doing that, Seattle will have a chance to enjoy a solid playoff run.
  • Seattle’s defense is championship-caliber. San Francisco has been one of the NFL’s best offenses this season when Brock Purdy has been healthy. The Seahawks have been able to stymie them in both meetings, holding the 49ers to an average of 10 points per game while limiting Purdy to an 80.3 passer rating. Seattle has elite talent at all three levels and plays as a connected, tough-to-beat defense under Macdonald. Much like the Seahawks’ ‘Legion of Boom’ days, this unit is plenty good enough to get Seattle through an open playoff field and into the Super Bowl.
  • Kenneth Walker and Zach Charbonnet are an underrated running back duo. Seattle’s one-two punch at running back doesn’t get enough love for what it’s able to do. Walker and Charbonnet are both good runners with explosive playmaking abilities, as they showed against the 49ers. Walker showed off his shiftiness on a key, 19-yard reception that allowed the Seahawks to continue their crucial field goal drive, while Charbonnet showed off good vision and burst on a 27-yard touchdown that proved to be a game-winner for Seattle. If they can continue to support Darnold while keeping each other fresh, the Seahawks should sport one of the better-balanced offenses of the 2025 NFL playoffs.
  • The 49ers need Trent Williams back. The 49ers aren’t going to play a pass rush as great as that of the Seahawks every week, but it was clear they missed Williams on Saturday. Austen Pleasants had trouble holding up in Williams’ stead, and Brock Purdy was sacked a season-high three times as a result. Expect the 49ers to do everything they can to get Williams back before their wild-card game.

Brock Purdy stats vs. Seahawks

  • 19-of-27 (70.3% completion rate)
  • 127 passing yards
  • 0 passing touchdowns
  • 1 interception
  • 64.9 passer rating
  • 2 rushing attempts, 21 rushing yards

Sam Darnold stats vs. 49ers

  • 20-of-26 (76.9% completion rate)
  • 198 passing yards
  • 0 passing touchdowns
  • 0 interceptions
  • 97.9 passer rating
  • 6 rushing attempts, 9 rushing yards

Christian McCaffrey stats vs. Seahawks

  • 8 rushing attempts
  • 23 rushing yards
  • 0 total touchdowns
  • 6 receptions (7 targets)
  • 34 receiving yards

Seahawks clinch No. 1 seed in NFC

Seattle finished the job, collecting a victory over the 49ers at Levi’s Stadium. The Seahawks are the top seed in the NFC, earning home-field advantage and a first-round bye.

49ers vs. Seahawks final score: Seattle 13, San Francisco 3

49ers vs. Seahawks highlights

Seahawks force turnover on downs to seal win on Saturday night

The 49ers couldn’t get a first down in their last-gasp effort to get back into the game against the Seahawks. Brock Purdy’s final pass fell harmlessly to the ground, and Seattle will win the NFC West after taking a few kneel-downs to end a 13-3 victory.

Jason Myers doinks 26-yard field goal off the upright

After intercepting Purdy, the Seahawks marched 89 yards over 16 plays to set Myers up for a short-distance field goal. For the second time tonight, Myers missed to the right, as his kick curved right and doinked off the upright.

Myers’ miss will allow the 49ers to remain down just 10 points. However, just 2:20 remains in the game after Seattle’s long drive, and San Francisco has no timeouts left. That means the 49ers will likely need to attempt an onside kick to have any chance to win.

Drake Thomas intercepts pass that glances off Christian McCaffrey’s hands

The 49ers were in the midst of their best offensive drive of the game and had a goal-to-go opportunity when Brock Purdy tried to throw a pass to McCaffrey at the 5-yard line. Edge rusher Boye Mafe appeared to barely deflect the pass at the line of scrimmage, and the veteran running back wasn’t able to corral it.

The result? The ball glanced off McCaffrey’s hands and into the arms of Thomas. The red-zone takeaway ensured Seattle would remain up by 10 points with about 10 minutes remaining in regulation.

49ers vs. Seahawks score update: Jason Myers makes 31-yard chip shot to extend Seattle’s lead

The Seahawks looked like they were going to go three-and-out before Kenneth Walker turned a screen-pass dump-off on third-and-17 into a 19-yard gain and a first down. From there, Seattle moved into short field goal range before stalling out.

Myers was called on to attempt the 31-yarder. He made it with ease, giving the Seahawks a 10-point lead with 14:15 remaining in regulation.

Seahawks 13, 49ers 3

When was the Seahawks’ last Super Bowl win?

The Seahawks have just one Super Bowl win in their history. That came in Super Bowl 48, when their ‘Legion of Boom’ defense thrashed Peyton Manning and the Broncos offense in a 43-8 rout.

Seattle also played in Super Bowl 49. The Seahawks lost to the New England Patriots when Malcolm Butler famously intercepted Russell Wilson on the goal-line in the final minute of a 28-24 Patriots win.

49ers forced to punt on first drive of second half

The 49ers weren’t able to mount back-to-back scoring drives. Brock Purdy and Co. managed to get themselves out from being backed up after Brian Robinson struggled to handle a kickoff, but San Francisco couldn’t get to midfield before Seattle found a way to stop it.

Rashid Shaheed was able to return Thomas Morstead’s 44-yard punt 20 yards to give Seattle solid field position as it looks to build on its 10-3 lead.

49ers vs. Seahawks score at halftime: Seattle leading 10-3

The Seahawks have just a seven-point lead, but they have dominated the 49ers in the first half. Seattle has outgained San Francisco 196-69 and has run 34 plays compared to the 49ers’ 20, as Sam Darnold and the offense have performed well.

Seattle’s offense has been balanced. Darnold has taken a couple of sacks but has otherwise been efficient, completing 10 of 13 passes for 98 yards over the first 30 minutes. The Seahawks have also run the ball well, as Zach Charbonnet and Kenneth Walker have combined for 110 yards on 18 carries while Charbonnet scored the lone touchdown of the first half on a 27-yard run.

The 49ers will need to get Christian McCaffrey more involved in the second half, as he had just six touches for 25 yards in the first half. Brock Purdy has matched Sam Darnold, completing 10 of his 13 passes, but has turned them into just 47 yards.

San Francisco will get the ball first coming out of halftime. Expect Kyle Shanahan to try to get the ball into the hands of his playmakers as the 49ers try to come from behind to win the NFC West.

49ers vs. Seahawks score update: Eddy Pineiro makes 48-yard field goal to get San Francisco on board

The 49ers will not be shut out in the first half. Brock Purdy made a nice throw on the run to convert a third-and-11 before San Francisco stalled out shortly thereafter. Pineiro was called on to attempt a 48-yard kick, and he was able to tuck it inside the right upright.

The 49ers now trail by just one possession and will look to stop the Seahawks with a minute remaining in the first half.

Seahawks 10, 49ers 3

Where did Sam Darnold go to college?

Darnold went to USC. He spent three seasons with the Trojans and was a two-year starter for them. He completed 64.9% of his passes for 7,229 yards, 57 touchdowns and 22 interceptions across 27 games with the team.

Darnold’s performance was good enough to make him a first-round talent. The New York Jets selected him with the No. 3 overall pick in the 2018 NFL Draft.

49ers vs. Seahawks score update: Jason Myers makes 45-yard field goal to extend Seattle lead

After missing from 47 yards earlier in the quarter, Myers was able to make a 45-yard kick after Seattle’s drive stalled out. That gave the Seahawks a two-possession lead for the first time in the game.

The Seahawks have dominated the 49ers thus far, outgaining them 193-39 and running 32 plays compared to San Francisco’s 12. The 49ers will now have 5:19 remaining in the first half to try to get on the board against Mike Macdonald’s stingy defense.

Seahawks 10, 49ers 0

Who is the Seahawks coach?

Mike Macdonald is the Seahawks’ head coach. He is in his second season with Seattle and has posted a 23-10 record across his first 33 games with the franchise.

Macdonald cut his teeth with the Ravens and turned Baltimore’s stop unit into one of the NFL’s best during his two seasons as the team’s defensive coordinator. The 38-year-old has enjoyed similar success with the Seahawks and is one of the youngest head coaches in the league.

Jason Myers misses 47-yard field goal, snapping streak of 18 straight makes

The Seahawks were once again able to get into scoring range against the 49ers’ defense. However, Myers wasn’t able to make the 47-yard kick, as it drifted right of the upright.

The Seahawks remain ahead 7-0, but Seattle has to be kicking itself after coming up empty in scoring range twice in the first half of the de facto NFC West championship game.

What is Sam Darnold’s salary?

Darnold has a base salary of just $5.3 million in 2025, but that’s because he got a $32 million signing bonus for his first season with the Seahawks.

The better measure of Darnold’s worth? He signed a three-year, $100.5 million contract with the Seahawks in free agency. That gives him an average annual value (AAV) of $33.5 million, which ranks 18th among NFL quarterbacks.

49ers vs. Seahawks score update: Seattle strikes first with 27-yard Zach Charbonnet TD

The Seahawks are on the board first in the battle for the NFC West. Sam Darnold handed the ball to Charbonnet on a third-and-2, and the third-year back found space after cutting to the left side of the line. He was able to just get around the last defender and scamper into the end zone for a touchdown.

Jason Myers makes the extra point, and Seattle is leading by seven in the first quarter.

Seahawks 7, 49ers 0

Seahawks fail to convert fourth-and-goal on first drive of game

Seattle did something it doesn’t often do to open its Week 18 game against San Francisco. The Seahawks went for it on fourth-and-goal from the 4-yard line, allowing Sam Darnold to try to throw a touchdown on the opening drive of the game.

Darnold couldn’t connect with Cooper Kupp, and as a result, Seattle had nothing to show for its game-opening drive, which spanned 12 plays, 66 yards and 7:37 of game time.

What happens if 49ers win today?

A 49ers win over the Seahawks in Week 18 would allow San Francisco to win the NFC West and clinch the No. 1 overall seed in the NFC.

Conversely, a loss would guarantee the 49ers would remain a wild-card team. They would earn either the No. 5 or No. 6 seed, pending the result of the Rams vs. Cardinals game on Sunday.

How to watch the 49ers vs. Seahawks game?

  • TV channel: ABC, ESPN

The 49ers-Seahawks matchup on Saturday will be broadcast nationally on ABC and ESPN. Joe Buck (play-by-play) and Troy Aikman (analyst) will be on the call.

What time is the 49ers vs. Seahawks game?

  • Start time: 8 p.m. ET

The 49ers and Seahawks are scheduled for kickoff at 8 p.m. ET on Saturday night.

49ers vs. Seahawks stream

  • Live stream: ESPN+, fuboTV, NFL+

The 49ers-Seahawks game will stream on ESPN+ and fuboTV as well as the league’s streaming service, NFL+.

Catch NFL action with a fubo subscription

49ers vs. Seahawks prediction, picks

Here’s what the experts at USA TODAY think will happen in the 49ers vs. Seahawks matchup in Week 18:

  • Jarrett Bell: 49ers, 24-20
  • Nick Brinkerhoff: 49ers, 38-31
  • Chris Bumbaca: 49ers, 29-28
  • Nate Davis: Seahawks, 30-24
  • Tyler Dragon: Seahawks, 28-25
  • Mike Middlehurst-Schwartz: 49ers, 31-28

49ers vs. Seahawks odds, moneyline, O/U

Provided by BetMGM Sportsbook; access USA TODAY Sports Scores and Sports Betting Odds hub for a full list. Lines last updated Friday at 9:30 p.m. ET.

  • Over/Under (O/U): 48 (O: -110 | U: -110)
  • Moneyline (ML): Seahawks -135 (Bet $135 to win $100) | 49ers +115 (Bet $100 to win $115)
  • Against the spread (ATS): Seahawks -2.5 (-110) | 49ers +2.5 (-110)

NFC West standings

The Seahawks lead the NFC West standings entering the season finale. Here’s a full look at the division:

  1. Seattle Seahawks (13-3, 3-2 NFC West)
  2. San Francisco 49ers (12-4, 4-1)
  3. Los Angeles Rams (11-5, 3-2)
  4. Arizona Cardinals (3-13, 0-5)

NFC playoff picture: NFC bracket

  1. Seattle Seahawks (13-3, NFC West leaders)*
  2. Chicago Bears (11-5, NFC North winners)*
  3. Philadelphia Eagles (11-5, NFC East winners)*
  4. Tampa Bay Buccaneers (8-9, NFC South leaders)
  5. San Francisco 49ers (12-4, wild card No. 1)*
  6. Los Angeles Rams (11-5, wild card No. 2)*
  7. Green Bay Packers (9-6-1, wild card No. 3)*

In the hunt:Carolina Panthers (8-9)

49ers uniforms today vs. Seahawks

For the first time, the Niners will be in monochrome black as they also wear black helmets − which they’ve never had since joining the NFL in 1950. The dome is matte black, adorned with a pair of red stripes down the centerline, the familiar interlocking ‘SF’ logo and gold-coated facemasks intended to sparkle under Levi’s Stadium’s lights. ‘Faithful’ is scripted on the headgear’s back bumper.

The red jersey numbers are outlined in gold and presented in a saloon-like font derived by the franchise’s classic wordmark. A cursive ‘Faithful’ is etched above the numbers on the chest, enabling the franchise to express its ‘steadfast appreciation for the unwavering dedication of 49ers fans across the globe.’ “Faithful to the Bay,’ the club motto, is stitched inside the collar. Per Nike, the look is ‘inspired by the Gold Rush era that once defined San Francisco.’ – Nate Davis

49ers inactives today vs. Seahawks

  • LT Trent Williams (hamstring)
  • WR Ricky Pearsall (knee)
  • RB Isaac Guerendo
  • DE Robert Beal Jr.
  • DT Kevin Givens
  • LB Curtis Robinson
  • CB Chase Lucas

Seahawks inactives today vs. 49ers

  • QB Jalen Milroe (Emergency QB3)
  • OT Charles Cross (hamstring)
  • S Coby Bryant (knee)
  • OL Bryce Cabeldue
  • OL Mason Richman
  • LB Jared Ivey
  • TE Nick Kallerup

Is George Kittle playing today vs. the Seahawks?

Yes, the All-Pro is not listed among the 49ers’ inactives ahead of tonight’s kickoff. He is expected to return to the lineup after missing Week 17 with a hamstring injury.

NFL playoff picture: AFC Bracket

  1. Denver Broncos (13-3, AFC West winners)*
  2. New England Patriots (13-3, AFC East winners)*
  3. Jacksonville Jaguars (12-4, AFC South leaders)*
  4. Pittsburgh Steelers (9-7, AFC North leaders)
  5. Houston Texans (11-5, wild card No. 1)*
  6. Los Angeles Chargers (11-5, wild card No. 3)*
  7. Buffalo Bills (11-5, wild card No. 3)*

In the hunt: Baltimore Ravens (8-8)

An asterisk (*) denotes teams that have clinched

2026 NFL Draft order

Here’s a look at the latest draft order for the first round with strength of schedule information via Tankathon:

  1. Las Vegas Raiders: 2-14; .542 SOS
  2. New York Giants: 3-13 record; .531 strength of schedule
  3. New York Jets: 3-13, .548 SOS
  4. Tennessee Titans: 3-13, .576 SOS
  5. Arizona Cardinals: 3-13; .580 SOS
  6. Cleveland Browns: 4-12, .491 SOS
  7. Washington Commanders: 4-12; .507 SOS
  8. New Orleans Saints: 6-10; .491 SOS
  9. Kansas City Chiefs: 6-10; .509 SOS
  10. Cincinnati Bengals: 6-10; .517 SOS
  11. Atlanta Falcons (pick belongs to Los Angeles Rams): 6-9; .498 SOS
  12. Miami Dolphins: 7-9; .483 SOS
  13. Tampa Bay Buccaneers: 7-9, .532 SOS
  14. Dallas Cowboys: 7-8-1; .436 SOS
  15. Detroit Lions: 8-8; .493 SOS
  16. Baltimore Ravens: 8-8; .504 SOS
  17. Minnesota Vikings: 8-8; .515 SOS
  18. Indianapolis Colts (pick belongs to Jets): 8-8; .537 SOS
  19. Carolina Panthers: 8-8, .520 SOS
  20. Pittsburgh Steelers: 9-7; .509 SOS
  21. Green Bay Packers (pick belongs to Cowboys): 9-6-1; .480 SOS
  22. Los Angeles Chargers: 11-5; .461 SOS
  23. Philadelphia Eagles: 11-5; .467 SOS
  24. Buffalo Bills: 11-5, .472 SOS
  25. Chicago Bears: 11-5; .454 SOS
  26. Houston Texans: 11-5; .528 SOS
  27. Los Angeles Rams: 11-4, .531 SOS
  28. Jacksonville Jaguars (pick belongs to Browns): 12-4; .487 SOS
  29. San Francisco 49ers: 12-4, .494 SOS
  30. New England Patriots: 13-3; .384 SOS
  31. Denver Broncos: 13-3; .426 SOS
  32. Seattle Seahawks: 13-3; .498 SOS

Is there a ManningCast for 49ers-Seahawks game?

Yes, there will be a ManningCast tonight. The Manning brothers return on the alt-cast in Week 18.

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This post appeared first on USA TODAY

During the second period between the Toronto Maple Leafs and the New York Islanders, Leafs captain Auston Matthews scored two goals.

Both his tallies have a place in Maple Leafs history as his first goal equalled Mats Sundin’s 420 goals in the Blue and White. Later in the period, Matthews fired home a one-timer to take sole possession of first place on the franchise’s all-time goal list.

All of his teammates cleared the bench to congratulate him on the milestone.

His one-timer was set up by Bobby McMann, and Max Domi provided the crucial secondary helper with a puck battle at the blue line to keep the puck alive. Matthews’ two goals gave the Leafs a 2-1 lead going into the third period.

Matthews’ latest goal was his 20th of the campaign. That puts him on pace to score around 43 goals, which is 10 more than what he recorded last season. 

There’s a little more to the story of his offensive production. Matthews wasn’t at his best to start this season, but he’s been red-hot as of late. In his past four games, the 28-year-old center has six goals and 10 points.

In 317 fewer games than Sundin, Matthews now has the most goals by any Maple Leaf. With 421 goals, Matthews has 760 career points in 664 NHL games. 

Following Matthews’ record-breaking goal, Sundin left a video message, congratulating him on the historic milestone.

‘What a treat for all Maple Leafs fans, around the world, to have a player like yourself,’ Sundin said in the video.

In the points department, Matthews still has to surpass four legendary Maple Leafs to own that title. That includes Borje Salming, Dave Keon, Darryl Sittler and Sundin.

For action-packed issues, access to the entire magazine archive and a free issue, subscribe to The Hockey News at THN.com/free. Get the latest news and trending stories by subscribing to our newsletter here. And share your thoughts by commenting below the article on THN.com or creating your own post in our community forum.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY