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Major League Baseball’s 2025 winter meetings are underway with the baseball world descending on Florida to (hopefully) make some deals and lay the groundwork for moves in the weeks to come.

Outfielder Kyle Tucker is considered the winter’s top free agent, with big bats Alex Bregman, Kyle Schwarber and Pete Alonso also on the market. Need pitching? Left-handed starters Framber Valdez and Ranger Suarez are available, as well as closer Edwin Diaz.

The Detroit Tigers probably won’t trade Cy Young winner Tarik Skubal, but there’s plenty of intrigue with the ace entering his final year before hitting free agency.

Here’s a look at some of Monday’s happenings:

CJ Abrams, MacKenzie Gore rumors for Nationals

ORLANDO, FL — The Nationals have aggressively been engaged in trade talks with teams involving All-Star pitcher MacKenzie Gore and shortstop CJ Abrams, with two general managers saying Monday morning that they now fully expect the two players to be traded.

Paul Toboni, the Nationals new president of baseball operations, informed teams weeks ago that they would listen to offers and after receiving heavy interest, now appear much more willing to part with the two players.

Teams, after seeing the high price for pitching on the free-agent market, have reached out to Washington in hopes to acquire Gore. The left-hander. 26, went 5-15 with a 4.17 ERA, striking out 185 batters in 159⅔ innings. He is under team control for two more years.

– Bob Nightengale

MLB winter meetings 2025: Five teams to watch

The winters meetings aren’t a hard deadline to add or subtract personnel, and many bold-faced names will loiter on the market, perhaps into the new year.

But proximity can certainly breed activity. With that, we examine five teams who could – or should – shake things up this week:

  • Boston Red Sox
  • Baltimore Orioles, 
  • Toronto Blue Jays 
  • Arizona Diamondbacks
  • Detroit Tigers

– Gabe Lacques

Report: Diamondbacks agree to deal with SP Mike Soroka

Free agent right-hander Mike Soroka has agreed to a one-year deal with the Arizona Diamondbacks, ESPN is reporting.

Soroka began last season with the Washington Nationals before being traded to the Chicago Cubs at the deadline. He finished the season with a combined record of 3-8 with a 4.52 ERA over 89 2/3 innings (17 starts). He spend a significant portion of the season on the injured list with a shoulder issue, but returned late in the season as a reliever.

Tigers eyeing free agent Brad Keller as starter

Remember when the Detroit Tigers tried to convert right-hander Ryan Helsley from reliever to starter, only for him to stay in the bullpen by signing a two-year, $28 million contract with the Baltimore Orioles?

Here we go again.

The Tigers are interested in free-agent right-hander Brad Keller as a starter after his successful 2025 season in the Chicago Cubs bullpen, according to a person with knowledge of the situation who spoke on condition of anonymity because the situation is still developing. The 30-year-old is believed to be willing pitch as either a starter or reliever, but the Tigers are talking to him about returning to the rotation.

Evan Petzold, Detroit Free Press

Yankees hot stove rumors for baseball winter meetings

“You never know,’’ Yankees GM Brian Cashman said of finding trade or free agent matches at these meetings. “It’s that time of year, so you hope you run into some things.’’

That said, “I don’t think there’s as deep of a need of a lot of things as there were last year,’’ said Cashman, referencing the pivots after losing free agent Juan Soto to the Mets.

“But there’s things we’re obviously trying to do,’’ Cashman said of acquisitions big and small.

Any larger scale deals by the Yanks might be via trade, due to owner Hal Steinbrenner’s “ideal’’ of a payroll just south of the final luxury tax threshold.

– Pete Caldera, NorthJersey.com

Kyle Schwarber the center of attention in Orlando

Now that closer Emilio Pagan is back in the fold for the Cincinnati Reds, all eyes turn to Kyle Schwarber as the Reds and the rest of MLB head to Florida for the winter meetings.

Team sources say the Reds’ long-rumored pursuit of the star slugger from Middletown remains serious heading into the industry’s annual convention – when many in the game believe the robust market for Schwarber should start to crystallize.

The favorite to land this year’s National League MVP runner-up still is considered to be his own Philadelphia Phillies, who have expressed strong interest in bringing him back even as reports suggest they’re slow-playing the process as his market becomes more defined.

The Mets, supposedly the Orioles, Blue Jays and Red Sox, and allegedly even the Pirates have been linked to Schwarber, too.

– Gordon Wittenmyer, Cincinnati Enquirer

Yankees’ Brian Cashman pushes back on Sonny Gray

Former Yankees pitcher Sonny Gray may not have enjoyed pitching in New York, but team GM Brian Cashman said Sunday night the now division-rival never let him know that was the case until it was too late. Speaking to reporters Sunday night after arriving at the Winter Meetings, Cashman said Gray didn’t voice his displeasure until after the 2018 trade deadline.

Accroding to Cashman, Gray admitted his agent encouraged him to stay silent about his dislike for New York when the Yankees acquired him in 2017 so that it would improve his value as a free agent.

‘I never wanted to go there in the first place,’ Gray said in his introductory press conference on Dec. 2 after the Boston Red Sox acquired him from the St. Louis Cardinals.

Gray had a rocky time with the Yanks, going 15-16 with a 4.81 ERA before they traded him to the Cincinnati Reds following the 2018 season. After Gray came clean about his true feelings, Cashman said he told the pitcher, ‘Nothing I can do about it now. I wish you’d told me beforehand. I wish we knew this before we ever tried to acquire you.’

Mets rumors: Will New York make moves at winter meetings?

A season ago at the Major League Baseball’s Winter Meetings, the Mets grabbed a stranglehold on the attention when they landed Juan Soto one night into the proceedings on the richest contract in sports. It was a massive swing by the Mets front office – one that only netted soft contact during Soto’s first season in Flushing as the team fell shy of the postseason.

The Mets have already made waves early in the offseason, trading Brandon Nimmo and bringing in Marcus Semien. Last week, they signed reliever Devin Williams to a three-year, $51 million contract to plug in one hole in the bullpen.

But the futures of franchise favorites Pete Alonso and Edwin Diaz still linger at the top of mind for Mets fans. After last season’s disappointment, there is a need to bolster the top of the starting rotation — either via a signing or trade — and Nimmo’s exit opens up a second gap in the outfield that needs to be filled.

– Andrew Treddenick, NorthJersey.com

Jeff Kent voted into Hall of Fame by contemporary era committee

ORLANDO, FL — Every San Francisco Giants fan knew the day would eventually arrive that their legendary slugger would be elected into Baseball’s Hall of Fame.

Who would have ever imagined second baseman Jeff Kent would be the one to enter Cooperstown while Barry Bonds, baseball’s all-time home run king, was shut out again.

Kent, whose 377 home runs are the most by a primary second baseman in baseball history, received 14 of the 16 votes by the contemporary era committee and was the only player elected on Sunday, Dec. 7. Kent, who received 46.5% of the votes in his final year on the Baseball Writers Association of America ballot in 2023, needed 12 votes (75%) to be elected.

– Bob Nightengale, USA TODAY Sports

MLB trade rumors on top 10 targets

  1. Tarik Skubal, Detroit Tigers
  2. Freddy Peralta, Milwaukee Brewers
  3. Ketel Marte, Arizona Diamondbacks
  4. Steven Kwan, Cleveland Guardians
  5. Joe Ryan, Minnesota Twins
  6. MacKenzie Gore, Washington Nationals
  7. Brandon Lowe, Tampa Bay Rays
  8. Jarren Duran, Boston Red Sox
  9. Brendan Donovan, St. Louis Cardinals
  10. Luis Severino, Athletics

Yankees rumors: Pitchers for Bombers to target

There’s an acute need to improve the Yankees’ setup relief, but they’re likelier to find relievers via trade – as they did with Devin Williams and Fernando Cruz last winter. Bidding on big, free agent bullpen arms – led this time by Edwin Diaz – hasn’t been a Yankee trait in recent years, and they’re also likely to see Luke Weaver follow Williams (Mets) to another club.

Steinbrenner’s stated satisfaction with his rotation doesn’t rhyme with a pursuit of big-name starters, a group that includes Japan’s Tatsuya Imai.

Last year, Max Fried ($218 million) made it a trio of expensive, pinstriped free agent starters, joining Gerrit Cole ($324 million) and Carlos Rodon ($162 million). But Cole, Rodon and Clarke Schmidt will start the season on the injured list, and there’s incentive to add a one-year veteran option – perhaps inviting Justin Verlander and Max Scherzer into the conversation.

Right-handers Chris Bassitt, Merrill Kelly and Nick Martinez are potential short-term options, while Michael King – reluctantly traded in the Juan Soto deal – is a far more expensive but worthy target.

– Pete Caldera, NorthJersey.com

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

ORLANDO, Fla. – It was a side of Jeff Kent that no one had really seen Monday afternoon, struggling to speak, breaking down several times, and overcome with emotion at his Hall of Fame press conference.

He broke down at the mention of the San Francisco Giants’ greats inducted into the Hall of Fame before him. He choked up knowing this was the final step of his baseball career. He was emotional talking about former San Francisco Giants general manager Brian Sabean taking the gamble and trading Matt Williams for him, and how former Giants manager Dusty Baker helped make him a Hall of Fame player.

Yet, the most poignant moment was when he was asked about his son, Kaeden, a minor leaguer in the New York Yankees organization, with his voice cracking several times while trying to speak.

“He always thought he could be better than me,’’ Kent said, “because he’d always say, “Dad, you’re not in the Hall of Fame.’ So, after I got the call, I hugged him and said, ‘Good luck.’’’

Kent’s press conference was attended by virtually the entire Giants’ front office, which will include three more Giants’ Hall of Famers in two years. Catcher Buster Posey, president of baseball operations, is a virtual lock to be a first-ballot Hall of Famer along with former Giants managers Bruce Bochy and Dusty Baker.

Jeff Kent, an old school player heads to the Hall of Fame

Kent’s impact of his six years in the Giants organization will reverberate forever, not simply because he hit more homers and drove in more runs than any second baseman in the modern era, but also for the way he played the game of baseball.

“I texted him this morning,’’ Posey told USA TODAY Sports, “and told him, ‘You were one of my favorite guys to watch when I was growing up.’ And then to see how emotional it was, how much this meant to him, was really special. I think that’s the coolest part about our game is the impact we can have as players on fans and their families. So then when you get to honor somebody like this, and see just how important the game was to him for so long, it’s pretty fun to see.’’

Bochy, who won three World Series championships with Posey as his catcher, never managed Kent in San Francisco, but grew to admire him from across the field for simply the way he played the game.

“He was old school, real old school,’’ Bochy said. “You didn’t see any fraternization with other players. He just played the game hard. And he played the game right.

“What we saw today, with all of those emotions coming out, you never saw that on the field. All you saw was his fierce competitiveness. He always played the game hard. He looked for any way to beat you.’’

Hall of Fame shortstop Alan Trammell, who was on the contemporary era committee that voted Kent into the Hall of Fame, says Kent reminded him of former teammate Kirk Gibson. He could be surly. He could be crude. You may hate him as an opponent, but you loved him as a teammate.

And no matter how you felt about him, you respected him.

“I remember just watching him run on the field before games,’’ Trammell said. “Guys would run across the infield, and meet and talk to other players. Not Kent. He would always go further down away from everyone. You know why? He didn’t want to fraternize. He was like Gibson or Jack Morris. You don’t mess with those guys before games.

“I don’t know what it really means, but it’s just a different breed, and that was Jeff Kent. He was a hell of a player who deserved this. He just exemplified how you play the game.’’

Said Kent: “It was a cliché, but I didn’t want people to get in my house. I didn’t want people to get in my brain because I wanted to focus on the game. I think a lot of times throughout my career people thought I took the game too serious at times. I didn’t have too much fun on the field. …

“But I played the game with passion. I played with integrity. I loved every minute that I played the game.’’

Kent still regrets never having won a World Series championship, saying the ultimate joy would have been simply to sit on the floor in a dirty uniform, soaked with champagne, and experiencing the feeling of being on the greatest team of the year.

“That has to be the ultimate fun,’’ Kent said. “I never got to experience that, and I miss that. But along the way, did I have fun? Yeah, but I still feel a little incomplete.

“But today, there’s no more. That’s it.’’

Follow Nightengale on X: @Bnightengale

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The Cleveland Browns are no longer determining their quarterback outlook on a week-by-week basis.

‘He has constantly and consistently gotten better in each one of these games and how he’s approached this game,’ Stefanski said of Sanders. ‘He’s been working very hard. So I feel good about where his development is heading. He knows there are always plays where he can be better and those type of things. But he’s very intentional about getting better each and every game he’s out there.’

The decision comes one day after Sanders threw for 364 yards and totaled four touchdowns in a 31-29 loss to the Tennessee Titans. In the fifth-round pick’s third start, he became the only rookie quarterback other than Joe Burrow to record at least 350 passing yards, three touchdown passes and a rushing score in a game in the Super Bowl era.

His third-quarter interception that led to the Titans’ go-ahead score loomed large in the contest, which ended on a sour note for Cleveland when a botched two-point conversion attempt – which Sanders was not on the field for – ended the team’s comeback bid.

‘He fought throughout the game, which we knew he would,’ Stefanski said on Sunday of Sanders’ performance. ‘Obviously with any young player, there’s going to be ups and downs, and I though there were some really, really, really good moments. He’ll keep learning from some of the plays he wants back, but (there were) some really good moments.’

Stefanski had previously not committed to starting Sanders for the remainder of the regular season. The Browns first turned to the quarterback when fellow rookie Dillon Gabriel landed in the concussion protocol after exiting a Week 11 loss to the Baltimore Ravens.

Stefanski at first said that Gabriel would reclaim his starting role once healthy but reversed course after the Browns won in Sanders’ first start against the Las Vegas Raiders.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The NFL is flexing its first prime-time game of the 2025 season.

The league announced Monday that it is rescheduling the originally slotted ‘Sunday Night Football’ game for Week 16, the Cincinnati Bengals’ visit to the Miami Dolphins on Dec. 21, into that day’s 1 p.m. ET window, where it will be televised by CBS.

Moving into the league’s marquee weekly window on NBC will be the New England Patriots and Baltimore Ravens, their game at M&T Bank Stadium sure to have much broader playoff implications. The Bengals and Dolphins are still mathematically alive, though barely so with matching 6-7 records.

The Patriots currently lead the AFC East with an 11-2 record and are virtually tied atop the conference with the Denver Broncos, though the AFC West leaders currently hold the tiebreaker. Though 6-7, the Ravens are one game back of the Pittsburgh Steelers for the AFC North lead.

The only games the NFL had shifted so far this season were within the Sunday afternoon window.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The Florida State women’s college soccer team is the national champion once again.

No. 3 Florida State defeated No. 1 overall seed Stanford 1-0 in the Women’s College Cup on Monday at CPKC Stadium in Kansas City, Missouri. It is the Seminoles’ third national title in five years and fifth overall.

‘I’m honestly just so grateful. My team worked so hard and I’m so glad we got the outcome (we wanted), because we really went through it this game,’ Florida State sophomore Wrianna Hudson, who socred the game-winner in the 87th minute, said.

Florida State weathered an offensive attack from Stanford, who entered Monday’s championship with a nation-best 96 goals, 25 more goals than the next closest team. But the Cardinal were shut out when it mattered most. Stanford had 18 shots and nine shots on goal, but Florida State freshman goalkeeper Kate Ockene recorded a career-high nine saves for the clean sheet.

Florida State head coach Brian Pensky called Ockene ‘the MVP of this match. She kept us in the game. That’s what great goalkeepers have to do.’

USA TODAY Sports provided live updates of the Women’s College Cup final between Florida State and Stanford. Catch up below:

Women’s College Cup final live score

The section will be updated throughout the game.

Women’s College Cup final live updates

87′ – FSU 1, Stanford 0

Florida State is on the board. Wrianna Hudson, Florida State’s leading scorer this season, put the Seminoles in the lead with less than four minutes remaining in the championship match. The goal came off a corner kick.

85′ – FSU 0, Stanford 0

Florida State’s Jordynn Dudley was issued a yellow card for charging the ref after a non-call.

70′ – FSU 0, Stanford 0

Stanford’s Jasmine Aikey drew a foul from Florida State’s Janet Okeke and earned a free kick in the 70th minute. Aikey has a direct goal off a free kick in each of the last two matches, including the game-winning goal against Duke in the semifinal. Aikey unleashed another direct shot at the goal on the free kick, but it was saved by the Seminoles’ Kate Ockene. It marked Ockene’s eighth save of the match.

63′ – FSU 0, Stanford 0

After not recording any shots on goal in the first half, Florida State opened the second half more aggressive and registered back-to-back shots on goal in the 63rd and 65th minute. Stanford goalkeeper Caroline Birkel saved both shots from Kameron Simmonds and Jordynn Dudley, respectively.

Halftime – FSU 0, Stanford 0

The teams are scoreless heading into halftime. Stanford is outshooting Florida State 11-4, with six shots on the goal, but Florida State goalkeeper Kate Ockene’s six saves have kept Florida State in the game. Ockene’s six saves through the first half are a season-high for the freshman keeper.

Stanford head coach Paul Ratcliffe called for his team to have ‘more composure on the ball.’

34′ – FSU 0, Stanford 0

Stanford’s Sophie Murdock was assessed a yellow card on a hard foul on Florida State’s Jordynn Dudley. Florida State wasn’t able to capitalize on the free kick.

15′ – FSU 0, Stanford 0

Taylor Suarez got a good look at the goal, but her shot sailed high over the crossbar.

9′ – FSU 0, Stanford 0

Florida State goalkeeper Kate Ockene has been busy. Stanford came out the gate hot against Florida State, recording five shots and four shots on goal in the first nine minutes of the College Cup championship match. The best attempt came from a header from Eleanor Klinger at the 8-minute mark, but Ockene made one of four saves to keep Stanford off the board. The Cardinal are used to scoring early. Stanford has scored in the first 15 minutes in 17 of 24 games this season, including every game of the 2025 NCAA Tournament.

Florida State has one shot against Stanford.

Florida State women’s soccer starting lineup

Stanford women’s soccer starting lineup

Stanford invites Taylor Swift to Women’s College Cup

Musician Taylor Swift is familiar with Kansas City. She’s been a staple at Arrowhead Stadium over the years to cheer on her fiancé, Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce. The Cardinal extended an invite for Swift to come out and watch the Women’s College Cup championship match at CPKC Stadium in Kansas City on Monday. Will Swift make an appearance?

What time does Women’s College Cup final start?

  • Date: Monday, Dec. 8
  • Time: 7 p.m. ET ∣ 6 p.m. CT
  • Where: CPKC Stadium (Kansas City, Missouri)

Florida and Stanford will kick off at 7 p.m. ET on Monday, Dec. 8 from CPKC Stadium in Kansas City, Missouri in the Women’s College Cup final.

What TV channel is Women’s College Cup final on today?

  • TV channel: ESPNU
  • Livestream: Fubo (free trial)

The Women’s College Cup final between Florida State and Stanford will be broadcast on ESPNU. Streaming options for the game include Fubo, which carries ESPNU and offers a free trial to new subscribers.

Women’s College Cup final predictions

Craig Meyer, USA TODAY Sports: Florida State 2, Stanford 1

The Seminoles lost the previous matchup between the teams this season, but largely controlled the game, nearly doubling the Cardinal in shots (16 to nine). This time around, they’ll get a more favorable result for their third title in the past five years.

The USA TODAY app gets you to the heart of the news — fastDownload for award-winning coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, the eNewspaper and more.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Clem Chambers, CEO of aNewFN.com, shares his outlook for silver in 2026.

In his view, the white metal could rise as high as US$150 to US$160 per ounce.

Chambers also discusses his other areas of focus right now, including gold, as well as the defense industry and tech stocks like Intel (NASDAQ:INTC).

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

This post appeared first on investingnews.com

(TheNewswire)

Vancouver, British Columbia, December 8, 2025 TheNewswire – Prismo Metals Inc. (‘ Prismo ‘ or the ‘ Company ‘) (CSE: PRIZ,OTC:PMOMF) (OTCQB: PMOMF) is pleased to announce that it has continued out of the jurisdiction of Canada under the Canada Business Corporations Act into the provincial jurisdiction of British Columbia under the Business Corporations Act (British Columbia) (the ‘ BCBCA ‘). Shareholders approved the continuance at the Company’s annual general and special meeting of shareholders held on October 2, 2025.

In connection with the continuance, the Company has replaced its articles and bylaws with new notice of articles and articles, respectively, under the BCBCA. The CUSIP / ISIN numbers for the Company’s common shares and the stock symbol for the Company’s common shares remain unchanged.

About Prismo Metals Inc.

Prismo (CSE: PRIZ,OTC:PMOMF) is mining exploration company focused on advancing its Silver King, Ripsey and Hot Breccia projects in Arizona and its Palos Verdes silver project in Mexico.

Please follow @ PrismoMetals on , , , Instagram , and

Prismo Metals Inc.

1100 – 1111 Melville St., Vancouver, British Columbia V6E 3V6

Phone: (416) 361-0737

Contact:

Alain Lambert, Chief Executive Officer alain.lambert@prismometals.com

Gordon Aldcorn, President gordon.aldcorn@prismometals.com

Neither the Canadian Securities Exchange nor its Market Regulator (as that term is defined in the policies of the Canadian Securities Exchange) accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this release.

Copyright (c) 2025 TheNewswire – All rights reserved.

News Provided by TheNewsWire via QuoteMedia

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Notre Dame football was controversially left out of the College Football Playoff bracket on Sunday, Dec. 7. In turn, the Fighting Irish’s season is over.

Notre Dame, despite finishing with a 10-2 record, four wins above bowl eligibility, announced it is declining a bowl invitation a few hours after Alabama and Miami took the final two at-large bids over the Fighting Irish.

‘As a team, we’ve decided to withdraw our name from consideration for a bowl game following the 2025 season,’ a statement posted on the team’s social media account read. ‘We appreciate all the support from our families and fans, and we’re hoping to bring the 12th national title to South Bend in 2026.’

Notre Dame finished the season with 10 consecutive wins after starting 0-2 after matchups with Miami and Texas A&M, both of which made the CFP. Ultimately, the Fighting Irish’s head-to-head loss was the deciding factor.

Notre Dame was ranked No. 10 in the final rankings reveal prior to the bracket being set on Tuesday, Dec. 2. The Fighting Irish were No. 9, one spot ahead of Alabama, for multiple weeks before the committee swapped the two teams on Dec. 2.

Miami rose from No. 11 to No. 10 despite not playing in the ACC Championship game. The Hurricanes jumped No. 11 BYU, who lost in the Big 12 Conference Championship to No. 4 Texas Tech, and Notre Dame.

Iowa State and Kansas State declined bowl invites as well and were fined $500,000 by the Big 12. Both Big 12 programs lost their head coaches, though, after Matt Campbell left for Penn State and Chris Klieman retired.

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The clock is ticking – on the year and the 2025 NFL regular season.

It will soon be ticking at the 2026 NFL Draft, but who will own that top spot when the dust settles? There are only four weeks left after the Week 14 slate to determine the final order – at least until the inevitable trades shake it up even further.

Plenty of familiar teams headline the group again this time of year. The Tennessee Titans, New York Giants, New Orleans Saints, Las Vegas Raiders and Cleveland Browns all entered Week 14 in possession of a top-five pick. Will they be able to say the same after the week is over?

Here’s a look at the 2026 NFL Draft order as Week 14 results come in.

2026 NFL Draft order

Here’s a look at the updated first-round order as Week 14 results come in, according to Tankathon, which calculates strength of schedule differently from the NFL:

  1. New York Giants: 2-11 record; .534 strength of schedule
  2. Las Vegas Raiders 2-11; .548 SOS
  3. Tennessee Titans: 2-11; .573 SOS
  4. Cleveland Browns: 3-10; .486 SOS
  5. New Orleans Saints: 3-10; .498 SOS
  6. Washington Commanders: 3-10; .511 SOS
  7. New York Jets: 3-10; .541 SOS
  8. Arizona Cardinals: 3-10; .570 SOS
  9. Atlanta Falcons (pick belongs to Los Angeles Rams): 4-9; .502 SOS
  10. Cincinnati Bengals: 4-9; .523 SOS
  11. Minnesota Vikings: 5-8; .523 SOS
  12. Miami Dolphins: 6-7; .482 SOS
  13. Baltimore Ravens: 6-7; .509 SOS
  14. Kansas City Chiefs: 6-7; .511 SOS
  15. Dallas Cowboys: 6-6-1; .447 SOS
  16. Carolina Panthers: 7-6; .516 SOS
  17. Detroit Lions: 8-5; .498 SOS
  18. Indianapolis Colts (pick belongs to Jets): 8-5; .518 SOS
  19. Pittsburgh Steelers: 7-6; .511 SOS
  20. Tampa Bay Buccaneers: 7-6; .514 SOS
  21. Houston Texans: 8-5; .541 SOS
  22. Los Angeles Chargers: 8-4; .466 SOS
  23. Philadelphia Eagles: 8-4; .489 SOS
  24. Chicago Bears: 9-4; .448 SOS
  25. Buffalo Bills: 9-4; .468 SOS
  26. San Francisco 49ers: 9-4; .489 SOS
  27. Jacksonville Jaguars (pick belongs to Browns): 9-4; .495 SOS
  28. Green Bay Packers (pick belongs to Cowboys): 9-3-1; .475 SOS
  29. Seattle Seahawks: 10-3; .484 SOS
  30. New England Patriots: 11-2; .376 SOS
  31. Los Angeles Rams: 10-3; .518 SOS
  32. Denver Broncos: 11-2; .436 SOS

2026 NFL mock draft

This is how USA TODAY Sports’ Ayrton Ostly projected the top five picks in his latest mock draft:

  1. Tennessee Titans: LB/Edge Arvell Reese, Ohio State
  2. New York Giants: WR Jordyn Tyson, Arizona State
  3. New Orleans Saints: QB Fernando Mendoza, Indiana
  4. Las Vegas Raiders: QB Ty Simpson, Alabama
  5. Cleveland Browns: QB Dante Moore, Oregon
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