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  • The one reason you can’t completely rule out the Sixers for LeBron James

    The one reason you can’t completely rule out the Sixers for LeBron James

    Rich Paul said something the other day that is worth a little bit of reflection for anybody who rolls their eyes at the idea of LeBron James joining the Sixers.

    Paul, the NBA superagent who was essentially created by James and who also hosts a podcast alongside former ESPN personality Max Kellerman, claimed that the Knicks would have been James’ clear first choice had they not won an NBA title this season.

    “If the Knicks hadn’t have won, this wouldn’t even — there would be no board. He’d be going to the Knicks,” Paul said to Kellerman as he was breaking down James’ potential landing spots.

    The comment was both surprising in its bluntness and unsurprising in its conclusion. To anybody who had followed James’ career and psychologically profiled him from afar, it would have made perfect sense if he decided to go where he would be the biggest fish in the biggest pond and also have a chance to write a story that ended up near the top of the local history books.

    That probably sounds discouraging to anybody who had been holding out of picking Philadelphia from the list of 10-14 potential destinations Paul broke down for Kellerman. And let’s be clear, that’s probably the correct interpretation. Hey, we all love Philly. But it’s generally not a place for people who dream of places like New York, Los Angeles, and Miami.

    Except, there’s another way to interpret Paul’s comments, at least as it pertains to James’ psyche heading into his 24th season in the NBA. While it is impossible to overlook his clear affinity for the bright lights and big city, James also clearly cares deeply about his legacy and his place in the historical record. Neither the Clippers nor the Nets are on his list, after all. His desire for the Knicks would have been as much about the story as the setting. Not only would he have had a chance to become the first player to win four NBA titles with four different teams, he would have won each of them in a place where they meant something.

    Such motivation is perfectly reasonable. Inevitable, even. When a competitor spends two decades as the undisputed greatest player in his sport, he needs to find something else to compete against. For many of them, that something is history. James has accomplished more than almost all of the greatest of the greats, and thus needs to keep coming up with new historical challenges to overcome. Leading the Knicks to their first title in 50-plus years would have been the ultimate bucket list item. But Jalen Brunson did it first.

    The Sixers aren’t to Philly what the Knicks are to New York. As far as I know, Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce didn’t tour Xfinity Mobile Arena as a potential wedding venue. That being said, the Sixers do offer James a chance to do something novel. You can’t say that about many of his potential landing spots.

    What could James accomplish in Denver, Golden State or Boston? All have won championships within the last decade led by stars who’ve spent their entire careers with the organizations. Each has a significant edge over Philly if James’ goal is basketball nirvana. Playing alongside Steph Curry or Nikola Jokic or Jayson Tatum would be a hell of a lot of fun, and any of the three could arguably offer James a better chance at winning a title. But none of them offer him a chance to prove something one last time.

    In Miami and Cleveland, James has been there and done that. Miami would offer him a unique narrative symmetry along with a chance to play alongside Giannis Antetokounmpo. He went back to Cleveland and won a title with a totally different team from his first stint. Now, he can do the same in Miami. That’s almost as compelling as the prodigal son returning home to close out his career where his heart has always remained. The problem with both situations is the fit.

    Look, James would fit pretty much anywhere, even at 42 years old, which he’ll turn Dec. 30. He averaged 20.9 points, 7.2 assists, and 6.1 rebounds last season. His efficiency remains elite. He led his team to a first-round upset of the Rockets before getting swept by the Thunder. The question is whether he would enjoy playing basketball with James Harden in Cleveland.

    LeBron James averaged 20.9 points during the 2025-26 season.

    In Miami, the trio of LeBron, Giannis and Bam Adebayo might be too clunky to get it done given the Heat’s deficiencies in the backcourt and in overall depth. One can argue the Sixers with LeBron have a chance to be a much more enjoyable experience, and potentially much better team than Cleveland and Miami. Going home again comes with the risk of undoing some of the good feelings you carried with your initial departure. Does LeBron really want to risk ending his career in either city with disappointment?

    I’ll believe James is seriously considering joining the Sixers as soon as I see him shaking Mike Gansey’s hand in front of the cameras and fielding questions from reporters at the team’s practice facility in Camden. In the event he does not hold an introductory news conference this summer, I will believe he is joining the Sixers the moment I see him at training camp in a Sixers jersey. Even then, I might want to at least poke him with a finger to make sure my eyes do not deceive me.

    We’ve done this dance before, haven’t we? Once upon a time Ben Simmons was the Klutch Sports mentee and Joel Embiid was the rising superstar. It was only eight years ago that Josh Harris and Brett Brown climbed aboard the Starchaser Enterprise and flew out to California with the hope that they could sway James to sign with the Sixers. Somehow, they managed to express these hopes with a straight face. The result was little more than a needlessly expanded carbon footprint. The Sixers didn’t even get face time with James himself, and the four-time MVP wound up signing with the Lakers, as everybody had long expected.

    LeBron James and Tyrese Maxey are both members of Klutch Sports.

    At this point, there is little reason to assume that things will play out any differently. The one commonality between all three of James’ free agencies is that they’ve all involved a level of protracted drama that, in hindsight, seemed at least partially contrived. In all three instances, James wound up in a place that looked like the most obvious option, at least in hindsight. The first time he left Cleveland, and went to a place where he could build his own superteam in America’s premier locale for the young, rich and famous. His return to Cleveland both rebuilt and burnished his standing as a hometown legend. The Lakers are the Lakers.

    No offense to James, and no offense to Gansey or Bob Myers or Tyrese Maxey or whoever else thinks their personal connection to the King is strong enough to convince him to spend what could be the last season or seasons of his career in a city that offers a tiny fraction of the prestige or narrative value of several of the other potential destinations he is allegedly considering after opting out of his Lakers contract.

    I’m not suggesting that anybody on the Sixers side is deluding themselves, and I’m not suggesting that James or Paul is feeding those delusions in bad faith. I’m sure Paul would be thrilled to see James team up with Maxey, another one of his clients at Klutch Sports. I’m sure James loves Maxey, who is impossible not to love, and it’s more than possible that he feels a genuine connection to Gansey, a fellow former Ohio schoolboy star who began climbing up the ranks of the Cavaliers front office around the same time James returned to Cleveland after his four seasons with the Heat. I’m far from sure that any of that will matter in the end.

    The Heat and Cavaliers make the most sense from an end-of-career narrative standpoint. The Warriors and Nuggets make the most sense from a pure basketball bliss standpoint. For James to choose the Sixers, he’d need sentiment, basketball bliss, a setting to take a backseat to his desire to put his singular imprint on a new city and a new organization, and to potentially leave both of those entities better off after he is gone than they were before he arrived.

    As long as the Sixers can offer him that, you can’t rule him out.

  • Eagles newcomers ‘26: How soon can Eli Stowers make an impact at tight end?

    Eagles newcomers ‘26: How soon can Eli Stowers make an impact at tight end?

    With Eagles training camp drawing nearer, The Inquirer is taking a closer look at the more than three dozen new faces who are expected to report along with the rest of the team on July 28.

    Player: Eli Stowers

    Position: Tight end

    Age: 23

    Previous experience: Stowers, a second-round pick in this year’s draft, has been a tight end for only a few years. He entered college in 2021 as a quarterback, a top 20 recruit nationally at his position. But shoulder injuries forced him to find a new spot on the field. He was 6-foot-4, 215 pounds when he entered college; he’s now 240 pounds and scouts rave about his blend of size and speed. At Vanderbilt last season, Stowers, who won the 2025 William V. Campbell Trophy, otherwise known as the “Academic Heisman,” caught 62 passes for 769 yards and four touchdowns in 12 games.

    He was named the nation’s top tight end after leading all FBS tight ends in receiving yards per game (64.1). A year earlier, Stowers, a two-year starter at tight end, had 49 catches for 638 yards in 13 games with the Commodores.

    Path to a roster spot: Stowers’ spot on the team is secure. His role, however, is up in the air right now. It’s not worth overanalyzing organized team activities and mandatory minicamp workouts in May and June, but Stowers didn’t stand out during practices open to reporters.

    Nick Sirianni seems excited about the possibility of lining Stowers up in the slot and creating mismatches, but the tight end’s path to significant playing time in his rookie season includes becoming a better blocker. Dallas Goedert is the unquestioned No. 1 on the depth chart, and the Eagles brought in a blocking tight end, Johnny Mundt, to help fill in an area of weakness from last year. If Stowers proves to be an efficient route-runner who can get open and make plays, he’ll find himself on the field plenty.

    Fun fact: Stowers is a son of coaches. His father, Donald, played defensive back at New Mexico State and had a short professional football career before becoming a coach. His mother, Tina, played volleyball at Baylor and later became a coach. While recovering from shoulder surgery in 2021, Stowers learned how to play guitar.

    Eli Stowers has drawn comparisons to Travis Kelce.

    Quotable: “I’m going to throw a name out here and people may be [like], ‘Are you serious?’ I’m just speaking from a standpoint of his approach to the game, and when I watch him — Travis Kelce was a former quarterback,” former Eagles receiver Jordan Matthews, now a coach at Vanderbilt, said in April when asked for Stowers’ NFL comparison. “You can tell Travis Kelce runs routes like he understands the defensive structure.

    “He knows what the defense has given him, and so he knows how to find voids in zone. But then he’s also athletic enough to win vs. man.”

    Maximus Pulley (left) signed with the Eagles as a UDFA after three standout seasons at FCS school Wofford.

    Player: Maximus Pulley

    Position: Safety

    Age: 23

    Previous experience: Pulley’s rise has been remarkable. He had no scholarship offers out of high school, and Western Kentucky, where he began his college journey, didn’t even have a preferred walk-on spot for him. Pulley tried out for the team in the middle of the season in 2021 and joined the scout team. By the next year, he was a full-time special teamer. He hit the transfer portal after 2022 and landed at Wofford, a FCS program. He started every game with Wofford the next three seasons. Last year, Pulley led the team with five interceptions and returned two of them for touchdowns. He was a first-team All-American.

    At his pro day, Pulley ran a 4.45 40-yard dash and registered a vertical jump of 41½ inches.

    Path to a roster spot: Pulley is a long shot. The Eagles have at least some uncertainty at safety, but Pulley will be starting pretty low on the totem pole. Drew Mukuba is a lock to start, and the Eagles plan to use All-Pro nickel Cooper DeJean at safety in base. Right now, Marcus Epps is next in line to get on the field, with Michael Carter II also in the mix. The Eagles also used a seventh-round draft pick on a safety, Cole Wisniewski, and signed veteran special teams ace J.T. Gray. There’s room for an undrafted free agent like Pulley to make a push, but he’ll also be competing with fellow UDFA Kapena Gushiken — whom Vic Fangio has already name-dropped — for opportunities.

    Fun fact: Pulley, a sociology and anthropology major with a 3.64 GPA at Wofford, was named an academic All-American last season.

    Quotable: “Coming out high school, I wasn’t really good, but I was always the hardest worker,” Pulley said earlier this year on the Sam Acho podcast. “I feel like I’ve passed over so many people in the football world due to my work alone and my delusion. My mom loves the faith that I’ve always had, but the faith has come more recently. The delusion … I thought I was so much better than I was but I always trusted the work that I did.”

  • Breast cancer survivors from Whitemarsh Boat Club are rowing like ‘an athlete’

    Breast cancer survivors from Whitemarsh Boat Club are rowing like ‘an athlete’

    It was Valentine’s Day 2022 when Shannan McConnell found a rash near her neck that felt like a lump. Then, everything went awry. She was diagnosed with breast cancer and quickly began her treatment.

    There wasn’t much time to process what was happening to her, she says.

    “A lot of people say that when you’re going through the treatment, you’re just doing what you’re told and you just keep going,” said McConnell, age 46, from Media. “Then when you’re left alone, you’re like, someone has to tell me that really happened, it was so far out. … Will I ever be the same, will I ever be strong, will I ever have adventures?

    “We have 10 years of medication that changes your whole life, monthly injections, it’s ongoing. It kind of feels a little more daunting afterward.”

    McConnell is no longer in active treatment, and even though her doctors have told her, “you’re cancer free — you can put this behind you,” she can’t. Many cancer survivors can’t, she says. However, for the past three years, McConnell has found an outlet that has given her strength and community. It’s paddling in a boat with a group of women.

    WeCanRow-Philadelphia, a rowing program through Whitemarsh Boat Club for breast cancer survivors, came to Philly in 2018 and currently has 46 members.

    WeCanRow-Philadelphia is a rowing program through Whitemarsh Boat Club for breast cancer survivors. The Philly chapter is supported through the Survivor Rowing Network, which has more than 30 participating programs around the nation. It came to Philly in 2018 and currently has 46 members.

    “WeCanRow is everything about community, about mentoring, about encouraging, about connection, about hope,” said Susan Ryan, 61, of Eagleville. “It’s the on-water support group that isn’t.”

    While the program focuses on mental and physical healing for those treated for breast cancer, the participants are competitors, too. They’ve raced twice at the Head of the Charles Regatta in Boston and won both exhibition survivor events in 2024 and 2025.

    Now, they’re taking their oars across seas.

    From July 10 to 12, Whitemarsh Boat Club will have three boats compete at the Henley Masters Regatta in Henley-on-Thames, England. Members of WeCanRow-Philly will take part in an exhibition women’s coxed four. McConnell, Ryan, Jill Hunt, Bonnie Martin, and coxswain Marie Leonard will fill the exhibition boat.

    This will be the regatta’s first dedicated cancer survivor rowing event and marks a significant milestone as the first major event in the United Kingdom to welcome cancer survivor crews. It will run as a trial, with the hopes of becoming a permanent fixture.

    “When we meet these other survivors, there’s a connection,” said Martin, 61, of Lumberton, Burlington County. “It’s just great to have these connection points really all over the world, all over the country.

    “If someone would have told me six and a half years ago, when I was in treatment, that I’d be rowing like this, I would have never believed it. I feel like I’m an athlete, which I was never part of any organized sports before. It’s just been amazing.”

    WeCanRow-Philly is one of more than 30 participating programs around the nation through the Survivor Rowing Network.

    The two other boats are men’s and women’s quad. Both will race in the Master’s E class.

    The women’s quad is made up of all cancer survivors, featuring Emily Nelson, Karen Pinkstone, Kathy Reape, and Rebecca Choo Quan, while the men’s includes two cancer survivors from Whitemarsh, Jason Beck and Jim Nice.

    The program, which runs out of Hines Rowing Center in Conshohocken, runs from April till September, every Monday evening. Then in October, practices are held on Saturday mornings.

    Since finding out in May that they would be rowing at Henley, the crew bumped those practices to three times a week. Volunteer coach Matt Sidlowski, who’s a senior studying graphic design at West Chester, has been preparing the group for the upcoming regatta. He’s been involved with WeCanRow-Philly for the past three years.

    “They are so eager to row, so eager to get out there and spend their time working toward improvement,” Sidlowski said. “It makes it easy to show up. I have the power as a coach to give them access to a practice plan, training schedules, equipment, water time, feedback. … It really is motivating for me to see them achieve things they never thought they could.”

    Matt Sidlowski (left), a senior at West Chester, is a volunteer coach for WeCanRow-Philly.

    WeCanRow-Philly has brought together women from all over the area since Whitemarsh Boat Club is the only local boathouse offering cancer survivor rowing.

    Pinkstone, 56, travels about an hour from her home in Yardley to Montgomery County to row. But the drive is well worth it, she says.

    “It’s an entire evening,” she added. “You’re working all day and then you’re going to practice. My family is supportive because they see how happy this makes me and how important it is to me. … I’m a better teacher, a better mom, a better wife, a better person, because I’m taking care of myself, and this is a big part of it.”

    The group hopes to see more survivor rowing programs and events. To participate at such a prestigious regatta, though, is a start.

    Beyond the sisterhood, rowing is about working together to be in sync — even when the odds feel against you.

    “You can still pull hard in an unset boat, it doesn’t have to be perfect,” said Nelson, 56, of Villanova. “You can still put in 1,000 percent effort, even though the conditions are terrible, and I think about that a lot in the boat.

    “It’s not set, that’s not a reason to stop rowing, it’s not a reason to make excuses. Just go out there, do your best, no matter what’s going on. And that’s true on land, too.”

    WeCanRow-Philly has brought together women from all over the area since Whitemarsh Boat Club is the only local boathouse offering cancer survivor rowing.
  • Phillies radio calls give him ‘goose bumps.’ Then he shares those chills with everyone on social media.

    Phillies radio calls give him ‘goose bumps.’ Then he shares those chills with everyone on social media.

    The Phillies game wasn’t over yet last month but it was over as Nick Piccone kept the TV on mute like a distraction in the background. The Phils trailed the Nationals by two runs and were down to their last strike with the bases empty in the ninth on June 23. It was over.

    But Piccone — just like lots of diehards who accepted a loss but refused to stop watching — didn’t turn it off.

    “Just in case,” he said.

    And then it happened. The Phillies scored eight runs with two outs, delivering the most unlikely win of the season. It was time for Piccone to work. He’s built a following in recent seasons for being the guy who clips the radio calls of Philly sports highlights and posts them to social media.

    First, he had to listen to how Scott Franzke — the Phils’ radio voice on 94.1 WIP — described the action.

    “I got goose bumps when I listened to it,” said Piccone, who lives in Delaware County. “And I just knew Phillies fans are going to love this.”

    He posted a montage of Franzke’s pitch-perfect calls that night and then watched them go viral. Philadelphia loves its teams but the city has always had a deep relationship with the voices, putting Piccone at the intersection of fandom and the way we enjoy it.

    Brandon Marsh’s homer was thrilling, but how much better did Franzke’s narration make it feel?

    “You could tell that the fan kind of came out,” Piccone said. “Like, he didn’t think that was going to happen. He had the same reaction that we did, and he’s calling it. He reaches that second level for a regular season game when I’m sure he probably thought this was going to be a loss. You could hear the surprise in his voice.

    “If you’re listening live on the radio, you feel that instantly. And even if you’re watching the video, you’re like, ‘Oh my God.’ Having him feel what we feel and hear his voice match what we’re feeling inside, makes it so much better. It makes those moments so much better.”

    Phillies radio play-by-play announcer Scott Franzke (left) with TV analyst John Kruk.

    Piccone does not get paid to post his videos, but he commits himself every game — “I watch every pitch,” he said — to tracking the calls of the big plays and sharing them on social media. He does the same thing for other teams. It’s how he enjoys the game.

    It takes about 10 minutes for Piccone to edit the clip on his computer and post it on social media.

    “People would message me from Europe or Asia and say, ‘I’m stationed here’ or ‘I moved here for work, and your videos make me feel like I’m home,’” Piccone said. “When I started doing it, I wasn’t even thinking about that stuff. So when people say that I was able to provide that, I was like, ‘Wow.’ That’s a huge reason why I continue to do it.”

    His hustle gives a radio broadcast a new life, allowing Franzke’s words to be heard again and again. Some people want to relive a moment they already enjoyed. Others want to feel closer to home.

    “It’s flattering, honestly,” Franzke said. “It’s humbling to know that it resonates enough with someone to know that they’re willing to go through that sort of trouble and effort to spread the word.”

    Brandon Marsh watches the ball after hitting a two-run home run against the Washington Nationals on June 23.

    From Dolly to Franzke

    Franzke was told when he first got into the business to have someone in mind to whom you are broadcasting.

    “For me, the general Delaware Valley listener is stuck in traffic on the Schuylkill,” Franzke said.

    His voice is the soundtrack of traffic jams, days at the beach, and backyard barbecues. Kids tune their radio to the Phils while they’re putting on their PJs, just like their grandparents used to sneak transistor radios under their pillows. They listen to Franzke on their porch at night and power walk around the neighborhood with his voice in their earbuds.

    Radio broadcasters Larry Andersen (left) and Scott Franzke (right) call a Phillies game in 2011.

    The Phillies broadcast their first game on the radio in 1936 with a former umpire named Dolly Stark calling the action. He was regarded as the National League’s top ump but quit after the 1935 season when the league balked at his request for a raise from his $9,000 salary.

    “A new sports thrill,” said the advertisement for the games that were broadcast on WIP 610. “Seeing the game through the umpire’s eyes! Hearing what he thinks about every play, while that play is being made! And it’s a thrill that will last all summer.”

    Stark called games for just one season before he returned to calling balls and strikes. But the game became the perfect radio sport. The pace is slow enough for the broadcaster to share a story and make you comfortable. Yet the action becomes exciting enough for them to build drama and make you feel something.

    The umpire was followed by greats who became voices of summer like By Saam, Bill Campbell, Harry Kalas, and Franzke. Richie Ashburn ordered pizzas, Chris Wheeler taught you something, and Larry Andersen admires the umpire. There’s just something about baseball on the radio. It works.

    “I think one of the reasons that baseball on the radio still works is because people can consume it passively,” Franzke said. “They’re driving, falling asleep in their beach chair, or doing yard work. They can do other things and be a part of it. A lot of people like the audio wallpaper, if you will. It’s there. It’s around them. They enjoy it passively and do other things in their life. We’re just along for the ride, I guess.”

    Piccone’s clips show that Franzke is more than just enjoying the ride. He’s driving the car. It wasn’t a silent clip of Marsh’s homer that went viral last week. It was the clip of Marsh’s homer with the announcer sounding just as stunned as you were that it happened.

    Franzke said it’s the moment that “generates the goose bumps,” since he’s just a guy. And it was the guy calling that moment last week that gave Piccone chills.

    “It doesn’t matter when it is during the season, September or April, the story of the game takes over,” Piccone said. “I think he tells that story perfectly in his calls. Offense, a great defensive play, a strikeout. That emotion comes through and you know it’s a big moment.”

    Nick Piccone says he’s “kind of jealous” of people who grew up listening to baseball games on the radio. “I didn’t even think of consuming sports in that way when I was younger. I’m glad I’m able to do it now.”

    Being that guy

    Piccone grew up on the 1993 Phillies and started watching the other teams in 1999 as a freshman at Kingsway High School. He soon was a diehard: devastated when they lost and elated when they won.

    “I just consume it,” Piccone said last month. “Like, I’m mad the Phillies lost today.”

    But the guy who chops up the audio of every radio broadcast didn’t grow up listening to the radio. He just watched it on TV.

    “People who say they were brought up listening to sports on the radio, I’m kind of jealous of them,” Piccone, 40, said. “Because I didn’t even think of consuming sports in that way when I was younger. I’m glad I’m able to do it now.”

    “We just have amazing play-by-play guys. You think of the Phillies, you think of Franzke. You think of the Flyers, you think of Tim Saunders. You think of the Sixers, you think of Tom McGinnis. Eagles, Merrill Reese and Mike Quick. They’re synonymous with the teams.”

    Piccone planned to do what he does now — clip the radio call and match it to the TV feed — when the Eagles played the Patriots in Super Bowl LII. But his buddy’s Wi-Fi dropped that night, so Piccone closed his laptop and watched the game like a normal fan. And then the Eagles won, and he wished he had the clips.

    He made sure to have a stronger connection in 2022 when the Phillies went to the World Series. He clipped every call that October, and his social media following soared.

    He sends out Franzke’s call along with the team’s Spanish broadcasters and the opponent’s call. Piccone noticed that the TV calls are the ones usually shared by the teams or networks. The radio guys, he thought, weren’t getting their due.

    People soon started messaging him for specific calls or pointing out things he may have missed. He suddenly felt like he had a responsibility. He became that guy.

    “It’s fun being known for that,” said Piccone, who writes for Crossing Broad. “I like being that guy.”

    The Phillies season likely will end in October again, giving Piccone plenty of moments to share. The goose bumps, he said, usually are felt in the fall when the stakes are higher. But sometimes the broadcaster makes you feel it on a weeknight in June. And that’s why you leave the game on.

    “People will say, ‘I heard your call,’” said Franzke, who is not on X, formerly known as Twitter. “And there’s two places they heard it: WIP playing it back or on social media. It’s cool that Nick invests that kind of time. At the end of day, this promotes what we’re doing.”

  • Flyers’ Trevor Zegras and Jamie Drysdale are among 15 players who have filed for salary arbitration

    Flyers’ Trevor Zegras and Jamie Drysdale are among 15 players who have filed for salary arbitration

    As the Flyers await word on whether the Anaheim Ducks will match the offer sheet they tendered to center Leo Carlsson, two of the organization’s four restricted free agents filed for salary arbitration.

    On Sunday, Jamie Drysdale and forward Trevor Zegras opted for salary arbitration and, therefore, cannot be tendered an offer sheet by another NHL team.

    The hearings are scheduled between July 20 and Aug. 1, and the team and player can still negotiate a deal until the hearing begins. If it does go to the arbitrator, they can only award a one- or two-year contract. Because it was a player’s choice, the Flyers will select the term length. If the Flyers select a two-year contract, the player would walk to unrestricted free agency, but if it is for one year, the player would be a restricted free agent next summer.

    Zegras said he felt like he “had lost a little bit of that drive and passion to win” in Anaheim and felt rejuvenated this past year. He did have a career year, notching highs in goals (26), points (67), power-play goals (10), and power-play points (23) across 81 games. The New York native spent time on the wing and at center this season. How he is viewed, whether as a winger or a center by either side, impacts contract negotiations because, typically, centers are paid more.

    Flyers center Trevor Zegras scored 26 goals during the 2025-26 season.

    At his end-of-season availability, Drysdale said the biggest step he took this year was “just coming to the rink and believing that I was a good player and could make an impact.” The blueliner played in 78 games, his highest total since he played 81 in 2021-22, had a career-high in goals (eight), and tied his career-high in points (32).

    Both got their first taste of the postseason, with Drysdale scoring two goals and four points, and Zegras adding four goals and six points in 10 games apiece.

    Defenseman Hunter McDonald is a restricted free agent and did not elect salary arbitration by the 5 p.m. deadline. Forward Nikita Grebenkin, the final RFA for the Flyers, was not eligible.

    Zegras and Drysdale are two of 15 players to elect salary arbitration. The others are forwards Xavier Bourgault (Ottawa Senators), Kirby Dach (Montreal Canadiens), Alex Jefferies (New York Islanders), Peyton Krebs (Buffalo Sabres), Connor McMichael (St. Louis Blues), Cole Perfetti (Winnipeg Jets), Jason Robertson (Dallas Stars), Nick Robertson (Pittsburgh Penguins), and Cole Sillinger (Columbus Blue Jackets); goalies Jet Greaves (Columbus Blue Jackets) and Akira Schmid (Florida Panthers); and defensemen Braden Schneider (New York Rangers) and Ronan Seeley (Carolina Hurricanes).

    The AAV on the Flyers’ offer would make Leo Carlsson the highest-paid player in the NHL.

    On Friday, the Flyers sent shockwaves through the hockey world by tendering a five-year offer sheet with an average annual value of $18 million to Carlsson, which would make him the highest-paid player in terms of AAV in the NHL.

    According to a league source, it is front-loaded with heavy signing bonuses.

    GM Pat Verbeek and the Ducks have seven days to match the offer. If they don’t, according to the team’s press release, the Flyers would have to transfer their own first-round draft pick in each of the next four seasons as compensation. However, according to PuckPedia, it is four in the next five years.

  • Aaron Nola posts longest outing of the season, but Phillies’ bats go silent in loss to Royals

    Aaron Nola posts longest outing of the season, but Phillies’ bats go silent in loss to Royals

    KANSAS CITY, Mo. — During the seventh-inning stretch here Sunday, as the fans stood for a holiday-weekend rendition of “God Bless America,” Aaron Nola returned to the mound.

    And it was fair to wonder why.

    Never mind that Nola’s pitch count was under control, or that the Phillies were trailing by one run. He started the seventh inning only once in 17 previous starts — and not since April 3.

    But Don Mattingly stuck with Nola, who struck out the side to punctuate his best start of the season, the extent of the good news for the Phillies in a series-evening 5-2 loss to the Royals.

    Here’s the thing, though: It would be really good news for the Phillies if three runs on seven hits in seven walk-free innings was the start of a turnaround for Nola.

    “It’s obviously important that [Nola’s] start turns into a [future] game that you feel like you’re in, you’re not scrambling the whole day,” Mattingly said. “It doesn’t necessarily have to be seven. But if we’re in the game through six, five, seven, whatever that is, then it gives us a lot better shot to be able to put some runs up.”

    OK, so that last part didn’t happen on this toasty day in the Midwest. The Phillies generated five hits, including two after the fifth inning. And unlike Saturday night’s series opener, the Royals kept them in the ballpark.

    At least the Phillies were able to look forward to sending Cristopher Sánchez to the mound for Monday’s rubber game.

    Other than Nola — and the pregame ceremony, in which bench coach Dusty Wathan’s dad, John, went into the Royals’ Hall of Fame — there wasn’t much to look back on.

    In that case, let’s talk about Nola, who entered with a 6.04 ERA, second-worst among 64 pitchers who qualified for the ERA title, and gave up hits to three of the Royals’ first five batters.

    Here we go again?

    Not exactly.

    After allowing two first-inning runs on back-to-back singles by Lane Thomas and Michael Massey, Nola knuckled down. Leading again with his signature curveball, he held the Royals off the board save for a fifth-inning run on a leadoff double and a sacrifice fly.

    Nola threw 98 pitches; 31 were curveballs, and 11 of those generated swings and misses.

    “Yeah, curveball felt good,” he said. “Better than it had been in some previous starts. I had a couple ones that kind of popped out [of his hand] a little bit, but overall they felt pretty sharp.”

    Sharpening the curveball was a focus for Nola between starts. His also worked on his changeup, a vital weapon for him against left-handed hitters. Specifically, he wants the changeup to move downward rather than “wiping out to the right side” and into the swing paths of left-handed hitters.

    The Phillies also paired Nola with third-string catcher Garrett Stubbs in hopes of rekindling success that they’ve had working with one another in the past. Nola and Stubbs navigated the Royals’ weak lineup mostly with offspeed pitches. He threw as many changeups (19) as fastballs (19).

    “It’s always a plan to go in and throw that [changeup], just depending on how it’s working and feeling that day,” Nola said. “Today it felt really good, and we threw it quite a bit.”

    Nola was at 83 pitches after six innings. Trailing 3-2 and with the bottom of the Royals’ order due to bat, Mattingly let Nola go back out for the seventh inning. Nola wound up completing the seventh for the first time since he went eight innings last Sept. 26.

    “I felt like he was throwing the ball as good as anybody,” said Mattingly, who had two relievers warming just in case. “I felt like he’d handled those guys pretty well. If anybody gets on there, we’re not going to let him try to face the top of the order. But he got his guys.”

    Nola appreciated the opportunity.

    “Yeah, it’s been a while since I threw seven,” he said. “It’s the first time this year. I don’t know. Felt pretty good. I don’t think I had any walks, which is a plus.”

    Especially if Nola is able to keep it going Friday in Detroit, his last start before the All-Star break.

    The Phillies are already searching for a No. 5 starter after optioning Andrew Painter to triple A last month. Pitching coach Caleb Cotham was encouraged by Painter’s second start for Lehigh Valley: one run on four hits and no walks in six innings Saturday in Rochester, N.Y.

    Mattingly didn’t rule out a swift return to the majors for Painter.

    “I think everything’s on the table,” he said. “I never had any feeling that it was sending him out and forgetting about him, right? It was send him out to work on stuff and help him get better. So, I think anything could happen.”

    Even a resurgence for Nola.

  • Brandon Marsh joins Jhoan Duran as first-time All-Star: ‘It hasn’t hit me yet’

    Brandon Marsh joins Jhoan Duran as first-time All-Star: ‘It hasn’t hit me yet’

    KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Brandon Marsh tried not to think about it. Even as the periodic voting updates rolled in, he claimed to be concerned only with the Phillies’ next game, not the All-Star Game.

    Yet here he was Sunday, finally yielding to his inner 10-year-old over the fulfillment of a lifelong dream.

    “Growing up as a kid, playing in the backyard with the Wiffle bats, you always want to be an All-Star,” said Marsh, one day after being named not only to the National League roster but voted in as a starter by the fans. “You always want to call yourself an All-Star growing up. I’m thankful for all the people that voted, all the fans.”

    Marsh led NL outfielders in the final phase of the fan balloting. The support was merited. Entering play Sunday, he was sixth in the NL batting race with a .310 average. He had the Phillies’ third-best OPS (.856) and was settling into the cleanup spot behind Bryce Harper.

    Five Phillies players were selected for the All-Star Game on July 14 in Citizens Bank Park, with Marsh and closer Jhoan Duran as first-timers. Harper was named to his ninth All-Star Game as the commissioner’s pick, while Kyle Schwarber will make his fourth All-Star appearance and Cristopher Sánchez his second.

    “It’s a dream come true,” Duran said. “I always wanted to be there, and it happened this year.”

    Brandon Marsh was sixth in the NL with a .310 batting average through Saturday.

    Marsh took a winding path to the All-Star Game — in Philly, no less.

    Drafted in the second round by the Angels in 2016, Marsh made his major-league debut in July 2021 and got traded to the Phillies a year later for catcher Logan O’Hoppe. They envisioned him as their future center fielder, but eventually moved him to left.

    And as recently as last winter, even after Marsh batted .303 with an .836 OPS over the final five months of last season, the Phillies were intent on using him in a platoon role because it didn’t seem he would solve left-handed pitching.

    “To be honest, I came into the year having zero expectations for myself personally,” Marsh said. “I feel like I’ve learned that from a lot of the great players in this game. So, I didn’t have many expectations, and I think that’s honestly helped a little bit, just not pressing so hard and stuff like that.”

    Marsh started fast, with two doubles on opening day. But like the rest of the Phillies, he has thrived under interim manager Don Mattingly, batting .315 with 11 homers and an .882 OPS in 59 games entering Sunday.

    In a team meeting Saturday, roughly one hour before the series opener against the Royals, Mattingly held a team meeting to inform the All-Stars of their selections. Marsh didn’t have much time to process it. Not with a game to play.

    “Really, it hasn’t hit me yet, to be honest with you,” Marsh said. “Tonight, when I have a lot of time on my hands after the game, I’ll sit down and I’ll have my moment and just just wrap my head around everything and realize how special it is and how much of an honor it is to be in this in this position.”

    Surely, Marsh will think about his dad, Jake, who died in 2021 due to throat and neck cancer.

    “He’s got the best seat in the house, you know?” Marsh said. “He gets to watch from the front row. I think he’d be super proud. He’s a big reason of why I do it.”

    Phillies ace Cristopher Sanchez is a candidate to start the All-Star Game for the National League.

    A start for Sánchez?

    If Sánchez wasn’t already the leading candidate to be the NL’s starting pitcher, consider this: Brewers ace Jacob Misiorowski is lined up to start the final game before the break, leaving him unable to unleash his historic fastball in the All-Star Game.

    Sánchez, meanwhile, will pitch Monday in Kansas City and again Saturday in Detroit. Mattingly said Sánchez could pitch one inning in the All-Star Game on what would be his between-starts bullpen day.

    What would it mean to Sánchez to get the start?

    “Still a couple of [starts] left,” he said through a team interpreter. “We’ll just have to wait and see.”

    Regardless, Sánchez said he expects to have at least 20 family members and friends in attendance at the All-Star Game.

    “Super excited and happy,” said Sánchez, who has a 2.00 ERA in 18 starts, second in the majors to only Misiorowski. “All the hard work that we’ve been putting in, it was worth it.”

    Phils pitcher Brad Keller runs to cover first base during the Chicago White Sox at Philadelphia Phillies MLB baseball game at Citizens Bank Park in Philadelphia on Friday, June 5, 2026.

    Extra bases

    Reliever Brad Keller (right forearm tendintis) pitched a scoreless inning for triple-A Lehigh Valley in Rochester, N.Y. He could be reinstated from the injured list and rejoin the Phillies’ bullpen as soon as Tuesday night, according to Mattingly. … With a fastball-heavy approach (35 four-seamers out of 69 pitches), Andrew Painter allowed one run on four hits in six walk-free innings Saturday in triple A. … Bench coach Dusty Wathan’s dad, John, was inducted into the Royals’ Hall of Fame before the game. John Wathan was Kansas City’s catcher for 10 years and managed the Royals from 1987-91. … The Phillies signed triple-A outfielder Bryan De La Cruz to a major-league contract, added him to the 40-man roster, and optioned him to Lehigh Valley. De La Cruz exercised an opt-out in his minor-league contract, prompting the move. Right-hander Jean Cabrera, who has a 9.10 ERA between triple A and double A, was designated for assignment. … Sánchez (10-3, 2.00 ERA) will be opposed by Royals lefty Noah Cameron (4-6, 4.95) in the series finale Monday at 2:10 p.m. ET.

  • Bryce Harper is ‘grateful’ to be MLB commissioner’s All-Star pick. He’s also earned it.

    Bryce Harper is ‘grateful’ to be MLB commissioner’s All-Star pick. He’s also earned it.

    KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Bryce Harper saw the missed call on his phone Wednesday after the Phillies got off the field at Citizens Bank Park.

    Rob Manfred wanted to chat.

    The last time they talked, almost a year ago, it ended with Harper telling the commissioner to “get the [heck] out of our clubhouse” if he wanted to propose a salary cap in baseball.

    But Manfred had something less divisive on his mind. He wanted to use his one selection to name Harper to the National League team for the 96th All-Star Game on July 14 in Philadelphia.

    “Yeah, he called me and told me I was going to be his pick,” Harper said Sunday. “He said that I’ve had a great first half, and I think the numbers kind of speak for themselves. I think I had an opportunity [to be an All-Star]. Obviously with the fan vote it didn’t happen, so he gave me the opportunity. Definitely grateful for that and excited to be there.”

    So, Harper and Manfred are pals now?

    Harper laughed.

    “No, I’m just grateful for the opportunity,” said Harper, a nine-time All-Star, with more selections than any active player except Mike Trout (12), Chris Sale (10), and Freddie Freeman (10). “He left me a voicemail during the game and told me he wanted to talk about the All-Star Game. I wasn’t sure what the question was going to be at that point, but then we talked and he let me know.

    Bryce Harper said, “I think I deserve to be in the game for the way I’ve played.”

    “I think I deserve to be in the game for the way I’ve played, so definitely grateful for it.”

    Indeed, entering Sunday’s games, Harper was tied for 11th in the majors with a .903 OPS and was among 15 players with at least 20 home runs. He was batting .274 with a .374 on-base percentage.

    The numbers are notable. Last October, in a season-ending news conference, Phillies president of baseball operations Dave Dombrowski wondered aloud if Harper, at age 33, was still elite.

    A few days ago, Harper said a reporter asked him if he has answered the question.

    “It’s like, I don’t care,” Harper said. “It’s up to you guys to decide that. Every year, I come in and I’ve got an opportunity to be great at what I do, you know? Like I said, the numbers show right now, they speak for themselves.

    “But I know they can be better. I know I can be better. I’m going to enjoy it, obviously. But I think I can be better than what I’m doing right now.”

    Harper figures he can always swing at fewer pitches out of the zone or draw more walks. The Phillies have four other All-Stars: Kyle Schwarber, Cristopher Sánchez, and first-timers Brandon Marsh and Jhoan Duran. Marsh is a starter in the National League outfield; Sánchez might be the starting pitcher.

    But it wouldn’t have been an All-Star Game in Philly without Harper, the city’s biggest baseball star.

    The question now: Will he be in the Home Run Derby?

    Harper remains noncommittal. Health isn’t a problem. After dealing with wrist and back issues over the past few seasons, he said his “body feels great.” He has started every game so far this season.

    Bryce Harper and Kyle Schwarber are All-Stars. Will they compete in the Home Run Derby?

    The biggest issue: Finding a pitcher. Harper’s dad, Ron, did the honors in 2018, when Harper won the Home Run Derby in Washington, but hasn’t thrown batting practice in four or five years.

    Harper’s phone has been buzzing with offers.

    “A couple ex-players that throw BP now to their kids and stuff,” he said. “I think I can trust a couple of them, but it’s just hard for me, to tell you the truth, not being able to do it with somebody that I’m super comfortable with. You can’t just pick somebody random to go out there.

    “I’m not going to do something if I’m going to have a half-mentality towards it. If I’m going to do it, I want to be full bore and very confident in winning. Because I’m not going to do it unless I’m going to try to win it. Like, I’m not going out there just to have fun. I want to win the thing.”

    Chalk it up to a competitive streak that continues to fuel Harper in his 15th major-league season.

    None other than Phillies interim manager Don Mattingly, a six-time All-Star as a player, marveled at Harper’s nine All-Star selections for both the longevity and level of excellence.

    “I think the first thing that comes to mind is, ‘Not enough,’” said Harper, who has five years left on his Phillies contract and a desire to play beyond that. “I’ve been in the game a long time. Nine’s a big number. But hopefully I’ll have more after the next couple of years.

    “Every number or anything that I look at right now, it’s just I always kind of tell myself ‘not enough,’ you know? Just got to keep going, keep wanting more, and then hopefully get there.”

  • FIFA overturned USMNT star Folarin Balogun’s suspension vs. Belgium. Was Trump involved?

    FIFA overturned USMNT star Folarin Balogun’s suspension vs. Belgium. Was Trump involved?

    SEATTLE — U.S. men’s soccer team star striker Folarin Balogun will be available to play in Monday’s World Cup round-of-16 game after all.

    FIFA announced just before the team’s practice on Sunday that the one-game suspension that came with Balogun’s red card against Bosnia in the round of 32 has been suspended “for a probationary period of one year.” The governing body said it invoked Article 27 of its disciplinary code, which says, “The judicial body may decide to fully or partially suspend the implementation of a disciplinary measure.”

    It’s a special treatment that world soccer’s governing body has only given twice in its history.

    At the 1962 World Cup, Brazilian star Garrincha had a red card overturned after lobbying from his nation’s federation and host Chile’s president — and, allegedly, a potential bribe to a referee, allowing him to play in the final.

    Last November, FIFA suspended two games of a three-game ban given to Portugal’s Cristiano Ronaldo after he elbowed a Republic of Ireland player in a World Cup qualifier. That allowed him to play in two group games this summer that he otherwise would have missed.

    “In line with article 27 of the FIFA Disciplinary Code, the implementation of the match suspension is suspended,” the governing body’s statement said.

    Balogun was ejected during the U.S. round-of-32 win for running the studs of his right cleat down Bosnia’s Tarik Muharemović’s right calf before catching the back of his foot.

    Referee Raphael Claus didn’t call it at first, but the video review officials saw it and recommended that Claus take a second look. Once he did, the red card felt inevitable.

    FIFA does not allow appeals of red cards, but the governing body can decide on its own to suspend a suspension.

    Referee Raphael Claus (left) showing Folarin Balogun the red card in Wednesday’s game.

    There’s some irony in the fact that when the ejection happened, FIFA was criticized for Claus’ use of a slow-motion replay that might have been against the rules of video reviews. But FIFA’s announcement made no mention of that.

    “We accept the decision of the Disciplinary Committee and are pleased that Folarin Balogun is eligible to compete [Monday],” U.S. Soccer said in a statement. “Our full attention is focused on the round of 16 match against Belgium in Seattle, and we look forward to the continued support of our amazing fans.”

    Confusion over the rules

    Star playmaker Christian Pulisic opened a can of worms when he said, “Obviously we made that appeal, and felt like there was a good chance, because anyone can look at that and say it was super harsh.”

    A U.S. Soccer spokesperson was asked if there was, in fact, an appeal or if Pulisic misspoke, given the federation’s previous statement that no appeal was possible. The response was that U.S. Soccer was “engaged in the process” with FIFA’s disciplinary committee, but no details were given.

    Christian Pulisic (right) consoling Folarin Balogun after the ejection.

    U.S. players found out about the decision on the bus ride over to Friday morning’s practice. Balogun was not among the players who spoke when they arrived. He said on Saturday that he disagreed with the decision, but had moved on in part to be a role model for fans watching.

    “We weren’t quite sure if it was true or not,” centerback Chris Richards said of the moment he heard the news. “I think everyone knows with AI and with this and that, [there] can be a few question marks. But ultimately we found out through social media, so it was cool to finally get the confirmation that it was true.”

    Asked what it means that Balogun got treatment only previously accorded to Ronaldo, he said: “I don’t know what goes on behind the scenes — I don’t know if they’re comparing Flo to Cristiano Ronaldo or what’s going on. I try to focus on what goes on on the field, but clearly they saw something in the decision that they thought deserved to be overturned.”

    Fellow defender Alex Freeman said, “I had no clue” that it was in the works.

    Folarin Balogun working in a drill with teammates on Friday.

    “I think it’s a little strange for us,” he said. “I have no clue how it happened, but for us, we’re just happy that it happened, and happy that we’re able to go in and have a phenomenal player like Balogun to be able to go in and play.”

    There was immediate criticism on social media, including from international journalists who accused FIFA of rigging the game for the host country.

    A statement from Belgium’s federation said it was “astonished by FIFA’s decision,” and that “in order to safeguard the legitimate rights of all participating teams and to protect the fundamental principles of fair play in our sport, both at this FIFA World Cup and at future editions of the tournament,” it was “investigating all potential options.”

    But it did not say what those options could be.

    Belgium manger Rudi Garcia said, “the Belgian federation isn’t just defending itself — it’s defending football in general.”

    Belgium manager Rudi Garcia was even more blunt in his news conference Sunday afternoon.

    “I didn’t know that at FIFA’s headquarters, July 5 is the same thing as April 1 in Europe,” referring to a calendar date that also applies in the United States. “I think you should refer to the statement by my federation … The Belgian federation isn’t just defending itself, it’s not just defending the national team. It’s defending football in general. It’s defending its integrity, defending its ethics.”

    Another question on the subject drew a quick “Don’t waste your time asking about it” answer. And when Garcia was asked if he believed his star striker Romelu Lukaku would get the same treatment from FIFA, he answered: “Ah, I can’t answer that question.”

    But those reactions were just the tip of the iceberg.

    FIFA president Gianni Infantino (right) giving U.S. President Donald Trump the men’s World Cup trophy at the White House last year.

    Trump lobbied his friend

    A source with knowledge of the matter confirmed reports that President Donald Trump personally called FIFA president Gianni Infantino to lobby for Balogun’s suspension to be overturned.

    The New York Times reported that Trump called Infantino on Wednesday — the night the game was played in Santa Clara, Calif. — and English radio network TalkSport reported that “FIFA sources insist White House influence could not affect the decision.”

    That did not stop Trump from posting on his Truth Social platform: “Thank you to FIFA for doing what was right, and reversing a great injustice!”

    A request for further comment from FIFA has not yet been returned.

    Sources in Seattle said there was a point in the past few days when Trump or Vice President J.D. Vance might attend Monday’s game, with authorities in town preparing for them to visit. But it was confirmed on Friday that they are not.

    U.S. manager Mauricio Pochettino said he wasn’t involved in any lobbying by U.S. Soccer, though he named CEO JT Batson as someone who was. Pochettino also said he didn’t know about Trump’s involvement until reporters told him at his news conference.

    “No, we cannot mix that,” he said. “That is a decision from FIFA with the evidence that happened before, and that’s it.”

    But he was, of course, very happy that the decision went his team’s way.

    United States head coach Mauricio Pochettino said, “I think it’s fair, the decision, to not punish us more.”

    “It’s not only because I am the coach of the U.S. men’s national team that I need to defend my side,” Pochettino said. “I think it’s 100% — or 99%, because there are always some people, 99.9% — we all agree that was an unfair red card.”

    He also was not surprised that it became such a big deal.

    “I come from cultures in Argentina [in] Europe where fútbol, soccer, is more than a religion. It does not surprise me that in this country, that feeling has started to grow.”

    Pochettino spoke repeatedly of his respect for Garcia, whom he has known a long time. But beyond that, he said “I think it’s fair, the decision, to not punish us more. Because I think it was enough. And now focus on the game.”

    Staff writer Dugan Arnett contributed to this article.

  • The FIFA World Cup in Philly won’t soon be forgotten. Here are 10 major reasons why.

    The FIFA World Cup in Philly won’t soon be forgotten. Here are 10 major reasons why.

    Three weeks of World Cup excitement in Philadelphia came to a close on Saturday, but not before an announced sold-out crowd of 68,324 sat through 100-plus degree temperatures to watch France move on to the quarterfinals following a 1-0 defeat of Paraguay.

    When the final whistle blew, it capped Philly’s first-ever hosting of the men’s World Cup in what was just the second time it’s been played on U.S. soil. Over the course of those weeks, Philadelphia became the world’s playground as our parks were used as staging grounds for thousands of fans, bars and restaurants catered to people from all over the world, and city landmarks received global attention.

    The moments the World Cup brought were innumerable, but we compiled a list of the Top 10 takeaways as the lights move away from Philadelphia Stadium and continue at FIFA’s Fan Festival at Lemon Hill, which will keep the party going as the tournament inches closer to a thrilling end at New York/New Jersey Stadium on July 19.

    Party on the Orange Line

    SEPTA pulled out all of the stops — literally and figuratively — getting thousands of fans to and from Philadelphia Stadium courtesy of both local and express trains on the Broad Street Line that ran frequently and, for the most part, safely and efficiently, with scores of transit police and other officials at the stations.

    But while SEPTA deserves a job well done, the heroes are the fans who routinely brought the party on the rides to and from the stadium. For just $2.90, fans heading down were subjected to singing, drums, flag waving, and a whole lot of hugging and high-fiving, whether you wanted it or not. The pre-party might have been at FIFA’s Festival or Stateside Live!, but it was also on many of the matchday trips southbound to NRG Stadium.

    On the eve of the FIFA World Cup Group C match between Brazil and Haiti, this fan left a Spanish and English soccer jersey at Rocky’s feet on the Art Museum steps on June 18.

    Rocky statue became World Cup lore

    World Cup fans not only embraced Philly culture but also embraced our city’s sports culture and its superstitions. No proof of that was bigger than how nations took to the curse of placing a team jersey on the Rocky statue. Ecuador kick-started the notion, and their team lost, causing the planner of the moment to make a public apology.

    The Ecuadorian team jersey on the Rocky statue was made by a fan who wanted to bring good luck to his team. That fan later issued a public apology after Ecuador’s loss.

    Brazil brought its own partition and security detail to keep supporters from putting a kit on Rocky, and Croatia claimed to debunk the curse, announcing they put a jersey on Rocky, but it didn’t matter in their team’s 2-1 defeat of Ghana.

    Still, news of our city’s statue went viral and has now become a fan phenomenon, regardless of sport, worldwide.

    Members of the Ivory Coast national soccer team react to fans during an open practice at Subaru Park in Chester on June 12.

    A second home for the Ivory Coast

    The love affair of the Ivory Coast needs to be studied because for the two weeks that the team took up residence at the Hotel DuPont in Wilmington and trained at WSFS SportsPlex and Subaru Park in Chester, they became family. People cooked special meals for the team, fans were buying their signature bright orange jerseys, and they were yearning for autographs at team training sessions.

    In return, Ivory Coast advanced to the knockout rounds by winning both of its matches in Philadelphia, against Ecuador and Curaçao. Always remember that the team earned its first-ever trip to the knockout stage via a path forged through the Greater Philadelphia Region.

    France’s Kylian Mbappé, reacts after a foul by Paraguay’s Andrés Cubas during the first half Saturday’s round-of-16 World Cup match at Philadelphia Stadium.

    Red, white, and blue on July 4

    It wasn’t the red, white, and blue of our nation’s colors, but it was somewhat symbolic that those were the colors of the two nations that faced off in Philly’s final game on a day that celebrated America’s independence.

    On one side, there was France, a nation whose efforts in America’s independence are well-documented, which arrived with a team viewed as one of the best in the world, with arguably the world’s best striker, Kylian Mbappé.

    On the other side sat Paraguay, a nation the U.S. men’s national team has beaten twice in less than a year: first in its Group D opener, then in a friendly last November at Chester’s Subaru Park.

    A fan heads for shelter as rain falls at Lincoln Financial Field during a World Cup match between France and Iraq on, June 22.

    Singing (and shopping) in the rain

    Sure, it was hot, muggy, and wet, but France’s first match in Philadelphia, against Iraq, won’t soon be forgotten. Two storms, one right after the other, soaked Philadelphia Stadium and caused a delay of more than two hours. But while some actually decided to leave, believe it or not, the fans who stayed sang, cheered, and found ways to stay cool and dry.

    How? Well, how about ravaging the concourse levels for food, drink, and memorabilia, leaving many concessions out of food and drink by the time the game resumed, and the official FIFA store on the main concourse looking like it got hit by a tornado?

    ALL the color

    It’s tough to put into words how to describe all of the vibrant colors on display during the three weeks of the tournament. Fortunately, a team of Inquirer photographers not only attended every match, but also were around town capturing moments showcasing the rabid fandom and excitement the World Cup delivered.

    There to help

    They wore neon green, light purple, and dark blue. They were comfortable being in the backdrop, but seemed ready to step up and support at a moment’s notice. In addition to the familiar faces of fan service representatives on any given Eagles gameday, the thousands of FIFA volunteers scattered both in and out of the stadium and at the FIFA Fan Festival brought a level of comfort simply by being there.

    But the great part is that to many of them, it wasn’t just a job. They, too, seemed to be soaking in Philly’s moment in soccer’s sun, or dancing during the rains that fell for some of it, too.

    Fan service representatives Robin “Miss Robin” Carter (left) and Maura Jacquinet were dancing in the rain during the delay for the June 22 match between France and Iraq.

    And when you remember that mostly unpaid volunteers did much of the work, often through six- to eight-hour shifts, a special hat tip is due to those who helped make the event memorable for hundreds of thousands in attendance.

    Fans pack the Broad Street Line ahead of the World Cup game between Brazil and Haiti on June 19.

    Brazil vs. Haiti was a vibe

    Probably the one match in Philadelphia where the game didn’t matter, the party started the night before with Brazil fans taking over bars, restaurants and the steps of the Art Museum in advance of their match against Haiti. The next day, whether it was on the train, in the parking lots, or once inside the stadium, both Brazilian and Haitian fans alike decided to make the game one big party.

    A fan looks on with delight during Brazil’s match against Haiti on June 19.

    Money was no object in Philly

    In what amounted to the most expensive edition of the FIFA World Cup to attend, ever, fans still found a way to pack Philadelphia Stadium. In all, five of the six matches held in Philly were announced as complete sellouts of 68,324 in attendance. Only the match between Ivory Coast and Ecuador didn’t deliver a sellout crowd, and the margin was just 50 people. The average get-in ticket for a group-stage match on secondary market sites in Philly was $703, according to Front Office Sports.

    “It’s been an expensive summer,” said Susan Richman, who attended two matches in Philly with six other family members. “I think all in all we’ve spent close to $15,000 [on tickets]? But for us to say that we’ve attended the World Cup in America is something that personally, I’ll always remember.”

    Brazil fan Maninhu and Haitian fan Greguity met at the World Cup match in Philly between Brazil and Haiti. Both said they’ve become “best friends” in the process.

    Fans becoming friends

    One of the things that this tournament has conveyed is that humanity isn’t gone, as much as our social media algorithms would love us to believe. The colors that have mattered throughout the World Cup have had nothing to do with the color of someone’s skin, or where they’re from. The colors that have mattered have been the ones on the jerseys that have passed through Philadelphia Stadium, ones that have allowed us to ask questions of others, to get to learn more about them, their culture, their nation’s history.

    Fans play a soccer game at the base of the Art Museum steps ahead of the FIFA World Cup Group C match between Brazil and Haiti on June 18.

    It’s why money was no object to be in that moment, why a bucket list was fulfilled. In the end, that commonality undoubtedly found that strangers become friends, and friends become family, using sport as a connective tissue. In the end, that just might be the greatest takeaway from the three weeks in which the world’s greatest game made a pit stop in Philadelphia.

    “This is wonderful for Philadelphia and wonderful for America, welcoming everybody into this beautiful country,” Ivory Coast native-turned-Philadelphian Ahmadou Dia told The Inquirer recently. “The World Cup, the football itself, brings every country, every single person, together regardless of color. It doesn’t matter what you look like, because on the field or in that stadium, we’re family.”

    Honorable mentions: The turf laid down at the bubble field at Fan Festival … The Bank of America charm bracelets everyone went wild for at Fan Festival … The VFA-11 and VFA-81 flyover at Philadelphia Stadium on July 4. … Free rides on the Broad Street Line after the game … Ghana and Paraguay fans remaining in the stadium for over an hour after their matches to soak it all in … Lines of fans outside team hotels … The rooftop terrace at Stateside Live! on any given matchday.