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  • 🏀 Path out of play-in | Sports Daily Newsletter

    🏀 Path out of play-in | Sports Daily Newsletter

    The 76ers still have some work to do before the NBA playoffs.

    If they win tonight against the Orlando Magic in the Play-In Tournament (7:30, Prime Video), they’ll move on as the Eastern Conference’s No. 7 seed and face the Boston Celtics in the first round.

    But wins are not automatic, especially without former MVP Joel Embiid, who has not been around the team “at all” since his appendectomy.

    But a loss to the Magic doesn’t end the Sixers’ chances of making the playoffs. They would have another shot against the Charlotte Hornets, who beat the Miami Heat in the 9-10 matchup on Tuesday night.

    Curious what the media is saying about both scenarios? We’ve got you covered.

    There’s been a lot to unpack with this year’s Sixers — from Embiid’s tale of two seasons as his health continued to limit him to Paul George serving a 25-game suspension for violating the NBA’s anti-drug policy. There also are positives that they’ll be leaning on tonight.

    Those positives are in backcourt duo Tyrese Maxey and VJ Edgecombe, also known as “VJ Maxx.” It’s no secret that they have fueled the Sixers this season, and the team will go as far as the pair can lead them.

    The duo also symbolize the core foundation that the franchise should build around in the future.

    — Isabella DiAmore, @phillysport, sports.daily@inquirer.com.

    If someone forwarded you this email, sign up for free here.

    ❓What is your prediction for the Sixers? Can they make it out of the first round? Email us back for a chance to be featured in the newsletter.

    Roseman speaks out

    At a news conference on Tuesday, Howie Roseman called the reporting surrounding Jalen Hurts “unfair.”

    Howie Roseman is usually aware of what’s being reported about the Eagles. So he has seen the articles in the aftermath of an early playoff exit that pointed some of the blame for the team’s offensive struggles at Jalen Hurts. The GM said it’s “unfair — but I also understand it’s what sells at this point.”

    Roseman also was asked about A.J. Brown’s future with the Eagles, especially after the trade for Dontayvion Wicks, but his answer remained the same.

    What we’re 


    🏈 Learning: NFL reporter Dianna Russini resigned from The Athletic a week after photos of her with Patriots coach Mike Vrabel were published.

    🏒 Reliving: The Flyers clinching their first playoff berth since 2020 after beating the Carolina Hurricanes in a 3-2 shootout on Monday.

    đŸ„Š Preparing: UFC is returning to Philadelphia in August for UFC 330, its first major championship event in the city in 15 years.

    📖 Reading: A Camden High graduate’s journey from playing five years of college football to having NFL aspirations.

    Bullpen shuffle

    Chase Shugart had a 3.72 ERA over 9⅔ innings in spring training.

    The Phillies’ bullpen shuffling continues, with the team optioning righty Seth Johnson and recalling righty Chase Shugart from triple-A Lehigh Valley.

    Recalling Shugart gives the bullpen a fresh arm. Rob Thomson got a look at the 29-year-old in spring training and says “I don’t think any situation is going to scare him a lot.”

    After jumping out to a 3-0 lead against the Cubs, a disastrous sixth inning from Tim Mayza doomed the Phillies in a 10-4 loss. The Phillies will try to avoid losing three consecutive series on Wednesday.

    ‘A little bit of belief’

    Flyers goaltender Dan Vladar celebrates with his teammates after the Flyers clinched a playoff spot on Monday.

    They did it. The Flyers are back in the playoffs for the first time in six seasons. “It’s been a lot of years,” coach Rick Tocchet said Monday.

    The other Philly teams have gotten the chance to experience what a true playoff atmosphere looks like over the last few seasons. Now it’s the Flyers’ turn to experience a playoff atmosphere in Philly.

    And as the season wrapped up on Tuesday, the Flyers’ youngsters shined in a 4-2 win over the Montreal Canadiens. The win gave the Flyers 43 on the season, their most since the 2011-12 season.

    Fan gets Flyer’d up

    Flyers mascot Gritty (left) and a likeness of him tattooed into the top of Willie Aston’s head.

    Willie Aston, 50, of Kutztown has been a Flyers fan since the 1990s, and with the team making the playoffs for the first time since 2020, he got a portrait of Gritty tattooed on the top of his head.

    “Everybody so far has loved [my Gritty tattoo]. 
 A lot of people like the added touch of the eyes and the blood and the fangs.”

    Mike Sielski’s take

    Keith Jones has proved to be a quick study since transitioning from broadcasting to an NHL front office.

    Since becoming the Flyers’ president in 2023, Keith Jones has never watched his team compete in a shootout. On Monday night, he was in the upper reaches of Xfinity Mobile Arena, pacing in a hallway just outside the booth where he used to call games.

    Many rolled their eyes when the Flyers hired a broadcaster as team president. Three years later, Jones has the team in the playoffs and trending upward. He has shown he shouldn’t be underestimated, writes columnist Mike Sielski.

    🧠 Trivia time answer

    Who holds the Sixers record for most points in a playoff game with 55?

    B) Allen Iverson in Game 1 of the 2003 Eastern Conference first round — Joey M. was first with the correct answer.

    What you’re saying about your favorite venue

    We asked: What is your favorite Philly sports venue of all time? Among your response:

    Way too many to choose from. Shibe Park a/k/a Connie Mack Stadium, Municipal stadium, the Palestra, Franklin Field, the Arena at 45th & Market St, the original Spectrum, Xfinity Mobile, the Vet, Citizens Bank Park, Lincoln Financial Field, Olney High School Gymnasium, the Convention Hall, Mann Music Center, Freedom Mortgage Pavilion. Going on 87 and been to them all. I think my all time favorite was a vacant lot at the Harold B Robinson auto store at Broad and 67th Ave. in West Oak Lane where we played soft ball games with our dad’s, uncles and friends almost every Sunday morning in the ‘40’s and ‘50’s. — Ronald R.

    The Palestra hands-down! Loved watching Big 5 college and PIAA triple header basketball playoff games in the mid-70’s. Bristol High School would have 4 fan buses caravan to West Philly to support the Warriors during their state championship run. Later as a Temple Owl, we attended many Big 5 double headers with the streamers and signs from the student section. — Bob C.

    The Palestra is the oldest major college arena still in use.

    For me it was Shibe Park later Connie Mack Stadium. I saw my very first MLB game there in 1948 sitting in the left field bleachers with the Springfield Delco AA. Saw Connie Mack and his Athletics there just once, and saw my first Eagles game there as well. Very special too because over the years I got to take all four of my younger brothers there to see the Phillies and or Eagles. Many fond memories. — Everett S.

    Connie Mack Stadium was all about baseball (not “entertainment” distractions) where the grass was actually a beautiful green compared to my black and white TV and of course, the massive Ballantine Beer Scoreboard along with box and reserve seats not wide enough for today’s human. — Mike P.

    I have to say that both the palestra and Franklin Field were my favorite venues. Watching the Eagles beat Green Bay on 12/26/60 was a true highlight and all of the Big 5 games at the Palestra with the roll-out signs and the intensity in the stands there was never dull moment in the hallowed halls of the magnificent Basilica of College Basketball. — Richard F.

    We compiled today’s newsletter using reporting from Matt Mullin, Gina Mizell, Gabriela Carroll, Devin Jackson, Rob Tornoe, Ariel Simpson, Jackie Spiegel, Mike Sielski, Lochlahn March, Scott Lauber, and Owen Hewitt.

    By submitting your written, visual, and/or audio contributions, you agree to The Inquirer’s Terms of Use, including the grant of rights in Section 10.

    Thanks for getting your morning started with me on this hot spring day. Kerith will catch back up with you in Thursday’s newsletter. — Bella

  • ‘I want us to go down in history’: Tyrese Maxey and VJ Edgecombe’s bond will shape the Sixers’ future

    ‘I want us to go down in history’: Tyrese Maxey and VJ Edgecombe’s bond will shape the Sixers’ future

    Inside the visitors’ locker room in Washington earlier this month, VJ Edgecombe slid over to join Tyrese Maxey for a joint postgame interview.

    Six minutes of banter, inside jokes, and genuine comments ensued between the 76ers guards. Maxey scanned a box score from the Sixers’ dominant victory over the Wizards and asked Edgecombe, with pseudo exasperation, “Bro, you only had one defensive rebound? How is that possible?” Edgecombe interjected during a Maxey answer about teammates who had scored 30 points off the bench this season, because the veteran had forgotten Justin Edwards and former Sixer Cameron Payne. And Maxey dropped that Edgecombe had started calling himself “PG1,” because he had 10 assists that night.

    “Just trying to make life easier for my dog right here,” Edgecombe said of Maxey. “They be hounding him. Guarding him full-court. Face guarding him. Doing all type of things. They trying their best to stop him, and they can’t, really.”

    The scene was evidence of how Maxey and Edgecombe can be playful in one moment, then candidly hold each other accountable in the next, then sincere about their partnership in the next. They are similarly wired: tenaciously hardworking and poised for their age, yet unafraid to let their personalities crack through their seriousness about their craft.

    Now the Sixers’ electric backcourt — which we can officially dub “VJ Maxx” thanks to their collaboration with clothing store TJ Maxx for their outfits for Sunday’s regular-season finale — are about to step into the postseason together for the first time. Joel Embiid, a former NBA Most Valuable Player, remains out while recovering from last week’s emergency appendectomy. Paul George, at 35 years old, must now be characterized as a complementary player who recently returned from a 25-game NBA suspension for violating the league’s anti-drug policy.

    Maxey and Edgecombe have fueled this Sixers season, as the All-NBA contender and first-year player likely to finish third on an exceptional Rookie of the Year ballot. The Sixers likely will go as far as the pair can lead them, starting with Wednesday’s Play-In Tournament matchup against the Orlando Magic (7:30 p.m., Prime Video). And it marks another move into the Sixers’ future that has already been percolating, with Maxey and Edgecombe creating the core duo around whom the franchise should build.

    “We have this chip on our shoulder, I think,” Maxey said. “We’re competitive and we want to win. He don’t care about nothing but winning. He don’t care about his points. He don’t care about his stats. All he care about is winning, and it’s evident in his play, so that’s why we get along.”

    Added Edgecombe: “[He’s] one of the best players in the NBA. 
 My goal is to be that, to be a superstar. So it’s helping me to know the right steps and everything it takes in how to do that.”

    Maxey and Edgecombe were initially linked because of, as Maxey called it, the Sixers’ “very, very, very, very bad” 2024-25 season — plus fabulous draft lottery luck to land the third overall pick.

    Before the Sixers chose Edgecombe, Maxey remembered seeing clips of him dunking on “the kid from Gonzaga” (Joe Few) and talking trash while playing with former Sixer Buddy Hield with the Bahamian national team. Edgecombe, who is such a film junkie that he watched Maxey’s high school footage, was impressed with his quickness and skill.

    Sixers guards Tyrese Maxey and VJ Edgecombe will serve as the core of the franchise in the future.

    They first met when Maxey stopped by the Sixers’ facility during Edgecombe’s predraft workout. They had a casual get-to-know-you conversation that day, before Maxey called to welcome him to the Sixers on draft night.

    When Maxey shared that his offseason workouts begin at 6 a.m., and Edgecombe committed to joining and then actually showed up, Maxey knew they were a basketball match.

    “And he’s smiling, too,” Maxey recently recalled to The Inquirer. “But he’s a tough kid, and I feel like I’m tough, as well.”

    The summer training sessions continued in Philly and Los Angeles, with a side quest to Disneyland during which Maxey forced Edgecombe to wear a Goofy hat. When Maxey peeked his head through a curtain to say, “Hey, buddy” during Edgecombe’s media day news conference, it was clear they had established a foundational bond.

    As the season approached, Maxey was ready for another leap into stardom. Coach Nick Nurse, meanwhile, had no hesitation about immediately putting Edgecombe in the starting lineup. They possessed the explosive speed and athleticism to push the pace, attack the rim, and make defensive plays on the ball.

    “If me and him are running,” Edgecombe recently told The Inquirer, “I think we’re hard to stop.”

    Like in the Sixers’ opener at the Boston Celtics, when Maxey dropped 40 points and Edgecombe had 34 in a historic rookie debut. Or in December, when Edgecombe got into position to collect a short Maxey jumper for a go-ahead putback against the Golden State Warriors, just before Maxey raced to the other end for a game-clinching block at the buzzer. Or a couple weeks after that, when Maxey dished to Edgecombe for the game-winning three-pointer to beat the Memphis Grizzlies in overtime.

    Maxey ascended into a top-5 scorer in the NBA (28.3 points per game) and the league leader in minutes played per game (38), while also averaging 6.6 assists, 4.1 rebounds, and 1.9 steals per game. Edgecombe demonstrated an all-around game — he finished the season averaging 16 points, 5.6 rebounds, 4.2 assists, and 1.4 steals in 75 games — and a knack for those crunch-time buckets.

    In mid-February, they took the cross-country trip to Los Angeles to represent the Sixers at All-Star Weekend. Maxey sat courtside as Edgecombe won Rising Stars MVP, before helping his team of younger U.S. players win the Sunday tournament.

    “He ain’t coming to watch it if I ain’t going to play hard,” Edgecombe said after the Rising Stars event. “ 
 I didn’t want to waste his time. I know he has a whole lot of stuff he could probably be doing.”

    In between that on-court success, there were signals of their deepening rapport.

    They flashed coordinated dance moves during pregame introductions and postgame interviews. When Edgecombe deadpanned in February that he rated a wicked Maxey dunk on Minnesota star Anthony Edwards a “6 out of 10,” a flabbergasted Maxey responded with, “He can’t even dunk on people, and he gave me a 6 out of 10?!”

    Sixers guards Tyrese Maxey and VJ Edgecombe build their bond over summer and preseason workouts.

    Cameras also caught a heated exchange between the two players during a January loss to the Cleveland Cavaliers, when both thought they were supposed to pick up the ballhandler. Maxey did not realize the moment had blown up online until his father, Tyrone, called and asked, “Hey, you and VJ good?”

    “Everybody thought we was mad at each other,” Maxey said later. “That’s competitive nature. We can talk that out. We was just fine right after. 
 That’s my little brother.”

    Added Edgecombe: “We’re hard on each other, and then we also understand. 
 Every time he has something to say, I know it’s always coming from a place of love.”

    Nurse sees Maxey passing his early-career experiences on to Edgecombe. The most valuable, the rookie says, is observing the consistency with which Maxey has carried himself throughout the season.

    Maxey, meanwhile, already views Edgecombe in a role similar to his third season — aka, “we need him.” And though Edgecombe has occasionally gotten “lost in the sauce” scoring-wise, Maxey is proud of how the rookie has shifted into multiple roles.

    That was especially true last month, when the Sixers were missing four starters, including Maxey. That pushed Edgecombe into the lead ballhandler and top scoring option, and into encountering double-teams for the first time “that I can remember,” he said. Maxey, naturally, became a source of advice.

    “I told him that I hate it,” Edgecombe said following a March 14 win over the Brooklyn Nets. “But it’s a sign of respect. I’m going to ask him [how to combat it]. 
 But that just shows how good Tyrese is, also. I’ve just got to keep asking questions [and] try to figure out how to get through everything.”

    Added George: “Tyrese is giving [Edgecombe] a ton of confidence 
 and I think it’s showing. When he’s on the court, it’s almost like he’s been here before.”

    As the Sixers went down the stretch of the regular season, former coach Doc Rivers said he believes playing alongside Edgecombe has helped Maxey improve his defense. On fan appreciation night last week, the giveaway was a “Rookie Jam” T-shirt featuring Maxey and Edgecombe’s faces and video game-style ratings for various skills. San Antonio Spurs coach Mitch Johnson took a question about Edgecombe before last week’s matchup against the Sixers, and immediately tied him to Maxey.

    “It seems like he likes competing, and he and Maxey share that sentiment from afar,” Johnson said. “To have that in two young men, for a franchise with that amount of talent and, it feels like, character 
 that’s a really good source [for] your main characters involved in your program.”

    When asked where Edgecombe has most helped him this season, Maxey grinned and said, “He keeps me happy.” Maxey appreciates now being the veteran on the receiving end of the type of energy boost he knows he has provided to Embiid and former Sixers guard James Harden over the years. And though Maxey has shared a bit with Edgecombe about what to expect from the postseason, that demeanor is why “he’s the least of my worries.”

    Prior to Sunday’s regular-season finale, Nurse said he believes the Maxey-Edgecombe backcourt is “still unfolding.” As Edgecombe stepped into a media scrum to face questions about Wednesday’s play-in game against Orlando, he wore Gucci sunglasses to complement his TJ Maxx sweater, tie, and slacks. From across the room, Maxey yelled Edgecombe looked “clean as hell” and that he “ain’t a rookie no more.”

    “Playoff Valdez,” Maxey said, dropping Edgecombe’s full first name.

    Next, they will step into their first postseason together. And, perhaps, into the Sixers’ future.

    “Just to be his running mate,” Edgecombe said. “As the years go on, I want us to go down in history.”

  • Hungary’s Viktor OrbĂĄn was called ‘Trump before Trump.’ Will the president also follow him in defeat? | Editorial

    Hungary’s Viktor Orbán was called ‘Trump before Trump.’ Will the president also follow him in defeat? | Editorial

    Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, whose illiberal right-wing policies have served as a template for Donald Trump’s second term, was roundly defeated Sunday. His electoral loss, after 16 years in power, offers a lesson for those seeking to safeguard the American experiment from the president’s autocratic bent.

    Perhaps the biggest takeaway from challenger PĂ©ter Magyar’s victory is that if the will of the voters is strong enough, even a hollowed-out democracy can still speak for the people. This bodes ill for Republicans in upcoming elections, as the United States is nowhere near the level of institutional degradation achieved by OrbĂĄn and his party.

    It has not been for lack of trying, though.

    Guided by the Project 2025 blueprint — a plan Trump disavowed during his campaign but which he has followed since his return to the White House — the president has attempted to dismantle constitutional checks and balances, undermine elections, and bully and dominate business and civil society.

    Trump adviser Steve Bannon once called Orbán “Trump before Trump” and Hungary under his leadership offered a grim preview of what a successfully MAGA-fied America would look like: Government control of universities and the media, courts and federal jobs occupied by loyalists, extreme gerrymandering limiting political opposition, and curbed press freedoms.

    But just as Trump and his enablers moved much more swiftly in trying to undercut democratic institutions and weaken the rule of law than their Eastern European counterparts, the cracks in the foundation that ultimately led to Orbán’s overwhelming loss are already visible in Washington.

    Magyar and his Tisza party were expected to hold a two-thirds parliamentary majority on the strength of focusing on corruption and a poor economy. While Trump has been busy enriching himself, his family, and his cronies to the tune of billions of dollars, everyday Americans are struggling.

    Peter Magyar, the leader of the opposition Tisza party waves a national flag after claiming victory in a parliamentary election in Budapest, Hungary, Sunday.

    Although the U.S. is not Hungary, Democrats still looking to find a winning message can’t do much better than what Magyar promised in his victory speech, a country “where citizens can count on their government, where everyone is entitled to proper healthcare, a carefree childhood, and a dignified old age.”

    Contrast that with a president who claims that citizens of the richest nation in the world who want a better life, better look elsewhere. “It’s not possible for us to take care of daycare, Medicaid, Medicare, all these individual things,” Trump said at an April 2 Easter luncheon. “They can do it on a state basis. You can’t do it on a federal. We have to take care of one thing: military protection.”

    Yes, having a strong military is important, but even more so is the responsible stewardship of America’s armed forces. By some estimates, Trump’s war of choice in Iran costs taxpayers $2 billion a day, with a long term price tag coming in at $1 trillion over the next decade on military-related spending alone. That doesn’t even consider the pain at the pump and the checkout lane as the still unresolved conflict hikes up prices on everything from gas to groceries.

    Trump’s blinkered priorities are not limited to the economy.

    While the president and his secretary of state watched a mixed martial arts match in Miami Saturday, peace talks with Iran were falling apart. On Sunday, Trump attacked Pope Leo XIV on social media, claiming the U.S.-born pontiff should “stop catering to the radical left” and “get his act together as pope” before posting an AI-generated image of himself as Jesus healing the sick.

    As far as we know, Viktor OrbĂĄn never publicly compared himself to Christ, but other parallels with Trump remain strong, including the use of the autocratic playbook, and the graft and incompetence of their administrations.

    After Sunday, supporters of democracy can hope the similarities don’t end there.

  • Jalen Hurts needs another weapon. The Eagles need to prioritize one in the draft.

    Jalen Hurts needs another weapon. The Eagles need to prioritize one in the draft.

    Eight days out from the draft, and the biggest question of the offseason has yet to be answered.

    What is the Eagles’ plan for the post-A.J. Brown Era?

    This isn’t a question that you can shrug off. It would be just as pressing if Brown were guaranteed to return in 2026. He and Dallas Goedert almost certainly won’t be with the team in 2027 or beyond. Even if they are, they are highly unlikely to be anywhere close to the players they were when the Eagles’ offense was at its best. The chapters are short in the NFL. The pages must be turned.

    The story of this year’s draft better be the pass catchers. Even if the Eagles somehow think their passing game can tread water with Dontayvion Wicks and Marquise Brown as their second and third options out wide, and with a 31-year-old and clearly diminished Goedert at tight end, those aren’t long-term solutions. The Eagles desperately need to find at least one in this year’s draft after going four years without selecting a pass catcher higher than 152nd.

    A few points of emphasis:

    You don’t find a lot of franchise-level offensive tackles in the second half of the first round.

    Not since 2017 has a future All Pro tackle been drafted between picks No. 17 and 49. Even multiyear Pro Bowlers are few and far between. The Cowboys nabbed left tackle Tyler Smith at No. 24 in 2022. Before that, Garrett Boles was the biggest success story, going to the Broncos at No. 20 in 2017. Boles was the first offensive lineman off the board that year, thanks in part to a confluence of circumstances. Going before him were three quarterbacks, two unicorn running backs, and the first three members of a loaded cornerback class (Marshon Lattimore, Marlon Humphrey, Adoree’ Jackson).

    The Eagle know first hand how hard it is to find a fixture in the second half of the first round. The last two offensive linemen they drafted there were Andre Dillard and Danny Watkins. There simply isn’t a lot of logic in the idea that the Eagles will be prioritizing an eventual Lane Johnson replacement at No. 23.

    “If you’re forcing something, you’re not really filling the need anyway,” general manager Howie Roseman said on Tuesday.

    The Texans went 4-12 in 2020. And while Deshaun Watson put up the best numbers of his career — 4,823 yards, 33 touchdowns, seven interceptions, a 70.2 completions percentage — the game script had something to do with them.

    Jihaad Campbell was the Eagles’ pick at No. 31 overall during the 2025 draft.

    The Eagles have spent a lot of draft capital on the defensive line over the last several seasons.

    Again, that’s not to say that they’d turn down an opportunity to draft an edge rusher they have graded as a potential elite talent who can start immediately. Chances are, anybody who fits that profile will be long gone by the time the Eagles are on the clock. They used the No. 31 pick on Jihaad Campbell last season. They drafted Nolan Smith at No. 30 in 2023. Of the last 11 picks that the Eagles have made inside the Top 115 overall, 10 have come on the defensive side of the football.

    Jalen Hurts is a quarterback who needs an elite weapon that a defense can’t shade coverage to on every play.

    DeVonta Smith counts as an elite weapon. But people need to pump the brakes on the idea that he is Jaxon Smith-Njigba in waiting. Several different media outlets have mentioned the construct in their reporting on the Brown situation. The theory goes something like this: with Brown gone, Smith will be better than he ever has been, similar to how Smith-Njiba blew up in 2025 after the Seahawks traded away D.K. Metcalf.

    The problem with that reasoning is that Metcalf’s departure was the least significant of three major variable changes in the Seahawks offense last season. The first two were a new quarterback and a new offensive coordinator.

    In fact, you might consider it four variable changes if you include Geno Smith’s departure in addition to Sam Darnold’s arrival. Jakobi Meyers’ decreased production year-over-year after Smith’s arrival at quarterback looks suspiciously similar to Smith-Njigba’s increased production in the wake of Smith’s departure. Meyers saw a 23% drop in his targets and a 36% drop in his receiving yardage on a per-game basis in his seven weeks with Smith compared to his 2024 output. And Meyers didn’t have to play in the shadow of Metcalf, either.

    The real yin to Smith-Njigba’s yang was Justin Jefferson. In 2024, he caught 103 passes for 1,533 yards with Darnold as starter. This, despite the presence of Jordan Addison, whose numbers were practically identical to Metcalf’s. Addison was still there last year. Darnold wasn’t. Jefferson caught 84 passes for 1,048 yards.

    A tidier summation:

    • Jefferson without Darnold vs. ’24: 13 less targets, 19 less receptions, 485 less yards.
    • Smith-Njigba with Darnold vs. ’24: 26 more targets, 19 more receptions, 663 more yards

    Fairly symmetrical, no?

    Smith-Njigba’s breakout happened because he had a quarterback who could make all of the throws, including those in traffic in the middle of the field. Hurts hasn’t shown to be that quarterback.

    Oregon tight end Kenyon Sadiq should be at the top of the Eagles draft board. But don’t bet on him falling close to their range.

    I’m still a bit puzzled that the majority of mock drafts have Sadiq falling into the second half of the first round. He is a physical specimen who tested off the charts at the combine. The only guy in his class over the last 20 years was future All-Pro Vernon Davis. The college production wasn’t eye-popping, but it also wasn’t much different from Colston Loveland, who went 10th overall to the Bears last season. All it takes is one team higher than the Eagles to fall in love with him. I’ll be surprised if he falls beyond No. 15.

    Oregon’s Kenyon Sadiq is the top projected tight end in the NFL draft.

    That being said, if the Eagles somehow find a way to get themselves in position to draft Sadiq, they would have a tidy answer to their question of where to go after Brown (and Goedert). Sadiq is the one player in this draft outside the projected Top 5 who has the potential to immediately fix a lot of the Eagles’ offensive question marks, run-blocking included.

    Even if Sadiq isn’t an option, the Eagles have good reason to hope they can nab a player who can help them in both the short and long-term.

    Neither Texas A&M’s K.C. Concepcion nor Alabama’s Germie Bernard profile as the sort of outlier that Brown is/was. But both have skill sets and polish that would pair nicely with DeVonta Smith. Both are players who could exploit whatever attention defenses pay to Smith. Concepcion has a lot of Stefon Diggs to his profile, while Bernard looks like a potential Deebo Samuel with the frame and rushing ability to go with his hands. I’ve seen a few mock drafts that have Bernard on the board when the Eagles pick at No. 54. That would be a stroke of luck on the level of Cooper DeJean.

    The moral of the story is simple. The Eagles can’t afford to force a pick at any position. But they also aren’t in a situation where they can afford to go purely for the best player available. They need to factor in their future salary cap and talent distribution. You can’t have too many All-Pro cornerbacks, but you can have too many who you need to pay.

    Further, you can have too few players at positions that have shown themselves to be just as important to the Eagles’ success over the last several seasons.

    Roseman shouldn’t get trapped into picking the best pass-catcher available. But he does need to hope a viable one is there.

  • Gov. Shapiro says dispute over security fence with Abington neighbors has no place in federal court

    Gov. Shapiro says dispute over security fence with Abington neighbors has no place in federal court

    While Gov. Josh Shapiro was showing the Dutch royal couple around Independence Mall this week, his general counsel was taking steps to quell a dispute that hit Pennsylvania’s first couple close to home.

    Shapiro asked a U.S. district judge to dismiss a federal lawsuit filed by his Abington neighbors over a parcel of land between their residences.

    Jeremy and Simone Mock accused the governor and his wife, Lori Shapiro, of illegally occupying part of their yard to build an eight-foot security fence last summer in what the Mocks claim in the lawsuit was an “outrageous abuse of power.”

    On the same February day the Mocks filed their lawsuit, the Shapiros sued their neighbors in Montgomery County Court, asking a judge to declare the disputed 2,900-square-foot strip of lawn as part of their property.

    The Mocks’ lawsuit has no place in federal court, Monday’s filing contends, as a controversy over a property boundary is a common matter for state courts.

    Plus, the Mocks cannot bring a lawsuit against Shapiro as governor or against the Pennsylvania State Police because the couple’s claims are against Shapiro as a property owner, not action he took in his official capacity as governor, according to the filing.

    “That the Shapiros allowed [state police] to access the disputed parcel in a manner similar to that which the Shapiros access that parcel does not magically convert this private dispute to ‘state action,’” the motion says.

    The motion also argues the state police are immune from litigation in federal court as a state agency.

    The Shapiros have lived in the sleepy Montco neighborhood for more than 23 years, with the Mocks as their neighbors for less than a decade.

    The feud began when security updates were proposed to Shapiro’s home after a man firebombed the state-owned governor’s residence in Harrisburg in April 2025 while Shapiro and his family slept inside, according to court filings.

    In response, state police proposed security upgrades to the governor’s personal residence in Abington, which included the installation of an eight-foot fence along the property’s perimeter.

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    A land surveyor discovered in summer 2025 that the Mocks actually owned about 2,900 square feet of land that the Shapiros had believed was a part of their property since they bought the home in 2003.

    The Mocks, whose property is adjacent to the Shapiros’, say in their suit that the planned location of the fence is on their property unlawfully and would violate their rights.

    The Shapiros began planting arborvitae-type trees and other plants on the Mocks’ property, flying drones over it, threatening to remove healthy trees, and “chasing away” contractors who came to work in the Mocks’ yard, the Mocks’ suit says.

    The complaint also accuses Shapiro of directing state police to patrol the property. Troopers instructed the Mocks to leave the area of the yard multiple times, calling it a “disputed” area or “security zone,” the suit says.

    The Shapiros say they are the rightful owners of the land through adverse possession, a legal mechanism that extends a person ownership of a property they have actively used for at least 21 years.

    The governor and his wife are asking a Montgomery County Court judge to find them the “legal and equitable owners” of the area in dispute. Until the state judge makes a determination, the federal court should abstain from considering the Mocks’ federal lawsuit, the new filing says.

    Outside of court filings, Shapiro attacked the lawsuit as politically motivated.

    The Mocks are represented by Wally Zimolong, a Delaware County attorney who describes himself on his website as the “‘go-to’ lawyer in Pennsylvania for conservative causes and candidates.” Zimolong previously represented the political campaigns of President Donald Trump and U.S. Sen. Dave McCormick (R., Pa.).

    “The Governor looks forward to a swift resolution and will not be bullied by anyone trying to score cheap political points, especially at the expense of his family’s safety and well-being,” Will Simons, a spokesperson for Shapiro, a Democrat running for reelection, said in a statement in February.

    Zimolong did not comment on the new filing, but previously said the Mocks are open to resolving the dispute outside of court.

    “At base, this is a straightforward defense of the property rights of two innocent owners, who were living peacefully next to the Shapiros for over nine years,” the attorney said in a February statement.

    Staff writer Gillian McGoldrick contributed to this article.

  • Nationals say Andrew Painter was ‘as advertised’ in Phillies debut: ‘He’s got really plus stuff’

    Nationals left fielder Daylen Lile can recall facing Andrew Painter as a teenager.

    Lile, 23, is four months older than the 22-year-old Phillies pitcher, and they grew up competing on the travel ball circuit many years before they played against each other at Citizens Bank Park. They also faced off in the 2020 Perfect Game All-American Classic in Oklahoma City, a showcase of the top high school baseball players in the country that also doubles as a charity fundraiser for pediatric cancer research.

    Lile, a Kentucky native, represented the West, while Painter, a Floridian, played for the East.

    “Seeing him through travel ball and seeing him now, kind of the same pitcher,” Lile said. “… Just keeping hitters guessing. He’s got really plus stuff. He’s got really good extension, being a tall guy.”

    Lile was one of the few Nationals hitters who found success against Painter in his sparkling major-league debut on Tuesday. Over 5⅓ innings of work, Painter allowed one earned run on four hits and one walk to secure his first major league win. He struck out eight, mixing all six of his pitches.

    “He was as advertised,” said Nationals manager Blake Butera. “He’s going to be a really good pitcher in this game for a long time. That was pretty impressive stuff.”

    Lile was responsible for half of the Nationals’ hits against Painter, notching a single to lead off the second and a double with one out in the fourth. He joked that it was nice payback after Painter struck him out, back when they were both 17.

    “I think he got me one time, but it was nice to get him back today,” Lile said.

    Nationals right fielder James Wood and third baseman Brady House also played in that showcase in Oklahoma City six years ago as Painter’s teammates on the East team.

    Each of them were early draft picks, then top prospects, and now all four have officially made it to the majors.

    “It’s kind of crazy,” Lile said. “Obviously, we talk about it. We’re pretty young, but to see all of us doing what we’re doing up here, it’s pretty special.”

    Painter’s road here has taken more twists and turns than expected. He entered the spring of 2023 battling for a Phillies rotation spot, but he suffered a UCL tear that required Tommy John surgery and sidelined him for nearly two years.

    After returning to competitive action in the minor leagues last season, he was expected to potentially impact the major league club. But erratic fastball command led to inconsistent results in triple-A Lehigh Valley, and a call-up never arrived.

    That is, until he made the Phillies opening day roster this year. And according to the hitters on the other side on Tuesday night, his heater was a big part of what made him so effective.

    “He was kind of manipulating his fastball well,” said Wood, who went 0-for-3 against Painter. “He had a little bit of cut to it. So I feel like that made it play up.”

    Wood, hitting leadoff for the Nationals, became Painter’s first career strikeout in the first inning when he swung through a splitter below the zone. He struck out again in the fifth, whiffing on Painter’s fastball.

    When asked if Painter reminded him of another pitcher he’s faced before, Wood didn’t have a comparison.

    “No, he’s Andrew Painter,” Wood said. “He’s a good pitcher in his own right.”

  • Flyers playoff picture: Updated standings and wild-card chances

    Flyers playoff picture: Updated standings and wild-card chances

    So you’re saying there’s a chance …

    The Flyers enter the final stretch of the season squarely in the mix to land their first playoff berth in six seasons.

    The last time the Flyers made the playoffs was during the 2019-20 season, where, in the COVID bubble in Toronto, they eventually lost in the second round to the New York Islanders. The Flyers haven’t hosted a playoff game in Philly since the 2017-18 season.

    Things looked bleak just a few weeks ago, when the Flyers lost 12 of 15 games heading into the Olympic break. But the Flyers put together a solid string of wins since then, including Sunday’s exciting overtime victory against the Dallas Stars that supercharged their playoff hopes.

    The odds were rising before Tuesday night’s loss to the Washington Capitals. Money Puck dropped the Flyers’ playoff chances to 19.5% Tuesday night.

    Still, two paths remain for Philly to end their postseason drought. Here’s what the Flyers’ playoff picture currently looks like:

    Metropolitan Division standings

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    The top three teams in the Metropolitan Division by points will secure playoff spots.

    The Flyers have just one game remaining against teams in the divisional playoff hunt — Friday against the New York Islanders (7 p.m., NBC Sports Philadelphia+)

    Wild card standings

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    Outside of the top three teams in the Metropolitan and Atlantic divisions, the top two remaining teams in the Eastern Conference will secure wild-card spots in the playoffs.

    The Flyers are one of four teams within five points of the second wild-card spot in the Eastern Conference.

    The Flyers face the Detroit Red Wings two more times before the end of the season, starting with Thursday night’s matchup at the Xfinity Mobile Arena in South Philly. The Flyers also have a game on Saturday against Boston, which currently holds the first wild-card spot and is six points up on the Orange and Black.

    NHL playoff tiebreakers

    The Flyers will almost certainly need to land a playoff spot outright, as they are unlikely to win any tiebreaker.

    Regulation wins are the NHL’s first playoff tiebreaker, and the Flyers, with only 23, have by far the fewest among the teams they’re competing with for a postseason spot.

    Here are the NHL’s tiebreakers if two or more clubs are tied in points when the regular season ends:

    1. The greater number of regulation wins (RW)
    2. The greater number of regulation and overtime wins (ROW)
    3. The greater number of total wins (W)
    4. Points earned head-to-head in games against tied opponents
    5. The greater differential between goals for and against for the entire regular season (DIFF)
    6. The greater number of goals scored for the entire regular season (GF)

    Technically, the first tiebreaker is fewer number of games played, leading to a better points percentage. But since all NHL teams are scheduled to play 82 games, this is mainly used in-season to determine standings.

    Flyers remaining schedule

    • Thursday: Detroit Red Wings at Flyers, 7 p.m. (NBC Sports Philadelphia)
    • Friday: Flyers at New York Islanders, 7 p.m. (NBC Sports Philadelphia+)
    • Sunday: Boston Bruins at Flyers, 3:30 p.m. (TNT, truTV, HBO Max)
    • Tuesday, April 7: Flyers at New Jersey Devils, 7 p.m. (ESPN)
    • Thursday, April 9: Flyers at Detroit Red Wings, 7 p.m. (NBC Sports Philadelphia)
    • Saturday, April 11: Flyers at Winnipeg Jets,7 p.m. (NBC Sports Philadelphia)
    • Monday, April 13: Carolina Hurricanes at Flyers,7 p.m. (NBC Sports Philadelphia)
    • Tuesday, April 14: Montreal Canadiens at Flyers, 7 p.m. (NBC Sports Philadelphia)
  • Eagles owner Jeffrey Lurie calls the Linc ‘wonderful,’ but won’t rule out leaving South Philly amid stadium research

    Eagles owner Jeffrey Lurie calls the Linc ‘wonderful,’ but won’t rule out leaving South Philly amid stadium research

    PHOENIX — With the expiration of Lincoln Financial Field’s lease looming in 2032, team owner Jeffrey Lurie made it clear that all options are on the table for the Eagles’ future home.

    One of those variables is the prospective location of their home.

    At his annual news conference at the league meetings on Tuesday, Lurie explained that the team is conducting “exploratory research” on the prospect of a new or renovated stadium. That research dates back to at least last year, when the organization sent out surveys to season ticket holders to solicit their opinions on a potential stadium renovation or a new building.

    Before the Eagles’ move from Veterans Stadium to Lincoln Financial Field in 2003, Lurie said the organization conducted two to three years of exploratory research. Similarly, in the next year or two, he said he aims to have a more “definitive approach” to their stadium plans.

    For now, the Eagles are taking it slow with the exploratory process, using the latest NFL stadiums belonging to the Tennessee Titans and Buffalo Bills, as well as renovated international stadiums such as Bernabéu in Madrid and Camp Nou in Barcelona, as case studies.

    “Is there anything we can learn from Nashville and Buffalo?” Lurie said. “Is there anything we can learn from the renovations in Madrid and Barcelona? It’s really important. I think we want to maximize fan amenities and attract the best possible environment for Philadelphia. And to do that, you’ve really got to do the exploratory research. Don’t rush into it. This is a big decision.”

    Lincoln Financial Field has been the Eagles’ home since the 2003 season.

    Part of the big decision includes the future site of the stadium, if the Eagles decide to build anew. Since 1971, the Eagles have called the South Philadelphia Sports Complex their home. The World War II-era Steagles aside, each of the team’s six permanent home stadiums throughout its 92-year history have been located within city limits.

    But in recent years, some NFL teams with new stadium plans have explored moves outside of city centers, or even to different states entirely. Chicago Bears president Kevin Warren told Pro Football Talk on Tuesday that the team’s next stadium will likely reside in either northwest Indiana or Arlington Heights, Ill., after their lease expires at Soldier Field in 2033.

    Public funding often plays a role in prospective stadium destinations. Indiana governor Mike Braun signed a bill in February that permitted funding for a potential new Bears stadium in Hammond, Ind., which is located approximately 25 miles northeast of Chicago.

    Lurie wouldn’t rule out any potential locations if the team builds a new stadium, even if that means leaving South Philadelphia.

    “Whatever’s best for the fans,” Lurie said. “I mean, we don’t really go on a geographical basis. It’s whatever’s best for the fans. And I can’t tell you where [the planned stadium in] Cleveland is, Barcelona is, I don’t know. Honestly, the bottom line is whatever is best for the fans.”

    Lurie repeatedly emphasized that the fan experience is his top priority in the stadium plans. He said he doesn’t have any “non-negotiables,” even as it pertains to the decision to include a dome on their home. New stadiums and renovations to existing facilities around the league have often included roofs, increasing the eligibility of those cities to host events such as the Super Bowl.

    “We’re so focused on fan amenities,” Lurie said. “To me, that’s the number one thing. Just as a boy growing up, you want to have as best a fan experience. The rest is architecture, design, and where it ends up.”

    The Bills’ new Highmark Stadium in Orchard Park, N.Y. (upper right) is one of the new NFL facilities the Eagles are studying as part of their research.

    Lincoln Financial Field will turn 23 years old in August. The Jefferson Health Training Complex, the team’s practice facility formerly called the NovaCare Complex, is 24 years old. By the time the Washington Commanders’ new stadium is scheduled to open at the historic RFK Stadium site in 2030, Lurie acknowledged that the Eagles’ facilities will be the oldest in the division.

    But Lurie said he loves Lincoln Financial Field and called it “wonderful.” The practice facility went from “worst to best” when NovaCare was built in 2001, he said. The team continues to make upgrades and renovations to its current facilities, plus investments beyond the physical buildings into player health and safety endeavors.

    Just because the Eagles’ facilities are aging doesn’t necessarily mean that they can’t be improved or that a new stadium is a foregone conclusion, according to Lurie.

    “There’s Fenway [Park], there’s Lambeau [Field], whatever, but there’s no question our practice facility and particularly our stadium will be the oldest in the division,” Lurie said. “We have put so much money into the stadium, so it doesn’t appear that way, and it’s still great, and people still love it, but it’s a fact of that exploration I was talking to you about.

    “Do we want to be in 2045, 15 years older than every other stadium in our division or whatever? We’d have to see. Maybe. But it’s all part of it. I know part of our culture is to … maximize the athletic ability that we have of our players, our coaches and everybody. That will always be the top priority. So whatever we’re doing with [the] stadium, with [the] practice facility, if it’s not near top-notch, it’s not our goal.”

    The Eagles are still at least a year away from cementing their stadium plans. The only certainty is that Lurie is considering every alternative.

    “I think if you’re just humble about it and open that you don’t have all the answers, and do the exploratory work, you’ll end up with a better long-term situation,” Lurie said.

  • Flyers’ playoff push and Porter Martone’s debut stalled by Alex Ovechkin and the Capitals in 6-4 loss

    WASHINGTON ― The Flyers’ final countdown began on Tuesday night.

    Playing in their 74th game of the season, and facing a Washington Capitals team clinging to their own playoff dreams, the Flyers had a chance to gain some ground but instead fell, 6-4.

    The loss ended the Flyers’ winning streak at three games; they have not won four in a row since Feb. 6-12, 2023.

    However, there is some good news. The Flyers didn’t really lose any ground in the playoff race as the Ottawa Senators, Detroit Red Wings, New York Islanders, and Columbus Blue Jackets all lost, too.

    They remain tied in points with the Red Wings and Senators, with all three teams trailing the Blue Jackets by two points for the second wild card slot in the Eastern Conference. All three teams have a game in hand on Columbus. Washington moved three points back of the Blue Jackets, too.

    The Flyers also remain three points back of the Islanders for the third seed in the Metropolitan Division, while the Pittsburgh Penguins expanded their lead for the second seed in the division with a win.

    Ending up on the losing side also spoiled the debut of Porter Martone, who was drafted sixth overall in the 2025 NHL draft and did not look out of place. He skated on a line with Christian Dvorak and Travis Konecny, the latter of whom was his linemate during exhibition games for Canada at the Ice Hockey World Championships last May.

    The 19-year-old played more than 16 minutes, got tagged for delay of the game, and had six shot attempts and five shots on goal, including a one-timer off a pass from Konecny as they were rushing into the zone. He made a great play in the third period with the Flyers down by two, when he backchecked on a play that turned into a two-on-one, and knocked away the pass across the ice.

    A physical game that saw a combined 59 hits and had a high-tempo pace and intensity seemed to catch the Flyers off-guard to start, but they settled in, and said afterward they felt they handled it better as the game wore on. It was a good test for a young team that is hoping to play well into April.

    And it also showed that the Flyers’ special teams need to step up. The power play went 0-for-3, including a chance with under four minutes left in regulation and the Flyers needing a goal to tie. Washington scored twice when it had the man advantage, thanks to offensive-zone penalties taken by Konecny and Trevor Zegras.

    Skating in his 900th game, Washington’s Tom Wilson opened the scoring with just over five minutes left in the first period during five-on-five action. On a two-on-two against Rasmus Ristolainen and Travis Sanheim, he took a drop pass from Pierre-Luc Dubois and sent the shot against the grain and past Dan Vladaƙ’s blocker. It was the 47th time in 74 games that the Flyers trailed first.

    Flyers right wing Carl Grundstrom (center) celebrates his goal during the second period against the Capitals.

    Less than four minutes later, they found themselves in a 2-0 hole when Alex Ovechkin registered his 927th regular-season goal.

    The Capitals gained the offensive zone, and Connor McMichael dished the puck to defenseman Matt Roy, who was trailing. He had room and skated down to the net before sending a pass into the crease, where Jamie Drysdale tried to clear, but Ovechkin swooped in and knocked it home.

    An unrestricted free agent at the end of the season, there is a strong possibility that the game was “The Great 8’s” last game against the Flyers.

    But as they’ve done countless times before, the Flyers battled back, and before the clock hit five minutes into the second period, it was all tied up.

    Just 39 seconds in, Sanheim scored during four-on-four action, firing a one-timer off a pass from Konecny. The referees initially said there was goaltender interference by Christian Dvorak and called off the goal. Coach Rick Tocchet and his staff challenged the call because Dvorak actually never touched Capitals goalie Logan Thompson as he crashed the net. The replay showed that Capitals defenseman Martin FehĂ©rvĂĄry’s stick touched Thompson, and after a review, the goal counted.

    Sanheim has nine goals on the season, one shy of his career high set in 2023-24.

    Under four minutes later, it was Carl Grundström getting on the board for the first time since Feb. 3 — which just happened to be against the Capitals too.

    The Flyers dumped the puck in, and Owen Tippett put a little bit of pressure on Roy, causing him to send a somewhat blind pass up off the boards. Zegras got there first and sent a quick, zinging backhand to the front of the net where Grundström was. The Swede took it and scored around the right pad of Thompson.

    The good vibes didn’t last long, however, as the Capitals retook the lead just over two minutes later on a goal by Jakob Chychrun. Off an offensive-zone faceoff during a power play, Ryan Leonard sent the puck over to the big defenseman, and he fired off the one-timer past Vladaƙ. Leonard scored to make it 4-2 with his own power-play goal later in the period when it looked like Vladaƙ was screened by Nick Seeler.

    But once again, the Flyers tried to charge back in the third period.

    Less than 40 seconds in, Sanheim made a good play in the defensive zone that started the rush up the ice. Martone got the puck on a two-on-one with Konecny and tried to pass it over.

    The play was broken up, but Sanheim was there to get the loose puck and to send it over to Konecny, who just missed short side. He got the puck and fed it in front to Dvorak for his 16th goal of the season, putting him one shy of his career high.

    Ovechkin then made it 5-3 when he was left alone in front and reached to tap in a pass from McMichael. It was Ovechkin’s 54th goal and 86th point in 82 regular-season games against Philly.

    But the Flyers again got within one goal.

    Ristolainen got the puck inside the zone and made a nice move to give himself time and space to put a shot on. On the way to the net, Denver Barkey deflected the puck, which was also deflected off the Caps, and got it past Thompson to cut Washington’s lead to 5-4.

    Barkey has two goals and an assist in his past four games after being held off the score sheet for six games. Ristolainen has five assists in his past seven games.

    Breakaways

    Zegras extended his point streak to six games (one goal, five assists). … Konecny extended his point streak to three games (one goal, four assists) and gave him 65 points in 70 games. … Dvorak had a goal and an assist to give him 46 points on the season. … Noah Cates got an assist on Ristolainen’s goal, tying his career high (25) set in 2022-23. … Wilson added an empty-net goal with 64 seconds left in the game. 
 Forwards Alex Bump and Garrett Wilson, and defenseman Noah Juulsen were healthy scratches. 
 Defenseman Emil Andrae played in his 100th NHL game.

    Up next

    The Flyers return home for another meeting with the Red Wings on Thursday (7 p.m., NBCSP) to kick start a back-to-back that takes them to Long Island on Friday to play the Islanders (7 p.m., NBCSP+, NHLN).

  • The USMNT loses to Portugal in what amounted to a final pre-World Cup audition

    The USMNT loses to Portugal in what amounted to a final pre-World Cup audition

    ATLANTA — If fans of the U.S. men’s soccer team wanted to see an A-level squad take on Portugal’s stars, they didn’t get it.

    But if U.S. manager Mauricio Pochettino wanted to see what would come of a slew of auditions for spots on his World Cup roster, he certainly got that.

    Pochettino tested 20 players across four formations over the course of 90 minutes in a 2-0 loss to Portugal on Wednesday night inside Mercedes-Benz Stadium.

    For a second straight game, Pochettino decided to try something new instead of working toward his best starting lineup. He deployed a 4-2-3-1 with no formal striker at the top, instead putting Christian Pulisic up there in front of Tim Weah, Weston McKennie, and Malik Tillman.

    USMNT head coach Mauricio Pochettino (left) continued to experiment with formations and personnel during their loss to Portugal.

    That freed Weah of the defensive responsibilities he had as a right back on Saturday, and Pochettino reinforced the role a little more by starting Alex Freeman there. The defense also included Media’s Auston Trusty at centerback and Wayne’s Matt Freese at goalkeeper, with the latter move seemingly cementing Freese as the No. 1 in net.

    The point of putting Pulisic up top was to get him closer to goal, and that genuinely happened in the first few minutes. The U.S. had some very nice attacking plays, and Portugal’s defense worked well to keep shots from going in.

    In the 22nd minute, Weah showed the virtue of playing him higher up the field with a burst down the right wing and cross for Pulisic. Alas, the Hershey native fluffed his chance, and the ball bounced past McKennie as it ran away.

    When Pulisic shot narrowly wide from 20 yards in the 36th, it seemed the U.S. was building more momentum. But Portugal then went right down the field and scored. Bruno Fernandes drove forward, then tore up the U.S. defense with a gorgeous backheel pass for Francisco TrincĂŁo to finish.

    Both teams decided the starters had done their work in the first half, and began a parade of substitutions as the second kicked off. Portugal made seven (of 11 allowed), and the U.S. made three: striker Patrick Agyemang for Pulisic, Tanner Tessmann for McKennie in midfield, and Max Arfsten for Antonee Robinson on the back line.

    Those moves restored the U.S. to the 3-4-2-1 formation that many observers had wanted to see. Alas, it did not stop Portugal from scoring a second goal in the 59th, though the tactical change wasn’t why.

    In fact, it was something worse — a corner kick play that completely fooled the Americans.

    With almost everyone from both teams lined up near the goal mouth, Fernandes swung a service to one two Portuguese players who stood unmarked atop the box, second half substitute, João Felix. He hit an inch-perfect smash through the crowd that Freese likely couldn’t see until too late.

    Freese made up for it in the 64th with a nice diving save on a long-range hit from Ruben Neves. That was one of three stops he made on the night.

    Three minutes later, Pochettino sent in Folarin Balogun for Tillman and Joe Scally for Weah, putting the U.S. in a two-striker setup — effectively a 3-4-1-2 instead of a 3-4-2-1. The next subs, in the 79th, made it a 4-4-2: Brenden Aaronson and Gio Reyna entered for Freeman and Sebastian Berhalter.

    Trusty was the last U.S. player to exit, replaced by Mark McKenzie in second-half stoppage time after cramping up. It was a sour ending to what had been a very good game overall for Trusty, on his own and in tandem with Chris Richards.

    At the final whistle, it was pretty clear that the score didn’t matter to either team. But it will have to U.S. fans. Their hopes for a statement win in 2026 before the World Cup now rest with the tournament squad’s two warmup games, against Senegal and Germany in early June.

    "Yes, he felt frustrated, but that is what we want, and what we expect."

    Mauricio Pochettino analyzes Christian Pulisic's night as a striker:

    www.inquirer.com/soccer/usmnt…

    #USMNT

    [image or embed]

    — Jonathan Tannenwald (@jtannenwald.bsky.social) April 1, 2026 at 12:07 AM