Sports
Cincinnati Bengals Betting Big: Can They Keep Tee Higgins?

The Cincinnati Bengals know what they have in Tee Higgins. The hard part will be keeping him.
Since coming into the NFL in 2020 as Cincinnati’s second-round pick behind No. 1 selection Joe Burrow, the explosive wide receiver has made a home with the Bengals as one of the most reliable weapons in a vaunted offense.
Higgins is coming off a season in which he caught 73 passes for 911 yards and a career-best 10 touchdowns. His best seasons came in 2021 and 2022 when he caught 74 passes each season, went over 1,000 yards receiving each year and totaled 13 touchdowns in the two years.
The Bengals advanced to Super Bowl LVI in 2021 and returned to the AFC Championship the next season, only to lose on a last-second field goal to the Chiefs.
The Bengals know full well that their offense reaches new heights when Higgins joins Burrow and star receiver Ja’Marr Chase on the field together. Higgins makes the Bengals more dynamic, and Burrow and Chase make Higgins—one of the best downfield receivers in the game—more dangerous.
It’s a marriage that benefits both sides.
There’s a blueprint already in place for the Bengals to follow in terms of structuring their offense around a star quarterback and multiple weapons on massive contracts.
The Miami Dolphins pulled it off when they signed Tyreek Hill and Jaylen Waddle around Tua Tagovailoa. More recently—and more notably—the Philadelphia Eagles won a Super Bowl with star receivers A.J. Brown and DeVonta Smith and running back Saquon Barkley supporting quarterback Jalen Hurts.
Tee Higgins can get his money anywhere if the Bengals allow him to hit free agency. But that’s almost certainly not going to happen this season. The Bengals are expected to hit Higgins with a franchise tag while simultaneously working out a long-term, multi-year deal with the sixth-year receiver out of Clemson.
The tag this year would be much different than the one placed on him last offseason. That tag was with the intention of having him play on a $21.8 million franchise tender for one season.
This one is to ensure the Bengals get compensation through a trade if a deal can’t be reached. All signs from the Bengals’ front office so far indicate that a framework is in place to get a deal done.
“We want a long-term deal with Tee,” Bengals director of player personnel Duke Tobin said Tuesday. “We’re going through the negotiation process, the details of which I’m not going to share.”
Tobin may not want to share the numbers that have been thrown out there, but they are $28 million to $30 million per season over three or four years, with guaranteed money anywhere between $75 million and $90 million.
The Bengals are trying to get a deal done with Chase that will likely reach $40 million per season with a guarantee north of $100 million, shattering the $35 million annual average of Minnesota star receiver Justin Jefferson last spring. With the NFL cap approaching $280 million, the Bengals believe they have the ability to do both comfortably.
Ever since Burrow came out publicly after a December win in Dallas and said he has every reason to think the team can keep Higgins, there’s been hope the two sides can come together. That hope was strengthened when Higgins fired his agent, David Mulugheta of Athletes First, and went with Rocky Arcenaux, the New Orleans-based agent who also represents Chase.
Burrow wants badly to win now and get back to the Super Bowl that he narrowly missed winning in 2021.
“Urgency is as high as it could get,” Tobin said. “That’s every offseason, though. You know, when you’re a bad football team trying to get to the competitive level, there’s high urgency. When you’re what I consider a high-level football team—and that’s what I consider us—you guys can scoff at it, but I consider us a very high-level football team.
“We’re trying to maximize our guys, and when you have Joe Burrow, you’re trying to fit it around him and give him the best chance to have a Hall of Fame career, and he’s certainly capable of that.”
The Bengals insist this offseason isn’t the first time they’ve made a genuine effort to sign the receiver who would almost immediately become the best free agent on the market. But Tobin says this might be the best progress the team has made.
“We’ve tried to make a lot of runs at Tee. Maybe this is the year,” Tobin said. “He would be valued by other teams, and they sense he’s close to free agency, and those guys don’t get to free agency. Maybe that bids him up, I don’t know. We’re trying to reward him for what he’s done and what we think he will do going forward for us.”
Sports
A'ja Wilson has no shortage of motivation after Aces' early exit in '24


LAS VEGAS — Entering her eighth season in the WNBA, Las Vegas Aces superstar A’ja Wilson is poised to build on what was arguably the most dominant individual campaign in league history.
Wilson joined Cynthia Cooper (1997) as the second player in league history to win a unanimous MVP award and joined an exclusive club as the fourth player to win the award three times. She averaged 26.9 points and 11.9 rebounds per game last season and set the all-time single-season mark for points (1,021) and rebounds (451).
Unfortunately for Las Vegas, injuries and fatigue from their two previous championship runs mounted and resulted in the team’s worst regular-season record (27-13) since 2019. The Aces’ three-peat hopes ended with a 76-62 home loss to the New York Liberty to drop their semifinal series 3-1.
It’s that loss on her home floor that served as Wilson’s motivation this offseason.
“Losing sucks, especially on your home court,” Wilson said “It still kind of burns a little bit, but I’ve used that as fuel to help my teammates understand how hard it is to win in this league. Yes, we can celebrate the two championships. They were great. But for us to move forward, we have to understand how hard this league is and value the basketball and the little things. I think that’s what we lacked last season, so we’re going to make sure that we can show up better than we did.”
While the Aces appeared to be on top of the world heading into their potential three-peat campaign in 2024, the reality inside the locker room was that both the internal and external pressure to win another championship had become suffocating. A common theme across media day was the fact that the team feels less pressure entering the 2025 season, a sentiment Wilson shared as the unquestioned leader of the team.
“(Three-peat talks) obviously impacted us, because it’s like, y’all think we don’t want to win? We’re trying as well,” Wilson said.
“I would definitely say it’s refreshing this year. I feel like this is one of my only years where it feels like there’s no weight. There’s a lot of weight to be defending champs. It’s a lot of weight to be trying to win one. We don’t have that. We actually have a clean slate to really dial into getting back to who we are culturally, like, in our system and everything.”
Leading the Aces back to the top of the mountain for a third time in four years is one of a few historically significant achievements Wilson can collect this upcoming season. Wilson could also become the first four-time MVP in league history, though the meaning of that is something she hasn’t quite allowed herself to ponder yet.
“I haven’t given it much thought, but it would be a blessing to have my name in that conversation,” Wilson said. “Every year, I try to be better than I was the year before just to give myself a chance in this league. Because the league is getting better. We’re growing. At this point, you just want to maintain your stamina. You want to maintain your mental, all of that, because the season gets hard. I can’t think too much about that just yet, but I’m definitely going to try to be better than I was last year.”
As Aces coach Becky Hammon put it, fans can expect to see an even better version of Wilson this season.
“What I see is, she went and got better,” Hammon said. “Which is hard to do when you’re already the best, but it speaks to her work ethic, her desire and her mindset this whole offseason. We talked a lot this offseason. She’s a busy lady, but I can tell you what she always does is her workouts. She’s always getting her workouts in. That comes first and foremost, she never gets her priorities jumbled up.”
When Hammon was asked what a player like Wilson would possibly need to improve after last season’s campaign, the coach did not feel like revealing too much.
“There was (something for Wilson to improve), and she did,” Hammon said. “I’m not going to tell you what it was. Actually, there were two things.”
–Will Despart, Field Level Media
Sports
Jacob Wilson joins Aaron Judge in spotlight for Yankees-A's series


The top two hitters in the majors square off Friday night when the New York Yankees face the Athletics in the opener of a three-game series in Sacramento, Calif.
It’s no surprise to see Yankees star Aaron Judge off to a superb start after winning American League MVP honors last season. He has a major league-best .400 batting average and entered Thursday’s play tied for the big-league lead with 12 homers and 34 RBIs.
But who had Athletics rookie Jacob Wilson ranking second in the majors at .357 as the season nears the quarter pole? Wilson has played in just 64 career games and quickly has solidified himself as a future All-Star, perhaps even this season.
Sharing the marquee board with Judge seems quite surreal for the 23-year-old shortstop who was the No. 6 overall pick of the 2023 draft.
“It’s a great feeling, for sure,” Wilson said of his name being mentioned with Judge. “Obviously, everybody has seen what he is doing. It’s pretty incredible watching him do his thing on a daily basis. To be up there with him is pretty cool for me.
“I’m excited to play against him this week and see what it looks like in person.”
Wilson had his first career four-hit game during Wednesday’s 6-5 home loss against the Seattle Mariners and has six multi-hit outings in the past eight games. He went 8-for-14 with one game-winning hit in the three-game series against the Mariners and is 16-for-34 (.471) with four walks during the eight-game stretch.
The hot hitting led to Athletics manager Mark Kotsay moving Wilson to the leadoff spot on Wednesday. Kotsay indicated Wilson may be sticking at the top of the lineup.
“I think you’ll see Jacob up there now,” Kotsay said. “Jacob’s earned it. … Jacob has shown enough over the last week. He’s walking and taking pitches, and, obviously, swinging the bat really well.”
Judge arrives in Sacramento in the midst of a four-game funk in which he is 2-for-15.
The two-time MVP just went 1-for-10 in a three-game home series against the San Diego Padres, but the one hit was a homer.
Judge grew up 50 miles south of Sacramento in Linden and starred for Linden High but wasn’t highly sought by major league teams. The then-Oakland Athletics selected him in the 31st round in 2010.
Judge instead went the college route and starred for Fresno State. He was chosen in the first round (32nd overall) by the Yankees in the 2013 draft.
Trent Grisham was one of the heroes of Wednesday’s 4-3, 10-inning win over the Padres. He hit a tying two-run pinch-hit homer in the eighth inning.
Grisham had two homers and five RBIs in the series against the Padres — one of his former teams — and already has 10 long balls in just 89 at-bats. He hit just nine last season in 179 at-bats.
“I’m having fun with the guys, I would say that more than anything,” Grisham said. “The clubhouse is really good in here, led by Cap (Judge). So, I would say the guys have been the most enjoyable part.”
New York is starting right-hander Will Warren (1-2, 5.65 ERA) in Friday’s series opener. Right-hander Osvaldo Bido (2-2, 4.71) will be on the mound for the Athletics.
Warren, 25, struck out a career-high eight in 4 2/3 innings while losing to the Tampa Bay Rays on Sunday. He gave up five runs (three earned) and seven hits. Warren hasn’t previously faced the Athletics.
Bido, 29, received a no-decision against the Miami Marlins last Saturday when he gave up four runs on three hits over five innings. He is winless (0-1) over his last three starts. Bido hasn’t faced the Yankees.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Report: Boxing legend Manny Pacquiao coming out of retirement


Boxing legend Manny Pacquiao plans to end his retirement and return to the ring on July 19 against Mario Barrios in Las Vegas, ESPN reported Thursday.
Pacquiao, 46, will be fighting for the first time since losing a unanimous decision to Yordenis Ugas in 2021.
The fight will be for Barrios’ WBC welterweight championship belt. Barrios turns 30 on May 18.
Pacquiao is an eight-division champion who is slated to be inducted into the boxing Hall of Fame in June. He reportedly will formally announce his return to boxing next week. The report stated that Pacquiao has been cleared to compete by the Nevada State Athletic Commission.
In recent years, Pacquiao has been focusing on his political career in the Philippines.
The boxer nicknamed “PacMan” has a 62-8-2 record with 39 knockouts during his career. He won his first major title — the WBC flyweight crown — at age 19 in 1998.
Pacquiao was 54-3-2 prior to turning 33 and 8-5 afterward. One of those losses was to Floyd Mayweather Jr. via unanimous decision in 2015, a bout that reportedly drew nearly $400 million in pay-per-view sales.
Barrios (29-2-1, 18 knockouts) fought to a 12-round, split-decision draw against Abel Ramos last November. This will be his third defense since winning the title by beating Ugas in 2023.
–Field Level Media