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The UFC Heavyweight Division Is Broken — And UFC Vegas 113 Proved It

UFC Vegas 113 proved to be your typical UFC Fight Night, with the biggest standouts being main event and co-main event winners Mario Bautista and Kyoji Horiguchi, and even a last-second submission on the prelims. 

But there was a different kind of big standout – a different kind of big, and a really bad standout.

UFC Vegas 113’s main card featured a heavyweight matchup between Jailton Almeida and Rizvan Kuniev. It was a chance for Almeida to rebound from his title eliminator loss to Alexander Volkov and prove he’s still relevant in the heavyweight title picture. For Kuniev, competing for just the second time in the Octagon, it was a chance to make a quick jump in the heavyweight rankings and show off his full potential.

Instead, we got a matchup where Kuniev held Almeida against the fence for most of the fight.The two fighters combined for just 30 significant strikes landed through two rounds. It was a matchup that did not truly benefit either fighter.

What the bout did was expose Almeida as having not developed any answer for when his grappling gets stopped. Everyone who was familiar with Kuniev and sung his praises and power were left with nothing to say after the performance he had, even in a win.

The fans in the arena booed, the MMA community eviscerated the two to the point they called for their UFC releases, and it just adds another blow to what is already a weak UFC heavyweight division.

The top of the heavyweight division is even stagnant right now. There is no clear timeline on when Tom Aspinall will be ready to return after the eye injury he suffered in his no contest with Ciryl Gane at UFC 321.

That has also left Gane’s status in question on which will happen first – a title rematch with Aspinall or fighting someone for an interim heavyweight title.

UFC light heavyweight champion Alex Pereira has teased a move up to heavyweight to try and become the first UFC fighter to win gold in three weight classes during their career. But UFC CEO and President Dana White is hesitant on the idea.

Jon Jones? Who knows whatever is going on with him, in or out of the Octagon. Jones has previously advocated to compete on the UFC White House card but White supposedly wants none of it.

And look at some of the rest of the top 15. Alexander Volkov beat Almeida in a title eliminator, but the mess at the top of the division has put his title shot in limbo. Sergei Pavlovich lost to Aspinall and Volkov, but he is the lone blemish in Waldo Cortes-Acosta’s current upward trajectory, and WCA is the talk of the heavyweight town right now.

Curtis Blaydes? Lost to Aspinall and should have lost to a debuting Rizvan Kuniev. No thank you. Tallison Teixeira seemed to have potential even with a loss to Derrick Lewis, but his win over Tai Tuivasa at UFC 325 last week was a stinker. Lewis himself is a legend, but his days of seriously pursuing a heavyweight title are behind him.

Speaking of Tuivasa, can someone explain to me how this guy can lose five fights in a row and still be ranked?!?

The only hope outside the top five is Valter Walker, who has picked more ankles for submission wins than a little kid picks their nose.

The UFC heavyweight scene is dull, boring, and has very little signs of strong activity. It needs life injected to it. And that’s not Josh Hokit and his cringe-based promo skills or the political schtick we’ve already seen from Colby Covington.

When an (at least for now) unrealistic matchup between Jones and Pereira is the most enticing potential matchup at heavyweight, and nothing comes close, the division has problems.

The screams of “Shut down heavyweight!” won’t be answered. It’s unfair to those who can’t drop to 205, and combat sports has long had heavyweight as a “glamor division.”

But these calls, and the lack of talent in the fights, show the division has lost the support of the MMA fanbase. And that’s just a sad fact.

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Sam Darnold Is 60 Minutes Away From Erasing His Past

Sam Darnold was viewed as a complete bust by age 25.

In the spring of 2023, nobody wanted to bring Darnold in to be their starting quarterback so he took a backup gig with the San Francisco 49ers.

Darnold, the third overall pick of the 2018 NFL Draft, spent the campaign backing up Brock Purdy, the final pick of the 2022 draft.

That’s not how the career of a high draft pick is supposed to go.

Darnold, who once famously said he was “seeing ghosts” turning a horrific nationally televised performance, was becoming invisible.

But come Sunday, Darnold will be more visible than ever when he leads the Seattle Seahawks into Super Bowl LX against the New England Patriots at Santa Clara, Calif.

He’s just 60 football minutes away – or more if the game goes into overtime – of perhaps being known forever as a Super Bowl-winning quarterback. He could even be named the game’s MVP.

At least Darnold is back on the track after badly derailing his career.

Darnold was supposed to be the savior of the Jets but he completed just 59.8% of his passes through three rocky seasons. He passed for 45 touchdowns against 39 interceptions.

He was traded to the Carolina Panthers following the 2020 campaign and he continued to struggle and had 16 touchdowns and 16 interceptions over two lackluster seasons.

Then it was off to the 49ers and it looked like journeyman duty for the long haul.

But after getting a chance to be an observer and soaking it the atmosphere, Darnold was ready for another chance. He had worked hard on his mental game – something he admitted to struggling with – and was refreshed when he joined the Minnesota Vikings.

He enjoyed a big 2024 season with Minnesota – setting career highs of 4,319 passing yards and 35 touchdowns – and led the Vikings to a 14-3 record.

The Vikings badly erred by not re-signing Darnold and he landed a three-year, $100.5 million free-agent contract with the Seahawks

He came through with a second straight stellar season with 4,048 yards and 25 touchdowns while leading Seattle to a 14-3 regular-season record and two playoff victories.

“Sam’s just been so resilient,” Seahawks coach Mike Macdonald said. “… He’s so steadfast in his approach, he’s confident in who he is. He understands how much his team believes in him and has his back.”

Now 28, Darnold is the more experienced quarterback in this game as Patriots star Drake Maye is in his second NFL season.

Darnold has been a cool customer the past two seasons but everyone will be paying attention to see if he can deliver in his biggest moment.

What’s become clear is that Darnold has simplified his approach and that has led to less miscues and fewer times beating himself up.

“As a young player, early on in my career, I was really hard on myself,” Darnold said. “After a bad rep or a bad practice, I would let it affect my attitude a little bit. Just being able to have a great attitude all the time, ‘All right, that happens, it’s football, we’re not always going to be perfect.’”

Both teams have strong defenses so the quarterback who makes the biggest mistake could cost his team the game on Sunday.

Maye, 23, completed a league-best 72% of his passes and was intercepted just eight times while being a close runner-up for MVP honors behind Matthew Stafford of the Los Angeles Rams.

Darnold completed 67.7% of his throws and was picked off 14 times. And he never saw ghosts like he did in the humbling four-interception, 33-0 loss to the Patriots in 2019.

“I almost forgot about it, so thanks,” Darnold said when reminded by a reporter this week.

Darnold can erase nearly all his bad memories just by winning on Sunday.

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Austrian snowboarder wins parallel giant slalom in 5th Olympics

Austrian snowboarder wins parallel giant slalom in 5th OlympicsBenjamin Karl of Austria win’s the men’s parallel giant slalom big final against Sangkyum Kim of South Korea at Livigno Snow Park in Livigno, Italy, on Sunday.

LIVIGNO, Italy – Austrian snowboarder Benjamin Karl raced to a second straight gold medal in the men’s parallel giant slalom on Sunday at the Milan Cortina Games, capping a glittering career on the slopes at his fifth Olympics.

In the women’s event, Czech snowboarder Zuzana Maderova triumphed after teammate and two-time Olympic gold medallist Ester Ledecka was knocked out in the quarterfinals.

The 40-year-old Karl tore off his shirt to celebrate bare-chested on the snow-covered slopes of Livigno in the Italian Alps, pumping his arms and shouting. Karl, who has said he plans to retire after this season, edged silver medalist Sangkyum Kim of Korea by 0.19 seconds.

The triumph handed Karl his fourth Olympic medal. He earned silver in Vancouver in 2010, a bronze at Sochi in 2014 and gold at Beijing in 2022.

Tervel Zamfirov of Bulgaria earned bronze in a photo finish over Slovenia’s Tim Mastnak, the silver medalist in Beijing.

Maderova, the women’s champion, jumped on the top step of the podium at the medal ceremony and bronze medalist Lucia Dalmasso of Italy cried as she grasped her prize.

With them was silver medalist Sabine Payer of Austria, who knocked Ledecka out of the contest.

The 30-year-old Ledecka was the first female to win gold in two different Winter Olympic sports at Pyeongchang 2018 when she prevailed in the snowboarding parallel giant slalom and the skiing Super-G.

Ledecka had to choose between the two events in Milan due to a scheduling clash, opting for snowboarding over the downhill races.

“I feel sorry for my team, but I did my best and that’s just what can happen in sports,” Ledecka said.

–Reuters, special to Field Level Media

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Sam Darnold’s Long Road From USC to Super Bowl LX

The need to fill the two weeks between the NFL’s conference championship games and Super Bowl wears out previously fascinating tidbits like this year’s about the Seattle Seahawks’ Sam Darnold: Did you know he’s the first Southern California quarterback to start in the premier pro game?

So maybe the surface-level intrigue of this factoid on its own has been run into the ground. However, the context of what Darnold’s Super Bowl LX appearance — both within the historic framework of USC football and the quarterback’s own career trajectory — makes this one of the better postseason stories in recent memory.

Next September marks the 10-year anniversary of Darnold bursting into the national spotlight. On a Friday night in Salt Lake City, Darnold went 18-of-26 for 253 yards and rushed for 41 yards with a touchdown in his first start at USC.

The Trojans lost to a Top 25-ranked Utah team, 31-27, falling to 1-3 on the season. But Darnold’s presence provided a spark that was immediately evident, and which ignited a nine-game winning streak to close USC’s 2016 campaign.

Covering the Trojans that season made for a wild ride. The first month felt headed for depths not experienced reached in Los Angeles since the Paul Hackett era, only for Darnold to lead USC to heights not achieved since Pete Carroll’s tenure with a Rose Bowl Game win.

USC’s achievements in the Darnold days included more milestones last reached during the dynastic run of the 2000s, with the 2017 Trojans winning the Pac-12 Conference champion. Both the 2016 season’s Rose Bowl victory and 2017 campaign’s league championship are also the last for a program nearly 20 years from its golden age.

Despite this, it can often feel as if Darnold’s time quarterbacking the Trojans goes underappreciated. It could be the lack of a national championship, which former USC great and then-university athletic director Lynn Swann declared was the program’s standard, even as the confetti still fell on the 2017 Rose Bowl.

The 21st century of USC football also bookended Darnold’s two outstanding seasons with Heisman Trophy-winning quarterbacks in Carson Palmer and Matt Leinart, and a third with Caleb Williams.

And then there’s Darnold’s NFL career up to the last two seasons. College stardom hardly forecasts pro success, and USC quarterbacks of the last 20 years may exemplify that more than any other program’s.

Palmer enjoyed a long and at times excellent NFL career, and Williams is proving to be the real deal for Chicago — so much so, the 2022 Heisman winner very nearly led the Bears to face Darnold’s Seahawks in the NFC Championship Game.

But in the 21 years between Palmer’s debut with Cincinnati and Williams’ in Chicago, USC also produced some of the most notable quarterback busts and flameouts of modern drafts. Leinart technically represented the Trojans in the Super Bowl, but as the back-up to Kurt Warner for the 2008 Arizona Cardinals.

Mark Sanchez showed promise for the New York Jets, but one of the most unforgiving black holes of professional sports eventually swallowed hope of his career being remembered for much more than one of the more unfortunate fumbles in NFL history.

Matt Barkley was the last in a line of USC quarterbacks over a decade from 2003 through 2013 that had pro scouts and evaluators salivating while in college, at least until a blind-side sack from UCLA’s Anthony Barr.

How much the shoulder injury sustained on one of the most famous plays in the crosstown rivalry’s 96 years altered Barkley’s pro prospects, we’ll never know. Barkley was reliable enough to have a place in the league for more than a decade, but never as the star he had been at USC.

Darnold appeared headed for the same fate. Landing with the Jets has repeatedly proven to be a dead-end for quarterbacks, and his tenure there was no exception. A move to Carolina was no better, and failing to beat out a then-relative unknown in Brock Purdy for the starting job in San Francisco may have been a career-ender for others.

Emerging from down on the depth chart has proven to be a strength of Darnold’s, however.

He didn’t make his first start at USC until the Trojans’ fourth game in 2016, having been beat out in preseason camp by Max Browne. While depicting Darnold as an under-the-radar recruiting gem would be disingenuous — he was a high-4-star prospect at San Clemente High School fielding interest from Oregon and Tennessee — Browne more closely resembled the USC pedigree as a 5-star recruit.

Browne and Darnold were similar in that they were two of the more genuine, thoughtful players one could hope to encounter covering college football. It was no surprise, then, reading Browne’s memories of a decade ago as detailed to The Athletic last week.

It’s a must-read article that shines some light into why Darnold reaching this unprecedented point for USC is so special. Even for anyone with no connection to the Trojans, Darnold is an easy guy to root for – and he’s been that from the first start.

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