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Houston, We Have A Problem: C.J. Stroud Needs To Play Better For Texans

The New York Jets hadn’t won in exactly six weeks, so Thursday’s 21-13 win over the Houston Texans will feel like a masterpiece.

In truth, it was a first half displaying exactly why they owned a porous 2-6 record and a second half showing they can still rally and make a playoff run.

Which way it goes is still to be determined, but New York must play like it did in the second half to have any chance at saving its season.

Aaron Rodgers looked horrible in the first half with a grand total of 32 passing yards. He threw three touchdown passes in the second half, two of those on superb one-handed catches by budding star Garrett Wilson.

Rodgers hasn’t reached 300 yards this season, and the 40-year-old version of him certainly doesn’t have the same skills as the player who won four MVP awards with the Green Bay Packers.

But the Jets (3-6) are all in on Rodgers and don’t have a quarterback of the future on the 53-man roster; veteran Tyrod Taylor is the backup. This is going to be Rodgers’ show barring injury, and New York needs him to at least approach his earlier form.

New York stands in 10th place in the AFC and needs to get on a roll. There is certainly hope when you consider the Denver Broncos (5-3) may not be able to maintain their strong start and the Indianapolis Colts (4-4) are having quarterback issues and have demoted Anthony Richardson in favor of Joe Flacco.

In fact, the Jets stand second in the AFC East, with both the Miami Dolphins and New England Patriots faring worse.

The Texans (6-3) envision being a postseason force this season, but it was hard to feel they could win more than one postseason game by watching Thursday’s act. They also dropped to 2-3 on the road.

Star quarterback C.J. Stroud is allowed to have a bad performance, but his shoddy 11-of-30 effort really hurt. It was his second subpar performance in three games as he passed for just 86 yards on 10-of-21 passing in a 24-22 road loss against the Green Bay Packers on Oct. 20.

At the same time, Houston couldn’t protect Stroud, and he was sacked eight times. He was certainly hurried on other occasions.

Stroud will bounce back. His output will be something to watch in the Texans’ next road game, which is on the Monday Night stage against the Dallas Cowboys in Week 11.

Stroud needs to be a lot better.

It didn’t help that wide receiver Stefon Diggs tore his ACL and is out for the season, and that big-play man Nico Collins is still sidelined with a hamstring injury. Tank Dell stepped up with six catches for 126 yards on a night when the rest of the team had just 65 receiving yards.

Houston also has Joe Mixon running like a runway Amtrak train. He had 106 yards against the Jets for his fourth straight 100-yard outing, and he looks like a cinch to record his fifth career 1,000-yard season.

The Texans are easily the best team in the AFC South. But where they stand in the pecking order in the conference and NFL overall became uncertain. The immediate schedule in front of Houston isn’t easy with the Detroit Lions coming to Houston on Nov. 10.

They have games against the Kansas City Chiefs and Baltimore Ravens in a five-day span in December that will be even more challenging.

But no matter how you cut it, their Halloween performance was scary in a bad way. That’s a problem, Houston.

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7 runs lead to 7th straight win for Cubs as Phillies' losing streak hits 7

MLB: Philadelphia Phillies at Chicago CubsApr 21, 2026; Chicago, Illinois, USA; Chicago Cubs second baseman Nico Hoerner (2) high fives left fielder Ian Happ (8), right, after scoring during the sixth inning against the Philadelphia Phillies at Wrigley Field. Mandatory Credit: Matt Marton-Imagn Images

Shota Imanaga tossed seven stellar innings, Seiya Suzuki and Michael Busch each drove in two runs and the streaking Chicago Cubs posted a 7-4 victory over the visiting Philadelphia Phillies on Tuesday.

Imanaga (2-1) allowed just one run on three hits, striking out one and walking one for the Cubs, who won their Major League-leading seventh straight game. Suzuki and Nico Hoerner each homered in the win.

Jesus Luzardo threw 4 2/3 innings for the Phillies, surrendering one run on five hits, walking four and striking out three. Bryce Harper and Kyle Schwarber both homered for the Phillies, who saw their losing streak extend to seven.

In the fifth, Ian Happ walked and Suzuki singled to begin the frame. After Luzardo retired Carson Kelly and Busch, Orion Kerkering relieved the Philadelphia starter. Kerkering then walked Dansby Swanson to load the bases and followed with a run-scoring walk of Moises Ballesteros, giving the Cubs a 1-0 lead.

Kerkering escaped further trouble, retiring Pete Crow-Armstrong to end the inning.

Philadelphia evened the score in the sixth, as Schwarber connected on his eighth home run of the season — a 386-foot shot to right center.

Tanner Banks (0-1) replaced Kerkering in the bottom of the sixth. Hoerner led off the frame with a single and advanced to third on Happ’s one-out base hit. After Carson Kelly’s two-out walk loaded the bases, Busch drove in a pair with a single to center.

Against Philadelphia reliever Tim Mayza, Hoerner launched a one-out solo homer to push the lead to 4-1. After Alex Bregman’s walk, Suzuki hit his first homer of the season — a 441-footer that extended the margin to five.

Riley Martin replaced Imanaga in the eighth, allowing Schwarber’s two-out walk and Harper’s two-run homer, pulling the Phillies within three.

The Cubs scored their seventh run in the bottom of the eighth, as Philadelphia’s Jose Alvarado’s wild pitch prolonged the visitors’ pitching woes.

Chicago pitcher Jacob Webb allowed Adolis Garcia’s leadoff single in the ninth, before J.T. Realmuto reached on third baseman Scott Kingery’s throwing error. Alec Bohm’s sacrifice fly drove in Garcia, cutting the deficit to 7-4.

After Brandon Marsh’s single, Caleb Thielbar entered for the Cubs. Thielbar retired Edmundo Sosa and Trea Turner to seal the win, securing his second save of the year.

–Field Level Media

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J.J. Moser, Lightning bounce back for OT win over Habs

NHL: Stanley Cup Playoffs-Montreal Canadiens at Tampa Bay LightningApr 21, 2026; Tampa, Florida, USA; Montreal Canadiens defenseman Kaiden Guhle (21) collides with Tampa Bay Lightning center Yanni Gourde (37) in the second period during game two of the first round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs at Benchmark International Arena. Mandatory Credit: Nathan Ray Seebeck-Imagn Images

J.J. Moser scored 12:48 into overtime, giving the host Tampa Bay Lightning a 3-2 comeback victory over the Montreal Canadiens on Tuesday and evening their first-round Eastern Conference playoff series at one win each.

Tampa Bay fully controlled the game in the extra period and was rewarded when Moser found the net. He gained the puck off a faceoff win in the offensive zone, worked his way to a shooting position at the top of the right circle and wired a top-corner shot for his first career playoff tally.

Montreal, which won Game 1 in overtime, was outshot 9-0 in overtime of Game 2.

The series shifts to Montreal for Game 3 on Friday.

Tampa Bay’s Brandon Hagel collected a goal and an assist. Nikita Kucherov tallied once, Anthony Cirelli collected two assists and goaltender Andrei Vasilevskiy made 25 saves for Tampa Bay, which snapped a collection of playoff swoons.

The Lightning had lost four consecutive and 10 of 11 postseason home games, plus seven straight overtime affairs during Stanley Cup playoff action.

Lane Hutson and Josh Anderson tallied for the Canadiens, while goalie Jakub Dobes stopped 31 shots, including eight in overtime.

The clubs traded goals in a chippy first period. Hagel put the Lightning on the board at 8:40 with his team’s first shot on target. The puck came to Hagel at the top of the left circle, and he unloaded a top-corner slap shot that for his third goal of the series.

Hutson tied the clash less then six minutes later with Montreal’s fourth power-play goal in the series. Hutson sent a one-timer from the point position that ricocheted off a defender and into the net for his first career playoff tally.

Anderson gave Montreal the lead with 84 seconds remaining in the second period. Jake Evans won a battle for the puck deep in the Tampa Bay zone and Phillip Danault chipped it to the front of the net, where Anderson was waiting to chip it into the cage for his second goal of the series.

Kucherov evened the score at 12:33 of the third period. Hagel intercepted a poor clearing attempt and fired a long shot wide. Kucherov grabbed the loose puck behind the net and converted a wraparound for his first playoff goal in 17 outings. His last playoff goal came on April 18, 2023, the opener of a first-round series against the Toronto Maple Leafs.

–Field Level Media

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Rangers open homestand with victory over Pirates

MLB: Pittsburgh Pirates at Texas RangersApr 21, 2026; Arlington, Texas, USA; Texas Rangers designated hitter Joc Pederson (3) celebrates with catcher Danny Jansen (9) after scoring a run against the Pittsburgh Pirates during the second inning at Globe Life Field. Mandatory Credit: Jerome Miron-Imagn Images

Kumar Rocker allowed one run on four hits over a season-high six innings and the Texas Rangers began a nine-game homestand with a 5-1 win over the Pittsburgh Pirates on Tuesday.

Rocker (1-1) walked one and struck out five for Texas, which returned home after playing 16 of its first 22 games on the road. Cole Winn, Jacob Latz and Jakob Junis each pitched a scoreless inning in relief.

Jake Mangum and Nick Gonzales had two hits apiece for the Pirates, who have lost three of their last five.

Pittsburgh took a 1-0 lead in the first inning when leadoff hitter Oneil Cruz singled, stole second, moved to third on an error, and scored on Ryan O’Hearn’s single up the middle.

Texas moved ahead with two runs in the second against Carmen Mlodzinski (1-1), who had not allowed an earned run in his last 13 innings.

Joc Pederson singled to begin the inning, went to third on Josh Jung’s double to center, and scored on Evan Carter’s single. After Danny Jansen struck out, Jung scored from third on Josh Smith’s sacrifice fly.

The Pirates put two runners on with two outs in the fifth, but Rocker escaped unscathed when Carter reached over the center-field wall to rob Cruz of a three-run homer.

Texas tacked on three runs and knocked Mlodzinski out of the game in the fifth. Smith hit a leadoff double, moved to third on Brandon Nimmo’s fly out, and scored on Ezequiel Duran’s double.

Wilber Dotel replaced Mlodzinski after Corey Seager delivered an RBI single to center. Jake Burger greeted Dotel with a single and Joc Pederson walked to load the bases before Seager scored on Jung’s force out.

Mlodzinski allowed five runs on six hits over 4 1/3 innings while throwing a season-high 93 pitches. He walked two and struck out six.

Mangum singled with one out in the seventh and was stranded after Konnor Griffin flied out and Henry Davis fanned on three pitches.

Texas left fielder Wyatt Langford exited the game in the fifth inning with right forearm tightness and was replaced by Duran.

–Field Level Media

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