Biggest remaining hole for every NFL teamBiggest remaining hole for every NFL team
Biggest remaining hole for every NFL team
Biggest remaining hole for every NFL team
Rougned Odor and the Texas Rangers have agreed to a new six-year contract that includes a club option for 2023 and guarantees the young second baseman at least $49.5 million. The deal completed Thursday includes a $2 million signing bonus and a $13.5 million club option for 2023 with a $3 million buyout. Odor’s salary will be $1 million this season, and then it will increase to $3 million in 2018 and $7.5 million in 2019.
Vikings defensive tackle Sharrif Floyd has yet to recover from nerve damage that occurred during September surgery to repair a knee injury, NFL Network Insider Ian Rapoport reports.
Berry: Free agency Love/Hate, players rising and falling in 2017 value
Rougned Odor will be pestering American League foes in a Texas uniform through 2022, and the Rangers couldn’t be happier. The team held a news conference Thursday to announce a six-year, $49.5 million contract extension for Odor, who turned 23 in February and is coming off a 2016 season in which he hit .271 with 33 home runs and 88 RBIs. The deal includes a $2 million signing bonus and a $13.5 million option for 2023, or a $2 million buyout.
PGA TOUR Fantasy Golf presented by SERVPRO Assuming that every gamer who submitted a lineup for the Shell Houston Open was cognizant that it’s the last stop of Segment 2, then the ownership percentages should reflect as true a representation of how much chalk remains on the board across the landscape. Suffice it to say that the pickins were getting thin. The emergence of Jon Rahm since the holiday break has been a wonderful bonus, so it’s no surprise that he’s atop this week’s splits, and the cascade throughout the top five is as expected for a field of this strength. But note the slide to Justin Rose in sixth with just 28.2 percent. The usual separation occurs after that spot, not markedly before it. Henrik Stenson hasn’t picked up any fans from our world in recent weeks, but his share at 23.4 percent is much lower than I anticipated. The SHO is just his fourth start of the 2017 portion of the season, and if you had him on your bench during the first round of the World Golf Championships-Mexico Championship when he withdrew, you’d have at least one remaining for this week. Yet, there he is in eighth, a few clicks behind the course horse, Russell Henley. We won’t see a juxtaposition between those two often, if again. Defending champion Jim Herman slots 24th with 5.0 percent of you on board. In another interesting comparison that paints the visual of passing ships, Patrick Cantlay is 25th with 4.9 percent. Tony Finau is another notable not shown below. He checks in at 11th at 14.9 percent. Segment 3 will hit the ground running at the Masters next week. NOTE: Rob’s Rating refers to where our Fantasy Insider slotted a golfer in his Power Rankings. Golfers in the Power Rankings and outside the top 10 in most owned PGA TOUR Fantasy One & Done presented by SERVPRO While the roster game sets up like a strategic tug of war during which gamers are replenished with three starts per golfer per segment, the arcing lifespan of the One & Done wages a tug of war with our emotions. It can be full of life and it can be full of regret, for you get only one chance per golfer at glory. Week after week, we’re presented with slam dunks. The Shell Houston Open is no different. Phil Mickelson, Jon Rahm and Rickie Fowler slot a respective 1-2-3 among gamers. Of course we expect each to succeed, but the ball still needs be guided into the cylinder. The course history buffs convened again here in lifting Russell Henley to fourth most-picked. Make any argument you want for the guy, and I’m not saying it’s wrong, but it’s still shocking to see him ranked above the likes of J.B. Holmes (fifth) and Henrik Stenson (eighth) at the Golf Club of Houston. Back to defend his only PGA TOUR title, Jim Herman populates 0.8 percent of the submissions. That’s good for 21st overall. Other notables outside the top 10 include Justin Rose (11th, 2.9 percent), Jordan Spieth (T13, 2.4 percent), Tony Finau (15th, 2.2 percent), Patrick Cantlay (16th, 1.9 percent) and Patrick Reed (19th, 1.4 percent).
Former pros find passion, purpose coaching kids
Former running back LaDainian Tomlinson rejoined the Chargers on Thursday as a special assistant to the owner. The Los Angeles Chargers made the move to reunite the San Diego sports hero with the franchise that employed him for his first nine NFL seasons. Tomlinson will be a public representative of the Chargers and will participate in community outreach programs while the franchise moves north after 56 seasons in San Diego.
Rating Ballmer, Buss and the NBA’s 30 owners
Blake Treinen will begin the season as the closer for the Washington Nationals, even though he has only one big league save. After Washington went a winter without landing a ninth-inning man and a spring training trying to figure out who would earn the role, manager Dusty Baker announced Thursday the 28-year-old Treinen won the job. Baker, general manager Mike Rizzo and pitching coach Mike Maddux waited until the team’s final day in Florida – the Nationals were playing an exhibition game at the Boston Red Sox – to settle on Treinen, who found out Thursday morning that he would be the reigning NL East champions’ closer.