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WNBA, players' union have ‘spirited conversations' in next step toward CBA

WNBA, players' union have ‘spirited conversations' in next step toward CBA

Yahoo6 days ago
INDIANAPOLIS — A record number of players attended Thursday's meeting between the WNBA and WNBPA as part of the next step in collective bargaining negotiations. The group of more than 40 players included union leadership, like Nneka Ogwumike, Breanna Stewart, Kelsey Plum, and Napheesa Collier, as well as young stars such as Caitlin Clark, Angel Reese, and Paige Bueckers.
Weeks removed from receiving a counterproposal from the WNBA that frustrated players, WNBPA executive director Terri Jackson said that players 'had spirited conversations' with the league about revenue sharing, among other topics.
When asked if the meeting was successful, Jackson said, 'Negotiations are hard. They have hard conversations. … That's what today was, no different from any other negotiation.'
Jackson said another meeting is scheduled 'soon,' though she did not specify a date or location. Thursday's meeting lasted a couple of hours, and Jackson said that players sacrificed opportunities for paid appearances to be in attendance.
'I think we're on track to get back to meeting, and conversations that lead us to a CBA,' Jackson said.
'What we heard from the league more than once, maybe three times, was 'We hear you, we're listening.''
As players trickled out of the meeting on their way to the All-Star orange carpet, they declined to speak about the tenor of the negotiations. However, some discussed their reflections on the meeting at the All-Star weekend kickoff event.
'I think there was engagement,' Ogwumike, a star for the Seattle Storm and the president of the WNBPA, told The Athletic. 'I think there were conversations that will start to roll the ball on where we're going to head in this negotiation.'
Added Los Angeles Sparks guard Kelsey Plum, who is the first vice president of the WNBPA: 'We have a long way to go. We're gonna use this weekend to show our value and our worth and continue to be united because we do deserve more.'
The league did not provide a comment regarding the meeting.
The WNBPA received its first counterproposal from the league in the last week of June. Players said they submitted the first version of a proposal during the first week of February but waited months to hear a formal response, which added to the importance of Thursday's meeting, the first since December that included players in person.
'I think for the league to hear the players' perspective definitely goes a long way,' Stewart, a New York Liberty star and vice president of the WNBPA said. 'The way I would describe it, if I could give a summary, is we're a work in progress.'
Ogwumike said earlier this month that she felt the league gave off an impression that 'players don't understand the business.'
'(WNBA commissioner Cathy Engelbert) has told me that to my face,' she said earlier this July. 'I communicated that to the players and I said, 'OK, let's demonstrate that we do understand the business, especially as we're going back and forth in negotiations.'
Engelbert left the building in which the meeting was held just under four hours after it began.
For multiple players on the WNBPA executive committee, a key hangup was a league proposal regarding revenue sharing. While players did not disclose the fixed revenue percentage that the league proposed, players expressed frustration that it would limit their ability to grow with the league itself.
'I don't know that I'm going to say progress,' Jackson said, when asked if they made progress on revenue sharing talks. 'But we had spirited conversations.'
The league's current CBA, which was agreed to in January 2020 and runs through Oct. 31, created significant shifts in the league. Groundbreaking maternity benefits and a notable jump in maximum player salaries were among the major shifts; however, much has changed around the WNBA since. The WNBA continues to routinely achieve record or near-record TV broadcast ratings, with a new 11-year, $2.2 billion TV deal set to go into effect next season. The league recently announced three expansion teams — in Cleveland, Detroit and Philadelphia — set to debut in 2028, 2029 and 2030, respectively, all set to enter the league at a record $250 million expansion fee.
'From what we can tell, the trends are pretty good when it comes to the financial side of things, and we're not unreasonable in understanding the business for us to be able to negotiate with somebody that reflects our values,' Ogwumike said earlier this month.
In a statement provided after Thursday's meeting, the WNBPA said that, 'The only thing more unsustainable than the current system is pretending it can go on forever. It's not complicated. We are committed to the fight.'
The Athletic's Hannah Vanbiber contributed to this story.
(Photo: Kamil Krzaczynski / Imagn Images)
This article originally appeared in The Athletic.
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NBA offseason grades for every West team: Did Rockets, Lakers earn high marks? Plus, which squad scored an 'F'?
NBA offseason grades for every West team: Did Rockets, Lakers earn high marks? Plus, which squad scored an 'F'?

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NBA offseason grades for every West team: Did Rockets, Lakers earn high marks? Plus, which squad scored an 'F'?

It may be the middle of summer, but it is time for an NBA offseason report card, as free agency news has petered from a steady flow to a slow trickle. When 40-year-old Chris Paul's reunion with the Los Angeles Clippers is the biggest story to hit the league, it is high time we start handing out grades for every team. There was plenty of movement in the Western Conference, where Kevin Durant was traded from the Phoenix Suns to the Houston Rockets, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander signed a supermax contract extension with the Oklahoma City Thunder and No. 1 overall draft pick Cooper Flagg joined a Dallas Mavericks team that wants to win now. The Denver Nuggets retooled. The Los Angeles Lakers and Clippers added veteran depth. The Minnesota Timberwolves are trying to reach a third consecutive Western Conference finals. The San Antonio Spurs and Portland Trail Blazers, among other teams, are trying to disrupt the playoff status quo in the West. A lot is happening. Let us get to it. Without further ado, your 2025 NBA offseason report card ... Dallas Mavericks 2024-25 record: 39-43 2025-26 wins O/U: 39.5 Key additions: Cooper Flagg • D'Angelo Russell Key subtractions: Spencer Dinwiddie Oddsmakers figure the Mavs will win as many games this season, when No. 1 overall draft pick Cooper Flagg is in the fold, as they did last season, when they featured Luka Dončić and Kyrie Irving for half the year. They traded Dončić for Anthony Davis, and Irving tore an ACL, which could cost him this coming season, too. That series of events sent them spiraling into the lottery, where they lucked into Flagg. [Join or create a Yahoo Fantasy Football league for the 2025 NFL season] Scoring Flagg is a home run, but how much credit do we want to give them for a few ping-pong balls bouncing their way? More than we ding them for only adding D'Angelo Russell as an Irving replacement, I guess. But it really feels like any executive could have pulled off what Dallas did this summer, making an obvious choice at No. 1 and signing a high-usage, low-efficiency one-time All-Star to run the offense. Grade: B Denver Nuggets 2024-25 record: 50-32 2025-26 wins O/U: 53.5 Key additions: Cam Johnson • Tim Hardaway Jr. • Bruce Brown • Jonas Valančiūnas Key subtractions: Michael Porter Jr. • Dario Šarić • Russell Westbrook • DeAndre Jordan The Nuggets had little to work with and completely retooled their rotation around Nikola Jokić, Jamal Murray and Aaron Gordon, which seems like a good bit of business under the salary cap's second apron. Denver turned Michael Porter Jr.'s $38.3 million salary into $21 million of Cam Johnson, acquiring a more dependable and versatile player. They then manufactured three rotational players — Bruce Brown, Tim Hardaway Jr. and Jonas Valančiūnas — from nothing more than minimum contracts and Dario Šarić's expiring salary, padding a bench that previously could not sustain winning without Jokić on the floor. Grade: A Golden State Warriors 2024-25 record: 48-34 2025-26 wins O/U: 46.5 Key additions: Alex Toohey • Will Richard Key subtractions: Kevon Looney The Warriors have done little beyond adding a couple of late second-round draft picks and losing a fan favorite, Kevon Looney, to free agency. If, as has been rumored, Golden State can sign both Al Horford and De'Anthony Melton to free-agent deals, it will make this a successful summer. Horford, in particular, would join Stephen Curry, Jimmy Butler and Draymond Green as veterans who know how to win games. In the meantime, the Warriors are locked in stalemate with restricted free agent Jonathan Kuminga, a young and talented wing who has flashed potential when he has not been in head coach Steve Kerr's doghouse. They do not seem too keen on paying him; nor do they want to lose him for nothing. It is a real conundrum that telegraphs to the rest of the league: We don't really want him, so why should you? Grade: C Houston Rockets 2024-25 record: 52-30 2025-26 wins O/U: 55.5 Key additions: Kevin Durant • Dorian Finney-Smith • Clint Capela Key subtractions: Jalen Green • Dillon Brooks • Jock Landale The Rockets traded Jalen Green, a wildly inconsistent 23-year-old, for Kevin Durant, one of the most consistent scorers in league history. It is a heck of an upgrade for this coming season — and maybe this coming season alone, as we have no idea how long Durant can sustain his greatness at 37 years old. Still, Durant transforms them from a second-seeded pretender into a bona fide contender, giving them the reliable crunch-time scorer they so desperately needed. Meanwhile, Houston extended its rotation both on the wing and at center, where they respectively added Dorian Finney-Smith and Clint Capela. Grade: A Los Angeles Clippers 2024-25 record: 50-32 2025-26 wins O/U: 48.5 Key additions: Brook Lopez • John Collins • Bradley Beal • Chris Paul • Yanic Konan Niederhauser Key subtractions: Norman Powell • Drew Eubanks • Patty Mills The Clippers reshuffled their veterans, drawing Brook Lopez, John Collins and Bradley Beal from a deck that once included Norman Powell, Drew Eubanks and Patty Mills. Beal can capably fill Powell's shoes as a scoring guard, while Lopez and Collins further strengthen a frontcourt centered around Ivica Zubac. They just added Chris Paul, too, which gives them a handful of guys who were better last decade (i.e., Kawhi Leonard and James Harden). They make sense together, or at least head coach Tyronn Lue will ensure they do. They were already a contender to challenge the Oklahoma City Thunder's supremacy in the West, and now they are a little deeper and a little more well-rounded, if not a little older. Grade: B Los Angeles Lakers 2024-25 record: 50-32 2025-26 wins O/U: 47.5 Key additions: Deandre Ayton • Marcus Smart • Jake LaRavia Key subtractions: Dorian Finney-Smith • Jordan Goodwin • Shake Milton The Lakers lost Dorian Finney-Smith, one of the best 3-and-D wings on the market, to the Rockets — not great for a team that requires defense-first role players around Dončić, LeBron James and Austin Reaves. They instead signed Deandre Ayton, Marcus Smart and Jake LaRavia, a nice haul for around the same amount of money that Finney-Smith received. Ayton, of course, is a 26-year-old former No. 1 overall pick, Smart is a one-time Defensive Player of the Year, and LaRavia shot 42.3% from 3-point range last year. None of their previous teams wanted to keep them, which should raise some red flags for Lakers fans. Meanwhile, the Lakers' offseason did not seem to impress James, who issued a contentious statement upon opting into the final year of his contract with the team. That led to rumors about his availability in either a trade or buyout, none of which seems imminent, and all of which seems like a major distraction. Grade: C Memphis Grizzlies 2024-25 record: 48-34 2025-26 wins O/U: 40.5 Key additions: Ty Jerome • Kentavious Caldwell-Pope • Cedric Coward • Jock Landale Key subtractions: Desmond Bane • Luke Kennard • Jay Huff • Marvin Bagley III The Grizzlies traded Desmond Bane, their third-best player, for Kentavious Caldwell-Pope and the rights to four first-round draft picks, which is a lot more than anyone thought they could get for a non-All-Star. It is a forward-thinking move that gives Memphis more flexibility to build around Ja Morant and Jaren Jackson Jr. (who, along with Memphis teammate Santi Aldama, received a healthy raise this summer). Meanwhile, the Grizzlies added Ty Jerome, a Sixth Man of the Year candidate last season, to reestablish its depth at the point guard position behind Ja Morant. A lot of teams did a lot worse in free agency. Same goes for the draft, where Memphis traded up to select Cedric Coward with the No. 11 overall pick. Grade: B Minnesota Timberwolves 2024-25 record: 49-33 2025-26 wins O/U: 50.5 Key additions: Joan Beringer Key subtractions: Nickeil Alexander-Walker • Luka Garza • Josh Minott The Timberwolves did well to re-sign both Julius Randle and Naz Reid, something not everyone expected from a team that was staring the salary cap's second apron in the face. That crunch did cost them Nickeil Alexander-Walker, another key contributor to their most recent run to the Western Conference finals. Minnesota will instead depend on the internal development of its recent first-round picks, including this year's selection, Joan Beringer, to carry them forward into more serious title contention. That is not such a bad strategy when 23-year-old phenom Anthony Edwards is at the forefront of that rising development. Grade: C New Orleans Pelicans 2024-25 record: 21-61 2025-26 wins O/U: 30.5 Key additions: Jordan Poole • Saddiq Bey • Jeremiah Fears • Derik Queen • Kevon Looney Key subtractions: CJ McCollum • Kelly Olynyk • Brandon Boston Jr. • Elfrid Payton It is unclear what the Pelicans' strategy was for this summer, other than the fact that they really liked Derik Queen, for whose draft rights they traded their unprotected first-round pick in 2026. It was a wild gamble that essentially demands New Orleans makes the playoffs this season ... or loses a lottery pick. So what did the Pelicans do? In the absence of injured point guard Dejounte Murray, they traded CJ McCollum for Jordan Poole, giving the keys to their offense to one of the most inefficient high-usage players in the league, who also happens to have one more year than McCollum on the end of his deal. None of it makes any sense, whether or not Zion Williamson can remain healthy for an entire season. Grade: F Oklahoma City Thunder 2024-25 record: 68-14 2025-26 wins O/U: 62.5 Key additions: Thomas Sorber Key subtractions: Dillon Jones The Thunder, who won 68 games and the NBA championship this past season, needed to do very little in order to remain the favorite to repeat, and that they did, only adding a first-round pick, Thomas Sorber. They did, however, secure their existing core, giving max extensions to Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Jalen Williams and Chet Holmgren. That will carry some financial issues in the years to come, though it is not something they need to worry about this season, when they remain the league's best team on paper. Grade: A Phoenix Suns 2024-25 record: 36-46 2025-26 wins O/U: 30.5 Key additions: Jalen Green • Dillon Brooks • Khaman Maluach • Mark Williams Key subtractions: Kevin Durant • Bradley Beal • Tyus Jones • Mason Plumlee Poor Devin Booker. From a team that reached the 2021 NBA Finals, the Suns instead pivoted to constructing a superteam pretender, acquiring Kevin Durant and Bradley Beal, both of whom left the team this summer. They traded Durant for half of what they spent to get him and paid Beal to leave. It is a sad state of affairs that is entirely of their own making. They are devoid of most future draft picks and are scheduled to pay both Booker and Beal (who, remember, is no longer on the team) a combined $88.6 million in 2029-30. All that said, they did score Jalen Green and Khaman Maluach — two high-upside young talents — in exchange for Durant, and cutting Beal gave them some flexibility under the second apron. There were certainly a lot worse alternatives to what they accomplished this summer. Grade: C Portland Trail Blazers 2024-25 record: 36-46 2025-26 wins O/U: 33.5 Key additions: Jrue Holiday • Damian Lillard • Yang Hansen Key subtractions: Deandre Ayton • Anfernee Simons The willingness to trade 26-year-old Anfernee Simons for 35-year-old Jrue Holiday, who has two additional years and a lot more money left on his contract, is a strange instinct. The Blazers must feel like they are closer to competing for a Western Conference playoff spot than most people think, or else they would not have pursued so much veteran guidance. That includes the feel-good reacquisition of Damian Lillard, whose Achilles injury will keep him from contributing at all this season. There is hope in the form of Yang Hansen if you want to get in early on the Yang train. The Blazers are certainly riding it, taking him 16th overall in last month's draft, far higher than anyone prognosticated. Grade: C Sacramento Kings 2024-25 record: 40-42 2025-26 wins O/U: 35.5 Key additions: Dennis Schröder • Nique Clifford • Dario Šarić Key subtractions: Jonas Valančiūnas • Jake LaRavia The Kings sure made signing Dennis Schröder a priority this summer. Who knows what that will do but make their quest to compete for a playoff spot in the Western Conference slightly more disappointing. Trading Jonas Valančiūnas for Dario Šarić is an odd decision, too, but for wanting to help the Nuggets. Let us hope in Sacramento for Nique Clifford, the 24th pick, who will be introduced to a team led by Zach LaVine, DeMar DeRozan and Domantas Sabonis, one of the oddest collections of talent in the league. Two of them formed the nucleus of a mediocre Chicago Bulls team, and the other has been the anchor of a mediocre team in Sacramento for some time. Together they remain, as the kids say, as mid as it gets. Grade: D San Antonio Spurs 2024-25 record: 34-48 2025-26 wins O/U: 43.5 Key additions: Dylan Harper • Luke Kornet • Carter Bryant • Kelly Olynyk Key subtractions: Sandro Mamukelashvili • Chris Paul The Spurs leaned into the Victor Wembanyama era, bolstering the frontcourt around him and developing young talent behind him. Luke Kornet and Kelly Olynyk, who will make a combined $24.5 million next year, can play either with or in place of Wembanyama, or even together. They are at no shortage for size. There is no lack of youth, either. Add Dylan Harper and Carter Bryant, a pair of lottery picks, to a core that also includes Stephon Castle in addition to the 21-year-old Wembanyama. How quickly San Antonio transforms into a contender depends on how soon everyone develops alongside its 7-foot-5 Frenchman. Grade: B Utah Jazz 2024-25 record: 17-65 2025-26 wins O/U: 18.5 Key additions: Ace Bailey • Walter Clayton Jr. • Jusuf Nurkić • Kevin Love • Kyle Anderson Key subtractions: John Collins • Collin Sexton • Jordan Clarkson • Johnny Juzang It is hard not to like what the Jazz did in the draft, landing Ace Bailey — arguably the second- or third-most talented player in the process — with the No. 5 overall pick and adding Walter Clayton Jr., an NCAA tournament darling. They will join — and perhaps even lead — a growing group of recent first-round draft picks, none of whom has developed into a star. Maybe one or both of Bailey and Clayton become one. Meanwhile, Utah was intent on ensuring it will add another high draft pick next summer. They parted ways with veterans John Collins, Collin Sexton and Jordan Clarkson and got little in return, other than the expiring contracts of veterans Jusuf Nurkić, Kevin Love and Kyle Anderson. This is a lottery team in a rebuild, and it acted accordingly, prioritizing the possibility of youth and the failures that come with it. Grade: B

"Tokenized" Stocks Are Breaking Down Barriers. Here's What Investors Need to Know.
"Tokenized" Stocks Are Breaking Down Barriers. Here's What Investors Need to Know.

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"Tokenized" Stocks Are Breaking Down Barriers. Here's What Investors Need to Know.

Key Points Robinhood just launched its tokenized stocks platform in Europe. It's offering tokenized versions of both public and private companies. There are a few ways to benefit from stock tokenization without buying the tokens. 10 stocks we like better than Robinhood Markets › Modern stock trading still runs on systems that were designed when every phone had a cord. Robinhood's (NASDAQ: HOOD) new tokenized stock program, which rolled out to its European users this month, is the latest attempt to switch over to faster trade processing pipes that are actually public blockchains. The brokerage is letting people buy crypto tokens that represent shares of Apple, Tesla, or even private companies, and it could potentially launch this feature in the U.S. market soon. The promise is 24/7 trading, near‑instant transaction settlement, and the ability to buy stocks directly using crypto. That promise matters because the next wave of capital to enter crypto is likely to arrive through inflows to familiar tickers. Here's what you need to know about this trend, and how to take advantage of it with your investing. Tokenized assets are going mainstream Think of a tokenized stock as a crypto token that can (but does not always) confer ownership of the underlying stock. Ideally, a company issues a token while it holds shares of the stock that's being tokenized. The investor buys the token from them, and then, in theory, holders of the token can redeem it for shares of the stock if they choose to do so. The price of the token is tightly coupled to the price of the underlying stock, as the token is exchangeable for it. Another, far less desirable, implementation of the tokenization idea is a token that is artificially configured to mirror the price action of the underlying asset, without the token issuer actually owning any shares at all. Typically, the tokens are set to mirror the performance of the shares of private companies. These companies do not have stocks that are traded in highly liquid markets like those for public companies, and some of them are technically not allowed to be traded without permission of the stock's issuer. In such a situation, token issuers are providing a financial product that's totally unmoored from the actual value of the asset, so there's nothing to stop holders from getting burned. Of course, it's still possible to sell such tokens to a greater fool, but they are in no way investment-grade, and you should not buy them. For its part, Robinhood says it will back its public company tokens with real equity. But its OpenAI and SpaceX tokens rely solely on Robinhood's own hedging desk, meaning holders have no claim on the underlying businesses if things go sideways. In other words, Robinhood issues the less desirable and uninvestible type of tokenized stock, as well as tokenized shares backed by its own holdings. But why bother with tokenization of stocks in general? In short, convenience. Traditional equity trades in the U.S. settle the next day, they may incur fees, and the market shuts down for nights and weekends. A blockchain can close a tokenized trade in seconds for less than a penny, and it never sleeps. Robinhood is betting that this streamlining and wider trading window will win it new customers. The upside could be massive for investors who position carefully in advance of this trend. Boston Consulting Group (BCG) pegs the potential market for tokenized real-world assets (RWAs), including stocks, at about $16.1 trillion by 2030. Today, only about $22 billion in assets are actually tokenized on‑chain. $528 million of this trading volume is stocks, but that's changing quickly. One chain could be the biggest beneficiary here Enter Solana, (CRYPTO: SOL) the chain that handles thousands of transactions per second, with typical fees of fractions of a cent. Those attributes matter for its prospects as a home for tokenized stock trading. The value of tokenized assets on Solana has soared 140% as of mid-July to reach more than $101.6 million, outpacing the broader tokenization market and capturing the vast majority of this year's growth in the tokenized stocks segment. xStocks, a Solana‑native project launched on June 30, onboarded over 40,000 crypto wallets in its first week, offering more than 50 tokenized U.S. tickers. For now, Solana's combination of throughput and cost gives it a first-mover advantage in tokenized stocks. If the segment follows the broader tokenization roadmap, capital will chase liquidity, reinforcing that lead. Regulation could hobble the segment, or a faster competitor could emerge, so size your positions accordingly. Investors interested in the tokenization wave thus have two main options. One is to buy Robinhood and hope the brokerage scales the program without angering regulators, and that its dalliance with issuing tokenized stocks of private companies ends before there's serious fallout. The better option is to own a sliver of the tokenization rails via an investment in Solana or another chain that's going to be a hub for tokenized equity trading. If tokenized equities graduate from curiosity to mainstream channels, early exposure to Solana could look wise. Since it's a blockchain system rather than a company, multiple tokenized stock issuers could operate on Solana's network. That means that the regulatory risk to the network as a whole is much lower than an investment in Robinhood. Robinhood's investments in tokenization could still bring investors significant wealth, but so far, it simply doesn't seem to be protecting investors or educating them properly in light of its approach to issuing tokens. Do the experts think Robinhood Markets is a buy right now? The Motley Fool's expert analyst team, drawing on years of investing experience and deep analysis of thousands of stocks, leverages our proprietary Moneyball AI investing database to uncover top opportunities. They've just revealed their to buy now — did Robinhood Markets make the list? When our Stock Advisor analyst team has a stock recommendation, it can pay to listen. After all, Stock Advisor's total average return is up 1,034% vs. just 180% for the S&P — that is beating the market by 853.75%!* Imagine if you were a Stock Advisor member when Netflix made this list on December 17, 2004... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you'd have $641,800!* Or when Nvidia made this list on April 15, 2005... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you'd have $1,023,813!* The 10 stocks that made the cut could produce monster returns in the coming years. Don't miss out on the latest top 10 list, available when you join Stock Advisor. See the 10 stocks » *Stock Advisor returns as of July 21, 2025 Alex Carchidi has positions in Apple, Solana, and Tesla. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Apple, Solana, and Tesla. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. "Tokenized" Stocks Are Breaking Down Barriers. Here's What Investors Need to Know. was originally published by The Motley Fool

Chiefs scouting report: Iowa Hawkeyes DE Max Llewellyn
Chiefs scouting report: Iowa Hawkeyes DE Max Llewellyn

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time24 minutes ago

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Chiefs scouting report: Iowa Hawkeyes DE Max Llewellyn

The Kansas City Chiefs have one of the best collections of power rushers in the NFL. It's time for the team to diversify some of the body types in its defensive end room. Several 2026 NFL draft prospects, including Texas Tech's David Bailey, Iowa's Max Llewellyn and Oklahoma's R Mason Thomas, offer the explosiveness to electrify Kansas City's pass rush. Llewellyn is a quick pass rusher with the immediate burst to stress offensive tackles vertically. Many offensive linemen break out of their usual pass set form and chase or overextend to match Llewellyn's speed. This leaves the linemen off balance and vulnerable to counters or line games. Llewellyn sets offensive tackles up with his speed rush early in games before attacking the B-gap later on. He's a fluid athlete who counters inside without sacrificing any momentum. While he sometimes attacks the B-gap with a speed rush off the line, he also works across the offensive tackle's face mid-play when he feels his outside rush won't get home. Llewellyn's pass rush plan includes chops, club-swims, long-arms, rips, swipe-rips, two-handed swipes and one of the best spin moves in the class. Llewellyn has mastered every element of the spin. He sets up offensive linemen for his best move with long strides that force them to overset, creating room in the B-gap for an inside spin. He also uses head fakes and some hip movement to manipulate the offensive tackle's leverage. It might sound like Llewellyn's pass rush plan is complete, but it's still a developmental part of his game. He relies too much on his spin move. He posts several wins per game with the spin, but offensive linemen eventually adjust and counter its effectiveness. Once this happens, Llewellyn doesn't have other polished, NFL-caliber moves that he feels comfortable deploying. Llewellyn currently projects as a late top 100 selection but could elevate into the second round if he refines his pass rush plan and unlocks his bend more often. He shows flashes of playing low to flatten his rush angle and beat the offensive tackle around their outside shoulder. However, his high pad level makes it difficult for him to bend around the corner consistently. Llewellyn's value in run defense is questionable, at best. He shows good effort but lacks the mass to anchor at the point of attack. Iowa doesn't play him in goal line situations because he lacks the play strength to consistently stack blocks and pinch run lanes. These concerns make Llewellyn a candidate to serve as a designated pass rusher early in his career. This article originally appeared on Chiefs Wire: 2026 NFL draft scouting report: Iowa Hawkeyes DE Max Llewellyn

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