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Devin Obee embraces SEC challenge and postseason mindset at Georgia

Devin Obee embraces SEC challenge and postseason mindset at Georgia

Yahoo2 days ago

On the Sidelines S1E14: Guest Matthew Smith, Storm get statement win, division crown is Mariners' to lose
FOX 13 News Anchor and sports fanatic Matthew Smith joins the show for the first time. We break down the Storm's statement blowout win over Las Vegas on Sunday and what we learned about the team that should carry forward through the rest of the season and into the playoffs. Then, we recap the Mariners 6-4 road trip and discuss how the Mariners matchup with the Astros this season compared to years past. The Sounders took home another three points at Lumen Field continuing their unbeaten streak at home. We cover the hot topics from the NFL's spring meeting including the tush push surviving and NFL players being allowed to play flag football in the 2028 Olympics. We discuss whether the OG flag football players are getting unfairly pushed out and who we would want to see play most. We finish with another edition of Top 5 Dead or Alive, this time ranking our top 5 teams we each individually hate the most as sports fans.
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How to watch Wings at Storm: Dallas without Paige Bueckers; Seattle tries to right ship
How to watch Wings at Storm: Dallas without Paige Bueckers; Seattle tries to right ship

Yahoo

time4 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

How to watch Wings at Storm: Dallas without Paige Bueckers; Seattle tries to right ship

How to watch Wings at Storm: Dallas without Paige Bueckers; Seattle tries to right ship The WNBA in-season Commissioner's Cup rolls on, with a national TV look for the Dallas Wings and Seattle Storm. The visitors find themselves without Paige Bueckers, who is shelved in concussion protocol, while the hosts find themselves mired in volatility — a three-game losing streak washing away three consecutive wins. Here's what you need to know for Tuesday night's tip-off. How to watch Dallas Wings at Seattle Storm Venue: Climate Pledge Arena — Seattle Advertisement Time: 9:30 p.m. ET, Tuesday TV: ESPN Streaming: Fubo (try for free) Watching in-person? Get tickets on StubHub. Seattle has an established big three on the offensive end. Veterans Skylar Diggins (17.9 points per game) and Nneka Ogwumike (16.9 ppg) are dealing out their usual damage; forward Gabby Williams (14.0 ppg) is breaking out in her fourth season with the Storm. Together, they lead a scoring punch that's second in field goal percentage and third in assisted baskets. Still, they've taken tough Ls in each of their last three outings. An inspired comeback against the formidable Aces fell 5 points short on Sunday. They lost to the Dream last Friday, after Rhyne Howard dropped a season-high 33 points and Allisha Gray added a career-best 28 versus the Storm's defense. Seattle was also defeated by the Lynx — these days, who isn't? — though the 82-77 final reflected some competitive juice. Advertisement Tuesday night should be something of a get-right game against the floundering Wings. Dallas is 1-6 and will have to pull off this road upset without Bueckers (concussion). Through seven contests, the Wings are 11th in defensive rating and fast-break defense, ninth in second-chance points and last in defensive rebounding. Dallas hits this game after losing a home-and-away mini-series to the Sky. Stalwart guard Arike Ogunbowale leads the team in scoring, but she's doing so on paltry 36/30 percent splits. Newcomer DiJonai Carrington is off to the worst shooting season since her rookie campaign, and fellow offseason add Myisha Hines-Allen has career highs in turnovers and fouls. In better developments, Maddy Siegrist, 2023's third-overall pick, has four blocks across her last two games and has hit double-digit scoring in all but two games this season. The Commissioner's Cup began Sunday and runs through July 1's championship action. Four different teams have won in four iterations. Minnesota is the reigning champ, while New York took the trophy in 2023. Las Vegas won the Cup en route to the 2022 WNBA championship, and Seattle won the first-ever tourney back in 2021. Best player to wear both jerseys: This is a tough call. We could go with Hall of Famers Swin Cash and Katie Smith, or six-time All-WNBA star and current Storm guard Diggins. Wings at Storm odds The Athletic This article originally appeared in The Athletic. Seattle Storm, Dallas Wings, WNBA, Sports Betting, Fubo Partnership 2025 The Athletic Media Company

Who Is Frank Ragnow's Wife, Lucy & How Many Kids Do They Have?
Who Is Frank Ragnow's Wife, Lucy & How Many Kids Do They Have?

Yahoo

time14 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Who Is Frank Ragnow's Wife, Lucy & How Many Kids Do They Have?

Fans are curious to know all about Frank Ragnow's wife after the NFL star recently announced his retirement. Ragnow is hanging up his cleats after seven years of playing center for the Detroit Lions to focus on his growing family. So, here's everything we know about Frank Ragnow's wife, how many kids they have, and more details. Frank Ragnow's wife is Lucy Ragnow. Frank and Lucy Ragnow tied the knot in 2021. Lucy Ragnow often shares snaps of her posing with her husband and their kids on her Instagram, giving fans a glimpse into their loving relationship. She seems to have been an unwavering pillar of support to his husband throughout his NFL career. Following Frank Ragnow's announcement of his sudden retirement, Lucy shared a message in support of her husband's decision. On June 2, 2025, Ragnow shared an Instagram post bidding farewell to the Detroit Lions. Lucy posted a comment sharing heartfelt words of encouragement. 'Beyond proud of you. I'm so honored to be your wife and to have had a front row seat to everything you've accomplished in your career. Big things ahead. Love you x 100000,' penned Lucy Ragnow. Lucy Ragnow is a certified pilates instructor. Lucy runs her pilates classes called @pilatesbylucyco. As per her LinkedIn, she received her STOTT Pilates Level 1 Mat & Reformer license from Merrithew in 2022. Furthermore, she holds a Bachelor of Applied Science ( in Retail and Consumer Behavior degree, which she earned from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Additionally, she contributes to the Rags Remembered Foundation. The organization was founded by her husband, Frank Ragnow, and is dedicated to helping grief-stricken families 'bond and create memories by getting outside and enjoying activities together.' Frank and Lucy Ragnow currently have one kid together, and they are soon going to become parents to another child. The couple welcomed their first son, Jon Benson, in August 2023. On May 14, 2025, Lucy Ragnow took to her Instagram to announce that they are expecting their second child, a daughter. The post featured an adorable photo of the Ragnow family with baby Jon holding the ultrasound image of his sister. Originally reported by Namrata Ghosh on ComingSoon. The post Who Is Frank Ragnow's Wife, Lucy & How Many Kids Do They Have? appeared first on Mandatory.

Why Bengals' personnel additions are more notable than typical June transactions
Why Bengals' personnel additions are more notable than typical June transactions

New York Times

time26 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Why Bengals' personnel additions are more notable than typical June transactions

Shuffling of personnel staff, adding of supplemental scouts and assistants doesn't typically resonate as news, even in the empty June news cycles. The Bengals aren't the typical organization. So, when the club made official the additions of scouts Josh Hinch and Tyler Ramsey, along with scouting research analyst Trey LaBounty on Monday, it left a larger impression than the typical transaction. Advertisement The size of the Bengals' scouting staff has been a criticism of the organization for decades. So, when the team enters this season netting two extra assistants following scout Christian Sarkisian leaving to become general manager at Northwestern, it's notable. It also comes four months removed from the director of player personnel Duke Tobin saying this about his scouting group: 'If I thought we were missing something, I would definitely add more.' The Bengals still face a cavernous gap with the rest of the league, and specifically the AFC North. That's as easy to find as a link on the team directory page. There are differences in how teams categorize and list their scouting and analytics staffers, but they generally categorize them into research and strategy and player personnel. Combining those groups, here are the general numbers of employees in those divisions. • Ravens: 36 • Browns: 35 • Steelers: 27 • Bengals: 9 The Browns, known for their heavy lean into analytics, list 15 in research and strategy alone, plus another 20 in player personnel. The Bengals only list employees in alphabetical order and don't classify them by division. Staffers don't necessarily equate to results, of course. Plus, the Bengals utilize their coaching staff in the scouting process as much, if not more, than any organization in the NFL. Tobin's idea is that the coaches are responsible for developing the draft picks, and they want everyone pulling in the same direction with conviction once the player enters the building. Head coach Zac Taylor has repeatedly spoken out about his support for the Bengals' process, lending weight to the coaching staff's opinions in the evaluation period. Tobin has provided a version of the same answer to the repeated question about the smallest scouting staff in the NFL for decades. 'It's never been and never will be about how many voices you have or how many opinions,' Tobin said before Super Bowl LVI in 2022. 'It's about having the right opinions and trusting in the guys you have entrusted to come up with the right opinions.' Validation of the philosophy will always be easier to find when the wins stack up, specifically in January. Tobin's team put together multiple productive free agent and draft classes in advance of the 2020 and 2021 seasons, leading to back-to-back AFC North titles, an AFC championship and an appearance in the AFC Championship Game that snapped a franchise record 10-game win streak. Advertisement The answers are harder to validate coming off missing the playoffs in back-to-back years, as he did at the combine in Indianapolis. 'Hugely disappointing,' Tobin said with the first two words regarding last season while addressing the gathered media in February. Inevitably, that day, the question came up again regarding the size of his scouting staff and if he was looking to add to the staff. 'Adding more just to satisfy a league quota isn't something I would do,' Tobin said. 'If I thought we were missing some area and weren't getting coverage where I need or where I wanted, or we needed a capacity we don't currently have, then certainly I would look at it. Right now, I think the group is operating very effectively and cohesively. I value their opinions. I know what I am getting out of their opinions. 'When you add new people, it takes a while to know what you are getting out of those opinions. So those opinions don't hold the weight until they have been here a while. There are people around the league I know, like and trust. Am I prepared if something happens? Yeah, I'm always prepared if something happens. But the need right now isn't there.' What happened over the ensuing four months came in waves and made an impact. Major contract negotiations with Tee Higgins, Ja'Marr Chase and (still) Trey Hendrickson ran parallel with a free agency week in which the Bengals stayed surprisingly quiet. Then came a draft where the club desperately needed to find starters in the first three rounds, all while negotiations over the expiring stadium lease were ongoing at the highest levels. Then Sarkisian moved on to Northwestern. His departure allowed an opportunity to reevaluate how the department operates. Tobin's right-hand men, Steven Radicevic (director of pro scouting), Mike Potts (director of college scouting) and Trey Brown (senior personnel executive) all remain, along with scout Andrew Johnson. Advertisement The addition of the 39-year-old Hinch, 35-year-old Ramsey and LaBounty, a product of Stanford (2021) and Miami University (2023), makes for a plus-two trade out. They still boast half the personnel staff as every other team in the league, but it marks the first addition to the group since Brown was added in 2021. Hinch and Ramsey offer a more traditional background in line with the rest of the department. Hinch spent the last four seasons with the Patriots, having broken into the NFL in 2015 with Tampa Bay. Ramsey has 16 years of scouting experience, mostly with Seattle and Carolina. The most interesting addition is LaBounty, who will bring an analytics element to player evaluation. Analytics chief Sam Francis has led the charge on the data side since his hiring in 2019, when he worked with current offensive coordinator Dan Pitcher to build the Bengals' analytics and game management from scratch. With most of his attention focused on the field during the season, LaBounty's ability to focus on the college evaluation side through a data lens brings a new angle to the draft process from start to finish, rather than Francis jumping in late to the game. 'If it pops up tomorrow that we need X and don't have the coverage for it, and I need somebody with a different skill set, we will go out and get them,' Tobin also said in February. These moves suggest there was an obvious need for a different skill set and willingness to move off a previous stance. Nobody will confuse the Bengals with the Browns, Ravens, or any other personnel department in football at this point, but with all the demands placed on executives, this at least serves as recognition that the time had come for an incremental move in a more modern direction. (Photo of Duke Tobin: Kirby Lee / Imagn Images)

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