10 things we learned about Dan Snyder’s awfulness from ESPN’s report on the Jon Gruden email leaks

ESPN’s latest investigative bombshell leaves no one looking good — and shows Dan Snyder might have ousted himself.

I’d like to believe this is our last chronicle of all the awful and stupid things Washington Commanders owner Dan Snyder has done. In my heart, I know it won’t be.

Ostensibly, this is a breakdown of the latest reported transgressions from ESPN’s reporting of the ongoing strip mining of toxic sludge that has permeated every layer of Snyder’s franchise. It’s a recounting of the leaked emails that cost Jon Gruden his job as head coach of a totally different team and how Snyder’s alleged impatience eventually led to his own ousting after a series of passive not-technically-threats to NFL owners and officials. In short, emails discovered during a joint investigation into Washington’s toxic work environment — specifically, emails Gruden wrote using racist and homophobic language — were leaked to the press and had a still-catalyzing reaction.

There’s a lot of good stuff in there as well, from petty personal grudges to a shrugging game of “not me” among millionaires to, delightfully, Sean Payton calling Gruden a “dumb[expletive]” for paying league fines. This was never going to be a pleasant story, but at least with the worst person in the NFL finally, probably, on his way out, there was a silver lining.

But while Snyder’s alleged role in the leaks forced him into the imminent sale of the franchise he quickly smothered — a sale that will bring him more than $6 billion after buying the team for $750 million — it seems a given that the loudest braying jackass in a pasture made specifically for similarly minded animals won’t go quietly into his good night. Snyder may not own his team after 2024, (or maybe he will, it’s Dan Snyder, neither common sense nor sound logic play a role here). Either way, his truly depressing incapacity to learn from mistakes or better himself in any way makes it a near certainty that we will, sometime in the future, once again require a digest of all the terrible things he’s done.

This is probably just another volume in the encyclopedia of Snyder disasters. Let’s trace the story from its origin — amazingly, as always, reported by Seth Wickersham and Don Van Natta Jr. — and figure out whose lives Dan Snyder ruined this time.

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Aaron Rodgers had a nonsensical description of how words work at a psychedelics conference

None of this gibberish was remotely insightful.

Aaron Rodgers is a bona fide future Hall of Fame quarterback. He is, point blank, one of the best to ever throw a football on a professional level. But these days, I get the sense the pseudo-intellectual New York Jets signal caller makes more headlines for his silly commentary on society rather than any success on the football field.

There was that time he gave us a close-up of his toe on camera. He once gave us a lecture about “students of astrology” in regard to a tattoo that clearly had no inherent central meaning. In his best 1960s/1970s “nonconformist” voice, he responded to rightful criticism from former All-Pro tackle Mitchell Schwartz by telling him to be “curious” first. Lest I forget, the man who claims to be worldly didn’t know squat about the great American state of New Jersey.

These are only a few examples, but I think Rodgers’ latest word salad is a top contender for one of the most nonsensical things he’s ever said. And folks: that is a very high bar to clear.

During a “Psychedelics Science” conference in Denver this week, Rodgers was one of the primary speakers. This isn’t surprising for the self-professed ayahuasca user that once claimed the drug helped him play like an MVP. Rodgers appears to be all about “alternative” means to wellness, so of course, he’s selling it to the world.

What was somewhat surprising was Rodgers telling everyone how words work. In audio provided to Pro Football Talk’s Mike Florio, at first, it almost seems like Rodgers was trying to expand on some kind of random opinion on cancel culture or how the “media” (in an extremely general sense) demonizes him.

Whatever Rodgers was trying to say, to me, he lost his train of thought and wound up comparing language to witchcraft. I am not even remotely exaggerating.

More from Pro Football Talk:

“You know,” Rodgers said, “words are so interesting. They have such power in their spells. There’s a reason it’s called ‘spelling,’ because the way that the letters are put together have such power.”

Ah, yes, that makes sense. When I channel my inner Mary Poppins and unironically type supercalifragilisticexpialidocious, I’m actually using magic. I can feel the sorcery coming through my laptop keyboard. There’s lyrical meaning involved, and there’s so much power in that word, in all words, really. What an insight. And this brilliant man, who happens to play football on the side, opened my eyes to it? What a talent.

No, wait, I’m falling for it! Knowing Rodgers, I bet he thinks he just cracked a language code. I’m sure he felt so smart sharing that complete gibberish. And I trust this won’t be the last absurd sentiment to leave his lips.

I, for one, can’t wait to make fun of him again when it happens.

Chris Paul says Isiah Thomas had something to do with his Suns trade. If he did, that’s a problem

Isiah Thomas shouldn’t be making decisions for the Suns

Chris Paul was shocked by his trade, just like you were. The future Hall of Famer is reportedly being shipped to Washington in the Bradley Beal trade and could potentially be on the move again after that. Clearly, he’s not thrilled with it.

But what might be most shocking isn’t even that Paul was traded. It might be the people involved in the decision-making process. At the very least, it’s super confusing.

Mat Ishbia has mostly been running the team since he purchased the Suns. But, in an interview with The New York Times, Paul hinted that Ishbia is being advised by his friend and Hall of Fame point guard, Isiah Thomas.

RELATED: Who won the deal between the Suns and the Wizards?

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Paul mentioned Thomas’ name as a decision-maker multiple times in the interview.

“It’s just — it’s tough. Seriously, it is part of the business, and what you realize is that no one owes you anything. No matter how you are with them or what you do, you realize that in this business, nobody owes you anything, as it should be.

“But when it comes through and my son texts me, I realize that, you know, Mat and Isiah, I guess, just wanted to go in a different direction.”

To be clear, Thomas hasn’t actually been hired by the Suns in any official capacity.

He is friends with Ishbia, however. And when Ishbia purchased the team in February, it was rumored that Thomas would get a front office role with the team. The Suns refuted the reporting initially. Now, he seems to have some sort of role. At least, that’s what Paul would have us believe.

From an organizational standpoint, it’s just messy. James Jones is the general manager of the Suns. Ultimately, he has to make decisions for the team. But if Thomas is truly in on that decision-making process, it can muddle things up quite a bit. We saw the shadow GM workplace dynamic play out in Dallas a few seasons ago and it was disastrous.

On top of that, though, and more importantly, this completely undermines the cultural reset the Suns are supposed to be having. Robert Sarver was forced to sell the team behind allegations of workplace misconduct. Isiah Thomas might be a brilliant basketball mind, but he was also accused of sexual harassment by front-office employee Anucha Browne Sanders while working for the Knicks in 2007. The case settled out of court and both Thomas and the Knicks denied the claims, but that history doesn’t go away.

It’s hard to say what’s real and what’s not when it comes to the Suns’ decision-making these days. James Jones seems to just be along for the ride at this point. Whether that works out, in the long run, remains to be seen.

Ja Morant’s 25-game NBA suspension might go too far in trying to make an example of him

The NBA may have gotten it right on Ja Morant, but it still feels like a bit too much.

Welcome to Layup Lines, our basketball newsletter where we’ll prep you for a tip-off of tonight’s action, from what to watch to bets to make. Subscribe here to get it delivered to your inbox every afternoon

Howdy, folks. Welcome back to Layup Lines. It’s Sykes, once again, here to talk some hoops. Let’s chat about Ja Morant.

If you haven’t seen the news, Morant’s suspension from the NBA finally came down this morning. It was originally forecasted that it’d likely be more than 18 games and it certainly was. Morant ended up getting a 25-game suspension plus conditional requirements for his return to the league.

The league investigated his second appearance with a gun on social media in two calendar months. In a statement, the NBA noted that Morant promised not to do this again after the first instance. He did it again and, now, his punishment is worse. About 15 games worse.

To be completely honest with you all, I’m a bit torn about it. I don’t quite know where I stand on the suspension as a whole.

On one hand, Morant’s behavior over the last year has been more than concerning. It doesn’t start with these gun incidents, either. It goes back to the reported altercation he had with a 17-year-old at an event in Memphis. It goes back to a laser allegedly being trained on Pacers players by someone in his entourage.

So, yeah, I get it. This isn’t just about one incident — it’s all of it. These are signs that, yes, there are some things going on with Ja Morant that need to be corrected. The suspension gives Morant ample opportunity to figure those things out.

But on the other hand, doesn’t this feel like a bit much? Out of all the incidents I just rattled off to you, this is probably the most tame out of each of them. The NBA broke it down to us in the league’s statement. This was Ja Morant in a car with friends in Memphis — a city in Tennessee where you can openly carry a gun without a license.  That’s not illegal. No team policy was violated. The suspension is just for a moment of mindlessness.

The impact of the suspension doesn’t just take away 25 games from Morant. There are financial implications that come with this. After missing 25 games, Morant won’t be eligible for the league’s postseason awards due to the league’s new rule that players have to play at least 65 games to qualify.

That also means he won’t be eligible for a supermax extension. From a labor perspective, that’s extremely problematic and something the National Basketball Player’s Association is going to push back on. It’s important not to conflate Morant’s actions with the impending union fight he now has to be a part of. The player’s association may not be thrilled by Morant’s behavior, but it has to ensure the NBA can’t kneecap a player’s long-term earning potential. That’s the job of a union, plain and simple.

In the end, regardless of the outcome of the impending battle between the NBA and the NBPA,  He says he’s going to use that time to work on his own mental health and decision-making. That’s good. That’s exactly what needs to be done here.

Because, putting aside the basketball and the money and everything else, there just seems to be something going on with Morant that the rest of us don’t quite get. And he might not completely get it, either.

Figuring that out is the most important thing of all. Because to fix any of this, Ja Morant needs to be OK. So let’s just hope he truly gets what he needs this time.

The Tip-Off

Some NBA goodness from around the USA TODAY Sports network.

The NBA draft is next week, so now is as good a time as ever for you to freshen up on the prospects being picked and where everyone might go. Luckily for you, we’ve got Bryan Kalbrosky on the job. And you’re probably not going to find a mock draft as thorough anywhere else.

Here’s a breakdown of where we currently are as well as how he puts his mock together. It’s brilliant.

There were 242 players who applied as early-entry candidates for the 2023 NBA Draft, and hundreds more were automatically eligible. After several notable prospects tested the waters, however, more than 100 players decided to withdraw from this year’s pre-draft process.

This mock draft is based on intel, research, scouting, deep data dives, and continued conversations with experts around the league. The results of this mock draft are based on the current order of the draft, though we can expect trades that will shake up the picks on the night of the event.”

See who we’ve got your favorite team picking here. 

Shootaround

— Speaking of Kalbrosky, you’ll definitely want to read his latest draft profile of Noah Clowney.

— Michael Jordan sold the Hornets! Here are the 10 most notable moments from his tenure as owner.

— The Pelicans probably won’t trade Zion Williamson, but if they do, our Charles Curtis has some destination for him.

— The Nuggets’ parade was so good, but there wasn’t a better moment than Nikola Jokic changing his mind about the parade.

Enjoy the weekend, folks.

Opinion: NCAA needs to offer more transparency about weather delays

Saturday’s frustrating events show that the NCAA needs to offer more transparency into its weather delay process.

LSU is 4-0 in the NCAA tournament and one win away from its first College World Series appearance since 2017.

Despite that undefeated record, there’s been some frustration at Alex Box Stadium from LSU fans this month. This postseason has provided weather delay after weather delay.

It’s not unusual. It’s the summer, and it’s the south. There are going to be thunderstorms and lightning out of nowhere on any given afternoon.

Just as LSU and Kentucky were getting ready for game one early Saturday afternoon, a lightning strike pushed first pitch back. Moments later, the teams left the field, and it was clear this game wasn’t starting anytime soon.

First pitch got pushed back even further into the evening only for the radar to look even worse as the evening approached. There were two more delays before the game finally got underway at 9:06 p.m. CT.

Fans at the Box were puzzled and grew frustrated. A glance at the sky didn’t reveal anything that looked like it should threaten play.

The initial delay made sense. Every outside sport is disrupted by lightning. Nobody is arguing with that. And yes, sunny skies don’t always tell the full story there.

After that first 30 or 45-minute delay is where it gets murkier.

The choice to push the game into the night was a questionable one. You had a situation where rain was likely at night, too. Meanwhile, fans were sitting around The Box without much knowledge of when the game would actually be played.

Both coaches said they wanted to avoid a situation where the game was stopping and starting. Games like that can put more stress on the players and make it difficult to manage a pitching staff. I understand that and I’m sure every fan does too.

But there becomes a point where you just have to play with what you got. It’s hard to pick and choose when it comes to weather at this point in the year.

The significant delay risked the game not getting played at all on Saturday, potentially leading to a situation where a doubleheader or playing on Tuesday was required. Either one of those options could have caused the same inconvenience of a start-and-stop game.

The choices made ended up being fine. Alex Box remained full, and the game got underway well before the deadline. But the NCAA needs to improve how it does business in this department.

It starts with transparency. Much of Saturday’s frustration grew from confusion.  A fan base that sat through several delays last weekend was once again doing it, except this time, it wasn’t pouring rain.

It wasn’t until after the game that [autotag]Jay Johnson[/autotag] was able to give a complete answer on what happened behind the scenes.

Johnson detailed conversations with the NCAA and National Weather Service, saying there was too much lightning when they tried to first get underway. That’s a respectable process, but there’s no reason the answer Johnson gave after the game couldn’t have been sent in a Tweet hours earlier.

The fans at Alex Box are some of the best in the sport, and more needs to be done to limit frustration on a day like Saturday.

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The PGA Tour’s deal with LIV Golf and Saudi Arabia could be a precursor for what’s to come in the NBA

The NBA door is wide open for the Saudi Public Investment fund

Welcome to Layup Lines, our basketball newsletter where we’ll prep you for a tip-off of tonight’s action, from what to watch to bets to make. Subscribe here to get it delivered to your inbox every afternoon

Howdy, folks. Welcome back to Layup Lines. It’s Sykes. Let’s talk a little golf and basketball.

Lots of folks have been, rightfully, up in arms following the merger of LIV Golf and the PGA Tour.

So now, what we’re left with is a PGA Tour that is firmly in the grip of Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund, just as LIV Golf once was. For fans of the sport, this can be a hard pill to swallow.

Yes, this public investment fund is there to diversify the country’s economy as the well runs dry on fossil fuels that have driven Saudi Arabia for so long. There’s obviously lots of money there to spend and many organizations will gladly take it.

But, at the same time, this is also a country with an abhorrent human rights record. The families of 9/11 victims are suing Saudi Arabia to hold it responsible for the attack. The Saudi public investment fund that is now bankrolling the PGA Tour also owned planes used in the killing of Washington Post journalist Jamal Khashoggi.  This is who owns golf now.

NBA fans, if you’re uncomfortable with that, you’d better get used to it. Because it’s probably coming to your favorite league, too.

The NBA welcomes this. Last year, the league’s board of governors instated a rule change allowing sovereign wealth funds (looking at you, PIF) to buy up to a 20 percent stake in any team. The door is quite literally wide open.

Adam Silver is letting everyone know it, too. Silver was asked about the PGA Tour merger on the Dan Patrick Show and potential investment from the Saudi PIF coming to the NBA. Here’s what he had to say, via The Athletic.

“I hear the comments about sportswashing. On the other hand, you’re talking about it, others are talking about it. … In the same way the World Cup — the football World Cup, soccer World Cup — brought enormous attention to Qatar. I think people learn about these countries, learn about what’s happening in the world in ways they otherwise wouldn’t. So I think the media does its job.

“But … now talking specifically about the NBA, where we’re such a global sport, I think people are a little too dismissive these days about the benefits that come from the commonality around sports.”

The only word I can find that feels appropriate for these comments is disappointing. We obviously know this isn’t the case now, but Adam Silver had once built the NBA up as the progressive league in sports. When cash is involved? You can cast all that aside. So many moments have shown us that. This is certainly one of them.

But, here’s the thing. Can you blame him, though? By and large, this is the attitude that pretty much everyone is taking on. The NBA is obviously open to it. The PGA Tour just did it after saying it wouldn’t. The WNBA probably will someday, too. The WTA and the ATP probably will, too. Several organizations in soccer already have. And Uber. And Twitter. And lots of other companies that you probably love.

The message is this: Sure, it might feel a bit icky taking this check. But, y’all, do you see this check? The money is just far too much to pass up — morality be damned.

That’s sad. It’s gross. But it’s our reality. Unfortunately, sports fans, you should probably get used to it.

The Tip-Off

Some NBA goodness from around the USA TODAY Sports network.

The Denver Nuggets caught all of us by surprise today by making a trade. Yes, you read that correctly. In the middle of the NBA Finals. Shouldn’t they be focused on pick-and-roll coverage or something?

Regardless of the timing, though, this is actually a pretty smart deal. Here’s why:

“It matters because of the NBA’s new collective bargaining agreement. The league and the NBA Player’s Association agreed to a new deal in the midst of this season that implements more punitive penalties for teams like the Warriors, Clippers and others that choose to spend deep into the tax.

That matters because once teams pass that second luxury tax apron, they’ll lose access to key roster-building tools like the NBA’s taxpayer mid-level exception. They also will be prevented from signing players who have been waived during the season if that player’s previous salary was larger than the midlevel exception.”

Maybe we should see more NBA trades in the Finals. The Nuggets are trendsetters.

One to Watch

(All odds via Tipico.)

(AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill)

Nuggets (-3.5, -160) @ Heat (+140), O/U 211.5 8:30 PM ET

The Miami Heat have their backs up against the wall facing a 2-1 deficit against the Nuggets with Nikola Jokic and Jamal Murray both on a tear. These are the exact sorts of games the Heat somehow find themselves winning. I’m not saying they’ll win outright, but I do think it’ll be a close one. I’d take Miami +3.5.

Shootaround

— Christian Braun, the most surprising X-factor so far of the NBA Finals. Bryan Kalbrosky has more.

— Everyone should be calling for the Mavericks’ 10th pick right now. Prince Grimes has some good suitors for it here.

— Stephen A. Smith really said Nikola Jokic isn’t known for his post-game. Robert Zegklinski couldn’t believe it either.

— Maxwell Lewis has to have one of the most fascinating stories in the NBA draft this season.

Enjoy the weekend, folks.

Jay Monahan can’t remain PGA Tour commissioner, even if he just killed LIV Golf

By securing funding, the PGA Tour has all but ended LIV Golf. Jay Monahan still must go.

There’s an argument to be made — and plenty are making it already — that by partnering with the Saudi-controlled Public Investment Fund, PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan effectively killed LIV Golf and the existential threat to the sport’s most elite circuit.

Monahan, the newly crowned worst commissioner in professional sports, will try to make this explanation work for him and win the public relations battle. We’re already getting glimpses of it.

“The PIF was controlling LIV, and we were competing against LIV,” Monahan told reporters Tuesday. “I felt very good about the changes we’d made and the position that we’re in, but ultimately to take the competitor off of the board, to have them exist as a partner — not an owner — and for us to be able to control the direction going forward, put us in a position as the PGA Tour to serve our members, and at the same time, get to a productive position for the game at large.”

Similarly, The Athletic’s Brendan Quinn reported some inside the Tour see the move as an act of survival for a PGA hemorrhaging money to keep up with the Saudis both on the golf course and in the court battles. There has also been speculation the PGA Tour wanted to avoid the discovery process in any legal proceedings. That’s not hard to imagine.

There is some merit in these explanations. The PGA Tour could only retain its talent as long as it had the money to do so. Protecting the existence of the a league is the ultimate goal for any commissioners. If that’s the argument Monahan is sticking to, so be it. He still has to go. He cannot run the PGA Tour for another day. He certainly cannot take over as the CEO of the to-be-named for-profit entity that will control the PGA Tour, LIV Golf and DP World Tour.

MORE LIV-PGA MERGER

Monahan has burned all his credibility, for starters.  Players like Rory McIlroy, Scottie Scheffler, Tiger Woods and Jon Rahm stood as his human shield while LIV poached players away over the last two years. Monahan told his golfers they were on the right side of history. He invoked the Saudi connection to 9/11 on national television by asking if any PGA player had ever felt the need to apologize for their tour.

Which makes the the fact that only 90 percent of the room called for Monahan’s job the most surprising report to come out of Tuesday’s PGA Tour players-only meeting. But what’s worse is that even by “saving” the PGA Tour from LIV Golf, Monahan himself seems to have lost the plot.

LIV Golf was created to force the PGA Tour to give the Saudis a seat at the table. Forget about the low ratings, inconsistent broadcasts, the ridiculous team format or anything else. The only reason the PIF invested in LIV was because it wanted access to the type of institutional wealth and corporate relationships the PGA was built on.

LIV is most likely going away now. Maybe before 2024. Maybe after. The assurance of a process by which PGA defectors can re-apply to get on Tour all but guarantees it. Doesn’t that seem to signal that the Saudis never cared about the success of their own league? All they needed to do was bleed the Tour until it desperately needed PIF funding.

That day apparently came seven weeks ago when Monahan and PIF governor Yasir Al-Rumayyan first met in Italy. They met again in London for lunch and golf a few weeks later. The whole thing was kept completely under wraps from even the most engaged and important stakeholders  — a clear sign both of how dire the situation was for the PGA and how carefully Monahan had to move to avoid any Tour member from stopping him.

There is absolutely zero question the PIF that benefits more from that arrangement. For someone who preached the long game here, Monahan sure looks like he took the easiest exit available.

“Things are not won in soundbites,” Monahan told The Athletic last August. Things are not in individual moves. You win over the long haul. You win by keeping people inspired, learning every step of the way, and understand you don’t have every answer.”

Monahan played everyone and achieved a pyrrhic victory unlike any seen in modern sports. He killed LIV Golf, secured guaranteed billions for the sport and turned an enemy into an ally.

All it cost him was credibility, his standing with the players he supposedly represents and the first line of his obituary. The Saudis now own professional golf. It’s their money, their exclusive investment. Who needs a seat at the table when you can just buy the whole conference room?

Monahan must go immediately. He cannot be trusted with the PGA Tour one minute longer.

The only credit he deserves is having the courage to face all the players he betrayed in Tuesday’s meeting, during which multiple players hurled expletives at him while calling out his hypocrisy. At the end of it all, Monahan told reporters he still thinks he did right.

“It probably didn’t seem this way to them, but as I looked to our players, those players that have been loyal to the PGA Tour, I’m confident that the move that they’ve made the right decision,” Monahan said. “They’ve helped rearchitect the future of the PGA Tour. They’ve moved us to a more pro-competitive model.”

Blathering drivel like this almost makes you wish Monahan had been as gruesomely honest as Phil Mickelson was last February while talking to Fire Pit Collective’s Alan Shipnuck.

“We know they killed [Washington Post reporter and U.S. resident Jamal] Khashoggi and have a horrible record on human rights,” Mickelson said then. “They execute people over there for being gay. Knowing all of this, why would I even consider it? Because this is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to reshape how the PGA Tour operates.”

Monahan certainly reshaped how the PGA Tour operates. Now his time in golf has reached its end.

PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan burned everyone who trusted him

The PGA Tour foolishly trusted Jay Monahan to protect it.

Jay Monahan had his price and it shouldn’t come as much of a surprise, I suppose.

The Saudi-backed LIV Golf league was throwing hundreds of millions of dollars around on players, tournaments and legal fees to compete with the PGA Tour. Maybe it was naive to think there wasn’t an endgame where the commissioner of golf’s premier circuit to came out on top.

After two years of holding the PGA together, of convincing the majority of the game’s top players not to accept the blood money coming from Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund, of revamping the Tour schedule with designated event purses worth $20 million each, of securing trust from sponsors, stakeholders and anyone else who could’ve put the final nail in the PGA’s coffin, the end came without warning on Tuesday morning and it was Monahan holding the hammer.

The PGA Tour, DP World Tour and LIV Golf will merge into one, for-profit entity. Professional golf as we knew it is dead, almost unilaterally destroyed by the man entrusted to save it.

No one was given any indication this sort of deal was possible, let alone being negotiated. PGA Tour players — the same ones who had Monahan’s back, who turned down millions — found out about the merger on Twitter.

How he can even dare to face them again is mind-boggling. Judging from the early responses of those on Tour, it won’t be pretty.

But none of that matters to Monahan, apparently. He emerges from the seismic shift with more power than ever as the CEO of the yet-to-be-named organization. PIF governor Yasir Al-Rumayyan will serve as chairman. The Saudi fund will initially serve as exclusive investor to the new endeavor, meaning Al-Rumayyan is the only person Monahan must dance for now and already were seeing him move in ways previously thought impossible.

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Take what Monahan said at the Travelers Championship almost exactly one year ago, June 22, 2022, as the Tour announced massive changes to retain its talent from LIV’s overtures:

“The PGA Tour, an American institution, can’t compete with a foreign monarchy that is spending billions of dollars in an attempt to buy the game of golf. We welcome good, healthy competition. The LIV Saudi Golf League is not that. It’s an irrational threat, one not concerned with the return on investment or true growth of the game.”

Here’s what Monahan said on Tuesday, after announcing the merger:

“What’s happened today is we’ve recognized that together we can have a far greater impact on this game than we can working apart,” Monahan told CNBC. “…We’re announcing to the world that on behalf of this game we’re coming together. It’s less about how people respond today and it’s all about how people respond in ten years. When they see the impact we’re having on this game together there will be a lot of smiles on peoples faces.”

Well, look at that! It turns out Grandpa Joe’s legs worked this whole time, he was just waiting on a golden ticket to get him out of bed.

Will Monahan even be around in 10 years to see what becomes of this deal? How can he possibly stay on as CEO and get the players to trust him after such hypocrisy?

Let’s just strip away all the moral arguments for a moment — and there are many — and think about this purely from a financial standpoint. Some of the biggest names in golf turned down a chance to acquire equity in LIV Golf and its team franchises. Those who did take the money and own part of their LIV teams are now expected to see their ownership values skyrocket beyond comprehension.

How can Monahan look at players like Jon Rahm, Rory McIlroy and Scottie Scheffler with a clear conscious? How does he reward their loyalty? By kneecapping their earning power to increase his own.

Make no mistake: Monahan needs their support. Both from a public relations standpoint and a business one. The PGA-LIV merger is contingent on the PGA Tour Policy Board’s approval. McIlroy, Patrick Cantlay, Webb Simpson, Charley Hoffman and Peter Malnati all serve as player directors on the policy board.

Now that Monahan has exposed himself as the worst kind of hypocrite, McIlroy is supposed to follow his lead and backtrack on every hardline stance he took against LIV? It’s hard to envision.

Netflix’s Full Swing showed everyone exactly what PGA Tour players think about LIV Golf. And we’ll get to see exactly how the players reacted to the news because Netflix had cameras rolling for Full Swing season two when news of the merger broke.

There’s no hiding from what happened here.

Jay Monahan packed everyone into the PGA Tour’s safe house, doused it with Saudi oil and lit a match. Somehow he’s the only person who didn’t get burned. Money and a new title offered all the protection he needed.

The Score’s Jordan Schultz lists Browns Elijah Moore as a breakout candidate

One expert singled out #Browns receiver Elijah Moore as a candidate to take a major step forward in 2023.

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One of the most important moves of the Cleveland Browns’ offseason occurred when the team traded back in the draft to acquire Jets wide receiver Elijah Moore. It’s clear when you watch Moore’s tape that his numbers suffered greatly from poor play design and terrible quarterback play. He possesses a great blend of route running and speed to be a difference-maker when used correctly.

The Score’s Jordan Schultz agrees listing Moore as a breakout wide receiver candidate in a recent article.

“Moore’s capacity to play inside and execute bubbles – plus his sensational short-area quickness – provide the Browns with a new skill set that I fully expect head coach Kevin Stefanski and offensive coordinator Alex Van Pelt to take advantage of. Candidly: I love the fit.”

The team has lacked the kind of dynamic playmaker that Moore has the ability to be since Stefanski arrived. Having a player under contract that can perfectly complement Amari Cooper this season will be a blessing. Mix that in with Donovan Peoples-Jones, David Njoku, Jordan Akins, and Cedric Tillman this passing offense has a chance to be one of the best in the NFL.

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Bob Huggins should have been fired, but West Virginia chose cowardice instead

The issue with Bob Huggins is just as much about what he said as *how* he said it.

With Bob Huggins, West Virginia had the chance to do the right thing. But when faced with an opportunity to stand up for the LGBTQ+ community and demonstrate zero tolerance for hate speech, it said, “Nah.”

The Mountaineers’ 69-year-old men’s basketball coach appeared on a Cincinnati radio show Monday and repeatedly used a homophobic slur while he and the host mocked solidarity for the transgender community.

Once the clip of Huggins’ interview hit the internet, the outraged reaction was swift, with many convinced there was no way the head coach could or should return to the sidelines. After all, Huggins casually employed an odious slur that should be extinct from everyone’s vocabulary.

But instead of firing Huggins — who’s been with the Mountaineers since 2007 — West Virginia spinelessly offered up a slap on the wrist that keeps him on the sidelines as one of the state’s highest paid public employees.

His penance for hate speech? A tiny suspension, sensitivity training, a million-dollar salary reduction and an amended year-to-year contract that went into effect Wednesday. Oh yeah, sure, making $3.15 million instead of $4.15 million while sitting out just three whole games — it’s laughable.

The issue with Huggins here is just as much about what he said as how he said it.

If a hateful slur is uttered with seemingly tremendous ease, and more than once, it’s reasonable to think that word is part of that person’s vocabulary, rather than a mistake. And if this is a word Huggins employs casually without hesitation, he has no business coaching young athletes and being arguably the face of West Virginia athletics.

But let’s back up to Monday’s radio appearance with Huggins and WLW-AM host Bill Cunningham.

While discussing the Xavier-Cincinnati basketball rivalry, Huggins — who coached the Bearcats from 1989 to 2005 — and Cunningham recalled an incident from the teams’ Crosstown Shootout matchup when “rubber penises” were tossed on the court. After Cunningham joked that it was transgender night, Huggins chimed in with his anti-gay slur — the same revolting language former Cincinnati Reds announcer Thom Brennaman was fired for using in 2020.

“What it was, was all those [expletive],” Huggins said. And then he momentarily stumbled over his words.

For a split second, it seemed like he knew he used a slur and was about to backtrack or, perhaps, apologize for his vile language. Clearly, that was giving him far too much credit because while he did correct himself, it was only to ensure the word “Catholic” preceded his slur.

Huggins continued: “Those, those Catholic [expletive] I think threw them.”

Despite the appearance of an awkward pause, Huggins’ bigoted garbage was followed by on-air laughs and praise for him as “the best.” Far from it for anyone with some semblance of humanity.

Not only is there a good chance he’s alienated himself from his players, as USA TODAY Sports’ Mike Freeman noted, but, despite a wanting apology, he’s also shown his true feelings about already marginalized folks, against whom hate crimes and suicide contemplation and rates, especially among LGBTQ+ youth, are on the rise.

Is he really a person West Virginia wants representing it? Recruiting for it? Speaking for it? It’s shameful for West Virginia that the answers appear to be yes — despite calling his language “insensitive, offensive” and not representative of the school’s values.

A statement from the athletics department noted the $1 million from Huggins’ salary “will be used to directly support WVU’s LGBTQ+ Center,” which is a good thing. It’s also requiring Huggins to meet with LGBTQ+ leaders around the state, and it plans to develop required annual trainings to “address all aspects of inequality including homophobia, transphobia, sexism, ableism and more.” Also good.

But the Mountaineers didn’t go far enough, and the requirements of Huggins are actions he should be taking anyway to be a decent human being, regardless of retaining his job or not.

In a statement on Twitter, Morgantown Pride, an organization promoted by the university, wrote in part:

We believe that this incident requires the termination of Bob Huggins as this type of rhetoric creates a space in which students, community members and most especially players are NOT SAFE. However, if WV Athletics chooses the wrong path and does not ask Bob Huggins to resign, the culture that he has obviously cultivated in which individuals feel so comfortable saying homophobic slurs that they would do so whilst being interviewed, requires significant investment of both time and labor to correct.

Firing Huggins would have been the correct first step in making amends after this incident. It would have sent a clear message of solidarity and shown the LGBTQ+ people and everyone else on campus, within the fan base and in the locker room that this kind of language is unacceptable no matter what. It also would have publicly demonstrated that West Virginia values the well-being and livelihoods of everyone, not just the cis straight folks.

Especially at a time when LGBTQ+ people are discriminated against with basic rights being stripped away, homophobic language is disgraceful. From anyone. And Huggins should have known, in 2023, that word is a slur — and why.

But rather than deal appropriate consequences, the Mountaineers opted for cowardice, allowing Huggins to still make millions with a measly three-game suspension and implying bigoted language is tolerated.

It doesn’t matter what year you were born in or if you’re from “another time.” Society is supposed to evolve, and treating people with respect and dignity is what we as a collective should strive for.

Keeping Huggins in Morgantown is a disservice to the LGBTQ+ community, as well as to Mountaineer athletes, students, employees and fans. Coaching is a privilege, and Huggins has made millions over the years with success in college hoops. But it’s a privilege he no longer deserves.