Monday, March 9, 2026

Browns sign Quincy Williams

      Just a few minutes after I wrapped up writing about the Cleveland Browns losing linebacker Devin Bush to the Chicago Bears and discussing the Browns' possible options at the position, the Browns announced their replacement, and this is one that I really like.

Cleveland signed Quincy Williams from the New York Jets for a reported two-year contract valued at seventeen million dollars.

Williams wasn't the impact player last season for the Jets under new head coach Aaron Glenn that he was in the previous two seasons under Robert Salah, but still finished with forty-five solo tackles and three and a half sacks in thirteen games.

New Browns defensive coordinator Mike Rutenberg coached Williams in New York, and what Saleh ran (similarities with Jim Schwartz's scheme) should be close to Rutenberg's plans for the Browns.

Rutenberg was Williams's position coach in his best seasons, with Williams finishing with one hundred tackles in each of the four years, and an All-Pro selection in 2023.

Williams is more than a tackle accumulator and can be used effectively as a blitzer, earning twelve and a half sacks as a Jet. He is known for his range and ability in coverage, which should fit well with Carson Schwesinger as three down linebackers.

Williams will turn thirty in training camp and will enter his eighth year (two with Jacksonville, five with the Jets), but he looked good in the games I saw the Jets last season.

All in all, the Browns have signed a superior player (Williams over Devon Bush) at a cheaper rate (Bush signed for three years at ten million per year, Williams will cost eight and a half million per year for two).

I'm a big fan of this signing and think the Browns have done well here.








Browns sign Zion Johnson, lose Devin Bush

    The Cleveland Browns' rebuilding of their offensive line continued on the first day of free agency with the signing of guard Zion Johnson to a three-year contract worth 49.5 million, $32.4 million guaranteed.

Johnson spent the last four seasons with the Los Angeles Chargers after the Chargers selected him in the first round of the 2022 draft from Boston College.

Johnson played every snap for the Chargers last season except in the final game, when all starters were rested, so he's durable.

Johnson also excels in run blocking, but has struggled in pass protection, the inverse of the Browns' other veteran addition to the line, tackle Tytus Howard.

Johnson's fifth-year option wasn't picked up by the Chargers before last season, and he responded with the best season of his career, so this isn't the case of a player needing a second chance.

Johnson played left guard last season, but has played both guard positions, which could allow for the return of Joel Bitonio, should he decide to play one more season.

It's a bit of an overpay, as it usually is when teams need starting offensive linemen through free agency, but Johnson seems to be a player on the upswing.


Meanwhile, the Browns had hoped to keep linebacker Devin Bush, but the veteran signed with the Chicago Bears.

The three-year contract is valued at thirty million dollars, and while keeping Bush would have been nice, I don't blame the Browns here.

While Bush had the best season of his career last season with three interceptions (Two returned for touchdowns), two sacks, and over one hundred tackles, Bush has had off-the-field issues, and while the Browns have stated that they will play the same defensive scheme under new defensive coordinator Mike Rutenberg as they did under Jim Schwartz, it's only natural to figure that some small changes (at least) are in store.

When a player such as Devin Bush excels in one system and has been pedestrian in others, I'm always hesitant to count on the same production when the coordinator changes.

Cleveland could take a linebacker on day three in the draft, sign a veteran in need of a new start (as was the case with Devin Bush), or they could attempt to re-sign veteran Jerome Baker and give him a chance to replace Bush.

Boxing Challenge: Zuffa Era begins with Opietaia win

   Jai Opietaia's victory over Brandon Glanton was as dominant as one could see, but it could be more significant for what happened outside the ring, as Opietaia was stripped of his IBF cruiserweight title before the bell rang.

In the ring, the bout was forgettable as Opietaia puffed up Glanton's eyes and forehead and did about everything a fighter could do short of scoring a knockdown.

Honestly, the fight could have been stopped in the corner of Glanton in the late rounds, and I would not have complained.

Glanton was penalized for holding and low blows, and somehow Opietaia was penalized for holding, which was the only thing preventing Opietaia from a perfect score with all three judges scoring the fight 119-106 for the Australian.

The real fun was outside the ring where despite paying the sanctioning fees, the IBF still took their title away in a snit over the Zuffa championship.

I'm no Zuffa apologist but this is all on the IBF.

Yes, Dana White (Zuffa head) has made his statement about the boxing status quo but their fighter (Opietaia) has made it clear that he wanted to unify all four titles, and they are trying to make that happen with their cooperation to date.

I could do without the Zuffa title but it's not a major problem yet.

There will be a showdown eventually but for now, Zuffa has played by the standard rules and deserves the recognition of being right.

Boxing Challenge

Ramon Malpica: 26 Pts (1)
Vince Samano: 24 Pts (1)
TRS: 22 Pts (1)

Sunday, March 8, 2026

Boxing Challenge

       Only one fight in the boxing challenge, and it's a championship for now, but only until Jai Opietaia enters the ring.

Once he does, the IBF will strip him of their cruiserweight title and only the newly created Zuffa title will be at stake against top ten contender Brandon Glanton.


Cruiserweights,12 Rds 
Jai Opietaia vs Brandon Glanton
Ramon Malpica: Opietaia KO 7
TRS: Opietaia KO 10
Vince Samano: Opietaia KO 6.


Friday, March 6, 2026

Cleaning out the Inbox

     It's time for an inbox cleaning, and we start with a presenter who is about to pull a rare doubleheader in 2026.

Richard Deitsch (who does an excellent podcast) writes for Sports Business Journal about the excellent Premier League host, Rebecca Lowe.

Lowe, who covers the Premier League for NBC Sports, will also be working their Olympic coverage, but the special part comes with Lowe being loaned to Fox Sports for Fox's World Cup broadcasts.

The article covers Lowe's entire career and how she was months away from leaving the profession before being hired by NBC.

Your Mileage May Vary writes of the continuing drop-off in business for the South Carolina tourist attraction, South of the Border.

South of the Border is selling a portion of the facility, so if you have a spare 2.85 million lying around (and if you do, why haven't you offered some to us to go mainstream), you can help revive South of the Border!

MSN.com writes of an unexpected problem at the Winter Olympics- the medals are breaking!

Not the actual medal itself, but the small connector to the medal that allows fabric to go through a loop, allowing it to be worn.

The company that manufactured the medals for the games has offered to fix all medals with this issue.

The legend of Elvis Presley continues to survive, even almost forty-nine years after his death.

The recent release of "Epic- Elvis Presley in Concert" showcases fifty-nine new hours of live footage found stored in a Kansas salt mine.

The article digs deep into Elvis's past, especially how his image has consistently evolved with the times.

The recent ABA documentary on Amazon Prime (which I haven't seen yet) has returned the league to public attention, but what about the small Indiana company that sells the ABA ball?

Lana Sports is a father/son-owned business, and the documentary has caused the sales of the ABA ball to boom.

A percentage of the sales goes to the Dropping Dimes foundation, an organization that helps former ABA players who don't qualify for an NBA pension.

And yes, I own one of these- a mini ball that I won in a Twitter contest from Lana Sports! 


Wednesday, March 4, 2026

Cleaning out the Inbox: Passings

    The tributes never seem to stop, and this edition brings a top-class offering with one particularly sad story.

Goodbye to Doug Moe at the age of 87. 

Moe was an All-American at North Carolina when he was involved in a point shaving scandal, which he was later cleared of involvement, but he would never play in the NBA, although he would later receive a financial settlement.

Moe would play in the ABA for five seasons for the New Orleans Buccaneers, the 1968-69 champion Oakland Oaks, the Carolina Cougars, and the Virginia Squires before bad knees forced him from the game at thirty-three.

Moe played in three ABA All-Star games as a player before transitioning to coach as an assistant with boyhood friend Larry Brown with both Carolina and Denver before receiving his first head coaching position in 1976 with the San Antonio Spurs, where he would win two division titles in four years.

Moe would move to Denver in 1980, where he would make the playoffs in eight of his nine seasons, win two division titles, and win coach of the year in 1988.

Known for his high-scoring teams, Moe's teams often were rapped for lack of defense, and his final head coaching stop in Philadelphia in 1992 ended with a 19-37 record before he was fired.

Goodbye to Bo Lamar at the age of 74.

The leading scorer in NCAA basketball for Louisiana-Lafayette in the 1971-72 season and two-time first team All-American, Lamar averaged over thirty-one points per game for the Ragin Cajuns, and finished with 3,493 points for his career.

Lamar would be drafted with the first pick of the 1973 ABA draft by the San Diego Conquistadors and was named to the All-ABA team after averaging twenty points per game, which he would repeat in his second season with San Diego.

Lamar would play for Indiana in the ABA's final season after San Diego folded and for the Lakers in the first season after the NBA-ABA merger.

Lamar would be the radio analyst for Louisiana-Lafayette after his playing career.

Goodbye to Rondale Moore at the age of  25.

A second-round draft pick by the Cardinals from Purdue in the 2021 draft, Moore struggled with injuries in his three seasons in Arizona, but still caught 135 passes in those three years.

Moore was on the roster of Atlanta in 2024 and Minnesota in 2025, but didn't appear in a game due to injury.

Moore was a standout at Purdue in 2018 as a sophomore, catching 114 passes for over twelve hundred yards and twelve touchdowns, but would play in only seven games in his only two seasons with the Boilermakers. 

Moore was the key player in Purdue's famous 2018 upset of second-ranked Ohio State, catching twelve passes for 170 yards and two touchdowns in Purdue's 49-20 stunner.

Goodbye to Bobby Douglas at the age of 83.

An Olympic freestyle wrestler for the United States in 1964 and 1968, Douglas handed Dan Gable an 11-1 loss in the 1968 Olympic trials.

Douglas would later become the head coach at Iowa State, where he coached Cael Sanderson, and at Arizona State, where he would win his only national title as a coach in 1988.

Tuesday, March 3, 2026

Boxing Challenge: Navarrete nails Nunez

      Entering Saturday's junior lightweight title unification match in Glendale, Arizona, most believed it had fight-of-the-year potential, and while it may have fallen short of that status, it was an exciting scrap.

IBF champion Eduardo "Sugar" Nunez was a slight favorite at the start of the fight, but he gave away the first four rounds to WBO boss Emanuel Navarrete in a manner that one would expect from a fan rather than a champion.

An overly respectful Nunez fell behind and never caught up as the larger and more powerful Navarrete backed Nunez up, closed his right eye, and in the tenth, busted the swelling open in gruesome fashion and forced the fight to be stopped before the start of the eleventh round.

Navarrete was the bigger man, the bigger puncher, and for a fighter known for his eccentric style, Navarrete showed some skills that he hadn't in previous fights.

Nunez showed heart and a good chin, but this is the type of battering that can ruin careers, and it will be interesting to see how he performs in his next outing.

Navarrete is now likely to meet Charly Suarez in a WBO-mandated rematch.

Suarez cut Navarrete with a punch in their first fight, but the cut was ruled to be from a butt and would go to the scorecards with Navarrete winning a close technical decision in the eighth round.

Suarez's appeal was successful, and the fight was changed to a no-contest with a rematch ordered.

Suarez accepted step-aside money to allow Navarrete to unify against Nunez, so the rematch will either be next or Navarrete will give up the WBO belt.

In the other challenge bout, veteran Abel Ramos continued his late career comeback with a split decision win over formerly unbeaten Tahmir Smalls.

Smalls led early, Ramos took over late in an entertaining fight.

I had it closer than the judges (96-94 for Ramos) did: 98-92 and 97-93, with the dissenting judge for Smalls at 96-94.

Ramos will likely move into a welterweight eliminator, while Smalls didn't hurt himself in defeat.

Boxing Challenge

Ramon Malpica:  25 Pts(3)
Vince Samano: 23 Pts (0)
TRS: 21 Pts (1)

Browns sign Quincy Williams

      Just a few minutes after I wrapped up writing about the Cleveland Browns losing linebacker Devin Bush to the Chicago Bears and discuss...