Podcast
Panthers OTAs
CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Dave Canales and his staff had their first look at the team’s rookies during a two-day minicamp earlier this month. Following the holiday weekend, they’ll get the whole gang together. The Carolina Panthers’ offseason program ramps up to something more closely resembling real football Tuesday with the first of six scheduled OTA […]

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Dave Canales and his staff had their first look at the team’s rookies during a two-day minicamp earlier this month. Following the holiday weekend, they’ll get the whole gang together.
The Carolina Panthers’ offseason program ramps up to something more closely resembling real football Tuesday with the first of six scheduled OTA practices over the next two weeks. Those will be followed by a three-day mandatory minicamp from June 10-12.
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The NFL allows for up to 10 OTA practices, but the Panthers are among 15 teams slated to use only six. As with the rookie camp, no live contact is allowed in the OTA or minicamp practices. But teams can stage 7-on-7, 9-on-7 and 11-on-11 drills, so it’s at least a start.
One OTA practice each week and the entire minicamp is open to the media. Here’s what I’ll be watching:
Wide receiver pecking order
A year ago, we were just beginning to document the Diontae Johnson experiment, which didn’t make it to Halloween. Johnson has been on three different teams since then, including two stints with the Baltimore Ravens.
Meanwhile, the Panthers bolstered their receiving corps by drafting Tetairoa McMillan with the eighth pick, adding former Colorado receiver Jimmy Horn in the sixth round and taking a flier on Hunter Renfrow, the former Clemson and Raiders receiver who was out of the league last year while dealing with ulcerative colitis.
McMillan figures to get the majority of his work at the X, with Adam Thielen and Xavier Legette lining up at the slot and the Z, respectively. But it will be interesting to see how the reps shake out among the receivers a little farther down the depth chart, a group that includes Jalen Coker, Renfrow, Horn and David Moore, who was re-signed to a one-year deal after a career resurgence last season.
Something else to track: Bryce Young’s touch passes to the 6-foot-4 McMillan, whose ability to high-point balls and get open on scramble plays should mesh well with Young’s skills in both of those areas.
Which edge rushers emerge
Jadeveon Clowney’s release leaves the Panthers with only a couple of proven edge rushers in D.J. Wonnum and free-agent acquisition Patrick Jones, a situational pass rusher in Minnesota who finished with a career-high seven sacks last year. But that was part of the point in moving on from Clowney: To open up playing opportunities for young players like second-round pick Nic Scourton and third-rounder Princely Umanmielen.
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Besides their SEC backgrounds, the two outside linebackers don’t have much in common regarding their pass-rush arsenal. Umanmielen is a speed rusher with a good bend, while Scourton relied on a power repertoire and, at times, nearly ate his way into an interior position in college.
Neither lacks confidence.
Besides a “nasty demeanor” and natural leadership skills, Scourton pointed to his competitiveness when asked what sets him apart. “I’m not coming just to say I made it to the NFL,” he said. “I think I can add a lot to the defense, just by being myself, coming in and working hard, getting around the vets and just getting better.”
And Umanmielen believes he’s more than just a one-trick pass rusher. “I didn’t really have to use power against offensive tackles. I was winning with my moves, so there was no reason to convert to power,” he said. “There were times where I go power and it does show up on film a lot. I squat 700 pounds, so I know I have a lot of power.”
Checking on Derrick Brown and others in their rehab process
When Brown spoke with reporters in April, the Pro Bowl defensive end indicated his goal was Week 1 — not OTA practices in May — in terms of a timeline in returning from knee surgery. There’s no reason for the Panthers to be in a rush with Brown, whose loss was felt across the whole defense after he tore his meniscus in the season opener against the New Orleans Saints.
“We’re just kind of week to week, just seeing where he’s at with his confidence level, conditioning level and all that,” Canales said of Brown. “We’ll kind of just play that by ear.”
Brown said last month he’s following the doctors’ and trainers’ orders. “No rush, just trying to get back,” he said. “I would like to be able to be there when the team gets ready to play in September.”
Second-year linebacker Trevin Wallace is farther along in his recovery from offseason shoulder surgery and is expected to participate in OTAs and the mandatory minicamp. Wallace, last year’s third-round pick from Kentucky, started eight games as a rookie after Shaq Thompson was injured. Wallace totaled 64 tackles.

Panthers star defensive tackle Derrick Brown is coming back from a meniscus tear in 2024, with a goal to be ready by Week 1 against the Jacksonville Jaguars. (John Byrum / Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)
Second-teamers in the secondary
The starting secondary looks to be set after the Panthers re-signed cornerbacks Jaycee Horn and Michael Jackson and overhauled their safety room, where former Raider Tre’von Moehrig and fourth-round pick Lathan Ransom are replacing Xavier Woods and Jordan Fuller.
Veteran Nick Scott and second-year Demani Richardson are the backups at safety, while Chau Smith-Wade returns at nickel. But the rest of the depth chart looks a little shaky. The Panthers kept cornerback Shemar Bartholomew around all last season after claiming him from the New York Jets in August, so they see something they like in the 6-foot-1, 200-pounder.
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The Panthers also have two other waiver claims at corner: Akayleb Evans, whom they acquired off waivers from Minnesota last year, and recent addition MJ Devonshire, who spent all of 2024 on the Raiders’ practice squad. Devonshire was a ballhawk and playmaker at Pittsburgh, intercepting eight passes (and returning three for touchdowns) over his final three college seasons.
Let the kicking competition begin
One of the storylines during OTAs last year was the absence of kicker Eddy Pineiro, who remained in Florida while looking for a contract extension that never came. After opting not to re-sign Pineiro, the Panthers brought in undrafted free agent Ryan Fitzgerald to compete with journeyman Matthew Wright.
Previous kicking battles didn’t begin in earnest until training camp, but Canales is eager to get going on finding a successor to Pineiro, No. 3 on the NFL’s all-time field goal percentage list but with questionable leg strength. “We’ll start kicking now,” Canales said recently.
Fitzgerald should be considered the favorite. The south Georgia native made all of his kicks during his final season at Florida State, including a 5-for-5 mark on field goals of 50-plus. He appears ready for the challenge.
“I think at this level, every year regardless of the team, it’s gonna be a competition. I love that. I’m a competitor,” Fitzgerald told The Athletic during rookie camp. “But the key to that is just focus on myself. It’s me versus the uprights, not me versus another guy. I’m sure that’s the same for Matt’s mindset as well. Just excited to get to work with the guys.”
(Top photo: Jared C. Tilton / Getty Images)
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DJ Steward Talks Strong Summer With Lakers, Developing Point Guard Skills
DJ Steward talked about his strong summer with the Lakers, developing point guard skills, and more! Join our LN YouTube Channel for perks like extra shows, input on content, badges and more! https://www.youtube.com/lakersnation/join Join us on Playback for our live stream of every game!: https://www.playback.tv/lakersnation Subscribe To The Lakers Nation Podcast! Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/lakers-nation-podcast/id1200202500 Spotify: […]


DJ Steward talked about his strong summer with the Lakers, developing point guard skills, and more! Join our LN YouTube Channel for perks like extra shows, input on content, badges and more! https://www.youtube.com/lakersnation/join Join us on Playback for our live stream of every game!: https://www.playback.tv/lakersnation Subscribe To The Lakers Nation Podcast! Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/lakers-nation-podcast/id1200202500 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5RvQfs2iFUWc0sFMdHaN7o?si=L6qBbuieQsqOP4fUvnzo5Q Subscribe to our NBA Front Office Channel: https://www.youtube.com/c/NBAFrontOffice Subscribe To Dodger Blue: https://www.youtube.com/@DodgerBlue1958 Subscribe to Raptors Nation: https://www.youtube.com/@raptorsnationcom Help us continue to provide Lakers coverage and SUBSCRIBE: https://goo.gl/5AXSud
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© 2025 Leaders Group. All rights reserved.
The material on this site may not be reproduced, distributed, transmitted, cached or otherwise used,
except with the prior written permission of Leaders Group.
Podcast
LeBron James, Travis Kelce Break Into YouTube Podcast Charts– See This Week's Top 100
Share Copy Link Some of sports’ biggest names made their way onto the YouTube Top Podcast Shows ranking this week, bringing a lighter tone to the chart still dominated by true crime and political commentary. LeBron James and Steve Nash’s podcast, Mind the Game, hit the charts for the first time this week at #31. The pod’s second […]

Some of sports’ biggest names made their way onto the YouTube Top Podcast Shows ranking this week, bringing a lighter tone to the chart still dominated by true crime and political commentary.
LeBron James and Steve Nash’s podcast, Mind the Game, hit the charts for the first time this week at #31. The pod’s second season debuted in April after an almost year-long hiatus, with Nash replacing previous co-host JJ Redick of ESPN. Part one of the show’s extensive interview with NBA legend Kevin Durant, which debuted this week, has already gained over two million views.
Two more sports world celebrities joined the charts this week. New Heights with Jason and Travis Kelce broke into the top 100 at #89, the first time the brothers have made the cut since the charts began being published. The football stars’ pod has done well for over two years, but hasn’t cracked a million views for months now. Their interview with Brad Pitt this week didn’t hit the million marker, but it definitely played a role in catapulting the brothers upward.
Checking in with the top five: Joe Rogan is still king, but this week the #2 spot – which The MeidasTouch Podcast has had locked up recently– has been claimed by top five regular Kill Tony. The Meiselas brothers have been bumped into third, with Rotten Mango maintaining its fourth place spot from last week. Last but not least, the Shawn Ryan Show has finally edged its way into the #5 slot. The former Navy SEAL and CIA contractor has been hovering at sixth or seventh for months now, and this week finally nudged 48 Hours aside to take its place.
Famous faces rundown: Tucker Carlson moved down to 12th, Megyn Kelly sits at 16th, Call Her Daddy at #68, and Benny Johnson is nowhere to be found.
Here’s a full rundown of the top 100 podcasts from YouTube, June 30 – July 6, 2025:
- The Joe Rogan Experience
- Kill Tony
- The MeidasTouch Podcast
- Rotten Mango
- Shawn Ryan Show
- 48 Hours
- Smosh Reads Reddit Stories
- Creepcast
- The Diary Of A CEO
- The Why Files: Operation Podcast (All of ‘Em)
- This Past Weekend w/Theo Von
- The Tucker Carlson Show
- Brian Tyler Cohen
- The Pat McAfee Show
- Law&Crime Sidebar with Jesse Weber
- The Megyn Kelly Show
- 60 Minutes
- Bad Friends Podcast
- Black Conservative Perspective
- PBD Podcast
- Club Shay Shay
- Murder, Mystery & Makeup
- The DeVory Darkins Show
- Timcast IRL
- Gil’s Arena
- Dr Insanity
- Crime Stories with Nancy Grace
- Just Trish
- The Adam Mockler Show
- Lex Fridman Podcast
- Mind the Game
- The Phillip DeFranco Show
- Unsubscribe Podcast
- Dark History
- 520 in the Morning
- Matt and Shane’s Secret Podcast
- IHIP News
- The Lets Read Podcast
- Legal AF Podcast
- Barry Cunningham Podcasts and Live Shows
- StarTalk Podcast
- True Crime with Kendall Rae
- Distractible
- Breaking Points
- Turtleboy Live
- The Joe Budden Podcast
- You Should Know Podcast
- Reel Rejects
- Stories from the Bible
- Flagrant
- Tomcats News Stories
- CinePals
- NBC Nightly News with Tom Llamas
- Joe And Jada
- rSlash
- Pardon My Take
- Live Trials with Emily D. Baker
- The 85 South Comedy Show
- Democracy Now!
- Impaulsive Podcast
- Club 520 Podcast
- The Ben Shapiro Show
- Bulwark Takes
- The Bulwark Podcast with Tim Miller
- The Majority Report
- The Bald and the Beautiful with Trixie and Katya
- Law&Crime On the Case with Chris Stewart
- Call Her Daddy Podcast
- The Pivot Podcast
- Javier Ceriani Show
- Reality Check with Ross Coulthart
- The Rubin Report Podcast
- Así Veo las Cosas
- MrBallen Crime
- The Broski Report
- Julian Dorey Podcast
- Shane Dawson Podcast
- Matthew Cox | Inside True Crime
- Two Hot Takes
- No Spin News
- PBS NewsHour
- Episodes – Unlocked with Savannah Chrisley
- David Pakman Daily
- The Stephen A. Smith Show
- Your Mom’s House w/Tom Segura & Christina P
- DEBRIEFED – An AREA52 Podcast with Chris Ramsay
- Huberman Lab
- Trap Lore Ross
- New Heights with Jason and Travis Kelce
- Drop Dead Serious with Ashleigh Banfield
- The Young Turks
- Piers Morgan Uncensored: US Politics
- The Yard Podcast
- Law&Crime Crime Fix with Angenette Levy
- Crime Weekly
- The Mel Robbins Podcast
- The WAN Show
- Armchair Expert with Dax Shepard
- Cancelled with Tana Mongeau & Brooke Schofield
- The Confessionals Episodes
NIL
'The Domonique Foxworth Show' summer slate is exactly what an ESPN podcast should be
For tons of sports hosts, the calendar flipping to July doubles as an invitation to mail in the content. The long NBA season mercifully ends, and we all start to see football coming on the horizon. This is the time for vacations and fill-in hosts, GOAT debates, and schedule talk. But on The Domonique Foxworth […]


For tons of sports hosts, the calendar flipping to July doubles as an invitation to mail in the content. The long NBA season mercifully ends, and we all start to see football coming on the horizon. This is the time for vacations and fill-in hosts, GOAT debates, and schedule talk.
But on The Domonique Foxworth Show, this might just be the best time of year.
The retired NFL cornerback took a circuitous path to hosting his own show for the four letters, writing features for Andscape before hosting weekend radio and breaking into the new-look Get Up roster. Since 2022, Foxworth has used the podcast to explore all the corners of his own skill set as a commentator. This summer, Foxworth and producer Charlie Kravitz have taken full advantage of the break from big-time sports to reach into their deep toolbag for conversations on labor, media, youth sports, and athlete health.
That these two would create compelling and creative content together is no surprise. Foxworth, beyond his playing career on the gridiron, is an experienced union leader. He was the president of the NFL Players’ Association executive committee, a Harvard Business School graduate, and a former COO of the NBPA. It would be no exaggeration to call Foxworth one of the most interesting and thoughtful people at ESPN.
“They present it as a way to create parity and maximize fan interest in every market…I don’t think that it does that.” – @Foxworth24 walks us through the NBA’s second apron and what some of its unintended consequences are. https://t.co/tPbF7ULqpe pic.twitter.com/uyRdVWViZz
— The Domonique Foxworth Show (@FoxworthShow) June 27, 2025
As hard as it would seem to keep up with a host like that, Kravitz makes it look easy. Coming up in the Erik Rydholm branch of ESPN as a producer on Highly Questionable and then its digital spinoff, Debatable, Kravitz knows how to take the silly and make it serious. But, the Foxworth Show shines because of the chemistry Kravitz has developed with Foxworth and the effort he puts into shaping each conversation.
Their resumes make the Foxworth Show a place where the audience will see a television-worthy breakdown of Minnesota’s stifling secondary, followed by an Ivy League panel discussion on the economics of Caitlin Clark, within a few months. This is what podcasting used to be.
A decade or more ago, podcasts were intended for in-depth discussions and offbeat conversations. The top shows were known for “Half-Baked Ideas,” getting high with Elon Musk, and hardcore history. They were radio’s black sheep younger cousin. You listened to them to stretch your mind out and have a laugh.
The blast of new podcasts in recent years has morphed their identity. Now, podcast is a term that is almost impossible to define. In sports, they are for live reaction streams, sit-down interviews, and bro outs. They appear to be replacing the traditional studio show.
Ultimately, sports podcasts could become something like the Foxworth Show.
The offseason has given Foxworth and Kravitz time to delve into the NBA’s Achilles’ epidemic, the ramifications of Ace Bailey’s potential holdout, the NBA’s new CBA, a Caitlin Clark spinoff league, and the professionalization of youth sports. In previous years, Foxworth has hosted conversations with sports science writer David Epstein and NBA deputy commissioner Mark Tatum during these quiet weeks.
But he can do sports talk too. During football season, the more traditional Sunday night recap episodes with ESPN NFL writer Bill Barnwell are just as great.
Looking through the cracks of megadeals for top talent and the spending spree for live game rights, ESPN does need content. As much as the network might prefer it this way, many fans won’t pay to subscribe to the Worldwide Leader simply for games that they can illegally pirate or catch at a local bar. ESPN needs to establish a brand and a library featuring exceptional hosts.
Particularly at a time when ESPN (and most of sports media) faces the perception that it has backgrounded journalism over loud, messy entertainment, the Foxworth Show can do both. Perhaps the trick of today is to simply Trojan Horse the former into the latter. If so, Foxworth and Kravitz have been playing that trick on the audience for years.
Foxworth is not among the names typically listed among ESPN’s great hosts. Kravitz isn’t a recognizable producer like Stanford Steve, Ty Schmit, or Paul “Hembo” Hembekides. But ESPN clearly believes in the Foxworth Show, giving it a primo syndicated spot on ESPN2.
While other shows relax, the Foxworth Show has shown why it deserves that belief and is on its way up.
Podcast
Confidential memo reveals Dem official urged Kamala Harris to go on Bill Simmons during campaign
It’s officially been eight months since Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris lost the 2024 election to now-President Donald Trump, and the campaign retrospectives are already hitting the presses. On Tuesday, Josh Dawsey, Tyler Pager, and Isaac Arnsdorf released “2024: How Trump Retook the White House and the Democrats Lost America,” detailing the 2024 presidential campaign […]


It’s officially been eight months since Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris lost the 2024 election to now-President Donald Trump, and the campaign retrospectives are already hitting the presses.
On Tuesday, Josh Dawsey, Tyler Pager, and Isaac Arnsdorf released “2024: How Trump Retook the White House and the Democrats Lost America,” detailing the 2024 presidential campaign and perceived missteps by Harris and her team that led to Trump’s win in November. The book details confidential memos, obtained by Politico and published in Tuesday morning’s “Politico Playbook,” written by Democratic strategist Maria Comella to Harris’ campaign manager Jen O’Malley Dillon.
Within the memos is a surprising sports media tie-in. Written in the final weeks of the campaign, Comella warned O’Malley Dillon that the current Harris strategy was not working and that the Democratic nominee should alter her media strategy to get herself in front of different groups of voters.
One name specifically mentioned by Comella was The Ringer founder Bill Simmons. Simmons, of course, hosts one of the most-popular sports podcasts in the country. He’s also historically been friendly with the Democratic party, having hosted former President Barack Obama on his show while he was still in office.
Simmons’ show isn’t inherently political and rarely strays that way, but that’s exactly the type of interview the Harris team believed their candidate should’ve been looking for. The memo includes suggestions like “consider a male moderator as a contrast so it doesn’t feel and look too much like ‘girl talk.’”
Comella wasn’t the only Democratic operative pushing for Harris to appear on these platforms. In September, Harris ally Bakari Sellers was urging the nominee to appear on shows like Simmons’ and Paul Finebaum’s.
Of course, even if Harris wanted to appear on The Bill Simmons Podcast, it’s unclear whether he would’ve agreed to have her on. In an interview with Semafor one month after the election, Harris’ deputy campaign manager Rob Flaherty acknowledged the difficulty the Harris campaign faced getting her booked on mainstream sports programs. “It got more complicated for sports personalities to take us on their shows because they didn’t want to ‘do politics,’” he suggested.
In today’s political climate, there is likely little to gain for the most popular sports hosts by having on political figures. Doing so guarantees angering a portion of your audience, so why bother?
That’s why it’s easier said than done when a strategist like Comella suggests something like this. There’s little upside for a sports personality to get political, unless it’s part of his or her brand. And seeing that politics isn’t a big part of the Simmons brand, especially in 2024, maybe that particular recommendation from Comella was a bit shortsighted.
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