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Off-field earnings push Patrick Mahomes into top 20 of world’s highest-paid athletes | The Star
The San Francisco 49ers last week gave quarterback Brock Purdy a huge five-year contract extension worth $265 million, and many people were talking about …. the Chiefs’ Patrick Mahomes.
Yep, Over The Cap said Mahomes has the 14th-highest average salary per year among NFL quarterbacks.
The good news for Mahomes is he is still being paid handsomely by the Chiefs, and he’s also making a lot of money away from the field. Those endorsement deals are a big reason why Mahomes is ranked as the 18th highest-paid athlete in the world by Forbes.
Predicting the Best Rookie on Every Team in 2025 | Sports Illustrated
Kansas City Chiefs: Omarr Norman-Lott, DT
It’ll be interesting to see how the Chiefs’ left tackle situation unfolds, as first-round pick Josh Simmons, who’s still rehabbing from a torn patellar tendon sustained in October, competes with free agent signing Jaylon Moore for the starting job. Norman-Lott faces no such questions. The Tennessee product is a potent interior pass rusher. With Chris Jones commanding extra attention next to him, Norman-Lott will have plenty of advantageous opportunities to disrupt opposing quarterbacks.
Chiefs rookie LB Jeffrey Bassa describes collegiate position change | Chiefs Wire
A highly viewed four-star recruit in the class of 2021, Bassa took a unique path to finding his current role. He entered college primarily playing safety before kicking down to linebacker to cover for injured teammates. Bassa never returned to safety, but he retained most of the athletic traits that made him a coveted defensive back.
While at the Senior Bowl earlier this year, Bassa detailed his experience transitioning from safety to off-ball linebacker.
“It was great. You’re so used to guarding receivers all the time … You get transitioned into the box, and you’re dealing with linemen all the time. You’re dealing with vision of the quarterback, dealing with the linemen and assigning everybody to make sure they’re alright,” said Bassa. “I thought it was a quick and easy transition for me because I always wanted to have that vocal voice and for people to depend on me to get them aligned right. [I can] also do things that a DB can do and stop the run as well.”
Top extension candidate for every NFL team | CBS Sports
Kansas City Chiefs: QB Patrick Mahomes
Back in 2020, Mahomes and the Chiefs agreed to a 10-year, $447 million contract that could be worth up to $503 million. While that deal — which has Mahomes connected to Kansas City through the 2031 season — has been tweaked in recent years to give the Chiefs some cap flexibility, the quarterback market has changed rather dramatically. That could mean that they take a harder look at this deal to bring Mahomes up to a respective level. At the moment, Mahomes is making $45 million per season, which has him tied with Kirk Cousins (currently a backup) as the 14th highest-paid quarterback in the league. With Josh Allen recently reworking his deal to get him to $55 million per season, it wouldn’t be surprising to see Mahomes and the Chiefs follow suit.
Chiefs have kept C.J. Hanson on ice for a year and there’s a reason for it | Arrowhead Addict
It’s be easy to forget what made the Chiefs look Hanson’s way in the first place, which is understandable, but it all starts with that RAS—his Relative Athetic Score—a metric designed by Kent Lee Platte that takes into account a player’s height, weight, bench press, leaping drills, speed drills, and more. The result is a number measured up to 10.0.
Back to Hanson. Platte’s RAS for Hanson measured out to 9.84, which is basically otherworldly for an offensive lineman. Per Platte, it ranks at No. 26 overall among a group of 1,582 linemen from the mid-’80s to 2024. Yeah, that’s impressive.
Of course, NFL Draft history is littered with busts who were excellent at the Combine or at their respective Pro Days yet never turned in anything meaningful on the field. That said, Hanson is made of the sort of uber-athletic clay that coaches look forward to molding.
Beyond the raw athleticism, Hanson also entered the draft with an impressive amount of experience and reliability. While at Holy Cross, he’d started 38 games at right guard over three seasons and was named First-Team All-Patriot League in his final two seasons as a Crusader. He was also a team captain, and that leadership speaks volumes about the kind of person he will be for the Chiefs.
Around the NFL
The NFL and College Football Fight for the Calendar Is Brewing | Sports Illustrated
The NFL’s actions also speak loudly on Saturday when the Sports Broadcasting Act of 1961 allows the league to start airing games on college football’s typical place in the week starting after the second weekend of December. While in the past this hasn’t been a big deal, it is nowadays with a 12-game college football slate during the regular season with a conference championship weekend tacked on and an expanded playoff that now has four rounds worth of action.
When the CFP initially put out dates for its inaugural 12-team tournament, there was hope among some in college football circles that the NFL would opt to avoid going head-to-head with the three first-round games on Dec. 20, 2024. The league instead scheduled two marquee games—featuring the Kansas City Chiefs against the Houston Texans plus the Baltimore Ravens and the Pittsburgh Steelers—and put both on over-the-air networks to help bolster their reach even further.
Projecting performances of quarterbacks who changed teams in offseason | NFL.com
Geno Smith – Las Vegas Raiders
2025 numbers will be: BETTERWith the Seahawks electing to get younger and — slightly — cheaper at quarterback, Smith reunites with Pete Carroll, under whom he earned the only two Pro Bowl nods of his career.
Smith didn’t get enough credit for keeping the Seahawks offense afloat behind a porous offensive line. The interceptions, particularly in the red zone, were rough, but most quarterbacks become ineffective when battered as much as Smith was last year.
When stating that I expect better numbers from Smith, I don’t think he’ll pass for another career high in yardage, as I’m anticipating the Raiders to be more balanced. However, I do expect Smith’s efficiency numbers to improve. His -.02 EPA per dropback should improve while he cuts down on the backbreaking INTs. And the 53.8 QBR from 2024 should get back into the 60s, where it was when he was with Carroll.
I am interested in the fit with Raiders offensive coordinator Chip Kelly. A once-ballyhooed coach when he entered the NFL in 2013, Kelly created nary a buzz after returning to the pro game. Whereas once there were debates about Kelly and his style, now it’s mostly a shrug. How will his system mesh with Smith’s ability to assess at the line of scrimmage and make pre-snap reads?
The weaponry surrounding Smith is a fascinating collection. Tight end Brock Bowers is a No. 1 target. First-round running back Ashton Jeanty should make his life easier. The WR crew has some questions, but Jakobi Meyers is underrated and second-round pick Jack Bech brings a physical style. If Smith is protected better than he was last year, he can dramatically improve a Raiders offense that has been stuck in the mud for the past two years.
Aaron Rodgers drops massive hint he will sign with Pittsburgh Steelers | Penn Live
Free agent quarterback Aaron Rodgers dropped the latest hint that he will sign with the Pittsburgh Steelers.
Rodgers traveled to Austin, Texas, over the weekend to join his friend and artist, Mike Stud, also known as mike. During the event, Rodgers held a Q&A with the crowd.
At one point, a girl asks him if he would ever play for the Chicago Bears, and Rodgers’ answer is another hint that he will eventually suit up for the Steelers.
“No,” Rodgers answered the question. “But I believe there is a team that might play in Chicago this year, a road trip to Chicago. I love Chicago, though, way more than they love me. It’s been a great relationship all one way.”
In case you missed it on Arrowhead Pride
Bill Barnwell isn’t sold on the Chiefs’ changes to the offensive line
It’s true: Jalon Moore has only a small number of NFL starts — fewer than Orlando Brown Jr. when he came to Kansas City. But Brown had roughly the same number as Moore at the position he would play. And the Chiefs should be more comfortable with the former San Francisco 49ers’ tackle adjusting to the system than fans ever were with Brown.
And, it’s true: Josh Simmons might not be ready to play until 2026. If that’s how it plays out (and as long as Moore is an effective stopgap), the $21.2 million the Chiefs have promised him will be a bargain. It will be a lot if he ends up being a swing tackle, but considering that the team has lost two league championship games largely because of issues on the offensive line, is that something fans should worry about?
That brings us to Kingsley Suamataia. It’s reasonable to be concerned about his ability to play as an NFL guard; he didn’t inspire much confidence playing outside during his rookie season. Yet every year, we see college tackles with no NFL experience successfully transition to guard. Isn’t it possible that Suamataia could make the adjustments that many other players have made in his second year? And if he can’t, the Chiefs have other players who can step in.
Barnwell is right: there are reasons to be worried about Kansas City’s offensive line. But it’s not like the Chiefs haven’t been here before.
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County Partners with Santa Barbara Volleyball Club on Indoor Facility | Local News
A new four-court indoor volleyball facility is moving into the Goleta Valley.
The Santa Barbara County Board of Supervisors on Tuesday approved a 15-year lease for the facility with youth sports nonprofit Santa Barbara Volleyball Club.
The agreement allows the club to demolish the current duplexes and storage sheds at 4550 Hollister Ave., adjacent to the Page Youth Center and Fire Station 13, to build the 18,400-square-foot steel facility.
Alongside the courts, there will be restrooms, reception, storage and 18 parking spots, one of which will be an ADA-compliant space, all funded through donations and community fundraising.
SBVC’s lead on the demolition will save costs for the county, as it will not have to pay anything for this project. Additionally, the club will not pay rent during the lease in exchange for the facility’s construction.
Construction is expected to start in 2026 and will not be completed until 2027, according to Matt Riley, SBVC executive director.
“The new gym will address a long-standing shortage of indoor court space in the region and will allow SBVC to expand programming, reduce reliance on shared school facilities, and increase access for local families,” he said in a statement.
The site has been formerly used to house county departments that were in the process of relocating.
However, the buildings are not suitable for county use, Kirk Lagerquist, general services director, wrote in a letter to the board. If SBVC did not propose to take over the space, the county would be responsible for abatement and demolition.

Instead, it will be transformed into a modern space for the community and local youths to promote health and wellness while reducing county liability with the unsafe structures, Lagerquist added in the letter.
The project still needs to acquire a conditional-use permit from the county Planning & Development Department.
“This project represents a major investment in the future of youth sports in Santa Barbara,” Riley said.
Sports
Three Wildcat Volleyball Standouts Name CSC Academic All-District
ELLENSBURG, Wash. – Three Central Washington University volleyball student-athletes were named to the College Sports Communicators (CSC) Division II Academic All-District Women’s Volleyball Team. This will be Scottie Ellsworth’s second time earning Academic All-District while Ellie Marble and Kayleigh-Shay Chang both will earn the honor for the first time.
The 2025-26 Academic All-District Women’s Volleyball teams, selected by College Sports Communicators, recognize the nation’s top student-athletes for their combined performances on the court and in the classroom. The CSC Academic All-America program separately recognizes women’s volleyball honorees in four divisions — NCAA Division I, NCAA Division II, NCAA Division III and NAIA.
Student-athletes selected as CSC Academic All-America finalists will advance to the national ballot to be voted on by CSC members. First-, second- and third-team Academic All-America honorees will be announced January 13, 2026.
The Division II and III CSC Academic All-America programs are partially financially supported by the NCAA Division II and III national governance structures to assist CSC with handling the awards fulfillment aspects for the 2025-26 Divisions II and III Academic All-America programs. The NAIA CSC Academic All-America program is partially financially supported through the NAIA governance structure.
Ellsworth, an AVCA Honorable Mention All-American and a three-time Academic All-GNAC honoree, owns a 3.99 GPA in Elementary Education. Marble, a First Team All-GNAC and two-time Academic All-GNAC honoree, has a perfect 4.0 GPA in Physical Education & School Health. Chang, an Honorable Mention All-GNAC and Academic All-GNAC honoree this season, has a 3.75 GPA and is undeclared on a major.
The entire CSC Academic All-District list can be found HERE
Sports
CSC Announces 2025 Women’s Volleyball Academic All-District
NEW YORK – A total of seven CUNY Athletic Conference women’s volleyball student-athletes were named to the 2025-26 College Sports Communicators (CSC) Academic All-District Team for NCAA Division III announced Tuesday afternoon.
The 2025-26 Academic All-District® Women’s Volleyball Team, selected by College Sports Communicators, recognizes the nation’s top student-athletes for their combined performances on the field and in the classroom.
To be eligible for CSC Academic All-America® honors, a student-athlete must maintain at least a 3.50 grade-point average, be a sophomore, junior, or senior, and be a starter or significant reserve.
Academic All-District® honorees advance to the CSC Academic All-America® ballot. First-, second, and third-team Academic All-America® honorees will be announced on January 13, 2026.
CUNY Athletic Conference
2025-26 CSC Women’s Volleyball Academic All-District
Karolina Lundqvist, Baruch
Ruti Joshi, Brooklyn
Malia Reyes, Brooklyn
Ivanna Zamora Sanchez, CCNY
Alex Overcamp, John Jay
Hailey Waugaman, John Jay
Maritza Argueta, Medgar Evers
For the latest news on the CUNY Athletic Conference, log on to cunyathletics.com – the official site of the CUNY Athletic Conference. Also, become a follower of the CUNYAC on Instagram (@CUNYAC), Twitter (@CUNYAC) and YouTube (@CUNY Athletic Conference), and “LIKE” Us on Facebook (CUNY Athletic Conference).
Sign up to receive the latest CUNY Athletic Conference news delivered right to your email inbox HERE.
Sports
Volleyball Places Four on CSC Academic All-District Team
RIO GRANDE VALLEY – The College Sports Communicators (CSC) announced the 2025 CSC Academic All-District Team Tuesday and The University of Texas Rio Grande Valley (UTRGV) Vaqueros volleyball team had four earn the recognition in junior setter Isabella Costantini, junior libero Celianiz Cabranes, junior outside hitter Nadine Zech and sophomore outside hitter Martina Franco.
Academic All-District selections are part of the Academic All-America program, which is the longest running and premier award for athletic and academic success across many levels of college sports. To be eligible, student-athletes must be at least a sophomore athletically and academically with a 3.50 cumulative GPA or better. Requirements to earn Academic All-District for volleyball student-athletes also include competing in 90% of matches or starting in at least 66% of matches. Select student-athletes will advance to the national ballot for consideration for the Academic All-America teams, selected by CSC.
Costantini is a multidisciplinary studies major earning her second CSC Academic All-District honor. The two-time Southland Conference (SLC) Setter of the Year and All-Conference First Team member was named to the SLC All-Tournament Team after helping the Vaqueros reach the championship match. Costantini led the SLC averaging 10.62 assists/set and with 57 service aces. She facilitated the conference’s best offense to a program-record .275 hitting percentage which aided a program-best 16-match winning streak.
Cabranes is a kinesiology major who earned All-SLC Second Team honors this season for her defensive excellence. She totaled 503 digs for an average of 4.79 digs/set, both top 10 marks in program history. Cabranes also totaled 88 assists and 21 aces in 2025.
Zech was named to the All-SLC Second Team for the second consecutive year, earning her third conference honors in a row. The exercise science major averaged 2.68 kills/set and 1.82 digs/set in 2025 while totaling 30 blocks and 10 aces. She scored 3.10 points/set as a key contributor on the most efficient and diverse offense in the conference.
Franco, a transfer studying kinesiology, was named the SLC Newcomer of the Year and to the All-SLC First Team after a stellar debut season at UTRGV. She led the team averaging 3.44 kills/set and hit .258 while scoring 4.04 points/set. Along with totaling 248 booming kills from the outside and back row, Franco served 16 aces and averaged 2.43 digs/set with 44 total blocks.
Sports
Four Nebraska volleyball players named AVCA All-Americans
LINCOLN, Neb. (KOLN) – Four Nebraska volleyball players were named to the American Volleyball Coaches Association (AVCA) All-America Teams, Nebraska Athletics said Wednesday.
Andi Jackson, Harper Murray and Bergen Reilly were selected to the AVCA All-America First Team. Rebekah Allick was chosen to the AVCA All-America Second Team.
Huskers.com said the Huskers’ four All-America selections bring their nation-leading total to 111 all-time.
Murray and Reilly are now three-time AVCA All-Americans, but both earned first-team honors for the first time in their careers.
Jackson earned a second straight nod on the First Team, while Allick was named an All-American for the first time.
AVCA All-America First Team
Andi Jackson, Jr., MB, Brighton, Colo.
- Jackson was chosen to the AVCA All-America First Team for the second straight year, as well as the All-Big Ten First Team. She was also an AVCA Player of the Year Semifinalist.
- Jackson averaged 2.74 kills per set on .467 hitting with 1.12 blocks per set, and she served 16 aces.
- Jackson’s .467 hitting percentage leads the nation and was the No. 3 hitting percentage in school history for a single season.
- In conference-only matches, Jackson hit .559 to break the Big Ten record for hitting percentage in conference-only matches in a season, which was .541 by Arielle Wilson from Penn State in 2008.
- Jackson has a career hitting percentage of .437, which is the No. 1 mark in school history and the No. 1 mark among active Division I players.
- Jackson earned Big Ten Player of the Week, Big Ten Defensive Player of the Week and AVCA First Serve Match MVP honors this season.
Harper Murray, Jr., OH, Ann Arbor, Mich.
- Murray earned AVCA All-America and All-Big Ten First Team honors for the third straight year.
- Murray led the Huskers with a career-best 3.54 kills per set on a career-high .295 hitting percentage.
- A standout six-rotation player, Murray also contributed 2.16 digs per set and 0.60 blocks per set along with a team-high 34 aces. She totaled a career-high 4.21 points per set for the season.
- One of the best passers in the nation at her position, Murray passed a 2.52 throughout the season.
- Murray finished the season at 1,181 career kills, which ranks 19th all-time in school history and 10th in the rally-scoring era.
- Murray’s career kills per set average of 3.38 ranks third at NU in the rally-scoring era behind only Sarah Pavan and Jordan Larson.
- Murray’s 109 career aces are the sixth-most at NU in the rally-scoring era.
Bergen Reilly, Jr., S, Sioux Falls, S.D.
- Reilly has been an AVCA All-American each year of her Husker career but earned a first-team accolade for the first time after a record-breaking season.
- Reilly set the Huskers to a school-record .351 hitting percentage, shattering the previous record of .331 in 1986. NU’s .351 hitting percentage ranks first nationally and is the best hitting percentage by a Big Ten team since 2009 Penn State.
- Reilly averaged 10.47 assists per set and 2.70 digs per set. She also totaled 73 kills, 67 blocks and 19 aces.
- Reilly was named Big Ten Player of the Year and AVCA Region Player of the Year, as well as Big Ten Setter of the Year and All-Big Ten First Team for the third time.
- Reilly set Nebraska to a .400 or better hitting percentage nine times on the season, a school record in the rally-scoring era. She had double-doubles in all six of the Husker matches that went longer than three sets, and she had four double-doubles in sweeps.
- Reilly ranks No. 3 in school history in career assists in the rally-scoring era with 3,723. Her career assists per set average of 10.70 ranks No. 4 among active Division I players and No. 2 in school history in the rally-scoring era.
- Reilly was named Big Ten Setter of the Week four times this season, giving her 13 for her career.
AVCA All-America Second Team
Rebekah Allick, Sr., MB, Lincoln, Neb.
- Allick earned the first AVCA All-America honor of her career after being named All-Region three times. She also earned All-Big Ten First Team accolades for the first time.
- Allick had the best season of her standout career with 2.56 kills per set on .450 hitting with a team-high 1.27 blocks per set.
- Allick’s .450 hitting percentage ranks as the No. 4 single-season mark in school history, as well as the No. 4 mark in the country this season.
- Allick finished her Husker career at No. 5 in career blocks in the rally-scoring era with 543. Her career blocks per set average of 1.31 ranks fourth.
- Allick was named AVCA National Player of the Week, a two-time Big Ten Defensive Player of the Week, and to the AVCA All-First Serve Team.
- Allick was on the AVCA Player of the Year Watch List at the midway point of the season.
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Within Nike, the Jordan brand has always come with a significant opportunity—and challenge. The more than $7 billion business is the “blueprint” of what it means to be an athlete-centered brand, says brand president Sarah Mensah (so much so that its origin with Michael Jordan was dramatized in the film Air).
But for some athletes, the Jordan legacy has come with too much pressure. “In the men’s game, we tend to compare every athlete: are they another MJ?” Mensah says. “That can kind of get in your head.”
That’s one reason Mensah is excited about the potential for female athletes and the Jordan brand, as well as its women’s business. “You don’t have that same sort of comparison with female athletes,” Mensah says. WNBA star Napheesa Collier moved from an overall Nike deal to the Jordan brand earlier this year, citing the investment the brand was making in the women’s game as a reason for the switch. Last year, the Jordan brand debuted the Jordan Heir series, which was designed for WNBA stars. It was the first line of product from the brand “specifically for female hoopers,” Mensah says.
Beyond comparisons with a basketball legend, Mensah thinks female athletes inherently understand the DNA of the Jordan brand, which comes down to “greatness” on the court and off. “They’re defining the game in their own terms, and they’re overcoming adversity,” she says. “They’re overcoming perceptions. And there’s something about that. There’s something about charting a new course, going in a new direction, redefining the game.” These themes are among the top reasons female athletes resonate so strongly with consumers, making them the most effective influencers compared to male athletes or general lifestyle influencers.
Nike is now a year into a turnaround under new CEO Elliott Hill, who aims to return Nike to its roots in sports. While Nike was struggling in recent years, the Jordan brand had been an exception—but this year saw sales fall. Hill has said he believes in the Jordan brand as a pillar of Nike’s return to dominance in sportswear.
There’s a new generation of consumers, however, who have never seen Michael Jordan play basketball and associate the brand only with its Jumpman logo. For Mensah, who has been with Nike for more than a decade and took over the Jordan brand in 2023, female athletes are an essential tool to communicate the original message of “greatness” to a new generation.
“That’s always been the distinction for this brand. It’s never just been about sport, it’s never just been about being an athlete,” Mensah says, “but the body of the athlete, the mind of the athlete, the spirit of the athlete, what the athlete does on the court, the greatness that’s displayed there, and the greatness that they bring to the rest of their world.”
Emma Hinchliffe
emma.hinchliffe@fortune.com
The Most Powerful Women Daily newsletter is Fortune’s daily briefing for and about the women leading the business world. Subscribe here.
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Two Palantir alums just raised $20 million for patent filing. My colleague Jeremy Kahn has the exclusive on Ankar, a London-based startup that’s trying to use AI to transform the process for filing and managing patents. It’s founded by Tamar Gomez and Wiem Gharbi. Fortune
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