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Why Dave Canales Has Been the Coach of the Year Through 13 Weeks

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If you’re looking to wager on NFL Coach of the Year, you have to wait until the page loads more options before Panthers coach Dave Canales’s name comes up. And while it’s true that this is a uniquely crowded field and that the current favorite—Mike Vrabel—has a team that won four games last season at 10–2, barreling toward a first-round bye in the playoffs, and Ben Johnson has the Bears sitting as the NFC’s current No. 1 seed after an outright collapse a year ago, I think many are discounting the totality of what has occurred in Carolina. 

This is especially true if the Panthers, 7–6 after Sunday’s 31–28 win over the Rams, reach the postseason. Carolina has odds slightly better than 30% (through the early window Sunday), though the team has one of the more difficult opponent strength of schedules from here out, with both Buccaneers games remaining and a date with the Seahawks. Given that the Panthers and Buccaneers are tied with seven wins apiece and Tampa Bay is clearly struggling, I would venture to say that the current odds on Carolina’s postseason bid are a bit conservative. 

It cannot be discounted that, in two consecutive weeks, the Panthers have forced three turnovers each against teams coached by Kyle Shanahan and Sean McVay. The Panthers have logged wins over both the Packers (Week 9) and now the Rams. And while there are weeks when this team can revert into the previously established narrative version of itself—a blowout loss to the Bills and a 10-point loss to the Saints come to mind—I think it’s worth making the case that what Canales and his staff are doing is perhaps the most impressive job in the league. 

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For example, with some of the other coaches in front of Canales, such as the Seahawks’ Mike Macdonald and Colts’ Shane Steichen, you can pinpoint a large part of the team’s rise to critical coordinator changes in the offseason. The Colts went from being 14th in EPA to an undisputed top-10 unit. While not ignoring the team’s uncanny offensive efficiency, the Colts are one good game away from tying the number of quarterback hits they had all of last season. The Seahawks, in addition, went from the 10th-best defense (Macdonald’s area of expertise) and the 18th-best offense, to a top-10 offense that has set a standard for deep-shot, game-altering plays, and the fifth-best defense. Certainly, Steichen’s handling of Daniel Jones and scrapping the Anthony Richardson offense are excellent achievements attributed to the play-calling, former-quarterback head coach. But the Colts have lost three of four, looking suspect against the toothier portion of their schedule.  

Vrabel, while undoubtedly fantastic, has thus far played a schedule with a combined strength of schedule under .400. And while New England has performed well against the top-tier competition it has faced to this point, we’re flimsily building that case on a win over the painfully inconsistent Bills. I don’t know if we can say, with any degree of certainty, how New England would perform in a second-round playoff matchup  

With Johnson, there was an offseason personnel overhaul, especially on the offensive line. The new players—Jonah Jackson, Drew Dalman and Joe Thuney—have all played between 97% and 100% of the team’s offensive snaps this season. Caleb Williams, while uneven during his first year under Matt Eberflus, is an undeniably talented quarterback with the potential to become a perennial top-five player in the NFL. While we absolutely cannot discount Johnson’s genius as a play-caller, Chicago ranks very highly in many of the NFL’s luck-adjacent metrics, such as fumble recovery percentage and third-down conversions over expectation (stunningly, the Bears have faced more third downs this season than any team except for the Giants). Six of the team’s nine wins have been one-score victories. 

Juxtapose this with Carolina, a team that won five games last year when Canales first took over, after a two-win season that preceded Canales that was arguably one of the most ill-conceived blends of a mismatched coaching staff, overzealous personnel department and over-involved ownership in NFL history. 

Carolina’s big free-agent addition on offense was a one-year, $3 million contract handed to Rico Dowdle. This season, Carolina has a bottom-third fumble recovery percentage and one of the worst red zone touchdown percentages in the NFL. Outside of the growing threat posed by first-round wide receiver Tetairoa McMillan, the Panthers have been almost singularly dependent on a running game with a top-10 efficiency rate and … not much else. The Panthers’ defense, while buoyed by a handful of Band-Aid free agents and a resurgent campaign from Derrick Brown, moved from dead last in EPA—and one of the worst defenses in recent NFL history—to 24th. 

While we can utilize these numbers to say whatever we want—statistics are the grist for manipulation—I see an extraordinarily hard-capped roster with almost all of its “star” power on the defensive side of the ball grinding out wins on the shoulders of a journeyman running back. This is different from an offense that, say, already had Jonathan Taylor finding its footing with the addition of a former first-round pick at quarterback. This is different from a team that already possessed an ascending star quarterback (Drake Maye) adding a top-five pick at left tackle, a multi-time Pro Bowl wide receiver and a new offensive coordinator to the fold. 

This, you’ll find, after watching the same Young whom many have given up on time and time again, throwing picture-perfect balls in a diving rain on critical third and fourth downs against the best defense in football, is different from almost anything we’re seeing in the NFL. 

And that is why we should consider a coach talented enough to orchestrate it befitting of an award. 

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Guardian caps, new helmets aim to improve safety for young football players

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New and improved helmet technology was approved by the National Operating Committee on the Standards for Athletic Equipment.

The helmet is lighter and more suitable for youth. While this lighter helmet won’t be available until 2027 and won’t be mandatory, youth leagues around the area will be more than willing to adopt this new equipment to protect the youth.

“I don’t see how you can’t,” former college and NFL football cornerback Carl Lee said. “For the youth kids to play.”

Since retiring from playing and coaching, Lee deals directly with fitting youth for their helmet sizes in South Charleston. Lee does everything he possibly can to make sure the helmet is a perfect fit.

But that’s just part of the problem.

“You got a kid that’s about to your knees, and while the helmet may fit, it’s like two bricks,” Lee said. “He can’t even hold his head up. There has to be more attention paid to youth football and the gear that you’re providing for them.”

Efforts are underway to get guardian caps mandated for middle and high school players. (WCHS)

Efforts are underway to get guardian caps mandated for middle and high school players. (WCHS)

Everyone wants to be safe but having the ability to provide the newest and best equipment is another challenge that some leagues may struggle to provide. Lee said South Charleston is lucky enough to be one of the leagues that has a budget to provide the safest and best facilities for their kids.

Due to others teams’ and leagues’ budgets, the safety and equipment some kids may get, isn’t on par with what others may receive

“It doesn’t create safety across the league as a whole,” Lee said. “I think us being safe and doing the best we can to be safe, isn’t good for the league. What needs to happen is the league itself, we have to find ways to make every child that plays safe.”

That particular helmet is not available until 2027. Teams right now are doing what they can to provide an extra layer of safety to their kids though the use of newer helmets and mostly guardian caps – a decision that many coaches and league presidents didn’t take lightly.

“We made this decision last year after the tragedy that happened to the young man in Madison Middle,” youth league president David Hopper said. “We bought them the day or the week after that we heard about it on the news.”

The tragedy Hopper is talking about is that of Cohen Craddock in August of 2024. At just 13 years old, Craddock died after a collision at practice caused a brain bleed and swelling, leading to a lack of oxygen.

It sent shockwaves through communities across the state. Craddock’s father continues fighting in his son’s honor in an attempt to get mandatory guardian caps for all middle and high school practices.

Cohen Craddock died after a collision at practice at just 13 years old. (WCHS){ }{p}{/p}

Cohen Craddock died after a collision at practice at just 13 years old. (WCHS){ }

The extra protection eases the minds of parents who want to prevent future tragedies from happening to other young athletes.

“I’ve been in the league for about four years now,” Melissa Allen said. “We’ve seen some pretty nasty hits. It definitely eases your mind as a parent to know that there is a little bit more protection. This year, we have seen a lot less injuries. I definitely, think they’re a great addition.”

According to the National Football League, guardian caps absorb 11-12% of impact force and were made mandatory during practice as they try to crack down on concussions and head trauma at the professional level. These protective caps have contributed to a nearly 50% reduction in concussions.

The caps can run roughly $80 per player, which could be a burden for parents who may already be facing financial hardships. Luckily for Ripley Little League, local businesses stepped in and helped provide the caps, helping provide the youth football Vikings the all-important extra layer of protection

Safety equipment can be cost preventative for some families. (WCHS){p}{/p}

Safety equipment can be cost preventative for some families. (WCHS)

“This is our youth,” Allen said. “This is who grows up and takes care of your businesses, and these parents are going to support your business.”

Football is a core memory for millions growing up. Many wouldn’t trade the experiences and life lessons they learned, but parent’s minds are at ease knowing that safety continues to be at the forefront of every league.

“I let my kid play before there were guardian caps,” Allen said. “I do wish there were guardian caps back when he played, but I would let my kid play just because of what football teaches them. It does ease your mind as a parent that there’s some extra protection there now. I love football, I love what it teaches my kid. It teaches them how to be a team player, it teaches them that it’s not only you. You have to work together with people and it teaches you a lot about leadership.”

“I think there’s a danger with anything,” Hopper added. “Just walking down the sidewalk there’s a danger to it. Football builds character. Football builds young men. There’s a trend today to let your kids be safe, be coddled, but it’s important to let them do hard things and football I think is the epitome of that.”



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Monumental Sports & Entertainment Steps Up D.C. Students’ Access to Athletic Shoes with “District Kicks” Initiative

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Year-long effort as part of company’s “District of Play” program will provide Under Armour footwear to nearly 6,500 students across DC Public Schools

WASHINGTON, D.C. (December 21, 2025) — Monumental Sports & Entertainment (MSE) today announced “District Kicks,” one of the year two marquee initiative of the District of Play platform, led by the Washington Wizards in partnership with Under Armour and DC Public Schools (DCPS).

Building on the success of last year’s inaugural effort, District Dribble, which placed nearly 30,000 basketballs into the hands of every DCPS student in PK3 through 5th grade, District Kicks shifts the focus to essential athletic gear—ensuring student-athletes can take part in sports safely and with pride.

The district-wide, multi-phase initiative will deliver Under Armour footwear to all DCPS high school athletes and celebrate milestone moments for sixth-grade students enrolled in DCPS 6th Grade Academies.

“When I got my first basketball as a kid in Brooklyn, that single piece of equipment unlocked everything that followed—confidence, belonging, and the belief that sports could shape my future,” said Ted Leonsis, founder, chairman, managing partner and CEO of Monumental Sports & Entertainment. “District Kicks is built on that same idea: when you give young people the right tools, you give them the ability to dream bigger. We are proud to partner with Under Armour and DCPS to ensure DC students can step onto the court or field ready to compete and believe in what’s possible.”

“We are the Sports Capital not only because of our professional teams, but also because of the opportunities we create for our children,” said Mayor Muriel Bowser. “This initiative is one more way we can make sports more accessible to more students, and we’re grateful for Monumental’s continued partnership and commitment to our city’s young people.”

About District Kicks

Throughout 2026, District Kicks will come to life through a full year of athletic shoe distribution and programming.

High School Sport-Specific Footwear: District Kicks will provide sport-specific Under Armour footwear to all high school student-athletes across roughly 22 DCPS schools, totaling approximately 5,200 students. Shoes will be delivered directly to school campuses and will be distributed in alignment with athletic seasons, beginning with spring sports in March 2026, followed by fall sports in August and winter sports in November.

High School Pep Rallies: Each seasonal distribution will be anchored by a flagship pep rally at a featured high school, creating moments of recognition and visibility for student athletes.

6th Grade Athletic Footwear: District Kicks will provide all DCPS 6th graders enrolled in 6th Grade Academies with Under Armour athletic sneakers, reaching more than 1,200 students across 11 DCPS campuses. Available in multiple styles and colorways, the footwear is designed to help students feel comfortable, confident, and ready to move, play, and take part in school sports and activities.

6th Grade Kick Off Event: MSE will distribute the footwear as part of a celebration for 6th graders enrolled in 6th Grade Academies on March 3, 2026, at CareFirst Arena. The event will gather students for a high-energy, pep rally-style celebration, complete with interactive sports experiences and career-based learning opportunities. MSE will cover transportation and logistics for all participating schools, ensuring every student can be part of the day.

“Engaging our scholars throughout their transition into middle school takes commitment and creativity,” said DCPS Chancellor, Dr. Lewis D. Ferebee. “In our 6th Grade Academies, students are given the tools to excel inside and outside of the classroom. DCPS is grateful to partner with Monumental Sports and Under Armour to provide resources to young people so they can thrive in programming that deepens their connection to school.”

About Under Armour’s Project Rampart

Project Rampart is an initiative by Under Armour to elevate the student-athlete experience and improve academic outcomes through the power of sport. Beginning in Baltimore in 2017 and having since expanded to Oakland and Washington DC, Project Rampart is a blueprint that ensures student-athletes have access to upgraded facilities, best-in-class apparel, leadership development, and coach training through specialized programming.

To learn more, visit about.underarmour.com/Purpose/impact/project-rampart.

About District of Play

Launched in 2024 as part of the Capital One Arena reimagination, “District of Play” is MSE’s commitment to expanding access to youth sports and wellness across DC. “District of Play” invests in youth sports infrastructure, creates new opportunities for underserved youth, and drives community impact through the Capitals, Wizards, Mystics, Capital City Go-Go, Monumental Sports Network, and the MSE Foundation.

In its first year, the initiative reached more than 200,000 residents, earning recognition from Fight for Children and a nomination for a 2025 ESPY Sports Humanitarian Award. Learn more about “District of Play”’s momentous first year of impact in the 2024-25 annual report here.

About Monumental Sports & Entertainment

Monumental Sports & Entertainment is America’s leading integrated sports and entertainment company and is ranked as one of the most valuable globally. Our people, players, teams, and events bring excitement and joy to millions. We invest and innovate to consistently raise the game so we can deliver extraordinary experiences that will inspire and unite our community, our fans, and our people. To learn more, please visit monumentalsports.com.

About Under Armour, Inc.

Under Armour, Inc., headquartered in Baltimore, Maryland, is a leading inventor, marketer, and distributor of branded athletic performance apparel, footwear, and accessories. Designed to empower human performance, Under Armour’s innovative products and experiences are engineered to make athletes better. For further information, please visit http://about.underarmour.com.



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Suns, Mercury pros join youth for hoops to celebrate World Basketball Day

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PHOENIX (AZFamily) — The Phoenix Suns and Phoenix Mercury marked World Basketball Day with a basketball clinic that brought kids face-to-face with two pro players on Tuesday.

The Suns/Mercury Foundation hosted the event, which brought the Suns’ Nick Richards and the Mercury’s Natasha Mack to answer questions from children in a Q&A.

Richards, who grew up in Jamaica, and Mack, a dual citizen of Montenegro, shared stories about playing overseas and how basketball connects people everywhere.

The Suns/Mercury Foundation hosted a basketball clinic for World Basketball Day on Dec. 16.
The Suns/Mercury Foundation hosted a basketball clinic for World Basketball Day on Dec. 16.(Suns/Mercury Foundation)

After the chat, the pros and kids rolled up their sleeves and shot hoops alongside the mascots.

World Basketball Day, now in its third year, rallies the NBA family and the global basketball community.

Partners like the YMCA, FIBA, USA Basketball, the NCAA, and the Naismith Hall of Fame joined in with clinics, social campaigns, and activities worldwide.

See a spelling or grammatical error in our story? Please click here to report it.

Do you have a photo or video of a breaking news story? Send it to us here with a brief description.



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3 kids steal and crash car into home after watching YouTube tutorials, police say

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NEWBURGH HEIGHTS, Ohio (WOIO/Gray News) – Three children, ages 8, 11 and 12, stole a car and crashed it into a home after watching how-to videos on YouTube, according to police.

On Saturday, officers were in pursuit of a stolen car in Ohio when it crashed into a men’s recovery home, causing minor damage.

Officers caught the three children who tried to run away after crashing the car.

Thankfully, no one was injured.

Newburgh Heights police told WOIO the 11-year-old was driving the car.

The children allegedly told police that they watched YouTube videos on how to steal cars.

Police said the children were later released to their parents and charges will be filed in juvenile court.



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Binghamton mayor talks housing, public safety

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This week, JoDee Kenney sits down with Binghamton Mayor Jared Kraham.

Binghamton Mayor Jared Kraham takes the Spectrum News team on a walk-and-talk to various projects around the city. Mayor Kraham talks about the overseeing of significant developments in Dickinson, including the largest housing construction project, Town and Country apartments, with 256 units of affordable housing. He shares how the project is valued in tens of millions and features modern, energy-efficient units, and addresses past issues of crime and poor housing conditions. Mayor Kraham highlights how the city is also developing a new Recreation Center, repurposed from a local church, to serve as a hub for youth sports and community activities. He shares how the recreation center includes a full-size gym, classroom space, and a commercial kitchen. Mayor Kraham explains that these initiatives aim to enhance community life and provide permanent, affordable housing options.

Mayor Kraham also talks about community policing and emphasizes the need for increased staffing to allow officers to engage with the community effectively. He highlights the city’s low crime rate, attributing it to community policing, gun violence reduction initiatives funded by $1 million from the American Rescue Plan Act, and the use of advanced technology like license plate readers and street cameras. Mayor Kraham also details the revitalization of Clinton Street, a historic downtown area, through a $10 million state initiative to create a walkable, eclectic district that supports housing and regional tourism.

And finally, Mayor Kraham talks about being inspired by his father’s government service and his own interest in public communications. He discusses being a Syracuse University dual major in political science and broadcast journalism and emphasizes the importance of local politics and student engagement. He highlights his efforts to support small businesses, influenced by his experience working at his parents’ furniture store. Mayor Kraham also talks about his passion for local music, dining, and sports, and outlined his 2026 goals: revitalizing Clinton Street, enhancing public safety, and addressing affordable housing to foster neighborhood development.

You can watch the full interviews above. And be sure to tune in for a look inside the biggest issues impacting upstate New York, on In Focus with JoDee Kenney — every Sunday on Spectrum News 1.



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Power of basketball to connect people around the globe celebrated with World Basketball Day

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Can basketball be a force that helps bring a divided nation, a divided world together?

That’s the dream of World Basketball Day. A day — designated by the United Nations to be commemorated every Dec. 21 — where we celebrate the power of basketball to unite communities and connect people around the world.

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“There’s increasingly few spaces left where we humanize each other, where we actually spend time face-to-face, eye contact, wordlessly negotiating and sharing and creating space with and between each other — doing the kinds of intimate, continuous, fluid communication that the space of a basketball court fosters,” said David Hollander, an NYU professor who helped create World Basketball Day. “The game itself is an empathy lab. And so, yes, I believe it is one of the greatest exercises that people can engage in to begin to knit back together the social fabric.”

It’s a dream shared by the NBA and people who love basketball around the globe — and it’s a chance to give back to the community through the game.

“World Basketball Day is a chance to celebrate the game and impact it has on people everywhere,” the Celtics’ Jayson Tatum said. “Basketball has had such a positive influence on my life, and I hope I can pass along the joy and skills I’ve learned, both on- and-off the court, to the next generation.”

The NBA is doing this in part by announcing the extension of its longstanding relationship with the YMCA, collaborating on year-long youth basketball and community-focused programming that will reach 6 million youth in the next year. World Basketball Day also means events to connect with youth around the nation and around the globe.

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“World Basketball Day takes on a special meaning this year as we commemorate the 175th anniversary of the YMCA, where the sport was first invented 134 years ago,” NBA Commissioner Adam Silver said. “We are thrilled to join our many friends in the basketball community to celebrate the game’s impact and influence around the world.”

What is World Basketball Day?

World Basketball Day is the brainchild of Hollander, an NYU professor with the Preston Robert Tisch Institute for Global Sport. Holland teaches a course at NYU called “How Basketball Can Save the World.”

“It’s a very popular elective that treats basketball like a philosophy,” Hollander said. “I created principles that I believe basketball stands for — the way you play basketball can be understood as a really good guide for how we can behave with each other. The way the game was intended to be structured can tell us a lot about how we ought to structure a society, and it’s a game intrinsically of hope.”

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He eventually turned that course into a book, in which he drafted a UN resolution for World Basketball Day. That idea took off in a way he did not fully expect.

“Basketball was always intended to be stateless, borderless, global right from the very start,” Hollander said. “And as the world tries to solve the problems that only a whole world can solve, I suggested that we ought to start somewhere where the whole world is happy and the whole world comes together, and the whole world agrees. And, I said, that place is basketball, and it should have a day.

“That’s how it began.”

World Basketball Day was established in 2023 by the United Nations. Not coincidentally, World Basketball Day is observed each year on Dec. 21, the date in 1891 that Dr. James Naismith hung up the peach baskets and first introduced the game of basketball at the YMCA in Springfield, Mass.

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Part of what World Basketball Day has become is a focus on the future and connecting people. For example, last week marked the third annual United Nations diplomats basketball game, in which more than 60 diplomats from 30 countries played pickup at the local YMCA.

“In other words, these peacemakers are actually doing the thing that I hope basketball on a grand scale achieves,” Hollander said.

It’s not just the NBA and the United States celebrating this, it is FIBA — the international governing body of basketball — and its coaching clinics and camps in Africa on this day. It’s local hoopers and content creators from Australia, Indonesia, Japan and the Philippines featuring World Basketball Day content across the NBA’s localized channels in those countries.

“Basketball has always been global,” Hollander said. “Dr James Naismith sent emissaries to teach basketball in 1895, as soon as he could right after he invented the game, to Europe to Australia, to China to South America. So it is no surprise to me that coming from all corners of the world are some of the most eloquent speakers of the language of basketball.”

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That language of basketball and how it can be a unifying force deserves to be celebrated. And, much like Christmas, we could use more of that force and spirit all year-round.



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