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15-0: The Cavaliers are the fourth team in NBA history to start 15-0, joining the 1948-49 Washington Capitols, 1993-94 Rockets and 2015-16 Warriors.
️ NWSL semifinals: Washington beat Gotham (3-0 in PKs) and Orlando beat Kansas City (3-2) to advance to next weekend’s championship game.
Wings win lottery: The Dallas Wings won Sunday’s WNBA draft lottery, and all signs point to them drafting UConn superstar Paige Bueckers with the No. 1 pick in April.
ATP Finals: World No. 1 Jannik Sinner beat Taylor Fritz on Sunday to win his first ATP Finals title and cap a superb season. The Italian has won 26 of his last 27 matches.
Fox makes history: Kings PG De’Aaron Fox scored a franchise-record 60 points on Friday and added 49 more on Saturday. Only Kobe Bryant has scored more points on back-to-back nights in the past 50 years.
It took 328 days, but the Kansas City Chiefs finally lost a football game.
ICYMI: The Bills beat the Chiefs, 30-21, on Sunday in Buffalo, handing the defending Super Bowl champs their first loss of the season and snapping their 15-game win streak that dated back 328 days to Christmas 2023.
Wild stat: Mahomes has started 124 games (regular season and playoffs), and this was just the fifth time he lost by more than one score.
More from Sunday:
Elsewhere: Seahawks 20, 49ers 17 | Rams 28, Patriots 22 | Colts 28, Jets 27 | Dolphins 34, Raiders 19 | Vikings 23, Titans 13 | Broncos 38, Falcons 6
Sunday recap: Winners and losers
Combat sports took center stage this weekend, with boxing drawing record viewership and UFC drawing the president-elect and his top cabinet picks.
Boxing: Jake Paul vs. Mike Tyson wasn’t a very good boxing match, or a very well-handled boxing match, but it was a very well-viewed boxing match. The fight at Jerry World averaged an astounding 60 million viewers worldwide, according to Netflix, and peaked at 65 million.
UFC: Jon Jones (28-1) dominated Stipe Miocic (20-5) at Madison Square Garden in his long awaited-return to the octagon, defending his UFC heavyweight title in front of President-elect Donald Trump, Elon Musk, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and other cabinet picks.
Go deeper: Head over to Uncrowned, our new combat sports hub, for full weekend analysis.
Provo, Utah Kansas stunned No. 6 BYU, 17-13, to hand the Cougars their first loss of the season. Just three undefeated FBS teams remain: Oregon, Indiana and Army.
Athens, Georgia The Bulldogs beat the Vols, 31-17, to keep their CFP hopes alive and leave open the possibility that the SEC could land six teams in the playoff. Georgia has won eight straight games against Tennessee.
Boulder, Colorado Heisman favorite Travis Hunter led Colorado to a 49-24 win over Utah and joined Champ Bailey (with the Redskins) as the only FBS or NFL players with 50 receiving yards, a rushing TD and an interception in the same game.
San Jose Boise State beat San Jose State, 42-21, behind another monster game from Ashton Jeanty (159 yards, 3 TD), who’s on pace to break Barry Sanders’ single-season FBS rushing record (2,628 yards in 1988).
Winners and losers: The 21 teams that still have a shot at the CFP
First on Yahoo Sports AM: Northwestern University and the Ryan family have provided the first public look at the design and layout of the new Ryan Field.
The $850 million venue is scheduled to open in 2026 and will host not only Northwestern football but also concerts, youth sports championships and other events.
More renderings will be released this morning.
58 years ago today, Sandy Koufax shocked the world by retiring at age 30, citing his painfully arthritic arm and the fear of permanent damage.
“In those days there was no surgery. The wisdom was if you went in there, it would only make things worse. … Now you go in, fix it and you’re OK for next spring.”
Koufax
The big picture: Though modern surgery might have extended Koufax’s career, there’s something to be said for going out on top. And few athletes ever did that quite like Sandy.
By the numbers: Through the first six years of his career (ages 19-24), Koufax was a serviceable if unspectacular starting pitcher. Then he turned 25 and began arguably the greatest prime in MLB history.
The last word: Willie Stargell, the Pirates Hall of Famer who managed just two hits in 23 at-bats against Koufax, put it best: “Hitting against Sandy Koufax is like drinking coffee with a fork.”
The Cowboys host the Texans tonight (8:15pm ET, ESPN/ABC/ESPN2) in a matchup between the NFL’s two Texas teams.
Head-to-head: Dallas leads the all-time series 4-2, but first-place Houston* has the obvious upper hand this year against a reeling Cowboys team that has lost four straight and will be without starting QB Dak Prescott for the rest of the season (hamstring).
More to watch:
*Looking for a bounce-back win: The Texans have lost three of four since their 5-1 start. The Cowboys who’ve allowed at least 27 points in four straight games might be just what the doctor ordered.
James Harden moved into second place on the all-time 3-point list on Sunday (2,975), and now trails only Steph Curry (3,782).
Question: Who did Harden pass?
Answer at the bottom.
Watch all 13.
Trivia answer: Ray Allen (2,973 career 3-pointers)
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