USA Today - 18.03.2020

(Axel Boer) #1
Tennis major will be played in late September,
which opens with Triple Crown race. Page 5C

French Open, Kentucky


Derby postponed till fall


Padres outfielder talks of growing ‘frustration’ as
opening pushed back to at least May. Page 6C

MLB players unsure of start of


season, how they’ll be paid


E

USA TODAY| WEDNESDAY, MARCH 18, 2020 | SECTION C

SPORTS


FIRST WORD

For those who say we do
everything for money, this is
the most painful thing we’ve ever
done financially. We will lose a
significant portion of our revenue.
We’re working our way through
that right now, as you might
expect ... but there’s no way to go
through this year and into next
year without a very significant
financial interruption.”

NCAA president Mark Emmert on the
impact of canceling March Madness.
The NCAA’s revenue comes from the
tournament, and most of that is then
passed on to the member schools.
Emmert also said, “We would have
loved to postpone it. We looked at
postponing it, and also looked at
whether we could move it up, shorten
the tournament to a Sweet 16 to ac-
celerate and get in front of the spread
of the coronavirus, but we wound up
having to conclude we couldn’t do
either one.”

NOTABLE NUMBERS

$100 million
Over five years for Dallas WR Amari
Cooper, the Cowboys announced,
surpassing Saints receiver Michael
Thomas’ $96.25 million extension to
become the richest receiver in NFL
history.

$1 million
From each of the 30 Major League
Baseball teams to help support ball-
park employees during the coronavi-
rus shutdown, according to commis-
sioner Rob Manfred.

77


Miles left as of Tuesday eve-
ning for Norway’s Thomas
Waerner, leader of the Iditarod, one of
the few sports still being contested.
Three-time champion Mitch Seavey
was five hours behind Waerner, ac-
cording to the Anchorage Daily News.
The race is scheduled to end Wednes-
day.

4


Nets players tested positive for
COVID-19, according to the team.
Kevin Durant told The Athletic he was
one of them. This makes at least seven
NBA players who have coronavirus.

LAST WORD

We are unbelievably excited
to have Bryce Drew lead our
basketball program into its next
phase of development.”

Grand Canyon president Brian Mueller
in a statement announcing the hiring
of former Valparaiso star and Vander-
bilt coach Bryce Drew to head the
basketball program. Drew replaces
Dan Majerle, who was let go after
posting a 136–89 record in Grand Can-
yon’s first seven years as an NCAA
Division I member.

FANTASY EXTRA

Although opening day is delayed, our
annual issue prepares you for baseball
drafts and the 2020 season. Our 23
pages of fantasy coverage include
player rankings, projected stats and
lineups, experts’ auctions and average
player draft positions. Available on
newsstands or subscribe at mysports-
weekly.com or 800-872-1415.

Staff and wire reports

EMMERT BY ROBERT DEUTSCH/USA TODAY

SPORTSLINE


INDIANAPOLIS – The rumor has
become reality.
Indianapolis has agreed to terms
with longtime Chargers quarterback
Philip Rivers in free agency, a person
with knowledge of the deal told the
USA TODAY Network, in a move that
likely ends Jacoby Brissett’s time as
the Colts’ starter at the position. The
person spoke on condition of anonym-

ity because the deal cannot be complet-
ed until the start of the new league year
on Wednesday.
The Colts are signing the 38-year-old
Rivers to a one-year deal worth $25 mil-
lion, according to ESPN.
The move capped a wild day involv-
ing prominent NFL quarterbacks. Be-
yond the stunning Tom Brady an-
nouncement he would leave New Eng-
land that jump-started Tuesday, Drew
Brees agreed on a deal to stay with the
Saints while former New Orleans back-
up Teddy Bridgewater, according to

multiple reports, agreed to go to the di-
visional-rival Panthers, who also said
starter Cam Newton could seek a trade.
Facing uncertainty at the quarter-
back position for the first time in more
than two decades in Indianapolis, Colts
owner Jim Irsay, general manager Chris
Ballard and Frank Reich made a move at
the game’s most important position, a
move coming just hours after Ballard
made an enormous splash by trading his
first-round pick to the 49ers for All-Pro

Rivers lands 1-year Colts deal


Joel A. Erickson
The Indianapolis Star
USA TODAY

See RIVERS, Page 3C

Lilly King is American Olympic roy-
alty, a two-time swimming gold med-
alist in 2016 in Rio who is expected to
be one of the veterans of the U.S.
Olympic team this summer in Tokyo.
But right now, little more than four
months before the July 24 opening
ceremony, King’s description of what
life is like for the nation’s Olympians

trying to prepare for Tokyo in the midst
of the coronavirus outbreak is sobering.
“The athletes’ lives have truly been
turned upside down by this,” she wrote
in a text message Tuesday to USA TO-
DAY Sports. “Most of us are struggling
to find places to let us in to work out.
Many don’t know where they are train-
ing tomorrow. We have to prepare as if
the Olympics are going on as planned,
even if our training plans have com-
pletely changed within the last week.”
Several hours before King sent those

Olympian: Lives ‘turned upside down’


Christine Brennan
Columnist
USA TODAY

See BRENNAN, Page 5C

Lilly King is an 11-time world champ
expecting to compete at the Tokyo
Olympics.MADDIE MEYER/GETTY IMAGES

Tom Brady didn’t take long to deter-
mine his landing spot in the NFL.
The former Patriots quarterback
agreed in principle to sign with the
Buccaneers, a person with knowledge
of the deal told USA TODAY on Tues-
day evening. The person spoke on con-
dition of anonymity because the deal
had not been finalized and cannot be
completed until the start of the league
year Wednesday.
The deal is believed to be worth
roughly $30 million a year, according
to the report.
Earlier in the day, NFL Network re-
ported that the Chargers believed they
were out of the running for Brady. The
six-time Super Bowl champion and
three-time MVP would prefer to stay
on the East Coast because of “family
considerations,” according to the re-
port.
ESPN had reported the Buccaneers
had emerged as the front-runner.

The new NFL league year starts at
4 p.m. ET Wednesday. However, negoti-
ations have been allowed to go on.
Brady, who will turn 43 in August, an-
nounced Tuesday morning that he will
not return to the Patriots next season
and instead look elsewhere in free agen-
cy.
“To all my teammates, coaches, exec-
utives and staff, Coach (Bill) Belichick,
RKK (owner Robert Kraft) and the Kraft
family and the entire organization,” Bra-
dy wrote on a post to his social media
channels. “I want to say thank you for
the past twenty years of my life and the
daily commitment to winning and cre-
ating a winning culture built on great
values. ... Although my football journey
will take place elsewhere, I appreciate
everything that we have achieved and
am grateful for our incredible TEAM ac-
complishments.”
Several other quarterback dominoes
have already fallen throughout the NFL.
The Titans, once seen as a leading con-
tender for Brady because former team-
mate Mike Vrabel is now their head
coach, decided to re-sign incumbent

starter Ryan Tannehill to a four-year,
$118 million contract on Sunday.
On Tuesday, the Colts reached a one-
year pact with longtime Chargers sig-
nal-caller Philip Rivers, a person with
knowledge of the move told USA TO-
DAY. The person spoke on condition of
anonymity because deals cannot be-
come official until Wednesday.
The Chargers were in the running for
Brady because they have an opening on
the depth chart and they want to revive
their fan base – especially given they’re
scheduled to move into new SoFi Stadi-
um in Los Angeles.
They’ve got studs permeating the
roster, including WRs Keenan Allen and
Mike Williams, RB Austin Ekeler and
franchise-tagged TE Hunter Henry. GM
Tom Telesco also has the requisite cap
room.
When you’re a California kid in the
process of starting up your own Holly-
wood production company – and one
who might want to stay in the AFC (the
Chargers will host the Patriots in 2020)

After 20 years with the Patriots, Tom Brady has plotted his next landing point on the NFL landscape as Tampa with the
Buccaneers. KIM KLEMENT/USA TODAY SPORTS

Brady heading to Bucs

and sunny Florida

Mike Jones
and Michael Middlehurst-Schwartz
USA TODAY

See BUCS, Page 3C
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