Golf Glance: Elite field for The Players' $25M purse; LIV returns to Singapore

The smallest field in the history of The Players Championship tackles the iconic TPC Sawgrass with the PGA Tour's largest purse at stake, while Jon Rahm looks to keep his red-hot LIV Golf streak going in Singapore.

Field Level Media

THIS WEEK: The Players Championship, Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla., March 12-15

Course: TPC Sawgrass (Par 72, 7,352 Yards)

Purse: $25M (Winner: $4.5M)

Defending Champion: Rory McIlroy

FedEx Cup Leader: Collin Morikawa

HOW TO FOLLOW

TV: Thursday-Friday: 1-7 p.m. ET (Golf Channel); Saturday: 2-7 p.m. (NBC); Sunday: 1-6 p.m. (NBC)

Streaming (ESPN+): Thursday-Friday: 7:30 a.m.-7 p.m. ET; Saturday: 8 a.m.-7 p.m.; Sunday: 7:30 a.m.-6 p.m.

X: @ThePlayers

NOTES: Each of the past six winners of The Players entered the week inside the top 10 in the Official World Golf Ranking, and this week's field includes 46 of the top 50 players. ... This is the first of five events this season that offer 750 FedExCup points to the winner, and the winner earns a five-year PGA Tour exemption. ... Seven of the first nine events have been won by players in their 20s. ... Five of the past six Players were decided by no more than one shot. ... Joel Dahmen, Taylor Moore, Seamus Power and Andrew Putnam qualified for the field through their FedExCup ranking through the Cognizant Classic. ... Only three players have converted the 54-hole lead/co-lead into a victory at The Players since 2016: Jason Day (2016), Webb Simpson (2018) and Scottie Scheffler (2023). ... Brooks Koepka is in the field as part of his return to the PGA Tour via the Returning Member Program. To round out threesomes, the field was expanded to 123 with the addition of Patton Kizzire and Seamus Power. It still marks the smallest field in tournament history. ... 2021 Players champion Justin Thomas will make his second start in his return from November back surgery. ... Fourteen players are making their tournament debut, including seven tour rookies... Greg Norman holds the tournament scoring record of 264 set in 1994.

BEST BETS: Scottie Scheffler (+435 at DraftKings) won at TPC Sawgrass in 2023-24 and seeks to join Jack Nicklaus as the only three-time winners of The Players. ... Rory McIlroy (+1475) is also a two-time winner of The Players, but did not arrive at TPC Sawgrass until Wednesday after withdrawing from the Arnold Palmer due to back spasms. ... Collin Morikawa (+2050) leads the FedExCup standings following his T-7 at the Genesis and solo fifth at the Arnold Palmer in addition to his win at Pebble Beach. ... Ludvig Aberg (+2900) is coming off a T3 at Bay Hill and finished solo eighth here in 2024 before missing the cut last year. ... Chris Gotterup (+4700) offers intriguing odds for the only two-time winner on tour so far this season. ... Sepp Straka (+5600) provides longshot odds despite entering the week ranked ninth in the world. He had a T-2 at Pebble Beach and finished T-13 last week.

Last Tournament: Arnold Palmer Invitational (Akshay Bhatia)

Next Tournament: Valspar Championship, Palm Harbor, Fla. (March 19-22)

LIV GOLF LEAGUE

THIS WEEK: LIV Golf Singapore, March 12-15

Course: Sentosa Golf Club (Par 71, 7,406 Yards)

Purses: Individual: $30M (Winner: $4M); Team: $10M (Winners: $3M)

Defending Champions: Individual: Joaquin Niemann; Team: Fireballs GC

2026 Season Leaders: Individual: Jon Rahm; Team: Ripper GC

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HOW TO WATCH

TV: Wednesday: 9-11 p.m. ET (Fox Sports app), 11 p.m.-2 a.m. (FS1); Thursday: 9-11:30 p.m. (Fox Sports app), 11:30 p.m.-2 a.m. (FS1); Friday: 9:30-10:30 p.m. (FS2), 10:30 p.m.-2:30 a.m. (FS); Saturday: 9 p.m.-2 a.m. (FS1)

X: @livgolf_league

NOTES: This is the fourth of 14 events this season as LIV Golf returns to Singapore for the fourth consecutive year. ... Rahm has four runner-ups and a win in his past five LIV events. ... HyFlyers GC captain Phil Mickelson will miss his fourth consecutive event due to an undisclosed family matter and will be replaced by Wade Ormsby. ... The daily shotgun start includes 13 teams and 57 total players, including five wild cards. ... Thomas Detry (No. 61) and Elvis Smylie (No. 73) have two events remaining to climb into the top 50 of the Official World Golf Ranking and earn a spot into the Masters.

Last Event: LIV Golf Hong Kong (Individual: Rahm; Team: 4Aces GC)

Next Event: LIV Golf South Africa, Steyn City, March 19-22

THIS WEEK: OFF.

Race to CME Globe Leader: Jeeno Thitikul

Last Tournament: Blue Bay LPGA (Mi Hyang Lee)

Next Tournament: Fortinet Founders Cup, Menlo Park, Calif., March 19-22

DP WORLD TOUR

THIS WEEK: OFF.

Race to Dubai Leader: Patrick Reed

Last Tournament: Joburg Open (Dan Bradbury)

Next Tournament: Hainan Classic, Hainan Island, China, March 19-22

PGA TOUR CHAMPIONS

THIS WEEK: OFF.

Charles Schwab Cup leader: Stewart Cink

Last Tournament: James Hardie Pro Football Hall of Fame Invitational (Zach Johnson)

Next Tournament: Cologuard Classic, Tucson, Ariz., March 20-22

--Field Level Media

Golf Glance: Elite field for The Players' $25M purse; LIV returns to Singapore

The smallest field in the history of The Players Championship tackles the iconic TPC Sawgrass with the PGA Tour's ...
Homesick, but hopeful: The World Baseball Classic is giving Venezuelans a reason to dance at a time of intense upheaval

With Team Venezuela leading 6-2 in the seventh inning of their firstWorld Baseball Classicgame, a dance party erupted on the concourse behind third base.

CNN Sports Venezuela's Eugenio Suárez and Luis Arráez dance in the dugout before their game against Israel on Saturday. - Sam Navarro/Imagn Images/Reuters

A small drumline – one of several in the stands, even for a noon game on a weekday – had attracted a crowd. It didn't take long for the throng to form a dance circle with a number of eager participants. The concourse became impassable, but no one seemed to mind. Fans of all ages abandoned plans to return to their seats and gave up on wherever they were going, choosing to twerk and shimmy and shout, "Eyyy, Venezuela!" in unison.

The game was in Miami, the epicenter of the largest Venezuelan population in the United States. In the clubhouse, players ate arepas, always a staple of the concession stands here. They faced off against the Netherlands, with a player pool and fanbase populated by Caribbean expats from former Dutch colonies. But the vast majority of the crowd was Venezuelan and came to celebrate their country with auspicious hope, raucous revelry, and, of course, baseball.

Venezuela fans cheer for their team during the game against the Netherlands on Friday. - Marta Lavandier/AP

The tournament, held every few years as a joint production between MLB and theMLB Players Association, allows players to represent, not the city that hired them, but the home that raised them or their forebears. For Venezuelan players, who make up the second-largest foreign-born population in MLB, it's a chance to show that even though baseball was a ticket out of their country, it also ties them to it. Just because they left doesn't mean they don't love it.

It's a sentiment shared by many members of the diaspora. And part of what makes the WBC so special is the chance to be surrounded by so many other Venezuelans all exulting in their shared heritage.

"Being together, sharing our culture in the stadium here, and I feel very excited because we feel like we are in Venezuela again," said Ángela Ramírez, who had traveled from Orlando with her husband and their friends for the game. They have lived in the US for nearly a decade.

"It feels like home," said Jorge Galicia, who has been in the US for eight years and Miami for four, but still thinks of Venezuela when he references the comfort he found in the stadium this weekend.

He was at the game alone, draped in a Venezuela flag that he repeatedly lent out to his compatriots who asked to borrow it for photos snapped from the centerfield concourse, a field full of Venezuelans winning behind them.

For Galicia, Ramírez and many other Venezuelans living in the states, the approximation of home at a ballpark in Miami is as close as they can get — for now.

Venezuela fans support the team in Miami on Friday. - Marta Lavandier/AP

Safety concerns have kept many who fled Venezuela from returning. In the stands, some fans FaceTimed friends and family back in Venezuela, whom they may not have seen since they left. Galicia, for instance, was part of the political opposition in the country and came to the US claiming asylum.

"It's difficult because I cannot see baseball anymore in Venezuela because of all the political situation, but it's refreshing to have some of that here in the city where I live now," he said. "I'm waiting for a good moment to return."

After the capture and removal offormer Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduroand his wife by the Trump administration, some expats believe that moment is approaching. Or, at least, they hope so. It has made them even more proud to cheer for a team withVenezuelaemblazoned across the chest.

"Oh, way more," Galicia said. "I'm heavily optimistic."

'Finally, they did something'

January 3 was Francisco Zambrano's birthday.

"That was a great day," he said. It was also the day that Maduro was captured. "So that was a great gift."

Juan Sánchez, who has been living in the States for 20 years, 15 of which in Miami, was at work when the news broke.

"I was in the middle of my shift, and I just go home and celebrate. Been waiting for this more than 20 years, and now it happens," he said. "I have to go home and celebrate with my family. It was exciting. It was very exciting."

All of the Venezuelan fansCNN Sportsspoke to in Miami were happy to have Maduro out, but they wavered on what it meant for the future of the country. For now, the Trump administration has thrown its support behindDelcy Rodríguez, Maduro's former vice president who has assumed the presidency.

"It's a very difficult problem. There are too many bad people. It's very complicated," said Ramírez.

"I think we need to be patient. These processes are slow," Galicia said. "Of course, I want to see free and fair elections. I'm confident we're heading there. I don't know how fast that's going to be, but I like the things that I'm seeing. I like the changes that we're seeing."

Change. That is what has inspired the optimism among the expat Venezuelans. The conditions under Maduro drove many of them to flee a country that they miss terribly. Now, they are hopeful that no matter what the future brings, it will be different.

"We always be having hope that one day it's going to happen," said Andrés Pacheco, whose face was painted yellow, blue, and red with white stars across the bridge of his nose like the Venezuelan flag. "And finally, they did something. We don't know what's going to happen later. But it's something."

Pacheco had traveled all the way from Oklahoma, where he works at a restaurant, to attend the WBC. He watched Team Venezuela when it played exhibition games in West Palm Beach. He was there when the team had a workout day before pool play in Miami. He follows Venezuelan players on MLB teams closely, collecting their baseball cards.

Even when they are playing for American cities, their success redounds on the heritage. But this, the opportunity to see them explicitly representing their shared homeland, was too powerful to pass up.

"Now that they have (the WBC) and they come to Miami, it's the most amazing thing because I love Venezuela and baseball," he said.

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He plans to attend every game for as long as Venezuela remains in the tournament.

"I'm already emotional when I see them together."

A touchy situation for Team Venezuela

Omar López, the manager of Team Venezuela, looked around the sparsely attended news conference and asked if he could wait a few minutes before starting to see if more reporters would arrive.

It was a few hours before Venezuela's second game of the group stage and multiple days of manager media availability had sapped some of the urgency out of his appearances. But López had something he needed the world to hear.

Venezuelan manager Omar López talks to the media before a game against Nicaragua. - Kelly Gavin/MLB Photos/Getty Images

"I want to say something before we start. I hope that you can pass this on to journalists from other countries," he began solemnly, speaking in Spanish. "My name is Omar López. I have been working in baseball for 29 years. I don't work in politics. I didn't go to college to study diplomacy or any other career related to politics. I am not supporting anybody.

"I support and I am connected with my family and nobody else. So I ask the Venezuelans, the Venezuelan community, please don't ask me more questions about the political situation of my country, of our country. And please, please share this with the other journalists."

The entreaty continued from there. He referenced a question from a couple days prior when he had been asked about the "very unusual political times" in Venezuela. He had deflected vociferously – insisting "I'm not here to talk about anything about political situations around the world, around my country" – but evidently that had not been a definitive enough distancing from the issue.

At the risk of undermining López's very emphatic testimony – that he didn't know about politics, doesn't really want to think about it and definitely didn't want to talk about it – the opening statement belied an obvious truth: It seemed to be something that, in fact, he had given quite a bit of consideration. All of that consideration led to him deliberately deciding to stay away from taking any particular position.

Members of Team Venezuela stand during the national anthem before their game in Miami on Friday. - Kelly Gavin/MLB Photos/Getty Images

It was a stark, but unsurprising, contrast to the unanimity of the fans' eagerness to celebrate Maduro's ouster. If their enthusiasm extends to the dugout, it's hard to tell.

Salvador Pérez, the team's captain, a 14-year MLB veteran who is now playing in his fourth WBC – said he doesn't pay attention to the outside noise, citing the fans who just want to see their team win.

"Everybody knows how hard it is," he conceded obliquely in Spanish. "I can control what I can control. The rest, God has control of that."

Whether it's true or not that Pérez is able to ignore the upheaval in his home country, it would be difficult to get him to say otherwise. Venezuelan players and coaches are incredibly cautious commenting publicly on politics of the country – to do so could draw additional attention to themselves. Already, their rich, widely reported salaries make them and their loved ones targets.

Big leaguers playing in winter leagues back in Venezuela have historically brought bodyguards with them to the ballpark. Relatives – mothers, sons and brothers – have been kidnapped and held for ransom. In 2011, big leaguerWilson Ramos himself was abductedand held for two days in a targeted kidnappingbefore being rescued.

And in 2017, two-time MVP and 12-time All-StarMiguel Cabrera posted a series of videos on Instagrampassionately decrying the corruption and dangers of his home country. He referenced the death threats he received, the bribes he paid to ensure the safety of his family, and aligned himself with the resistance to Maduro's regime.

And yet, nearly a decade later and now a coach on Team Venezuela,Cabrera was heckled as a "Chavista,"a supporter of Maduro's ideological predecessor Hugo Chávez at the game Saturday night in Miami.

'Maybe, this is the year'

It wasn't the only politically tinged cheer in the stadium.

"We're going to say today, in the baseball game, '¡Maduro, c****a de tu madre!'" Rachel Pérez said shortly before Saturday's game.

Her son, Victor, offers a rough translation: "It's like, 'F**k you, Maduro.'"

They left Venezuela when Victor was a teenager studying law. His parents were worried for his safety and he saw no future there. Now, he misses Venezuela every day.

"I mean, I love the US," Victor said. "But definitely my home country is Venezuela, so I want to be there."

Eugenio Suárez, left, celebrates a home run with captain Salvador Perez on Saturday. Venezuela defeated Israel 11-3. - Kelly Gavin/MLB Photos/Getty Images A fan waves a Venezuela flag during the 6-2 win against the Netherlands on Friday. - Jim Rassol/Imagn Images/Reuters

But at least for now, they are surrounded by people who can understand that dichotomy because they feel it too. Heading into Wednesday night's massive showdown against the Dominican Republic, the Venezuelans are undefeated and looking like one of the top teams in the tournament.

They're not quite favored – realistically ranking behind Team USA, Team Japan, and their Miami rivals, the Dominican Republic – but Team Venezuela is a serious contender. If they win it all, it would be the first time since the WBC debuted in 2006.

"Maybe, this is the year cause things are getting better for us," Galicia said.

Pacheco tried to imagine what that would feel like.

"Oh my God, I don't even know because I have been waiting for it," he said. "The same way we've been waiting for the political (situation to improve), we've been waiting for this."

For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Homesick, but hopeful: The World Baseball Classic is giving Venezuelans a reason to dance at a time of intense upheaval

With Team Venezuela leading 6-2 in the seventh inning of their firstWorld Baseball Classicgame, a dance party erupted on ...
What we know on the 12th day of the US and Israel's war with Iran

A wave of strikes on Iran hit the capital and northern areas overnight into Wednesday, while Tehran launched what it called its "most intense" operation ofthe war,targeting Israel and Gulf nations, and attacks on ships near the Strait of Hormuz escalated.

CNN People inspect the damage where Israel's military carried out an airborne operation that dropped troops overnight, in the town of Nabi Chit, Lebanon, March 7, 2026. REUTERS/ Mohammad Yassine     TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY      - Mohammad Yassine/Reuters

Throughout the region, a humanitarian crisis is mounting – withthe UN warningof toxic black rain, mass displacement and disrupted supply chains for life-saving goods. And the death toll continues to rise.

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Here's what you need to know on day 12.

What's happening in the region?

A fireball rises from the site of an Israeli airstrike that targeted an area in Beirut's southern suburbs overnight. - Fadel Itani/AFP/Getty Images
  • Attacks near Strait of Hormuz: Three vessels near the Strait of Hormuz were hit by "unknown projectiles," the UK's maritime agency said. One cargo ship caught fire after it was struck, but that was later extinguished and caused "no environmental damage." The waterway, which Iran has effectively shut, is a crucial artery for the global economy since about one-fifth of the world's oil supply passes through there.

  • Israeli strikes: Israel launched a wave of strikes in the Iranian capital overnight into Wednesday, with the Iranian Red Crescent saying a residential area in Tehran had been targeted. Beyond the capital, CNN staff in northern Iran also reported major nighttime air raids. Israel also said it struck targets in Beirut in Lebanon, and issued another sweeping evacuation order for residents in the south of the city. Videos showed parts of a high-rise building engulfed in flames. Further south in Lebanon, a paramedic was killed after an Israeli strike hit a Red Cross ambulance.

  • Iran ramps up: Iran's military said it launched its "most intense and heaviest operation" since the start of the war overnight into Wednesday, according to state media. The attack targeted locations in Israel and US assets in the region, state media reported.

  • Regional attacks: Gulf states have been intercepting new waves of Iranian drones and missiles early Wednesday local time. A suspected Iranian drone also hit a US diplomatic facility in Iraq Tuesday, near the Baghdad airport, two sources told CNN.

  • Toxic black rain: The World Health Organization is warning that black rain - contaminated rainfall - resulting from pollution could pose health risks after strikes in Iran. After fuel depots were hit last week, including in Tehran, thick plumes of black smoke billowed into the air, mixing with precipitation in the air to create toxic rain.

  • Growing death toll: Iran has accused the US and Israel of deliberately targeting civilians, with strikes killing more than 1,300 since the conflict started, according to Iran's UN ambassador. In Lebanon, Israel's strikes have killed more than 10 children every day so far, according to the UN's children's agency. Dozens more have been killed elsewhere around the region, including by Iranian strikes. Seven US service members have been killed and 140 troops wounded, the Pentagon said Tuesday.

  • New supreme leader's condition: Mojtaba Khamenei "is safe," the son of Iran's president said, amid rumors the new supreme leader was wounded by US-Israeli strikes. Mojtaba has not been seen in public nor issued a written statement since being chosen as Iran's new leader.

What are the other headlines?

Members of Iran's women's football team arrive at the Kuala Lumpur International Airport - Arif Kartono/AFP/Getty Images
  • Mines in the Strait: The US military said it destroyed Iranian naval ships — including 16 minelayers — near the Strait of Hormuz. Sources earlier told CNN that Tehran has begun laying mines in the waterway, the world's most important energy chokepoint, through which about one-fifth of all crude oil travels.

  • US terms: The White House laid out demands for what an "unconditional surrender" by Iran could look like, saying it will be personally determined by President Donald Trump. This includes dismantling Iran's ballistic missile arsenal that "protects" their nuclear ambitions, it said – adding that Trump does "not rule options out" in the war, including deploying US ground troops.

  • School strike: The Pentagon will release its report into a strike on an Iranian girls' school that killed at least 168 children, the White House said Tuesday. The US military was likely responsible, according to CNN and expert analysis of evidence. And footage has emerged that appears to show a US missile targeting the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps naval base adjacent to the school.

  • Iranian women's soccer team: Seven members of the Iranian football team were granted humanitarian visas in Australia after seeking asylum, though one member changed her mind afterward and said she wanted to return home. The rest of the team left Sydney late Tuesday.

For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

What we know on the 12th day of the US and Israel’s war with Iran

A wave of strikes on Iran hit the capital and northern areas overnight into Wednesday, while Tehran launched what it call...
Millions face tornado and storm warnings after homes destroyed in Midwest

More than 77 million people from the Midwest to the southern Plains were under some form of tornado warning on Wednesday after multiple apparent twisters caused extensive damage in Illinois and Indiana.

NBC Universal

Northern Illinois remains the highest risk, with a "moderate" tornado warning for 2 million people in cities south and east of Chicago, including Joliet, Peoria and Bloomington. A marginal risk extends all the way down to Texas and Tennessee.

A tornado emergency was declared in Knox, Indiana, on Tuesday, with the National Weather Service telling residents, "This is a life-threatening situation. Seek shelter now!"

On Tuesday, the parent thunderstorm that produced tornadoes in northern Illinois and northern Indiana persisted for over 7 hours, along a 200-mile path. According to the National Weather Service, there were eight reports of tornadoes between the two states on Tuesday, and two in Texas.

An elderly couple from Lake Village, Indiana, was killed in one of the tornadoes on Tuesday night, officials said on Wednesday. Several others were hospitalized from the storms, officials added.

Many areas were also hit by strong storms and heavy rain, with strong winds and hail the size of golf balls in the Chicago region. Flood warnings are in place along rivers in Illinois and Indiana.

Much of Indiana, northern Kentucky and western Ohio — including in Indianapolis, Evansville, Louisville and Cincinnati — are under a tornado watch until 12 p.m. ET. Approximately 67 million people are under the threat of severe storms from northern Pennsylvania down to the Gulf Coast.

More than 12,000 energy customers were without power across the Midwest and 23,000 across the Great Lakes region on Wednesday morning, according to PowerOutage.us.

NBC Chicagoreported that there was significant but, so far unquantified, damage across northern Illinois and northwest Indiana, including to homes, other buildings and roads.

Tornadoes Leave Wreckage Behind In Midwest (Michael Hickey / Getty Images)

Kankakee County, south of Chicago, declared a state of emergency and said local officials and sheriff's deputies were carrying out search and rescue efforts, as well as damage assessments. There have been no confirmed reports of deaths so far.

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A house in the village of Aroma Park had its roof partially blown off and its walls collapsed, NBC Chicago reported. The local school district is shut Wednesday.

The resident, who gave his name as Bob,told NBC Chicagothat the storm "started getting louder and I started hearing stuff breaking and caving in and pretty soon my kitchen fell on top of me from upstairs."

"Everything caved in, the fridge and everything. Luckily, I was in, like, a hole, so I didn't get hurt at all — I was just trapped," he said. Neighbors came to rescue him.

Rob Churchill, the chief of the Lake Township Fire Department, said in a video posted to Facebook that multiple homes in Lake Village, Indiana, were destroyed when the town took a "direct hit" from a tornado. People forced from their homes were being sheltered in a local school. "It's going to be a long night," he added.

In the same video, while standing in front of what appeared to be a destroyed home, Newton County Sheriff Shannon Cothran said, "Please do not come here. Do not try to help right now."

Separately, Cothran told reporters that "injuries so far have been reported as being minor, but the home damage is pretty significant."

The midweek threat of storms and tornadoes makes this the most "widespread and impactful severe weather outbreak so far this year," according to AccuWeather Senior Meteorologist Courtney Travis.

"The overlap of strong winds aloft, abundant moisture from the Gulf and sharp temperature contrasts creates an environment supportive of tornadoes, damaging wind gusts and large hail," he said.

The weather service told peoplein the Chicago area to reduce their water usage ahead of the storm to prevent flooding and protect the limited local water supply.

Parts of the Northeast also experienced extreme weather this week. On Tuesday, New York City's Central Park broke its daily high temperature record, with the temperature soaring to 80 degrees, melting away remaining snow and ice from a recent blizzard.

Millions face tornado and storm warnings after homes destroyed in Midwest

More than 77 million people from the Midwest to the southern Plains were under some form of tornado warning on Wednesday ...
Raiders say Ravens have 'backed out of our trade agreement for Maxx Crosby,' who reportedly failed physical

The Las Vegas Raiders announced Tuesday evening that the "Baltimore Ravens have backed out of our trade agreement for Maxx Crosby."

Yahoo Sports

The Raiders didn't provide further details about the decision, butThe Athletic's Dianna Russini reportedshortly after news broke that Crosby failed his physical. The Raiders will get Crosby back, and the Ravens will get two first-round picks back before this upcoming NFL Draft.

The report didn't go into detail as to why Crosby failed his physical. Crosby played through much of the 2025 season with a left knee injury and eventually cut his season short.He had surgerytorepair the meniscusin his knee in January anddeclared on social mediathat he was "expecting 200% recovery."

The Ravens had not released a statement addressing the situation at the time.

Seismic impact for Raiders, Ravens

The reversal of the trade nullifies one of the biggest moves of the NFL offseason.

The Raiders are rebuilding in anticipation of selecting Indiana quarterback Fernando Mendoza with the No. 1 pick in the upcoming draft. They've made multiple significant roster moves since the start of the NFL's free-agency tampering period Monday to facilitate that rebuild.

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The Maxx Crosby trade between the Raiders and Ravens is off.

Prior to free agency,they traded Crosby to the Ravensfor first-round selections in the 2026 and 2027 drafts in another move with their eyes on the future.

The Ravens, meanwhile, acquired a five-time Pro Bowler and two-time All-Pro in Crosby who's one of the NFL's best pass rushers. Baltimore is built to win now around Lamar Jackson and was willing to part with significant draft capital to facilitate the trade.

It was a deal that made sense for both sides. And now the trade is off.

Raiders now in salary cap bind?

In addition to the dramatic direct consequences of the reversal of the trade on the field for both teams, the news has the potential to create significant salary-cap problems for the Raiders. Crosby is due $30 million this season, and his contract will count fora $35.8 million salary-cap hit.

The Raiders have been among the NFL's biggest spendersat the start of free agencyunder the presumption that that cap hit was off their books. Now it's back.

Crosby, 28, is an eight-year NFL veteran. He's recorded 10-plus sacks in four of his seven seasons and has never recorded fewer than seven while averaging 9.9 sacks per season. He's made the Pro Bowl in each of the past five seasons.

Raiders say Ravens have 'backed out of our trade agreement for Maxx Crosby,' who reportedly failed physical

The Las Vegas Raiders announced Tuesday evening that the "Baltimore Ravens have backed out of our trade agreement...

 

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