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Nov. 2, 2025, 7:28 PM ESTBy Andrew GreifOne of the seemingly few bankable results early in this NFL season was the Detroit Lions scoring at least 30 points. They did it in four straight wins to start 4-1 and place themselves in the conversation of Super Bowl contenders.Yet the Lions have failed to exceed that total in each of their last three games, including Sunday’s 27-24 loss to Minnesota. The NFL’s best offense propelled the Indianapolis Colts to a 7-1 start. Then, on Sunday, they turned the ball over six times — more than their total from the previous eight games combined — in a stunning loss to the Pittsburgh Steelers.And the Green Bay Packers, who had re-asserted themselves as Super Bowl contenders during a 5-1-1 start? Naturally, they suffered their season’s first home loss on Sunday to a middling Carolina Panthers team.What connects those three results is the notion that at the season’s halfway mark, there appears to be a paucity of pigskin dominance across a league where teams toggle between looking superb and sliding, varying on the week.Entering this week, ESPN’s Football Power Index projected the Indianapolis Colts to finish with the highest win total in the league, at 12.2. How low is that? The last time 12 wins was enough to lead the league was 2014.In another sign of the parity that has led to many good teams, but no dominant leader, 12 teams entered Week 9 with positive expected-points-added ratings on both offense and defense. Through the same point last year, there were nine such teams; the season before, seven.One potential factor is the 2024 introduction of the “dynamic kickoff” that became permanent before this season. The rule change incentivizes the kicking team to kick a playable ball. Balls kicked into the end zone result in the offensive team taking over at their own 35-yard line, a yardage that gives offenses a sizable head start on their ensuing drive. Field-goal range is now only a few passes away. Facing often shorter fields, offenses in 2025 are averaging 328.9 yards per game, the lowest league average since 2008, yet are scoring 2.14 points per drive, the second-highest in NFL history. In Green Bay’s case, Sunday’s loss — to a Panthers team coming off a 31-point loss — wasn’t one to simply shrug off as a bad day. Star tight end Tucker Kraft was carted off with what was called a knee injury that Packers coach Matt LaFleur said “doesn’t look good.” In Detroit, the Lions gained more yards, completed all three four-down conversions and held the ball three minutes longer yet lost to the Vikings by committing more turnovers and converting fewer red-zone opportunities into points.”It’s probably one of the worst games we’ve played in a really long time,” Lions coach Dan Campbell said.More from SportsDodgers win Game 7 in extra-inning thriller to claim second straight World Series titleAn NFL kicker just hit a 68-yard field goal. Yes, you read that right.The Bears and Bengals traded collapses and comebacks in the wildest game of the NFL seasonBut the most baffling performance by a team previously sitting at or near the top of a conference was Indianapolis. Quarterback Daniel Jones had resurrected his career with the Colts by leading the team to its most points through eight games since 1964. The Colts had turned the ball over just four times in eight games, only for Jones to personally throw three interceptions and lose two fumbles against the Steelers alone. Their record, to this point, had largely been built on beating teams with losing records. The season’s final half, then, will be spent learning whether the Colts are the rare, dominant team they appeared for two months, or simply one of several good ones.Andrew GreifAndrew Greif is a sports reporter for NBC News Digital. 

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At the NFL season’s halfway mark, there appears to be a paucity of pigskin dominance across a league where teams toggle between looking superb and sliding, varying on the week.



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Nov. 2, 2025, 6:53 PM ESTBy Rohan NadkarniThe Chicago Bears and Cincinnati Bengals played one of the most thrilling games of the NFL season Sunday, a rollercoaster ride that ended with a 47-42 win for the Bears. Joe Flacco threw for 470 yards and four touchdowns in the loss, while Caleb Williams threw for 280 yards and three scores. The teams combined for 31 points in a thrilling fourth quarter — including 28 in the final five minutes. The chaos began with less than six minutes to go. The Bears were leading 34-27 when the Bengals lined up for a 54-yard field goal, only for Evan McPherson to miss the kick short.Two plays later, Chicago wide receiver D.J. Moore was ruled out at the 1-yard line on a running play, but Cincinnati challenged to see if Moore fumbled out of the endzone for a touchback. The Bengals technically won the challenge, but it backfired: The play was overturned to a touchdown, giving the Bears a 41-27 lead.On Cincinnati’s next drive, Flacco brought the offense all the way to the way to the 5-yard line before he was picked off by a diving Tremaine Edmunds, who ran the ball all the way back for a pick-six. Upon review however, Edmunds was ruled down by contact, taking the touchdown off the board.Following the interception, the Bears had a two-score lead with two minutes and 42 seconds to go — a 99.6% win probability, per ESPN. But Chicago went three-and-out in only 27 seconds, giving the Bengals the ball back quickly. Flacco needed only four plays to go 55 yards and find Noah Fant for a 23-yard touchdown. After the Fant score, Cincinnati also converted a two-point conversion to cut the lead to 41-35. After the 2-pointer, the Bengals miraculously recovered an onside kick. The ball didn’t travel 10 yards, but it touched the foot of a Bears player, allowing Cincinnati to pounce on the kick.This time, Flacco drove down the field in six plays, finding Andrei Iosavas for the go-ahead touchdown with only 54 seconds to go.Chicago’s next drive started poorly. Williams threw back-to-back incompletions before finally scrambling for a first on 3rd-and-10, causing the Bears to use their final timeout.That set up a 1st-and-10 for Chicago on its own 42 with 25 seconds to go. On that play, Williams fired a strike to tight end Colston Loveland over the middle of the field. Loveland somehow escaped the grasp of two Bengals, and then outran the rest of the defense for a 58-yard touchdown.Cincinnati had one last possession, but its magic finally ran out when Flacco was intercepted on a Hail Mary attempt on the game’s final play. It was a true up-and-down fourth quarter for the Bears. Their win probability peaked at 99.7% and valleyed at 14.1% — an 85.6% swing. Ultimately, Chicago hung on to improve to 5-3, while the Bengals fell to 3-6. Rohan NadkarniRohan Nadkarni is a sports reporter for NBC News. 
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Nov. 13, 2025, 4:50 PM ESTBy Jonathan Dienst, Tom Winter and Dareh GregorianFederal investigators are searching for a “disgruntled” man they say showed up at acting New Jersey U.S. Attorney Alina Habba’s office building with a baseball bat, two sources familiar with the matter said.The unidentified man was carrying a bat when arrived outside the Peter Rodino Federal Building in Newark on Wednesday night, the two sources said. The man was not allowed entry.He returned later without the bat and was allowed in after going through a security screening, the sources said.A senior official familiar with the incident said an early review shows the man went upstairs to the U.S. attorney’s office and told the receptionist, who was behind secure glass, that he was there to speak to Habba.He was told he did not have an appointment and waited in the foyer area for a short time before he stormed out into the public hallway and tore down two pictures that were hanging, the official said.He then fled the building.The official said the man never got into the actual prosecutors’ offices, which are behind a locked buzzer door. Law enforcement is reviewing security camera footage to try to identify him, the official said.In a post on X, Habba said Thursday, “I will not be intimidated by radical lunatics for doing my job.”“Thankfully, Alina is ok,” Attorney General Pam Bondi wrote in a pair of posts on X.“We will find this person, and the individual will be brought to justice,” the post said, adding, “Any violence or threats of violence against any federal officer will not be tolerated. Period.”Trump nominated Habba, formerly his personal lawyer, in March to serve as acting U.S. attorney in New Jersey, a position with a 120-day limit. The president nominated her in July to serve in the role permanently after her term expired but a federal judge ruled in August that the appointment was unlawful. The judge paused his decision while the appeals process plays out, so she has remained in the role.Jonathan DienstJonathan Dienst is chief justice contributor for NBC News and chief investigative reporter for WNBC-TV in New York.Tom WinterTom Winter is NBC’s National Law Enforcement and Intelligence Correspondent. Dareh GregorianDareh Gregorian is a politics reporter for NBC News.
October 21, 2025
Savewith a NBCUniversal ProfileCreate your free profile or log in to save this articleOct. 20, 2025, 4:57 PM EDTBy Andrew GreifWhen the 2025-26 NBA season returns Tuesday, some things will not have changed in years.Though Golden State Warriors guard Steph Curry is now 37, and the Los Angeles Lakers’ LeBron James 40 (and will begin the season sidelined by injury), the two superstars remain undisputed headliners a decade after the first of their four consecutive meetings in the NBA Finals. The sheer wattage of their stardom has barely dimmed, and it’s why their teams will meet in one of Tuesday’s opening-night matchups.But the other opening-night tipoff will take place in Oklahoma City, where the Thunder will receive the championship rings they earned by winning Game 7 of June’s NBA Finals over Indiana. Though the league’s old guard, led by Curry and James, remains formidable, the road to the championship trophy now runs through the uber-young Thunder, who spent the offseason signing their young core of stars to long-term deals. Haven’t paid attention to the NBA since the Thunder’s victory parade cruised through Oklahoma City in mid-June? Here’s everything you may have missed to get you up to speed.Who are the title contenders?Recent history suggests the Thunder will not be lifting the trophy again next June: The league hasn’t crowned a repeat champion in seven seasons, with Golden State (2017-18) the last to repeat. Yet the Thunder have an extremely compelling case for being prepared to break that streak. They return every consequential member of their rotation from last season’s playoff roster, including Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, the reigning most valuable player. That team won 68 games even though injuries sidelined big men Chet Holmgren and Isaiah Hartenstein for about half a season each. This year, they start healthy.By trading for Phoenix’s Kevin Durant in June, Houston announced its intention to challenge Oklahoma City in the Western Conference. The Rockets remain a contender, but their case took a hit in the offseason after point guard Fred VanVleet suffered a knee injury that could sideline him the entire season.Denver, the 2023 champion, has superstar Nikola Jokic in his prime and has surrounded the virtuosic big man with the deepest roster in years. With so much uncertainty as to whether Philadelphia’s star pairing of Joel Embiid and Paul George can stay healthy, and Boston superstar Jayson Tatum set to miss at least a significant chunk of the season after tearing an Achilles tendon in May, the New York Knicks and Cleveland Cavaliers enter as the East’s top contenders. The Knicks have a new coach in Mike Brown, who will be tasked with finding a lineup that truly works. The Cavaliers won 64 games last season to earn the top seed in the East, but injuries contributed to their exit in just the second round of the playoffs. The team that knocked them out, the Indiana Pacers, is widely expected to take a step back after star guard Tyrese Haliburton tore his Achilles tendon during the finals.Key storylinesStart in Los Angeles, where Luka Doncic is beginning his first full season with the Lakers following last season’s shocking trade from Dallas. The Lakers are at a transition point in that their future will now be planned around the 26-year-old Doncic’s timeline and prime years and not James, for the first time since he joined the team in 2018. The all-time scoring leader, and an NBA champion with three different franchises, James has done everything possible in his career. But his 23rd season will mark something new, too — the first time he will be playing on an expiring contract. Where that leaves James and the Lakers at the trade deadline, or offseason, remains the subject of intense speculation. In Dallas the first overall pick of June’s draft, Cooper Flagg, will enter the season under high expectations. The 6-foot-9 Flagg averaged 19.2 points, 7.5 rebounds and 4.2 assists in his lone season at Duke while winning national honors for player of the year, and since entering the NBA has added a goatee and more ballhandling responsibilities, because Dallas will be without injured point guard Kyrie Irving until likely the late winter. Flagg won’t turn 19 until Dec. 21. Another former No. 1 pick in Texas, Victor Wembanyama, has been cleared to play again after experiencing blood clots last season. Wembanyama, 21, enters his fourth season in San Antonio under rising expectations. The NBA’s longest-tenured coach, Gregg Popovich, has moved into a front-office role, with former Spurs assistant Mitch Johnson his successor. Johnson knows Wembanyama is a one-man top-five defense, but how will the offense look as it blends Wembanyama, rookie Dylan Harper and veteran guard De’Aaron Fox, once Fox returns from an injury? Injuries in Boston and Indiana and injury rehabilitation in Philadelphia have put the Knicks and Cavaliers seemingly on a glide course to the playoffs in the East, but Detroit, Atlanta and Orlando, which pulled off a huge offseason trade for Memphis sharpshooter Desmond Bane, are seen as up-and-coming threats potentially ready for a breakthrough. But the biggest story in the East centers on Milwaukee, where the Bucks are desperately trying to ensure that star Giannis Antetokounmpo wants to remain with the franchise. League insiders don’t consider an Antetokounmpo trade imminent, but they do consider such a move as having the type of domino effect that could reshape the league and its contenders.New rulePlayers that fire a “heave” at the end of a quarter won’t see their shooting percentage penalized. A new rule this season changes how some statistics are kept. Plays that begin in the backcourt and result in a shot taken in the final three seconds of the first three quarters, from at least 36 feet away, will count as a team attempt, not an individual shot. Investigation dramaIn an offseason report by the podcast “Pablo Torre Finds Out,” former employees of a green-bank startup called Aspiration claimed the company’s lucrative but previously undisclosed endorsement deal with Los Angeles Clippers star Kawhi Leonard was brokered as a means for the team to compensate Leonard while circumventing the league’s salary cap — one of the NBA’s most fiercely protected rules. The NBA has hired a law firm to investigation the claims, which if proven could result in a suspension of team owner Steve Ballmer, a team fine and even the voiding of Leonard’s contract. The additional layer to the drama is that the NBA’s All-Star game will be hosted as Ballmer’s year-old arena, Intuit Dome, in February. More from SportsInside the Nuggets’ plan to build around the NBA’s best playerThe New York Giants had a once-in-a-generation collapse. Here’s how it happened.Sunday Night Football: Christian McCaffrey’s big night powers 49ers to 20-10 victoryNBA has its eyes abroadNBA commissioner Adam Silver and his top deputy held meetings this summer in London and Paris aimed at bringing the league’s European expansion plans closer to reality. The NBA has been working on a model that would include 14-16 teams, the majority of which would be permanent clubs in cities like London, Paris and Berlin. Teams could also win their way into, and lose their way out of, the league’s remaining spots, which borrows from the relegation and promotion model that is central to European soccer leagues. The league’s meetings this summer were with private equity firms, political leaders including U.K. Prime Minster Keir Starmer and clubs such as Turkey’s Galatasaray, Germany’s Alba Berlin, and Spain’s Real Madrid. How to watch games has changedNew 11-year media rights deals signed between the NBA and broadcast partners NBC, ABC/ESPN and Amazon kick in this season, changing how games will be watched.For NBC, it’s the first time NBA games will air on the network since 2002. NBC and its streaming platform, Peacock, will air 100 regular-season games, NBA All-Star Weekend and playoff games, as well. Peacock will host games on Monday, and NBC and Peacock both will air games on Tuesday. In addition, starting at midseason, NBC/Peacock will air games Sunday night. Only ESPN will carry games on Wednesdays. Starting at midseason ESPN and ABC will also carry night games on Fridays and Saturdays and Sunday afternoon matchups.The third broadcast partner is a new one: Amazon Prime. It will carry games on Friday, and starting at midseason will also air games Thursdays and Saturday afternoon.The biggest change as a result of the new broadcast deals is that for the first time since 1984, Turner Sports and its cable network, TNT, will no longer host games. But TNT’s uber-popular studio show, “Inside the NBA,” will nonetheless live on at ESPN.Andrew GreifAndrew Greif is a sports reporter for NBC News Digital. 
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