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Best DFS picks for Eagles at Chargers in Week 14

Best DFS picks for Eagles at Chargers in Week 14

Week 14 of the 2025 NFL season wraps up tonight with a showdown featuring the Philadelphia Eagles visiting the Los Angeles Chargers. Philadelphia enters as a 2.5-point road favorite, with an over/under of 41.5. The Eagles have dropped two straight and are fighting to stay in contention for the No. 1 seed in the NFC. Meanwhile, the Chargers will try to stay within two games of the Broncos for first place in the AFC West.

Below, we will take a look at the best DFS plays for this Monday night showdown.

Jalen Hurts, QB, Philadelphia Eagles (FLEX $13,200, CPT $19,800)

The Eagles offense was once again inconsistent in their loss to the Bears on Black Friday, but that didn’t stop Hurts from once again presenting himself as quality option at QB. The Super Bowl 59 MVP posted 230 passing yards, 31 rushing yards, and two touchdowns and would’ve racked up more than 17.3 fantasy points for the week if not for two second-half turnovers that ended up costing Philly late.

Hurts is still averaging 21 FP per game in DFS and his abilities as a runner always give him a boost as his eight rushing touchdowns only trails Josh Allen among QB scores on the ground. His 9.6 ADOT actually leads all starting quarterbacks at the conclusion of Week 14 and it makes sense when you have big-play weapons like A.J. Brown and DeVonta Smith to air it out to. He’ll have a challenge on his hands against a Chargers defense that have put the clamps on opposing QB’s, but he should be fine as long as he limits turnovers tonight.

A.J. Brown, WR, Philadelphia Eagles (FLEX $11,400, CPT $17,100)

Speaking of Brown, he’s at least been getting the ball more as of late and he had a season-best performance against the Bears on Black Friday, posting 10 receptions for 132 receiving yards and two late touchdowns in the 24-15 loss. It’s safe to say that all of his frustrations were heard loud and clear as he has combined for 33 targets over their last three games. Huh, actually getting the ball to your multi-time All-Pro receiver. What a concept!

Brown is averaging 13.3 FP per game in DFS and those numbers are bound to shoot up if he keeps at the pace he’s been on over the past few weeks. The Chargers actually rank 19th in DVOA vs. WR1’s this season, so there’s an opportunity here for the veteran to do some damage to their secondary tonight.

Kimani Vidal, RB, Los Angeles Chargers (FLEX $8,800, CPT $13,200)

Vidal had one of his better outings of the season in their win over the Raiders last Sunday, taking 25 carries for 126 rushing yards and a touchdown on the ground. It marked the third 100+ rushing day for the second-year product out of Troy and those numbers were good enough to allow him to finish as a top-five fantasy running back in all scoring formats for the week.

The big news for the Chargers in this game is the return of running back Omarion Hampton, who has been out since Week 5 with an ankle injury. Vidal has done a great job holding down the fort in his absence and it remains to be seen if he sees a significant drop in snaps with the first-round rookie back in action. I’d imagine they’d try to ease the rookie back in, still opening the door for Vidal to get plenty of reps for tonight. That makes him a sneaky captain option with value for this showdown.

Cameron Dicker, K, Los Angeles Chargers (FLEX $6,200, CPT $9,300)

Dicker was once again a reliable leg in the Chargers’ 31-14 victory over the Raiders last week, booting a successful 56-yarder along with four PAT’s in the big divisional win. The fourth-year special teamer is one of just four kickers that is averaging at least 10 fantasy points per game at the moment and he’s been extremely trustworthy with just two misses for the entire season. Need a solid source of points for the lineup? Just turn to Dicker.

Tre’ Harris, WR, Los Angeles Chargers (FLEX $5,200, CPT $7,800)

The Chargers have a plethora of pass-catching weapons that they can lean on and Harris has been serviceable in spots throughout the season. The rookie caught three of four targets for 30 receiving yards in last week’s win over the Raiders and it was notably the second straight game where he was on the field for at least 50% of their offensive snaps. There will be a week where the Ole Miss product goes off as a Flex option and I think he’d be worth taking a flier on for tonight.

Tank Bigsby, RB, Philadelphia Eagles (FLEX $3,600, CPT $5,400)

Bigsby inexplicably received zero touches in their Black Friday loss to the Bears and the lack of a consistent run game is becoming a huge problem for the Eagles late in the season. It wasn’t too long ago that he was running over the Giants for 104 rushing yards on the ground, so we know what he’s capable of when he gets consistent opportunities to tote the rock out of the backfield. In the event that this does change this evening, he’s a cheap option to take a flier on.

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Yaxel Lendeborg set a personal goal when Michigan started practice at the very beginning of what would become its 2026 national championship season. He wanted to dunk on new teammate Aday Mara.

“I tried a couple times when I first got here, and he ruined my confidence so quickly,” Lendeborg said after Michigan beat UConn in the title game.

Mara had just come over from UCLA after two disappointing seasons where he could barely get off the bench, and his size made him an inviting target for a poster. Standing 7’3 with a reported 7’7 wingspan, the Spanish big man had measurables few humans in the world could match. Realizing that Mara shouldn’t be challenged at the rim was only one part of the process. As Michigan brought in four new starters via the transfer portal, there was a steep learning curve for everyone when it came to how to maximize their gigantic center.

“He’s definitely the most unique big man I’ve ever played with,” Elliott Cadeau told SB Nation ahead of the national championship game. “It took some time for us to get some chemistry. We talk about the ball screen literally every practice. We’re both really high-IQ players. When teams play us two-on-two, we feel like we can get whatever we want.”

The entire country knows what Mara is capable of now after the Wolverines completed one of the most dominant national championship runs of the last 30 years. There were plenty of key takeaways from how Michigan built its title team, but the biggest one is size. Lendeborg, Mara, and Morez Johnson all primarily played center at their previous schools, but shared the court at Michigan with resounding success. Each of them played a part in making it work: Lendeborg flushed out his perimeter skill in an attempt to appeal to NBA scouts, Johnson showed the ability to defend all of the floor and started taking threes, and Mara proved he could play at the top of the key offensively due to his innate passing touch.

Michigan head coach Dusty May sold his stars on his vision of the three-big front line during the offseason recruiting process, but Mara admitted he wasn’t always sold he would be such a focal point. He had reason to be skeptical. When he entered UCLA, SB Nation projected Mara as a one-and-one done top-10 pick for the 2024 draft after standout showings in FIBA tournaments for Spain. Instead, he quickly lost his starting spot as a freshman and continued to have a small role off the bench as a sophomore. Head coach Mick Cronin often cited conditioning and matchup issues for why he didn’t get more playing time.

Cronin looks like a fool now, because Mara was legitimately one of the most impactful big men in college basketball. That’s just the start of it. After breaking into NBA mock drafts again midway through the season as a late first-round pick, Mara’s exceptional NCAA tournament run now has him positioned to be a lottery selection. SB Nation had him projected as the No. 9 overall pick to the Chicago Bulls in our mock draft after March Madness was over. He’s also in lottery position on ESPN’s big board.

Mara was perhaps the single biggest breakout star of March Madness this year, and his continued climb up the 2026 NBA Draft board is next. He’ll have a few things working in his favor when he decides to make the jump to the next level.

Mara has shooting touch even if he doesn’t yet have range

Mara’s scoring efficiency inside was absurd all season: he shot 68 percent on two-pointers, 81 percent at the rim, and 41.1 percent on non-rim twos. His two-point percentage remained just about the same even against top-100 and top-50 competition, and even if you take away his dunks (he had 81 of them on the year), he still shot 72 percent at the rim.

His comfort in the post continued to grow as the season went on. By the time March Madness started, Mara was making a fool out of even very good opposing centers with his size and touch.

Mara is going to be one of the tallest and longest player in the NBA from the day he’s drafted. Victor Wembanyama and Zach Edey are just about the only players who can top him in those departments. He may have issues establishing post position against NBA bigs with a higher center of gravity, but his ability to hit baby hooks and flip shots gives him some real scoring utility even if it won’t be the best part of his game.

One of the biggest red flags in Mara’s statistical profile is his terrible free throw percentage. He shot 56.4 percent from the free throw line this season, and only 58.5 percent over his college career on 241 attempts. Free throw percentage is a proxy for touch, and at first glance it seems like Mara doesn’t have it.

It’s worth noting that Mara got consistently better from the free throw stripe all year. Over his last 20 games this season, he shot 74 percent from the foul line by hitting 37-of-50 freebies. That’s encouraging growth, and it comes back to the coaching he received at Michigan. Mara said he was hitting his free throws well in practice, but missing them in games. May started making Mara take high-pressure free throws to end practices, and encouraged him by showing there was nothing wrong with his form. Eventually, they started to drop when it really mattered.

Will Mara be able to shoot threes eventually? He only went 3-for-10 on the year, but he told me he believes it will be part of his skill set in time. He was just doing what his team needed.

“I know it’s in my game,” Mara told SB Nation. “I know I don’t shoot a lot. Sometimes I’m rushing, but I know it’s in my game. I have confidence, and if I get it again, I will shoot it again.”

Can Mara maintain his late season free throw touch? Can the three-ball be a real part of his game? Those are two of the biggest questions related to his upside at the next level. Even if the threes never come, he has a few other ways to impact the game as a scorer.

Mara is going to be a plus as an offensive rebounder, which will work in his favor as offensive rebounding takes on more emphasis in the battle for the possession game at the NBA level. He’s also a big target as a roller, and his soft hands allow him to catch the ball on the move. He’s going to be a dominant lob threat with a massive catch radius. Mara probably won’t ever be a 20-point-per-game scorer at the NBA, but his efficiency on the interior, ability to generate extra possessions on the glass, and massive length advantage gives him some bankable scoring ability as he goes on his career.

Mara’s passing ability is special

The best sight in college basketball this season was Mara’s outlet passing ability. He always has his eyes up after grabbing a rebound, and he proved he can throw full court dimes to get his team an easy two points. He did it again:

Transition offense is far more efficient than halfcourt offense at every level of the game. Mara’s ability to throw deep passes with pinpoint accuracy is basically a cheat code for igniting transition opportunities, and it should be a big part of his game at the next level.

Mara doesn’t just throw outlets. He’s an extremely creative passer with behind-the-back looks and between-the-legs drop-offs in his bag:

He’ll be a weapon in the short roll, too.

There are some moments where it feels like Mara holds onto the ball too long before making a pass or deciding to attack. Quicker processing will be essential to maximize his ability at the next level. It’s easy to believe that should improve with more reps for a player who never had a real role in his college career before this season. Either way, Mara is one of the best passers in the country regardless of size, and the fact that he’s doing it at 7’3 gives him unique utility as he goes on in his career.

Mara’s rim protection is elite, but there are other defensive questions

Mara’s length translates most obviously on the defensive end. He doesn’t have great coverage versatility, but he’s effective in deep drop, and his length gives him an ability to challenge shots and close windows on pull-up shooters when they bail out of their drive before getting to the rim.

Mara finished the year with a 11.9 percent block rate. Good luck challenging him at the rim. If a 23-year-old tank like Lendeborg couldn’t get Mara in practice, most NBA players won’t be able to, either.

UConn’s Tarris Reed was probably the second-best player in the NCAA tournament after Lendeborg. He had no answers for Mara when he met him in the national championship game. Mara’s length disrupted everything Reed was trying to do inside, and eventually you could see he was getting psyched out of even attempting looks he would normally drain.

That’s what Mara’s length and shot-blocking functionally provides on the court: he makes everyone second-guess if they can really get the shot off. Being tentative for even a split second can be a death wish in the NBA, and Mara makes it happen regularly to his opponents.

Mara’s perimeter defense is more of a work in progress. He can be attacked on switches by quicker guards who can separate from him with their first and second steps. Showing an ability to defend the stretch bigs all over the NBA will be vital. Can Mara recover to the perimeter on pick-and-pop attempts? Can he stay strong on his feet when a ball handler attacks a closeout? There were encouraging moments on the tape, but also plenty of instances where he got caught flat footed.

I asked Mara about his defending on the perimeter after Michigan’s Sweet 16 win over Alabama, and here’s what he told me.

“I know I’m capable of playing like a good defense outside,” Mara told SB Nation. “I think when I was against Purdue (in the Big Ten tournament championship game), I had like a terrible game there defensively. But I know that I’m able to to play defense and switch onto guards or whoever has the ball outside. Sometimes I go to a game I’m not ready to play outside defense, but I think like if I’m ready, if I’m with a good mindset and with a high intensity level, I can do it for sure.”

Mara is a team player who should be a welcome presence in any locker room

I spoke with Mara in the post-game locker room after Michigan beat Wisconsin in the Big Ten tournament on March 14. He had a phenomenal game that afternoon, finishing with 16 points, five blocks, eight rebounds. I asked him how he’s developed more comfort as a scorer as the season has gone on, but he immediately deflected the credit.

“It doesn’t matter if I score 20 or if I score four,” Mara told me. “It’s just about helping the team win. The last two games I’ve been able to help the team by scoring. But maybe tomorrow I score 0 points and I get five blocks, you know, it will be all right.”

I covered Michigan throughout March Madness with a credential at the Big Ten tournament, Sweet 16, Final Four, and national championship game. Mara was generous and thoughtful in his media availability the entire time, speaking to reporters for long stretches in his second language. He told me getting better at English was one of his top priorities when he came to the U.S. upon committing to UCLA, and he showed how much he’s grown in that area too throughout March Madness.

At one point, I asked Mara why he thought Michigan’s three big look worked so well together.

“We are not selfish,” he said. “We play for each other. If I see Morez inside the paint, I’m going to stay out. So it’s not like I want to get here, and if Morez is here, I’m gonna get here anyways. We’re trying to do, I don’t know, different things, like move the ball.

“Today it was me. Maybe tomorrow it is going to be Morez, and the next day it’s going to be someone else. I think that’s what make us play so well together.”

As the NBA moves to more double-big looks, Mara’s ability to play with other bigs will be an essential part of his appeal. Even without a proven jump shot, he knows how to space the floor by leveraging his size and skills to help out his teammates. He doesn’t care about getting the glory.

Size is in at every level of basketball. Length is one of the most essential traits in the sport. Almost no one alive is longer than Mara, and he also brings unique skills and a positive attitude to every game.

A year ago, Mara felt like one of the most underwhelming players in America as he sat glued to Mick Cronin’s bench. Dusty May believed in him and brought out the best in his abilities. His incredible March Madness run showed the NBA he deserves lottery consideration. Given his rapid development throughout the season, it feels like this is only the start as Mara continues to grow into his body and his game.

Aday Mara’s NBA mock draft stock is rising

Here’s the lottery for the NBA mock draft we published after March Madness ended. Mara is already in the top-10. Don’t be surprised if he keeps rising.

Pick

Team

Player

Position

School

Age

1Washington WizardsCameron BoozerForwardDukeFreshman
2Indiana PacersDarryn PetersonGuardKansasFreshman
3Brooklyn NetsAJ DybantsaWingBYUFreshman
4Utah JazzCaleb WilsonForwardNorth CarolinaFreshman
5Sacramento KingsDarius AcuffGuardArkansasFreshman
6Atlanta Hawks (via Pelicans)Keaton WaglerGuardIllinoisFreshman
7Memphis GrizzliesKingston FlemingsGuardHoustonFreshman
8Dallas MavericksMikel Brown Jr.GuardLouisvilleFreshman
9Chicago BullsAday MaraCenterMichiganJunior
10Milwaukee BucksBrayden BurriesGuardArizonaFreshman
11Golden State WarriorsYaxel LendeborgForwardMichiganSenior
12Portland Trail BlazersNate AmentWingTennesseeFreshman
13Miami HeatKarim LopezForwardNZ BreakersBorn 2007
14Memphis Grizzlies (via Magic)Jayden QuaintanceCenter/ForwardKentuckySophomore
#Aday #Mara #played #lottery #latest #NBA #mock #draft">How Aday Mara played his way into the lottery of our latest NBA mock draft  Yaxel Lendeborg set a personal goal when Michigan started practice at the very beginning of what would become its 2026 national championship season. He wanted to dunk on new teammate Aday Mara.“I tried a couple times when I first got here, and he ruined my confidence so quickly,” Lendeborg said after Michigan beat UConn in the title game.Mara had just come over from UCLA after two disappointing seasons where he could barely get off the bench, and his size made him an inviting target for a poster. Standing 7’3 with a reported 7’7 wingspan, the Spanish big man had measurables few humans in the world could match. Realizing that Mara shouldn’t be challenged at the rim was only one part of the process. As Michigan brought in four new starters via the transfer portal, there was a steep learning curve for everyone when it came to how to maximize their gigantic center.“He’s definitely the most unique big man I’ve ever played with,” Elliott Cadeau told SB Nation ahead of the national championship game. “It took some time for us to get some chemistry. We talk about the ball screen literally every practice. We’re both really high-IQ players. When teams play us two-on-two, we feel like we can get whatever we want.”The entire country knows what Mara is capable of now after the Wolverines completed one of the most dominant national championship runs of the last 30 years. There were plenty of key takeaways from how Michigan built its title team, but the biggest one is size. Lendeborg, Mara, and Morez Johnson all primarily played center at their previous schools, but shared the court at Michigan with resounding success. Each of them played a part in making it work: Lendeborg flushed out his perimeter skill in an attempt to appeal to NBA scouts, Johnson showed the ability to defend all of the floor and started taking threes, and Mara proved he could play at the top of the key offensively due to his innate passing touch.Michigan head coach Dusty May sold his stars on his vision of the three-big front line during the offseason recruiting process, but Mara admitted he wasn’t always sold he would be such a focal point. He had reason to be skeptical. When he entered UCLA, SB Nation projected Mara as a one-and-one done top-10 pick for the 2024 draft after standout showings in FIBA tournaments for Spain. Instead, he quickly lost his starting spot as a freshman and continued to have a small role off the bench as a sophomore. Head coach Mick Cronin often cited conditioning and matchup issues for why he didn’t get more playing time.Cronin looks like a fool now, because Mara was legitimately one of the most impactful big men in college basketball. That’s just the start of it. After breaking into NBA mock drafts again midway through the season as a late first-round pick, Mara’s exceptional NCAA tournament run now has him positioned to be a lottery selection. SB Nation had him projected as the No. 9 overall pick to the Chicago Bulls in our mock draft after March Madness was over. He’s also in lottery position on ESPN’s big board.Mara was perhaps the single biggest breakout star of March Madness this year, and his continued climb up the 2026 NBA Draft board is next. He’ll have a few things working in his favor when he decides to make the jump to the next level.Mara has shooting touch even if he doesn’t yet have rangeMara’s scoring efficiency inside was absurd all season: he shot 68 percent on two-pointers, 81 percent at the rim, and 41.1 percent on non-rim twos. His two-point percentage remained just about the same even against top-100 and top-50 competition, and even if you take away his dunks (he had 81 of them on the year), he still shot 72 percent at the rim.His comfort in the post continued to grow as the season went on. By the time March Madness started, Mara was making a fool out of even very good opposing centers with his size and touch.Mara is going to be one of the tallest and longest player in the NBA from the day he’s drafted. Victor Wembanyama and Zach Edey are just about the only players who can top him in those departments. He may have issues establishing post position against NBA bigs with a higher center of gravity, but his ability to hit baby hooks and flip shots gives him some real scoring utility even if it won’t be the best part of his game.One of the biggest red flags in Mara’s statistical profile is his terrible free throw percentage. He shot 56.4 percent from the free throw line this season, and only 58.5 percent over his college career on 241 attempts. Free throw percentage is a proxy for touch, and at first glance it seems like Mara doesn’t have it.It’s worth noting that Mara got consistently better from the free throw stripe all year. Over his last 20 games this season, he shot 74 percent from the foul line by hitting 37-of-50 freebies. That’s encouraging growth, and it comes back to the coaching he received at Michigan. Mara said he was hitting his free throws well in practice, but missing them in games. May started making Mara take high-pressure free throws to end practices, and encouraged him by showing there was nothing wrong with his form. Eventually, they started to drop when it really mattered.Will Mara be able to shoot threes eventually? He only went 3-for-10 on the year, but he told me he believes it will be part of his skill set in time. He was just doing what his team needed.“I know it’s in my game,” Mara told SB Nation. “I know I don’t shoot a lot. Sometimes I’m rushing, but I know it’s in my game. I have confidence, and if I get it again, I will shoot it again.”Can Mara maintain his late season free throw touch? Can the three-ball be a real part of his game? Those are two of the biggest questions related to his upside at the next level. Even if the threes never come, he has a few other ways to impact the game as a scorer.Mara is going to be a plus as an offensive rebounder, which will work in his favor as offensive rebounding takes on more emphasis in the battle for the possession game at the NBA level. He’s also a big target as a roller, and his soft hands allow him to catch the ball on the move. He’s going to be a dominant lob threat with a massive catch radius. Mara probably won’t ever be a 20-point-per-game scorer at the NBA, but his efficiency on the interior, ability to generate extra possessions on the glass, and massive length advantage gives him some bankable scoring ability as he goes on his career.Mara’s passing ability is specialThe best sight in college basketball this season was Mara’s outlet passing ability. He always has his eyes up after grabbing a rebound, and he proved he can throw full court dimes to get his team an easy two points. He did it again:Transition offense is far more efficient than halfcourt offense at every level of the game. Mara’s ability to throw deep passes with pinpoint accuracy is basically a cheat code for igniting transition opportunities, and it should be a big part of his game at the next level.Mara doesn’t just throw outlets. He’s an extremely creative passer with behind-the-back looks and between-the-legs drop-offs in his bag:He’ll be a weapon in the short roll, too.There are some moments where it feels like Mara holds onto the ball too long before making a pass or deciding to attack. Quicker processing will be essential to maximize his ability at the next level. It’s easy to believe that should improve with more reps for a player who never had a real role in his college career before this season. Either way, Mara is one of the best passers in the country regardless of size, and the fact that he’s doing it at 7’3 gives him unique utility as he goes on in his career.Mara’s rim protection is elite, but there are other defensive questionsMara’s length translates most obviously on the defensive end. He doesn’t have great coverage versatility, but he’s effective in deep drop, and his length gives him an ability to challenge shots and close windows on pull-up shooters when they bail out of their drive before getting to the rim.Mara finished the year with a 11.9 percent block rate. Good luck challenging him at the rim. If a 23-year-old tank like Lendeborg couldn’t get Mara in practice, most NBA players won’t be able to, either.UConn’s Tarris Reed was probably the second-best player in the NCAA tournament after Lendeborg. He had no answers for Mara when he met him in the national championship game. Mara’s length disrupted everything Reed was trying to do inside, and eventually you could see he was getting psyched out of even attempting looks he would normally drain.That’s what Mara’s length and shot-blocking functionally provides on the court: he makes everyone second-guess if they can really get the shot off. Being tentative for even a split second can be a death wish in the NBA, and Mara makes it happen regularly to his opponents.Mara’s perimeter defense is more of a work in progress. He can be attacked on switches by quicker guards who can separate from him with their first and second steps. Showing an ability to defend the stretch bigs all over the NBA will be vital. Can Mara recover to the perimeter on pick-and-pop attempts? Can he stay strong on his feet when a ball handler attacks a closeout? There were encouraging moments on the tape, but also plenty of instances where he got caught flat footed.I asked Mara about his defending on the perimeter after Michigan’s Sweet 16 win over Alabama, and here’s what he told me.“I know I’m capable of playing like a good defense outside,” Mara told SB Nation. “I think when I was against Purdue (in the Big Ten tournament championship game), I had like a terrible game there defensively. But I know that I’m able to to play defense and switch onto guards or whoever has the ball outside. Sometimes I go to a game I’m not ready to play outside defense, but I think like if I’m ready, if I’m with a good mindset and with a high intensity level, I can do it for sure.”Mara is a team player who should be a welcome presence in any locker roomI spoke with Mara in the post-game locker room after Michigan beat Wisconsin in the Big Ten tournament on March 14. He had a phenomenal game that afternoon, finishing with 16 points, five blocks, eight rebounds. I asked him how he’s developed more comfort as a scorer as the season has gone on, but he immediately deflected the credit.“It doesn’t matter if I score 20 or if I score four,” Mara told me. “It’s just about helping the team win. The last two games I’ve been able to help the team by scoring. But maybe tomorrow I score 0 points and I get five blocks, you know, it will be all right.”I covered Michigan throughout March Madness with a credential at the Big Ten tournament, Sweet 16, Final Four, and national championship game. Mara was generous and thoughtful in his media availability the entire time, speaking to reporters for long stretches in his second language. He told me getting better at English was one of his top priorities when he came to the U.S. upon committing to UCLA, and he showed how much he’s grown in that area too throughout March Madness.At one point, I asked Mara why he thought Michigan’s three big look worked so well together.“We are not selfish,” he said. “We play for each other. If I see Morez inside the paint, I’m going to stay out. So it’s not like I want to get here, and if Morez is here, I’m gonna get here anyways. We’re trying to do, I don’t know, different things, like move the ball.“Today it was me. Maybe tomorrow it is going to be Morez, and the next day it’s going to be someone else. I think that’s what make us play so well together.”As the NBA moves to more double-big looks, Mara’s ability to play with other bigs will be an essential part of his appeal. Even without a proven jump shot, he knows how to space the floor by leveraging his size and skills to help out his teammates. He doesn’t care about getting the glory.Size is in at every level of basketball. Length is one of the most essential traits in the sport. Almost no one alive is longer than Mara, and he also brings unique skills and a positive attitude to every game.A year ago, Mara felt like one of the most underwhelming players in America as he sat glued to Mick Cronin’s bench. Dusty May believed in him and brought out the best in his abilities. His incredible March Madness run showed the NBA he deserves lottery consideration. Given his rapid development throughout the season, it feels like this is only the start as Mara continues to grow into his body and his game.Aday Mara’s NBA mock draft stock is risingHere’s the lottery for the NBA mock draft we published after March Madness ended. Mara is already in the top-10. Don’t be surprised if he keeps rising.PickTeamPlayerPositionSchoolAge1Washington WizardsCameron BoozerForwardDukeFreshman2Indiana PacersDarryn PetersonGuardKansasFreshman3Brooklyn NetsAJ DybantsaWingBYUFreshman4Utah JazzCaleb WilsonForwardNorth CarolinaFreshman5Sacramento KingsDarius AcuffGuardArkansasFreshman6Atlanta Hawks (via Pelicans)Keaton WaglerGuardIllinoisFreshman7Memphis GrizzliesKingston FlemingsGuardHoustonFreshman8Dallas MavericksMikel Brown Jr.GuardLouisvilleFreshman9Chicago BullsAday MaraCenterMichiganJunior10Milwaukee BucksBrayden BurriesGuardArizonaFreshman11Golden State WarriorsYaxel LendeborgForwardMichiganSenior12Portland Trail BlazersNate AmentWingTennesseeFreshman13Miami HeatKarim LopezForwardNZ BreakersBorn 200714Memphis Grizzlies (via Magic)Jayden QuaintanceCenter/ForwardKentuckySophomore  #Aday #Mara #played #lottery #latest #NBA #mock #draft

plenty of key takeaways from how Michigan built its title team, but the biggest one is size. Lendeborg, Mara, and Morez Johnson all primarily played center at their previous schools, but shared the court at Michigan with resounding success. Each of them played a part in making it work: Lendeborg flushed out his perimeter skill in an attempt to appeal to NBA scouts, Johnson showed the ability to defend all of the floor and started taking threes, and Mara proved he could play at the top of the key offensively due to his innate passing touch.

Michigan head coach Dusty May sold his stars on his vision of the three-big front line during the offseason recruiting process, but Mara admitted he wasn’t always sold he would be such a focal point. He had reason to be skeptical. When he entered UCLA, SB Nation projected Mara as a one-and-one done top-10 pick for the 2024 draft after standout showings in FIBA tournaments for Spain. Instead, he quickly lost his starting spot as a freshman and continued to have a small role off the bench as a sophomore. Head coach Mick Cronin often cited conditioning and matchup issues for why he didn’t get more playing time.

Cronin looks like a fool now, because Mara was legitimately one of the most impactful big men in college basketball. That’s just the start of it. After breaking into NBA mock drafts again midway through the season as a late first-round pick, Mara’s exceptional NCAA tournament run now has him positioned to be a lottery selection. SB Nation had him projected as the No. 9 overall pick to the Chicago Bulls in our mock draft after March Madness was over. He’s also in lottery position on ESPN’s big board.

Mara was perhaps the single biggest breakout star of March Madness this year, and his continued climb up the 2026 NBA Draft board is next. He’ll have a few things working in his favor when he decides to make the jump to the next level.

Mara has shooting touch even if he doesn’t yet have range

Mara’s scoring efficiency inside was absurd all season: he shot 68 percent on two-pointers, 81 percent at the rim, and 41.1 percent on non-rim twos. His two-point percentage remained just about the same even against top-100 and top-50 competition, and even if you take away his dunks (he had 81 of them on the year), he still shot 72 percent at the rim.

His comfort in the post continued to grow as the season went on. By the time March Madness started, Mara was making a fool out of even very good opposing centers with his size and touch.

Mara is going to be one of the tallest and longest player in the NBA from the day he’s drafted. Victor Wembanyama and Zach Edey are just about the only players who can top him in those departments. He may have issues establishing post position against NBA bigs with a higher center of gravity, but his ability to hit baby hooks and flip shots gives him some real scoring utility even if it won’t be the best part of his game.

One of the biggest red flags in Mara’s statistical profile is his terrible free throw percentage. He shot 56.4 percent from the free throw line this season, and only 58.5 percent over his college career on 241 attempts. Free throw percentage is a proxy for touch, and at first glance it seems like Mara doesn’t have it.

It’s worth noting that Mara got consistently better from the free throw stripe all year. Over his last 20 games this season, he shot 74 percent from the foul line by hitting 37-of-50 freebies. That’s encouraging growth, and it comes back to the coaching he received at Michigan. Mara said he was hitting his free throws well in practice, but missing them in games. May started making Mara take high-pressure free throws to end practices, and encouraged him by showing there was nothing wrong with his form. Eventually, they started to drop when it really mattered.

Will Mara be able to shoot threes eventually? He only went 3-for-10 on the year, but he told me he believes it will be part of his skill set in time. He was just doing what his team needed.

“I know it’s in my game,” Mara told SB Nation. “I know I don’t shoot a lot. Sometimes I’m rushing, but I know it’s in my game. I have confidence, and if I get it again, I will shoot it again.”

Can Mara maintain his late season free throw touch? Can the three-ball be a real part of his game? Those are two of the biggest questions related to his upside at the next level. Even if the threes never come, he has a few other ways to impact the game as a scorer.

Mara is going to be a plus as an offensive rebounder, which will work in his favor as offensive rebounding takes on more emphasis in the battle for the possession game at the NBA level. He’s also a big target as a roller, and his soft hands allow him to catch the ball on the move. He’s going to be a dominant lob threat with a massive catch radius. Mara probably won’t ever be a 20-point-per-game scorer at the NBA, but his efficiency on the interior, ability to generate extra possessions on the glass, and massive length advantage gives him some bankable scoring ability as he goes on his career.

Mara’s passing ability is special

The best sight in college basketball this season was Mara’s outlet passing ability. He always has his eyes up after grabbing a rebound, and he proved he can throw full court dimes to get his team an easy two points. He did it again:

Transition offense is far more efficient than halfcourt offense at every level of the game. Mara’s ability to throw deep passes with pinpoint accuracy is basically a cheat code for igniting transition opportunities, and it should be a big part of his game at the next level.

Mara doesn’t just throw outlets. He’s an extremely creative passer with behind-the-back looks and between-the-legs drop-offs in his bag:

He’ll be a weapon in the short roll, too.

There are some moments where it feels like Mara holds onto the ball too long before making a pass or deciding to attack. Quicker processing will be essential to maximize his ability at the next level. It’s easy to believe that should improve with more reps for a player who never had a real role in his college career before this season. Either way, Mara is one of the best passers in the country regardless of size, and the fact that he’s doing it at 7’3 gives him unique utility as he goes on in his career.

Mara’s rim protection is elite, but there are other defensive questions

Mara’s length translates most obviously on the defensive end. He doesn’t have great coverage versatility, but he’s effective in deep drop, and his length gives him an ability to challenge shots and close windows on pull-up shooters when they bail out of their drive before getting to the rim.

Mara finished the year with a 11.9 percent block rate. Good luck challenging him at the rim. If a 23-year-old tank like Lendeborg couldn’t get Mara in practice, most NBA players won’t be able to, either.

UConn’s Tarris Reed was probably the second-best player in the NCAA tournament after Lendeborg. He had no answers for Mara when he met him in the national championship game. Mara’s length disrupted everything Reed was trying to do inside, and eventually you could see he was getting psyched out of even attempting looks he would normally drain.

That’s what Mara’s length and shot-blocking functionally provides on the court: he makes everyone second-guess if they can really get the shot off. Being tentative for even a split second can be a death wish in the NBA, and Mara makes it happen regularly to his opponents.

Mara’s perimeter defense is more of a work in progress. He can be attacked on switches by quicker guards who can separate from him with their first and second steps. Showing an ability to defend the stretch bigs all over the NBA will be vital. Can Mara recover to the perimeter on pick-and-pop attempts? Can he stay strong on his feet when a ball handler attacks a closeout? There were encouraging moments on the tape, but also plenty of instances where he got caught flat footed.

I asked Mara about his defending on the perimeter after Michigan’s Sweet 16 win over Alabama, and here’s what he told me.

“I know I’m capable of playing like a good defense outside,” Mara told SB Nation. “I think when I was against Purdue (in the Big Ten tournament championship game), I had like a terrible game there defensively. But I know that I’m able to to play defense and switch onto guards or whoever has the ball outside. Sometimes I go to a game I’m not ready to play outside defense, but I think like if I’m ready, if I’m with a good mindset and with a high intensity level, I can do it for sure.”

Mara is a team player who should be a welcome presence in any locker room

I spoke with Mara in the post-game locker room after Michigan beat Wisconsin in the Big Ten tournament on March 14. He had a phenomenal game that afternoon, finishing with 16 points, five blocks, eight rebounds. I asked him how he’s developed more comfort as a scorer as the season has gone on, but he immediately deflected the credit.

“It doesn’t matter if I score 20 or if I score four,” Mara told me. “It’s just about helping the team win. The last two games I’ve been able to help the team by scoring. But maybe tomorrow I score 0 points and I get five blocks, you know, it will be all right.”

I covered Michigan throughout March Madness with a credential at the Big Ten tournament, Sweet 16, Final Four, and national championship game. Mara was generous and thoughtful in his media availability the entire time, speaking to reporters for long stretches in his second language. He told me getting better at English was one of his top priorities when he came to the U.S. upon committing to UCLA, and he showed how much he’s grown in that area too throughout March Madness.

At one point, I asked Mara why he thought Michigan’s three big look worked so well together.

“We are not selfish,” he said. “We play for each other. If I see Morez inside the paint, I’m going to stay out. So it’s not like I want to get here, and if Morez is here, I’m gonna get here anyways. We’re trying to do, I don’t know, different things, like move the ball.

“Today it was me. Maybe tomorrow it is going to be Morez, and the next day it’s going to be someone else. I think that’s what make us play so well together.”

As the NBA moves to more double-big looks, Mara’s ability to play with other bigs will be an essential part of his appeal. Even without a proven jump shot, he knows how to space the floor by leveraging his size and skills to help out his teammates. He doesn’t care about getting the glory.

Size is in at every level of basketball. Length is one of the most essential traits in the sport. Almost no one alive is longer than Mara, and he also brings unique skills and a positive attitude to every game.

A year ago, Mara felt like one of the most underwhelming players in America as he sat glued to Mick Cronin’s bench. Dusty May believed in him and brought out the best in his abilities. His incredible March Madness run showed the NBA he deserves lottery consideration. Given his rapid development throughout the season, it feels like this is only the start as Mara continues to grow into his body and his game.

Aday Mara’s NBA mock draft stock is rising

Here’s the lottery for the NBA mock draft we published after March Madness ended. Mara is already in the top-10. Don’t be surprised if he keeps rising.

Pick

Team

Player

Position

School

Age

1Washington WizardsCameron BoozerForwardDukeFreshman
2Indiana PacersDarryn PetersonGuardKansasFreshman
3Brooklyn NetsAJ DybantsaWingBYUFreshman
4Utah JazzCaleb WilsonForwardNorth CarolinaFreshman
5Sacramento KingsDarius AcuffGuardArkansasFreshman
6Atlanta Hawks (via Pelicans)Keaton WaglerGuardIllinoisFreshman
7Memphis GrizzliesKingston FlemingsGuardHoustonFreshman
8Dallas MavericksMikel Brown Jr.GuardLouisvilleFreshman
9Chicago BullsAday MaraCenterMichiganJunior
10Milwaukee BucksBrayden BurriesGuardArizonaFreshman
11Golden State WarriorsYaxel LendeborgForwardMichiganSenior
12Portland Trail BlazersNate AmentWingTennesseeFreshman
13Miami HeatKarim LopezForwardNZ BreakersBorn 2007
14Memphis Grizzlies (via Magic)Jayden QuaintanceCenter/ForwardKentuckySophomore

#Aday #Mara #played #lottery #latest #NBA #mock #draft">How Aday Mara played his way into the lottery of our latest NBA mock draft

Yaxel Lendeborg set a personal goal when Michigan started practice at the very beginning of what would become its 2026 national championship season. He wanted to dunk on new teammate Aday Mara.

“I tried a couple times when I first got here, and he ruined my confidence so quickly,” Lendeborg said after Michigan beat UConn in the title game.

Mara had just come over from UCLA after two disappointing seasons where he could barely get off the bench, and his size made him an inviting target for a poster. Standing 7’3 with a reported 7’7 wingspan, the Spanish big man had measurables few humans in the world could match. Realizing that Mara shouldn’t be challenged at the rim was only one part of the process. As Michigan brought in four new starters via the transfer portal, there was a steep learning curve for everyone when it came to how to maximize their gigantic center.

“He’s definitely the most unique big man I’ve ever played with,” Elliott Cadeau told SB Nation ahead of the national championship game. “It took some time for us to get some chemistry. We talk about the ball screen literally every practice. We’re both really high-IQ players. When teams play us two-on-two, we feel like we can get whatever we want.”

The entire country knows what Mara is capable of now after the Wolverines completed one of the most dominant national championship runs of the last 30 years. There were plenty of key takeaways from how Michigan built its title team, but the biggest one is size. Lendeborg, Mara, and Morez Johnson all primarily played center at their previous schools, but shared the court at Michigan with resounding success. Each of them played a part in making it work: Lendeborg flushed out his perimeter skill in an attempt to appeal to NBA scouts, Johnson showed the ability to defend all of the floor and started taking threes, and Mara proved he could play at the top of the key offensively due to his innate passing touch.

Michigan head coach Dusty May sold his stars on his vision of the three-big front line during the offseason recruiting process, but Mara admitted he wasn’t always sold he would be such a focal point. He had reason to be skeptical. When he entered UCLA, SB Nation projected Mara as a one-and-one done top-10 pick for the 2024 draft after standout showings in FIBA tournaments for Spain. Instead, he quickly lost his starting spot as a freshman and continued to have a small role off the bench as a sophomore. Head coach Mick Cronin often cited conditioning and matchup issues for why he didn’t get more playing time.

Cronin looks like a fool now, because Mara was legitimately one of the most impactful big men in college basketball. That’s just the start of it. After breaking into NBA mock drafts again midway through the season as a late first-round pick, Mara’s exceptional NCAA tournament run now has him positioned to be a lottery selection. SB Nation had him projected as the No. 9 overall pick to the Chicago Bulls in our mock draft after March Madness was over. He’s also in lottery position on ESPN’s big board.

Mara was perhaps the single biggest breakout star of March Madness this year, and his continued climb up the 2026 NBA Draft board is next. He’ll have a few things working in his favor when he decides to make the jump to the next level.

Mara has shooting touch even if he doesn’t yet have range

Mara’s scoring efficiency inside was absurd all season: he shot 68 percent on two-pointers, 81 percent at the rim, and 41.1 percent on non-rim twos. His two-point percentage remained just about the same even against top-100 and top-50 competition, and even if you take away his dunks (he had 81 of them on the year), he still shot 72 percent at the rim.

His comfort in the post continued to grow as the season went on. By the time March Madness started, Mara was making a fool out of even very good opposing centers with his size and touch.

Mara is going to be one of the tallest and longest player in the NBA from the day he’s drafted. Victor Wembanyama and Zach Edey are just about the only players who can top him in those departments. He may have issues establishing post position against NBA bigs with a higher center of gravity, but his ability to hit baby hooks and flip shots gives him some real scoring utility even if it won’t be the best part of his game.

One of the biggest red flags in Mara’s statistical profile is his terrible free throw percentage. He shot 56.4 percent from the free throw line this season, and only 58.5 percent over his college career on 241 attempts. Free throw percentage is a proxy for touch, and at first glance it seems like Mara doesn’t have it.

It’s worth noting that Mara got consistently better from the free throw stripe all year. Over his last 20 games this season, he shot 74 percent from the foul line by hitting 37-of-50 freebies. That’s encouraging growth, and it comes back to the coaching he received at Michigan. Mara said he was hitting his free throws well in practice, but missing them in games. May started making Mara take high-pressure free throws to end practices, and encouraged him by showing there was nothing wrong with his form. Eventually, they started to drop when it really mattered.

Will Mara be able to shoot threes eventually? He only went 3-for-10 on the year, but he told me he believes it will be part of his skill set in time. He was just doing what his team needed.

“I know it’s in my game,” Mara told SB Nation. “I know I don’t shoot a lot. Sometimes I’m rushing, but I know it’s in my game. I have confidence, and if I get it again, I will shoot it again.”

Can Mara maintain his late season free throw touch? Can the three-ball be a real part of his game? Those are two of the biggest questions related to his upside at the next level. Even if the threes never come, he has a few other ways to impact the game as a scorer.

Mara is going to be a plus as an offensive rebounder, which will work in his favor as offensive rebounding takes on more emphasis in the battle for the possession game at the NBA level. He’s also a big target as a roller, and his soft hands allow him to catch the ball on the move. He’s going to be a dominant lob threat with a massive catch radius. Mara probably won’t ever be a 20-point-per-game scorer at the NBA, but his efficiency on the interior, ability to generate extra possessions on the glass, and massive length advantage gives him some bankable scoring ability as he goes on his career.

Mara’s passing ability is special

The best sight in college basketball this season was Mara’s outlet passing ability. He always has his eyes up after grabbing a rebound, and he proved he can throw full court dimes to get his team an easy two points. He did it again:

Transition offense is far more efficient than halfcourt offense at every level of the game. Mara’s ability to throw deep passes with pinpoint accuracy is basically a cheat code for igniting transition opportunities, and it should be a big part of his game at the next level.

Mara doesn’t just throw outlets. He’s an extremely creative passer with behind-the-back looks and between-the-legs drop-offs in his bag:

He’ll be a weapon in the short roll, too.

There are some moments where it feels like Mara holds onto the ball too long before making a pass or deciding to attack. Quicker processing will be essential to maximize his ability at the next level. It’s easy to believe that should improve with more reps for a player who never had a real role in his college career before this season. Either way, Mara is one of the best passers in the country regardless of size, and the fact that he’s doing it at 7’3 gives him unique utility as he goes on in his career.

Mara’s rim protection is elite, but there are other defensive questions

Mara’s length translates most obviously on the defensive end. He doesn’t have great coverage versatility, but he’s effective in deep drop, and his length gives him an ability to challenge shots and close windows on pull-up shooters when they bail out of their drive before getting to the rim.

Mara finished the year with a 11.9 percent block rate. Good luck challenging him at the rim. If a 23-year-old tank like Lendeborg couldn’t get Mara in practice, most NBA players won’t be able to, either.

UConn’s Tarris Reed was probably the second-best player in the NCAA tournament after Lendeborg. He had no answers for Mara when he met him in the national championship game. Mara’s length disrupted everything Reed was trying to do inside, and eventually you could see he was getting psyched out of even attempting looks he would normally drain.

That’s what Mara’s length and shot-blocking functionally provides on the court: he makes everyone second-guess if they can really get the shot off. Being tentative for even a split second can be a death wish in the NBA, and Mara makes it happen regularly to his opponents.

Mara’s perimeter defense is more of a work in progress. He can be attacked on switches by quicker guards who can separate from him with their first and second steps. Showing an ability to defend the stretch bigs all over the NBA will be vital. Can Mara recover to the perimeter on pick-and-pop attempts? Can he stay strong on his feet when a ball handler attacks a closeout? There were encouraging moments on the tape, but also plenty of instances where he got caught flat footed.

I asked Mara about his defending on the perimeter after Michigan’s Sweet 16 win over Alabama, and here’s what he told me.

“I know I’m capable of playing like a good defense outside,” Mara told SB Nation. “I think when I was against Purdue (in the Big Ten tournament championship game), I had like a terrible game there defensively. But I know that I’m able to to play defense and switch onto guards or whoever has the ball outside. Sometimes I go to a game I’m not ready to play outside defense, but I think like if I’m ready, if I’m with a good mindset and with a high intensity level, I can do it for sure.”

Mara is a team player who should be a welcome presence in any locker room

I spoke with Mara in the post-game locker room after Michigan beat Wisconsin in the Big Ten tournament on March 14. He had a phenomenal game that afternoon, finishing with 16 points, five blocks, eight rebounds. I asked him how he’s developed more comfort as a scorer as the season has gone on, but he immediately deflected the credit.

“It doesn’t matter if I score 20 or if I score four,” Mara told me. “It’s just about helping the team win. The last two games I’ve been able to help the team by scoring. But maybe tomorrow I score 0 points and I get five blocks, you know, it will be all right.”

I covered Michigan throughout March Madness with a credential at the Big Ten tournament, Sweet 16, Final Four, and national championship game. Mara was generous and thoughtful in his media availability the entire time, speaking to reporters for long stretches in his second language. He told me getting better at English was one of his top priorities when he came to the U.S. upon committing to UCLA, and he showed how much he’s grown in that area too throughout March Madness.

At one point, I asked Mara why he thought Michigan’s three big look worked so well together.

“We are not selfish,” he said. “We play for each other. If I see Morez inside the paint, I’m going to stay out. So it’s not like I want to get here, and if Morez is here, I’m gonna get here anyways. We’re trying to do, I don’t know, different things, like move the ball.

“Today it was me. Maybe tomorrow it is going to be Morez, and the next day it’s going to be someone else. I think that’s what make us play so well together.”

As the NBA moves to more double-big looks, Mara’s ability to play with other bigs will be an essential part of his appeal. Even without a proven jump shot, he knows how to space the floor by leveraging his size and skills to help out his teammates. He doesn’t care about getting the glory.

Size is in at every level of basketball. Length is one of the most essential traits in the sport. Almost no one alive is longer than Mara, and he also brings unique skills and a positive attitude to every game.

A year ago, Mara felt like one of the most underwhelming players in America as he sat glued to Mick Cronin’s bench. Dusty May believed in him and brought out the best in his abilities. His incredible March Madness run showed the NBA he deserves lottery consideration. Given his rapid development throughout the season, it feels like this is only the start as Mara continues to grow into his body and his game.

Aday Mara’s NBA mock draft stock is rising

Here’s the lottery for the NBA mock draft we published after March Madness ended. Mara is already in the top-10. Don’t be surprised if he keeps rising.

Pick

Team

Player

Position

School

Age

1Washington WizardsCameron BoozerForwardDukeFreshman
2Indiana PacersDarryn PetersonGuardKansasFreshman
3Brooklyn NetsAJ DybantsaWingBYUFreshman
4Utah JazzCaleb WilsonForwardNorth CarolinaFreshman
5Sacramento KingsDarius AcuffGuardArkansasFreshman
6Atlanta Hawks (via Pelicans)Keaton WaglerGuardIllinoisFreshman
7Memphis GrizzliesKingston FlemingsGuardHoustonFreshman
8Dallas MavericksMikel Brown Jr.GuardLouisvilleFreshman
9Chicago BullsAday MaraCenterMichiganJunior
10Milwaukee BucksBrayden BurriesGuardArizonaFreshman
11Golden State WarriorsYaxel LendeborgForwardMichiganSenior
12Portland Trail BlazersNate AmentWingTennesseeFreshman
13Miami HeatKarim LopezForwardNZ BreakersBorn 2007
14Memphis Grizzlies (via Magic)Jayden QuaintanceCenter/ForwardKentuckySophomore
#Aday #Mara #played #lottery #latest #NBA #mock #draft

Liverpool CEO Billy ‌Hogan wrote to season ticket holders on Friday, urging the ​club’s supporters to keep planned protests over ticket price increases “grounded ⁠in the facts” as fans prepare to demonstrate at Anfield.

Liverpool had announced last month that it would increase general admission ticket prices for the next three seasons — ‌a decision that did not sit well with the fans who plan to protest when it hosts Fulham in the Premier ‌League on Saturday.

Hogan said the club “respects the right of supporters to ‌protest” ⁠but defended the decision due to an 85% rise in ⁠matchday operating costs over the past decade.

“We would also ask one thing in the days and weeks ahead: that any protest, and any debate, is grounded in the facts – what ​is changing, why it is changing, ‌and what it means in real terms,” Hogan wrote in the letter, as reported by British media.

READ | I feel complete support: Arne Slot says he has backing from Liverpool bosses despite Premier League form

Hogan also said utility costs jumped 107% over the past four years while business rates were up 286% in ‌that same period.

‘UNCONTROLLABLE COSTS’

“Over the last decade, we have increased ​ticket prices by just 4% to keep any rise in ticket prices to a minimum,” he added.

“Against that backdrop, we ⁠believe linking any increases to inflation, confirmed as a 3% rise for the 2026/27 season, is the fairest and most transparent way to attempt to cover ‌some of those uncontrollable costs.”

In 2016, around 10,000 supporters headed for the exits during a Premier League game to protest against a proposal to increase ticket prices significantly, after which the club’s American owners bowed to pressure and backed down.

Liverpool spent around 450 million pounds ($605.30 million) on new players in the close-season last year but the defending champion is fifth ‌in the standings with seven games left.

Hogan said the club had no choice but to increase ​prices, pointing to its competitors’ pricing policies.

“We are also operating in a league where other clubs have increased prices at ⁠a materially higher rate over the past decade,” Hogan said.

“Since 2016/17, our competitors ⁠in the top six have increased ticket prices by an average of 17%, where we have increased our prices by 4% over ‌the same period.

“No decision has been made post this three-year approach and we will continue to meaningfully engage with our Supporters Board ahead ​of that time.”

Reuters has contacted Liverpool for comment.

Published on Apr 10, 2026

#Liverpool #CEO #defends #ticket #price #hikes #ahead #planned #Anfield #protests">Liverpool CEO defends ticket price hikes ahead of planned Anfield protests  Liverpool CEO Billy ‌Hogan wrote to season ticket holders on Friday, urging the ​club’s supporters to keep planned protests over ticket price increases “grounded ⁠in the facts” as fans prepare to demonstrate at Anfield.Liverpool had announced last month that it would increase general admission ticket prices for the next three seasons — ‌a decision that did not sit well with the fans who plan to protest when it hosts Fulham in the Premier ‌League on Saturday.Hogan said the club “respects the right of supporters to ‌protest” ⁠but defended the decision due to an 85% rise in ⁠matchday operating costs over the past decade.“We would also ask one thing in the days and weeks ahead: that any protest, and any debate, is grounded in the facts – what ​is changing, why it is changing, ‌and what it means in real terms,” Hogan wrote in the letter, as reported by British media.READ  |          I feel complete support: Arne Slot says he has backing from Liverpool bosses despite Premier League formHogan also said utility costs jumped 107% over the past four years while business rates were up 286% in ‌that same period.‘UNCONTROLLABLE COSTS’“Over the last decade, we have increased ​ticket prices by just 4% to keep any rise in ticket prices to a minimum,” he added.“Against that backdrop, we ⁠believe linking any increases to inflation, confirmed as a 3% rise for the 2026/27 season, is the fairest and most transparent way to attempt to cover ‌some of those uncontrollable costs.”In 2016, around 10,000 supporters headed for the exits during a Premier League game to protest against a proposal to increase ticket prices significantly, after which the club’s American owners bowed to pressure and backed down.Liverpool spent around 450 million pounds (5.30 million) on new players in the close-season last year but the defending champion is fifth ‌in the standings with seven games left.Hogan said the club had no choice but to increase ​prices, pointing to its competitors’ pricing policies.“We are also operating in a league where other clubs have increased prices at ⁠a materially higher rate over the past decade,” Hogan said.“Since 2016/17, our competitors ⁠in the top six have increased ticket prices by an average of 17%, where we have increased our prices by 4% over ‌the same period.“No decision has been made post this three-year approach and we will continue to meaningfully engage with our Supporters Board ahead ​of that time.”Reuters has contacted Liverpool for comment.Published on Apr 10, 2026  #Liverpool #CEO #defends #ticket #price #hikes #ahead #planned #Anfield #protests

I feel complete support: Arne Slot says he has backing from Liverpool bosses despite Premier League form

Hogan also said utility costs jumped 107% over the past four years while business rates were up 286% in ‌that same period.

‘UNCONTROLLABLE COSTS’

“Over the last decade, we have increased ​ticket prices by just 4% to keep any rise in ticket prices to a minimum,” he added.

“Against that backdrop, we ⁠believe linking any increases to inflation, confirmed as a 3% rise for the 2026/27 season, is the fairest and most transparent way to attempt to cover ‌some of those uncontrollable costs.”

In 2016, around 10,000 supporters headed for the exits during a Premier League game to protest against a proposal to increase ticket prices significantly, after which the club’s American owners bowed to pressure and backed down.

Liverpool spent around 450 million pounds ($605.30 million) on new players in the close-season last year but the defending champion is fifth ‌in the standings with seven games left.

Hogan said the club had no choice but to increase ​prices, pointing to its competitors’ pricing policies.

“We are also operating in a league where other clubs have increased prices at ⁠a materially higher rate over the past decade,” Hogan said.

“Since 2016/17, our competitors ⁠in the top six have increased ticket prices by an average of 17%, where we have increased our prices by 4% over ‌the same period.

“No decision has been made post this three-year approach and we will continue to meaningfully engage with our Supporters Board ahead ​of that time.”

Reuters has contacted Liverpool for comment.

Published on Apr 10, 2026

#Liverpool #CEO #defends #ticket #price #hikes #ahead #planned #Anfield #protests">Liverpool CEO defends ticket price hikes ahead of planned Anfield protests

Liverpool CEO Billy ‌Hogan wrote to season ticket holders on Friday, urging the ​club’s supporters to keep planned protests over ticket price increases “grounded ⁠in the facts” as fans prepare to demonstrate at Anfield.

Liverpool had announced last month that it would increase general admission ticket prices for the next three seasons — ‌a decision that did not sit well with the fans who plan to protest when it hosts Fulham in the Premier ‌League on Saturday.

Hogan said the club “respects the right of supporters to ‌protest” ⁠but defended the decision due to an 85% rise in ⁠matchday operating costs over the past decade.

“We would also ask one thing in the days and weeks ahead: that any protest, and any debate, is grounded in the facts – what ​is changing, why it is changing, ‌and what it means in real terms,” Hogan wrote in the letter, as reported by British media.

READ | I feel complete support: Arne Slot says he has backing from Liverpool bosses despite Premier League form

Hogan also said utility costs jumped 107% over the past four years while business rates were up 286% in ‌that same period.

‘UNCONTROLLABLE COSTS’

“Over the last decade, we have increased ​ticket prices by just 4% to keep any rise in ticket prices to a minimum,” he added.

“Against that backdrop, we ⁠believe linking any increases to inflation, confirmed as a 3% rise for the 2026/27 season, is the fairest and most transparent way to attempt to cover ‌some of those uncontrollable costs.”

In 2016, around 10,000 supporters headed for the exits during a Premier League game to protest against a proposal to increase ticket prices significantly, after which the club’s American owners bowed to pressure and backed down.

Liverpool spent around 450 million pounds ($605.30 million) on new players in the close-season last year but the defending champion is fifth ‌in the standings with seven games left.

Hogan said the club had no choice but to increase ​prices, pointing to its competitors’ pricing policies.

“We are also operating in a league where other clubs have increased prices at ⁠a materially higher rate over the past decade,” Hogan said.

“Since 2016/17, our competitors ⁠in the top six have increased ticket prices by an average of 17%, where we have increased our prices by 4% over ‌the same period.

“No decision has been made post this three-year approach and we will continue to meaningfully engage with our Supporters Board ahead ​of that time.”

Reuters has contacted Liverpool for comment.

Published on Apr 10, 2026

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