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NFL Draft’s 10 biggest busts in history  It’s time to dive into a list nobody wants to see their team on. An NFL Draft bust can happen due to a variety of factors: Sometimes it’s completely botching the process and selecting a player with mammoth red flags, perhaps it’s due to drafting out of desperation which leads to a wasted pick, or on occasion you might take the right player, but select them at the wrong time for a franchise — causing them to bust for one team, then have success elsewhere due to a better fit.For a draft bust to be truly legendary, there needs to be a mixture of high stakes and the lowest possible return. It also helps if by selecting the player your team missed out on a generational, transformative talent. There will be no shortage of these stories on the list either.No. 10: Charles Rodgers, WR — No. 2 overall, Detroit Lions (2003)Everything pointed to Charles Rodgers being an absolute stud in the NFL, and being College Football’s top receiver from Michigan State, going to the Lions — well, it felt like a dream. Instead everything turned into a nightmare, with Rodgers breaking his clavicle during his rookie year which began a downward spiral.Allowed to leave the team to rehab from his injury, demons from Rodgers’ past swallowed him whole. Off-field concerns prior to the draft dominated the rest of his short-lived NFL career, as Rodgers was suspended three times for violating the NFL’s substance abuse policy in two years. He was cut in 2006 giving the Lions 440 total receiving yards.The player taken one spot after him: Hall of Fame receiver Andre Johnson.No. 9: Trey Lance, QB — No. 3 overall, San Francisco 49ers (2021)To this day I refuse to believe the 49ers traded up with the intention of taking Trey Lance in the 2021 NFL Draft. I think something happened in that draft room where a contingent of people wanted Mac Jones, with another side saying that Jones was too low ceiling and they had to roll the dice on Lance.Nothing about Trey Lance’s skillset upon entering the NFL said he was going to be a good Kyle Shanahan quarterback. A big-arm, small school improviser who needed a couple of seasons to learn the NFL game didn’t vibe with the “win now” mode the Niners were in when they looked for a QB upgrade. Of course they totally got bailed out by finding Brock Purdy, but that doesn’t change what a monumental bust taking Trey Lance was.San Francisco gave up No. 12, a 1st in 2o22, a 3rd in 2022, and a 1st in 2023 to move up and get Lance, who was later sent away for a 4th round pick two years later.No. 8: Ki-Jana Carter, RB — No.1 overall, Cincinnati Bengals (1995)It’s not often you have a draft pick who was so bad that they threw shade on an entire football program, but Ki-Jana Carter is a huge part of the Penn State NFL Draft stigma that lasted the better part of two decades. An absolute phenom for the Nittany Lions, Carter turned into a pumpkin the second he arrived in the NFL — going from amassing over 1,500 yards and 23 touchdowns on 7.8 yards-per-carry, to getting hurt, then taking four years to reach 700 rushing yards.Four Hall of Fame players were taken after Carter in the first round of 1995 (Tony Boselli, Warren Sapp, Ty Law, and Derrick Brooks). The team also passed on Steve McNair and Joey Galloway. It was a legendarily bad pick that kept Penn State away from the top pick for YEARS and turned the school into a meme.No. 7: Rich Campbell, QB — No. 6 overall, Green Bay Packers (1981)It was a different world when it came to picking quarterbacks back in 1981. In short: Nobody had any idea what the hell they were doing. The Packers took Campbell with the No. 6 overall pick, and the coaching staff hated him. Despite being a successful QB at Cal, it became immediately clear that Campbell didn’t have the arm strength to be an NFL quarterback and was extremely limited in the pocket.Campbell did not start a SINGLE GAME for the Packers. In four years he only appeared seven times, and logged 386 yards passing, 3 TDs and 9 INTs on his resume.No. 6: Ryan Leaf, QB — No. 2 overall, San Diego Chargers (1998)A lot of great bust lists will have Ryan Leaf near the top, but I’m here to explain why he’s simply not the absolute WORST. Leaf is given hell because of what he’s not: Namely Peyton Manning, who was taken one pick earlier. While there’s no doubt Leaf was a bust, he’s still not close to the worst QB on this list — as we’ll get to in a little bit.Leaf was abysmal in his rookie season, then got hurt, and we never saw what he could have done in the league. The size, timing, and arm were there — he just went to the wrong place, at the wrong time, and being compared to Peyton Manning made for impossible levels of pressure.No. 5: Tony Mandarich, OT — No. 2 overall, Green Bay Packers (1989)What happens when your entire college resume is fake? This list is littered with missed evaluations, but the Packers truly had no way of knowing that Tony Mandarich was one of the biggest fakes in draft history.Mandarich made a career for himself at Michigan State by completely obliterating everyone in his path. It looked like a God playing against mortals, and that was because Mandarich was on an immense amount of steroids for his entire college career. He had to quit his cheating regimen upon entering the NFL due to fears of getting caught, and it became immediately apparent that Mandarich had almost no skills to play professional football.What makes this pick hurt so, so much more is that immediately after Mandarich we had three of the greatest NFL players of all time picked immediately after him: Barry Sanders, Derrick Thomas, and Deion Sanders.No. 4: Akili Smith, QB — No. 3 overall, Cincinnati Bengals (1999)This is what happens when desperation for a position takes over the draft process entirely. Akili Smith had really good final season at Oregon, but he was still the third-best QB prospect in 1999 behind Tim Couch (lol) and Donovan McNabb. Smith was ass from the second he stepped on the field. There were physical traits, but he had no work ethic, and was entirely engineered to be a high draft pick, not a successful NFL player.Akili Smith was difficult to coach, couldn’t read the field, made bad decisions, and had horrible accuracy. There was essentially nothing he did well, and it hurts so, so much more with the information that Mike Ditka and the New Orleans Saints offered the Bengals NINE DRAFT PICKS to move up from No. 12 to No. 3 so they could get Ricky Williams.The Bengals were so sold on Smith that they gave up two years of compensation for him, and he provided them with nothing.No. 3: Robert Gallery, OT — No. 2 overall, Oakland Raiders (2004)Robert Gallery is fairly unique on this list that everyone thought this was a home run pick. Gallery was a completely dominant 6-7, 325 tackle with ideal size, great technique, and a pedigree at Iowa that seemed to indicate that he could compete against top talent.When he hit the league, everything just went up in smoke. Gallery struggled against speed rushers, which were in favor league-wide, and couldn’t handle any NFL pass rush moves off the edge. He had limited success after being moved inside to guard, but that never made up for the bust he was.There’s an alternate multiverse where the Raiders take Philip Rivers at No. 2 and avoid making the biggest bust in NFL history, who we’ll talk about in a moment.No. 2: Art Schlichter, QB — No. 4 overall, Baltimore Colts (1982)Here’s someone you rarely ever see mentioned in bust lists, but hoo boy does Art Schlichter belong.We’ve established that QB evaluation in the early 1980s was already bad, but Schlichter was on a whole other level. He was overblown because of an Ohio State offense engineered specifically to his skills and was utterly unable to pivot to learning a new offense. When he arrived at Colts camp Schlichter was out of shape, he had a bad work ethic, and despite being the No. 4 overall pick he lost the starting job to Colts 4th round pick at QB Mike Pagel.Schlichter blew his entire rookie salary on gambling, falling deep into addiction, betting on basketball. He was out of the league in four years with 3 TDs and 11 INTs — with just over 1,000 yards passing and 45% completion.No. 1: Jamarcus Russell, QB — No. 1 overall, Oakland Raiders (2007)Then there was one. Statistically there have been much worse quarterbacks, but by 2007 teams should have had a better idea how to evaluate quarterbacks. Russell had red flags all over him, yet Oakland felt the need to take him because of his physical skillset and desperation at quarterback.Russell was a bad worker, he didn’t study enough and was a liability every time he was on the field. This was made so much worse by the fact that Calvin Johnson and Joe Thomas were taken right after Russell.There are so many pivot points that can change a team’s future, but if we just look at the picks the Raiders ended up making they could have had Philip Rivers in 2004, and Joe Thomas in 2007. Instead they got Gallery and Russell.  #NFL #Drafts #biggest #busts #history

NFL Draft’s 10 biggest busts in history

It’s time to dive into a list nobody wants to see their team on. An NFL Draft bust can happen due to a variety of factors: Sometimes it’s completely botching the process and selecting a player with mammoth red flags, perhaps it’s due to drafting out of desperation which leads to a wasted pick, or on occasion you might take the right player, but select them at the wrong time for a franchise — causing them to bust for one team, then have success elsewhere due to a better fit.

For a draft bust to be truly legendary, there needs to be a mixture of high stakes and the lowest possible return. It also helps if by selecting the player your team missed out on a generational, transformative talent. There will be no shortage of these stories on the list either.

No. 10: Charles Rodgers, WR — No. 2 overall, Detroit Lions (2003)

Everything pointed to Charles Rodgers being an absolute stud in the NFL, and being College Football’s top receiver from Michigan State, going to the Lions — well, it felt like a dream. Instead everything turned into a nightmare, with Rodgers breaking his clavicle during his rookie year which began a downward spiral.

Allowed to leave the team to rehab from his injury, demons from Rodgers’ past swallowed him whole. Off-field concerns prior to the draft dominated the rest of his short-lived NFL career, as Rodgers was suspended three times for violating the NFL’s substance abuse policy in two years. He was cut in 2006 giving the Lions 440 total receiving yards.

The player taken one spot after him: Hall of Fame receiver Andre Johnson.

No. 9: Trey Lance, QB — No. 3 overall, San Francisco 49ers (2021)

To this day I refuse to believe the 49ers traded up with the intention of taking Trey Lance in the 2021 NFL Draft. I think something happened in that draft room where a contingent of people wanted Mac Jones, with another side saying that Jones was too low ceiling and they had to roll the dice on Lance.

Nothing about Trey Lance’s skillset upon entering the NFL said he was going to be a good Kyle Shanahan quarterback. A big-arm, small school improviser who needed a couple of seasons to learn the NFL game didn’t vibe with the “win now” mode the Niners were in when they looked for a QB upgrade. Of course they totally got bailed out by finding Brock Purdy, but that doesn’t change what a monumental bust taking Trey Lance was.

San Francisco gave up No. 12, a 1st in 2o22, a 3rd in 2022, and a 1st in 2023 to move up and get Lance, who was later sent away for a 4th round pick two years later.

No. 8: Ki-Jana Carter, RB — No.1 overall, Cincinnati Bengals (1995)

It’s not often you have a draft pick who was so bad that they threw shade on an entire football program, but Ki-Jana Carter is a huge part of the Penn State NFL Draft stigma that lasted the better part of two decades. An absolute phenom for the Nittany Lions, Carter turned into a pumpkin the second he arrived in the NFL — going from amassing over 1,500 yards and 23 touchdowns on 7.8 yards-per-carry, to getting hurt, then taking four years to reach 700 rushing yards.

Four Hall of Fame players were taken after Carter in the first round of 1995 (Tony Boselli, Warren Sapp, Ty Law, and Derrick Brooks). The team also passed on Steve McNair and Joey Galloway. It was a legendarily bad pick that kept Penn State away from the top pick for YEARS and turned the school into a meme.

No. 7: Rich Campbell, QB — No. 6 overall, Green Bay Packers (1981)

It was a different world when it came to picking quarterbacks back in 1981. In short: Nobody had any idea what the hell they were doing. The Packers took Campbell with the No. 6 overall pick, and the coaching staff hated him. Despite being a successful QB at Cal, it became immediately clear that Campbell didn’t have the arm strength to be an NFL quarterback and was extremely limited in the pocket.

Campbell did not start a SINGLE GAME for the Packers. In four years he only appeared seven times, and logged 386 yards passing, 3 TDs and 9 INTs on his resume.

No. 6: Ryan Leaf, QB — No. 2 overall, San Diego Chargers (1998)

A lot of great bust lists will have Ryan Leaf near the top, but I’m here to explain why he’s simply not the absolute WORST. Leaf is given hell because of what he’s not: Namely Peyton Manning, who was taken one pick earlier. While there’s no doubt Leaf was a bust, he’s still not close to the worst QB on this list — as we’ll get to in a little bit.

Leaf was abysmal in his rookie season, then got hurt, and we never saw what he could have done in the league. The size, timing, and arm were there — he just went to the wrong place, at the wrong time, and being compared to Peyton Manning made for impossible levels of pressure.

No. 5: Tony Mandarich, OT — No. 2 overall, Green Bay Packers (1989)

What happens when your entire college resume is fake? This list is littered with missed evaluations, but the Packers truly had no way of knowing that Tony Mandarich was one of the biggest fakes in draft history.

Mandarich made a career for himself at Michigan State by completely obliterating everyone in his path. It looked like a God playing against mortals, and that was because Mandarich was on an immense amount of steroids for his entire college career. He had to quit his cheating regimen upon entering the NFL due to fears of getting caught, and it became immediately apparent that Mandarich had almost no skills to play professional football.

What makes this pick hurt so, so much more is that immediately after Mandarich we had three of the greatest NFL players of all time picked immediately after him: Barry Sanders, Derrick Thomas, and Deion Sanders.

No. 4: Akili Smith, QB — No. 3 overall, Cincinnati Bengals (1999)

This is what happens when desperation for a position takes over the draft process entirely. Akili Smith had really good final season at Oregon, but he was still the third-best QB prospect in 1999 behind Tim Couch (lol) and Donovan McNabb. Smith was ass from the second he stepped on the field. There were physical traits, but he had no work ethic, and was entirely engineered to be a high draft pick, not a successful NFL player.

Akili Smith was difficult to coach, couldn’t read the field, made bad decisions, and had horrible accuracy. There was essentially nothing he did well, and it hurts so, so much more with the information that Mike Ditka and the New Orleans Saints offered the Bengals NINE DRAFT PICKS to move up from No. 12 to No. 3 so they could get Ricky Williams.

The Bengals were so sold on Smith that they gave up two years of compensation for him, and he provided them with nothing.

No. 3: Robert Gallery, OT — No. 2 overall, Oakland Raiders (2004)

Robert Gallery is fairly unique on this list that everyone thought this was a home run pick. Gallery was a completely dominant 6-7, 325 tackle with ideal size, great technique, and a pedigree at Iowa that seemed to indicate that he could compete against top talent.

When he hit the league, everything just went up in smoke. Gallery struggled against speed rushers, which were in favor league-wide, and couldn’t handle any NFL pass rush moves off the edge. He had limited success after being moved inside to guard, but that never made up for the bust he was.

There’s an alternate multiverse where the Raiders take Philip Rivers at No. 2 and avoid making the biggest bust in NFL history, who we’ll talk about in a moment.

No. 2: Art Schlichter, QB — No. 4 overall, Baltimore Colts (1982)

Here’s someone you rarely ever see mentioned in bust lists, but hoo boy does Art Schlichter belong.

We’ve established that QB evaluation in the early 1980s was already bad, but Schlichter was on a whole other level. He was overblown because of an Ohio State offense engineered specifically to his skills and was utterly unable to pivot to learning a new offense. When he arrived at Colts camp Schlichter was out of shape, he had a bad work ethic, and despite being the No. 4 overall pick he lost the starting job to Colts 4th round pick at QB Mike Pagel.

Schlichter blew his entire rookie salary on gambling, falling deep into addiction, betting on basketball. He was out of the league in four years with 3 TDs and 11 INTs — with just over 1,000 yards passing and 45% completion.

No. 1: Jamarcus Russell, QB — No. 1 overall, Oakland Raiders (2007)

Then there was one. Statistically there have been much worse quarterbacks, but by 2007 teams should have had a better idea how to evaluate quarterbacks. Russell had red flags all over him, yet Oakland felt the need to take him because of his physical skillset and desperation at quarterback.

Russell was a bad worker, he didn’t study enough and was a liability every time he was on the field. This was made so much worse by the fact that Calvin Johnson and Joe Thomas were taken right after Russell.

There are so many pivot points that can change a team’s future, but if we just look at the picks the Raiders ended up making they could have had Philip Rivers in 2004, and Joe Thomas in 2007. Instead they got Gallery and Russell.

#NFL #Drafts #biggest #busts #history

It’s time to dive into a list nobody wants to see their team on. An NFL Draft bust can happen due to a variety of factors: Sometimes it’s completely botching the process and selecting a player with mammoth red flags, perhaps it’s due to drafting out of desperation which leads to a wasted pick, or on occasion you might take the right player, but select them at the wrong time for a franchise — causing them to bust for one team, then have success elsewhere due to a better fit.

For a draft bust to be truly legendary, there needs to be a mixture of high stakes and the lowest possible return. It also helps if by selecting the player your team missed out on a generational, transformative talent. There will be no shortage of these stories on the list either.

No. 10: Charles Rodgers, WR — No. 2 overall, Detroit Lions (2003)

Everything pointed to Charles Rodgers being an absolute stud in the NFL, and being College Football’s top receiver from Michigan State, going to the Lions — well, it felt like a dream. Instead everything turned into a nightmare, with Rodgers breaking his clavicle during his rookie year which began a downward spiral.

Allowed to leave the team to rehab from his injury, demons from Rodgers’ past swallowed him whole. Off-field concerns prior to the draft dominated the rest of his short-lived NFL career, as Rodgers was suspended three times for violating the NFL’s substance abuse policy in two years. He was cut in 2006 giving the Lions 440 total receiving yards.

The player taken one spot after him: Hall of Fame receiver Andre Johnson.

No. 9: Trey Lance, QB — No. 3 overall, San Francisco 49ers (2021)

To this day I refuse to believe the 49ers traded up with the intention of taking Trey Lance in the 2021 NFL Draft. I think something happened in that draft room where a contingent of people wanted Mac Jones, with another side saying that Jones was too low ceiling and they had to roll the dice on Lance.

Nothing about Trey Lance’s skillset upon entering the NFL said he was going to be a good Kyle Shanahan quarterback. A big-arm, small school improviser who needed a couple of seasons to learn the NFL game didn’t vibe with the “win now” mode the Niners were in when they looked for a QB upgrade. Of course they totally got bailed out by finding Brock Purdy, but that doesn’t change what a monumental bust taking Trey Lance was.

San Francisco gave up No. 12, a 1st in 2o22, a 3rd in 2022, and a 1st in 2023 to move up and get Lance, who was later sent away for a 4th round pick two years later.

No. 8: Ki-Jana Carter, RB — No.1 overall, Cincinnati Bengals (1995)

It’s not often you have a draft pick who was so bad that they threw shade on an entire football program, but Ki-Jana Carter is a huge part of the Penn State NFL Draft stigma that lasted the better part of two decades. An absolute phenom for the Nittany Lions, Carter turned into a pumpkin the second he arrived in the NFL — going from amassing over 1,500 yards and 23 touchdowns on 7.8 yards-per-carry, to getting hurt, then taking four years to reach 700 rushing yards.

Four Hall of Fame players were taken after Carter in the first round of 1995 (Tony Boselli, Warren Sapp, Ty Law, and Derrick Brooks). The team also passed on Steve McNair and Joey Galloway. It was a legendarily bad pick that kept Penn State away from the top pick for YEARS and turned the school into a meme.

No. 7: Rich Campbell, QB — No. 6 overall, Green Bay Packers (1981)

It was a different world when it came to picking quarterbacks back in 1981. In short: Nobody had any idea what the hell they were doing. The Packers took Campbell with the No. 6 overall pick, and the coaching staff hated him. Despite being a successful QB at Cal, it became immediately clear that Campbell didn’t have the arm strength to be an NFL quarterback and was extremely limited in the pocket.

Campbell did not start a SINGLE GAME for the Packers. In four years he only appeared seven times, and logged 386 yards passing, 3 TDs and 9 INTs on his resume.

No. 6: Ryan Leaf, QB — No. 2 overall, San Diego Chargers (1998)

A lot of great bust lists will have Ryan Leaf near the top, but I’m here to explain why he’s simply not the absolute WORST. Leaf is given hell because of what he’s not: Namely Peyton Manning, who was taken one pick earlier. While there’s no doubt Leaf was a bust, he’s still not close to the worst QB on this list — as we’ll get to in a little bit.

Leaf was abysmal in his rookie season, then got hurt, and we never saw what he could have done in the league. The size, timing, and arm were there — he just went to the wrong place, at the wrong time, and being compared to Peyton Manning made for impossible levels of pressure.

No. 5: Tony Mandarich, OT — No. 2 overall, Green Bay Packers (1989)

What happens when your entire college resume is fake? This list is littered with missed evaluations, but the Packers truly had no way of knowing that Tony Mandarich was one of the biggest fakes in draft history.

Mandarich made a career for himself at Michigan State by completely obliterating everyone in his path. It looked like a God playing against mortals, and that was because Mandarich was on an immense amount of steroids for his entire college career. He had to quit his cheating regimen upon entering the NFL due to fears of getting caught, and it became immediately apparent that Mandarich had almost no skills to play professional football.

What makes this pick hurt so, so much more is that immediately after Mandarich we had three of the greatest NFL players of all time picked immediately after him: Barry Sanders, Derrick Thomas, and Deion Sanders.

No. 4: Akili Smith, QB — No. 3 overall, Cincinnati Bengals (1999)

This is what happens when desperation for a position takes over the draft process entirely. Akili Smith had really good final season at Oregon, but he was still the third-best QB prospect in 1999 behind Tim Couch (lol) and Donovan McNabb. Smith was ass from the second he stepped on the field. There were physical traits, but he had no work ethic, and was entirely engineered to be a high draft pick, not a successful NFL player.

Akili Smith was difficult to coach, couldn’t read the field, made bad decisions, and had horrible accuracy. There was essentially nothing he did well, and it hurts so, so much more with the information that Mike Ditka and the New Orleans Saints offered the Bengals NINE DRAFT PICKS to move up from No. 12 to No. 3 so they could get Ricky Williams.

The Bengals were so sold on Smith that they gave up two years of compensation for him, and he provided them with nothing.

No. 3: Robert Gallery, OT — No. 2 overall, Oakland Raiders (2004)

Robert Gallery is fairly unique on this list that everyone thought this was a home run pick. Gallery was a completely dominant 6-7, 325 tackle with ideal size, great technique, and a pedigree at Iowa that seemed to indicate that he could compete against top talent.

When he hit the league, everything just went up in smoke. Gallery struggled against speed rushers, which were in favor league-wide, and couldn’t handle any NFL pass rush moves off the edge. He had limited success after being moved inside to guard, but that never made up for the bust he was.

There’s an alternate multiverse where the Raiders take Philip Rivers at No. 2 and avoid making the biggest bust in NFL history, who we’ll talk about in a moment.

No. 2: Art Schlichter, QB — No. 4 overall, Baltimore Colts (1982)

Here’s someone you rarely ever see mentioned in bust lists, but hoo boy does Art Schlichter belong.

We’ve established that QB evaluation in the early 1980s was already bad, but Schlichter was on a whole other level. He was overblown because of an Ohio State offense engineered specifically to his skills and was utterly unable to pivot to learning a new offense. When he arrived at Colts camp Schlichter was out of shape, he had a bad work ethic, and despite being the No. 4 overall pick he lost the starting job to Colts 4th round pick at QB Mike Pagel.

Schlichter blew his entire rookie salary on gambling, falling deep into addiction, betting on basketball. He was out of the league in four years with 3 TDs and 11 INTs — with just over 1,000 yards passing and 45% completion.

No. 1: Jamarcus Russell, QB — No. 1 overall, Oakland Raiders (2007)

Then there was one. Statistically there have been much worse quarterbacks, but by 2007 teams should have had a better idea how to evaluate quarterbacks. Russell had red flags all over him, yet Oakland felt the need to take him because of his physical skillset and desperation at quarterback.

Russell was a bad worker, he didn’t study enough and was a liability every time he was on the field. This was made so much worse by the fact that Calvin Johnson and Joe Thomas were taken right after Russell.

There are so many pivot points that can change a team’s future, but if we just look at the picks the Raiders ended up making they could have had Philip Rivers in 2004, and Joe Thomas in 2007. Instead they got Gallery and Russell.

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#NFL #Drafts #biggest #busts #history

The start of the WNBA season is almost upon us, and with that in mind, it’s jersey release day around the league. This year the team’s are showing off their “Rebel Edition” uniforms, designed to evoke the culture and city built around the team. Some absolutely nailed the assignment — others, well, not so much.

Two new teams join the WNBA in 2026 with the Toronto Tempo and Portland Fire adding to the ranks as expansion teams. That means big moments in franchise history with their jerseys being unveiled for the first time.

Let’s rank everyone in the WNBAs new look.

This isn’t just great by league standards, this is an unbelievably iconic jersey in any sport. The colorway is classic and just looks so good, but it’s the subtle rose pattern of the uniform that really puts this over the top.

Just a stunning fit. The lowercase bubble writing evokes the 70s in the best way, while the secondary logo of the “A” on the peach is just wonderful. These look great from a distance, but then you close in and see all the zip codes for Atlanta and it puts it over the top.

Another team that went with the 70s aesthetic, and for good reason. These Wings jerseys are so much better than their standard uniform, and helps evoke old Dallas Mavericks jerseys, but integrating the Wings’ colorway. Just so clean.

Really clean uniforms. The simple white and red with some small black accents looks great. A little piping around the neck could have set this off a little more, but the “Indy” logo is just great.

No. 5: Washington Mystics

I really do like the idea of the purple and midnight blue swirling to evoke that mystical, crystal ball vibe. Not sure how I feel about “Of Change” being under the word “District,” I don’t think that addition really does much to the jersey and clutters it up a little too much.

The word “Keesusk” means “Sun” in the native Mohegan language, and it’s really neat to see elements of indigenous people integrated into a jersey like this. The design work on the neck, arms, and legs really stands out, making this feel unique.

It’s … fine. I like the radiating pinstripes being a new way to throw linework on a jersey, but the font feels wrong for the vibe of the uniform overall. Would have like to see something that felt a little more crafted and bespoke.

The cat print on the sides is great along with the ear tufts being evoked in the letter work. The only downside to this jersey is the goofy lynx on the waistband, which really didn’t need to be on this uniform at all.

I’m okay with a wordmark not being symmetrical, but this one just really irks me. The color and design are both solid overall, but having the peak of “SKYTOWN” happening three letters in to a seven-letter word gets under my skin. I also think the term “Skytown” is a little too on the nose. Yes, we get you’re the Sky and the term for Chicago is Chi-town, but I didn’t need the pun.

Really torn on this one. I like the front of the uniform, including the weather-shifted look of the number and the off-kilter wording, but I’m still deciding on the photorealistic storm clouds on the side. I can’t decide if I really like them, or I hate them.

Zero inspiration. Yes, you got in the Vegas font … cool. You could ask anyone to design a new jersey for Vegas and get 20 cliched versions of this look.

No. 12: Golden State Valkyries

They took the uniform and put it in black with some geometric work. It’s fine, but doesn’t make me feel anything either good or bad.

This looks like the logo for a crypto company.

It’s difficult to branch out in your first year, but I really don’t understand what this evokes about Toronto at all. Basically, this looks like a normal jersey without anything special or unique. Didn’t pass the assignment.

No. 15: Los Angeles Sparks

The design is okay, but there’s nothing about this uniform that even feels like the Sparks anymore. It’s as if everything was stripped out of the franchise and handed over to the old New Orleans Pelicans. This really doesn’t work. If it’s inspired by “risk takers,” they should have played it safe.

#WNBA #Rebel #edition #jersey #ranked #cool">Every WNBA ‘Rebel’ edition jersey, ranked by how cool they are  The start of the WNBA season is almost upon us, and with that in mind, it’s jersey release day around the league. This year the team’s are showing off their “Rebel Edition” uniforms, designed to evoke the culture and city built around the team. Some absolutely nailed the assignment — others, well, not so much.Two new teams join the WNBA in 2026 with the Toronto Tempo and Portland Fire adding to the ranks as expansion teams. That means big moments in franchise history with their jerseys being unveiled for the first time.Let’s rank everyone in the WNBAs new look.This isn’t just great by league standards, this is an unbelievably iconic jersey in any sport. The colorway is classic and just looks so good, but it’s the subtle rose pattern of the uniform that really puts this over the top.Just a stunning fit. The lowercase bubble writing evokes the 70s in the best way, while the secondary logo of the “A” on the peach is just wonderful. These look great from a distance, but then you close in and see all the zip codes for Atlanta and it puts it over the top.Another team that went with the 70s aesthetic, and for good reason. These Wings jerseys are so much better than their standard uniform, and helps evoke old Dallas Mavericks jerseys, but integrating the Wings’ colorway. Just so clean.Really clean uniforms. The simple white and red with some small black accents looks great. A little piping around the neck could have set this off a little more, but the “Indy” logo is just great.No. 5: Washington MysticsI really do like the idea of the purple and midnight blue swirling to evoke that mystical, crystal ball vibe. Not sure how I feel about “Of Change” being under the word “District,” I don’t think that addition really does much to the jersey and clutters it up a little too much.The word “Keesusk” means “Sun” in the native Mohegan language, and it’s really neat to see elements of indigenous people integrated into a jersey like this. The design work on the neck, arms, and legs really stands out, making this feel unique.It’s … fine. I like the radiating pinstripes being a new way to throw linework on a jersey, but the font feels wrong for the vibe of the uniform overall. Would have like to see something that felt a little more crafted and bespoke.The cat print on the sides is great along with the ear tufts being evoked in the letter work. The only downside to this jersey is the goofy lynx on the waistband, which really didn’t need to be on this uniform at all.I’m okay with a wordmark not being symmetrical, but this one just really irks me. The color and design are both solid overall, but having the peak of “SKYTOWN” happening three letters in to a seven-letter word gets under my skin. I also think the term “Skytown” is a little too on the nose. Yes, we get you’re the Sky and the term for Chicago is Chi-town, but I didn’t need the pun.Really torn on this one. I like the front of the uniform, including the weather-shifted look of the number and the off-kilter wording, but I’m still deciding on the photorealistic storm clouds on the side. I can’t decide if I really like them, or I hate them.Zero inspiration. Yes, you got in the Vegas font … cool. You could ask anyone to design a new jersey for Vegas and get 20 cliched versions of this look.No. 12: Golden State ValkyriesThey took the uniform and put it in black with some geometric work. It’s fine, but doesn’t make me feel anything either good or bad.This looks like the logo for a crypto company.It’s difficult to branch out in your first year, but I really don’t understand what this evokes about Toronto at all. Basically, this looks like a normal jersey without anything special or unique. Didn’t pass the assignment.No. 15: Los Angeles SparksThe design is okay, but there’s nothing about this uniform that even feels like the Sparks anymore. It’s as if everything was stripped out of the franchise and handed over to the old New Orleans Pelicans. This really doesn’t work. If it’s inspired by “risk takers,” they should have played it safe.  #WNBA #Rebel #edition #jersey #ranked #cool

Australia has left fast bowlers Pat Cummins, Mitchell Starc and Josh Hazlewood out of its limited overs squads for upcoming tours of Pakistan and Bangladesh later this month.

The trio will miss the three-match series against Pakistan starting May 30, with uncapped all-rounder Liam Scott and Australia Under-19 World Cup captain Ollie Peake earning their first senior international call-ups in a new-look Australian squad.

Young batter Joel Davies is another new face after he was selected for the T20 series against Bangladesh in June.

Travis Head, Cooper Connolly, Ben Dwarshuis and Xavier Bartlett will travel to Bangladesh once their Indian Premier League (IPL) commitments are completed, while veteran all-rounder Glenn Maxwell was omitted altogether.

Mitchell Marsh will be the captain across both tours as Australia begins its preparations for the ICC ODI World Cup to be held in South Africa, Namibia and Zimbabwe in October next year.

Selection chairman George Bailey said the tours presented opportunities for emerging players.

“It’s always exciting to see new players get an opportunity to play international cricket and be a part of the national team,” Bailey said. “The blend of experienced players coupled with new or returning players will provide a nice mix for these subcontinent tours.

“Continuing to provide opportunities for players to develop across a broad range of conditions and experiences is important and will continue to be a focus over the next 18 months to two years.”

Cummins, Starc and Hazlewood are expected to use the break to prepare for Australia’s World Test Championship campaign, which resumes in August in a two-Test home series against Bangladesh.

Australia plays Pakistan in three ODIs in Rawalpindi (May 30) and Lahore (June 2 and 4) before traveling to Bangladesh for three ODI games in Dhaka (June 9, 11 and 14) and three T20 Internationals in Chattogram (June 17, 19 and 21).

AUSTRALIA SQUADS

Australia ODI squad for Pakistan: Mitchell Marsh (captain), Alex Carey, Nathan Ellis, Cameron Green, Josh Inglis, Matthew Kuhnemann, Marnus Labuschagne, Riley Meredith, Ollie Peake, Matthew Renshaw, Tanveer Sangha, Liam Scott, Matthew Short, Billy Stanlake, Adam Zampa.

Australia ODI squad for Bangladesh: Mitchell Marsh (captain), Xavier Bartlett, Alex Carey, Cooper Connolly, Ben Dwarshuis, Nathan Ellis, Cameron Green, Travis Head, Josh Inglis, Matthew Kuhnemann, Marnus Labuschagne, Matthew Renshaw, Tanveer Sangha, Liam Scott, Adam Zampa

Australia T20 squad for Bangladesh: Mitchell Marsh (captain), Xavier Bartlett, Cooper Connolly, Tim David, Joel Davies, Nathan Ellis, Cameron Green, Aaron Hardie, Travis Head, Josh Inglis, Spencer Johnson, Matthew Kuhnemann, Riley Meredith, Josh Philippe, Matthew Renshaw, Adam Zampa

Published on May 11, 2026

#Australia #squad #tour #Pakistan #Bangladesh #Full #list #Cummins #Starc #Hazlewood #rested">Australia squad for tour in Pakistan, Bangladesh — Full list; Cummins, Starc, Hazlewood rested  Australia has left fast bowlers Pat Cummins, Mitchell Starc and Josh Hazlewood out of its limited overs squads for upcoming tours of Pakistan and Bangladesh later this month.The trio will miss the three-match series against Pakistan starting May 30, with uncapped all-rounder Liam Scott and Australia Under-19 World Cup captain Ollie Peake earning their first senior international call-ups in a new-look Australian squad.Young batter Joel Davies is another new face after he was selected for the T20 series against Bangladesh in June.Travis Head, Cooper Connolly, Ben Dwarshuis and Xavier Bartlett will travel to Bangladesh once their Indian Premier League (IPL) commitments are completed, while veteran all-rounder Glenn Maxwell was omitted altogether.Mitchell Marsh will be the captain across both tours as Australia begins its preparations for the ICC ODI World Cup to be held in South Africa, Namibia and Zimbabwe in October next year.Selection chairman George Bailey said the tours presented opportunities for emerging players.“It’s always exciting to see new players get an opportunity to play international cricket and be a part of the national team,” Bailey said. “The blend of experienced players coupled with new or returning players will provide a nice mix for these subcontinent tours.“Continuing to provide opportunities for players to develop across a broad range of conditions and experiences is important and will continue to be a focus over the next 18 months to two years.”Cummins, Starc and Hazlewood are expected to use the break to prepare for Australia’s World Test Championship campaign, which resumes in August in a two-Test home series against Bangladesh.Australia plays Pakistan in three ODIs in Rawalpindi (May 30) and Lahore (June 2 and 4) before traveling to Bangladesh for three ODI games in Dhaka (June 9, 11 and 14) and three T20 Internationals in Chattogram (June 17, 19 and 21).AUSTRALIA SQUADSAustralia ODI squad for Pakistan: Mitchell Marsh (captain), Alex Carey, Nathan Ellis, Cameron Green, Josh Inglis, Matthew Kuhnemann, Marnus Labuschagne, Riley Meredith, Ollie Peake, Matthew Renshaw, Tanveer Sangha, Liam Scott, Matthew Short, Billy Stanlake, Adam Zampa.Australia ODI squad for Bangladesh: Mitchell Marsh (captain), Xavier Bartlett, Alex Carey, Cooper Connolly, Ben Dwarshuis, Nathan Ellis, Cameron Green, Travis Head, Josh Inglis, Matthew Kuhnemann, Marnus Labuschagne, Matthew Renshaw, Tanveer Sangha, Liam Scott, Adam ZampaAustralia T20 squad for Bangladesh: Mitchell Marsh (captain), Xavier Bartlett, Cooper Connolly, Tim David, Joel Davies, Nathan Ellis, Cameron Green, Aaron Hardie, Travis Head, Josh Inglis, Spencer Johnson, Matthew Kuhnemann, Riley Meredith, Josh Philippe, Matthew Renshaw, Adam ZampaPublished on May 11, 2026  #Australia #squad #tour #Pakistan #Bangladesh #Full #list #Cummins #Starc #Hazlewood #rested

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