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Everybody’s got complaints, it seems.

Because of the transfer portal and the easing up of the first-time transfer rule, college football coaches have to spend more time than ever re-recruiting their own roster. Because of the introduction of name, image and likeness rights (and the fact that the NCAA has provided the smallest possible amount of guidance regarding them), coaches have to navigate an immature market, deal with amateur agents posing as player representatives and figure out how to divide a collected pool of NIL money like it’s a salary cap. Roster management is harder and more time-consuming than it’s ever been.

Administrators are complaining, too. “College sports are turning into minor leagues!” some of them got to complain in The New York Times. We’ve handed too much control to the athletes, they seem to think, and while everything’s fine now, everything will fall apart in the not-too-distant future if we don’t hand control back to the administrators. Doom approaches!

Everything’s more than fine now, however. The actual college sports product has rarely been more enjoyable. The 2022 college football season, the first in which both transfer recruiting and NIL funding played a truly significant role, was a damn delight. The 2023 men’s and women’s NCAA basketball tournaments, full of athletes making real money and, in some cases, playing for their second or third schools, have been so good that it actually prompted me to write about college basketball! Ratings are rebounding for some college sports and surging for others.

Meanwhile, though roster management might be more trying for head coaches than it’s ever been, the rewards are also richer. TCU just made the national title game with a small handful of blue-chippers, a number of key junior college transfers and starters who began their respective careers at Colorado, Louisiana-Monroe, Navy, New Mexico and SMU. That’s a recipe a lot of coaches can and will attempt to emulate.

There might still be only one way to build an actual national title team — amass an army of blue-chippers and deploy them in the meanest, most physical possible way (a la Georgia) — but there are more ways than ever to build a really good team. Here’s a look at the extra decisions a coach has to make and how transfers, juco and NIL usage can quickly reshape a team, for better or worse. With every change comes an inefficiency to exploit, and there’s more change than ever in college football. The coaches who navigate this inefficient landscape better than others will be richly rewarded in the win column.

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Reports: Blue Jays’ Swanson has carpal tunnel

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Reports: Blue Jays' Swanson has carpal tunnel

Toronto Blue Jays right-hander Erik Swanson received relatively good news when an MRI earlier this week on his pitching elbow revealed no structural damage, according to multiple reports Friday.

Swanson was diagnosed with what the team called median nerve entrapment, or carpal tunnel syndrome, according to the reports. He will get a cortisone shot and rest his arm for a few days.

The Blue Jays announced earlier this week that Swanson was scheduled to meet with elbow surgeon Dr. Keith Meister on Thursday following the onset of discomfort in his right elbow during a recent bullpen session.

Swanson, 31, spent the past two seasons as a key piece of the Blue Jays’ bullpen and dealt with right forearm discomfort earlier this spring. He has not pitched in a spring training game this year.

He was 2-2 with a 5.03 ERA, 14 walks and 37 strikeouts in 39⅓ innings over 45 relief appearances last season.

In six seasons with the Seattle Mariners (2019-22) and Blue Jays, Swanson is 10-16 with 10 saves, a 3.97 ERA and a 1.116 WHIP, 69 walks and 278 strikeouts in 240 games (11 starts) over 260⅔ innings.

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Braves’ Riley leaves game after HBP on right hand

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Braves' Riley leaves game after HBP on right hand

NORTH PORT, Fla. — Atlanta Braves third baseman Austin Riley left a Grapefruit League game Friday after a pitch hit him in the hand that he broke last season.

Riley got hit by a pitch from Jackson Rutledge in the first inning of the Braves’ game with the Washington Nationals. Riley held out his right hand immediately afterward in apparent pain before heading up the first base line.

Riley was removed when the Braves took the field in the top of the second inning.

The Braves announced that the two-time All-Star had been taken out of the game “as a precaution.” The Atlanta Journal-Constitution and MLB.com reported that X-rays were negative.

Riley, who turns 28 on April 2, batted .256 with a .322 on-base percentage, 19 homers and 56 RBIs last year. His season ended after he was hit in the right hand by a 97 mph fastball from Los Angeles Angels starter Jack Kochanowicz. An MRI revealed his hand was fractured.

Riley finished seventh in the MVP balloting in 2021, sixth in 2022 and seventh again in 2023. He hit at least 33 homers in each of those seasons.

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Yanks’ Rodon gets Opening Day nod with Cole out

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Yanks' Rodon gets Opening Day nod with Cole out

Left-hander Carlos Rodon was tabbed as the New York Yankees‘ Opening Day starter Friday by manager Aaron Boone.

The Yankees open the season at home against the Milwaukee Brewers on March 27.

A serious injury to ace right-hander Gerrit Cole opened the door for Rodon. Cole underwent Tommy John surgery Tuesday.

“It’s an honor,” Rodon told reporters. “I’m excited. Just want to go out there and win the game.”

Boone said left-hander Max Fried will start the second game. The former Atlanta Braves standout signed an eight-year, $218 million free agent deal in the offseason.

Rodon, 32, is entering the third season of a six-year, $162 million deal. He is 19-17 with a 4.74 ERA in 46 starts with New York. A two-time All-Star, he won a career-best 16 games last season.

“I feel like his arsenal continues to evolve — the secondary stuff is getting stronger and stronger, the changeup becoming a real factor for him now,” Boone said of Rodon.

This will be Rodon’s second Opening Day start; he also received the honor in 2019 for the Chicago White Sox.

“Honestly it’s just the first game of the season,” Rodon said. “It’s another baseball game. Take it like another game, it just so happens to be the first game of the year.”

Right-hander Freddy Peralta will start for the Brewers.

Field Level Media contributed to this report.

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