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WEST POINT, N.Y. — Mike Viti, Army’s assistant head coach for offense, still has his first evaluation of Bryson Daily on his computer after seeing tape of Daily as a high school prospect.

The report reads like it might have come from a back alley, maybe even an underground fight club, instead of a football field.

“It looked like he was in a street fight every time he carried the ball,” Viti said. “He looked like he was fighting, just a different running style. And then you find out he was a hurdler on the track team and a coach’s kid, and you get real excited.

“You knew you were watching a brawler.”

Viti, a former fullback at Army, recruits western Texas for the Black Knights, and when he says “football player” in describing Army’s record-setting quarterback, he means it.

As they say in West Texas, they make ’em a little tougher in those parts. Daily started at quarterback for Abernathy High, a school with 230 students located 20 miles north of Lubbock, from the time he was a ninth grader and led the Antelopes to the 3A state semifinals that season. He played for his father, Darrell Daily, and was more than just a quarterback. He also played linebacker, and in crucial situations would kick field goals and punt.

As a freshman, he helped beat one of Abernathy’s top rivals with a game-winning 27-yard field goal.

“Of course, if you ask him now, he would say it was a 47-yarder,” his father joked.

Daily also played point guard on the basketball team (he moved to the post if the other team had a big bruiser down low), pitched and played shortstop on the baseball team and ran hurdles and threw the discus on the track team.

“He screamed out that he was an Army football player, everything we’re looking for here,” Black Knights coach Jeff Monken said.

Daily’s play this season has screamed out even louder, as he leads the unbeaten and No. 19 Black Knights against No. 6 Notre Dame on Saturday night in Yankee Stadium. Army hasn’t played a game with national implications this high in decades, as the prime-time matchup has College Football Playoff ramifications for both sides. The Black Knights are two-touchdown underdogs.

“I think we do feed off that a little bit,” Daily said. “A lot of guys, like myself, only had FCS offers coming out of high school, a ton of our starters. But we’ve won all nine of our games this year, and those schools we’ve beaten wouldn’t have even thought about recruiting us. It’s the same with this game. Obviously, Notre Dame has top recruits, a top program, a lot of money, all that stuff.

“But the only thing we’re looking at is that it’s a great opportunity for us, and we’re excited to go play.”


DAILY, A SENIOR captain, has been the face of this Army team, which has matched the best start in program history. The 1949 team, under legendary coach Earl “Red” Blaik, finished the season 9-0.

“Tough as s—,” Monken said of the 6-foot, 221-pound Daily, who has been a battering ram at quarterback for Army’s triple-option attack that leads the country in rushing (334.9 yards per game).

That description fits just about every player in a program that breeds brotherhood, and as Monken is fond of saying, is the “last of the hard,” a throwback to the days before big money — for blueblood programs, administrators, coaches and now players — dominated the sport.

On the field, Daily takes Monken’s “last of the hard” mantra to another level.

“Bryson wants to punish you,” Army center Brady Small said. “He runs hard. He does everything hard, and what he does for us as a leader is just as important. When we see him lower that shoulder, whether it’s for an extra yard or 2 yards, that’s why we love him. It’s never about him.”

Daily ranks fifth nationally in rushing (132.7 yards per game) and is tied for second nationally with 21 rushing touchdowns. The only player with more touchdowns is Boise State’s Ashton Jeanty with 26, but Jeanty has played in two more games than Daily.

Daily and Jeanty are the only two players averaging more than 6 yards per carry and more than 20 carries per game. In his past two outings, Daily has bulldozed his way to a combined 67 rushing attempts, including 36 carries in Army’s 14-3 win over North Texas two weeks ago. The 36 carries were the most by an FBS player this season.

Daily is anything but your stereotypical running quarterback. His forte is power, not speed, meaning defenders tend to see a lot more of the front of his No. 13 jersey than they do the back.

“I’m not blessed with the speed that some guys have, so I have to take a few more shots,” Daily said. “But I enjoy contact. It’s always been a part of my personality. A lot of that comes from playing linebacker in the past and the mentality I grew up with playing for my dad. That’s the kind of program he ran, built on toughness. There wasn’t any other way to play the game.”

As tough as he is, Daily is not immune to injuries, and he missed the Air Force game Nov. 2, two weeks removed from a six-touchdown performance (5 rushing, 1 passing) in a 45-28 win over East Carolina. He carried the ball 31 times in that game and practiced the next week, although the Black Knights didn’t have a game that weekend.

But heading into the week of preparations for the Air Force game, Daily was sidelined with what Army officials termed an undisclosed injury/illness. He had contracted a painful infection in his foot that required a procedure to drain the swelling. Daily said he couldn’t even get his foot in a shoe, let alone put any pressure on it. He still doesn’t know how he got the infection.

“That’s football. You get hit as much as he has, and then something freaky like that takes you out,” said Darrell Daily, who spent the Saturday of the Air Force game in the hospital with his son.

Not being out there with his teammates for a service academy game was bad enough for Bryson Daily. But to make matters worse, he couldn’t get the game on television in his hospital room. There was a problem streaming the game on his laptop, and he missed part of the first quarter before finally getting the computer going.

“He about threw that sucker across the room,” Darrell Daily said. “It killed his soul not to be able to play in that game because he won both Commander-In-Chief games last year as a starting quarterback. But he was confident that [backup] Dewayne [Coleman] would step in for him and handle things.”

Army won 20-3 without him, but Bryson Daily was determined to get back for the North Texas game. Once the swelling subsided, he was back at practice, but did very little the week of the game, again placing his status in question.

“He walked through on Thursday and went through their pregame stuff on Friday and then went out there and carried the ball 36 times,” Darrell Daily said. “I’m not sure anybody or anything was going to keep him out of that game.”


NOW, WITH ANOTHER bye week to get healthier, Bryson Daily and Army get to play on their biggest stage yet in what has been a remarkable season for the Black Knights. One of just three unbeaten FBS teams with Oregon and Indiana, Army is the only one that has won every game by double digits. But it hasn’t faced any team the caliber of Notre Dame, which has given up just seven rushing touchdowns in 10 games.

Daily, one of 29 Texans on Army’s roster, gets his competitive spirit naturally. He grew up in a family of coaches and athletes. His mother, Christi, coached basketball and track. She and Darrell are retired and living in Wimberley, Texas, which is about 40 miles southwest of Austin.

Both of Daily’s grandfathers were coaches, not to mention one of his grandmothers. Both of his sisters, Brooke and Ali, played sports, and Brooke is a junior high school coach in Wimberley.

“It’s all we’ve known. It’s all Bryson has known, from the time he was in youth leagues and my father-in-law [Buddy Comer] was coaching him,” Darrell Daily said.

Comer was the one who helped Bryson Daily channel his intensity and drive, which occasionally reached the threshold of being more of a negative than a positive when he was younger. Daily hated to lose — and still does. But he learned to turn that anger into a steely determination.

Comer still sends his grandson reminders before games that a “cool head and hot heart” will lead to success. Daily even has “CHHH” tattooed on his arm.

“He’s an alpha leader, and the guys believe in him,” Monken said. “He pushes the other guys and is very demanding, but it’s always with the betterment of the team in mind.”

Daily doesn’t have anybody in his family with a military background, but it was an easy decision for him when Army offered him a scholarship.

“I wanted to play college football at the highest possible level. It didn’t matter where,” Daily said.

The FCS schools in Texas — Stephen F. Austin, Incarnate Word and Abilene Christian — all wanted him and so did several Ivy League schools, but not necessarily as a quarterback. SMU kept him dangling and had one scholarship spot open, but ended up giving it to a player in the transfer portal.

Army recruited Daily as both a quarterback and linebacker and assured him he would get his shot at QB. After visiting West Point, he was sold and felt a close connection with Viti, who was deployed in the Arghandab River Valley in Afghanistan from 2010-11 before returning to his alma mater to coach. Viti was a platoon leader, and he lived on a combat outpost that was attacked virtually every day by the Taliban.

“Seeing what kind of dude he was and seeing what West Point meant to him and hearing about his service, I knew this was where I belonged,” Daily said. “It wasn’t just about football. It was about being a part of something bigger than just yourself.”

Daily spent his first year at the U.S. Military Academy Preparatory School in 2020 after having to delay hernia surgery during the COVID pandemic. That first year helped him prepare for life at the academy. As a freshman the following season, Daily scuffled with the transition from the spread/speed option he ran in high school to Army’s version of the triple option. He appeared in only six games his first two seasons, although he did make the travel roster as a sophomore.

Daily patiently waited his turn and never flinched, even with four or five quarterbacks ahead of him on the roster when he arrived on campus. He knew his time was coming.

“The transfer portal isn’t a factor here,” Monken said. “You’re still able to develop players, have them be around older players and learn and stay together for four years. Bryson bought into that.”

He won the starting job as a junior in 2023 and became only the second Army quarterback to both rush and pass for 900 yards in a season. But the Black Knights had shifted to more of a shotgun/passing attack, in large part because of the rule change the year before that eliminated blocks below the waist outside the tackle box. Army’s offensive numbers tumbled, and the Black Knights finished 6-6 for the second straight season.

This season, Monken decided to go back to a true under-center, triple-option attack based on the power game. The Black Knights went from averaging 20.5 points in 2023 to 35.2 points this season and regained their spot as the country’s top rushing team. They’re averaging 72.1 more yards per game than the No. 2 FBS team (UCF).

“It was a way for us to maybe run some option out of the shotgun and still be different,” Monken said of the unsuccessful experiment a year ago. “But I realized we weren’t different enough. So this year, I came back to getting more under center, going back to our roots a little bit and finding a way to do that without having to rely on the cut block.”

All the while, Daily has flourished. He has attempted just 51 passes, but seven have gone for touchdowns, and he has thrown only one interception. But it’s the running game where he has excelled. He’s not the kind of quarterback who uses his speed to run away from defenders, but he’s quick and uses the next-level cut to find openings a lot of players don’t see.

And when all else fails, he goes into all-out linebacker mode, lowers his pads and essentially says, “May the best man win,” to his would-be tacklers.

“We’ve kind of grown with him, and that’s what you’ve got to do as a good offense,” Viti said. “You’ve got to see who your best players are and play to their strengths.”

Daily’s family will be well represented in New York. His parents, two sisters and one set of grandparents are all making the trip from Texas.

Daily, an engineering management major, has an eye on infantry to begin his military service. But just like his father, he will spend next football season coaching at the prep school at West Point. That time will count as the first six months of Daily’s military service.

But nobody in the Daily family is getting too far ahead of themselves, especially Bryson. There’s a lot more football left to be played, including the American Athletic Conference championship game Dec. 6 and the 125th Army-Navy game on Dec. 14 in Landover, Maryland.

And after that, maybe even a playoff game.

“We’re just trying to enjoy every moment and chase that winning feeling, and that happens by chasing that 1-0 mentality of going 1-0 every week,” Bryson said. “It’s no different this game than it was last game.”

And that’s whether it’s a street fight or fighting to find the goal line against the Fighting Irish.

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Cubs blow lead in 10-run 8th, storm back in thriller

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Cubs blow lead in 10-run 8th, storm back in thriller

CHICAGO — Kyle Tucker had the fans on their feet, roaring and pumping their fists as he rounded the bases after hitting the go-ahead two-run homer in the eighth inning. His screaming line drive cleared the right-field wall with plenty of room to spare.

The Chicago Cubs went from giving up 10 runs in the eighth to scoring six in the bottom half and beating the Arizona Diamondbacks 13-11 on Friday in one of the wildest games on record.

The two teams combined for 21 runs in the seventh and eighth innings, with the Cubs scoring 11 runs and the D-backs plating 10. It was the first nine-inning game in MLB history in which both teams scored 10 or more runs from the seventh inning on, and the third game overall, according to ESPN Research.

“That’s kind of baseball,” Tucker said. “There’s a lot of ups and downs in this game, especially with how many games we play.”

There haven’t been many games like this, though.

The Cubs are just the seventh team in at least the past 125 seasons to allow 10 or more runs in an inning and win. They are also the fifth team to give up 10 or more runs and score six or more in the same inning.

The 16 combined runs in the eighth were the most in an inning at Wrigley Field, according to the Elias Sports Bureau.

“If you’ve seen that one, you’ve been around for a while,” Cubs manager Craig Counsell said with a laugh. “It was crazy. You know, we gave up 10 runs in an inning and we won. So it was a wild game, but we kept going, and, you know, there’s 27 outs in a game and this kind of proves it, and you’re just happy to get out with a win.”

On a warm day with the ball carrying, Carson Kelly homered twice. Ian Happ belted a grand slam and Seiya Suzuki went deep, helping the Cubs open a weekend series on a winning note.

“You’ve seen it early — having some tough losses, coming back winning the next day,” Happ said. “Losing the first game of the series, winning the series. Little things like that. Today’s a great example of professional hitters going out there and continuing to have really good at-bats.”

The way things transpired in the final two innings was something to see.

Kelly hit a two-run homer in the second against Corbin Burnes, and Happ came through with his grand slam against Ryne Nelson as part of a five-run seventh. But just when it looked as if the Cubs were in control with a 7-1 lead, things took a wild turn in the eighth.

Eugenio Suarez cut it to 7-5 with a grand slam against Porter Hodge, Geraldo Perdomo singled in a run and Randal Grichuk put Arizona on top by one with a two-run double. Lourdes Gurriel Jr. hit a three-run homer, making it 11-7.

The crowd of more than 39,000 let the Cubs hear it, but their team regrouped in the bottom half. Bryce Jarvis hit Nico Hoerner leading off and walked Pete Crow-Armstrong before Kelly drove a three-run homer to center. Tucker, the Cubs’ prized offseason addition, came through after Happ singled with one out. Suzuki followed with his drive against Joe Mantiply to give the Cubs a 13-11 lead.

Arizona, which had won five straight, became just the third team over the past 50 seasons to lose a game in which it had a 10-run inning at any point, according to ESPN Research.

“You just got to stay locked in,” Kelly said. “Obviously, you don’t want to … give up 10 in an inning. Obviously, you don’t want to do that. I think the biggest thing is coming back, regrouping and continuing to fight.”

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Chisholm suspended 1 game for conduct, tweet

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Chisholm suspended 1 game for conduct, tweet

Major League Baseball suspended New York Yankees infielder Jazz Chisholm Jr. for one game and fined him an undisclosed amount, the result of his actions during Thursday night’s win against the Tampa Bay Rays.

Chisholm was ejected in the seventh inning by plate umpire John Bacon for arguing after a called third strike on a full-count pitch from Mason Montgomery that appeared low.

Minutes later, he posted on his X account, “Not even f—ing close!!!!!” then deleted the post.

“I didn’t think before I had anything that I said was ejectable but after probably,” Chisholm said after the game. “I’m a competitor, so when I go out there and I feel like I’m right and you’re saying something to me that I think doesn’t make sense, I’m going to get fired up and be upset.

“I lost my emotions. I lost my cool. I got to be better than that. … I’m definitely mad at myself for losing my cool.”

Michael Hill, the league’s senior vice president for on-field operations, said Friday’s discipline was for Chisholm’s “conduct, including his violation of Major League Baseball’s Social Media Policy for Major League Players.”

MLB regulations ban the use of electronic devices during games. The social media policy prohibits “displaying or transmitting content that questions the impartiality of or otherwise denigrates a major league umpire.”

Chisholm did appeal the decision, allowing him to play in Friday night’s 1-0 win against the Rays. He started at second base and went 0 for 4 with two strikeouts.

Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.

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First-time father-to-be Ohtani away from Dodgers

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First-time father-to-be Ohtani away from Dodgers

ARLINGTON, Texas — Shohei Ohtani is away from the Los Angeles Dodgers for the birth of the two-way superstar’s first child.

Manager Dave Roberts said before the Dodgers’ series opener Friday night against the Rangers that Ohtani was with his wife and going on MLB’s paternity list.

“He and Mamiko are expecting at some point. That’s all I know,” Roberts said. “I don’t know when he’s going to come back and I don’t know when they’re going to have the baby, but obviously they’re together in anticipation.”

The 30-year-old Ohtani posted on his Instagram account in late December that he and his 28-year-old wife, a former professional basketball player from his native Japan, were expecting a baby in 2025.

“Can’t wait for the little rookie to join our family soon!” said the Dec. 28 post that included a photo showing the couple’s beloved dog, Decoy, as well as a pink ruffled onesie along with baby shoes and a sonogram that was covered by a baby emoji.

Ohtani can miss up to three games while on paternity leave. The Dodgers have a three-game series in Texas before an off day Monday, then play the Cubs in Chicago on Tuesday.

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