The Houston Astros welcomed first baseman Christian Walker to the team Monday, in one of two moves that almost certainly marks the end of Alex Bregman‘s time in Houston. But Bregman’s tenure didn’t end without a concentrated effort by the Astros to keep the two-time All-Star.
On a day when Walker signed a three-year, $60 million contract that will pay him $20 million annually, which came just more than a week after the Astros acquired infielder Isaac Paredes from Cubs in the trade that sent outfielder Kyle Tucker to Chicago, the talk around the Astros seemed to focus more on who won’t be back next season.
“The way I view it right now is Paredes is going to play third base and Walker is going to play first base,” Astros general manager Dana Brown said Monday in Houston. “And Bregman’s still a free agent.”
The Astros had hoped to re-sign Bregman, the team’s third baseman for the past nine seasons, but Brown said the negotiations stalled.
“I thought we made a really competitive offer, showing that we wanted him back,” he said. “But we had to pursue other options. We couldn’t just sit there. We locked in Paredes early in that trade, knowing that he could play third or first and then when the opportunity to add another bat came up, we just jumped on it.”
Adding a first baseman was an offseason priority for the Astros after they released struggling first baseman Jose Abreu less than halfway through a three-year, $58.5 million contract.
“We knew we had to get better at first base,” Brown said. “We pursued [Walker] and we’re excited to have him because we know that we’re going to have a really good first baseman that can defend and also hit the ball on the seats from time to time.”
Walker was attracted by the sustained success of the Astros, who won their first two World Series titles in 2017 and 2022.
“I’ve been watching this team for a while now, and that edge, the energy, the expectation, you can tell that they’re going out there with a standard,” he said. “And I’m very excited to be a part of it.”
Walker is looking forward to playing with star second baseman Jose Altuve. Walker is fascinated by the success and consistency Altuve has had over his 14-year career.
“I get a chance to learn from Jose Altuve,” Walker said. “Nothing really gets better than that.”
Brown was asked what he would tell Astros fans, who saw the club lose another star after George Springer and Carlos Correa left as free agents in recent years.
“I would just tell the fans that look, we are very focused on remaining competitive,” he said. “We’re very focused on the winning division and going back to the World Series, and I think with these additions that we have the ability to do that. So, I feel strongly that we’re going to be picked to win the division first off. And if our pitching holds up, which I feel strongly about, as well, I think we’ll get deep into the postseason.”
The Astros won the American League West for a fourth straight year this season before they were swept by the Tigers in an AL Wild Card Series.
Walker, 33, hit .251 with 26 homers, 84 RBIs, 55 walks and 133 strikeouts this year. In 2023, he batted .258 with 33 homers and 103 RBIs as the Diamondbacks reached the World Series.
Walker played in 130 games this year, down from 157 in 2023 and 160 in 2022. He was sidelined between July 29 and Sept. 3 because of a strained left oblique.
He spent the past eight seasons with the Diamondbacks, hitting .251 with 146 homers and 442 RBIs.
He didn’t secure a full-time job in the big leagues until 2019. He has provided consistent power over the past six seasons and grown into an elite defensive first baseman, winning Gold Gloves in each of the past three seasons.
Walker played college ball at South Carolina and was drafted by the Baltimore Orioles in 2012. He made his big league debut with the Orioles in 2014 but couldn’t stick in the majors and was claimed off waivers by Atlanta, Cincinnati and Arizona in a five-week span.
Walker’s contract has a limited no-trade provision, allowing him to block deals to six teams without his consent. He would earn $200,000 for winning an MVP, $175,000 for finishing second in the voting, $150,000 for third, $125,000 for fourth and $100,000 for fifth.
Walker also would get $100,000 for being named World Series MVP, $50,000 for League Championship Series MVP and $75,000 apiece for making the All-Star Game or winning a Gold Glove or Silver Slugger Award.
Infielder Grae Kessinger was designated for assignment to open a roster spot.
COLLEGE STATION, Texas — Offensive coordinator Shannon Dawson’s game plan for Miami‘s first College Football Playoff appearance was to throw the kitchen sink at Texas A&M, to run every twist on every play he could imagine until something broke. He would leave no stone unturned.
By the fourth quarter, however, the score was tied at 3, and both offenses had traded blows in a battle of attrition. All the gadget plays and misdirection had amounted to nothing. A swirling wind at Kyle Field had stunted the passing attack and played havoc with the kicking game, as Miami missed three field goal attempts. The last hope, Dawson figured, was to do the thing he had been criticized for most this season.
He would run the ball — power run, A-gap, right down the Aggies’ throats until Miami was in the end zone.
Dawson found his tailback on the sideline before Miami’s final drive, and he issued an edict to Mark Fletcher Jr.
“We’re riding you down the field,” Dawson said.
Fletcher grinned — that smile that has become so familiar to everyone around Miami for the past three years. Fletcher is always happy, always an optimist, but this was different. It wasn’t optimism. It was certainty.
Fletcher found his O-line and explained the game plan for that final drive.
“I know what I’m going to do,” he told them. “Now you just get ’em out of the way, and I’ll handle the rest.”
Fletcher took a handoff on the first play of the drive, surged up the middle, dashed toward the sideline, fought off a pair of defenders and marched 56 yards downfield before he was dragged to the ground.
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Miami’s Mark Fletcher Jr. takes off for a 56-yard run late in 4th
Mark Fletcher Jr. is able to break free to set Miami up in field goal range.
He followed with runs of 2, 12, 3 and 2 yards to set Miami up for what became the decisive touchdown in the program’s biggest win in more than 20 years.
No one on the team was surprised.
“To see him have that success,” quarterback Carson Beck said, “I’m super happy for him. But it was very expected.”
Fletcher finished the game, a 10-3 win, with 172 yards rushing for an offense that managed just 278 yards total. On Dec. 31, Miami will face Ohio State in the Goodyear Cotton Bowl Classic (7:30 p.m. ET, ESPN).
In the chaos of the postgame locker room celebration, Fletcher went live on Instagram, holding up a T-shirt with his father’s face emblazoned on it, and the words that have come to define both his journey and Miami’s inspiration this season: “Long live Big Mark.”
It has been less than 14 months since Fletcher’s father, Big Mark, died in his sleep at 53. In the time since, Fletcher has reevaluated his outlook, refocused on his goals and relived so many memories of the man who helped make him into the glue that binds the Hurricanes together. He’s not playing for his dad exactly, Fletcher said, but it’s in these moments when he still feels closest to Big Mark.
So, yes, Fletcher knew what he was going to do on that final drive. He would do what his father always told him to do. He would put one foot in front of the other and fight for every inch.
“What he means to this team, it was a rough year for him, and he never flinched,” Miami coach Mario Cristobal said. “He’s the heart and soul of our football team. Everything he does is dedicated to his teammates getting better and his team winning. And he was the difference in this game. He just took over.”
LINDA FLETCHER WELCOMED as many fans to the Miami-Texas A&M game as she could, whether they were decked out in orange or maroon. She perched outside the stadium armed with signs — “Freight Train Fletcher” and “Long Live Big Mark” — and said hello to anyone she saw pass.
“I gave out 10,000 hugs,” she said. “And I love it.”
To understand Mark Fletcher’s outlook on the world, it helps to know who raised him.
“My other children always say, ‘Oh, she finally had her mini me,'” Linda said. “Mark’s ways are a lot like mine.”
There’s a group text for all the “Mamma Canes” to trade travel tips and hotel advice and just to talk football, but even amid the fanatical group of mothers, Linda stands out. A few are baffled by Linda’s willingness to engage the enemy at games but, as she sees it, everyone could use a little more love in their lives.
“I don’t know what my purpose is,” Linda said, “but they feel good, I feel good, and people are always talking about how much they love Mark.”
Linda hates flying, so she drives to each game, including the 1,300-mile journey from Fort Lauderdale to College Station for Miami’s playoff game against the Aggies. She has two older kids who live in Jacksonville, so she tries to stop there for the night, then ventures on in daylong chunks — to Syracuse and Dallas and Berkeley, California — stopping wherever she sees fit to experience a little of what the road has to offer.
Linda has tried to convince a few of the other Miami moms to join her on a road trip, but so far, she has had no takers. Occasionally someone will offer to buy her a plane ticket, and she laughs.
“I say they can buy me a tank of gas,” Linda said.
The dream, Linda said, is to buy an RV, so she can cruise America’s highways in style.
“Once Linda Fletcher pulls out in her big RV, that’s how you know we’ve made it,” she said. “I’m going to get me a big RV. I look forward to that. It’s on my bucket list.”
And yet, Linda is in no hurry to make the dream a reality. Mark Fletcher could move on to the NFL when Miami’s season draws to a close, but he has talked with his mom about the decision, and he wants to stick around. He loves Miami, and the program has been the salve that has made the past year bearable.
Mark Fletcher Sr. was “an inside dad,” Linda said. He never missed a practice. When the locker room opened to family, he was there. He was his son’s closest ally, but he was also a rock for Fletcher’s teammates.
“Him being around the building with the team, he was always cheering somebody up, always willing to talk to somebody,” Miami defensive end Rueben Bain said. “Of course, Mark lost him, but I feel like so many of us on the team lost him. Even myself. It’s crazy what the Fletcher family has done for this university.”
Fletcher said his dad served as a father figure for a number of his teammates who had grown up without one.
Linda said Big Mark was just a fun, outgoing person. He was someone people could trust.
And then, on Oct. 24, 2024, he was gone.
“We were broken inside,” Linda said. “My baby was broken. That’s the worst thing that ever could’ve happened, and I was nervous for him because I know how close him and his dad are.”
A few hours after Fletcher was marched into Cristobal’s office, where he was told his father had died, he was at practice. A week later, Miami was set to play rival Florida State. Fletcher insisted on suiting up for the game. The family rescheduled the funeral to accommodate it.
“We were crying our eyes out,” Linda said. “But funeral time, you know, it’s business. We had to go lay dad to rest. We’re not crying now.”
Then a procession of five buses arrived at the church. Every member of the Miami football program had come to say goodbye to Big Mark.
“We couldn’t keep ourselves together,” Linda said. “We thought it would be Mario and his family. The whole team? Think about that. For us. A little Black family from Fort Lauderdale. That was over the top.”
In the year since, Linda has been constantly amazed at how much football has been her center amid the grief.
She shows up for every practice now, except the ones at the tail end of the week before a road game. Then, she’s in her car, following some new stretch of highway. She gets to the games, and she holds up her signs, and she hugs a thousand strangers because, for her and for her son, the world is still full of love, even if one of their most important lights has gone out.
“It’s not always sad because we’re doing work that Big Mark Fletcher would so approve of,” Linda said. “It’s a bittersweet thing.”
During warmups on the field this past Saturday, before Miami played its biggest game in decades, Bain found Fletcher, and he hung an arm around his friend.
Bain wanted to soak in the moment with one of the teammates who had helped deliver Miami to this place — two of Cristobal’s early recruits who have helped engineer this new era.
Bain looked at his friend, patted his back and smiled.
“Long live Big Mark,” he said.
BEFORE FLETCHER’S DOMINANT final drive delivered Miami to the doorstep of the lone touchdown of the game, the Canes had another drive brewing. Fletcher had opened it with a 16-yard run, and, on the next play, Beck connected with star freshman Malachi Toney on a 12-yard completion past midfield. But as Toney fought for extra yardage, an A&M defender jarred the ball loose, and the Aggies recovered at their own 47.
Toney was heartbroken. He jogged to the sideline, took a seat on the bench and slumped over, believing he had cost his team the game.
“The second I saw him drop down,” Fletcher said, “I rushed over to him.”
In the weeks after Big Mark died, Fletcher spent his share of time slumped in his seat, too.
He had never wavered from football, but the problem was that Fletcher kept thinking about what his dad would’ve wanted. He thought about all the ways Big Mark had pushed him, motivated him, supported him. He was at Miami because of his dad, and now he felt he had to honor his father’s legacy. It was a weight, a feeling like his every step came in the shadow cast by the man who had set him on this path.
“I’d get so sad,” Fletcher said. “I’d cry before games.”
That sadness felt wrong though, Linda said. She admits, she still has her moments of overwhelming grief, but that’s not how the Fletcher family had ever lived. It’s in their DNA to find the light, even amid the darkest clouds. They are happy people, Linda said. Big Mark was happy.
“Big Mark helped build my son up to what he is today,” Linda said. “It gets sad that he’s not here in the flesh to follow this dream with us, but in the spiritual realm, we say he’s here with us. We just have to enjoy him in a different form. And that’s where our faith kicks in.”
So Linda and Mark and the rest of their family devised a slogan to help them honor Big Mark without remaining tethered to their grief: Keep going.
When his father was alive, Fletcher texted him daily. Usually his phone would chime a few minutes later with a note from Big Mark, offering inspiration. Nothing was owed to Fletcher, Big Mark would say. You have to earn it, then take it. Big Mark always understood how to push his son forward.
Looking back now, Linda sees it as part of Big Mark’s legacy. In his absence, he taught his family — and, really, an entire team — to keep putting one foot in front of the other, to keep living life to the fullest. Their story is not over yet.
Fletcher’s mission, Linda said, has shifted from being stressful to being purposeful.
“I think about him every single day, every second, honestly,” Fletcher said. “That’s what drives me. But I had to switch my mindset in how I’d think about him. That’s not how he’d want me to play this beautiful game of football. I just said, I miss my dad but he’d want me to go out there and have fun.”
So when Fletcher found his teammate slumped on the sideline after the worst moment of his young career, he knew exactly the right words.
Keep going.
“God just gave you some adversity right now,” Fletcher told Toney. “That’s all it is. Now let’s go win this game.”
Miami’s defense stuffed Texas A&M on three straight plays after Toney’s fumble. The Aggies punted it back to the Canes, Fletcher ran 75 yards on five plays, setting up Miami with a third-and-5 at the A&M 11.
On the next play, Beck tossed to Toney streaking across the backfield. Toney bolted around the edge, out to the sideline, past frustrated A&M defenders and into the end zone.
Keep going, and good things will happen.
“Week in and week out, Mark’s been the best guy in the building,” Bain said. “He’s always positive, always gives his best effort. He’s the leader we need him to be, but he’s just a good, righteous person, and he’s reaping what he sows. He gives his all, and he’s getting it all.”
But Fletcher remembers what his father always told him. He’s not owed anything. He is blessed. And, like his mother’s RV, he’s in no rush to seize the dream. He’s here, right now, with a chance to make his family proud and to play the game he loves.
He wouldn’t want to be anywhere else.
“I just know that every day I wake up breathing it’s another opportunity to make somebody else’s life better,” Fletcher said. “God blessed me to be in this position, and I just want to make an impact.”
Eli Lederman covers college football and recruiting for ESPN.com. He joined ESPN in 2024 after covering the University of Oklahoma for Sellout Crowd and the Tulsa World.
North Carolina and coach Bill Belichick are working toward hiring Bobby Petrino as the program’s next offensive coordinator, sources confirmed to ESPN on Monday.
Offensive coordinator Freddie Kitchens was fired earlier this month after the Tar Heels ranked 131st nationally in total offense (288.8 yards per game) in 2025.
UNC sources told ESPN’s Pete Thamel that there are still multiple steps remaining before any potential hire is announced. No announcement is imminent and other candidates remain engaged in the process.
The move back into the top job at Arkansas marked a full-circle turnaround for Petrino, who was fired by the Razorbacks in 2012 for misleading officials about an extramarital affair with an athletic department employee. The Razorbacks went 0-7 under Petrino’s leadership this fall en route to a 2-10 finish, and Arkansas hiredMemphis‘ Ryan Silverfield as its head coach on Nov. 30.
The Tar Heels are seeking to revamp their offense following a 4-8 season in 2025. Only five FBS teams finished this past season with fewer yards per game than North Carolina, which also ranked 121st in scoring offense (19.3 PPG) and 124th in rushing (105.3) in Belichick’s debut season at UNC.
Under Kitchens, the former Cleveland Browns head coach, the Tar Heels scored 15 points or fewer in six of their 12 games.
Petrino has built a reputation for turning around struggling offenses throughout his career.
As a head coach, he led Louisville from 2003 to 2006 before one season with the Falcons. At Arkansas, he went 21-5 in the final two seasons before he was fired in December 2012.
Petrino spent the 2023 season as the offensive coordinator at Texas A&M prior to joining Pittman’s staff at Arkansas in 2024. With Petrino calling plays, the Razorbacks improved from 107th to 10th nationally in yards per game (326.5 to 459.5) last year. Despite going winless in its final 10 games in 2025, Arkansas closed the regular season ranked inside the top 25 nationally in both scoring (32.0 PPG), total offense (454.8 YPG) and rushing (191.9 YPG) among FBS programs.
Each of the previous two head coaches Petrino has worked for — Texas A&M’s Jimbo Fisher and Pittman — have been fired within two seasons. If a deal is finalized, Petrino will arrive at North Carolina ahead of a pivotal season under Belichick, who went 2-6 in ACC play in 2025.
The Tar Heels’ intention to hire Petrino was first reported by On3.
Jake Trotter is a senior writer at ESPN. Trotter covers college football. He also writes about other college sports, including men’s and women’s basketball. Trotter resides in the Cleveland area with his wife and three kids and is a fan of his hometown Oklahoma City Thunder. He covered the Cleveland Browns and NFL for ESPN for five years, moving back to college football in 2024. Previously, Trotter worked for the Middletown (Ohio) Journal, Austin American-Statesman and Oklahoman newspapers before joining ESPN in 2011. He’s a 2004 graduate of Washington and Lee University. You can reach out to Trotter at jake.trotter@espn.com and follow him on X at @Jake_Trotter.
Ohio State coach Ryan Day said he will take over calling offensive plays in the Buckeyes’ College Football Playoff opener on New Year’s Eve against Miami.
Ohio State offensive coordinator Brian Hartline, who had called plays this season, is balancing responsibilities, having recently taken the head coaching job at USF.
Day added that Hartline will focus on coaching Ohio State’s receivers in the CFP.
“We wanted to take [playcalling] off of Brian’s plate because he’s got so much going on with what he’s trying to do,” Day said Monday. “Ultimately it will be my decision what calls go into the game.”
As head coach, Day called Ohio State’s offensive plays until last season, when he relinquished those duties to Chip Kelly. After the Buckeyes won the national championship, Kelly left to be the offensive coordinator for the Las Vegas Raiders and Day promoted Hartline from receivers coach.
Under Hartline, the Buckeyes rank 17th nationally in scoring, averaging almost 35 points per game, though they scored only 10 in their Big Ten championship loss to Indiana. The Buckeyes twice drove the ball inside the Indiana 10-yard line in the second half but failed to come up with any points.
Miami knocked off Texas A&M 10-3 on Saturday in the first round to advance to face the second-seeded Buckeyes at the Cotton Bowl.