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LOS ANGELES — The intentional walk, if you think about it, was appropriate. Two runners were on in a two-run game. First base was open with two outs. Francisco Lindor, a potential MVP who had already homered, was up to bat. And yet Mark Vientos, who would deliver the grand slam that set the tone in the New York Mets7-3 victory over the Los Angeles Dodgers in Game 2 of the National League Championship Series on Monday, said he “took it personal.”

That reaction, if you ask Vientos’ teammates, was also appropriate.

“My man’s got a lot of confidence in himself,” said Sean Manaea, the Mets’ winning pitcher. “I love that.”

Vientos’ grand slam off Landon Knack, who was expected to do most of the work in what qualified as a bullpen game for the Dodgers, capped a five-run second inning that helped the Mets split the first two games from Dodger Stadium, evening the best-of-seven NLCS with three games from New York’s Citi Field on tap.

It was also the continuation of a miraculous run for Vientos — from an .820 OPS over the regular season’s last four months to the game-winning hit in the postseason opener, the game-tying single in Game 1 of the NL Division Series and, now, the big home run in a game the Mets desperately needed.

At 24 years and 308 days old, Vientos became the youngest player to hit a grand slam in the history of this round, a mere 49 days younger than Rafael Devers in 2021. Vientos’ 11 RBIs are tied for the most in Mets postseason history through a player’s first nine games, along with John Olerud in 1999, Carlos Delgado in 2006 and Daniel Murphy in 2015. All told, Vientos is slashing .378/.410/.676 with three home runs in October.

And yet the most impressive thing about him might be this: An unheralded player who didn’t have a job early this season was insulted that an opposing team would walk one of the game’s best players ahead of him.

“That’s who he is,” Lindor said of Vientos. “I’m glad he took it personal. He’s got to continue to climb.”

The Dodgers’ pitching staff entered Monday’s game on a string of 33 consecutive scoreless innings, tied with the 1966 Baltimore Orioles for the most in postseason history. Lindor put an end to that by working an eight-pitch at-bat against opener Ryan Brasier and finishing it with a leadoff homer. The Mets continued to apply pressure in the next inning. Starling Marte started with a single, Jesse Winker drew a walk and Tyrone Taylor came up with an RBI double two batters later, putting runners on second and third and setting up Lindor’s intentional walk.

Vientos felt ready.

“I want to be up there during that at-bat,” he said. “I want them to walk Lindor in that situation, put me up there. And at that point I was just, ‘Let me simplify the game, just get one run in, get a walk — whatever I can do to add another run to the score.’ And luckily I hit a bomb.”

Vientos is navigating through his first postseason, but his ability to simplify at-bats — to slow his thoughts, remain calm, keep his body under control — has stood out to those who have watched him closely. Those traits showed again in his confrontation with Knack. Vientos took a first-pitch ball, then fouled off back-to-back sliders. Knack used those pitches to set up a high fastball to try for a strikeout, but Vientos fouled the pitch back. He later took two sliders low and away “with ease,” Mets manager Carlos Mendoza said.

When he got another fastball — a pitch Vientos was hoping for but didn’t expect — it traveled right down the middle. Rather than aggressively try to pull the pitch, Vientos saw it deep into the zone and smacked it to the opposite field, a 102 mph line drive that snuck over the wall in right-center. Vientos went deep on the ninth pitch of the at-bat, after the most pitches seen before a grand slam in the past 50 postseasons, according to ESPN Research.

“You didn’t see a big swing,” Mendoza said. “It was, ‘Let me put it in play. Let me stay in the big part of the ballpark.’ And he was able to drive that one. You see the next at-bat, against a lefty, just going the other way with ease and just shoot the ball the other way. That’s a sign of not only a good hitter, but someone that is mature and is under control. It doesn’t matter the situation.”

You can say the same thing about the 2024 Mets, who have followed all three of their postseason losses with multiple-run victories.

Manaea, who transformed his career by dropping his arm slot and pitching across his body, held the Dodgers to only a Max Muncy home run through the first five innings, keeping a big early lead intact. The Mets nearly fumbled it away in a sixth inning that saw Jose Iglesias and Pete Alonso misplay groundballs, but Phil Maton got a red-hot Kiké Hernández to bounce into an inning-ending double play to preserve a three-run lead. Ryne Stanek followed, then Edwin Diaz came in for the four-out save.

The Mets will now have three straight games at Citi Field.

In other words, they have a chance to clinch one of the most improbable World Series berths in recent memory at home.

“Playing in front of the New York fans is the best,” Vientos said. “I’m excited to get back.”

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Mississippi St. flips ex-Auburn commit Womack

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Mississippi St. flips ex-Auburn commit Womack

Four-star prospect Bralan Womack, ESPN’s No. 3 safety in the 2026 class, flipped his commitment from Auburn to Mississippi State on Monday, sealing a historic late-cycle pledge for coach Jeff Lebby and the Bulldogs.

Womack, a 6-foot, 200-pound defender from Flowood, Mississippi, is the No. 39 overall prospect in the 2026 ESPN 300. If he signs later this week, Womack will join the in-state Bulldogs as the school’s highest-ranked signee in the ESPN recruiting era, dating to 2006.

Prior to Monday, Womack had spent the fall as the top-ranked commit in Auburn’s 2026 class after picking the Tigers over Florida, Ohio State and Texas A&M in August. However, Auburn’s decision to fire coach Hugh Freeze on Nov. 2 unsettled Womack’s recruitment, opening the door to late fall flip interest from LSU, Mississippi State and Texas A&M.

Womack’s exit from the Tigers’ incoming class comes one day after the program announced the hiring of South Florida coach Alex Golesh on Sunday. Womack, who visited Auburn for the Iron Bowl in Week 14, told ESPN on Nov. 25 that his decision would be tied closely to the outcome of the Tigers’ coaching search and interim coach D.J. Durkin’s role with the program in the future.

Whether or not Durkin will remain on Golesh’s staff remains unclear as of Monday.

Womack, ESPN’s No. 3 recruit in the state of Mississippi, won back-to-back state titles in his sophomore and junior seasons at Mississippi’s Hartfield Academy. He entered his senior campaign this fall as the state’s reigning Gatorade Football Player of the Year.

Womack has visited each of LSU, Mississippi State and Texas A&M since late October. He told ESPN that the Bulldogs turned up the heat on his recruitment early last month, eventually hosting him twice in November, most recently during last weekend’s Egg Bowl defeat to Ole Miss.

Womack said the Bulldogs’ pitched him on becoming the defensive version of star freshman quarterback Kamario Taylor — an in-state signee in the 2025 class who made his first career start in Week 14 — and highlighted the program’s progress across two seasons under Lebby.

“You can see his ability to go out and get players and build confidence in a locker room that didn’t have much when he walked in,” Womack said. That takes a lot. You can see what he’s doing.”‘

Womack now stands as the lone ESPN 300 pledge in Mississippi State’s 2026 signing class with the three-day early signing period set to open Wednesday morning. Prior to his flip, the Bulldogs’ incoming class sat at No. 49 in ESPN’s class rankings for the 2026 cycle.

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Stoops fired after 13 years at UK, owed $37.7M

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Stoops fired after 13 years at UK, owed .7M

Kentucky has fired football coach Mark Stoops.

The school’s athletic director announced the dismissal Monday, thanking Stoops for his dedication and leadership:

“His tenure transformed the program and reset expectations,” said athletic director Mitch Barnhart in a statement released on social media. “His tenure transformed the program and reset expectations. His time here was filled with memorable victories, a historic run of consecutive bowl appearances, and a commitment to developing young men both on and off the field.”

Stoops just completed his 13th season at Kentucky with a 5-7 record after going 4-8 in 2024. Kentucky lost its final game of the year to rival Louisville 41-0 on Saturday.

Stoops, 58, went 72-80 during his time in Lexington (82-80 if including the 10-win 2021 season that was later vacated) and leaves as the winningest coach in school history. Bear Bryant is No. 2.

Stoops brought consistency to Kentucky, making bowl games every season from 2016 to 2023 and twice finishing in the AP top 20.

But Kentucky has had very few bright spots the past two seasons, and the university decided to move on despite Stoops being signed through June 2031 and earning $9 million this year.

Stoops is owed 75% of his remaining salary, which is approximately $37.7 million. That falls within the top five buyouts in college football history, four of which have come this year (the first three were Brian Kelly, $54 million; James Franklin, $49 million, though that was reduced when he took the job at Virginia Tech; and Jonathan Smith, $33 million).

Stoops’ last two years at Kentucky came in the wake of changes to NIL and revenue sharing in college football. Before that era, Stoops delivered some of the best seasons in school history. That included 10-win seasons in 2018, Kentucky’s first since 1977, and the aforementioned 2021 season since vacated.

He developed Kentucky into a program with toughness and player development as its hallmarks. The Wildcats had multiple players drafted every year from 2019 through 2025, including four first-round picks during his tenure.

Kentucky appeared to have found its quarterback for the future this season, as Stoops inserted freshman Cutter Boley as the starter in late September. The move paid dividends, as Kentucky took Texas to overtime and then won three straight games — at Auburn, Florida and Tennessee Tech. Boley threw 15 touchdown passes and completed 65.8% of his throws.

After the loss to Louisville on Saturday, Stoops — who chose to remain at Kentucky when other opportunities surfaced over the years — said he wasn’t going anywhere.

Asked after the game about the possibility of stepping down, Stoops told reporters, “Like, I’m going to walk away? Are you kidding me? … Zero percent chance I walk.”

Barnhart has pledged to “make the necessary investments to recruit an elite head coach” to “build a championship program for the people of Kentucky.”

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Sources: Spartans target Fitzgerald as new coach

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Sources: Spartans target Fitzgerald as new coach

Pat Fitzgerald has emerged as the target of Michigan State football’s coaching search, sources confirmed to ESPN’s Pete Thamel on Sunday night. The sides are working toward a deal, which is expected to be finalized in the near future.

The anticipated arrival of Fitzgerald comes after Michigan State fired Jonathan Smith on Sunday, two years after he was hired, and one day after the Spartans defeated Maryland to conclude the regular season.

“The 2025 football season has not lived up to our shared standards for Michigan State Football,” athletic director J Batt said in a statement. “While that does not fall solely on Jonathan Smith, it’s become necessary to make a coaching change in order to chart a new direction for the program.”

The 50-year-old Fitzgerald reached a settlement with Northwestern in August, two years after he sued the university amid a team hazing scandal that led to his firing following an investigation. Details of the settlement were not made public.

Former Northwestern football players started filing lawsuits in 2023, alleging sexual abuse and racial discrimination on the team. Similar allegations then spread across several sports.

Fitzgerald denied wrongdoing and sued for $130 million. He alleged the school illegally terminated his employment and damaged his reputation, among other things. His case was set to go to trial this month.

Fitzgerald was an All-America linebacker for the Wildcats and starred on the 1995 team that won the Big Ten and played in the Rose Bowl.

He was 110-101 in 17 seasons as Northwestern’s head coach. He led the Wildcats to Big Ten West championships in 2018 and 2020 and to five bowl victories. Over his final two seasons, though, Northwestern was 4-20.

Michigan State lost eight of its last nine games to finish 4-8 this season. Smith’s overall record at MSU was 9-15 and just 4-14 in the Big Ten. Smith is due more than $30 million, according to terms of his seven-year contract.

Smith, on the sidelines for the Spartans’ 38-28 win over the Terrapins on Saturday night at Ford Field, was 34-35 over six seasons at Oregon State, winning at least eight games in consecutive seasons for the first time in more than a decade at his alma mater. He went 5-7 overall and 3-6 in the Big Ten during his debut season last year. His seat got warm when athletic director Alan Haller, who hired him, left the school last May.

Expectations were low for this season, and the results were worse.

The Spartans followed up wins against Western Michigan, Boston College and Youngstown State with an 0-8 start in Big Ten play. They lost to USC, Nebraska, UCLA, Indiana and Michigan by double digits before blowing a late lead and losing at Minnesota by three points in overtime. Their only conference win came Saturday against Maryland.

Smith benched quarterback Aidan Chiles, who followed him from Oregon State, against the Golden Gophers and gave redshirt freshman Alessio Milivojevic a shot to start, perhaps with an eye toward the future the coach no longer has at Michigan State. Milivojevic tossed a career-high four touchdown passes and completed 27 of 39 passes for 292 yards Saturday night.

The program has struggled since the school’s winningest coach, Mark Dantonio, retired and ended a record-breaking 13-year run with consecutive 7-6 seasons and a .500 Big Ten record over two years.

With limited choices in the winter of 2020, inexperienced athletic director Bill Beekman hired Mel Tucker after he went 5-7 in one season at Colorado and had ties to the school as a graduate assistant under Nick Saban.

Tucker led the Spartans to an 11-2 record in 2021 and the school rewarded him with a $95 million, 10-year contract. The school fired him early in the 2023 season after investigating a sexual misconduct complaint against him.

Michigan State does not have a scandal to recover from during its latest attempt to fix its program, but it faces a big challenge to find someone who can win consistently in the expanded and highly competitive Big Ten.

News of Michigan State’s decision to focus on Fitzgerald was first reported by the Detroit Free Press.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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