Robin L Marshall/Getty  Maks Chmerkovskiy and Peta Murgatroyd on October 21, 2025 in Beverly Hills, California.

Robin L Marshall/Getty

NEED TO KNOW

  • Maksim Chmerkovskiy and Peta Murgatroyd first met on the Broadway production of Burn the Floor in 2009

  • But Murgatroyd said in a Dec. 10 interview that when she first met Chmerkovskiy, she thought he was an "a-hole"

  • She recalled that he came to the Broadway production with "this big ass ego"

Maksim Chmerkovskiyknows he didn't make a great first impression on his future wife,Peta Murgatroyd.

The married couple chatted withAccess Hollywoodon Wednesday, Dec. 10, and revealed their first impressions of each other after meeting on the Broadway production ofBurn the Floorin 2009.

Murgatroyd, 39, asked her husband what he first thought of her when they initially met.

"It's the body. We've got to go to the body," Chmerkovskiy, 45, replied. "I didn't even hear you speak before I saw you move. How would I have?"

Murgatroyd blushed in response and then candidly answered the question from her perspective. "I thought that you were an a-hole," she said.

Eric McCandless via Getty  Maks Chmerkovskiy and Peta Murgatroyd on

Eric McCandless via Getty

Chmerkovskiy looked directly at the camera and said, "I know. That's why I didn't want to ask this question."

Murgatroyd then added that she also thought the professional dancer was "very tall and handsome."

She noted, "But we were both with other people at the time," and Chmerkovskiy quipped, "So you chose to hate."

Murgatroyd rejected his claim, "I didn't choose to hate." She said that he came to the Broadway production with "this big ass ego." However, the formerDancing with the Starsprofessional admitted she "grew to like" Chmerkovskiy, and eventually "grew to love" him.

Murgatroyd previouslytold PEOPLEin a 2015 interview that she thought Chmerkovskiy was "arrogant." Once she realized that wasn't the case, their friendship "grew and grew," she said.

After the couple's first meeting in 2009, they would reunite onDancing with the Starswhen Murgatroyd was cast as a troupe dancer for season 12 in 2011. Chmerkovskiy joinedDWTSas a pro dancer in 2006, while Murgatroyd was promoted to the professional cast the following season.

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In 2012, Murgatroydmade their relationship Instagram official. But after less than a year of dating, Chmerkovskiy called it quits.

In the Dec. 10Access Hollywoodinterview, Chmerkovskiy told Murgatroyd that, despite breaking up with her, that's when he knew he wanted to marry her. "At some point, when I actually came to that realization, like, 'This is it.' That's when we broke up," he said.

The two rekindled their relationship in October 2014. Then, in December 2015,Chmerkovskiy and Murgatroyd got engagedduring an episode ofDWTS.

Axelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic Maksim Chmerkovskiy and Peta Murgatroyd on July 20, 2022 in Hollywood, California.

Axelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic

Theytied the knotin New York on July 8, 2017, six months after theywelcomed son Shai Aleksanderon Jan. 4, 2017.

They later welcomed their second child, sonRio John, in June 2023, and just seven months later, the coupleannounced their third pregnancy. In July 2024, they announced that their son,Milan Maksim, was born.

Since becoming parents to three boys, the pair reflected on their parenting styles, and Murgatroyd told Chmerkovskiy on Dec. 10, "You have a really good balance of love for the children and also discipline."

He then replied, "Every time I feel like I'm not going to survive this, I'm looking at you, and I'm like, 'I don't know where she gets it from.' "

Read the original article onPeople

“Dancing with the Stars ”Pro Maksim Chmerkovskiy Says He Knew Wife Peta Murgatroyd Thought He Was an 'A-Hole'

Robin L Marshall/Getty NEED TO KNOW Maksim Chmerkovskiy and Peta Murgatroyd first met on the Broadway production of Burn the Floor in 200...
'Partenope,' Ennio Morricone's long-neglected opera, emerges to enchant Naples

NAPLES, Italy (AP) — At long last, vindication is at hand for an Oscar-winning composer who sought to prove he was just as capable of breathing life into Italy's grand theaters as gritty Hollywood films.

On Friday night, Naples' Teatro San Carlo will stageEnnio Morricone'sonly opera, "Partenope," three full decades after its composition. It is inspired by the mythical siren who drowned herself after failing to enchant Ulysses, her body washing ashore and becoming a settlement that grew over millennia into the seaside city of Naples.

When Morricone wrote "Partenope" in 1995, he was already the world-famous creator of the theme to the Spaghetti Western "The Good, the Bad and the Ugly" and haunting soundtracks for epic films such as "The Untouchables" and "Once Upon a Time in America."

He earned an Oscar for lifetime achievement in 2007, but his compositions never resounded in the hallowed halls of opera houses — viewed in his home country as the elite musical echelon. To his great chagrin, Partenope gathered dust for decades;Morricone died without seeing it performed.

"In the end, he read as a sign of destiny the fact he would not make his debut in the opera world," Alessandro De Rosa, a close collaborator who coauthored Morricone's autobiography, said in an interview. "I'm sure that if he were alive now, he would have taken the challenge and would have dialogued with the orchestra and the director, tirelessly, like a young kid."

Neapolitan sounds

Director Vanessa Beecroft and conductor Riccardo Frizza had to find their way through the visionary work without the benefit of those notes.

"It would have been wonderful to be able to talk to Morricone about his musical choices … but we had to understand them from what he left us and tried to interpret them in the best way," Frizza said.

For instance, he chose not to use violins in this orchestra, instead favoring flutes, harps and horns, which appear in Greek mythology, Frizza explained.

"Then you have the modern instruments, lots of percussion, with the Neapolitan sounds provided by tambourines and putipu'," he added, referencing a friction drum used in local folk music.

Teatro San Carlo was filled with anticipation on Thursday evening as Neapolitans attended an open rehearsal. Free tickets were snapped up in just a few hours.

"It was such a long wait, that's why we are here today," said middle-aged Alfonso Ieneroso as he entered the theater.

Local legend

The mythical Partenope is part ofNaples' culture, with tradition suggesting her voice represents the city's enduring spirit. The original Greek settlement was named for her. She is depicted at monuments like the Fontana della Sirena, a fountain that has become one of the city's symbols. Young children all along the Gulf of Naples, living under Mount Vesuvius' shadow, learnthe legend of Partenopefrom their parents.

And like Morricone's opera, Naples itself spent decades downtrodden and overlooked, but is enjoying resurgence: The U.N. recognized itspizza makers as an intangible cultural heritage of humanity; It featured on foreign media lists of must-visit destinations; Elena Ferrante's Neapolitan novels wereacclaimed bestsellersthat became an HBO series; and its soccer team in 2023took home the nation's top league trophyfor the first timesince Maradona played in the 1980s— thenwon again in May.

Naples has also been celebrating its 2,500th anniversary this year, and Morricone's opera marks the culmination of festivities. The protagonist in his adaptation is a woman who, after her husband dies and she is separated from her best friend, refuses the consolation of being transformed into a distant constellation. Instead, she asks the gods to let her stretch her wings along the gulf on which an immortal city will arise.

The production explores the link between the ancient legend and the modern city's identity, as two sopranos embody Partenope simultaneously, reflecting her dual nature as body and myth.

'The torment'

Morricone originally composed the one-act opera — free of charge — to accompany a libretto by authors Guido Barbieri and Sandro Cappelletto for a small festival in Positano, just south of Naples on the Amalfi coast. But it was not to be: the festival went bankrupt and Partenope was shelved.

There were several attempts to revive their work, including one between 1998 and 2000 with the Teatro Massimo of Palermo. But that project ultimately ran aground when a director couldn't be secured.

"In those years Morricone had the torment of not being accepted as a composer of what he called 'absolute music,' as he was identified with his popular movie scores," Barbieri, one of the libretto's authors, said in an interview. Cappelletto said that, in a conversation with the two authors in 2017, three years before his death, Morricone appeared "at peace" with his music career.

Partenope has inspired several productions over the centuries, including operas by renowned composers George Frideric Handel and Antonio Vivaldi in the 18th century, and a 2024 movie by Oscar-winning director Paolo Sorrentino. Morricone's work is finally coming alive to join their ranks.

"It was a great pleasure to listen to Morricone's music, the real protagonist of this opera," said Giovanni Capuano, a 26-year-old cinema student, after Thursday's rehearsal. "His spirit is back and has enchanted us."

Zampano reported from Rome.

'Partenope,' Ennio Morricone’s long-neglected opera, emerges to enchant Naples

NAPLES, Italy (AP) — At long last, vindication is at hand for an Oscar-winning composer who sought to prove he was just a...
A dance hall in Buenos Aires guarantees tango sessions with professional partners

BUENOS AIRES (AP) — At a dance hall in the heart ofBuenos Aires, 14 men in elegant dark suits sat at separate tables while across the room, 14 women in dresses and high heels waited to be asked for a dance.

As the first notes of a popular tango began to hum, the male dancers signaled to the women and crossed the dance floor in search of partners. Moments later, the couples' legs traced the gracious movements oftangoat an event that ensures every woman gets to dance.

The women book their sessions in advance with an organizer via WhatsApp, securing a dance and avoiding the interminable wait they've endured at other "milongas," or dancing gatherings, where women outnumber men.

Among the dancers on a recent Wednesday was Antje Rickel, a 69-year-old French woman in a semi-transparent red blouse and with her hair coquettishly styled up. Her dancing partner was a young man about 5 inches shorter than her. But the difference in age and height was irrelevant to the couple, who felt in perfect communion as they glided across the dance floor to the rhythm of a tango.

"He has great control," said Rickel of her young dancing companion, Jared Ramos, a professional tango dancer with the Che Che Tango Premium "milonga," where people can book guaranteed two‑hour dances with professional partners known as"Taxi Dancers."

Held on Wednesdays and Fridays, the program offers dance aficionados like Rickel the opportunity to practice tango steps, going from one dancer's arm to another's. A two-hour session goes for 55,000 pesos (about $37) for foreigners and about $30 for Argentine nationals and residents.

The dance events are organized by dancers Alejandro Justiniano and Sara Parnigoni, who present it on social media as "a tango space where you can be sure you'll dance like you've always dreamed."

Justiniano said that the male dancers are carefully chosen, with most being professional dancers or tango teachers who perform at different events. "We've looked for dancers with a lot of experience," he said.

He came up with the idea after observing the "long faces" of many women who would spend evenings at dance events watching from the sidelines. Justiniano created what he calls a "mini milonga," something a little more intimate so that "for two hours they can reach their full potential in their dancing."

Ramos, a professional tango dancer, said women face several challenges at other "milongas."

"There are 10 women for every man," he said, which means many women are left out. Adding to the problem, he noted, is the fact that "not all of them dance well."

Follow AP's coverage of Latin America and the Caribbean athttps://apnews.com/hub/latin-america

A dance hall in Buenos Aires guarantees tango sessions with professional partners

BUENOS AIRES (AP) — At a dance hall in the heart ofBuenos Aires, 14 men in elegant dark suits sat at separate tables whil...
NFL playoff race: Key numbers for AFC's top 4 seeds that could tell their postseason story

What is old is new again in the AFC. The stalwarts of the NFL at the beginning of the 21st century are now back on top of their respective divisions. The Broncos, Steelers, and Patriots are partying like it's 2014 (or 2004) and the Jaguars are appropriately playing like the Jaguars whose uniforms they've started donning again.

While the NFC has the Rams, Seahawks and Packers amongst other competitive teams and units, the AFC feels a little upside down, even if the standings are such a nod to the past that it would make theDuffer Brothersblush.

I looked at the four teams that lead the AFC divisions with four weeks to go in what's shaping up to be a wide open conference and playoffs. Each team has two numbers that represent a split between how the teams have played at certain times, with certain players, or against certain opponents, and what that means for these current division leaders as they try to make a run in January.

Let's dive in.

Denver Broncos

Number to know: 9th, 23rd

Those are, respectively, Bo Nix's dropbacksuccess ratesagainst man coverage and zone coverage this season out of 29 qualifying quarterbacks. Nix's splits against man and zone are stark and clear: He's worse against zone.

The good: Nix is essentially a top-10 quarterback this season against man coverage. He loves to take isolated receivers on the outside, primarily Courtland Sutton (but Pat Bryant is coming along, too). Against man coverage, Nix ranks fifth in EPA per dropback and ninth in explosive play rate, and his 7.1 net yards per attempt is a respectable 12th.

Pat Bryant. X WR.pic.twitter.com/14NnNCInv5

— Nate Tice (@Nate_Tice)December 9, 2025

The bad: Against zone coverage, Nix is essentially a bottom-10 quarterback this season. He ranks 14th in EPA per dropback (going from .28, which is around an MVP-level mark, to .04) and his success rate drops from 48.2% to 41.7%, with his explosive plays (from 16.9% to 10.2%, which ranks 26th) and net yards per attempt (5.7, which ranks 20th) dropping as well.

It makes sense! Nix has a big arm and is a great athlete, but his inconsistent footwork and the frantic speed at which he processes make him too antsy to have consistent results when reading out zone coverages. Nix can be spooked by any coverage he doesn't read out cleanly, like a horse (even a bronco, if you will) bucking at a loud sound. Nix will often choose to leave the pocket altogether rather than hang in there to move onto his second or third reads; 30.9% of Nix's pass attempts against zone this season have come from outside the pocket, the highest rate in the NFL. He can fire in throws when he's comfortable with the route and what he's seeing, but it's still inconsistent, even when Sean Payton attempts to streamline reads to one side being the man coverage-beating side and other to be the zone-beating side, or to cut the entire field in half on movement throws.

Against man coverage, things are more streamlined for Nix. He can find his man-beating route (like Sutton on an isolated vertical route or slant) and let it rip with no worries about layering a throw over an intermediate defender. To further illustrate, 47.6% of Nix's targets are to outside receivers against man coverage, which ranks fourth in the NFL; against zone coverage, that outside receiver rate drops to 34.9%, which ranks 20th. And Nix's legs make him a weapon as a scrambler, especially against man coverage when defenders are paying more attention to receivers and not the quarterback.

Denver's defense is full of banshees that are racking up sacks at a historic rate, and it's mostly good-to-elite in every metric. The Broncos are deep up front, and they have Patrick Surtain II and Riley Moss (I swear he's good outside of getting dunked on every week), and Talanoa Hufanga wants to collect souls likeShang Tsung.They're top-five against the run and don't allow explosives.

That said, you can poke at them a bit with run plays with pullers, and they can be susceptible to targets to the slot. They're 21st in EPA per pass but seventh in passing success rate, and 30th in EPA per pass allowed to slot targets when in zone coverage as well. That's something to keep an eye on in Week 15 against the Packers and a now-healthy Jayden Reed. But it's still an elite unit that takes it to offenses on every snap. It's just their offense, and their quarterback, have to iron out their kinks to not meet a frustrating end to their season.

New England Patriots

Numbers to know: 30th, 16th

Those are, respectively, the Patriot offense's ranks in EPA per rush and Patriot defense's rank in EPA per rush allowed this season.

Starting with the offense, the numbers get alittlebetter since TreVeyon Henderson started to take a larger workload after Rhamondre Stevenson suffered a toe injury in Week 9 against the Falcons, with the Pats' run game bumping up to 23rd in EPA per rush and 24th in rushingsuccess rate.(Their 37.9% is inching toward that 40% threshold, though, which represents a good rushing attack.) Opponent adjustments don't do the Patriots' run game any favor, as they rank 31st in DVOA, ahead of only the Raiders' atrocious ground "attack" (I use the term loosely).

So far, it hasn't hindered New England too much. Mostly because of a favorable schedule, and also because of the supernova/phenom/future MVP (if not this season, then before this decade wraps up) thePatriots have at quarterback in Drake Maye.There is also the hope that the return of rookie offensive tackle Will Campbell, who had a strong first season before being placed on IR, will help give this run game a further boost. Just alittlebit more consistency can go a long way to help their young star signal-caller when defenses get tighter and tighter in the postseason. Especially when teams like the Buccaneers have already showed they are fine dropping eight into coverage (like Todd Bowles did in Week 10, one of the highest rates of his play-calling career), daring Maye to be patient and the Patriots to run the ball consistently. (Which they didn't do that day. Henderson did have his two huge touchdown runs, which more than made up for it, but relying on home runs is a dangerous bet come postseason.)

The Patriots' defense confounds me. Like their offensive brethren, they have faced an easy schedule (32nd in DVOA's schedule rank, with the offense ranking 31st in their respective metric), and they have real strengths but real pickable aspects that will get tested by more competent offenses.

The Patriots play a mix of coverages and overall have a more bend-but-don't-break style that almost plays, for lack of a better word, stereotypically? When the Patriots play two-high coverages (which they do at a slightly above league average rate, 37.7% of snaps vs. 35.2%), they allow themselves to get peppered underneath and on the ground while limiting big plays. They rank 25th in passing success rate allowed and 26th in rushing success rate when playing Cover 2, 4, or 6 this season. But they rank seventh in EPA per play, 26th in EPA per rush, and eighth in EPA per pass allowed in those same coverages. Yielding very few big plays, especially on early downs, forces offenses to be methodical and into repeat conversion attempts on late downs (meaning third and fourth).

And sure enough, the Patriots' defense has stark splits in this regard. They're dead last in passing success rate allowed on early downs this season, a blistering 52.9% rate against mostly toothless passing games. But because this is the Patriots' defense, they sure enough rank first in passing success rate allowed on late downs at a 30% clip, half of the league's 59.9% average. They're first in net yards per attempt on late downs and second in sheer EPA per play. (You can, though, run on the Patriots on late downs, because of course you can. They are dead last in rushing success rate allowed on late downs, and out of the 28 runs they've faced, this season, the Patriots have allowed 23 to go for successful gains.)

Perhaps Milton Williams' return will help keep their heads above water and force defenses to late downs. But it is something I'm keeping my eye on as the Patriots' yards before contact allowed per run jumped from .71 from Weeks 1-8 (which would rank first over the entire season) to 2.36 yards before contact allowed per run since Week 9, which would easily rank dead last.

Eye test-wise and statistically, the Patriots are more consistent when they play single-high (man-to-man) coverages and let their talented cornerback duo of Christian Gonzalez and Carlton Davis do their thing. And the Patriots play a good amount of man coverage, especially as the downs get later.

So, the TL;DR of the Patriots: They can stop the run when they think the opponent is going to run (when in base defense, on first and second down, etc.) and they can stop the pass when they think the opponent is going to pass (when in nickel or dime personnel, on third and fourth down, etc.). Their run game needs a little more work, and perhaps their bye week will stock up the ammo that this attack needs. And Drake Maye rocks.

Jacksonville Jaguars

Numbers to know: 29th, 5th

Those are Trevor Lawrence's ranks in dropback success rate before and after the Jaguars traded for Jakobi Meyers.

Meyers, a well-rounded wide receiver whose skill set fits in any type of scheme or ecosystem, had been withering away in the Las Vegas desert before the Jaguars made a move for him at the trade deadline. But as soon as he stepped on the football field in teal and black, he became a steadying force for the Jaguars' sometimes explosive but oftentimes frustrating pass game.

loved the clean design of this Jags RZ design on the Jakobi Meyers TD. Trevor Lawrence throws just as Meyers is clearing the LB after using the hesitation to time up the routes. CB is captured by the TE's route. Good stuff.pic.twitter.com/Q0GmRlDwqY

— Nate Tice (@Nate_Tice)December 8, 2025

Lawrence ranks first in the NFL in completions of 10 or more yards since Week 10 (he was 14th in the first half of the season) and seventh in explosive pass rate. Opportunities over the middle of field are no longer being called "hospital balls" due to Brian Thomas Jr's lack of fondness for running over the middle. Instead, they're now highlights featuring long catch-and-runs by Meyers — and that same Brian Thomas Jr. laying key blocks down the field.

back-to-back deep dig routes on dagger concepts by Trevor Lawrence. Don't see that every day.really liked how Lawrence throws to a spot and how early he gets rid of the 1st throw, especially with pressure bearing down.even get a great BTJ block at the end of the 2nd play!pic.twitter.com/qf5RhW6yYk

— Nate Tice (@Nate_Tice)December 2, 2025

Lawrence, who has always been willing to work the upper half of high-lows and push the football (especially when he's really feeling it), is throwing between the numbers at the highest rate in the NFL since Week 10. He's pushing it over 2 yards further on those throws, too, from 6.6 air yards per attempt and a 49.3% success rate on throws between the numbers before Week 10 to 8.8 air yards per attempt and a scorching 60.3% success rate after Week 10, for a tidy .29 EPA per dropback.

Meyers' all-around game, along with the return of tight end Brenton Strange, has freed Thomas Jr. to do what he's best at. Namely, vertical and outbreaking routes where he can use his speed and size, while keeping him from too much contact that can happen on in-breaking routes. And sure enough, Thomas Jr. has rediscovered the confidence that made him look like such a star during his rookie year.

Brenton Strange giving the thumbs up after BTJ's awesome one handed grab is killing mepic.twitter.com/U5Wh6ucP55

— Nate Tice (@Nate_Tice)December 8, 2025

Lawrence, too, looks more confident in letting throws rip with Meyers around. So much so theloss of Travis Hunter for the seasonhasn't been really felt. Hunter flashed all-world ability as a rookie, but also did look raw as a route runner and just lacked polish overall as a wide receiver. (Hunter looking to the sideline for help from Jaguars coaches whenever Lawrence changed a play became a weekly all-22 highlight for me.) That lack of polish, along with Thomas Jr. spiraling after a slew of early-season drops, led to a lack of trust for Lawrence to push the ball andtrysome throws. Instead, he tucked the football and scrambled rather than relying on one of his wide receivers to get to the right spot.

The Jaguars' offense has had brilliant moments of design from Liam Coen and the coaching staff, as well as stretches of explosive execution from players, but it's all too often felt chaotic. A late break of the huddle here, another illegal shift penalty there. Since their Week 8 bye week, the Jaguars have felt alittlemore buttoned up, going from a penalty per snap rate of 8.1% from Weeks 1-8 (which would easily rank highest if it were a full-season number) to 5.2% from Week 9 onward (a more respectable 17th).

The offense, Coen and Lawrence included, feels like it's taken a deep breath since the bye week. And I think Meyers has only helped calm everyone's nerves. The offensive line is well-coached but lacks high-end talent, but with Lawrence playing likethisalong with a feisty defense full of players playing the best football of their careers, this Jaguars offense, and team, is suddenly feeling dangerous in a wide-open conference.

Pittsburgh Steelers

Numbers to know: 24th, 6th

Those are the Steelers' defense's ranks in EPA per pass allowed before and after Week 9.

Why week 9? That's when they moved Jalen Ramsey to safety full-time. Ramsey, truly one of the best defensive back prospects and players of the past decade-plus, has played at an All-Pro level as both an outside cornerback and as a slot defender in his career. His combination of size, speed, length and football IQ has allowed him to flourish in both spots and in multiple different defensive schemes, and it's allowed him to transition flawlessly to playing safety (a position Ramsey played during his freshman season at Florida State, and some NFL teams even had him graded there as a prospect).

After playing just 61 total snaps as a safety since 2019 (the furthest TruMedia's position data goes back), Ramsey has played 354 snaps as a safety this season, with 75.8% of his snaps since Week 9 there. And Ramsey, like Charles Woodson and Rod Woodson before him, has hit the ground running while playing in the deep post.

what a great tackle from depth by Jalen Ramsey on Derrick Henry.I've always been keen on seeing Ramsey as a full time Safety at some point in his career since I thought he had a great skillset for the position. This is exactly what I had in mind lolpic.twitter.com/QulBUQFDTo

— Nate Tice (@Nate_Tice)December 10, 2025

Against the Ravens, there were snaps of Ramsey flying from depth and corralling Derrick Henry by himself. And then a few players later, there's Ramsey cutting a crossing wide receiver and devouring them like a hawk taking down a sparrow. The Steelers justfeela little more shored up with Ramsey being there to erase mistakes and whatever the offense is trying. It's not all perfect, of course, but the Steelers went from being a bottom-eight passing defense to firmly top-eight since Week 9. They've lowered the passing success rate allowed by 10% (to 38.7%, which ranks sixth since Week 9), with their net yards per attempt (7 to 5.8) on top of their EPA ranks improving, too.

The Steelers' offense is death-by-4-yard gains, whether it's on the ground or through the air. Arthur Smith seems downright giddy deploying Darnell"The Mountain That Rides"Washington, an extra offensive lineman, and multiple blocking wide receivers as Jaylen Warren spins his way for another solid gain. (Also, shoutout to the young, talented Steelers offensive line).

The passing game is go-balls to DK Metcalf and checkdowns and swings to Warren and Kenneth Gainwell. Only eight running backs have a target share above 20% this year in the NFL; Warren and Gainwell are two of them. Aaron Rodgers' 5.9 air yards per attempt ranks 449th among 452 qualifying quarterback seasons since 2013. His -3.2 average air yards to sticks (how close a quarterback throws the ball relative to the first down marker) ranks 451st, only above Alex Smith in 2020 with Washington.

So, that's the Steelers for you. A veteran defense with a veteran safety at the top of the pyramid and an offense that looks likePigpen from Peanuts.

NFL playoff race: Key numbers for AFC's top 4 seeds that could tell their postseason story

What is old is new again in the AFC. The stalwarts of the NFL at the beginning of the 21st century are now back on top of...

1-on-1 with Charlie Baker

Charlie Baker in October at a Big East basketball event. (Porter Binks/Getty Images)

In just a few short years, sports betting has gone from an occasional Vegas detour to a constant presence in American life. A tap away on your phone. A fixture in every commercial break. A storyline woven into every game.

As betting has surged, so have the ripple effects: social media abuse, integrity concerns, pressure on athletes, and an entirely new culture forming around wins, losses, and prop bets. College sports sits at the center of that storm. So I spoke with NCAA President Charlie Baker (no relation) about what he's seeing, what worries him and what comes next.

Let's dive in…

Kendall Baker:Charlie, thanks so much for taking the time. I'd like to begin with some pretty alarming numbers. According to a recent NCAA study, 36% of Division I men's basketball athletes reported experiencing social media abuse related to sports betting within the last year, while 29% reported having interacted with a student on campus who had placed a bet on their team. What are your immediate thoughts when you hear that?

Charlie Baker:

After my appointment was announced in December 2022, I went out and visited about 1,000 student athletes on campuses, mostly in and around New England, which is where I was living. Basically just to sort of say, "tell me what's going on."

So much of those conversations were about sports betting — and especially the abuse and harassment that came with it — that one of the first things we did when I got to the NCAA was a survey of 18 to 22 year olds on sports betting. I wanted to see if what I'd been hearing anecdotally was true; that the peer group of a lot of kids who play college sports were really betting on it in a very significant way.

The answer that came back was that, yeah, a ton of people between the ages of 18 and 22 — never mind the grown ups — were betting on college sports. And these are the kids that student athletes are interacting with, going to class with, eating in the cafeteria with and all the rest.

When I was in college, it would have been a very weird day if we had a game coming up and I didn't have classmates and friends asking me, "How's it gonna go tonight?" But that was just chatter. Now, it's guidance and inside information, and I think that creates a completely different dynamic for athletes, especially those playing at a big-time level.

"The phone changed everything"

KB:Legalized sports betting is an issue you dealt with as the Governor of Massachusetts, and now it's something you're navigating as president of the NCAA. So I'm just curious how you, personally, think about sports betting and the cultural impact it's having?

When I was governor and this issue was first being debated and discussed, which probably goes back to 2018 or so, most people thought this was going to be casino-type stuff. That you would go somewhere and bet on sports. Because everybody had always gone to Vegas to bet on sports.

I don't think anybody was anticipating that it would be as ubiquitous as it became when DraftKings and FanDuel, in particular, created phone-based opportunities for people to bet on pretty much anything. You think about parlays, that's something that was really hard to do without technology and almost simultaneous betting opportunities.

So there's just so many things about the technology that I think we can't underestimate in the growth and the interest and the access that people have to this stuff. The phone changed everything. People just weren't thinking at that point [in 2018] about how fast this whole thing was going to end up in the palm of your hand.

And look, how many [sports betting] ads do you see when you watch any sort of sporting event now? I mean, this stuff is everywhere. I do believe that when something is illegal, people think twice about it. So you can't underestimate the impact all these commercials have had [in making] sports betting socially acceptable.

The problem with prop bets

A board of prop bets at the Westgate Superbook in Las Vegas ahead of Super Bowl LVIII in 2024. (Aaron M. Sprecher/Getty Images)

Prop bets have been at the center of this year's biggest scandals (see: Jontay Porter and Terry Rozier in the NBA, Emmanuel Clase and Luis Ortiz in MLB), and it's not hard to see why. Unlike wagers tied to team outcomes, these bets hinge on a single player doing a specific thing, whether that's scoring fewer than 10 points or throwing a ball instead of a strike. That makes them easier to manipulate and easier to approach athletes about.

KB:Why do prop bets pose such a unique threat? And how much of the betting-related harassment stems from these specific types of wagers?

Well, it's definitely where most of the really aggressive harassment directed at kids is coming from. And the second thing is the pressure that the underperforming prop bets puts on young people. I don't think that's something that's fully understood.

I mean, if you talk to athletes who play for programs where there are regularly betting lines on a lot of what happens in their games… they've got classmates, school employees, friends they had in high school, and all kinds of people putting all this social pressure on them.

They're saying, "Look, I don't want you to lose the game, but just don't score more than 20 points. Miss your first shot. Don't hit your first free throw. Don't catch your first pass." It sounds so easy to the person who's trying to get the kid to do this, and it's just relentless the pressure.

It's like, "Hey, I'm not asking you to do something awful or terrible. I'm not asking you to throw the game," right? But what you are asking them to do is not play the game the way they would choose to play it if their goal was to be a good teammate and win.

I hate the fact that we've caught a whole bunch of young people engaging in this stuff, which just sucks for everybody. But our message has been, ya know, "If you do this, we will catch you." We run a really big integrity monitoring program, probably the biggest in the world. I'm not sure people appreciate that. Over 2.75 million athletes covered over the last five years.

KB:Do you think we could see a nationwide ban on prop bets? There seems to be some momentum around it at the state level as more people realize the danger prop bets pose to the integrity of the games — and to athletes.

We did manage to get a bunch of states to change their rules on this, which I thought was good. And we're now to the point where even the sportsbooks themselves have acknowledged that [prop bets] are a problem because they've changed their rules around NBA and MLB games.

The big challenge with this is always going to be the fact that, for the most part, it's regulated at the state level. The Senate had a hearing last year, and a couple of them were like, "Hmm, there is some interstate commerce stuff here that we should probably be paying attention to." But for the most part, they definitely see this more as a state issue. And frankly, I think a lot of the states probably would rather have it as a state issue.

Protecting college athletes

KB:The NCAA is obviously not the only sports organization navigating the realities of legal sports betting. That said, do you feel a unique responsibility to protect your athletes given how much more vulnerable they are than, say, professional athletes?

For sure. There's a big difference between being a professional athlete with a lot of structure and a lot of advisors around you, and being a kid who eats in a dining hall. And studies in a library. And goes to class with their classmates. And is so much more gettable with respect to practically anything around this. So yeah, for sure, [we feel an added responsibility].

And let's also talk about scale here, okay? I mean, there are 32 NFL teams, 30 MLB teams, 30 NBA teams, 32 NHL teams. I mean, that's not even like a conference in collegiate sports when you think about all the teams. We've got football, we've got men's and women's basketball, volleyball, baseball, ice hockey — we have so many sports that are pretty high visibility.

Prediction markets: The next frontier

The website for Polymarket, a popular prediction market. (Gabby Jones/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

Just as sports betting has settled into the mainstream, a new, largely unregulated ecosystem is rising alongside it: prediction markets. They look like betting, act like betting, and operate in similar spaces — but without the rules, transparency, or accountability that states require from sportsbooks. That vacuum worries Baker, who sees prediction markets as the next major flashpoint in the gambling world.

Prediction markets are not regulated at all. And so, ya know, California, which currently doesn't permit sports betting, the prediction markets could have an absolute ball taking that space over.

You see DraftKings and FanDuel dropping out of the American Gaming Association… I'd be willing to conclude that a big part of their reasoning is they're going to get into the prediction market space. They can't afford to let those folks dominate all that green space they can't currently access.

It just says this whole thing is going to get worse unless somebody does something about it. And solving it at the federal level is going to be really challenging because it's still new and not fully formed. So, I mean, you're basically talking about no rules, no oversight, no nothing. And that just feels catastrophic to me. Not just for us, but for everybody.

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12-team College Football Playoff bracket has FBS teams second-guessing bowl game consolation prize

The quest to fill all 35 bowl games outside the playoff expanded toteams with losing recordsthis year, but the searching didn't get much easier. At least 10 teams reportedly declined invitations, raising questions about the future of the postseason games that are one of college football's most cherished traditions whose role has dramatically changed.

Notre Dame, Iowa State and Kansas State were the first to decide against bowl trips, with the two Big 12 teams drawing $500,000 fines for throwing a wrench into the league's commitment to certain games. After Notre Dame was left out of the College Football Playoff bracket, the Fighting Irishrejected an appearancein the Pop-Tarts Bowl.

In the second year of the 12-team playoff, some bowls — even established ones with long histories — are being reduced to optional status. The chance to hold more practices, get away to a warmer locale, give fans the chance to book a holiday trip with a little more football alongside fellow alumni doesn't seem to hold the same appeal for every program.

Bowl organizers say there is no need to panic and note the sprawling schedule of bowls — they begin Saturday, within an hour of the Army-Navy game that signals the end of the regular season — remains valuable.

"College football needs bowl games as much as it needs the CFP," the executive director of Coca-Cola Bowl Season, Nick Carparelli, told The Associated Press. "Bowl season is just as important, and to a greater number of institutions and student-athletes. College football needs postseason opportunities that serve the 130-plus FBS institutions who are all at different points in their development and evolution as football programs."

Bowls were considered pretigious for many years in part because there were so few of them, with the Rose Bowl the only major game in the early 1930s. But the appeal grew. Sunny bowl locations in the early days of winter touted themselves to tourists and all-star-like games gave way to showdowns between top programs. By 1980, there were more than a dozen bowl games and there were 35 by 2010, with sponsors getting their names on them to help foot the bill. TV deals meant wall-to-wall bowl games for three weeks.

Recent changes in college athletics have lessened the value for some. Quarterback Beau Pribuladrew outsized attentiona year ago when he left playoff-bound Penn State for the transfer portal. This year, Ole Miss balked at letting coachLane Kiffinstay for the the CFP after he took the job at LSU.

Players deciding they don't want to do a bowl game doesn't surprise Ramogi Huma, the executive director of the National College Players Association.

"I don't think you can hold players to a standard where they should absolutely be playing every bowl game offered when you have examples of schools and coaches not doing that," Huma said this week.

Huma argued the lack of enthusiasm toward bowl games goes hand-in-hand with a 12-team playoff. With room in the playoff for eight additional teams, the mission becomes CFP-or-bust for top programs.

"The emergence of a wider and larger College Football Playoff is another factor when you look at it," Huma said. "If the gold standard for these teams is now making an expanded playoff and everything else falls short, that may be a deterrent for a team like Notre Dame. … They might not want to play in another bowl, and that alone could decrease, kind of water down, the prominence of the bowls that are outside the playoff."

The classics, like the Cotton Bowl,Orange Bowl, Rose Bowl, Sugar Bowl, Fiesta Bowl and Peach Bowl, still hold significant meaning as College Football Playoff games. But in a case like the Birmingham Bowl, it took a handful of rejections beforefinding an opponentfor Georgia Southern.

Carparelli doesn't think it's time to sound an alarm.

"There are 82 bowl-eligible teams this year," he said. "Twelve were selected to participate in the playoff, and the other 70 were invited to participate in a bowl game. We shouldn't take a position on a system based on three of those 70 deciding it was not in their best interest to participate."

He says interest in bowl games is at an all-time high. Last year, the 35 non-CFP bowl games averaged 2.7 million television viewers, marking a 14% year-over-year increase and the largest audience in five years – and that was in the first year of the12-team playoff.

The vice president of ESPN Events, Clint Overby, echoed that optimism.

"Locally, there continues to be no shortage of communities who want to host games, sponsorships remain solid, viewership in the sport remains at an all-time high with last year's bowl season being an increase over previous years," Overby said. "There is no doubt the sport is in transition, but it would be shortsighted to judge this year's non-CFP postseason through the emotional lens of what transpired this past Sunday."

He acknowledged that stability doesn't mean standing still.

"The sport continues to evolve as a result of the CFP," he said. "It would be hard to suggest that the bowl system should remain static. I'm of the belief that the bowl system should be proactive and work with its league partners to meet them where the sport is going to ensure the long-term viability of the bowl system as a part of the college football postseason."

Get poll alerts and updates on the AP Top 25 throughout the season. Sign uphereandhere(AP News mobile app). AP college football:https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-football-pollandhttps://apnews.com/hub/college-football

12-team College Football Playoff bracket has FBS teams second-guessing bowl game consolation prize

The quest to fill all 35 bowl games outside the playoff expanded toteams with losing recordsthis year, but the searching ...
Frederic J. Brown / AFP via Getty Timothee Chalamet attends the premiere of

Frederic J. Brown / AFP via Getty

NEED TO KNOW

  • Timothée Chalamet called his work in new movie Marty Supreme "probably my best performance" in a recent, since-deleted interview

  • "It's important to say out loud because the discipline and the work ethic I'm bringing to these things, I don't want people to take for granted," he added

  • Chalamet has stated in the past that he wants "to be one of the greats"

Timothée Chalamet— like his newest character — is in pursuit of greatness.

Marty Supreme(in theaters Dec. 25) stars the 29-year-old actor as Marty Mauser, a Jewish American table tennis pioneer chasing success. In a recent viral interview, Chalamet channeled the onscreen athlete in touting his own work.

Multiple outletsreportthat Chalamet, in a video interview posted and since deleted on Margaret Gardiner'sYouTube page, joked that he "needed a little more confidence" after Gardiner shouted outGeorge Clooneyrecently calling theDunestar "a great actor."

"This is probably my best performance," he said ofMarty Supreme, per aTikTokclip shared by Screenshot HQ, adding, "and it's been like seven, eight years that I feel like I've been handing in really, really committed, top-of-the-line performances."

A24 Timothee Chalamet in Marty Supreme teaser

He continued, "It's important to say it out loud because the discipline and the work ethic I'm bringing to these things, I don't want people to take for granted. I don't want to take for granted. This is really some top-level s---."

Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.

PEOPLE did not independently view the video on Gardiner's YouTube page before it was deleted.

Video of the interview was removed from X (formerly Twitter) and Reddit, perWorld of ReelandBuzzfeed.

Director Josh Safdie'sMarty Supremewas co-written by Ronald Bronstein. As both actor and producer, Chalamet leads a cast that includesGwyneth Paltrow, Odessa A'zion,Kevin O'Leary, Tyler Okonma a.k.a.Tyler, the Creator, Abel Ferrara andFran Drescher.

Chalamet has acknowledged that he was disappointed to have not won theAcademy Awardlast year for his performance as Bob Dylan inA Complete Unknown. "People can call me a try-hard, and they can say whatever the f---," he said in a November interview withVogue. "If there's five people at an awards show, and four people go home losing you don't think those four people are at the restaurant like, 'Damn, we didn't win?' "

Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty Timothee Chalamet accepts the Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Leading Role award for

Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty

At the 2025Screen Actors Guild Awards, where Chalamet won Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Leading Role, hetook the stageto talk about being "really in pursuit of greatness." "I know people don't usually talk like that, but I want to be one of the greats ... I'm as inspired by Daniel Day-Lewis, Marlon Brando and Viola Davis as I am by Michael Jordan, Michael Phelps, and I want to be up there," he said. "So, I'm deeply grateful."

Marty Supremeis in theaters Dec. 25.

Read the original article onPeople

Timothée Chalamet Declares His “Marty Supreme” Performance His 'Best' Yet: 'It's Important to Say It Out Loud'

Frederic J. Brown / AFP via Getty NEED TO KNOW Timothée Chalamet called his work in new movie Marty Supreme "probably my best perfor...

 

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