Massive sewage spill flowing into Potomac River upstream from Washington

WASHINGTON (AP) — A massive pipe that moves millions of gallons of sewage has ruptured and sent wastewater flowing into the Potomac River northwest of Washington, D.C., polluting it ahead of amajor winter stormthat has repair crews scrambling.

DC Water, which operates the sewer system, is hooking up pumps to divert sewage around the rupture and allow crews to make repairs. It has cautioned people to stay out of the area and to wash their skin if exposed.

The spill was caused by a 72-inch (183-centimeter) diameter sewer pipe that collapsed late Monday, shooting sewage out of the ground and into the river. DC Water spokesperson John Lisle said the utility estimates the overflow at about 40 million gallons (about 150 million liters) each day — enough to fill about 66 Olympic-size swimming pools — but it's not clear exactly how much has spilled into the river since the overflow began.

Signs warn the public to stay away

"Oh, my god, the smell is horrific," said Dean Naujoks, the Potomac Riverkeeper and part of an environmental nonprofit. "It's such high concentrations of sewage that just grabbing a sample is a public health risk."

Associated Press video from the scene showed signs posted near the river that read "DANGER" and "Raw Sewage" and warned people not to enter the area. Naujoks and another man donned protective gloves to take samples of water from the river to test for E. coli and other bacteria. Small bits of debris could be seen floating in some of the sample bottles.

The spill occurred in Montgomery County, Maryland, along Clara Barton Parkway, which hugs the northern edge of the Potomac River near Chesapeake and Ohio Canal National Historic Park.

Crews are removing lock gates on the C & O Canal and will set up pumps to divert the sewage into the canal, rerouting it away from the river and back into the sewage system downstream. The pumps have enough capacity to capture all of the sewage flow in dry weather, said Lisle, but they could be overwhelmed by a surge in stormwater. Crews will work through the weekend, when a bad winter storms is expected, Lisle said, and they hope to have the bypass set up by Monday.

The spill does not impact drinking water, which is a separate system, DC Water said.

Naujoks said the spill is happening at time when the river is low. He went out to look at it Wednesday and was "kind of stunned."

"Sewage is just bubbling up like a small geyser, maybe 2, 3 feet into the air," he said. "Sewage water is running in every direction."

The District of Columbia Department of the Environment did not immediately respond to a request for comment, including whether it is testing the river's water.

Damaged pipeline is one of several sections identified for repair

DC Water knew the pipeline was deteriorating, and rehabilitation work on a section about a quarter-mile from the break began in September and was recently completed, Lisle said. Repair work on additional "high priority" sections of the pipeline is expected to start later this year, according to the DC Water website.

The pipeline, called the Potomac Interceptor, was first installed in the 1960s.

There's a huge funding gap for water infrastructure in the U.S., said Gary Belan, a senior director with American Rivers, an environmental organization that advocates for clean waterways.

"I know a lot of the wastewater folks are trying to catch up as best they can, but this is something we see and will continue to see, where these pipes fail and these massive sewage dumps occur," Belan said. "This is why we can't defer maintenance of our wastewater infrastructure. Too often, we're dependent on these disasters to prod us forward."

Washington Mayor Muriel Bowser, speaking at a press conference declaring a snow emergency for the impending storm, said authorities there were aware of the sewage spill "but I can't give you an intelligent response right now." She said D.C. officials would be more forthcoming as soon as they could.

Kelly Offner, a U.S. Environmental Protection Agency spokesperson for the mid-Atlantic region, said the agency was coordinating with DC Water, the Maryland Department of the Environment and other federal, state and local authorities to assess the impact on the environment from the Potomac Interceptor sanitary sewer overflow. The federal agency oversees DC Water's sewer operations under a 2015 federal consent decree.

"DC Water has provided daily updates since the overflow was discovered on January 19, 2026, and has been coordinating efforts to contain the overflow, monitor environmental impacts, and communicate with the public," Offner said in an emailed response to questions.

An EPA survey of wastewater infrastructure needs from 2022 estimated that the District of Columbia needs roughly $1.33 billion to replace or rehabilitate structurally deteriorating sanitary or combined sewers within the next 20 years.

Nationally, hundreds of billions in infrastructure investment is needed over the next two decades for clean water problems like aging sewer pipes.In other places where sewer breaks are persistent, it can lead to backups into homes and regular flooding.

Boone reported from Boise, Idaho.

The Associated Press receives support from the Walton Family Foundation for coverage of water and environmental policy. The AP is solely responsible for all content. For all of AP's environmental coverage, visithttps://apnews.com/hub/climate-and-environment

Massive sewage spill flowing into Potomac River upstream from Washington

WASHINGTON (AP) — A massive pipe that moves millions of gallons of sewage has ruptured and sent wastewater flowing into t...
Ukraine, Russia, US discuss fraught issue of territorial concessions in Abu Dhabi

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said the future of Ukraine's eastern Donbas region would be a key focus as negotiators from Ukraine, Russia and the United States meet in Abu Dhabi for talks to end Russia's nearlyfour-year full-scale invasion.

Associated Press Russian President Vladimir Putin, left, greet U.S. President Donald Trump's envoys Steve Witkoff, centre left, Jared Kushner, second right, and Josh Gruenbaum, the head of the Federal Acquisition Service at the General Services Administration, at the Senate Palace of the Kremlin, in Moscow, Thursday, Jan. 22, 2026. (Alexander Kazakov/Sputnik, Kremlin Pool Photo via AP) Russian President Vladimir Putin, left, greets U.S. President Donald Trump's envoys Steve Witkoff, center, and Jared Kushner at the Senate Palace of the Kremlin, in Moscow, Thursday, Jan. 22, 2026. (Alexander Kazakov/Sputnik, Kremlin Pool Photo via AP) Russian President Vladimir Putin, left, greets U.S. President Donald Trump's envoys Steve Witkoff at the Senate Palace of the Kremlin, in Moscow, Thursday, Jan. 22, 2026. (Alexander Kazakov/Sputnik, Kremlin Pool Photo via AP) Russian President Vladimir Putin speaks during a meeting on the development of domestic integrated electronics at the Kremlin in Moscow, Thursday, Jan. 22, 2026. (Vyacheslav Prokofyev/Sputnik, Kremlin Pool Photo via AP)

Russia US

The UAE's foreign ministry said the talks, which commenced on Friday and were scheduled to continue Saturday, were part of efforts "to promote dialogue and identify political solutions to the crisis." The White House described the talks as productive.

Just hours before the three-way talks began, Russian President Vladimir Putin discussed aUkrainesettlement with U.S. President Donald Trump's envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner during marathon overnight talks. The Kremlin insisted that to reach a peace deal, Kyiv must withdraw its troops from the areas in the east that Russia illegally annexed but has not fully captured.

Zelenskyy said after meeting with Trump on Thursdayin Davos, Switzerland,that while the future status of land in eastern Ukraine currently occupied by Russia remains unresolved, the peace proposals are "nearly ready."

He also reiterated his openness to establishing a free trade zone under Ukraine's control in the country's east, adding that he discussed the proposal with Trump. "I think it will be positive for our business," Zelenskyy told reporters.

Friday is the first known time that officials from the Trump administration simultaneously met with negotiators from both Ukraine and Russia. While it's unclear how the talks will unfold and many obstacles to peace remain, some see it as a sign that the parties are making headway in closing a deal.

Speaking in his evening address to the nation late Friday, Zelenskyy said the Ukrainian delegation at the talks reported to him "almost every hour."

"They are discussing the parameters for ending the war," Zelenskyy said. "Now, they should at least get some answers from Russia, and the most important thing is that Russia should be ready to end this war, which it itself started."

He added that it was too early to draw conclusions about Friday's talks and he would see how they go on Saturday.

"It's not just about Ukraine's desire to end this war and achieve full security — it's also about Russia somehow developing a similar desire," Zelenskyy said.

Kremlin insists on 'solving territorial issue'

The Kremlin offered little detail beyond calling Friday's meeting a "working group on security issues."

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov reaffirmed that Russia's demand for the Ukrainian troops' withdrawal from the eastern Donbas region is an "important condition," adding that there are other "nuances" on the agenda that he wouldn't specify.

Kremlin foreign affairs adviser Yuri Ushakov, who participated in Putin's meeting with Witkoff and Kushner, said "it was reaffirmed that reaching a long-term settlement can't be expected without solving the territorial issue." He described the talks with the U.S. as "frank, constructive" and "fruitful."

Russia's state Tass news agency reported that the discussions included possible buffer zones and control measures.

Peskov told reporters that the Russian delegation, headed by Adm. Igor Kostyukov, is comprised of military officials. Separately, Putin's envoy Kirill Dmitriev will hold talks with Witkoff on economic issues, Peskov added.

The U.S. has confirmed Witkoff and Kushner are attending the talks in Abu Dhabi along with Army Secretary Dan Driscoll and NATO's top general, U.S. Air Force Gen. Alexus Grynkewich.

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The Ukrainian team includes Rustem Umerov, head of Ukraine's national security and defense council; Andrii Hnatov, chief of the general staff; andKyrylo Budanov, head of the presidential office.

Trump's meeting with Zelenskyy

Hours before the Kremin talks, Zelenskyy met with Trump behind closed doors for about an hour at the World Economic Forum in Davos, describing the meeting as "productive and meaningful."

Speaking to reporters aboard Air Force One as he flew back to Washington, Trump said the meeting went well, adding that both Putin and Zelenskyy want to reach a deal and that "everyone's making concessions" to try to end the war.

He said the sticking points remain the same as they've been during talks held during the past six or seven months, noting "boundaries" was a key issue. "The main hold-up is the same things that's been holding it up for the last year," he said.

Russia's bigger army has managed to capture about 20% of Ukraine since hostilities began in 2014 and its full-scale invasion of 2022. But the battlefield gains along the roughly 1,000-kilometer (600-mile) front line have been costly for Moscow, and the Russian economy is feeling the consequences of the war and international sanctions.

Ukraine is short of money and, despite significantly boosting its own arms manufacturing, still needs Western weaponry. It is also short-handed on the front line. Its defense minister last week reported some 200,000 troop desertions, and draft-dodging by about 2 million Ukrainians.

Zelenskyy blasts European allies

Addressing the World Economic Forum on Thursday after meeting with Trump, Zelenskyy listed alitany of grievancesand criticisms of Europe.

He chided Europe for being slow to act on key decisions, spending too little on defense, failing to stop Russia's "shadow fleet" of oil tankers that are breaking international sanctions, and balking at using its frozen assets in Europe to finance Ukraine, among other things.

"Europe looks lost," Zelenskyy said in his speech, urging the continent to become a global force. He contrasted Europe's response with Washington's bold steps in Venezuela and Iran.

The former comic actor referred to the movie "Groundhog Day," in which the main character must relive the same day over and over again.

"Just last year, here in Davos, I ended my speech with the words: Europe needs to know how to defend itself. A year has passed. And nothing has changed. We are still in a situation where I must say the same words again," Zelenskyy said.

Hrabchuk reported from Kyiv, Ukraine, and Manenkov from Davos, Switzerland. Josh Boak on Air Force One, Meg Kinnard in Houston and Aamer Madhani, Konstantin Toropin and Ali Swenson in Washington contributed to this report.

Follow AP's coverage of the war in Ukraine athttps://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine

Ukraine, Russia, US discuss fraught issue of territorial concessions in Abu Dhabi

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said the future of Ukraine's eastern Donbas region would be a key focus as ne...
Chloe Renata Tipan Villacis. (Jason Chavez-Cruz via GoFundMe)

MINNEAPOLIS — A 2-year-old girl and her father were taken by ICE on Thursday, according to a Minneapolis council member. The Department of Homeland Security confirmed it has detained the father, who was with a child at the time.

Elvis Joel Tipan-Echeverria and his 2-year-old daughter Chloe Renata Tipan Villacis were taken in south Minneapolis on their way home from the grocery store, Minneapolis City Council member Jason Chavez said on Instagram.

A spokesperson for DHS confirmed that Tipan-Echeverria was taken into custody and that he was driving with a child when he was stopped. The agency did not identify the child's name, age or gender.

"A suspicious vehicle followed her father's vehicle home, broke his window and kidnapped them," Chavez wrote with the post. "No judicial warrant was provided." In a brief interview with NBC News, he confirmed that they had been taken and added that he met with the father and daughter's family on Thursday evening.

DHS said in a statement that Tipan-Echeverria was "an illegal immigrant from Ecuador who committed felony reentry and broke the laws of this nation."

The spokesperson added that "DHS law enforcement took care of the child who the mother would not take" and that the "child and father are now reunited [at] a federal facility."

DHS said that Tipan-Echeverria "was driving erratically with a child in the vehicle."

"Tipan-Echeverria later parked his vehicle and agents attempted to take Tipan-Echeverria into custody, but he refused multiple lawful commands to open his door or lower his window," the spokesperson said. "Agents took Tipan-Echeverria into custody and attempted to give the child to the mother who was in the area, but she refused."

The 2-year-old girl's mother could not immediately be reached for comment.

During the arrest of Tipan-Echeverria, approximately 120 individuals surrounded the agents, blocking them in and preventing them from exiting, the spokesperson added. The bystanders then began throwing rocks and garbage cans toward the agents and child before crowd control measures were deployed, DHS said.

The apprehension comes days after 5-year-old Liam Conejo Ramos and his father, Adrian Alexander Conejo Arias,were taken into custody by ICE, incensing the Twin Cities and drawing international media attention.

DHS said that 5-year-old Liam's mother "refused" to take him when ICE agents were apprehending his father, who is now in federal custody with Liam in Texas.

School board chair Mary Granlund, who witnessed Liam and his father being taken into custody, disputed DHS' claim, telling reporters on Thursday that she heard an adult inside the home begging agents to leave the child.

The apprehensions come amid a broader immigration crackdown in the Twin Cities.

More than 3,000 federal immigration personnel havedescended on Minnesotasince December in what the federal government has dubbed Operation Metro Surge. About 3,000 people who are unlawfully in the country have been apprehended in the region in recent weeks, DHS said in a statement on Monday.

Immigration authorities were sent to the city after a right-wing YouTuber released a viral video alleging massive fraud at child care centers owned by Somali immigrants. The video placed renewed attention on the Justice Department's investigation into analleged $250 million fraud schemeinvolving some members of Minnesota's Somali community.

2-year-old girl and father taken by ICE in Minneapolis, local lawmaker says

MINNEAPOLIS — A 2-year-old girl and her father were taken by ICE on Thursday, according to a Minneapolis council member. The Department of ...
Philip Rivers as Buffalo's next coach? It wouldn't be fair to Bills – or Rivers | Opinion

TheBuffalo Billsare desperate to win a Super Bowl, something the 66-year-old franchise has never done.

It was plainly evident when they lost on Super Sunday four straight times between the 1990 and 1993 seasons, the Lombardi Trophy seemingly straying further from their grasp with each successive failure – despite Buffalo's admirable (not admiral) bridesmaid run.

It was plainly evident Wednesday, whenBillsownerTerry Pegula attempted to explain his decision to firehead coach Sean McDermott after nine seasons – and 106 wins – with eight playoff appearances. Pegula was still clearly upset about Buffalo's final offensive snap in its33-30 overtime loss at Denver in the divisional round of the AFC playoffs, Broncos cornerback Ja'Quan McMillian's controversial interception/takeaway from Bills wideout Brandin Cooks.

YetPegula wasn't upset with quarterback Josh Allen, that final pick his fourth turnover of the day – to say nothing of the potential game-winning TD pass he missed at the end of regulation by overthrowing tight end Dawson Knox in the final seconds of the fourth quarter. Pegula apparently isn'toverly upset with GM Brandon Beane, who was also just awarded the title of president of football operations despite some questionable salary cap management and draft decisions.

<p style=Week 1: Detroit Lions wide receiver Isaac TeSlaa (18) makes a catch for a touchdown against the Green Bay Packers during the fourth quarter at Lambeau Field. The play was originally ruled an incomplete pass, but the call was overturned. Despite TeSlaa's effort, the Packers won the game 27-13.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> Week 1: The New England Patriots' Robert Spillane (14) and Christian Elliss (53) tackle Las Vegas Raiders tight end Michael Mayer (87) during the second half at Gillette Stadium. The Raiders won the game, 20-13. Week 1: New York Giants quarterback Russell Wilson (3) fumbles the ball on a tackle by Washington Commanders safety Will Harris (3) during the first quarter at Northwest Stadium. It was a rough Giants debut for Wilson (17 of 37 passing for 168 yards) as the Commanders won the game, 21-6. Week 1: Fireworks go off before the NFL Kickoff Game between the Philadelphia Eagles and Dallas Cowboys at Lincoln Financial Field. The defending Super Bowl champion Eagles opened the season with a 24-20 victory over their longtime NFC East rivals.

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Week 1: Detroit Lions wide receiver Isaac TeSlaa (18)makes a catch for a touchdownagainst the Green Bay Packers during the fourth quarter at Lambeau Field. The play was originally ruled an incomplete pass, but the call was overturned. Despite TeSlaa's effort, the Packers won the game 27-13.

Nope. Pegula saw a distraught locker room after the game and heaped the blame for Buffalo's latest postseason shortfall on McDermott (with a side reserved for receiver Keon Coleman).

"I felt like we hit the proverbial playoff wall, year after year: 13 seconds, missed field goals, the catch. I just sensed in that locker room, (players wondering) 'Where do we go from here?'" said Pegula.

Apparently – maybe – to Philip Rivers,whom the team reportedly interviewed to replace McDermotton Friday?

Philip Rivers getting Bills past 'playoff wall' would be a career first

Let's get this straight: A team that's never won the Super Bowl, nor been to one in 32 years, is considering a former player, one with no coaching experience at the NFL or college football levels, to replace a guy who'd been grinding in the NFL for more than a quarter century and won two-thirds of his games as Buffalo's HC? A team that's never won the Super Bowl, nor been to one in 32 years, is considering a former player to break through that "proverbial playoff wall" even though, as a Hall of Fame-caliber quarterback himself, Rivers never broke through that "proverbial playoff wall?"

McDermott was 8-8 in the playoffs with two losses in the AFC championship game. As the QB1 of the San Diego and Los Angeles Chargers and, briefly, the Indianapolis Colts, Rivers was 5-7 in the playoffs (in 17-plus seasons). The Bolts, armed with Hall of Famers LaDainian Tomlinson and Antonio Gates and a championship-caliber defense, went one-and-done in the 2006 and 2009 playoffs despite first-round byes and home games in San Diego.

That's not to say those failures lay solely at the feet of Rivers, who famously played the 2007 AFC championship game on a torn right ACL and meniscus. But how much of Buffalo's failures were McDermott's fault? Maybe the Bills did their version of the "Tush Push" once too often in last year's three-point AFC title game loss at Kansas City. Maybe Buffalo's defensive approach was tactically flawed when it allowed the Chiefs to the tie game with 13 seconds left in regulation before winning a coin toss and an epic divisional round in overtime 42-36 four years ago – at a time when Allen didn't get his shot to possess the ball in OT.

Yet McDermott didn't officiate Sunday's loss. He didn't fail to protect the ball. He didn't miss big kicks in previous years. (He did shepherd an emotionally spent teamto an AFC East crown and playoff win three years ago, in the intermediate aftermath of Bills safety Damar Hamlin suffering cardiac arrest on the field in Week 17, but that's a story for another day.)

What we'd talking about here is a guy who had yet to win the big one being replaced by one who never has, either.

Bills, in Josh Allen's prime, lack time for Rivers to learn on the job

Perhaps you say, Rivers – if hired – would be brought in as the head man, not quarterback, and he's been quite successful coaching at St. Michael Catholic High School in Fairhope, Alabama, where he's gone 43-15 since (temporarily) retiring from the NFL after the 2020 season.

I would say the last two former NFL players to become head coaches without the benefit of coaching experience at the NFL or college level are Jeff Saturday (1-7 as the Colts' interim coach in 2022) and Hall of Fame quarterback Norm Van Brocklin, who went 66-100-7 over 13 seasons between 1961 and 1974 and never reached the postseason. (FWIW, Rivers hasn't won a high school championship, either.)

Perhaps you say, it's better to hire a potentially high-end prospect like Rivers a year too early rather than wait and lose him. Just look at what Sean McVay, 30 when he was hired by the Los Angeles Rams in 2017, has done while becoming one of the best coaches in league history while not even on the job for a decade. (Note: McVay had eight seasons of NFL experience prior to joining the Rams.)

I would say whoever takes the Bills job doesn't have the luxury of on-job training. Sure, Rivers knows how to deftly handle the media and immerse himself into the NFL's weekly cadence − freshly reacquainted after coming out of retirement to start three games for the Colts in December. And while he wouldn't be charged with maintaining the field, as he's done in Fairhope, the demands on an NFL coach – never mindone with a family as large as Rivers'– are infinite.

And this assignment doesn't have the runaway of a rebuild. The Bills are a win-now team with a generational quarterback, but one who will enter his ninth NFL season in 2026. (FWIW, Cam Newton, a former MVP whose game was very similar to Allen's − including the punishment he absorbed − lasted 11 years, though the last few weren't very pretty.) And while Rivers wore No. 17 like Allen, his game was completely dissimilar, so it's not like he could lean on his own professional experience all that much while translating the NFL-adjacent offense he's run at St. Michael's to the one he'd potentially ask Allen to execute.

Yet the paramount consideration is that thisisa Super Bowl-or-bust scenario, even if Pegula wasn't willing to co-sign that label for his team – one just knocked off its AFC East perch by theyounger New England Patriotsin 2025 and now fighting to keep its championship window open.

"I don't know about pressure right now, but there's a lot of people that want to look at taking this job," Pegula said Wednesday. "There's a lot of interest."

Undoubtedly. Despite cap issues. Despite pending roster turnover. Despite Allen having played the final game of his twenties. Despite the obvious championship mandate Pegula won't admit exists ashis team moves into a new stadiumand era.

Added Pegula: "We're making a change and, you know, it's 'do your best job,'" meaning the message to McDermott's successor.

It's just unfair to Allen, his teammates and – frankly – Rivers to think he's the best man for this job. Right now.

The Mafia needs to look for a made man. Elsewhere.

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This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Philip Rivers a head coach Buffalo? Bills should find another option

Philip Rivers as Buffalo's next coach? It wouldn't be fair to Bills – or Rivers | Opinion

TheBuffalo Billsare desperate to win a Super Bowl, something the 66-year-old franchise has never done. It was pl...
5 big questions for the Mariners: Is another trade coming this winter? Can the offense get better?

In nearly a half-century of existence, no Seattle Mariners team has traversed deeper into the postseason than the 2025 club, which was on the precipice of the franchise's first World Series appearance before falling short in heartbreaking fashion against the Blue Jays in ALCS Game 7. But as painful as the ending might have been, it didn't erase a successful and memorable campaign for Seattle. Headlined by a full-fledged ascent into superstardom for catcher Cal Raleigh and a mostly homegrown rotation that is revered industry-wide, the Mariners took a meaningful step toward being firmly included among the inner circle of American League contenders.

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Yet with the label of the only major-league team to never appear in the Fall Classic still looming over the franchise, there's more work to be done. This offseason represented another opportunity for Seattle's front office, led by president of baseball operations Jerry Dipoto and general manager Justin Hollander, to solidify the team's status as the favorite in the AL West after winning the division for the first time since 2001. But after a flurry of activity early in the winter — re-signing first baseman Josh Naylor, acquiring lefty reliever Jose Ferrer, signing outfielder Rob Refsnyder — the Mariners have been uncharacteristically quiet in January. And with just three weeks until pitchers and catchers report to Peoria, Arizona, several key questions remain. Let's dig in.

1. Is Brendan Donovan still a realistic trade target?

Amid a Cardinals offseason that has seen a trio of accomplished veterans (Sonny Gray, Willson Contreras, Nolan Arenado) dealt, the versatile Brendan Donovan remains on the roster despite persistent trade rumors swirling around him. Because he is under contract for two more seasons at modest salaries — and because St. Louis values him so highly — there's not nearly as much urgency to trade him as there was for the three expensive vets already moved. But because of how future-focused new president of baseball operations Chaim Bloom has been with St. Louis' big-picture plan, whispers about Donovan's availability haven't exactly quieted.

The Marinershave not been shy about their interestin Donovan throughout the winter, understandably so. Swiftly re-signing Naylor helped stabilize the lineup, but Naylor wasn't the only key Seattle infielder who reached free agency; Eugenio Suárez and Jorge Polanco hit the open market as well, leaving second and third base relatively unsettled. The Mariners have several young players who could fill those spots, as Ben Williamson and Cole Young each showed flashes of promise as rookies in 2025, and top prospect Colt Emerson is knocking on the door. But Seattle would be wise to add some more certainty at one of those two infield spots. Enter Donovan, whose experience at both second and third combined with his stellar left-handed bat makes him an obvious target. Adding Donovan would enable Seattle to lean on whichever young infielder is most ready to contribute and have Donovan cover the other spot.

But while Donovan has long felt like a piece of Seattle's offseason puzzle, the two teams have yet to find common ground. But with a deep farm system to deal from, there's still time for the Mariners to offer the right combination of prospects to entice the Cardinals. As evidenced by the recent flurry of activity league-wide, negotiations that appear stalled can coalesce into deals in a blink. Don't rule this out just yet.

[Get more Seattle news: Mariners team feed]

2. If Donovan is a no-go, are the young infielders ready for prime time?

If the Mariners are unable to meet St. Louis' asking price for Donovan, they could turn elsewhere on the trade market or explore a(nother) reunion on a short-term deal with fan favorite Suárez,who remains unsigned. More likely, however, Seattle would keep the runway open for its group of homegrown infielders to establish themselves as core pieces in the majors, accepting the ups and downs that come with giving young players every-day opportunities.

Williamson, Young and Emerson offer varying reasons for optimism that they can become key contributors sooner rather than later. Williamson's bat was simply not ready for the majors when the Mariners tabbed him as the starter at third base in the first half last season, but his terrific glove comfortably passed the eye test, and he performedmuch better at the plate in Triple-Aonce sent back down. If some of his offensive adjustments stick, Williamson projects as a much more respectable regular at third now than he did at this time last year.

Young, Seattle's first-round pick in 2022, made his debut at age 21 in May and got substantial playing time before his role was reduced down the stretch and in the postseason in favor of Polanco and Leo Rivas. Young's final slash line as a rookie (.211/.302/.305) wasn't pretty, but his offensive potential was on display during a 29-game stretch in which he hit .268/.400/.476 and launcheda 456-foot home runagainst Texas, Seattle's farthest home run of the entire season and postseason (yes, farther than any of Cal Raleigh's 65 blasts!). Outlier moon shot aside, Young brings more on-base ability than potent power, but his overall skill set has Seattle confident he can become an above-average regular at second base in short order.

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And then there's Emerson, who is not just the top prospect in Seattle's system but also one of the premier infield prospects in all of baseball. In Seattle, he looks to be the heir apparent to J.P. Crawford at shortstop, but with Crawford under contract for another season, the quickest path to playing time for Emerson's advanced bat could come at third, where he's expected to compete with Williamson for the starting job this spring. Even if Emerson needs a touch more seasoning in the minors — he finished 2025 playing just six games with Triple-A Tacoma — it wouldn't be surprising to see him force the issue and debut before he turns 21, somethingno Mariner has donesince Adam Jones in 2006.

3. Can the offense be better than it was last year?

How the infield shakes out will influence the outlook for the offense as a whole. But there are other elements to consider when projecting Seattle's chances of improving on last year's lineup, whichranked third in wRC+, ninth in runs per game, 10th in OPS and third in home runs. That's a high bar to clear.

A full season from Naylor should do wonders; first base was a marked weakness before he arrived at the trade deadline, and he assimilated into the middle of the order seamlessly, undaunted by the prospect of hitting in hitter-unfriendly T-Mobile Park. Free-agent add Refsnyder, who crushes left-handed pitching, could form a fantastic platoon at DH and/or right field with Dominic Canzone. Canzone's .879 OPSranked 18th among left-handed hitters with at least 200 plate appearancesagainst righties in 2025, while Refsnyder's .924 OPS over the past four seasonsranked sixth among right-handed batswith at least 400 PAs against southpaws.

But while the new personnel is important, it's still all about the stars. It is unreasonable to expect Raleigh to hit 60 home runs again, but how much will he regress? He had never posted an OPS above .762 before last year's MVP-caliber mark of .948. Seattle's chances of being an elite offense might depend on that number being closer to the latter than the former. A lot is also riding on Julio Rodriguez's ability to start hot at the plate, instead of being a second-half superstar. There's no doubt that Raleigh and Rodriguez have established star-level floors of production, but how close they can get to replicating or even improving upon the best versions of themselves will go a long way in determining Seattle's potential.

4. Is there room for another bullpen addition?

If there's one area of the roster Seattle has been busy addressing this winter, it's the bullpen. Acquiring Ferrer, one of the hardest-throwing lefty relievers in the sport and someone Seattle believes has untapped potential, was the biggest move of the bunch, but he's hardly the only new arm who could be competing for a spot in camp. Smaller trades and waiver claims also netted right-handers Cole Wilcox, Alex Hoppe, Yosver Zulueta and Ryan Loutos, plus lefty Robinson Ortiz.

None of those are household names by any means, but it was crucial for Seattle to amass more depth in the bullpen to turn to over the course of a long season. For as good as the Mariners' upper-echelon bullpen arms — Andres Muñoz, Matt Brash, Gabe Speier and Eduard Bazardo — were for the bulk of last season, it was clear several of them had worn down considerably down the stretch and deep into October. That's what makes Ferrer's addition so important, but there's an argument that even more reinforcements are needed to avoid taxing the top arms so heavily in 2026. Proven options have thinned out considerablyon the free-agent market, but another Ferrer-style trade for an impact arm with multiple years of control could make sense.

The aforementioned top four plus Ferrer comfortably account for five of the eight spots in the Mariners' Opening Day bullpen. The next threeon the projected depth chart— Carlos Vargas, Casey Legumina and Jackson Kowar — are all out of options, so they might have a leg up on the new guys, but they'll need to earn their spots on the Opening Day roster, considering the depth of talent that will be pushing them.

5. How will the rotation evolve over the next year?

Few teams, if any, have had as much rotation stability in recent years as the Mariners. Outside of a few injury interruptions last year, Seattle has leaned on the same quintet — Logan GIlbert, Luis Castillo, George Kirby, Bryce Miller and Bryan Woo — for an overwhelming majority of its starts. In fact, over the past two seasons, just seven pitchers — those five plus homegrown right-handers Logan Evans and Emerson Hancock — have made at least five starts for the Mariners, thefewest of any club in baseballand a sharp contrast to other contenders such as the Dodgers (17), Brewers (16) and Astros (14), who have seen a plethora of starters take the ball over that span. With all five Mariners starters under contract for at least two more seasons — Gilbert and Castillo for two, Kirby for three, Woo and Miller for four — that unusually consistent core could stay intact a while longer.

Whether this rare continuity sustains for Seattle's rotation will depend on performance, injury luck and whether the Mariners are able to sign any of these pitchers to longer-term extensions. But adding further intrigue is the fact that Seattle also boasts one of the best trios of pitching prospects in the sport: 22-year-old switch-pitcher Jurrangelo Cijntje, 20-year-old right-hander Ryan Sloan and last year's No. 3 pick out of LSU, lefty Kade Anderson. These premium arms' progress this season will be fascinating to watch, as any of them could pitch their way to the doorstep of the majors and force the front office to make some interesting decisions about a rotation that has been so steady for so long. To be clear, these would be good problems to have if all the arms involved stay healthy and pitch well, so it's a fun subplot to keep an eye on as the 2026 season begins.

5 big questions for the Mariners: Is another trade coming this winter? Can the offense get better?

In nearly a half-century of existence, no Seattle Mariners team has traversed deeper into the postseason than the 2025 cl...
Opposing styles on display as No. 6 Houston faces No. 12 Texas Tech

Contrasting styles and mirror-image expectations clash Saturday in another high-profile showdown of ranked Big 12 Conference teams, and this time it's a rematch of a close game that remains fresh in both teams' minds.

Field Level Media

With the game time moved to 1 p.m. CT due to the winter storm sweeping across the country, No. 6 Houston faces No. 12 Texas Tech in Lubbock in a battle between the league's best defense and one of its most prolific offenses.

The Cougars (17-1, 5-0 Big 12) sit in second place in the league behind top-ranked Arizona. Their closest call in conference play so far was a 69-65 win against the Red Raiders (15-4, 5-1) on Jan. 6.

Texas Tech narrowly escaped Colorado with a 73-71 win, but the Red Raiders are formidable at home: 10-0 this season with an average scoring margin of 20.2 points. They have won all three Big 12 home games by 22, 14 and 13 points -- the latest against No. 11 BYU last Saturday.

The challenge looks tougher against a Houston team that makes scoring difficult every possession. The Cougars allow just 60.1 points per game, the second lowest in the country, and opponents shoot only 39.1% from the field (second in the Big 12, 15th nationally). In the first meeting, the Red Raiders' scoring was their second lowest this season, and they shot just 41.1% overall.

"We're definitely excited about getting another chance against them because we didn't think we played very well before," Texas Tech guard Donovan Atwell said. "We know we have to be locked in on both sides of the ball."

The Red Raiders come in after a much different game, following a 92-73 romp on the road at Baylor. Texas Tech connected on 14 of 19 3-point attempts in the first half and finished the night shooting a season-best 63% from deep (17 of 27). The Red Raiders lead the Big 12 in 3-pointers made (216) and attempted (553).

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Despite those numbers, the player who has Houston coach Kelvin Sampson's full attention the most is Texas Tech forward JT Toppin. The 2025 Big 12 Player of the Year and a preseason All-American, Toppin averages 21.6 points and a Big 12-leading 10.8 rebounds. He contributed 18 and 11 in the first game between Houston and Texas Tech and matched a career-best with five blocked shots.

"He's the most efficient basketball player in the country," Sampson said. "He takes shots he can make. I just love the way the kid plays. He plays with great focus."

Besides Toppin, the Cougars will also have to contend with Red Raider point guard Christian Anderson, who tops the Big 12 with 7.4 assists per game and has been lethal from beyond the 3-point arc, hitting 45.3%. Anderson drained eight 3s against Baylor, while Atwell connected on 7 of 10.

The Cougars counter with a tough, well-rounded team that mixes experienced veterans and talented freshmen from a squad that nearly won the national championship last season.

Emanuel Sharp is Houston's leading scorer (15.9 ppg) and top 3-point shooting threat (38.6%), while highly touted freshman Kingston Flemings has settled in as one of the top players in the Big 12 with averages of 15.6 points and a team-best 5.4 assists.

To beat the Red Raiders earlier this month, the Cougars needed a boost from Flemings, and he delivered with nine points in the final 2 minutes, part of a 15-point second half and game-high 23 points.

Freshman Jaylen Petty led Texas Tech against Houston, tying a season-high with 20 points in the loss, buoyed by 5-of-9 shooting from 3-point range.

--Field Level Media

Opposing styles on display as No. 6 Houston faces No. 12 Texas Tech

Contrasting styles and mirror-image expectations clash Saturday in another high-profile showdown of ranked Big 12 Conf...
THE TRAITORS --

Another contestant was murdered onThe Traitorson Thursday's (January 22) episode, and now he's speaking out about the mistreatment he endured. After everyone thoughtRon Funcheswas a traitor, heleftin a six to five to four vote. The comedian shared that he endured bullying behavior in the castle and revealed his autism diagnosis.

The Traitors' social media pages shared a video of Funches andRob Rauschplaying chess and talking about how Funches trusts Rausch and how Rausch felt bad for Funches in the game.

"Ron is an introvert, and I feel where he's coming from," Rausch said. "Sometimes the loneliest place for someone like that is in a crowded room."

"I love Ron. They were so mean to him," a fan commented on Instagram.

Others in the comments said that he shouldn't have said toDorinda Medleythat he "didn't give a f**k about her family" after she said she wanted to get to know him.

"I stick by it. You didn't see how terrible she was to me," Funches replied to the commenter.

Funches continued to talk about his qualms withTheReal Housewivesstar on Threads. A fan posted, "Dorinda's comments about how @ronfunch plays the game hit harder now knowing that Ron has autism. Kind of another example of how unconscious biases run rampant on reality TV."

Rob has everyone charmed.#TheTraitorsUSpic.twitter.com/O22w5RpfMb

— The Traitors US (@TheTraitorsUS)January 23, 2026

Hereplied, "Oh, she has conscious bias. She said some truly terrible things to me, but since they were deeply personal and outside of gameplay, they were never shown. Just me blowing up at her 'out of nowhere.'"

The interaction happened on the January 15 episode when Medley accused Funches of being a "Housewife hunter" after he accused both her andPorsha Williamsof being traitors. Williams was eliminated on  Episode 1, but was revealed to be a faithful.

"You decided you're going to go after me," Medley said. "But that's fine. I have tried to get to know your family. I asked you where you live. I've asked about your children."

"My family's none of your f**king business," Funches replied. "One of the things that has been brought against me is that I don't want to get to know you very much. I think that creates bias. I think that impedes my investigation."

After his elimination on Thursday night, Funches shared that he recently found out he had Autism.

Ron Funches statement on his Autism diagnosis

Ron Funches/Instagram Stories

On his Instagram story, he wrote, "Well, the internet told me I was Autisic and they were right. You win this round. Still not gay. Yet. thanks @thetraitorsus for helping me find out more about me through some type of cruel trauma."

Also on his Stories, the comedian revealed that he suffered a panic attack during episode 5. "Not supposed to talk about off-air thing, but I have to thank @yamilpr for noticing my heartbeat during the episode 5 challenge, which allowed me to find out I was having my first-ever anxiety attack," he wrote.

Ron Funches/Instagram

"I thought I was going to die. You still voted for me tho ya jerk," he ended.

TheTraitors, Thursdays, 9/8c, Peacock

Read the latest entertainment news onTV Insider.

Ron Funches Says ‘The Traitors’ Costar Bullied Him & Reveals Autism Diagnosis

Another contestant was murdered onThe Traitorson Thursday's (January 22) episode, and now he's speaking out about the mistreatment ...

 

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