Kyler Murray-Vikings marriage isn't the cleanest fit ever, but there's intrigue and potential abound

Kyler Murray signing with the Minnesota Vikingson a one-year deal is one of those NFL fever dream moments that creates a subplot that would have been unfathomable even half a year ago. The former No. 1 overall pick joins Kevin O'Connell and the Vikings — who are fresh off a disastrous debut campaign for their2024 first-round selection J.J. McCarthy,and the recentfiring of their general manager Kwesi Adofo-Mensah— in a union that still feels so strange to think of.

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It's also a marriage that I like the more I've pieced together the combination of an undersized, shotgun-heavy, pocket-breaking quarterback with one of the more traditional attack play-callers. And I like it more than just from a sheer morbid curiosity sense.

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To start, Murray is way better than McCarthy. Even at Murray's absolute worst, that is just an objective fact. Murray's worst is also better than Vikings backup Carson Wentz's play this decade, and Murray has been better than a lot of quarterbacks throughout his career while wilting away with an Arizona Cardinals organization that's on to another head coach and constantly rates among the league's worst in the NFLPA report cards.Call of Dutyrelease date memesor not, Murray has been a firmly league-average or better starter throughout his career.

Kyler Murray's size and play style have their advantages — and limitations

He is an imperfect player. Much has always been made about his height, but he actually has solid bulk and is of course a great athlete. Since entering the NFL in 2019, Murray ranks first in QB hit rate (sacks + knockdowns) with just a 9.4% mark. He has had some injuries crop up, but he does do a good job of getting rid of the ball (sometimes a bit too often) and avoids hits and sacks more often than is perceived. Murray's sack rate for his career is right at league average, about the same as Kirk Cousins. and he also has some creation ability to help open up plays beyond the concepts called.

Kyler Murray has a chance to rebound his career in Minnesota like Sam Darnold did. (Photo by Stephen Maturen/Getty Images)

There are drawbacks to Murray's size and play style, though. Murray's height does limit the areas of the field he can comfortably operate as a thrower, and he can bail from the pocket a bit too often when he is not comfortable with the concept or defensive disguise. He's also long been in shotgun-heavy offenses, from high school ball to college to even the NFL under his first Cardinals head coach Kliff Kingsbury. Murray has primarily operated in offenses steeped in traditional Air Raid principles (i.e. shotgun almost always). Murray had the highest rate of shotgun snaps among quarterbacks from 2019 to 2022, hovering around 90% of the Cardinals' snaps on early downs. From 2023-2025 under offensive coordinator Drew Petzing, it hovered around 70% of the time on early downs.

How will Kyler Murray fit into Kevin O'Connell's Vikings offense?

What makes Murray's fit with the Vikings so fascinating is how his play style will merge with O'Connell's modus operandi: getting under center and chucking it. Since O'Connell became Minnesota's head coach in 2022, 56.4% of the Vikings' early down snaps have been under center, which ranks second over that time period. They also rank second in the amount of play action from under center they ran over that time period. Murray has had 180 snaps of under-center play-action concepts since he's entered the NFL. The Vikings have averaged 164 per season since 2022.

O'Connell likes to attack vertically with play fakes to not only try and draw up defenders, but to also vary up protections so his quarterbacks can stand in the pocket and attack downfield. Cousins was a tough player that was willing to stand and deliver on throws, even if he lacked the high-end arm or athleticism to be considered an upper-tier quarterback. Sam Darnold then came in and played like Cousins withSam Raimi directinghim.

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Murray, meanwhile, had a few plays of being able to operate on these concepts, often on the move on bootlegs and at times bailing from the pocket a bit too early. But there are flashes of excellent throws from the pocket by Murray after he turns his back to the defense. O'Connell has seldom run play action out of the shotgun, so this will have to be incorporated in Minnesota.

Murray is best working to the outside and down the field. He has a nice knack for layering throws with touch, but is comfortable doing it more when he can throw out in space on things like crossers and overs and outbreaking routes. His partnership with Marvin Harrison Jr. was often frustrating because of Harrison Jr.'s role in the offense features in-breaking dig routes that Murray would neglect to throw to at all. (Murray ranks 40th out of 45 qualifying quarterbacks since entering the NFL in 2019 in throws of 10-22 yards and between the numbers.)

Here is Murray's target heat map from the 2024 and 2025 seasons, with a handy circle placed to focus on over the middle of the field. Notice the blue incomplete dots down the sideline and the lack of dots over the middle.

And here is Sam Darnold's heat map in 2024 when he was the Vikings' starting quarterback:

Darnold is a fellow talented but imperfect quarterback who excelled and used it to launch toeven greater success in Seattlethis past season. He has always been willing to attack the middle, sometimes to his own detriment, but that willingness is what made Shanahan (and Kubiak) coaches so fond of him operating in their under-center, play-action, chuck-it-between-the-hashes-like-there's-no-tomorrow offense.

Murray also went from chucking deep go balls to becoming more and more of an underneath thrower under Petzing. Sometimes frustratingly so. He went from 33.3% of his throws traveling 10 or more air yards in 2021 (which ranked 10th that season), to just 26.7% last season (which ranked 37th). His chemistry with Cardinals tight end Trey McBride is a part of that, but perhaps the rest of the Arizona receiving crops, which featured plenty of size but perhaps not a ton of deep speed, limited some of that. But Murray was a great deep ball thrower earlier in his career, even if the routes he likes to throw can be limited in scope.

Kyler Murray's play in Arizona was better than it seemed

Murray's underlying statistics, even with his imperfections, have still pointed to an effective (if limited) player.

Murray ranks 17th in dropback success rate since entering the NFL. His 46% rate is the exact same as Justin Herbert. It's above names like Aaron Rodgers, Baker Mayfield, Jalen Hurts, Trevor Lawrence, Sam Darnold, Russell Wilson, CJ Stroud and Bo Nix. He ranks 18th in EPA per play. He's an effective scrambler and doesn't actually scramble as much people perceive, although there is an uptick when he isn't comfortable with what's going on around him.

He's touched borderline top-10 play at the position (an arbitrary thing, but you get the idea). But he's done it in two wildly different offenses and his improvement for most of 2024 was a fun subplot for the season. He ranked 13th in EPA, eighth in success rate and ninth in QBR (a career high) in an offense that asked him to do more traditional operation at the position than he had ever done in his career.

Kyler Murray-Vikings marriage isn't the cleanest fit ever, but there's intrigue and potential abound

Kyler Murray signing with the Minnesota Vikingson a one-year deal is one of those NFL fever dream moments that creates a ...
Lydia Ko posts career-low 60 and only leads bye 1 shot in LPGA's Phoenix stop

PHOENIX (AP) — Lydia Ko opened with four straight birdies and never stopping rolling Thursday until she closed out the best round of her LPGA Tour career with two more birdies for a 12-under 60 on a day of extreme low scoring in the Ford Championship.

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Defending champion Hyo Joo Kim had a 61, making it the first time since the 2003 Kellogg-Keebler Classic two players were double digits under par in the opening round.

"I don't think I've ever actually started a round with four birdies, so it was nice to take advantage of the good start and continue that on my back nine," Ko said. "I think like as every golfer, when things go well you also think about the things that could go terribly wrong. I feel like I stayed patient and was rolling it really well."

A moderate start to her 13th season came to life on the Cattail course at Whirlwind Golf Club when the 28-year-old Ko got into a rhythm after a rare putter change and started piling up the birdies.

She said the idea of 59 — Annika Sorenstam has the only sub-60 round in LPGA history, 25 years ago on a different course in Phoenix — entered her thinking when she birdied her 14th and 15th holes of the round after starting on No. 10.

But she didn't hit a 7-foot birdie putt firmly enough on the par-5 seventh. Ko finished with two more birdies for her career low round.

"That would have been nice to hole that one," Ko said. "But who knows? Maybe if I holed that one I might not have holed the other two. You can't think about 'what if?' Birdied some other ones that I didn't expect, so kind of just evens out in that sense."

It was the ninth round of 60 or lower on the LPGA, the most recent by Lucy Li at Pinnacle Country Cub in Arkansas in 2024.

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Kim also started on No. 10 and shot 28 on the front nine, finishing birdie-eagle-birdie, including a hole-out from the fairway on the par-4 eighth hole.

Nelly Korda, who opened the year with a 54-hole win in Florida and was runner-up last week in California, holed out from the 18th fairway for eagle in the middle of her round and shot 63, one of her career best. She was three shots behind.

They all played in the morning and it was unlikely they would be caught by anyone in the afternoon, when temperatures were pushing 100 degrees (38 Celsius).

Jeeno Thitikul, the No. 1 player in women's golf, was among those who had a late start. She was only 2 under at the turn.

The big surprise for Ko was not so much her score but the equipment she uses. The Kiwi rarely tinkers with her putter but decided to switch to a different model earlier this week.

"It's been a while since I have tried a different model," Ko said of her Scotty Cameron 12 she used at Whirlwind. "It just rolled good. Went in the bag on Tuesday. ... This has only been one round but it's a good start. You know, really couldn't have been any better."

Ko was among six players from the morning wave who shot 65 or better. The course must not have seemed all that easy to Lexi Thompson, who plays a limited schedule and made her 2026 debut with a 75 that left her 15 shots behind.

AP golf:https://apnews.com/hub/golf

Lydia Ko posts career-low 60 and only leads bye 1 shot in LPGA's Phoenix stop

PHOENIX (AP) — Lydia Ko opened with four straight birdies and never stopping rolling Thursday until she closed out the be...
Tom Brady said he asked NFL if he could make comeback while owning Raiders: 'They don't like that idea very much'

Tom Brady isn't coming out of retirement to play in the NFL again … but he did ask how that would work now that he's a minority owner with the Las Vegas Raiders. According to Brady, the league didn't "like that idea very much," per CNBC.

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Brady said he "inquired" about the possibility and "explored a lot of things," but is ultimately "happily retired." The 48-year-old made those comments just days afterparticipating in the Flag Football Classic.

Though Brady's team was destroyed by Team USA, he made one highlight-worthy play that got people thinking he could still perform at a high level in the NFL.

It doesn't sound like that's actually going to happen, and things would have to change if Brady truly wanted to return to the NFL at this point.

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CNBC reached out to an NFL spokesperson, who said Brady would need to "divest his ownership stake in the Raiders" in order to return to the league as a player. The spokesperson added, "There would be salary cap issues involving a player/owner," per CNBC.

With that out of the question, Brady will have to settle for being arguably the best player to ever take the field. The 23-year pro made 15 Pro Bowls, won seven Super Bowls and threw an NFL-record 649 touchdowns over his career.

For now, it sounds like Brady is focused on his minority owner role with the Raiders. And while the future Hall of Famer couldn't exactly lay out his job details to CNBC, he said he was focused on bringing "the Raiders back to glory."

If Brady can't do that on the field, assisting the team and mentoring expected No. 1 overall pick, Fernando Mendoza, is the next best thing.

Tom Brady said he asked NFL if he could make comeback while owning Raiders: 'They don't like that idea very much'

Tom Brady isn't coming out of retirement to play in the NFL again … but he did ask how that would work now that he...
'Wu-Tang Forever: The Final Chamber' tour — How to get tickets, presale times, concert dates and more

Wu-Tang Clan is returning to North America this summer for encore dates of "Wu-Tang Forever: The Final Chamber" tour. The 26-city tour begins August 27 in Darien Center, N.Y., with stops across the U.S. and Canada, including Atlantic City, Toronto, Atlanta, Las Vegas, Phoenix and more. Bone Thugs-N-Harmony will open on most dates. Tickets for the iconic hip-hop group go on general sale on Friday, March 27, at 10 a.m. local venue time. Here's everything you need to know to grab tickets to the Wu-Tang Clan tour.

Yahoo Entertainment LONDON, ENGLAND - MARCH 17: Method Man of Wu Tang Clan perform onstage during the

When do Wu-Tang Clan tickets go on sale?

Wu-Tang Clan is back in the U.S. for more tour dates this summer. (Live Nation)

Presales for theWu-Tang Clan's upcoming tourran all this week and conclude today. General sale begins March 27 at 10 a.m. local venue time.

Find tickets

Wu-Tang Clan ticket prices

While official general sale tickets aren't available yet, third-party resellers like StubHub have Wu-Tang Clan tour ticketsstarting around $100(varying by date and venue).

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'Wu-Tang Forever: The Final Chamber' tour openers

Bone Thugs-N-Harmony will support Wu-Tang Clan on its upcoming North American tour.

'Wu-Tang Forever: The Final Chamber' tourdates

  • Thursday, Aug. 27 – Darien Center, N.Y., Darien Lake Amphitheater

  • Friday, Aug. 28 – Atlantic City, N.J., Hard Rock Live at Etess Arena ^

  • Saturday, Aug. 29 – Hartford, Conn., The Meadows Music Theatre

  • Tuesday, Sep. 1 – Shakopee, Minn., Mystic Lake Amphitheater ^

  • Wednesday, Sep. 2 – Kansas City, Mo., Morton Amphitheater

  • Friday, Sep. 4 – Tinley Park, Ill., Credit Union 1 Amphitheatre

  • Saturday, Sep. 5 – Cincinnati, Riverbend Music Center

  • Sunday, Sep. 6 – Clarkston, Mich., Pine Knob Music Theatre

  • Tuesday, Sep. 8 – Toronto, Ontario, RBC Amphitheatre

  • Wednesday, Sep. 9 – Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio, Blossom Music Center

  • Friday, Sep. 11 – Holmdel, N.J., PNC Bank Arts Center

  • Saturday, Sep. 12 – Mansfield, Mass., Xfinity Center

  • Sunday, Sep. 13 – Wantagh, N.Y., Northwell at Jones Beach Theater

  • Tuesday, Sep. 15 – Bristow, Va., Jiffy Lube Live

  • Wednesday, Sep. 16 – Virginia Beach, Va., Veterans United Home Loans Amphitheater at Virginia Beach

  • Friday, Sep. 18 – Charlotte, N.C., Truliant Amphitheater

  • Saturday, Sep. 19 – Birmingham, Ala., Coca-Cola Amphitheater

  • Sunday, Sep. 20 – Atlanta, Shaky Knees Festival – Piedmont Park *^

  • Tuesday, Sep. 22 – Orlando, Kia Center

  • Wednesday, Sep. 23 – West Palm Beach, Fla., iTHINK Financial Amphitheatre

  • Thursday, Sep. 24 – Tampa, MIDFLORIDA Credit Union Amphitheatre

  • Saturday, Sep. 26 – Thackerville, Okla., Winstar Casino ^

  • Monday, Sep. 28 – Albuquerque, First Financial Credit Union Amphitheater

  • Tuesday, Sep. 29 – Salt Lake City, Utah First Credit Union Amphitheatre

  • Thursday, Oct. 1 – Highland, Calif., Yaamava' Theater

  • Friday, Oct. 2 – Sacramento, Calif., Aftershock Festival–Discovery Park *^

  • Saturday, Oct. 3 – Las Vegas, T-Mobile Arena ^

  • Sunday, Oct. 4 – Phoenix, Talking Stick Resort Amphitheatre

* Festival appearance

^ Without Bone Thugs-N-Harmony

‘Wu-Tang Forever: The Final Chamber’ tour — How to get tickets, presale times, concert dates and more

Wu-Tang Clan is returning to North America this summer for encore dates of "Wu-Tang Forever: The Final Chamber"...
'Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone' trailer is raising eyebrows among Potterheads: 'Where's the whimsical color?'

When thefirst official trailerfor HBO's new seriesHarry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone,dropped on Wednesday, it wasn't long before fans chimed in with their commentary online.

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Among the biggest conversations on social media regarding the newly unveiled trailer has been about the color grading. Whereas the original film, released in 2001, looked warmer and more inviting, fans are wondering why this show, as seen in the trailer, looks much darker and gloomier by comparison.

"Why is the new Harry Potter so dark? Where's the whimsical color?"an X user asked.Another added: "The Harry Potter show looks exactly like the movie if it were drained of all color and magic and whimsy. Fun!"

"I think part of the disconnect with the new Harry Potter series is that it doesn't look very warm & inviting," aHarry Potterfan posited on X. "Look at the way it's shot compared to the original film. Where's the sense of wonder & awe to this world of magic? Why does the new series look so gloomy?"

On X, aHarry Potterfandelved deeper into their disappointmentwith the color grading in the trailer: "The biggest problem with the color grading in this abomination of a reboot is that the Harry Potter films very famously became progressively darker and less colorful from 1>8 to match the tone of the story and signal the rise of totalitarian evil. Starting out dark leaves little room to adjust the color grading as the story progresses," the X user wrote.

Yahoo reached out to HBO for comment but has not yet received a response.

Thoughnot everyonein theHarry Potterfandom is upset with the color-grading liberties the new series is taking.

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A Potterhead on X arguedthat the darker look of the HBO series is indicative of the fact that "TV and movies don't work the same way" anymore. "TV needs to be much more cohesive in its visuals. It's a completely legitimate choice, and it gives the series a more intimate feeling," they wrote. "There's no hard rule saying that grading has to match the tone of the story. Thinking this way just puts you into a boxed-in line of thinking," anX user added.

Another X user asked, simply, "Why do all of you want it to look identical to the movies??"

One X userbrought up a similar point, questioning the legitimacy of this complaint within theHarry Potterfandom: "Not really sure how this is a complaint. It's not by the same director as before, why would this director be locked in to having to follow the same creative choices the last ones did? This is a new team, their show is going to have its own visual identity as would be expected?"

Some social media usersargue that the darker color grading in the newHarryPotterseries alsoreflects the shifttowarddesaturated colors across modern television. While there's no hard-and-fast rule for why filmmakers may be gravitating toward darker aesthetics in their television shows, one reason, perhaps, is the use of dark coloring and low lighting as a narrative device to convey a grittier, more realistic perspective.

It's also worth noting that Mark Mylod and Adriano Goldman are the director and cinematographer of the forthcoming HBO series. They were not part of the original 2001 film.Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone, the first film of the blockbuster franchise, was directed by Chris Columbus and shot by John Seale. Columbus also directed the second film,Chamber of Secrets.

As theHarry Potterfilm franchise progressed,different directors and cinematographerswere brought on board. Alfonso Cuarón directed the third film,Prisoner of Azkaban,while Mike Newell directed the fourth,Goblet of Fire,and David Yates helmed the fifth, sixth, seventh and eighth films,Order of the Phoenix, Half-Blood PrinceandDeathly Hallows Part 1 and Part 2.

As for cinematographers, Roger Pratt shot the second and fourth films, Michael Seresin shot the third, Slawomir Idziak shot the fifth, Bruncho Delbonnel shot the sixth, and Eduardo Serra shot the seventh and eighth installments.

Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stonepremieres on HBO on Christmas Day.

'Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone' trailer is raising eyebrows among Potterheads: 'Where's the whimsical color?'

When thefirst official trailerfor HBO's new seriesHarry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone,dropped on Wednesday, ...
Netflix hikes prices on all plans for the second time in a year

Netflix has raised prices across all of its subscription tiers.

Entertainment Weekly The cast of Netflix's 'Stranger Things'Credit: Courtesy of Netflix

Key Points

  • Standard with Ads is going up $1 to $8.99 per month; Standard, which doesn't have ads, is going up $2 to $19.99 per month; while ad-free Premium is also rising $2 to $26.99 per month.

  • This price hike comes just a year after the last raises, which impacted the Standard without ads plan for the first time in three years.

When it comes toNetflixraising subscription prices, stranger things have happened.

Long gone are the days of sub-$10 subscription fees granting you access to the streaming giant's voluminous library. For the second time in just over a year, Netflix is raising prices across all subscription tiers.

According to thePlans and Pricingpage on the Netflix Help Center, the Standard With Ads plan, which allows for two supported devices, has gone up $1 from $7.99 to $8.99 per month. The Standard plan, which doesn't include ads and also allows for two supported devices, is rising $2 from $17.99 to $19.99 per month. Finally, the coveted Premium tier, which allows users to download the app on six supported devices and watch simultaneously and without ads on four, is also going up $2 from $24.99 to $26.99.

The Netflix logoCredit: Thomas IllustrationFuller/NurPhoto via Getty

Netflix shared the following statement withEntertainment Weeklywhen reached for comment regarding Thursday's price hikes: "Our approach remains the same: We continue offering a range of prices and plans to meet a variety of needs, and as we deliver more value to our members we are updating our prices to enable us to reinvest in quality entertainment and improve their experience by updating our prices."

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Originally a subscription-based DVD rental service, Netflix launched a parallel streaming service in 2007. At the time, pricing was computed according to the type of rental plan subscribers opted for. If you subscribed to the $18 per month plan, for example, you were accorded 18 hours of streaming time.

The following year, Netflix implemented the flat monthly subscription fee for streaming that it still employs. Unlimited streams without ads cost $9 per month back then — a service that now starts at $19.99 per month.

Netflix raised its prices last January. Though price hikes have never been uncommon at the streamer, last year's stood out, as they impacted the popular Standard without ads plan, which at the time hadn't seen a hike in three years.

The price point of Netflix's Premium subscription tier, its most expensive, is a far cry from where it started. But it's equally far from the streaming industry's most expensive monthly plan. Viewers interested in the Disney+, Hulu, and ESPN unlimited, ad-free bundle are looking at a monthly cost of $44.99.

But at $26.99, Netflix's Premium plan stands head and sometimes shoulders over the rest, from HBO Max's $22.99 per month, to the newly unveiled Prime Video Ultra (a standard Prime Video plan without ads, and without a general Prime subscription) cost of $13.98 per month, to Paramount+'s $13.99, which includes Showtime and CBS programming.

Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

Netflix hikes prices on all plans for the second time in a year

Netflix has raised prices across all of its subscription tiers. Key Points Standard with Ads is going up $1 to...
Iran's 'Tehran toll' booth forces some tankers to pay millions to leave Strait of Hormuz

DOHA, Qatar — Call it the world's most dangerous toll booth.

NBC Universal Strait Of Hormuz Remains Focal Point In Iran-U.S. War (Elke Scholiers / Getty Images)

Iranis forcing oil tankers to take a new route inthe Strait of Hormuzthrough a narrow passage controlled by itsRevolutionary Guard, with some ships charged millions of dollars to transit, according to maritime data shared with NBC News.

The new system — dubbed "the Tehran toll booth" by shipping industry experts — indicates Iran remains firmly in control of the critical waterway despite intense strikes on the country, and may be looking to cement that control over the longer term.

Before the U.S. and Israel launched their bombing campaign on Feb. 28, around 110 ships were passing through the Strait of Hormuz every day, data from Lloyd's List Intelligence shows. Since then, that number has plummeted to fewer than 10 a day, according to the London-based maritime intelligence service.

Maritime traffic routes through the Strait of Hormuz between March 22-24, 2026. (NBC News)

Instead of sailing down the middle of the strait, those ships are now taking a new route into Iran's territorial waters and through a tight passage between the islands of Qeshm and Larak, Tomer Raanan, a maritime risk analyst with the Lloyds List shipping journal, told NBC News on Wednesday.

"Whatever we can detect going out of the strait right now is going through this narrow channel in Iranian territorial waters, where the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps essentially verifies the ship's information and acts almost like a toll booth," Raanan said.

At least 25 vessels have taken the new route — which is less than 20 miles from Iran's main naval base at the port of Bandar Abbas — since March 13, according to Lloyd's List tracking. Among them was a Chinese tanker called Bright Gold, which made the voyage on March 23.

Video footage posted that day to Douyin, the Chinese version of TikTok, by one of the Bright Gold's crew and verified by NBC News, shows the ship passing between the two islands.

"In a few days, American soldiers might come here. This might be the main fighting spot," the crew member says in the video, pointing to high-rise Iranian buildings in the distance.

The video ends with the unidentified sailor saying it was too dangerous to continue filming.

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A screengrab from a video by a crew member on a Chinese-owned tanker appear to show it sailing through the Strait of Hormuz. (Obtained by NBC News)

Raanan said Lloyd's List was aware of at least two ships that had made payment in Chinese yuan to cross the strait. It does not appear that Iran has yet established a consistent policy, he added.

But Jasem Mohamed al-Budaiwi, of the Gulf Cooperation Council, a bloc of six Gulf Arab nations, said Thursday that Iran was officially charging for safe passage through the shipping channel, which is crucial to the world's energy supply.

Iranian state media also reported that the country's parliament was preparing legislation to formalize the toll.

"We provide its security, and it is natural that ships and oil tankers should pay such fees," lawmaker Mohammadreza Rezaei Kouchi was quoted as saying by the state-aligned Fars and Tasnim news agencies, both of which are close to the Revolutionary Guard.

His comments came days after Alaeddin Boroujerdi, a member of Iran's national security committee, suggested on state television that a $2 million fee would demonstrate Iran's authority over the waterway.

Israel said on Thursday that it had killedAlireza Tangsiri, the head of the Revolutionary Guard's naval forcesand the commander responsible for mining and blockading the strait.

Before his death, Iran was believed to be responsible for attacking at least 18 ships in and around the Persian Gulf since the outbreak of war,according to data compiled by the International Maritime Organization. In the deadliest incident, four sailors were killed on a tug boat as it sailed near the Strait of Hormuz on March 6.

In aletterto the United Nations Secretary General António Guterres this week, Iran's foreign ministry said the waterway remained open to "non-hostile vessels" on the condition they act "in coordination with the competent Iranian authorities".

Statements from the Iranian regime suggest that it now aims to turn its ad-hoc wartime control of the strait into a longer-term reality. On Thursday it issued five conditions it said would need to be met before it would agree to an end to the war.

Among them, "recognition of Iran's sovereignty over the Strait of Hormuz."

Iran's 'Tehran toll' booth forces some tankers to pay millions to leave Strait of Hormuz

DOHA, Qatar — Call it the world's most dangerous toll booth. Iranis forcing oil tankers to take a new rout...

 

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