Baker Mayfield doesn't mince words, calling out Sam Darnold ahead of Week 5

This Sunday, Seattle Seahawks quarterback Sam Darnold has a chance to renew acquaintances with his old friend Baker Mayfield. Mayfield will lead his Tampa Bay Buccaneers into Lumen Field for a battle between two 3-1 teams. It is not a situation many would have foreseen just three years ago, when the two QBs were teammates in Carolina.
Mayfield was asked about that time period during a press conference this week. SI.com’s Richie Whitt reported Mayfield’s response to a question about whether they ever reminisced about the “good old days in Carolina.”
Flashing the deadpan humor that made him a favorite of advertisers back when he was having success in Cleveland, Mayfield responded, “Reminisce on WHAT days?”
Seahawks' Sam Darnold and Bucs' Baker Mayfield’s NFL journeys continue to crisscross
To be sure, there wasn’t very much good about those days in Carolina. It was Darnold’s second NFL way station, after he flamed out with the Jets. Carolina had ponied up some decent draft assets to acquire him in 2021, but his performance still left a lot to be desired.
So the following season, they traded for Mayfield. It paired the number one and three overall picks in the 2018 draft on the same squad. Mayfield had risen higher and therefore fallen farther in his brief NFL career by the time he came to the Panthers.
Mayfield won the starting job but was ineffective. He eventually got hurt. Darnold, who was himself recovering from an injury, waited on the bench while PJ. Walker started games in the middle part of the season with no more success.
When Darnold got his chance to play in the final six games, he outperformed the man who had been chosen ahead of him back in 2018. He led the Panthers to four wins over their final six games and kept them in playoff contention until the second-to-last week. He threw seven touchdowns against just three interceptions and recorded a passer rating of 92.6.
Not that we’re keeping score here, but Mayfield’s rating was 74.4 that season.
Neither player would be in Carolina the following year. The Panthers moved heaven and earth (as well as D.J. Moore and a bunch of draft picks) to select Bryce Young as their new franchise QB. The two former first-rounders from the 2022 season were released.
Actually, Mayfield’s release came before the 2022 season was even over, during that modestly successful run Darnold had late in the season. Mayfield spent five minutes with Sean McVay and the Rams and was seemingly rejuvenated. He has taken the Bucs to the playoffs in each of his two seasons in Tampa and once again has them in first place in the NFC South.
Darnold played in 2023 under Kyle Shanahan in San Francisco before landing with Kevin O’Connell in Minnesota. Like his old friend Baker, Darnold led his team to the playoffs last year. It’s remarkable how a quality offensive-minded head coach can help revive the careers of once-promising QBs who had been given up for dead.
Actually, it’s not surprising in the least, and it calls into question every franchise that does not do everything it can to help develop its young quarterbacks.
By now, both Darnold and Mayfield are veterans who have weathered adversity and come out looking good.
Elaborating on his answer about the “good old days’ in Carolina, Mayfield went on to say that he and Darnold remain close and that he is happy for his old teammate. It seems as if every year, there are multiple examples of young quarterbacks who struggle early on at the most difficult position on the field, and then are jettisoned by their team. Sometimes, by the entire league.
Fortunately for Tampa, they gave Baker Mayfield a chance, and he has paid off their confidence with division titles. It is too early to know whether Darnold will pay the same dividends in Seattle, but he is off to a promising start. Certainly more promising than those days in Carolina.
Will Shohei Ohtani Have Pitching Restrictions in Game 1? Dodgers’ Andrew Friedman Answers

Los Angeles Dodgers president of baseball operations revealed whether or not two-way superstar Shohei Ohtani would have pitching restrictions in the Game 1 of the NLDS against the Philadelphia Phillies.
Ohtani returned to pitching this season after undergoing Tommy John surgery, and has been monitored extremely closely by the Dodgers in his recovery. He began his return by pitching one inning per game, and has gradually increased his load as the season has progressed. His last start of the regular season against the Arizona Diamondbacks lasted six innings, where he held the D-backs scoreless.
“I just think he’s a normal starting pitcher now,” Friedman said. “(We) kind of eased him along. Just a normal starting pitcher (now).”
Ohtani has never made a start in the postseason, having spent the first six seasons in MLB with the Los Angeles Angels, and will make his October debut on the mound Saturday. If he can replicate his regular season performances, he will be just fine.
The three-time MVP had a 2.87 ERA through 14 starts this season, and struck out 62 batters through just 47 innings. He has a ton of momentum carrying into this start, as he hasn’t allowed a run since pitching against the Cincinnati Reds on Aug. 27.
He has also been great on the other side of the ball as of late, crushing two home runs in the Dodgers’ opening game of the Wild Card series against the Reds and reaching base safely three times against them in Game 2.
The Dodgers will hope the reigning MVP can make the difference against the Phillies, as the Dodgers are looking to be the first team to win consecutive World Series since the New York Yankees, who won three straight from 1998-2000. The Dodgers’ series against the Phils begins Saturday at 3:38 p.m. PT.