New Photo - 76 Times Guys Mansplained Something To Women With Peak Confidence And Zero Accuracy

76 Times Guys Mansplained Something To Women With Peak Confidence And Zero Accuracy Oleksandra KyryliukJanuary 2, 2026 at 5:02 AM 0 I'm a big fan of photography. I've been doing it for years, and I know my way around a camera. But I can't even count how many times, mostly when I was younger, a random man—always a man—stopped me midshot on the street to "correct" me and offer completely unsolicited tips. That's the thing about mansplaining: it shows up when you're least asking for it, usually delivered with a confidence that doesn't match the facts. And it's rarely limited to cameras.

- - 76 Times Guys Mansplained Something To Women With Peak Confidence And Zero Accuracy

Oleksandra KyryliukJanuary 2, 2026 at 5:02 AM

0

I'm a big fan of photography. I've been doing it for years, and I know my way around a camera. But I can't even count how many times, mostly when I was younger, a random man—always a man—stopped me mid-shot on the street to "correct" me and offer completely unsolicited tips.

That's the thing about mansplaining: it shows up when you're least asking for it, usually delivered with a confidence that doesn't match the facts. And it's rarely limited to cameras. Women on Reddit shared the most bizarre, patronizing "lectures" they've gotten from men, and some of them are so ridiculous you can't help but laugh. Scroll down to read their stories.

#1

It was my partner, but he sent me some stats about toxic shock syndrome and reminded me to change my tampon.I was like dude, I have been getting my period for 32 years.

© Photo: QueenAmalasunta

#2

I had an ex tell me that women always know immediately when they are pregnant. I tried to explain it is not that simple because women (like myself) can have irregular periods and not know for sure if they miss one or two periods. But no, he told me all women know ASAP. So therefore there is no reason for abortions (not his exact words but basically that was the point he was trying to make).

© Photo: Girlwithatreetat

#3

Someone mansplained my area of expertise, and then posted a link to a paper to prove his point. I wrote the paper. *chef kiss*.

© Photo: SueBeee

#4

My period is because I'm unhealthy and healthy women only have a dot of blood that's why it's called a period…..

© Photo: Lyassa

#5

I was a wildlife biologist for a logging company. Hired because I can identify over 300 species of birds via sight and sound. One staff member described a fox sparrow to me, let him know what he saw. Another man told me how that's not possible and it was some other type of sparrow. I asked how he knew and if he had birding experience, no he worked with wolves and no birds. He just didn't like that I knew birds and he didn't lmao.

© Photo: whatasmallbird

#6

I had an ex mansplain how mortgages work which doesn't sound too weird except that I was a mortgage banker and he was essentially financially illiterate.

© Photo: beer_hearts

#7

I was working as an art instructor. He told me that "Real Artists" mix their own white paint by combining all the colors on their palette. I said "Oh really, I'd never heard that before." His assertion was false. That gets you brown/black. But I didn't correct him, because I knew one day, someone else would, and he'd think back to what he told me, and think "Man she must've thought I was an idiot," cuz yes, yes I did, and still do.

© Photo: iceariina

#8

Pregnancy. Prolifer dude explained to me that a healthy pregnancy places no physical burden on and poses no risks to the pregnant person.

© Photo: CerebellumPirate

#9

When my youngest was 9 years old, the guy I was talking to told me that HIS therapist told him that MY anxiety/depression was caused by Post Partum Hormones.

© Photo: anon

#10

I was working on a cross stitch project on an overnight shift work to fill the time and he told me I was doing it wrong. I asked if he did this craft. No, no he did not. He didn't do any crafts and had never in fact ever cross stitched or even held a needle. He just thought I was doing it wrong.

© Photo: Rainbow-Mama

#11

Bra size. He was convinced that the sizes were only lemons, apples, melons. (I am assuming small lemons?)I had to pull out a whiteboard and draw out bodies to explain band size, cup size and breast shape.

© Photo: troubledanger

#12

When my husband and I first started dating (way back in high school) I mentioned wanting to take a hot bath because of my cramps. He told me I should be taking a cold bath instead because heat is bad for cramps. I told him I'd see him after my hot bath.

© Photo: RockabillyBelle

#13

That it was worse for him to have had a catheter than when I did. Because his went into his urethra and mine went into my V, according to him.He is not the only man I've been with who thinks [like this].

© Photo: MellyMJ72

#14

What city I lived in. I lived in a major metro so people refer to various areas by their neighborhood name like normal. He insisted I did not live in the city. I did.

© Photo: MistletoeMinx

#15

My absolute favorite (in the worst way) was a know-it-all who was sure that the Ivy League University I went to did not offer my degree.I told him the subject of my MFA and he expressed his doubts that it existed in the curriculum of my university.I assured him that as someone who Holds That Degree from That University I was certain that it does indeed exist.Tf?A few weeks later he cheerfully let me know that he had researched it and confirmed that -- sure enough, my degree really is offered by that university! It was as if he was proudly breaking good news of this discovery to me.

© Photo: anon

#16

How to wash blood out of clothing. Sir, I have been washing blood out of clothing since I was 11 years old. GRRRRR…..

© Photo: chicagotodetroit

#17

How to do the job I am literally getting paid to teach them how to do, on their very first day of training. This has happened more than once.

© Photo: HauntedOryx

#18

My own height. I'm 5'6" (~168cm). Supposedly his shoulder was 5'4", and I came up to his shoulder; therefore I could not possibly be taller than 5'4".

© Photo: CyanocittaAtSea

#19

A woman's ovulation. He didn't get a single thing right.

© Photo: Academic-Drop9366

#20

My balding male partner was telling me the best technique for cutting curly hair. I have had long curly hair for over 40 years. Just for funsies: he goes to a guy who one time trimmed only one of his eyebrows so one was trimmed and one was Gandalf looking until his next cut!

© Photo: crying_boobs

#21

My husband told me I was wrong about where my hometown—where he had only been once—was located on a map.

© Photo: LiveOnFive

#22

My brother in law told me all about dogs and their behaviors. Complete with why they do what they do, how it relates to their wild ancestors, and how to interpret their body language. When I tried to tell him some of his "facts" were incorrect, he went on to talk over me and explain why *I* was wrong. I've been a veterinary technician for 24 years. He knows this. But please, go on. Tell me *ALL* about dogs and why they do what they do.

© Photo: CatmoCatmo

#23

I used to occasionally write for a news satire site. I shared a piece *I* wrote on Facebook with a quote. A man I know commented explaining to me that the piece was satire and that I had missed the joke, telling me what the author's true intention was.

© Photo: omnombooks

#24

One time, I went with my brother to buy a new pair of composite toe boots for work. I was trying on two different pairs of boots when a guy who worked there came up and asked if my brother needed assistance. My brother redirected the guy to me since I was the actual customer. The guy looked at me and told me that those boots were too big for me without actually having seen my feet. I explained that they are the correct size and that I go up a half size so that I have the option of adding an additional layer of thick wool socks. The guy then proceeded to tell me that I shouldn't wear wool socks because cheap cotton ones from Walmart work just fine. I patiently explained that wool socks are, in fact, more durable, antimicrobial, and still insulate when wet. He then told me that I didn't need anything heavy duty for working in the garden and definitely didn't need composite toe boots. I was so livid at that point but I remained calm and explained that my job involves working outside and surveying steep terrain in awful weather conditions. So, I need the heavy duty boots and wool socks. The guy still tried to tell me my boot size was wrong. I then turned to my brother and said that we should leave and that I would not be spending money at that establishment. His mansplaining lost him a $300 sale.

© Photo: Icy-Elk3698

#25

I had a guy I was planning a date with tell me I wanted to have at least one kid.Note in my profile I was clear that I was firmly child free.Second I have had complications due to PCOS and am all but certainly sterile.There was no date. Conveniently the next week a different man slipped into my DMs and we've been together for three years and share three cats.

© Photo: YFMAS

#26

Once I said that I didn't like the name of our college improv group. I thought it was pretentious. One of the other members explained to me what it meant.

© Photo: anon

#27

My favorite is always, "that's not what mansplaining is. Mansplaining is this: …".

© Photo: heckfyre

#28

I was the lone woman in a doctoral seminar on I don't even remember what it was now, but some pimply-faced 21 year-old kid tried to mansplain to me about the shortcomings of 2nd wave feminism. *Junior, I* ***was there.***.

© Photo: glycophosphate

#29

How menstruation works. P.S. I was in my 30s and he wasn't a medical professional.

© Photo: Helpful_Hour1984

#30

Why abortion is wrong (he thought women get their first period at the average age of 20).

© Photo: anon

#31

Pre- and post-increment. I had 4 years C++ and another 4 of Java by this stage. He got it wrong.

#32

This is more of a general habit I've noticed but a lot of men will explain my own jokes to me. Like I'll say something sarcastically, and they'll be like "that doesn't make sense, that's not how that works, etc."Like yea, that's the joke. I realized after a while that they just think no woman is smart enough to make a joke, so I must genuinely believe what I said. So now they need to explain it to me.

#33

We were both engineers. We went to a dinner where the service was ok. I was mentally calculating a 15 and a 20% tip in my head because it wasn't horrible service, but I didn't want to leave 20%. I guess he noticed I was taking a little longer than he thought appropriate and tried to mansplain how to calculate a 20% tip. I called him out on it by saying "are you seriously manslpaining math to me?!?!" The whole table found it hilarious. He laughed, but you could tell he wasn't happy. Our lead was doubled over laughing though.

#34

I went on a tour of this historic house a couple of years back. There was a little piece of folk art depicting a woman who had just given birth to her 7th child rigging up a flag to signal to her neighbors that she had the kid. I chuckled and made a joke along the lines of hey, maybe her husband or one of the half dozen other kids should do that for her. The tour guide didn't skip a beat when he said "actually, childbirth is really hard." I'm a woman. I was on the tour with my then-husband, who saw my face and burst out laughing. We're both clearly cisgendered. So is the tour guide, he made a point of telling us so when he told us later on about a train sim game he loves. I happen to also be a woman who really digs trains too so the whole tour ended on a relatively good note. But still, wow.That was both a highly weird but also super hilarious example. At least I got a kick out of it.

#35

I once had a man, who was not Australian, explain to me, an Australian, all about koalas. So I was mansplained AND koalasplained to.

#36

A random guy tried to explain the history behind MY LAST NAME. The best part was that he was totally incorrect in his assumption about the meaning of the name and where my family originated from. Several random men (who were not doctors) have tried explaining to me how MY OWN DISABILITIES work. Everything they said was laughably incorrect.

#37

Weirdest ever has got to be when a guy mansplained how marrying him would solve all my problems. He knew it was weird to keep bringing this up, but he had to explain again how marrying him was the clear answer: I'd have health insurance through him, he could pay for half of my monthly mortgage (and thus somehow equally own my home), etc, etc. This man was living at home with his mother for free, and didn't earn enough to be able to afford to pay for half of my monthly mortgage. Also, we weren't dating. 🙃.

#38

I work in IT, basically the master of all for the company I work for. I was trying to fix a computer tied to our AV entertainment system one day. This guy, who is one of our facilities folks, is notorious for trying to do IT related things because "you don't need a degree in computer science for this" (he told this to my best friend who is one of the other facilities people), started telling me that maybe I should try to see if it's X and not Z. He launches into this whole spiel about changing to use gold tipped HDMI cables over the silver tipped cables. That wasn't even the problem. So I started at him in the eye sockets of his soul, unplug one of the gold tipped HDMI cables from the system just to show him and plugged it back in. Surprise, that wasn't the problem.I've learned to always stare at him without blinking if he mansplains. I've really perfected my dry humor and sarcasm, so it makes him extra uncomfortable.

#39

Math. I have a bachelor's in mathematics and work in a STEM field. He had a high school diploma and worked in a blue collar job but thought he needed to explain to me that if 10% of people do something, that means 10 out of every 100 people do this thing.

#40

I was once dealing with an extreme depression and was crying talking to my mother and I said "I feel like my body is just an empty vessel just going through the motions" and her boyfriend at the time scoffed and said "Actually, a vessel is a boat."

#41

When I was in college I went home on break and met up with some of the people from high school, and we were talking about what we were studying, and I showed them all a website I'd made in one of my classes. And of the guys - who was a chemistry major, not a computer scientist - started mansplaining to me and everyone else how my website worked. The website I built. And worse, pretty much everything he said was wrong.He didn't seem happy when I told him that.

#42

My father in law was trying to explain evolution to me. I have a degree in archaeology with specialization in early hominid evolution. When I reminded him of this, he said, "Oh I thought you studied dinosaurs."

#43

My former landlord was in our house fixing something and saw vinegar by the washer. We said we use it for laundry, and he then proceeded to explain that all women should douce with vinegar. Looked dubious when we said women shouldn't douce at all and never with vinegar.

#44

My own taste in music. He tried to explain to me that I don't actually like the music that I do because all women have the same taste in music. He was convinced that every woman on earth likes Buckcherry. I do not. I'd bet money that most women do not.

#45

My own dad once went on a tangent about the differences between coffee drinks like what makes a latte different from a capacino after he told me a fun fact about coffee I genuinely didn't know all because he went on vacation to Italy and learned about it, I have been a barista since I was 17 lol.

#46

I'm an accountant with a degree in business management and my dad once mansplained the difference between profit and revenue for a whole hour long car ride.

#47

My dad tried to tell me he could make a better turkey than him for thanksgiving. I was a sous chef at the time. He thought it was best to try two birds that year if I was so confident. In the morning, while I was making every single other dish for the meal, he smugly asked what time he should have his bird ready. I told him 5pm. His was done at 3. And it was dry. Mine was perfectly rested at 5, with a pan gravy, stuffing, homemade bread, salad, homemade cranberry sauce, stuffing, mashed potatoes, roasted brussel sprouts, as well as multiple desserts. It was moist as [hell] and he never tried to make a bird when I was home again.

#48

I'm a 53yr old woman. I had a dinner meeting with a potential client and my 24yr old male coworker took it upon himself to explain to me how I should dress and how to subtly flirt with the prospect to get the deal done. He was wrong btw. That's not how I do business and yes I did get the deal closed.

#49

What a movie prop is because he's "in the industry". Dude worked at blockbuster. I was (still am) a union theatre tech with a theatre design degree. But thanks?

#50

Why I shouldn't receive epidural while giving birth 🙄.

#51

That a still menstruating woman in her late 30s/early 40s cannot possibly get pregnant cuz they're too old.

#52

I tweeted that a certain politician was "no Jack Kennedy". (This was a reference to a classic vice-presidential debate moment when Lloyd Bentsen told Dan Quayle: "I served with Jack Kennedy. I knew Jack Kennedy. Jack Kennedy was a friend of mine. Senator, you're no Jack Kennedy.")A mansplainer presumed to advise me that JFK's name was John and no one ever called him "Jack". I replied that Lloyd Bentsen must not have known JFK as well as he'd claimed to. A third person posted video of the debate moment, describing it as very famous. To the vast surprise of no one with two X chromosomes, the mansplainer never apologized.

#53

Just the other day actually a man mansplained to me what women want in media representation. And the best part was that he couldn't have possibly been more wrong or sexist about it. But he sure was confident. Seriously what is wrong with these men?

#54

How to apply mascara, lol.

#55

My dart team wanted to get shirts with the team name on it. I said I was concerned for my personal safety walking in/out of bars with that written on my shirt due to the double entrendre. I then had 3 guys explaining to me how it's a "legitimate dart question" and I'm overreacting....One, Do not recite the deep magic to me, boy. I was already playing at home and running match results at tournaments in 1980 - when I was FIVE. Two, the team name was "Is It In?" *slow blink*.

#56

A male friend and I were going to a movie. We wanted to grab a bite first, but we were a little short on time, so we decided to stop at Wendy's. My friend told me his order, dropped me at the door to the Wendy's, and went to park the car.When the order came, he unwrapped his burger. The conversation went as follows:Him: Ew. Ick.Me: Is there something wrong with your burger?Him: This is the part where you say, "I didn't know what you wanted, so I told them [pickles and onions]." (I actually don't recall at this point precisely what the offending fix-ins were.)Me: I didn't tell them that.Him: What did you say when they asked you?Me: They didn't ask me.Him: Wendy's always asks.Me: No, clearly they don't, because they didn't ask me.Him: But Wendy's always asks.Me: Do you want me to get you another burger?Him: No, I'll just scrape it off.20 minutes later, back in the car, on the way to the movie:Him: Did you tell them to put that stuff on my burger?Me: No! I told you that!Him: I thought you misunderstood.

#57

Had a guy explain "float" to me (the financial term). After he finished I told him I worked in financial technology for 20 years. He just kinda nodded. 😆

#58

A movie that he had never seen.

#59

I was working at a retail store in my 20s. Our payment system was down so I was doing people's bills on paper. A man told me how much sales tax was and how to calculate it. I was a math major in university at the time.

#60

Counting... and mopping. A male coworker saw me mopping the floors and proceeded to tell me how it's easier to break the area into sections. I told him thanks, but no thanks. I've been mopping these floors for years and know what I'm doing. He wouldn't let up, and instead proceeded to repeat himself, seeming to think I didn't understand the concept of breaking down a kitchen floor into sections, showing me how I can use nearby objects to line up and cut off sections and my fingers to count the spaces. Literally showed me his hand and how he raises a finger for each number ffs. Which, side note, the way he wanted me to mop was wrong anyway lol. I thought it was common sense to start at one end and finish at the other so you didn't walk over the clean floors but apparently it's not.

#61

A guy in college asked me if I could be immortal, would I choose that. I thought about it for like 30 second and was like, No, it sounds lonely, and that youd get bitter and it would be pointless to be without family and friends. (It was a only you in all the world.) He proceeded to tell me of course I would choose to be immortal, and to forget all that stupid emotional stuff. He was a weird pale creepy guy. Maybe he was a vampire. Or had a vampire obsession.

#62

I am a professional programmer. Need I say anything else?

#63

I had a man once explain to me, that women like myself, needed to stay away from horses during our periods or the horse will smell our pheromones and want to mate.

#64

Women's safety. Happens so often I go out of my way to avoid the topic even coming up. They are the experts and women are hysterical and anything bad that happens to any woman anywhere is a black swan and certainly never due to any kind of structural or individual blindness or bias.

#65

When I was 16, I waited tables and a guy mansplained to me the proper way to fill a glass with half sweet, half unsweet tea. I couldn't tell you which I did first, but he wanted me to know that you have to put unsweet first and then sweet because of density. Like just stir it with your spoon omfg.

#66

I had been working in the software industry making software talk to each other for 20 years. He explained to me what an API was. I told him that I'd been doing this a while and he didn't need to explain that. He kept explaining. 20 years prior when I started working in this area of IT, this man was a literal child.

#67

An IT geek, upon hearing that I was a primary caregiver for a family member with cancer, decided to explain cancer caregiving to me.

#68

Just had a man speak to our whole company about how women don't get ignored or gaslit at physician visits, just hospitals. This is so incorrect.

#69

I used to work overnight from 12am-8am12am is the start of the next day. So it would be like Wednesday then 12am hits and it's now Thursday My very much older male coworker tried to tell me what days of the week I worked not realizing 12am is a new day. He argued hardcore with me on it. Like dude I know what days I work. He also argued with me once that packages aren't mail. When FedEx or UPS came we would say the mail came and doing the mail as we had to sort it and make copies of the slips. His face turned red and as he screamed at me that it wasn't mail and he tried telling me what mail is and isn't.

#70

A guy at work tried to explain to me what solitaire game I was playing on my phone. He basically walked by me on break and I was playing freecell on my phone and he saw the cards asked if I was playing spider solitaire, I let him know that I wasn't, I was playing freecell. He then proceeded to tell me that I was wrong about what game I was playing and started explaining what freecell is. I was like I know, it's the game I currently playing. And just to add to it once he finally admitted that I was playing freecell, he started going off about how I should try spider solitaire because it's fun (just to be clear, by this point I had explained the difference between the two games enough that any reasonable human would realize that I was very familiar with both games.).

#71

I was once mansplained about white stereotyping of Asian people and how "most white people picturing an Asian woman are gonna think of like a K-Pop star" to me, an Asian afab person.

#72

I made a post about this before, but I had a guy mansplain what a lighter was to me, when I was inquiring about a lighter-log. I forget what they are actually called, but all of our wood was wet that night and we were planning a bonfire so I needed a lighter log to help the damp wood catch a flame. He asked me (SO SMUGGLY OMG) if I "know what a lighter is?" and I explained that I needed the log because our wood was too wet for just a lighter to catch. He got quiet while we just stared at eachother and then came back with "Well, you ever tried using a bigger lighter?" Mind you, this guy wasn't even the employee who was helping me, he was just some guuuyyyyyy lol. I walked down the aisle to where the employee directed me and found what I was looking for, and I hear this man shout out behind me "SO YOU DO KNOW WHAT A LIGHTER IS THEN!".

#73

I once phoned someone at work to confirm a small detail (should be a 30-60s call). He decided to explain basically 50% of my job to me for about 5 minutes Also this wasn't a random member of the public it was a clerk I often spoke to a few times a week.

#74

How to break up a bag of ice"So what you're gonna wanna do is drop it and then pick it up and drop it again".

#75

Lolita fashion. Lolita can be worn by anyone of any gender but it def skews feminine. I had worn it for 20 years at this point.

#76

How to use a fork.

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Source: "AOL Entertainment"

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Published: January 02, 2026 at 06:09AM on Source: RON MAG

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76 Times Guys Mansplained Something To Women With Peak Confidence And Zero Accuracy

76 Times Guys Mansplained Something To Women With Peak Confidence And Zero Accuracy Oleksandra KyryliukJanuary 2, 20...
New Photo - You'll Never Guess Which Viral Phrase Topped 2026's 'Banished Words List'

You'll Never Guess Which Viral Phrase Topped 2026's 'Banished Words List' Will SayreJanuary 2, 2026 at 12:31 AM 0 Getty Images There's a chance you're using a certain phrase these days that you probably never said before this past year. Modern society welcomes soontobe words and expressions all the time — and in honor of the trend, Lake Superior State University releases a Banished Words List each year. The 2026 version is particularly special since it's the infamous survey's 50thanniversary edition, the public college boasts.

- - You'll Never Guess Which Viral Phrase Topped 2026's 'Banished Words List'

Will SayreJanuary 2, 2026 at 12:31 AM

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There's a chance you're using a certain phrase these days that you probably never said before this past year.

Modern society welcomes soon-to-be words and expressions all the time — and in honor of the trend, Lake Superior State University releases a Banished Words List each year. The 2026 version is particularly special since it's the infamous survey's 50th-anniversary edition, the public college boasts.

Can you guess which phrase topped LSSU's top-10 list, released Thursday, Jan. 1 in honor of New Year's Day? Probably.

"67" became so engrained in our culture this year that it even seeped into popular media consumption, becoming the central plot line of the recent Halloween episode of South Park. Go back and watch as the Emmy-winning show's infamous Cartman character becomes possessed (in a spoof on The Exorcist) once his obsession with 6-7 drives him to insanity — to hilarious results.

Overall, the entries into LSSU's Banished Words List are continuing a tongue-in-cheek commentary on language, catchphrases and corporate jargon. More than 1,400 submissions were entrusted to LSSU this year, pouring in from all 50 U.S. states and as far as Uzbekistan, Brazil, Japan, the U.K. and more.

Here's the college's Banished Words List in full:

10. Reach Out9. My Bad8. Gift/Gifted7. Perfect6. Full Stop5. Incentivize4. Massive3. Cooked2. Demure1. 67

And just as Americans became obsessed with 67, so, too, have they remained fascinated with the true-crime realm of film and television this past year. Variety just put together a list of the top documentaries from 2025, and Netflix's Gone Girls: The Long Island Serial Killer topped the spread, spotlighting the hunt for a killer in a certain part of New York through the perspective of his victims, their loved ones and the police.

Netflix projects held the second and third spots on Variety's list as well, with The Perfect Neighbor ranked at No. 2 and Unknown Number: The High School Catfish trailing right behind it.

This story was originally published by Parade on Jan 1, 2026, where it first appeared in the News section. Add Parade as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

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Published: January 02, 2026 at 06:00AM on Source: RON MAG

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You'll Never Guess Which Viral Phrase Topped 2026's 'Banished Words List'

You'll Never Guess Which Viral Phrase Topped 2026's 'Banished Words List' Will SayreJanuary 2, 2026 a...
New Photo - Vikings' J.J. McCarthy (hand) resumes full practice activity

Vikings' J.J. McCarthy (hand) resumes full practice activity Field Level MediaJanuary 2, 2026 at 3:13 AM 0 Minnesota Vikings quarterback J.J. McCarthy (9) reacts during a game against the New York Giants at MetLife Stadium, Dec 21, 2025, East Rutherford, NJ, USA (Yannick Peterhans / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images) Minnesota Vikings quarterback J.J. McCarthy was a full participant at practice on Thursday, giving him a strong chance of starting Sunday against the Green Bay Packers.

- - Vikings' J.J. McCarthy (hand) resumes full practice activity

Field Level MediaJanuary 2, 2026 at 3:13 AM

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Minnesota Vikings quarterback J.J. McCarthy (9) reacts during a game against the New York Giants at MetLife Stadium, Dec 21, 2025, East Rutherford, NJ, USA (Yannick Peterhans / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images)

Minnesota Vikings quarterback J.J. McCarthy was a full participant at practice on Thursday, giving him a strong chance of starting Sunday against the Green Bay Packers.

McCarthy began the week of practice limited thanks to a hairline fracture in his throwing hand he sustained in Week 16 against the New York Giants.

That injury kept him out of the Vikings' 23-10 Christmas Day win vs. the Detroit Lions. Max Brosmer got the start at quarterback and threw for 51 yards.

McCarthy's participation Sunday would be something of a surprise given the game's stakes. Minnesota has already been eliminated from the playoffs at 8-8, while Green Bay is locked into the NFC's No. 7 seed at 9-6-1.

Earlier in the week, Vikings coach Kevin O'Connell was non-committal about McCarthy's status, taking a wait-and-see approach, but he did express interest in having his starter back.

"I'd love to get him one more game, for sure," O'Connell said.

The second-year player who missed his entire rookie season due to injury has gone 5-4 in nine starts this season, throwing for 1,450 yards with 11 touchdowns and 12 interceptions.

--Field Level Media

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Published: January 02, 2026 at 04:27AM on Source: RON MAG

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Vikings' J.J. McCarthy (hand) resumes full practice activity

Vikings' J.J. McCarthy (hand) resumes full practice activity Field Level MediaJanuary 2, 2026 at 3:13 AM 0 Minnesota ...
New Photo - Indiana looks like real deal in lopsided Rose Bowl beatdown of Alabama

Indiana looks like real deal in lopsided Rose Bowl beatdown of Alabama Kevin Skiver, USA TODAY NETWORKJanuary 2, 2026 at 3:13 AM 0 Indiana looks like real deal in lopsided Rose Bowl beatdown of Alabama Pasadena, CA — It's the mark of an overmatched team to use gimmicks to search for a seam. In that sense, old money Alabama was clearly overmatched against new money Indiana at an overcast Rose Bowl on Thursday, Jan. 1. The two teams' philosophies looked diametrically opposed in the first half.

- - Indiana looks like real deal in lopsided Rose Bowl beatdown of Alabama

Kevin Skiver, USA TODAY NETWORKJanuary 2, 2026 at 3:13 AM

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Indiana looks like real deal in lopsided Rose Bowl beatdown of Alabama

Pasadena, CA — It's the mark of an overmatched team to use gimmicks to search for a seam. In that sense, old money Alabama was clearly overmatched against new money Indiana at an overcast Rose Bowl on Thursday, Jan. 1.

The two teams' philosophies looked diametrically opposed in the first half. Where Indiana used a methodical offensive attack to move the ball north-to-south against the Crimson Tide, Alabama leaned on gadgetry to try find cracks in the last undefeated FBS team in the country. It failed miserably, with Alabama falling to Indiana 38-3 in a completely lopsided College Football Playoff matchup.

It was a browbeating so thorough, by the end would-be Alabama tacklers looked completely disinterested in bringing down Indiana ball-carriers.

REQUIRED READING: Indiana, Fernando Mendoza outclass Alabama in Rose Bowl to reach CFP semifinals

Alabama's shenanigans came to a peak with Indiana up 3-0 with 12:44 in the second quarter. On its own 34-yard line, Alabama went up to the line of scrimmage on a fourth-and-1 with Daniel Hill lining up in the wildcat.

Indiana responded with a timeout.

The Crimson Tide subsequently lined up to punt with Ty Simpson as an upback, with Simpson sprinting under center to try to spook Indiana into jumping offsides.

When that didn't work, Alabama took a timeout.

Instead of cutting his losses, however, Kalen DeBoer again sent the offense out, again with Hill in the shotgun. Hill pitched the ball to Germie Bernard in motion on a jet sweep before Indiana swarmed him short of the line to gain, giving the Hoosiers the ball on the Alabama 34-yard line and leaving Crimson Tide fans across the country muttering, "Too cute" under their collective breath.

Indiana capitalized on the opportunity, with Charlie Becker hauling in a 21-yard touchdown pass from Fernando Mendoza on the ensuing possession to procure a 10-0 lead and the first Indiana touchdown in Rose Bowl history.

Head coach Curt Cignetti Indiana in the first half against the Iowa Hawkeyes on Sept. 27, 2025 at Kinnick Stadium, in Iowa City, Iowa.

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Head coach Curt Cignetti Indiana in the first half against the Iowa Hawkeyes on Sept. 27, 2025 at Kinnick Stadium, in Iowa City, Iowa.

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Indiana Hoosiers head coach Curt Cignetti walks along the sideline during the second half against the Indiana State Sycamores at Memorial Stadium on Sep 12, 2025.

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Indiana Hoosiers head coach Curt Cignetti walks along the sideline during the second half against the Indiana State Sycamores at Memorial Stadium on Sep 12, 2025.

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1 / 15Is Curt Cignetti impressed? Can't tell with Indiana coach's sideline stanceIndiana Hoosiers head coach Curt Cignetti looks on before the Rose Bowl and College Football Playoff quarterfinal game against the Alabama Crimson Tide at Rose Bowl Stadium on Jan. 1, 2026.

"Just felt like it was going to be one of those games where you gotta take advantage of possessions," DeBoer said of the choice to go for it after the game. He later said the choice to hard count before calling a timeout was to buy some time. "I try not to be reckless. I try to be aggressive. … Did the punt slash try to hard count, just give me a little more time to think about what my decision would be. Give some of the guys on the sideline a talk through the play-call. And so I really felt like … I was committed to going for it to try to make it happen."

The sequence took approximately six minutes of real-life time and felt like a microcosm of how both teams approached the CFP quarterfinal matchup. Alabama desperately felt like it had to make something happen. Indiana was ready with a surgical counterstrike.

That's the hallmark of a Curt Cignetti team. Despite his lamentations about poor practices and the challenges of traveling to Southern California, which Cignetti told media members after the game was a message to his team through the television, Indiana showed up when it mattered and never looked off kilter in any phase outside of a poor first series.

When it was 10-0 and Alabama began to put together a drive in answer to Indiana's touchdown, it ended with a shot that left Ty Simpson shaken, causing him to fumble away what was to that point Alabama's best scoring opportunity. Indiana held Alabama to 93 yards in the first half, including 64 passing yards, and was dominant at the line of scrimmage.

The second half opened with much of the same. A screen pass to Ryan Williams was blown up for a loss of two to put Alabama behind the sticks. Then another screen pass with more movement than substance to Josh Cuevas fell incomplete. On third-and-12, Simpson checked down and Alabama punted again, with the Tide's pre-snap window dressing failing once again.

REQUIRED READING: Alabama 'humiliated' by Indiana: Reactions to Rose Bowl CFP quarterfinal

Entering this game, teams with a bye in the 12-team CFP were 0-6. So how did Heisman Trophy winner Fernando Mendoza and company avoid the hangover?

"Coach Cignetti did a fantastic job with the trickledown effect of really making sure there was no complacency," Mendoza told reporters after the game. "Because you have 26 days off, it's very, very tough, especially on the first drive as an offense — myself included — I think we got off to a slow start.

"And then other than that, once we got our feet wet we had the ball rolling and got back to playing Indiana brand of football. And so I think it was great overcoming that challenge as a team having such a long time off, but I think we overcame that challenge and it showed on the field today."

There is no way to twist it: Alabama didn't lose the Rose Bowl. Indiana won it. And did so in dominant fashion.

The Hoosiers entered this game as the better team, and left it in another league. Mendoza vindicated a more disparate Heisman vote than many expected with a nearly flawless game, going 14-for-16 with 194 yards and three touchdowns. Defensive coordinator Kane Wommack tried to dial up pressure, but Mendoza broke the pocket and had multiple scrambles that kept Indiana on schedule.

In that regard, sometimes just being on time is the difference. Alabama's inability to run the ball caught up to it on one of college football's great stages, with the Crimson Tide finding themselves behind the sticks time and time again. Alabama was just 3-of-11 on third down, whereas Indiana was 9-of-14 thanks in large part to avoiding negative plays.

The game ended with a perfect summation of its tenor: On fourth-and-4 at the two-minute mark, with Alabama about to get the ball back down 35, the Crimson Tide jumped offsides to let Indiana take a knee to kill the clock.

There is no one stat that explains Indiana's dismantling of the Crimson Tide. It was a beatdown, top to bottom, and the score reflected it. Now, Indiana goes into a semifinal matchup against Oregon in a highly anticipated rematch with sky-high expectations. It lived up to its No. 1 seed, shook off the curse of CFP rest, and legitimately looked like the best team in country.

So what will its follow-up performance look like?

"Well I'm not gonna assume anything like, we've bounced back from a number of big wins and we'll be fine," Cignetti said. "Because it's process. So we'll have a very big challenge ahead of us next week, it's very hard to beat a really good football team twice. There's no doubt about that."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Indiana arrives again in dominant Rose Bowl win over Alabama

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Published: January 02, 2026 at 04:27AM on Source: RON MAG

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Indiana looks like real deal in lopsided Rose Bowl beatdown of Alabama

Indiana looks like real deal in lopsided Rose Bowl beatdown of Alabama Kevin Skiver, USA TODAY NETWORKJanuary 2, 202...
New Photo - With little at stake, Packers and Vikings take aim at goals

With little at stake, Packers and Vikings take aim at goals Field Level MediaJanuary 2, 2026 at 3:22 AM 0 Green Bay Packers running back Emanuel Wilson (23) scores a touchdown against Minnesota Vikings linebacker Dallas Turner (15) in the third quarter during their football game Sunday, November 23, 2025, at Lambeau Field in Green Bay, Wisconsin. (Dan Powers/USA TODAY NETWORKWisconsin / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images) A pair of division rivals have differing agendas as they prepare for their regularseason finale.

- - With little at stake, Packers and Vikings take aim at goals

Field Level MediaJanuary 2, 2026 at 3:22 AM

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Green Bay Packers running back Emanuel Wilson (23) scores a touchdown against Minnesota Vikings linebacker Dallas Turner (15) in the third quarter during their football game Sunday, November 23, 2025, at Lambeau Field in Green Bay, Wisconsin. (Dan Powers/USA TODAY NETWORK-Wisconsin / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images)

A pair of division rivals have differing agendas as they prepare for their regular-season finale.

The Green Bay Packers want to get healthy heading into the playoffs, where they already have clinched a wild-card berth. This weekend's game will do nothing to change their No. 7 NFC playoff seed.

Meanwhile, the Minnesota Vikings want to put a final stamp on this season as they look toward 2026. They see the final game of this season as an opportunity for players to make a case for prominent roles next season.

So, in the big picture, Sunday's game between Green Bay (9-6-1) and Minnesota (8-8) in Minneapolis means little in the standings but could mean a lot for both teams and their futures, be it short term or long term.

"We're still in that wildly significant time where any and all reps and experience (matter)," said Vikings coach Kevin O'Connell, whose team is on a four-game winning streak. "It's another home game at U.S. Bank Stadium. All those things are important."

Nothing is more important than health for the Packers.

Green Bay has no shot at the NFC North division title after the Chicago Bears claimed that last week. The Packers know they will open the playoffs on the road next weekend, with the opponent and starting time to be determined.

Packers quarterback Jordan Love cleared the league's concussion protocol, but coach Matt LaFleur announced Thursday that third-stringer Clayton Tune will start instead. Backup Malik Willis, who has started with Love out, also is dealing with shoulder and hamstring injuries.

Tune has made 14 appearances in the NFL and is 0-1 as a starter. His lone start came in 2023 as a member of the Arizona Cardinals.

The dual injuries prompted Green Bay to sign quarterback Desmond Ridder to its practice squad on Wednesday. Ridder, 26, has not played this season but has appeared in 25 games with 18 starts across parts of three seasons with the Atlanta Falcons and Las Vegas Raiders.

LaFleur said the quarterback plan for Sunday is a work in progress.

"Clayton Tune's going to start, and then as far as the backup, we're kind of working through that process right now," LaFleur said. "Malik's dealing with a hamstring. Obviously just got Desmond Ridder in here. We're kind of taking it a day at a time."

There is far less indecision in Minnesota, where J.J. McCarthy is set to make his 10th start in his first season of NFL action. McCarthy missed all of last season because of a knee injury. An ankle injury cost him five games early in the 2025 campaign, and he sat out another contest while in concussion protocol.

McCarthy was sidelined last week due to a hairline fracture in his throwing hand, but he returned to full practice on Thursday.

The 22-year-old has shown flashes of his ability this season, but he also has struggled with consistency. He has passed for 11 touchdowns and 12 interceptions in his first nine games, and the regular-season finale could help the Vikings determine how much competition they want to bring in to challenge for the starting role in 2026.

McCarthy's top target is Justin Jefferson, who needs 53 receiving yards to reach the 1,000-yard mark for the sixth straight season. Jefferson also is looking for his first touchdown since Nov. 2.

Packers running back Josh Jacobs is 71 rushing yards shy of a 1,000-yard campaign, but he has dealt with a knee injury in recent weeks and could be a candidate to rest. He was a limited participant in practice on Wednesday. Backup running back Emanuel Wilson has 452 rushing yards and three touchdowns on the season.

--Field Level Media

Original Article on Source

Source: "AOL Sports"

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Published: January 02, 2026 at 04:27AM on Source: RON MAG

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With little at stake, Packers and Vikings take aim at goals

With little at stake, Packers and Vikings take aim at goals Field Level MediaJanuary 2, 2026 at 3:22 AM 0 Green Bay Pack...

 

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