Saints look smarter by the week after parting ways with Marshon Lattimore
The New Orleans Saints made the difficult decision to trade cornerback Marshon Lattimore ahead of last year's trade deadline. They sent Lattimore to the Washington Commanders in exchange for three draft picks and knew that, in doing so, they might end up regretting it.
While we won't know how the Saints' three draft picks (which turned into Jonas Sanker, Quincy Riley, and Devin Neal) will fare until a few more years, it's safe to say that the Commanders are already having buyer's remorse on this deal. Lattimore has been downright dreadful since arriving in DC and he's been put on blast by the fans, especially after his latest outing against the Cowboys where he was picked apart by Dak Prescott.
Lattimore was once a near-lockdown corner during his days with the Saints but he's been anything but since joining the Commanders. When he's been healthy enough to play, he's become the player that opposing quarterbacks pick on and that was on full display in the Cowboys' blowout win over Washington on Sunday. Time and time again, Prescott sent the ball Lattimore's way and the former Saint couldn't do anything to stop the bleeding.
Saints’ gamble on Marshon Lattimore departure looks genius in hindsight
The Saints knew they weren't contending for anything meaningful last season. That paired with Lattimore's injury history meant that trading him made a lot of sense, even if fans might have found themselves having a hard time with it. Lattimore was once one of the best players on the Saints' entire roster, but it became clear that the guy couldn't stay healthy and last year was the time to try and get something in return for him.
The Commanders were desperate to improve their roster as they shocked the world by becoming a playoff contender. They continued to dominate after trading for Lattimore but he didn't play much of a part in all of that. He appeared in just two regular season games after arriving in DC and while he looked like his old self over the summer, clearly that didn't carry over into the regular season.
PFF has not been kind to Lattimore with their grades (nor should they be), grading him out at 48.0 overall and 45.9 in coverage. Yikes and yikes. The Saints have tended to stick with oft-injured players until it's too late and the wheels have fallen off but they were smart to send Lattimore elsewhere before the same thing happened to him in New Orleans.
Now the Commanders are left wishing they had kept those three picks and improved their roster in other ways while Saints fans are breathing a huge sigh of relief. A rare win for the black and gold.
Malala Yousafzai Partners with Serena Williams and Billie Jean King to Make Sports More Inclusive

Malala Yousafzai is bringing her fight for equality onto the playing field, inspired by tennis legends Serena Williams and Billie Jean King. Watching their courage and determination, she sees how sport can empower girls, challenge stereotypes, and open doors. Through her work, Malala shows that mentorship, visibility, and opportunity can change lives — one game, one girl at a time.
Malala Yousafzai’s latest chapter finds her drawing strength from women who’ve long turned courts and fields into arenas of change. Anchoring her mission in the legacy of athletes like Serena Williams and Billie Jean King, she steps into the world of sport to champion gender equality, where competition meets conviction, and play becomes purpose.
A childhood of contrast: How early experiences shaped Malala’s vision
Malala Yousafzai’s latest chapter finds her drawing strength from women who’ve long turned courts and fields into arenas of change. Anchoring her mission in the legacy of athletes like Serena Williams and Billie Jean King, she steps into the world of sport to champion gender equality — where competition meets conviction, and play becomes purpose.
Growing up in Pakistan, Malala Yousafzai rarely saw girls playing sports. At her all-girls school in the Swat Valley, the concept of “recess” meant conversation and study, not competition or play. In another part of the same country, her now-husband Asser Malik — then a student at an all-boys school — could spend his breaks playing hockey, football, and cricket. That contrast, both simple and symbolic, would stay with her. Years later, it would shape her latest mission: investing in women’s sports as a tool for equality and empowerment.
Together, Yousafzai and Malik founded Recess Capital in January — a firm dedicated to supporting women’s sports at professional and amateur levels. The name, she says, came from their shared desire to “reimagine school recess for girls.” It’s a nod to the playgrounds where girls were too often spectators rather than players. Malala, now 28, is one of the world’s most recognizable advocates for girls’ education and the youngest-ever Nobel Peace Prize laureate.
Yet few might know she’s also an avid sports fan — and that it was sport, in many ways, that brought her and Malik together. When they met in 2018, she was studying at Oxford University and he was working as a cricket manager in Pakistan. Their relationship endured long distance, the COVID-19 pandemic, and cultural skepticism toward love marriages, still frowned upon in much of Pakistan.
“He was working in cricket, and that was one of the reasons I was interested in him,” she told People. “Every cricketer is a hard and handsome guy to meet.” Since their marriage in 2021, Malik has introduced her to sports like golf and pickleball, expanding what began as curiosity into a mission. The couple’s initiative, Recess, builds on Malala’s belief that sport can be as powerful as education in shaping a girl’s confidence.
At the Billie Jean King Power of Women’s Sport Summit in London, Malala unveiled the global Recess initiative — a two-pronged effort aimed at increasing girls’ access to sport while also investing in professional women’s leagues.
The project seeks to undo decades of underinvestment and challenge the stigma that still surrounds women’s sports, while proving that equality can also be a sound business decision. The effort is personal for Malala, who recalls being excluded from playground games as a child. “I believe that true education is giving girls access to all of these different pathways that they choose for themselves,” she said recently.
“And sports is a really powerful one — it builds self-esteem, challenges stereotypes, and sends a positive message about women and girls.” Recess is already backed by legendary advisors, including Billie Jean King and her longtime partner and sports executive Ilana Kloss. It is eyeing leagues like the National Women’s Soccer League (NWSL) and the Women’s National Basketball Association (WNBA) — both seen as high-growth spaces with strong social missions.
Malala herself has shown admiration for rising stars like Caitlin Clark, whose breakout success in the WNBA, she says, is proof that visibility can be more transformative than rhetoric.
“They have a huge impact without actually saying much,” she noted. “Just being on the field or on the court changes perspectives.” Malala’s advocacy extends beyond sport. She has supported the Afghan women’s cricket team, which continues to fight for official recognition while in exile after the Taliban’s return to power.
She also maintains friendships with elite athletes such as Olympic skier Lindsey Vonn and frequently attends major women’s sporting events worldwide.
Malala on how Serena Williams and Billie Jean King shaped her mission
When Malala speaks about women in sport, two names surface repeatedly: Serena Williams and Billie Jean King. Both have become personal inspirations — and in King’s case, a direct mentor — as Malala builds her movement from activism into enterprise.
King’s own story is etched into the DNA of women’s sports. From her 1973 victory over Bobby Riggs in the “Battle of the Sexes” to her relentless campaign for equal prize money, King transformed tennis into a platform for gender equality. She co-founded the Women’s Tennis Association (WTA), opened pathways for female athletes, and remains one of the sport’s fiercest advocates for equity.
Serena Williams, too, has long been part of that lineage. In a 2024 interview with Vanity Fair, she reflected on King’s influence, saying, “We had Billie Jean King, and not every sport had that. Billie did so much for women’s tennis and put it on the map. We were so fortunate to have that.”
Williams’ career — marked by 23 Grand Slam titles and two decades of dominance — is, in many ways, the embodiment of the barriers King helped dismantle.
Their bond goes back decades. At the 2000 Sydney Olympics, Serena and her sister Venus played doubles under King’s guidance as team coach — and struck gold. King later said of Serena, “When she steps away from tennis, she will leave as the sport’s greatest player.” Williams, in turn, once remarked, “The day I stop fighting for equality and for people that look like you and me will be the day I’m in my grave.”
For Malala, these women are not just icons but living blueprints. “It’s empowering girls,” she says. “It’s sending a powerful message that the sky’s the limit.”
And with that, Malala’s words echo far beyond the pitch. Now preparing to release her new memoir Finding My Way on October 21, she calls sport a “unifying language” in a divided world. “In times of global conflict and uncertainty,” she says, “it gives us a way to come together.”
Today, Malala Yousafzai’s world stretches from Oxford’s lecture halls to UN assemblies — and now, to locker rooms and courts. Through her initiative, Recess, she envisions a world where girls grow up not just to read about icons like Serena Williams or Billie Jean King, but to become them.
As she has often reminded us, “Sport builds confidence, challenges stereotypes, and shows what women can do when given the chance.” Their presence, their quiet defiance — speaks louder than any speech. “They have a huge impact without actually saying much,” Malala said. “I don’t think we need to ask them about every topic and every issue, the fact that they’re on the field and they’re on the court is already changing perspectives.
”It’s a simple, resounding truth: when women play, the world listens.