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ATLANTA ― Inconsistent officiating is something that’s plagued the WNBA all season long, and it reared its ugly head again when the Indiana Fever played the Atlanta Dream in their opening round matchup of the 2025 WNBA playoffs.

Less than two minutes into the game, the first of 43 personal fouls was tallied, an ominous foreboding of the day that lay ahead. Whistle after whistle peppered the atmosphere in Gateway Center Arena, quickly taking the air out of the building and stifling any momentum. Coaches and players from both teams stood in bewilderment as each call was logged, hands on top of their heads in shock and mouths gaping open.“It’s very frustrating, very frustrating,” Fever head coach Stephanie White said postgame, calling out the officiating after the Fever’s 80-68 loss. “Nobody likes to use their challenges in the first half, especially when they’re successful, you know? And look, it is what it is. This is not anything that’s new.’

However, on Sunday, it wasn’t just the sound of whistles cutting through the crowd noise and arena music. It was the apparent lack of calls, too, which were eerily deafening. The seemingly subpar officiating caused tensions to boil over. The groans from the crowd, a healthy mix of Dream and Fever fans, got louder and louder with each missed call. Eventually, emotions boiled over.

Fever center Aliyah Boston picked up two fouls within six seconds in the fourth quarter, and moments later, White lost her cool over what she felt was a foul that should have been called. She unleashed on the officiating crew, earning her a technical foul during a seconds-long tirade. White had to be held back and coaxed to the bench by a gaggle of Fever players, including guard Caitlin Clark.

Still, White wasn’t the only coach to ask for better officiating across the league.

‘I want a fair fight. I really do,’ Nakase said. ‘I want a clean fight, but I love the fact that both teams are playing their hearts out. They’re fighting. But I would like it to be fair. … And for me, that’s why I got a [technical foul] because at what point is it going to be fair?’

However, Nakase wasn’t done there. She maintained that her team did not get the whistle they deserved, insinuating instead that it was Minnesota who was getting the calls. The Lynx ended Sunday’s matchup with 24 free throw attempts against the Valkyries’ 27. Although those numbers are a departure from the regular-season averages for each team (16.1 and 18.4 attempts per game, respectively), the first-year head coach appeared to be flustered by Minnesota’s calls.

‘We’re playing the best team in the league,’ she said. ‘They don’t need no help. This team is great. They’re stacked. They play well. They play beautiful basketball. They’re coached well. They don’t need the help.’

When there’s a championship on the line, coaches want the calls to be even on both sides and perhaps more consistent. However, it’s hard to imagine a world where officiating won’t impact the playoffs moving forward considering it happened on the grandest stage last season: Game 5 of the 2024 WNBA Finals.

Officials missed a travel by the Liberty on the final possession of regulation, instead calling a foul on the Lynx. The call had a visible impact on the game, eventually sending the matchup into overtime. The lobbying for better officiating has only intensified since that moment and the WNBA is aware. In July, league commissioner Cathy Engelbert addressed officiating in a state-of-the-league news conference at All-Star weekend. ‘We hear the concerns, we take that input, and every play is reviewed,’ Engelbert said.

‘We spend hours and hours on hours. Obviously, we then use that to follow up with officials’ training. Obviously, consistency is important. … I realize consistency is the name of the game, so I think it’s something we definitely look at and evaluate.”

After the playoff’s opening day, it would seem improvement cannot come quickly enough.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Week 2 of the 2025 fantasy football season was as predictably unpredictable as Week 1.

With two Monday Night Football games pending, the top three quarterbacks are Jared Goff, Russell Wilson and Drake Maye. Four of the top eight wideouts are Rome Odunze, Wan’Dale Robinson, Hunter Renfrow and Troy Franklin. And the top finishers at tight end are Tucker Kraft, Zach Ertz and Juwan Johnson.

Week 3 is upon us now.

Here’s an early look at Week 3 fantasy football rankings. Toggle between standard, half PPR (point per reception) and full PPR to see where players rank in your league’s format.

Our team at USA TODAY Sports has you covered with plenty of content to help with your Week 3 waiver wire and roster decisions. Wondering who the best waiver-wire claims are? We have that covered, so you can make your pickups. Need to know what players you can drop? We have that as well. We also have a list of the nine best buy low/sell high candidates and our biggest winners and losers from Week 2. Finally, here’s our roundup of the most important fantasy football injury updates.

Please note: These rankings will change significantly as the week goes on. Check back on Sunday morning for final updates.

(The risers and sleepers sections will focus on players available in at least 40% of Yahoo leagues. All snap and target data from PFF.)

Week 3 fantasy football quarterback rankings: Risers and sleepers

  • Daniel Jones, Indianapolis Colts (18%) – Entering Monday, only Lamar Jackson has scored more fantasy points at quarterback than Jones. The Titans project as a tough matchup, but then again, so did the Broncos. Jones did finish as the QB9 in 2022, so it’s certainly plausible that he remains a fantasy asset for the remainder of the season.
  • Jake Browning, Cincinnati Bengals (1%) – With the news that Joe Burrow is expected to be out for at least three months, Browning enters the high-upside streamer conversation. After taking over for Burrow in Week 12 of the 2023 season, the 29-year-old ranked as the QB9 or better in five of his seven starts.
  • Sam Darnold, Seattle Seahawks (11%) – Darnold dropped a dud in Week 1, but he rebounded in Week 2 with 295 yards and two tuddies. His schedule over the next four weeks makes him an optimal pickup, as he’ll be facing the Saints, Cardinals, Buccaneers and Jaguars over that stretch.

Week 3 fantasy football running back rankings: Risers and sleepers

  • Cam Skattebo, New York Giants (59%) – It didn’t take long for the Giants backfield to undergo a seismic shift. Rookie Cam Skattebo led the way in snaps (35) and touches (14), while running just one fewer route than Tyrone Tracy Jr. If you’re in the 41% of leagues where he’s still available, make him your top priority.
  • Bhayshul Tuten, Jacksonville Jaguars (55%) – While Travis Etienne looks like a top-tier running back again, Tuten has emerged as one of the better handcuffs in fantasy. The rookie played just 18 snaps in Week 2, and he certainly made the most of them, turning 10 touches into 80 yards and a score. He should be rostered in all leagues.
  • Trey Benson, Arizona Cardinals (52%) – Week 2 saw Benson and James Conner in a near-even timeshare. While Conner led the way in snaps (30 to 25) and carries (11 to 3), Benson outpaced the veteran in routes (16 to 12) and targets (5 to 1). Conner has been one of the least efficient runners in all of football to start the season, and if that continues, look for Benson to keep eating away at that timeshare.
  • Chris Rodriguez Jr., Washington Commanders (4%) – Prior to suffering a season-ending injury on TNF, Austin Ekeler was dominating the Washington backfield in snaps (36), routes (21) and touches (12). While Jacory Croskey-Merritt should be the primary beneficiary, it’s possible that Rodriguez will get enough touches to be a viable flex play in deeper leagues.
  • Blake Corum, Los Angeles Rams (8%) – Speaking of inefficient backs, Kyren Williams hasn’t improved on his 2024 efficiency through two games. For just the second time in the last two seasons, Williams had a snap share below 75% in Week 2. Corum has his best game as a pro on just five carries, racking up 44 yards and a touchdown. The Michigan product remains one of the more valuable handcuffs in fantasy, and it’s possible that he carves out a standalone role as the season progresses.

Week 3 fantasy football wide receiver rankings: Risers and sleepers

  • Troy Franklin, Denver Broncos (3%) – Against the Colts, Franklin led all Denver wideouts in snaps (49), routes (28) and targets (9). This came after finishing second in all those categories in Week 1. The 22-year-old has garnered a 23.4% target share to date, which puts him firmly on the fantasy map.
  • Cedric Tillman, Cleveland Browns (39%) – Through two weeks, Tillman sits among the league leaders in snaps and routes, and his 15 targets are nothing to sneeze at. His fantasy day was saved by a touchdown that should have been intercepted, but the fact that he’s getting elite usage makes him a viable flex play every week.
  • Elic Ayomanor, Tennessee Titans (8%) – Through two games, Ayomanor ranks second among Tennessee receivers in snap share (78%), route rate (75%) and target share (23.6%). In Week 2, he turned his six targets into 56 yards and a score. He should be rostered in far more than 8% of leagues.
  • Darnell Mooney, Atlanta Falcons (51%) – After missing the opener, Mooney returned in Week 2 to lead the Falcons in snaps (57) and routes (24 – tied with Drake London). While he only generated four targets, that was likely due to a game script that allowed the Falcons to go run-heavy. Mooney is flex-worthy in plus matchups.
  • Wan’Dale Robinson, New York Giants (22%) – Through two weeks, only 14 receivers have generated more targets than Robinson (18). The 24-year-old is currently tied for seventh among wideouts with 14 receptions, and he ranks sixth in receiving yards. Given that the Giants will likely be in a lot of negative game scripts, Robinson should maintain fantasy value as long as he remains healthy.
  • Romeo Doubs, Green Bay Packers (16%) – While Doubs is unlikely to be a consistent option week-to-week, Jayden Reed’s injury makes him a viable flex play going forward in deeper leagues. The 25-year-old has played 21 more snaps than the next-closest Green Bay receiver.
  • Hunter Renfrow, Carolina Panthers (1%) – Renfrow played just three fewer snaps than Tet McMillan in Week 2, and finished tied with the rookie in routes run (53) and targets (9). Carolina is unlikely to attempt 51 passes on a regular basis, but Renfrow is worthy of consideration in deeper PPR leagues due to his role.
  • Dontayvion Wicks, Green Bay Packers (1%) – Through two weeks, Wicks (six targets in Week 2) is the only Green Bay wideout to have eclipsed five targets in a game. Despite Reed’s injury, Wicks remains a deep league-only add.

Week 3 fantasy football tight end rankings: Risers and sleepers

  • Juwan Johnson, New Orleans Saints (44%) – Johnson leads all tight ends in targets through two weeks. I’m sure everyone saw that coming. He also happens to be the TE3 in half-PPR points. He’s easily in the top-10 conversation until Foster Moreau and Taysom Hill return from the PUP list.
  • Zach Ertz, Washington Commanders (57%) – While Johnson ranks as the current TE3 heading into Monday Night Football, Ertz is a spot ahead at TE2. The veteran, who was the TE5 over the final eight weeks last season, needs to be rostered in all leagues until further notice.
  • Harold Fannin Jr., Cleveland Browns (42%) – For the second consecutive week, rookie Harold Fannin played a large enough role to be fantasy-relevant. The 67th overall pick currently ranks fifth at the position in targets and yards, and is tied for third in receptions. With David Njoku a free agent after the 2025 season, Fannin’s role could very well grow as the season chugs along.
  • Jake Tonges, San Francisco 49ers (3%) – In the first game with George Kittle on IR, Tonges led all 49ers tight ends in snaps (56), routes (31) and targets (5). He’s also one of just 14 tight ends with multiple red zone targets this season. Tonges will be on the Week 3 streaming radar against a Cardinals defense that has ceded the most receptions to the position.

Week 3 fantasy football rankings: PPR and non-PPR

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Maurene Comey, a longtime U.S. prosecutor who helped bring criminal cases against Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell, sued the Trump administration Monday over her abrupt firing from the Justice Department. 

Comey had served at the U.S. attorney’s office for the Southern District of New York since 2015 before her ousting earlier this year. She called her termination unlawful, ‘politically motivated,’ and argued it stemmed largely from the fact that her father is former FBI Director James Comey.

In Monday’s lawsuit, Comey’s lawyers said her firing violated ‘multiple provisions’ of the Civil Service Reform Act — a law designed to protect government employees, including career federal prosecutors — as well as the First and Fifth Amendments of the U.S. Constitution.

‘The politically motivated termination of Ms. Comey — ostensibly under ‘Article II of the Constitution’ — upends bedrock principles of our democracy and justice system,’ her lawyers argued, describing her removal as both ‘unlawful and unconstitutional.’

‘Defendants have not provided any explanation whatsoever for terminating Ms. Comey,’ her lawyers argued. ‘In truth, there is no legitimate explanation. Rather, defendants fired Ms. Comey solely or substantially because her father is former FBI Director James B. Comey, or because of her perceived political affiliation and beliefs, or both.’

The lawsuit asks that Comey be reinstated to the Southern District of New York, where lawyers noted her work earned multiple awards, promotions and internal recognition, including a recent performance review calling her work ‘outstanding.’

It also cites protections afforded to career federal prosecutors, including prior notification and the ability to challenge a removal.

In the years since Comey joined SDNY in 2015, her lawyers said, she had been assigned to prosecute some of the department’s most high-profile cases — including the criminal cases against Epstein, Maxwell, and others. Most recently, in May, she led the prosecution against Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs. 

Comey had been asked by the U.S. attorney’s office to lead a ‘major’ public corruption case just one day before she was fired, the lawsuit said, underscoring what her lawyers call the abrupt nature of her removal.

She was notified of her termination the next day in an emailed memo. The email did not list a cause or reason for removal, according to the lawsuit, though it made mention of ‘Article II,’ or the powers of the commander-in-chief.  

U.S. Attorney Jay Clayton did not answer Comey when she pressed him for information on her firing, the lawsuit alleges. Instead, he told her, ‘All I can say is it came from Washington. I can’t tell you anything else.’

‘No other explanation was ever provided to Ms. Comey regarding the reason for her termination,’ her lawyers said. ‘Defendants had no lawful authority to terminate [the] plaintiff from federal service without adhering to the statutory protections afforded to her.’ 

They argued that this distinction should be taken to mean that Comey’s termination is ‘ultra vires,’ or beyond the scope of one’s authority — thus ‘without force or effect.’

‘The executive branch cannot use Article II to overrule Congress and remove career civil servants for perceived disloyalty,’ they added. ‘Such an act violates the Constitution’s fundamental Separation of Powers. It also violates the Bill of Rights, depriving Ms. Comey of protection under the First and Fifth Amendments.’

The Justice Department declined to comment on the lawsuit, which names the department, Attorney General Pamela Bondi, OPM, and the Executive Office of the President as defendants, among others. 

It comes amid a years-long, high-profile dispute between President Donald Trump and former FBI Director James Comey, whom Trump fired during his first White House term in 2017, roughly five years into his 10-year tenure. 

In the years since Comey’s departure, the two have continued to be sharply at odds. Comey has emerged as an outspoken Trump critic, both in public and in his memoir, ‘A Higher Loyalty.’ Comey came into the president’s crosshairs again earlier this year after he posted what was viewed by Trump allies as a cryptic social media post online; he has denied knowledge of its true meaning.

Trump, for his part, has continued to assail Comey and probe his tenure at the FBI. Earlier this year, the FBI confirmed it had launched criminal investigations into Comey and former CIA Director John Brennan for allegedly making false statements to Congress. 

Details of the investigation were not immediately clear, and in the months since the FBI’s July announcement, there has been little information shared with the public about the nature or status of the probes.

The younger Comey was terminated about a week after the investigations were announced — a detail her lawyers highlighted in the lawsuit, which seeks her reinstatement and back pay.

In a farewell email sent to colleagues, Maurene Comey wrote, ‘If a career prosecutor can be fired without reason, fear may seep into the decisions of those who remain.’

 ‘Do not let that happen,’ she said.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Israel’s top military chief, Lt. Gen. Eyal Zamir, is opposing a full military takeover of Gaza and urging adoption of the Witkoff plan, three senior sources told Fox News Digital amid mounting debate over the country’s next steps.

‘The chief of staff is standing by his professional judgment, based on the experience of this war,’ one former senior IDF official said. ‘In recent days he told the cabinet that while the IDF is prepared for a ground maneuver, the correct path is to reach a deal to save all the hostages and to enter negotiations. A maneuver now could endanger the hostages, as we saw in Tel Sultan.’

The Tel Sultan incident in Rafah in 2024 remains a turning point in Israeli decision-making. During that operation, Hamas executed six hostages, including American-Israeli Hersh Goldberg-Polin, as Israeli forces closed in, underscoring the risks of a large-scale ground maneuver before negotiations are exhausted.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has repeatedly claimed that Israel’s goal ‘is not to occupy Gaza. Our goal is to free Gaza, free it from Hamas terrorists,’ arguing that seizing Gaza City is necessary because Hamas refuses to lay down arms. He has said this is the only way to secure the release of the roughly 48 hostages still held in Gaza.

But the former senior official told Fox News that military pressure has already brought Hamas back to the Witkoff framework of July 29. ‘The framework should be accepted, and Washington should understand the chief’s position as it was presented to the cabinet. Hamas is ready to stand by those conditions now. The chief of staff opposes military rule in Gaza and believes Israel should look ahead to the day after and draw a political solution accordingly. If necessary, the IDF can continue fighting after such an agreement.’

A spokesperson from the Prime Minister’s Office told Fox News Digital in response: ‘The Israeli cabinet decided to move forward with the operation plan presented by the chief of staff himself.’

A recent Politico report quoted a source described as ‘close to the president’s national security team,’ saying the Tuesday strike against Hamas’s leadership in Doha may have been an intentional move to hinder negotiations. ‘Every time they’re making progress, it seems like he [Netanyahu] bombs someone,’ the source said in the report.

The officials confirmed to Fox News Digital that both the IDF chief of staff and the Mossad director opposed the timing of the Qatar operation. ‘The plan was long in the works, but there was no reason to choose this specific timing instead of waiting to get Hamas’s response in the negotiations,’ one said, adding that ‘that decision, as well as the decision to continue the Gaza operation, go against professional echelon advice.’

A second source familiar with cabinet deliberations confirmed the chief of staff reiterated his position last Friday and again yesterday in both the Security Cabinet and the Foreign Affairs and Defense subcommittee. ‘He has made clear that the Witkoff plan is a good one,’ the source said, pointing to its terms: a 60-day Israeli withdrawal in exchange for the release of 10 live hostages and 15 bodies, with Israel free to resume fighting if Hamas violates the deal.

 

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

The Minnesota Vikings quarterback suffered an ankle sprain during his team’s ‘Sunday Night Football’ loss to the Atlanta Falcons in Week 2, according to head coach Kevin O’Connell.

O’Connell also shared that the Vikings are already preparing to face the Cincinnati Bengals on Sunday without McCarthy under center.

It’s the second lower-body injury of McCarthy’s pro career. His first, a torn meniscus in his preseason debut last year, knocked out last year’s No. 10 overall pick for the entirety of his rookie season.

Through two career regular-season games, McCarthy is 24-of-41 passing (58.5% completion rate) for 301 yards, two touchdowns and three interceptions, currently tied with six other players for the league lead.

McCarthy has a 1-1 record in his two starts after orchestrating a fourth-quarter comeback in his regular season debut against the Chicago Bears, then dropping his second game to the Falcons Sunday night.

J.J. McCarthy injury update

McCarthy sprained his ankle in the Vikings’ Week 2 loss to the Falcons on ‘Sunday Night Football,’ according to their head coach.

O’Connell added that he doesn’t see the injury as a short-term IR situation, but second-year quarterback is expected to miss his third career start against the Bengals next Sunday.

ESPN’s Adam Schefter adds that the injury could shelve McCarthy for 2 to 4 weeks.

Who is the Vikings’ backup quarterback?

Carson Wentz, who played the 2024 season with the Kansas City Chiefs, is McCarthy’s backup in Minnesota.

The Vikings signed Wentz to a one-year deal after trading Sam Howell to the Philadelphia Eagles at the end of training camp.

If Wentz starts for the Vikings in Week 3 as expected, it would be his first start of consequence – i.e. outside of two Week 18, ‘rest-the-starters’ games each of the last two years – since 2022, when he was with the Washington Commanders.

That game, a 24-10 loss to the Cleveland Browns, infamously opened the door for the Commanders’ elimination from playoff contention, which became official with a Green Bay Packers win later that day.

A post-game press conference question about then-head coach Ron Rivera’s decision to bench previous starter Taylor Heinicke in favor of Wentz given the pending elimination led Rivera to ask reporters, ‘We can be eliminated?’

Vikings QB depth chart

Minnesota has two backups for McCarthy on its active roster.

  • J.J. McCarthy (doubtful – ankle)
  • Carson Wentz
  • Max Brosmer

Brosmer was an undrafted free agent pickup by the Vikings in April. The University of Minnesota product won the third-string job over Brett Rypien (and Howell, whom the Vikings traded to Philadelphia) with strong performances in training camp and the preseason.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

  • Eddie Giacomin totaled 290 wins for the New York Rangers and Detroit Red Wings.
  • The Rangers fan favorite was serenaded with chants of ‘Eddie, Eddie’ when he returned to Madison Square Garden with the Red Wings.
  • He was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1987. The Rangers retired his No. 1 jersey in 1989.

Hall of Fame goaltender Eddie Giacomin, who starred for the New York Rangers in the 1960s and 1970s, has died at the age of 86, the team said.

Giacomin was the Rangers’ franchise leader with 267 regular-season victories when he was claimed by the Detroit Red Wings off waivers in 1975. That figure has been surpassed in Rangers history only by Mike Richter (301) and Henrik Lundqvist (459).

The six-time All-Star led the league three times in victories and in shutouts. He had 30 or more wins during four seasons with the Rangers, won the Vezina Trophy in 1970-71 and went to the Stanley Cup Final in 1972.

‘Eddie Giacomin was an integral member of the New York Rangers for a decade and personified what being a Ranger is all about, both to his teammates and the Blueshirts faithful. You cannot discuss the history of this organization and not immediately think of Eddie,’ the Rangers said in a statement.

‘The great Rod Gilbert called him the heart of their team, and we cannot think of a greater honor to bestow on one of the greatest goaltenders to ever play the game. Our thoughts are with Eddie’s family, friends and teammates during this incredibly difficult time.’

Giacomin’s Rangers career ended when he was placed on waivers and claimed by the Red Wings on Oct. 31, 1975. He appeared in Madison Square Garden two days later and was serenaded by Rangers fans with chants of ‘Eddie, Eddie.’ Detroit won the game 6-4.

He retired in 1978 with a 290-209-96 record, 2.82 goals-against average and 54 shutouts.

Giacomin became a New York Islanders broadcaster and later an assistant coach for the Islanders and Red Wings. He had two stints as a Rangers goalie coach.

He was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1987. The Rangers retired his No. 1 jersey in 1989.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The second week of the 2025 NFL season wraps up tonight with a Week 2 ‘Monday Night Football’ doubleheader – because two games are always better than one.

It’s the first ‘Monday Night Football’ doubleheader of the season, which kicks off in Houston with the Texans hosting the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in their home opener. It’ll be a battle between two 2024 playoff teams.

The visitors are coming in off a Week 1 victory in which they bested the Atlanta Falcons, 23-20. Tampa Bay has ruled the NFC South for the last four seasons – crowned division champs in each – and is looking to start 2-0 for the fifth consecutive season.

Meanwhile, Houston took a tough road loss against the Los Angeles Rams in Week 1. Quarterback C.J. Stroud and the offense sputtered, failing to score a touchdown in the game, ultimately losing 14-9. Texans edge rusher Will Anderson Jr. will look to make an impact against the Buccaneers’ offensive line that will be without All-Pro tackle Tristan Wirfs for the second straight week.

Tampa Bay’s offense is also missing wide receiver Chris Godwin, who is recovering from a dislocated ankle he suffered last season. Still, the Buccaneers have an embarrassment of riches at the skill positions; rookie Emeka Egbuka will look to replicate the success he achieved in his NFL debut alongside Mike Evans.

Houston’s defense is the team’s strength, led by coach DeMeco Ryans. The offense is aiming to gain momentum and secure a victory for the first time in 2025. Tampa Bay looks to improve to 2-0 despite starting the season with consecutive road matchups.

USA TODAY Sports will provide live updates, highlights and more from ‘Monday Night Football’ below.

What time does the Texans vs. Buccaneers game start?

  • Start time: 7:00 p.m. ET (6 p.m. CT)

The Houston Texans and Tampa Bay Buccaneers game will kick off at 7:00 p.m. ET on Monday. It’s the first of the ‘Monday Night Football’ doubleheader in Week 2.

What TV channel is Texans vs. Buccaneers?

  • TV channel: ABC, ESPN

The Houston Texans vs. Tampa Bay Buccaneers game will be simulcast on ABC and ESPN on Monday night.

Where to watch Houston Texans vs. Tampa Bay Buccaneers

Texans vs. Buccaneers is the first of the ‘Monday Night Football’ double-header tonight.

  • Date: Monday, Sept. 15, 2025
  • Time: 7:00 p.m. ET
  • Location: NRG Stadium in Houston, TX
  • TV: ABC and ESPN
  • Streaming: ESPN Unlimited | ESPN Select | Fubo

Watch all the action from the 2025 NFL season on Fubo

Texans vs. Buccaneers live odds, moneyline, over/under

Buccaneers vs. Texans injury report

Buccaneers vs. Texans prediction

Sometimes it boils down to the roster, and the Buccaneers simply have a better roster at the moment. The Texans offensive line is no bueno, the receiver situation is pretty questionable. The defense did look good in Week 1, as they held the Rams and the trio of Matthew Stafford, Puka Nacua and Davante Adams to just 14 points. They take a small step down in competition this week vs. Baker Mayfield, Mike Evans and Emeka Egbuka, but expect the Bucs to play well on the road and snatch the win.

Prediction: Buccaneers 20, Texans 17

Texans QB CJ Stroud arrives for ‘Monday Night Football’

The Texans third-year quarterback has only played in one Monday Night Football game in his career – a 2024 Week 11 road victory over the Dallas Cowboys. He aims to make it 2-0 in prime time tonight.

4th & Monday: Our NFL newsletter always brings the blitz 📰 

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A House Republican is demanding that Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., be stripped of her committee assignments, accusing her of making disparaging comments toward Charlie Kirk after his assassination last week.

Rep. Buddy Carter, R-Ga., is introducing a resolution on Monday to remove Omar from her two current committees: the House Budget Committee and the House Committee on Education and the Workforce.

She is the top Democrat on the latter panel’s Subcommittee on Workforce Protections.

It’s part of the continued fallout from Kirk’s killing in Utah during a college speaking event.

Republicans have responded forcefully to Democrats who they view as taking Kirk’s death lightly or dismissing it as a product of his conservative activism.

Omar, in particular, has faced backlash from the right over an interview with progressive news outlet Zeteo, where she criticized Kirk’s past commentary and Republicans’ reaction to the shooting. She accused Republicans of taking her words out of context, however, and she called Kirk’s death ‘mortifying.’

She told the outlet days after Kirk’s assassination that he previously ‘downplayed slavery and what Black people have gone through in this country by saying Juneteenth shouldn’t exist.’

‘There are a lot of people who are out there talking about him just wanting to have a civil debate,’ the ‘Squad’ member said. ‘There is nothing more effed up, you know, like, than to completely pretend that, you know, his words and actions have not been recorded and in existence for the last decade or so.’

She criticized Republican figures who have been going after Democrats for their rhetoric, adding, ‘These people are full of s—. And it’s important for us to call them out while we feel anger and sadness, and have, you know, empathy, which Charlie said, ‘No, it shouldn’t exist,’ because that’s a newly created word or something.’

Like, I have empathy for his kids and his wife and what they’re going through,’ Omar continued.

She later posted on X amid the backlash, ‘While I disagreed with Charlie Kirk vehemently about his rhetoric, my heart breaks for his wife and children. I don’t wish violence on anyone. My faith teaches me the power of peace, empathy, and compassion. Right-wing accounts trying to spin a false story when I condemned his murder multiple times is fitting for their agenda to villainize the left to hide from the fact that Donald Trump gins up hate on a daily basis.’

Carter told Fox News Digital, however, ‘Disparaging Charlie Kirk’s legacy, a God-fearing, honorable man, for boldly sharing his conservative beliefs is disgusting. The radical left has normalized meeting free speech with violence, and it must stop.’

‘No one who justifies the assassination of someone with different political views than them deserves to sit on a committee, and Ilhan Omar openly used language that incites violence toward her political opponents. Committees are for serious lawmakers, not hate-spewing politicians,’ he said.

Carter, who is currently running for U.S. Senate, sits on the House Budget Committee alongside Omar.

Fox News Digital reached out to the Minnesota progressive’s office for comment but did not hear back by press time.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

  • Think (Jonathan) Smith, not Sanders, for UCLA. Deion Sanders best stay at Colorado.
  • Could Dan Mullen get a wandering eye with UCLA and Virginia Tech open? The Hokies make sense.
  • Marcus Freeman admits he doesn’t have the answer to Notre Dame’s woes. Uh-oh.

Everything we thought we knew about college football is wrong.

Arch Manning is mid. Notre Dame’s defense stinks. All that returning production for Clemson meant very little. Vanderbilt is a wrecking crew.

Just like we drew it up in August, yeah?

Three weeks into the season, the coaching carousel already has shifted into gear, with more firings to come.

Here are four questions left on my mind after college football’s Week 3:

Would Deion Sanders consider UCLA?

Coaching searches begin (on the internet, at least) with the hot boards filled with white whales. Fans want their school to force the wish-list candidates to say no, in hopes of getting an improbable yes.

But, seriously, why would Coach Prime say yes to a UCLA job Chip Kelly wanted to leave so badly, he bolted for a coordinator position? Kelly’s successor performed so badly, he lasted just 15 games. UCLA’s program looks a mess within the Big Ten.

Sanders has built a little kingdom at Colorado. Nobody interferes with his operation. Colorado allows him to bring in his own video crew, turning Buffaloes football into an informercial for Prime. Sanders recruits without ever leaving campus, and, at Colorado, he’s not traveling to play road games at Ohio State.

In a vacuum, a Big Ten job is a better job than a Big 12 job. In this instance, I fail to see the upside of Sanders coaching at UCLA, in Southern California’s shadow, and leaving his Boulder fiefdom behind.

UCLA plays home games miles away from campus, a couple of towns over, in front of sparse crowds. Reported budgetary concerns don’t make for a great sales pitch, either. Neither does playing road games three time zones away against Big Ten powers.

Likewise, UNLV’s Dan Mullen will have other, better opportunities than UCLA, as long as the wins keep coming for his Runnin’ Rebels. Mullen’s name surfaces on speculative candidate lists for UCLA, but I wouldn’t see that as a smart move for Mullen, who did his best work in Starkville, Mississippi.

If I’m running UCLA’s search, I’d peek at Tulane’s Jon Sumrall. He’s thriving at the erudite school in “The Big Easy.” Sumrall’s Green Wave are in contention for the Group of Five’s playoff bid. He previously excelled at Troy.

Sumrall played at Kentucky, and he’s spent most of his career in the South. A move to the left coast would be a shift, but he’s bound for a “Super Two” job eventually. UCLA’s best move could be nabbing a rising, proven coach before someone else in the Big Ten or SEC snaps him up.

Another intriguing name: Former Northwestern coach Pat Fitzgerald. If you can win at Northwestern, you can win at UCLA.

Northwestern fired Fitzgerald after a player hazing scandal surfaced. After the firing, Fitzgerald took Northwestern to court, and he reached a legal settlement with his former employer last month. He’s maintained he had no knowledge of the hazing within Northwestern’s program. The school, in a statement announcing the settlement, said it uncovered no evidence that Fitzgerald condoned the behavior or that any player reported the conduct to the coach.

In sum, the findings and legal settlement could make Fitzgerald hirable.

One more … would Pasadena, California, native Jonathan Smith leave Michigan State in favor of a SoCal homecoming? UCLA should find out. Think Smith, not Sanders.

Dan Mullen for Virginia Tech? That’d be interesting

I mentioned Mullen’s best work occurred in Starkville, and I’ve always said Blacksburg, Virginia, is the Starkville of Appalachia.

Well, I’m saying that now, anyway.

Mullen is a good coach whose career got sidetracked by the LS-Shoe game, followed by one bad season at Florida. He’s got a mind for X’s and O’s, and he proved at Mississippi State he can develop three-star prospects into four-star talents.

North Carolina should have hired Mullen instead of experimenting with Bill Belichick. UNC’s mistake can become an opportunity for ACC rival Virginia Tech.

Mullen, in his first season coaching UNLV, is 3-0 and piling up points with transfer quarterback Anthony Colandrea, a former Virginia Cavalier.

Mullen won in the SEC’s West Division at the height of its power. He’d win in the ACC.

Marcus Freeman says dreaded ‘E’ word

Notre Dame coach Marcus Freeman wants us to believe “it’s not the (play) call, it’s the execution,” after the Irish got gutted for a second consecutive game under new defensive coordinator Chris Ash.

Ah, the dreaded ‘E’ word. Execution. Coaches who bemoan their team’s execution usually wind up with an average product on their hands, because it’s often easier to fix play-calling than it is to eradicate bad execution.

In truth, Notre Dame’s abysmal defensive performances in losses to Miami and Texas A&M are a combination of questionable calls and shaky execution.

Notre Dame’s hesitancy to blitz Carson Beck in Week 1 became a head-scratcher. The Irish didn’t apply enough pressure on Aggies quarterback Marcel Reed, either. They have one sack through two games after amassing 40 sacks last season under coordinator Al Golden, who’s now in the NFL. Freeman’s experiment to incorporate more zone coverage has failed, too.

“I don’t have the answer for you right now,” Freeman said of his team’s defensive woes.

No answers, faulty execution and questionable calls tend to result in the dreaded ‘M’ word: mediocrity.

Kirby Smart gets (oddly) philosophical

After Georgia’s comeback overtime victory at Tennessee, Kirby Smart took a shot at nebulous naysayers, who, apparently were “whistling by the graveyard.”

“I don’t mean this directed at Tennessee, but I told our players, there’s a lot of whistling by the graveyard,” Smart said. “A lot of people don’t know what that saying means, but there’s a lot of whistling by the graveyard, and that ain’t who we are.’

“We’re not going to go down without a fight,’ he added.

I don’t think Smart knows what that saying means, either.

Whistling past the graveyard means acting upbeat and unafraid in a dire situation, to distract yourself from the reality of doom. I fail to comprehend how it applies to Georgia and the supposed naysayers.

Perhaps, Smart meant to say Georgia’s enemies ought to know better than to “dance on the grave” of the Bulldogs, a different adage that would better fit this situation.

Georgia looked to be on the ropes in the first quarter at Neyland Stadium, but it came very much alive in the second half and overtime.

As Georgia Tech learned last season, the final shovel of dirt onto an upset of Georgia can prove to be the heaviest lift.

Blake Toppmeyer is the USA TODAY Network’s senior national college football columnist. Email him at BToppmeyer@gannett.com and follow him on X @btoppmeyer.

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  • Todd Marinovich, subbed ‘Robo QB’ by sportswriters, played college football at USC before being a first-round pick of the Los Angeles Raiders.
  • Marv Marinovich, one of the original ‘worst sports fathers,’ put Todd through rigorous daily training sessions as a child.
  • “Marinovich: Outside the Lines in Football, Art, and Addiction” is Todd’s effort to tell his well-chronicled story in his own words.

Marv Marinovich was one of the original “worst sports fathers,” decades before the obsession with young athletes spilled over to social media, years before there was even an Internet.

‘I didn’t make it through a full tackle football season until high school,” Todd Marinovich, his father’s prodigy turned USC quarterback and Los Angeles Raiders first-round NFL Draft pick, recalls in his new memoir. ‘Why? Marv bodychecked my coaches when he disagreed with their decisions.”

His father, Marinovich told USA TODAY Sports, “did not miss a (expletive) practice in any sport I played, from youth until I went to SC.”

It was Marv who caught flak from in-laws critical of punishments such as forcing the 9-year-old Todd to run alongside the car from Huntington Beach to Newport Beach after the boy had not played his best in a basketball game. Sportswriters call his son ‘Robo QB” and ‘the first test-tube athlete.‘ … Parenting authorities say his methods signal an abhorrent and dangerous trend among upper- and middle-class parents: over-programming their children and depriving them of childhood. Child-rearing experts say ‘hot housing,’ or the forced maturing of young children, has become a frightening national trend in academic and social life as well as sports.

— Los Angeles Times, June 17, 1990

The process of ‘letting go” has been cathartic. Marinovich met once a week with co-author Lizzy Wright. He shared his story of soaring to the NFL after his college sophomore year and his downward spiral out of it with drug abuse. He is at peace with ‘Marv,” the father he called by his first name.

A term of affection? ‘There’s probably some deep psychological or subconscious thing that I might have been doing, but it truly was,’ Todd says.

Their relationship was complicated: The every day (even Christmas) football training routine, the hand signals from the bleachers, the healthier ‘Marv-sanctioned” versions of cake and ice cream he had to bring to birthday parties while other kids ate the real thing.

Todd became a father of two who now manages youth football, and fatherhood, in a completely opposite way and with deep perspective.  

‘The most challenging endeavor of my life is being a parent,” he says.

USA TODAY Sports spoke with him about what young athletes and their parents can learn from his story.

Pull out the good you remember from your parents and coaches

‘Marinovich: Outside the Lines in Football, Art, and Addiction” is Todd’s effort to tell his well-chronicled story in his own words. It’s through the eyes of a father to Baron, a sophomore in high school, and Coco, a freshman.

Baron plays quarterback, and also receiver, the way Todd started out.

‘What’s really cool about having a son and a daughter is they get to have their own experience with the game,” says Todd, now 56. ‘It’s beautiful, and it’s not always fun.

‘I just am a huge fan of team sports, where you learn that it’s not about ‘me.’ My son’s getting his own experience that’s so different than mine, and I just get to be a spectator and watch it. It’s hard not to want to get too involved.”

He laughs heartily.

 ‘I know,” he says. “Marvisms are coming up left and right when I’m teaching. … But being on the other receiving end of that kind of coaching, I just try to emulate my favorite coaches all in one, and they all had something special that they did that affected me as a player.”

Marv had been a football captain at USC in 1962, and he played ever so briefly in the NFL, before his body broke down. He moved on to breaking ground as an NFL strength and conditioning coach.

And he set out to make his son a perfectly engineered athlete who was ahead of his time. Squats and shamrock shakes (“swamp water,” Todd thought as he digested them before a youth game) were a must.

It was Todd against the world, entangled in an endless loop of ‘Bull in the Ring,” a training technique Marv particularly loved where two football players grapple like Greco-Roman wrestlers.

“It’s a great drill,” Todd admits, “and you find out really quick who your players are.”

He found himself using it in recent years when he volunteered to coach football at a local high school on Hawaii’s big island, where he lives now.

But Todd’s team practiced for an hour and headed to the beach. He took a similar approach when he coached in a kids flag football league.

‘I don’t go more than 40 minutes because I can’t concentrate for more than 40 minutes,” he says. “How am I gonna expect a 10 year old to stay with me for 40 minutes? I don’t understand when my son calls me and says they’re out from 2 to 6, on the field. What the heck? I mean, come on, guys.

“You’ve gotta make it fun and throw in some coaching along the way. So many coaches ruin high school experiences or even youth where the kid doesn’t want to do it again, because it’s no fun. So I try to be super encouraging because you can always find something, even if they’re new to the game, that they’re doing right.”

IT’S THE FALL SEASON: Here’s how we reset as youth sports parents

It’s easy to treat kids as adults and expect too much, too early

The way Todd breaks down Marv today is similar to how Andre Agassi describes his own autocratic sports father: It’s as if dad loved them so much, it turned into obsession.

When Marinovich reached high school, he became starting quarterback at nationally-renowned Mater Dei High in Santa Ana, California, as a freshman. When he told his father the news, he saw something that loosely resembled a smile.

Writes Todd: ‘He wouldn’t say he was proud, but I knew it.”

‘People tagged him for all kinds of things of just being like that stage mother,” he tells USA TODAY Sports. ‘That’s what he was passionate about, training athletes, and football was the vehicle for a while. And so I was just immersed in it. That’s what the family did. It was just part of our culture. So did he influence that? Yeah, but he wasn’t like, ‘You gotta play this.’ If I just wanted to do basketball, he would have been fine with it. He just wanted me to  perform at a high level and train.

‘It wasn’t, truly, about living through me, like some people have said because he never did much in the NFL. It was none of that. I have always known that he wanted the best for me. He did the best he could at the same time. Did I agree with some of it? No, but that’s part of growing up.”

When he was 10, Todd opened the garage (the fitness “dojo” as he called it) and found Marv explaining the day’s training regimen with four Los Angeles Rams players.

They called him Marv and they got excited when they said it. Todd loved feeling close to dad, so he tried it, too.

‘Hey, Marv.”

Everyone paused, Todd feeling palpable tension before his father broke out in laughter.

‘Okay, Red Rocket, you can call me Marv too.

‘The thing that I seem to be able to do that my dad couldn’t is know appropriate for the age,” Todd says. ‘He was working for like an All-Pro, eight-year veteran and a nine year old. There’s just no difference with the way he used to do it.”

Marv told a 2011 ESPN ’30 for 30” he stretched his son’s hamstrings in the crib. Todd said he could probably run 4 miles at four and 10 miles at 10.

When he didn’t perform well, though, he felt family life held in the balance.

Traci, his older sister, remembers being in the car on a disciplinary run home. His mom, Trudi, didn’t have the courage to tell Marv how she felt about what their life had become.

One weekend, Trudi wrote him a brief note and whisked their son away to San Diego, where Todd had ice cream, beach time and freedom.

“She just knew when I needed that break from Marv,” Todd says. “And throughout my struggles, she’s just been that unconditional love. It’s a mother’s love, and I put her through some sleepless nights, I know that. And my amends to her is trying to live right, and she’s been there. Thank God. I’ll tell you what: I don’t think I would be here (without her).”

Don’t let your teammates down, it’s not about ‘me’

Todd felt that freedom playing basketball, too.

‘You’re in range when you step in the gym,” Gary McKnight, his middle school coach, would tell him. “And if you don’t shoot, I’m sitting you down.’

‘Within his constructs, you could really have fun,’ Todd says. ‘It wasn’t my main sport. It was more I’m just doing this for fun. And when you’re in that state, you tend to perform better.”

The team became a machine, he says, going 177-7 over three years.

McKnight played to strengths and gave everyone a distinct role. You tried not to step out of it.

Leaning on other people would become a consistent theme in Todd’s life, through all the turmoil yet to come from USC to the Raiders to rehab.

“In an undercover way, I was getting these fundamentals or principles ingrained,” he says. “You realize that’s what it’s about. It’s not about me. When I start getting into me, I am completely (expletive). Every time. But if I’m thinking about the guy next to me, not wanting to let them down, and showing up, that whole thing about showing up, you show up, no matter what. There’s no calling in sick. That doesn’t exist. You cannot do that because they got doctors there. So that’s just priceless stuff that you only learn through time.

“I thought when I was doing it, it was about winning.”

Win, he did, at Capistrano Valley High, where he transferred and set a then-a national record for passing yards; at USC, where he won a Rose Bowl; and even with the Raiders for a fleeting moment over a small stretch.

But when he looks back on his career, he thinks more about the guys with whom he spent it.

Among many others, there was Jeff Peace, the linebacker from a rival high school Todd went against when they competed for a league title. “He just snuffed me,” Marinovich says. They became roommates at USC and are still tight.

There was Marcus Allen, the Hall of Fame running back and Raiders teammate who roused him from bed the morning after another bender with ecstasy, cocaine and liquor and got him to practice.

And there was Marv.

The spirit of a coach/parent lasts a lifetime

Father and son lived together, alone, when Todd’s parents separated as he played at Capistrano Valley. It was Marv without emergency brakes, as Todd put it, and a period where he was a budding addict.

At USC, the quarterback was under the care of Larry Smith, an old-school coaching assistant to Bo Schembechler at Michigan.

‘He got a hard package to handle,” Todd says. “It’s not that way anymore, but any authority really was Marv. So when I left Marv, Larry became Marv. Larry was trying to tell me what to do, like, cut my hair? Well (expletive) you. You can’t wear sandals? I was over the ‘Yes, sir, no, sir,’ and it just happened, and Larry had come from that kind of background in the Midwest. It was the army, pretty much what you were in. That was like the furthest thing that I wanted the game of football to be.

‘I just thought it was definitely more creative and free spirited than that. So it was a volatile time that second season. It just came to a head.”

The two erupted in an argument on the sidelines captured on television at the 1990 Sun Bowl after an up-and-down season. It was decades before the transfer portal.

‘I was enjoying my college experience,” Todd says. ‘I did not want to do the NFL as a sophomore. I just felt like that was my only option.”

A month later, he was arrested for cocaine possession after a long night of revelry with his buddies. His first two experiences with rehabilitation came when he was still with the Raiders.

“I was winding down as my career was going up,” he says.

When his NFL career ended after eight games over two seasons, he faced more arrests and rehab stints. Father and son had drifted apart when he left for USC. But eventually, they found themselves back together.

“Even as hardcore as he was, he was always in times of doubt … there to give me that quiet confidence of, no, I do belong here, and yeah, I can overcome,” Todd says, “and throughout my whole journey, being strung out on heroin, he was there, saying, ‘You can do this.’”

Toward the end of his life, Marv, who died in 2020, had Alzheimer’s. Father and son lived together for long stints.

Over nearly 16 months, Buzzy, as Todd then called Marv, brought a wood sculpture to life, while Todd painted nearby. It was Todd’s turn to provide support.

‘It’s just crazy being on the other end of this illness,” Todd says. ‘It’s just bizarre, but I’m so grateful that I was there. If I would have done what I wanted – my head said just run from that because he’s not the same person – I would have missed lots of just priceless (moments). Because it was all about the now. We weren’t talking about yesterday; that’s gone with that illness. It’s just locking into the now and enjoying each other.”

It’s how he approaches life as he paints for a living in Hawaii. He talks to his son, Baron, who plays at Costa Mesa High in Orange County, after practices and games.

He bonds with his daughter, Coco, over art, his new life’s passion. It was their mother, Alix, his wife at the time, who suggested he paint.

“I find that place in creating art where time is nonexistent,” he says. “I felt similar coaching. And that’s a beautiful thing. That’s a sweet spot that I try to be in as much as possible.”

He steps into painting, and he never knows how long he’ll be there. Sometimes 10 minutes, sometimes 10 hours. Either way, he says, there are no shortcuts.

It’s a lesson he learned from football, and from Marv. He uses a different name this time.

“Dad really flourished into like a best friend toward the end,” he says. “It was really an amazing journey with him.”

Steve Borelli, aka Coach Steve, has been an editor and writer with USA TODAY since 1999. He spent 10 years coaching his two sons’ baseball and basketball teams. He and his wife, Colleen, are now sports parents for two high schoolers. His column is posted weekly. For his past columns, click here.

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