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With 32 NFL teams, chances are you might not have much to root for when the Kansas City Chiefs take on the Philadelphia Eagles in Super Bowl 59, which airs at 6:30 p.m. ET Feb. 9 on Fox, NFL app and Tubi.

Maybe you’ll just tune in for the commercials or go to a party for the snacks. Whatever the case may be, why not give yourself something more to care about, like some cold hard cash?

One of the easiest, no-skills way to play is the Super Bowl squares game. And now’s the perfect time (there’s a 100 reasons why below) to get a game going with family, friends or co-workers:

How to play Super Bowl squares

1. A 10×10 grid is used to play the game. Often, a paper copy of the grid is printed out.

2. People buy squares on the grid for a fixed price. We’ll use $5 a square here. Generally, in an office setting, you can write your name on the official grid.

Unable to view our graphics? Click here to see them.

3. Once all squares are sold (It’s OK if some are not sold, more on that later) the pool organizer draws random numbers between 0-9 and assigns them across the top and side of the grid. The organizer then shares the grid with all players who purchased squares.

4. At the end of every quarter, the last digit of the score for each team is plotted on the grid. For example, if the score at the end of the first quarter was the Eagles 14 and Chiefs 7, the winning numbers of 4 and 7 are plotted on the grid. Here, ‘Rick P.’ is the winner for the first quarter.

What if you haven’t sold all the squares and a blank square wins? That quarter’s prize rolls over into the next quarter. Just use your best judgment. You don’t want a game where there are too few squares and nobody wins.

How Super Bowl squares winnings are distributed

How winnings are divided among quarters can differ. Traditionally, the final quarter pays out the most. In our example, we assume we sold all 100 squares, making a $500 pot. The first, second and third quarters are awarded $100 and the final score is awarded $200.

Download a the Super Bowl squares grid

Click here to download your own Super Bowl Squares template and start a game with your friends. Tip: print the document in landscape mode.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Listen, I’m generally a fairly optimistic guy. I tend to see the good in the stock market, while many others continuously focus on potential selloffs ahead. I remain mostly bullish for good reason as the S&P 500 has risen 75% of all years since 1950. It just doesn’t make sense to keep trying to bet against the stock market, especially when you consider the long-term 100-year monthly chart of the S&P 500:

It’s really hard to argue with this chart. Remaining long is nearly always the best answer. However, there are occasions when bearish signals begin to line up and it’s at those times that we need to take notice. The best recent example was as we headed into 2022. Currently, I’m not seeing as many bearish signs as I saw then, but I am absolutely watching the bearish signs develop. The analogy that I would use is that MAJOR storm clouds are brewing on the horizon. Will we be able to skirt the storm, or are we about to get a direct hit?

I’m beginning to think DIRECT HIT.

Let me just talk about sentiment for a moment. One key takeaway is that it’s a contrarian indicator. When others are bullish, we should turn bearish. When others are bearish, we should turn bullish. We can reach points of excessive bullishness and we might be getting there now in the options world. Simply put, the number of equity calls traded are swamping the number of equity puts. We haven’t reached the absolutely CRAZY period of extreme equity-only put-call readings ($CPCE) that we saw in the latter part of 2021, just before the 2022 cyclical bear market drop of 28% (on the S&P 500). However, those readings were insane and likely a once-in-a-lifetime, or at least a generation, bullish period. Current readings should not be ignored as history tells us that current levels of market optimism have foreshadowed selloffs in the past.

I generally focus on the 5-day SMA (short-term direction) and the 253-day SMA (long-term direction) of the $CPCE and routinely communicate both to our EarningsBeats.com members via our Weekly Market Report. For purposes of this article, however, let’s look at a 22-day SMA of the $CPCE:

I chose 22 days in this calculation as 22 trading days represents roughly one month. The 22-day SMA signal provided above has been rock solid too, which doesn’t hurt. Sentiment really does provide us clues about market direction and we’re at a level on this 22-day SMA that’s at least worth considering.

This is the tip of the iceberg in terms of bearish signals.

Bracing For A Drop

One of our favored features of our service is our Portfolios. Our flagship Model Portfolio is very aggressive and has outperformed the benchmark S&P 500 by a mile since its inception on November 19, 2018. Here are our Model Portfolio returns, by calendar year, since inception (S&P 500 return in parenthesis):

  • 2018 (Nov 19-Dec 31): -1.32% (-6.83%)
  • 2019: +51.92% (+28.88%)
  • 2020: +100.96% (+16.26%)
  • 2021: +2.06% (+26.89%)
  • 2022: -32.72% (-19.44%)
  • 2023: +20.36% (+24.23%)
  • 2024: +48.30% (+23.31%)
  • 2025 (through Jan 31): +10.32% (+2.70%)

To give you some idea of how bearish I’m growing, I wrote to our members on Friday afternoon to let them know we were exiting all stock positions in our portfolios, a full 3 weeks ahead of schedule. Since we began the portfolios in 2018, we’ve never exited 3 weeks prior to the end of our portfolio quarter. The risk of holding is growing very rapidly and, quite honestly, why take a chance right now when we already are beating the S&P 500 by nearly 8 percentage points in just the first month of the year?

Calling a market top or bottom is never a guarantee, so we don’t look at it like that. Instead, we do our best to manage risk and the risk of a drop outweighs the potential benefit of remaining long at this time, in our opinion.

FREE Event on Monday

I like to consider everyone who follows me here at StockCharts and on YouTube as part of our EarningsBeats.com community – a community that we’ve been serving for over 20 years now. We have a history of making very bold and very accurate stock market predictions as part of our platform, where we provide market education, market guidance, and market research. Given the current market environment, historical patterns, and the evolving technical and sentiment issues, now is one of those times to make another very bold call.

Please mark your calendar and plan to join me on Monday, February 3rd, at 5:30pm ET for a very timely event, “Bearish Signals Abound: How to Navigate the Uncertainty”. The information that I will share may end up saving you a fortune. To register for this event with your name and email address, and to save your seat, CLICK HERE.

We’ll send you room instructions on Monday!

Happy trading!

Tom

MEDLEY, Fla. — Unrivaled returns to action on Saturday with one club seeking its first win of the season, while two other clubs hope to avoid a losing weekend in Week 3.

Unrivaled co-founder Breanna Stewart and the winless Mist (0-4) will face the Rhyne Howard, Arike Ogunbowale and the Vinyl (2-2) in the first of two games at 6 p.m. ET.

Kayla McBride, Tiffany Hayes and the Laces (4-1) hope to bounce back after their first loss against Angel Reese and the Rose (1-4) in the second game at 7:30 p.m. ET.

Here’s everything you need to know, and follow along here for live updates from USA TODAY Sports:

How to watch Unrivaled games on TV Saturday night?

Unrivaled is available on cable television on TruTV in the United States, and TSN+ in Canada.

How to live stream Unrivaled games on Saturday night?

Unrivaled games are also available to live stream on Max, and internationally on YouTube.

Watch: Unrivaled games on Sling TV

Vinyl (2-2) vs. Mist (0-4) at 6 p.m.

Unrivaled co-founder Breanna Stewart leads the Mist in nearly every statistical category, but the club is the only winless side in the league.

Meanwhile, the Vinyl hopes to get back on track. They won their first two games in Week 1, but dropped both games in Week 2.

Dearica Hamby leads the Vinyl with 19.0 points per game (fifth in Unrivaled), while Rhyne Howard averages 17.5 points (eighth). Jewell Loyd leads the Mist with 17.7 points (seventh), while Stewart has 17.5 points (ninth) and 11.8 rebounds per game (tied for first).

Laces (4-1) vs. Rose (1-4) at 7:30 p.m.

The Laces dropped their first game of the season against the Lunar Owls in a battle of unbeaten teams, while the Rose fell to Sabrina Ionescu and the Phantom on Friday night.

The Laces are led by Kayla McBride (25.6 ppg, second in Unrivaled) and Tiffany Hayes (19.4 ppg, fourth). Kahleah Copper is the leading scorer for Rose (14.8 ppg), while Angel Reese has averaged 11.2 points and 8.0 rebounds.

Both teams faced each other last Monday, with the Laces winning 71-64.

Angel Reese has new McDonald’s deal

Starting Feb. 10, you can order the Angel Reese Special, which includes a BBQ Bacon Quarter Pounder with Cheese topped with a new BBQ sauce, plus French fries and a drink.

WNBA free agency, offseason takes flight

The Unrivaled games come during a blockbuster week where several WNBA players will be on the move next season.

  • Griner agreed to a free agent deal with the Atlanta Dream after 11 seasons with the Phoenix Mercury.
  • The Laces’ Alyssa Thomas was traded from the Connecticut Sun after 11 seasons to the Mercury.
  • A three-team trade featuring Jewell Loyd, Kelsey Plum and several 2025 WNBA draft picks started the frenzy.

What is Unrivaled?

Six teams with 36 of the best women’s basketball players in the world, including Sabrina Ionescu and Brittney Griner, will compete in the 3-on-3, full court games.

Where is Unrivaled playing games?

Games will be played at Wayfair Arena in Medley, Florida, which is in the Miami metropolitan area, about 7 miles from Miami International Airport.

Unrivaled team names and rosters

  • Laces: Stefanie Dolson, Tiffany Hayes, Natisha Hiedeman (relief player contract), Kate Martin, Kayla McBride, Alyssa Thomas, Jackie Young.
  • Lunar Owls: Shakira Austin, Napheesa Collier, Skylar Diggins-Smith, Allisha Gray, Courtney Williams, Cameron Brink (IR).
  • Mist: DiJonai Carrington, Aaliyah Edwards, Rickea Jackson, Jewell Loyd, NaLyssa Smith (relief player contract), Breanna Stewart, Courtney Vandersloot.
  • Phantom: Natasha Cloud, Brittney Griner, Sabrina Ionescu, Marina Mabrey, Satou Sabally, Katie Lou Samuelson.
  • Rose: Kahleah Copper, Chelsea Gray, Lexie Hull, Angel Reese, Azura Stevens, Brittney Sykes.
  • Vinyl: Aliyah Boston, Rae Burrell, Jordin Canada, Dearica Hamby, Rhyne Howard, Arike Ogunbowale.

Unrivaled rules to know 

  • Unrivaled games start with three seven-minute quarters, and games end when the target winning score is reached in the fourth quarter. The target winning score is 11 points higher than the highest team’s score after the third quarter, known as the Elam Ending. 
  • Players also take just one free throw after being fouled: A free throw equals two or three points depending on the shooting foul. 
  • How long is the Unrivaled court size? It’s is 72 feet long by 49.2 feet wide. NBA and WNBA courts are 94 feet long and 50 feet wide. 

We occasionally recommend interesting products and services. If you make a purchase by clicking one of the links, we may earn an affiliate fee. USA TODAY Network newsrooms operate independently, and this doesn’t influence our coverage.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

New Orleans Pelicans guard Dejounte Murray tore his Achilles tendon during Friday night’s game against the Boston Celtics, according to multiple reports. The one-time All-Star’s first season with New Orleans is over.

The injury occurred during the first quarter of what was an eventual 118-116 win by the Celtics. Murray went down after pulling in a rebound after his own miss. He could barely get off the court under his own power and required assistance to get to the locker room.

Murray had four points and five rebounds in eight minutes before exiting with the injury.

Murray, an All-Star in 2022, joined the Pelicans via trade last July for a high price: four players, including promising third-year man Dyson Daniels and dependable veteran Larry Nance Jr., and two first-round draft picks.

Murray’s season got off to an inauspicious start — he broke his hand in the season opener on Oct. 23 and didn’t play again until Nov. 27. Now his campaign is over.

All things Pelicans: Latest New Orleans Pelicans news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

Entering Friday, Murray was averaging 17.9 points, 7.6 assists and 6.5 rebounds over 30 games.

The Pelicans have been ravaged by injuries this season. Zion Williamson has played just 13 games. Brandon Ingram has played in just 18 contests. And now Murray, their big offseason acquisition, will end the year having played 31 games.

That’s helped explain the Pelicans plummeting down the standings. A 49-33 playoff team last season, New Orleans is an abysmal 12-37 this year after Friday’s loss.

The USA TODAY app gets you to the heart of the news — fast. Download for award-winning coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, the eNewspaper and more.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The Democratic National Committee (DNC) on Saturday elected Minnesota party leader Ken Martin, who once called for President Donald Trump to be tried for treason, as its next national chair in the wake of the party’s disastrous performance in the November elections.

The election of Martin is the party’s first formal step to try and rebound from the November elections, in which President Donald Trump recaptured the White House, and Republicans flipped the Senate, held on to their fragile majority in the House and made major gains with working-class, minority and younger voters.

‘We have one team, one team, the Democratic Party,’ Martin said following his victory. ‘The fight is for our values. The fight is for working people. The fight right now is against Donald Trump and the billionaires who bought this country.’

Martin, over the past eight years, has served as a DNC vice chair and has led the association of state Democratic Party chairs.

In 2020, Martin called Trump a ‘traitor’ who should be tried for treason.

‘[Donald Trump] should be immediately impeached and then put on trial for treason,’ Martin wrote on June 29, 2020, citing an anonymously sourced news story. ‘His actions led to the deaths of American soldiers. He is a traitor to our nation and all those who have served.’

He topped Wisconsin Democratic Party chair Ben Wikler by over 100 votes among the 428 DNC members who cast ballots as they gathered for the party’s annual winter meeting, which this year was held at National Harbor in Maryland, just outside of Washington, D.C.

Martin O’Malley, the former two-term Maryland governor and 2016 Democratic presidential candidate who served as commissioner of the Social Security Administration during former President Biden’s last year in office, was a distant third in the voting.

Among the longshot candidates were Faiz Shakir, who ran the 2020 Democratic presidential campaign of Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont, and Marianne Williamson, who ran unsuccessfully for the 2020 and 2024 Democratic presidential nominations. Williamson endorsed Martin on Saturday, ahead of the vote.

The eight candidates in the race were vying to succeed DNC Chair Jaime Harrison, who decided against seeking a second straight four-year term steering the national party committee.

With no clear leader in the party, the next DNC chair could become the de facto face of Democrats from coast to coast and will make major decisions on messaging, strategy, infrastructure and where to spend millions in political contributions.

‘It’s an important opportunity for us to not only refocus the party and what we present to voters, but also an opportunity for us to look at how we internally govern ourselves,’ longtime New Hampshire Democratic Party Chair Ray Buckley told Fox News Digital.

Buckley, a former DNC vice chair who backed Martin, said he’s ‘very excited about the potential of great reform within the party.’ He emphasized that he hoped for ‘significantly more support for the state parties. That’s going to be a critical step towards our return to majority status.’

In his victory speech, Martin stressed unity and that the party needed ‘to rebuild our coalition.’

‘We need to go on offense,’ Martin said. ‘We’re going to go out there and take this fight to Donald Trump and the Republicans.’

This is a

Former Vice President Kamala Harris, who succeeded President Biden last July as the party’s 2024 standard-bearer, spoke with Martin, Wikler and O’Malley in the days ahead of Saturday’s election, Fox News confirmed. But Harris stayed neutral in the vote for party chair.

In a video message to the audience as the vote for chair was being tabulated, Harris said that the DNC has some ‘hard work ahead.’

But she pledged to be with the party ‘every step of the way,’ which could be a signal of her future political ambitions.

The debate during the three-month DNC campaign sprint mostly focused on the logistics of modern political campaigns, such as media strategy and messaging, fundraising and grassroots organizing and get-out-the-vote efforts. On those nuts-and-bolts issues, the candidates were mostly in agreement that changes are needed to win back blue-collar voters who now support Republicans.

But the final forum included a heavy focus on race and diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) programs, issues that appeared to hurt Democrats at the ballot box in November.

The forum, moderated and carried live on MSNBC and held at Georgetown University in Washington, D.C., devolved into chaos early on as a wave of left-wing protesters repeatedly interrupted the primetime event, heckling over concerns of climate change and billionaires’ influence in America’s elections before they were forcibly removed by security.

The chair election took place as a new national poll spelled more trouble for the Democrats.

Only 31% of respondents in a Quinnipiac University survey conducted over the past week had a favorable opinion of the Democratic Party, with 57% seeing the party in an unfavorable light.

‘This is the highest percentage of voters having an unfavorable opinion of the Democratic Party since the Quinnipiac University Poll began asking this question,’ the survey’s release noted. 

Meanwhile, 43% of those questioned had a favorable view of the GOP, with 45% holding an unfavorable opinion, which was the highest favorable opinion for the Republican Party ever in Quinnipiac polling.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

After largely withstanding written and oral arguments from a handful of lawyers opposing preliminary approval, the proposed multi-billion-dollar settlement of three athlete-compensation antitrust cases against the NCAA and the Power Five conferences now faces numerous organized objections and individual pleas as a federal judge in Northern California weighs whether to grant final consent.

More than 35 formal objections or comment letters were filed before the deadline for such submissions passed on Friday night at 11:59 Pacific Time. Among the most prominent athletes to object was current LSU gymnast and noted social-media influencer Olivia Dunne.

Dunne’s filing, on Friday, was not presented by a law firm acting on her behalf, and she did not identify herself by school or sport. But an LSU athletics spokesperson confirmed to USA TODAY Sports that Dunne had made the submission, which included seven detailed bullet points and a request that she or her lawyer be heard during the final approval hearing April 7.

Meanwhile, lawyers representing a group of 76 athletes who have opted out of the proposed settlement on Friday started a new antitrust lawsuit against the NCAA and the conferences. With former Mississippi State running back Kylin Hill as the lead plaintiff, it was filed in the same district in Northern California as the ongoing cases and several prominent past cases against the NCAA.  

The proposed settlement agreement would involve a $2.8 billion in damages pools for current and former athletes over a span of 10 years and set the stage for a fundamental change in college sports — Division I schools being allowed to start paying athletes directly for use of their name, image and likeness (NIL), subject to a per-school cap that would increase over time.

Also part of the arrangement would be rules changes for schools that opt in to making NIL deals with their athletes. Longstanding, sport-by-sport scholarship limits would be eliminated for those schools and replaced with a new set of roster-size limits, as early as the 2025-26 school year. The limits likely would result in hundreds, if not thousands, of current Division I roster spots being eliminated.

In addition, while athletes would continue to have the ability to make NIL deals with entities other than their schools, the settlement would allow the NCAA to institute rules designed to give the association greater enforcement oversight of those arrangements.

This has prompted a broad array of disagreements with the deal, dozens of which were detailed in both general and highly legalistic ways across the spread of filings. The most prominent and repeated ones are:

▶The impact on athletes who soon stand to lose their places on teams, and whether the roster limits could be imposed over several years instead of all at once.

▶Whether the proposed method for allocating a sizable part of the overall damages amount discriminates against female athletes in violation of the gender-equity law, Title IX, and sets the stage for allocations of NIL money from schools going forward in a fashion that violates Title IX. The damages allocation at issue would dramatically favor football and men’s basketball players.

▶The per-school cap on pay for NIL use replaces one illegal restraint on compensation with another.

▶Whether the plaintiffs’ lawyers — who could be positioned to receive more than $750 million in attorney’s fees and costs — could adequately represent the interests of all of the athletes involved in the case, given their varying interests of former, current athletes and future athletes; athletes on full scholarships, partial scholarships or no scholarships.  

The objection documents and comment letters came from athletes, former athletes and parents of athletes, some of whom told detailed personal stories.

Many of the athletes had no name recognition. But in addition to Dunne, recent Boston College starting quarterback Thomas Castellanos, now at Florida State, had an objection filed on his behalf. Former Kansas basketball player Frank Mason III is involved with one; so is Chuck O’Bannon, the former TCU basketball player whose uncle, Ed, was the lead plaintiff in another prominent case against the NCAA.

Ed O’Bannon’s lead lawyer in that case is directing an objection in this one. Other attorneys of prominence in the Title IX and sexual harassment fields are involved, and several veteran sports economics experts are playing supporting roles. Even a handful of current college coaches submitted declarations in support of an objection.

The federal government — at least for the moment — also is in the mix. It’s involved directly through a filing in the case from the Justice Department’s Antitrust Division three days before President Donald Trump’s inauguration that said final approval should be denied or include specified conditions. It’s involved indirectly, through documents issued by the Education Department’s Office for Civil Rights (OCR) regarding the application of longstanding Title IX policies to direct payments from schools to athletes for use of their NIL.

Whether the government will remain involved under the new Trump Administration is unclear. None of the three most highest-ranking Justice officials whose names are on that filing are still with the department, according to the department website and/or their LinkedIn profiles and messages. At the Education Department, the OCR’s leadership has been replaced.   

Regardless, will any of this persuade U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken?

A number of the arguments being advanced in the objections were tried in the preliminary-approval phase (those lawyers are back, too) and during a hearing, Wilken largely waved them off. She did end up saying she would not approve the original version of the proposed settlement — but for set of reasons that differed from those expressed in the oppositions.

When lawyers for the plaintiffs and the NCAA who crafted the proposed settlement addressed Wilken’s concerns in an adjusted version of the agreement, she moved it ahead to this final phase.

And Steve Berman, one of the plaintiffs’ lead attorneys, told USA TODAY Sports on Friday night that he is “not concerned” about the objections.

‘A lot of the objections are reiterations of what (Wilken) saw and overruled in preliminary approval,” although he noted that this time some of these issues have been addressed in greater detail and buttressed with expert backup.

“With something as emotional at this, people are not all going to agree. But is the overall settlement fair? I think she’s going to say, ‘Yes.’ ”

However, Berman was certain about how his side will approach the response to the objections that it must file by March 3.

“We’re coming out swinging,” he said.

The USA TODAY app gets you to the heart of the news — fastDownload for award-winning coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, the eNewspaper and more.

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Shriver, a 22-time major doubles champion and current ESPN commentator, revealed that she has recovered her Grand Slam trophies that were stolen inside her Dodge Durango Hellcat earlier this month after her family was forced to evacuate their Brentwood, California home as the Pacific Palisades wildfire raged, burning over 23,000 acres since Jan. 7.

‘Good news on my trophies (& family photos)- the LAPD detective in charge of the investigation has them at the police station being finger printed,’ Shriver wrote on X Friday, adding, ‘Today feels like we won another major!’

Shriver said 11 of her major trophies five U.S. Open trophies, five Roland Garros plates and one Australian Open trophy were in the back of the vehicle after her family fled to a hotel in Marina Del Rey, California.

‘I don’t think (the thieves) meant to take the trophies. I doubt they’re big tennis fans. They just happened to be in the back,’ Shriver told local new channel KTLA at the time. Family photos were among her possessions in the stolen car.

On Friday, Shriver told ESPN that the hotel staff found the trophies near the hotel on Monday morning. Surveillance footage showed that the hardware was returned by someone driving a vehicle that ‘fit, somewhat, the description’ of her stolen Dodge Durango Hellcat. She picked the trophies up from the police station on Tuesday after detectives fingerprinted them, but her black vehicle remains missing.

‘We still hope to find black Dodge Durango Hellcat in one piece,’ she wrote on X.

Shriver said she was overjoyed to be back in possession of her trophies. ‘It wasn’t just a sentiment to me. The trophies actually hold a pretty reasonable value as well,’ she told ESPN. ‘I do think getting a word out about the trophies helped get them back.’

Shriver and Martina Navratilova combined to form one of the most dominant women’s doubles teams in tennis history. They won 20 Grand Slams together, including seven Australian Open titles (1982-85, 1987-89), five Wimbledon titles (1981-84, 1986), four US Open titles (1983-84, 1986-87) and four French Open titles (1984-85, 1987-88). She also won the 1987 French Open mixed doubles title with Emilio Sánchez, the US Open with Natasha Zvereva in 1991, in addition to the Olympic gold medal in doubles with Zina Garrison at the 1988 Seoul Summer Games.

‘That is just awesome!!!! Well done the Police!!!’ Navratilova replied to Shriver on X.

The USA TODAY app gets you to the heart of the news — fastDownload for award-winning coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, the eNewspaper and more.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

If the Kansas City Chiefs triumph and become the first team to win three Super Bowls in a row, a Miami Heat owner might make some big bucks on it.

Legendary NBA coach and Miami Heat president and minority owner Pat Riley has made a lot of great decisions in his career. After his own time as a player he led the Los Angeles Lakers to four championships and the Miami Heat to one as their head coach, and then two more in Miami as team president. He was head coach of an NBA All-Star Game team nine times.

And, back in November of 1988, Pat Riley trademarked the term ‘three-peat’ and its variations after the Lakers seemed to be heading to one in the NBA Finals. They didn’t make it, losing to the Detroit Pistons, but trademark No. 1552980 was granted to his company, Riles & Company Inc.

That means anyone wanting to make commercial use of the term on highly lucrative and sought-after post-game jerseys, shirts, hats and other memorabilia — such as, say, an NFL football team that won Super Bowls in 2023 and 2024 — would have to cough up.

Has Pat Riley made money from ‘three-peat’ before?

The Chicago Bulls pulled off a three-peat twice, winning three consecutive championships in 1991, 1992 and 1993 and again in 1996, 1997 and 1998.

All things Chiefs: Latest Kansas City Chiefs news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

‘Each time, Pat Riley benefited significantly,’ Finance-Monthly.com reported, saying that he received approximately $300,000 in licensing and royalty fees in 1993 and nearly $600,000 in 1998.

Riley’s company scored again when the Lakers finally did hit their trifecta in 2000, 2001 and 2002, and he has licensed use of the terms since then.

Back in 2006, Riley said he donates much of the licensing fees from the phrase to charity.

Does Pat Riley hold the trademark for ‘three-peat’ or ‘3-peat’?

Through his company, Riley holds the trademarks for ‘THREE-PEAT,’ ‘THREEPEAT,’ and ‘3 PEAT,’ with multiple trademarks for each term for hats, jackets, shirts, collector’s plates, mugs, tankards, jewelry, bumper stickers, decals, pennants, paperweights, posters, energy drinks, sports drinks, water with vitamins, computer bags, backpacks, sunglasses and more.

Previous trademarks for rings, bed linens and blankets, key chains and plaques and cases for digital devices were allowed to drop out of use and were canceled. So was a trademark for ‘Fifteen Strong,’ a phrase Riley used for the Heat in 2006 to emphasize that the team was more than just the two powerhouse players, Shaquille O’Neal and Dwayne Wade.

What does ‘three-peat’ mean?

Originally a sports term, it’s a portmanteau of the words ‘three’ and ‘repeat’ and it refers to a team that wins three consecutive championships or tournaments. Also called ‘3-peat.’

The term has since become wildly popular in all sports championships as well as other, non-sports achievements such as Trevor Noah hosting the Grammys for the third time this year, or Taylor Swift’s latest album ‘The Tortured Poets Department’ hitting No. 1 on the charts three weeks in a row.

Who came up with the term ‘three-peat’?

According to Riley, Lakers’ player Byron Scott first used the term in 1988 while talking about the team’s chances in the NBA Finals.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Yarden Bibas is back in Israel more than 480 days after Hamas terrorists ripped him from his home in Kibbutz Nir Oz and dragged him to the Gaza Strip. Bibas’ return, however, is bittersweet as his wife, Shiri, and their two young children, Ariel and Kfir, remain in Gaza. Their fate is unknown, and the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) has made it clear that there are ‘grave concerns about their wellbeing.’

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu celebrated Yarden Bibas’ return, while saying the nation’s thoughts are with Shiri, Ariel and Kfir Bibas.

‘Our thoughts are now with Shiri, Ariel, and Kfir Bibas, and all of our abductees. We will continue to work to bring them home,’ Netanyahu wrote on X.

Israeli President Isaac Herzog also commented on Yarden’s release, calling it ‘heartbreaking.’

‘Yarden’s reunion with his family is simply heartbreaking. We all remain deeply concerned for the fate of our beloved Shiri, Ariel and Kfir Bibas – as an entire nation we hold them in our hearts. The people of Israel stand by Yarden and the whole family, with great concern and in heartfelt prayer,’ Herzog wrote in a post on X.

The Hostages and Missing Families Forum also celebrated Yarden Bibas’ return, and vowed to continue demanding that his wife and two sons be released.

Early Saturday, Bibas was freed alongside American-Israeli Keith Siegel and French-Israeli Ofer Kalderon in the fourth round of hostage releases as part of phase one of Israel and Hamas’ ongoing ceasefire deal.

‘From the moment Hamas launched its barbaric attack on October 7th, we have remained committed to one mission—bringing every hostage home,’ IDF International Spokesperson Lt. Col. Nadav Shoshani wrote on Substack. ‘We cannot and will not forget for a moment, the 79 hostages that remain in Hamas captivity.’

The release of Bibas, Siegel and Kalderon looked different from previous hostages’ releases, which saw shocking scenes of crowds mobbing the captives as they were transferred to the Red Cross. This change is likely due to Netanyahu’s demand that mediators guarantee the hostages safe exits following the chaotic scenes.

While in captivity, Bibas was forced to make a hostage film in which he was seen breaking down as Hamas claimed his wife and children had been killed. Hamas often uses these types of videos as part of what the IDF calls ‘psychological terror.’ However, the terror organization included Shiri, Kfir and Ariel on the list of 33 hostages set to be released in the first phase of the ceasefire deal.

Upon his release, Yarden’s family said that ‘a quarter of our heart has returned to us after 15 long months… Yarden has returned home, but the home remains incomplete.’

As images and videos of Hamas’ brutal attacks on Oct. 7 began to spread, the Bibas family quickly became a symbol of the terror group’s cruelty. A video of Shiri Bibas holding her two red-headed children in her arms was spread across the globe. Those calling for the Bibas’ family’s release often used the color orange to symbolize the infant and toddler’s bright red hair.

At the time of their kidnapping, Kfir was 9 months old and Ariel was 4 years old. They are the only child hostages remaining in Gaza. Ariel is now 5 years old and Kfir marked his second birthday in Hamas captivity, where he has spent his two and only birthdays.

As of Saturday, 79 hostages remain in Gaza, 35 of whom have been declared dead and whose bodies remain in the hands of Hamas. Keith Siegel, who was freed on Saturday, is the first Israeli-American to be released. There are still six American citizens in Gaza, only two of whom are believed to be alive.  

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LGBT activists and groups are already mobilizing to block gender-related executive orders President Donald Trump signed since taking office to fulfill one of his key campaign promises to crack down on ‘gender ideology extremism.’ And more legal challenges are expected in the coming weeks.

The executive orders, signed in late January, include a reinstatement of the ban on transgender troops in the military, a ban on federal funding for sex changes for minors and a directive requiring federal agencies to recognize only ‘two sexes,’ male and female, in official standard of conduct.

‘This ban betrays fundamental American values of equal opportunity and judging people on their merit,’ Jennifer Levi, director of Transgender and Queer Rights at GLBTQ Legal Advocates & Defenders (GLAD Law), said in a statement about the trans military ban 

‘It slams the door on qualified patriots who meet every standard and want nothing more than to serve their country, simply to appease a political agenda.’

GLAD Law and the National Center for Lesbian Rights (NCLR), were among the first groups to file a federal lawsuit against the Trump administration for its military ban. The lawsuit, Talbott v. Trump, was brought forward on equal protection grounds by six active-duty service members and two individuals attempting to enlist, according to the groups’ announcement.

The plaintiffs include a Sailor of the Year honoree, a Bronze Star recipient and several who were awarded meritorious service medals. They were identified as U.S. Army Reservist Lt. Nicolas Talbott, Army Maj. Erica Vandal, Army Sgt. First Class Kate Cole, Army Capt. Gordon Herrero, Navy Ensign Dany Danridge, Air Force Master Sgt. Jamie Hash, Koda Nature and Cael Neary. The latter two are civilians who are seeking to enlist in the military.

Another lawsuit, filed by a transgender inmate receiving taxpayer-funded medical treatments, is challenging Trump’s executive order that ends medical transgender treatments – such as hormones, sex changes and grooming accommodations – for federal prisoners.

The unnamed inmate, who goes by ‘Maria Moe’ in court documents and is represented by GLAD Law, NCLR and Lowenstein Sandler LLP, is claiming Trump and the Bureau of Prisons are violating the Fifth and Eighth amendments and claims to be ‘at imminent risk of losing access to the medical care she needs to treat her gender dysphoria.’

U.S. District Judge George O’Toole in Boston temporarily blocked BOP officials from transferring ‘Maria Moe’ to a men’s prison, according to a ruling released by the inmate’s attorney Thursday. The temporary restraining order was issued Sunday, the same day the suit was filed.

Prison officials are expected to keep the inmate in the women’s prison general population and maintain her transgender medical treatments, NBC first reported. 

Multiple lawsuits have been filed against Trump’s other executive orders, too, especially Trump’s immigration-related policies. More are expected in the coming weeks. 

A memo released Wednesday by the U.S. Office of Personnel Management provided guidance on directing federal agencies to acknowledge that women are biologically female and men are biologically male, Reuters reported. Trump said last week federal funds would not be used to promote ‘gender ideology.’ 

Fox News Digital reached out to the White House for comment on the litigation but did not hear back before publication.

Fox News Digital’s Louis Casiano contributed to this report. 

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