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  • Former President Trump speculated that Vladimir Putin may attend the 2026 World Cup despite Russia’s ban from FIFA competitions.
  • Trump’s comments came during the announcement of the World Cup draw location at the Kennedy Center in Washington D.C.
  • Russia was banned from FIFA following its 2022 invasion of Ukraine and did not participate in 2026 World Cup qualifying.

Despite Russia being banned from FIFA competitions, Donald Trump said he thinks that Vladimir Putin will attend the 2026 World Cup co-hosted by the United States, Canada and Mexico.

Speaking to reporters on Friday, Aug. 22 to announce that the draw for the World Cup would be held at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C., Trump showed off a photo of himself and the Russian president from the historic summit in Alaska and suggested that Putin would come to next summer’s tournament.

Trump said he believes Putin ‘will be coming, depending on what happens’ but did not elaborate beyond reiterating that he ‘may be coming and he may not, depending on what happens.’

FIFA president Gianni Infantino, standing beside Trump as he made the remarks in the Oval Office, did not comment on the possibility of Putin attending.

Russia was banned from competing in FIFA and UEFA competitions following the 2022 invasion of Ukraine, and it didn’t participate in qualification for the 2026 tournament.

Russia hosted the 2018 World Cup and Putin took on a large public-facing role during the festivities. He spoke at the opening ceremony and was on the field for trophy presentations following France’s win over Croatia in the final.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

  • Northwestern University fired football coach Pat Fitzgerald over hazing allegations, but later admitted he wasn’t responsible.
  • The university settled lawsuits with 34 former players and issued a public apology to Fitzgerald.
  • Although Northwestern acknowledged hazing occurred, an investigation found no evidence Fitzgerald knew about or condoned it.

There’s no reason to pull punches now, no sense in deferring to the politically correct thing. 

What Northwestern did two years ago to former coach Pat Fitzgerald was character and career assassination. Full stop. 

Forget about Thursday’s cash settlement or an official statement of apology, which admitted Northwestern wrongfully fired Fitzgerald prior to the 2023 season because he should’ve known about hazing within the football program.

It will never be enough.

Because here’s the worst part of this gross, reckless negligence from Northwestern: the university’s actions don’t disappear by throwing cash at the problem, and with a public relations-fed, attorney-orchestrated admittance of guilt.

Fitzgerald will forever be stained by association. Truth and innocence be damned.

Once you’re painted with the wide and indelible brush of public opinion – once everyone jumps on the pile to get their pound of flesh – it never fades.

“Evidence uncovered during extensive discovery did not establish that any player reported hazing to Coach Fitzgerald,” Northwestern’s statement read. “Or that Coach Fitzgerald condoned or directed any hazing.”

That’s about two years and one coaching job too short.

How much is a man’s reputation worth? How many millions will it take for Fitzgerald, his wife, Stacy, and their three sons to be at peace with the public humiliation brought about by Northwestern’s actions?

I want to be very clear: There’s no room for hazing, anywhere. Not in sports, not in society. It preys on the weak, dehumanizes the innocent and changes lives forever.

Northwestern acknowledged hazing within the football program, and announced it had settled lawsuits with 34 former players. But it took Northwestern more than two years to finally admit another gross injustice: blaming Fitzgerald for the hazing, and firing him for cause with nearly $70 million remaining on his contract. 

But this story isn’t about money, it’s about university officials bending to social media pitchforks and taking punitive action in a ruthlessly reactionary time where the squeakiest wheel held more power than the truth.

And taking two years to admit they blew it. 

When he announced Fitzgerald’s firing in July of 2023, Northwestern president Michael Schill said 11 current or former Northwestern players, “acknowledged that hazing has been ongoing within the football program” — and that “new media confirmed that hazing was systemic dating back many years.”

Whatever ‘new media’ means.

So Schill took anecdotal evidence of hazing and player mistreatment from current and former players – through a six-month investigation that began in November of 2022, and then from ‘new media’ – and used it as evidence to fire Fitzgerald.

What he learned from the six-month, third-party investigation initially led to a two-week suspension. What he read from “new media” then led to Fitzgerald’s firing.

It’s at this point where I remind everyone that just because you’re a university president, it doesn’t mean you’re the brightest bulb in the shop. Most university presidents are fundraisers above all else. 

Some lead their universities to unthinkable wealth. Others to public shame, complete with a public apology and settlements for all involved. 

It doesn’t matter how much money was just deposited into Fitzgerald’s bank account. Or that Northwestern finally admitted wrongdoing. 

Northwestern fired the one good thing it had going for it athletically, the one guy who had become the face of a world-renowned university.

Fitzgerald played at Northwestern, was an assistant coach at Northwestern, and eventually became the most successful coach in school history. 

Not just by wins, but by the lives he impacted. 

Northwestern wasn’t a football power under Fitzgerald, but its teams performed well enough, and played with such passion, that college football blue bloods Michigan, Notre Dame and Southern California (and a few NFL teams) tried to lure Fitzgerald from Evanston. 

He told them all to take a hike.

He loved living in Chicago, loved molding young men – yeah, it sounds corny and contrived in the current age of me-first players – and ritually declared they would graduate with a degree from “one of the finest institutions in the world.” 

The world. 

The world just got a little smaller. And no amount of money or exculpatory statements of fact can change a thing. 

Truth and innocence be damned. 

Matt Hayes is the senior national college football writer for USA TODAY Sports Network. Follow him on X at @MattHayesCFB.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The Trump administration began handing over documents related to Jeffrey Epstein’s case to the House Oversight Committee on Friday, a spokesperson for the panel said.

House Oversight Chair James Comer, R-Ky., has committed to making the documents public in the interest of transparency, albeit after a committee review for sensitive information related to Epstein’s victims.

‘The production contains thousands of pages of documents. The Trump DOJ is providing records at a far quicker pace than anything the Biden DOJ ever provided,’ the spokesperson told Fox News Digital.

‘The Committee intends to make these records public after thorough review to ensure any victims’ identification and child sexual abuse material are redacted. The Committee will also consult with the DOJ to ensure any documents released do not negatively impact ongoing criminal cases and investigations.’

The spokesperson added that the Trump DOJ was complying with Comer’s subpoena at a quicker pace than former Biden administration Attorney General Merrick Garland did in handing over materials related to Special Counsel Robert Hur’s investigation into ex-President Joe Biden’s handling of classified documents.

House investigators originally requested the Department of Justice (DOJ) produce a tranche of files pertaining to the late pedophile and his accomplice, Ghislaine Maxwell, by 12 p.m. on Tuesday, Aug. 19. 

It’s part of a wider bipartisan investigation into the handling of Epstein’s case, which has also reached several former attorneys general, FBI directors, and former first couple Bill and Hillary Clinton.

Comer announced Monday afternoon that he would delay the deadline until Friday in light of the DOJ’s cooperation.

‘Officials with the Department of Justice have informed us that the Department will begin to provide Epstein-related records to the Oversight Committee this week on Friday. There are many records in DOJ’s custody, and it will take the Department time to produce all the records and ensure the identification of victims and any child sexual abuse material are redacted,’ Comer said in a statement.

‘I appreciate the Trump administration’s commitment to transparency and efforts to provide the American people with information about this matter.’

Requested materials included all documents and communications in the DOJ’s possession relating to both Epstein and Maxwell, as well as files ‘further relating or referring to human trafficking, exploitation of minors, sexual abuse, or related activity.’

Documents relating specifically to the DOJ’s prosecutions of Epstein and Maxwell, Epstein’s 2007 non-prosecution agreement with federal prosecutors in Florida, and any materials related to Epstein’s death were requested.

The House Oversight Committee asked for the documents to be largely unredacted, according to a subpoena obtained by Fox News Digital, ‘except for redactions to protect the personally identifiable information of victims, for any child sex abuse material as defined by the Department of Justice Manual, and any other redactions required by law.’

The deadline comes a day after former Attorney General Bill Barr was deposed by the House Oversight Committee behind closed doors. Barr was the first person scheduled to appear in the committee’s probe under subpoena.

The Clintons both have separate deposition dates scheduled for October.

Comer was directed to send the flurry of subpoenas after a House Oversight Committee subcommittee panel voted in favor of them during an unrelated hearing in July.

Renewed furor over Epstein’s case engulfed Capitol Hill after intra-GOP fallout over the Trump administration’s handling of the matter.

The DOJ effectively declared the case closed after an ‘exhaustive review,’ revealing Epstein had no ‘client list,’ did not blackmail ‘prominent individuals,’ and confirmed he did die by suicide in a New York City jail while awaiting prosecution.

In response to the backlash by some on the right, Trump directed the DOJ to release grand jury testimony related to Epstein – a request that’s been tied up in courts since then – while Attorney General Pam Bondi had her deputy, Todd Blanche, interview Maxwell in person to uncover any possible new information.

Comer also subpoenaed Maxwell but agreed to defer her scheduled deposition until after the Supreme Court heard her appeal to overturn her conviction.

Fox News Digital reached out to the DOJ for comment but did not immediately hear back.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson criticized on Thursday what she said were the ‘recent tendencies’ of the Supreme Court to side with the Trump administration, providing her remarks in a bitter dissent in a case related to National Institutes of Health grants.

Jackson, a Biden appointee, rebuked her colleagues for ‘lawmaking’ on the shadow docket, where an unusual volume of fast, preliminary decisionmaking has taken place related to the hundreds of lawsuits President Donald Trump’s administration has faced.

‘This is Calvinball jurisprudence with a twist. Calvinball has only one rule: There are no fixed rules. We seem to have two: that one, and this Administration always wins,’ Jackson wrote.

The liberal justice pointed to the Oxford English Dictionary’s definition of Calvinball, which describes it as the practice of applying rules inconsistently for self-serving purposes.

Jackson, the high court’s most junior justice, said the majority ‘[bent] over backwards to accommodate’ the Trump administration by allowing the NIH to cancel about $783 million in grants that did not align with the administration’s priorities.

Some of the grants were geared toward research on diversity, equity and inclusion; COVID-19; and gender identity. Jackson argued the grants went far beyond that and that ‘life-saving biomedical research’ was at stake.

‘So, unfortunately, this newest entry in the Court’s quest to make way for the Executive Branch has real consequences, for the law and for the public,’ Jackson wrote.

The Supreme Court’s decision was fractured and only a partial victory for the Trump administration.

In a 5-4 decision greenlighting, for now, the NIH’s existing grant cancellations, Chief Justice John Roberts sided with the three liberal justices. In a second 5-4 decision that keeps a lower court’s block on the NIH’s directives about the grants intact, Justice Amy Coney Barrett, a Trump appointee, sided with Roberts and the three liberals. The latter portion of the ruling could hinder the NIH’s ability to cancel future grants.

The varying opinions by the justices came out to 36 pages total, which is lengthy relative to other emergency rulings. Jackson’s dissent made up more than half of that.

George Washington University law professor Jonathan Turley observed in an op-ed last month a rise in ‘rhetoric’ from Jackson, who garnered a reputation as the most vocal justice during oral arguments upon her ascension to the high court.

‘The histrionic and hyperbolic rhetoric has increased in Jackson’s opinions, which at times portray her colleagues as abandoning not just the Constitution but democracy itself,’ Turley said.

Barrett had sharp words for Jackson in a recent highly anticipated decision in which the Supreme Court blocked lower courts from imposing universal injunctions on the government. Barrett accused Jackson of subscribing to an ‘imperial judiciary’ and instructed people not to ‘dwell’ on her colleague’s dissent.

Barrett, the lone justice to issue the split decision in the NIH case, said challenges to the grants should be brought by the grant recipients in the Court of Federal Claims.

But Barrett said ‘both law and logic’ support that the federal court in Massachusetts does have the authority to review challenges to the guidance the NIH issued about grant money. Barrett joined Jackson and the other three in denying that portion of the Trump administration’s request, though she said she would not weigh in at this early stage on the merits of the case as it proceeds through the lower courts.

Jackson was dissatisfied with this partial denial of the Trump administration’s request, saying it was the high court’s way of preserving the ‘mirage of judicial review while eliminating its purpose: to remedy harms.’

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

The National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine — a largely taxpayer-funded body that has taken in hundreds of millions in federal dollars — is facing pushback for fast-tracking a climate review that critics say is an attempt to undermine the Trump administration’s energy agenda.

Earlier this month, Politico reported that NASEM is using ‘internal funding’ to pay for a review that will be released in September in order to ‘inform’ the Environmental Protection Agency’s move to rescind the Obama-era greenhouse gas endangerment finding, a cornerstone of climate regulation that conservatives say has strangled American energy production.

That effort is being led by molecular biologist Shirley M. Tilghman who, in addition to being a member of NASEM, serves as an External Science Advisor to the Science Philanthropy Alliance, a group tied to the progressive consulting behemoth Arabella Advisors through the New Venture Fund, a nonprofit that pushes a variety of progressive causes. 

Critics tell Fox News Digital they have concerns about the timing of this move and the possible political motives attached to the fast-tracked review. 

‘NASEM’s decision to do a fast-track study on greenhouse gas emissions and endangerment in response to the EPA rule undermines the legitimacy of the National Academies,’ Daren Bakst, Director of the Competitive Enterprise Institute’s Center for Energy and Environment, told Fox News Digital. 

‘The process shows the numerous problems with what they are doing. On August 7, NASEM announced they were doing a report to be finished in September. That is an incredible rush job that by itself undermines the legitimacy of what they are doing. Likely, the report has already been written in whole or in part, given the timing. This rush gives the impression they have their conclusions and are just working backwards. ‘

Conservatives have long argued that groups tied to Arabella Advisors operate as a ‘dark money’ network, influencing policy debates and shaping research priorities behind the scenes. This dynamic reflects a growing entanglement between research institutions and ideologically driven funding streams. 

The concern is heightened by the fact that NASEM derived roughly 58% of its budget from federal funds in 2024. The New York Times reported that ‘about 70%’ of the budget came from federal funds in 2023. 

‘To me, it seems like a move to protect NASEM’s position as the gatekeeper of official science,’ Travis Fisher, director of energy and environmental policy studies at the Cato Institute, told Fox News Digital. ‘I think it’s appropriate to ask whether government-funded researchers and organizations might have a conflict of interest in setting the terms of the climate debate. For example, it’s clear that more alarm means more research funding.’

Regarding the Arabella connection, Fisher said that ‘any overlap’ between the NASEM effort and political advocacy groups ‘deserves scrutiny.’

‘I’d like to know who pushed for NASEM’s involvement in the first place and whether ideological groups applied any pressure to get NASEM to join the political fray,’ Fisher said. ‘In any case, I’m surprised to see NASEM inject itself into inherently political fights over EPA policy.’

James Taylor, President of the Heartland Institute, told Fox News Digital that NASEM is a ‘leftist’ and ‘statist’ institution that is ‘funded by and dependent on big government.’

Fox News Digital previously reported that NASEM, sometimes referred to as NAS, has raked in hundreds of millions of dollars of taxpayer funds in recent years while doling out hefty salaries to its top brass and bankrolling a variety of left-wing initiatives. 

‘It has long since stopped being a scientific organization and is now merely a political one,’ Taylor said. 

‘For example, in a recent so-called climate science assessment, only 22% of the authors had PhDs, which was equaled by the 22% of authors who worked for environmental activist groups. Counting Democrat politicians who were also co-authors, the NAS assessment had more environmental activists writing the report than actual scientists. NAS is a joke and has no credibility at all.’

In a statement to Fox News Digital, a NASEM spokesperson said, ‘This fast-track study is being funded by private donations, and is intended to inform public comments requested by EPA.’

‘The New Venture Fund is a 501(c)(3) organization that uses a fiscal sponsorship model to support a wide range of nonpartisan projects,’ a New Venture Fund spokesperson told Fox News Digital. ‘We fully support efforts to increase funding for foundational science and proudly served as Science Philanthropy Alliance’s fiscal sponsor until it spun off in 2023.’

‘Arabella Advisors is an independent organization and one of our many vendors. They do not ‘manage’ New Venture Fund or have any say in our funding or fiscal sponsorship decisions.’

The revelation comes as the Trump administration seeks to rescind the Obama-era greenhouse gas endangerment finding, a cornerstone of climate regulation that critics say has strangled American energy production.

The 45-day public comment period for the proposal is set to end in mid-September. 

The 2009 Endangerment Finding, issued by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), declared that greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide, methane and nitrous oxide ‘threaten both the public health and the public welfare of current and future generations.’

This finding established the EPA’s legal obligation under the Clean Air Act to regulate greenhouse gas emissions.

In March, EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin pledged to roll back the assessment, claiming it has fueled an avalanche of regulations that have cost the U.S. economy over $1 trillion. He doubled down again in July during a speech in Indiana, delivered against a backdrop of trucks, while slamming the Biden-Harris Administration’s electric vehicle mandate.

‘With this proposal, the Trump EPA is proposing to end sixteen years of uncertainty for automakers and American consumers,’ Zeldin said, adding that regulatory relief will give U.S. consumers affordable choices when car shopping.

An Arabella spokesperson told Fox News Digital that Arabella ‘does not fund any organizations.’

‘We are a professional services firm that provides administrative and operational support such as compliance, HR, and accounting to nonprofit clients. We are not a donor and we are not a funder.’

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Most of the NHL’s top unrestricted free agents found homes early in July.

But there is still plenty of action to track during the NHL offseason. There are trades to be made and restricted free agents to re-sign. Salary arbitration hearings were scheduled from July 20 to Aug. 4, although players and teams settled beforehand in all 11 cases.

Also, players whose contracts run out after the 2025-26 season are eligible to sign contract extensions at any time.

Here is a look at the latest signings, trades and other news that have happened since the initial surge of movement in late June and early July:

Aug. 22: Marco Rossi signs three-year deal with Wild

Rossi, 23, will average $5 million in his three-year contract after recording career bests of 24 goals, 36 assists and 60 points. The start of his NHL career was delayed by complications from COVID, but he has recorded back-to-back 20-goal seasons. He led the Wild with seven power-play goals last season and finished second in points to help Minnesota reach the playoffs despite losing Kirill Kaprizov for half a season to injury.

Also: The Panthers added center depth by signing Luke Kunin to a one-year deal. He split time last season between the Sharks and Blue Jackets and was leading San Jose with 163 hits at the time of his trade.

Aug. 21: Frank Nazar signs extension with Blackhawks

The Blackhawks saw enough after 56 games to make Nazar, 21, the highest-paid player on the team – for the moment. The nearly $6.6 million cap hit in his seven-year extension, which kicks in during the 2026-27 season, moves him past Tyler Bertuzzi ($5.5 million).

Nazar, a 2022 first-round pick, had 26 points in 53 games in 2024-25 after being recalled from the American Hockey League in December. The extension continued his run of good news. He helped the United States win gold at the world championships and he has been invited to USA Hockey’s Olympic orientation session.

Connor Bedard, the No. 1 overall pick of 2023, is also eligible for an extension and almost certainly will top Nazar’s number.

Aug. 20: Victor Olofsson signs with Avalanche

Olofsson signed a one-year deal with Colorado worth $1.575 million, according to puckpedia.com. He played last season with the Vegas Golden Knights and had three 20-goal seasons with the Buffalo Sabres. The winger will provide secondary scoring after the Avalanche traded Charlie Coyle and Miles Wood this summer.

Also: Utah Mammoth goaltender Connor Ingram was cleared by the NHL/NHLPA player assistance program to return to the NHL. He went into the program in March.

Aug. 19: Milan Lucic signs tryout agreement with Blues

Lucic, 37, will try an NHL comeback, coming to St. Louis’ training camp on a professional tryout agreement. He last played in October 2023 and entered the NHL/NHLPA player assistance program. He has been cleared by the program, the Blues said. During his prime, Lucic was a key power forward and won a Stanley Cup with the Boston Bruins in 2011. His numbers had dropped off in recent seasons.

Aug. 18: Hudson Fasching signs with Blue Jackets

The Blue Jackets added forward depth by signing Hudson Fasching to a one-year deal. It’s a two-way contract, meaning he’d make less if sent to the American Hockey League. Fasching, 30, played for the New York Islanders the past three seasons and has 40 points in 175 career NHL games with three teams.

Also: The Colorado Avalanche signed University of New Hampshire defenseman Alex Gagne to a two-year, entry-level contract. The 6-foot-5, 225-pounder was team captain last season, had a career-best 17 points and led the Wildcats with 62 blocked shots.

Aug. 15: Travis Hamonic signs with Red Wings

Hamonic is getting a one year deal at $1 million. The veteran depth addition likely will play in the bottom defense pairing. He ranked second on the Ottawa Senators last season in blocked shots per 60 minutes and also killed penalties. Detroit will be his fifth NHL team. Hamonic, who turns 35 on Aug. 16, has 53 goals and 242 points in 900 career games.

Aug. 10: Jack Johnson signs tryout agreement with Wild

The 38-year-old defenseman will go to camp as a tryout in a bid for a 20th NHL season. He played 41 games last season with the Columbus Blue Jackets. The Wild might be without defenseman Jonas Brodin at the beginning of the season, according to the Athletic.

Also: The Kraken agreed to terms with defenseman Ryker Evans for two years at a $2.05 million average. He ranked fourth among Seattle blueliners with 25 points and was first with 123 hits.

Aug. 9: Nathan Bastian signs with Stars

He’ll get a one-year, $775,000 contract and add depth to the forward group. Bastian had played all but 12 games of his NHL career with the New Jersey Devils and ranked third among New Jersey regulars last season with 12.83 hits per 60 minutes. He has career totals of 33 goals, 68 points and 190 penalty minutes in 276 regular season games between the Devils and Seattle Kraken.

Aug. 8: Two-time Stanley Cup winner Kyle Clifford retires

Cllifford, who won Stanley Cup titles in 2012 and 2014 with the Los Angeles Kings, is retiring after 13 NHL seasons. The NHL Players’ Association said he would move into a player development role with the Toronto Maple Leafs. Clifford had two stints with the Leafs and finished his playing career in the organization with the American Hockey League’s Marlies. He also played for the St. Louis Blues and finished with 66 goals, 144 points and 905 penalty minutes in 753 NHL games.

Aug. 8: Avalanche re-sign Joel Kiviranta

Kiviranta is sticking around for a third season in Colorado by signing a one-year deal. Terms weren’t released. The bottom-six forward had 16 goals last season.

Aug. 2: Nick Robertson settles before arbitration hearing

All 11 players who filed for salary arbitration settled their cases before their hearings, with the Maple Leafs and Robertson the last to do so. Here are the new contracts the players agreed to, listed alphabetically.

Morgan Barron (Winnipeg Jets): Two years, $3.7 million.Lukas Dostal (Anaheim Ducks): Five years, $32.5 million.Drew Helleson (Anaheim Ducks): Two years, $2.2 million.Kaapo Kakko (Seattle Kraken). Three years, $13.575 million.Nick Robertson (Toronto Maple Leafs). One year, $1.825 million.Dylan Samberg (Winnipeg Jets): Three years, $15.75 million.Arvid Soderblom (Chicago Blackhawks): Two years, $5.5 million.Jayden Struble (Montreal Canadiens): Two years, $2.825 million.Conor Timmins (Buffalo Sabres): Two years, $4.4 million.Maxim Tsyplakov (New York Islanders): Two years, $4.5 million.Gabriel Vilardi (Winnipeg Jets): Six years, $45 million.

July 31: Sabres’ Devon Levi re-signs for two years

He’ll average $812,500 in the deal and is the final restricted free agent who needed to re-sign. He has had back-to-back solid seasons in the American Hockey League. With the Buffalo Sabres signing Alex Lyon this summer, Levi is expected to spend more time in the AHL for now.

July 28: Nicklas Backstrom signs deal in Sweden

The former Capitals star, 37, is returning to hockey by signing a deal to play for Brynas for the first time since 2006-07. He had played 1,105 NHL games in between, recording 1,033 points. But he had missed all of last season and most of 2023-24 while recovering from 2022 hip surgery.

July 17: Maple Leafs acquire Dakota Joshua from Canucks

Vancouver receives a 2028 fourth-round pick. Joshua will likely slot in the Maple Leafs’ bottom six forwards. He had a career-best 18 goals and 32 points in 2023-24 but missed the beginning of last season after having surgery for testicular cancer. He finished with 14 points in 57 games. He originally was drafted by the Maple Leafs but never played for them.

July 17: Blue Jackets’ Yegor Chinakhov requests trade

Yegor Chinakhov, a former first-round draft pick of the Columbus Blue Jackets, has asked for a trade.

The agent for Chinakhov posted on X, formerly Twitter, about the trade request.

“I had some misunderstandings with the coach during the season,” read the post quoting Chinakhov. “Now I would be glad to have a trade. I would like to move to a different location. Will I return to Russia? As long as I can play in the NHL, I will keep developing here.”

Chinakhov, who was selected with the No. 21 overall selection in 2020, missed nearly half of last season with a back injury, an issue that also sidelined him for the final 17 games in the previous season. – Joey Kaufman, Columbus Dispatch

July 15: Sabres re-sign Bowen Byram for two years

The defenseman will average $6.25 million in the deal. He was considered a candidate for an offer sheet but the Sabres reportedly filed for arbitration to prevent that. He ranked third among Sabres defensemen in average ice time and third with 38 points. The cap hit makes him the third highest paid defenseman on the team behind Rasmus Dahlin and Owen Power.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

After unexpected bad weather pushed Friday’s Tour Championship Round 2 tee times up by three hours, Russell Henley leads for the second consecutive day, but after Friday, he shares the top spot with Tommy Fleetwood.

Fleetwood, who is seeking his first win of the season, finished the second round with a score of 63, placing him in a tie for the lead at 13-under par. The competition for the top spot has been fierce among Fleetwood, Russell Henley and Cameron Young. However, it was Henley who ultimately took the spotlight and continued the momentum by making birdies on his last two holes to finish with a score of 66, also achieving a tie for first at 13-under through the second round.

USA TODAY Sports provided ongoing coverage of the Tour Championship on Friday. Here are the leaderboard updates and highlights of all the action from Round 2.

Tour Championship leaderboard

  • T1. Tommy Fleetwood: -13
  • T1. Russell Henley: -13
  • T2. Cameron Young: -11
  • T4. Robert MacIntyre: -10
  • T4. Patrick Cantlay: -10
  • 6. Scottie Scheffler: -8
  • T7. Shane Lowry: -7
  • T7. Chris Gotterup: -7
  • T7: Sam Burns: -7
  • T7. Rory McIlroy: -7
  • T7. Ben Griffin: -7
  • T7: Akshay Bhatia: -7
  • T7. Justin Thomas: -7
  • T14. Keegan Bradley: -6
  • T14: Harris English: -6
  • T14. Collin Morikawa: -6
  • T14: Jacob Bridgeman: -6
  • T14: Nick Taylor: -6
  • T14: Ludvig Aberg: -6

Fleetwood finishes second round

Tommy Fleetwood has completed the second round with a score of 13-under, currently holding the top spot as the last golfers finish the round.

Fleetwood claims the solo lead

After a birdie on the No. 13 hole, Tommy Fleetwood has taken the lead with a score of 11-under, one stroke ahead of Cameron Young, who is in second place with a score of 10-under.

Cameron Young has three birdies in a row

Cameron Young made three birdies on the front nine and has kept it up on the back nine with three consecutive birdies on Nos. 11, 12 and 13. Young has shot up the leaderboard all the way to a tie for third place at 8-under for the tournament.

Shane Lowry cards 7-under in second round

Shane Lowry finished his second round on absolute fire with six birdies on the back nine and carded a 7-under for the day. That gives Lowry a 7-under for the tournament and puts him in a tie for sixth place overall.

Scottie Scheffler drops a shot, too

Scottie Scheffler’s 14-foot putt for par rolled to the hole but just sit next to the lip to force the World No. 1 to tap in for bogey. Scheffler is now 7-under for the tournament and in a five-way tie for third place behind Russell Henley (-9) and Tommy Fleetwood (-8).

Russell Henley drops a shot

After nearly making a birdie on No. 3, leader Russell Henley had to settle for a par. On No. 4, he overshot the hole on his third shot and two-putted for a bogey that dropped him back to 9-under for the tournament. Henley clings to a one-shot lead over Scottie Scheffler and Tommy Fleetwood.

Scottie Scheffler makes birdie on No. 3

Scottie Scheffler rolled in a 12-foot birdie putt to move to 8-under for the tournament and pick up one stroke on leader Russell Henley, who lipped out his own birdie on No. 3 and settled for par.

Keegan Bradley, Harry Hall continue to sizzle in second round

Keegan Bradley and Harry Hall are both at 5-under for the day, which makes them 5-under for the tournament and in a tie for ninth place. They have the best scores of the day so far.

Scottie Scheffler tees off

Scottie Scheffler (-7) and Russell Henley (-9) are the last group to tee off in the second round of the Tour Championship. All 30 golfers are now on the course.

Robert MacIntyre starts with a birdie

After an excellent first round during which he shot 6-under, Robert MacIntryre began Friday with a birdie to get to 7-under for the tournament, tied with Scottie Scheffler and just two strokes behind leader Russell Henley.

Harry Hall surging in second round

After starting his round with pars on the first two holes, Harry Hall has birdied four of the next six holes to run his overall score to 4-under, which puts him in a tie for 10th place overall.

Rory McIlroy birdies first hole

Rory McIlroy got off to a nice start Friday making a birdie 3 on the first hole. He ripped his tee shot perfectly down the middle of the fairway to set up a second shot that he stuck within 10 feet of the hole. And then he rolled his birdie putt in to get to 5-under for the tournament.

Tour Championship tee times, pairings 

Second Round – Friday

All times ET 

  • 8 a.m.: Maverick McNealy, Sepp Straka
  • 8:11 a.m.: Andrew Novak, Keegan Bradley
  • 8:22 a.m.: Shane Lowry, Corey Conners
  • 8:33 a.m.: Chris Gotterup, Harry Hall
  • 8:44 a.m.: Hideki Matsuyama, Justin Rose
  • 9 a.m.: Harris English, J.J. Spaun
  • 9:11 a.m.: Sungjae Im, Viktor Hovland
  • 9:22 a.m.: Brian Harman, Cameron Young
  • 9:33 a.m.: Nick Taylor, Sam Burns
  • 9:44 a.m.: Rory McIlroy, Jacob Bridgeman
  • 10 a.m.: Ludvig Åberg, Ben Griffin
  • 10:11 a.m.: Tommy Fleetwood, Akshay Bhatia
  • 10:22 a.m.: Justin Thomas, Robert MacIntyre
  • 10:33 a.m.: Collin Morikawa, Patrick Cantlay
  • 10:44 a.m.: Russell Henley, Scottie Scheffler 

Watch the Tour Championship

Here’s the broadcast schedule for Friday’s second round of the 2025 Tour Championship:

All times Eastern

  • 11 a.m.-6 p.m. on ESPN+ 
  • 1-6 p.m. on Golf Channel,Fubo 

Rory McIlroy tee time

Rory McIlroy will tee off at 9:44 a.m. ET, as the top 10 at the Tour Championship are getting ready to take the course. McIlroy shot a 4-under during Thursday’s first round while being paired with ‘Happy Gilmore 2’ castmate Scottie Scheffler.

How many rounds is the Tour Championship?

The Tour Championship at Atlanta’s at East Lake Golf Club will be like a typical weekend golf tournament: four rounds, one round each day on Thursday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday. (Weather permitting, of course.)

Keegan Bradley off to fast start

Keegan Bradley entered the second round at even par, and scored a par on each of Friday’s first two holes. But Bradley has gone on to birdie two of the next four holes, including No. 6 when he stuck his third shot within 2 feet of the hole and tapped in the birdie putt. Bradley is at 2-under for the tournament, which puts him in a tie for 17th place.

Tour Championship weather

According to Accuweather, the forecast at East Lake Golf Club in Atlanta is expected to be cloudy and humid with heavy thunderstorms late in the day. These rains are expected to arrive as early as 2 p.m. ET.

Tour Championship begins

With heavy thunderstorms in the Atlanta forecast Friday, the Tour Championship’s second round started at 8 a.m. ET with Maverick McNealy and Sepp Straka teeing off.

What time is Tour Championship? 

The 2025 Tour Championship continues Friday, Aug. 22. The first tee time on Friday is 8 a.m. ET. This differs from Thursday’s 11:16 first tee, which is due to expected inclement weather.

How to watch Tour Championship: TV channel, streaming 

The 2025 Tour Championship, the final event of the PGA Tour’s FedEx Cup Playoffs, will be televised nationally on the Golf Channel and NBC. It can be live streamed via ESPN+, Peacock and Fubo depending on the time. Here’s the full broadcast schedule for all four rounds: 

All times Eastern 

Friday, Aug. 22 

  • 11 a.m.-6 p.m. on ESPN+ 
  • 1-6 p.m. on Golf Channel,Fubo 

Saturday, Aug. 23 

  • Noon-7 p.m. on ESPN+ 
  • 1-2:30 p.m. on Golf Channel, Fubo 
  • 2:30-7 p.m. on NBC, Peacock 

Sunday, Aug. 24 

  • 11 a.m.-6 p.m. on ESPN+ 
  • Noon-1:30 p.m. on Golf Channel, Fubo 
  • 1:30-6 p.m. on NBC, Peacock 

FedEx Cup standings 

Here are the 30 players who qualified for the 2025 Tour Championship and their FedEx Cup points following the BMW Championship, won by Scottie Scheffler: 

  1. Scottie Scheffler: 7,456 points 
  2. Rory McIlroy: 3,687 points 
  3. J.J. Spaun: 3,493 points 
  4. Justin Rose: 3,326 points 
  5. Tommy Fleetwood: 2,923 points 
  6. Ben Griffin: 2,798 points 
  7. Russell Henley: 2,795 points 
  8. Sepp Straka: 2,783 points 
  9. Robert MacIntyre: 2,750 points
  10. Maverick McNealy: 2,547 points 
  11. Harris English: 2,512 points 
  12. Justin Thomas: 2,477 points 
  13. Cameron Young: 2,185 points 
  14. Ludvig Aberg: 2,179 points 
  15. Andrew Novak: 2,030 points 
  16. Keegan Bradley: 1,993 points 
  17. Sam Burns: 1,871 points 
  18. Brian Harman: 1,735 points 
  19. Corey Conners: 1,719 points 
  20. Patrick Cantlay: 1,661 points 
  21. Collin Morikawa: 1,656 points 
  22. Viktor Hovland: 1,637 points 
  23. Hideki Matsuyama: 1,630 points 
  24. Shane Lowry: 1,607 points 
  25. Nick Taylor: 1,564 points 
  26. Harry Hall: 1,475 points 
  27. Jacob Bridgeman: 1,475 points 
  28. Sungjae Im: 1,422 points 
  29. Chris Gotterup: 1,414 points 
  30. Akshay Bhatia: 1,409 points 
This post appeared first on USA TODAY

  • Quenton Marcelles Brown, father of Celtics guard Jaylen Brown, was arrested and charged with attempted murder.
  • The incident allegedly stemmed from a parking lot dispute over a ‘door ding.’
  • The victim sustained multiple stab wounds and was in critical condition.

The father of Boston Celtics guard Jaylen Brown was arrested and charged with attempted murder after allegedly stabbing another man in a parking lot.

According to jail records, 57-year-old Quenton Marcelles Brown was booked on that charge, and his bail bond was set at $300,000.

According to a report obtained by the news outlet, the victim, who was in critical condition, was stabbed in his back, upper right clavicle area, and left hand. He also suffered a broken right rib that might require surgery.

Brown is a four-time NBA All-Star and 2024 Finals MVP, and has played with the Celtics since being drafted in 2016. He averaged 22.2 points, 5.8 rebounds, and 4.5 assists last season.

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  • The Women’s Professional Baseball League is holding tryouts ahead of its inaugural 2026 season.
  • Committed players include history-makers including Kelsie Whitmore and Mo’Ne Davis.
  • ‘We’re finally being seen,” Whitmore says of the WPBL.

For one of the few times in her more than decade-long baseball career, Kelsie Whitmore doesn’t have to worry about creating her own path.

At 27, she has experienced an entire spectrum of emotional highs and lows in her quest to simply play ball, from assimilating with all the boys on her high school baseball team, to a significant diversion from the path forcing her into college softball, to the trailblazing glory, but also the punishing loneliness, of being the first woman to play alongside former and current big leaguers in the independent Atlantic League.

So perhaps it will feel a little strange when Whitmore reports Aug. 22 for tryouts with the Women’s Professional Baseball League, which is staging four days of evaluations in Washington, culminating at Nationals Park on Aug. 25, setting the stage for the league’s first player draft in October ahead of its inaugural 2026 season.

Whitmore will see so many familiar faces among the 600 players registered for tryouts, such as her teammates on the U.S. Women’s National Team who are the backbone of this tight-knit yet often overshadowed community. And she’ll also see players young enough to have drawn inspiration from her and, in turn, will inspire the next generation.

The logistics and uncertainties of such a bold new venture can wait a moment. For Whitmore, the space has been created for athletes like her to flourish, and she cannot wait to see what that will look like.

“Everything starts with a foundation,” Whitmore tells USA TODAY Sports. “Us women in baseball have been doing it on our own for so long. “And to see the people behind the scenes at the league getting involved in it like we as women have: That’s what we need. The people outside of it who are willing to step into our world and tag along.

“And now, being able to have other people see the vision we do – that’s where everything’s going to blossom, where opportunities are going to grow.

“I’ve always dreamt of it. I didn’t know if it was ever going to happen.”

The intended reality of what was once Whitmore’s dream looks like this: The WPBL will consist of a handful of ballclubs playing at one or two central sites beginning in May 2026. Games will be Thursday through Sunday, the better to fit players’ schedules and appeal to fans.

Players will be paid within a salary structure determined by their selection in the draft, with a revenue-sharing program based on the league’s sponsorship income. Committed players include former Little League World Series star Mo’ne Davis, back on the diamond after a college softball career at Hampton, and Olivia Pichardo, the first woman to play in a Division I college game, for Brown.

Co-founder Justine Siegal also founded Baseball for All, a girls baseball organization whose annual national tournament recently marked its 10th anniversary; fellow co-founder and chief investor Keith Stein, like several key members of the organization, hails from Canada, where, along with Japan, women’s baseball flourishes in a manner never seen in the USA.

Chair Assia Grazioli-Venier is a venture capitalist who has invested in the NWSL’s Washington Spirit and the sports vertical Just Women’s Sports.

It is all very ground-floor at the moment, lacking, for better or worse, the financial backbone and overlord status the NBA lent to the WNBA for its 1997 launch.

Eventually, success will be measured by attendance and cultural currency and, perhaps, TV ratings. For now, Whitmore only sees one significant triumph: A destination for young, talented ballplayers.

“Success within it is allowing them to not go through what I went through when I was younger, which was not knowing what path to take to do what I loved,” says Whitmore. “There was no path. There was no direction.

“I had to create the path, create the direction.”

Detours and destiny

For Whitmore, that meant staying on the diamond by any means necessary. She played, and flourished, on her baseball team at Temecula Valley High School, a baseball-rich exurb an hour north of San Diego.

Yet finding a place to play collegiately, even a small-college option like former pitcher Ila Borders was able to find in the 1990s, proved elusive.

So she, like Davis, accepted a softball scholarship, to Cal State Fullerton. By her senior year in 2021, Whitmore was the Big West Conference’s player of the year, with a .395/.507/.824 slash line.

Yet the lack of an outlet forced Whitmore into bifurcating her talents in order to get her education paid for, as she was forced to shelve pitching for most of those years. She hopes more former baseball players gravitate back to the big diamond.

“I had to play softball in college, unfortunately,” she says. “I did not want to. It was just where my path led me to. I wouldn’t change it. But there’s a lot of girls that grew up playing baseball but transitioned into softball.

“I think those girls that grew up playing the game of baseball still have a lot of passion for it and can coexist with us women who are in baseball. And I think they should.

“They had a lost opportunity a while back and maybe if they came back to it, they’d fall back in love with it again.”

Yet Whitmore’s precocious ability enabled her to stay in it. She first earned a spot on the USWNT in 2014, when she was 16. By 17, she joined Stacy Piagno as the only women on the roster of the short-season independent league Sonoma Stompers, spending two summers playing against men a decade her senior.

After college, another opportunity presented itself: The Staten Island FerryHawks, members of the independent Atlantic League, offered Whitmore a shot.

She’d be the first woman since Borders to play at such a high level, and the first to play in a Major League Baseball-affiliated indie league after the minor leagues were reorganized.

Whitmore spent two seasons with the FerryHawks, the challenges between the lines and beyond both significantly challenging. She had one hit in 54 at-bats, and in 24 appearances on the mound gave up 27 earned runs in 22 ⅔ innings.

She found more success playing pro ball in Mexico but noted that “they weren’t ready for a woman.” She opted to end a stint with the independent Oakland Ballers after one season.

It was equal parts invigorating, intimidating and isolating.

“Sonoma, Staten Island, the Ballers and Mexico – all of it I’m thankful for,” she says. “I loved each one, but there were also times it was really lonely. Like, really lonely. It was scary sometimes. It was hard. It made me really crave being able to be on a team full of women.

“I didn’t feel like I could be myself as a player and a person. Not that anyone made me feel that way. But you’re trying to compete and keep your spot and not get cut and trying to prove yourself. It felt like a lot of pressure over the years, but I learned so much. And I was surrounded by a lot of great players.  I would not take it back one bit.

“I just made a hundred more brothers than I had before.”

She emerged just a little disillusioned, yet the perfect vehicle to discover her joy for the game was just around the corner.

Going Bananas

When Whitmore opted not to rejoin the Ballers for a second season, she was sans team. A year earlier, though, the Savannah Bananas had reached out, inquiring about her services.

Figuring their vaudevillian brand of Banana Ball was just a little too unserious, she declined. Yet by this year, she was ready to join the circus.

“When they called, it was a sign that maybe, instead of me chasing all these teams that aren’t wanting me the way I want them, the Bananas wanted me for me,” she says. “That really hit me. I was like you know what? I’m gonna take a chance on it.”

At the least, she says, it enabled her to fulfill some dreams, such as playing in big league ballparks, in front of overflow crowds, even. Come September, she’ll play at the ballpark of her youth when the Bananas visit Petco Park for a two-night gig.

And she knew she made the right decision on Aug. 15, when Bananas founder and owner Jesse Cole approached her in the Chicago White Sox clubhouse with a message before taking the field.

“He says, ‘Listen, I want you to have fun out there. People know you’re having fun, they’re having fun, too,” she recalls. “Because I’m very serious, I put pressure on myself, I get mad at the little things, I take the game so seriously.

“He says, ‘You’ve already won being out there. You don’t have to prove yourself anymore. Just go out there and enjoy it.’

“I had a really good inning and I had fun and I felt the most me out there.”

And it is not like the baseball is bad. The Bananas feature former professional and collegiate players, mixed in with regionally-appropriate MLB alum cameos, such as White Sox lefty Mark Buehrle, who at 46 worked an inning in Chicago with old batterymate A.J. Pierzynski.

Whitmore recently induced three ground balls in an inning of work, all of them to a shortstop who performed some form of acrobatics in converting all three into routine outs.

“It’s making me be more creative and honestly, helping me be more me, as a player,” she says. “That’s something I’ve always felt more restricted to in conventional pro ball, where it’s like, ‘Hey, you can’t throw 90? Well, we need you to train in the offseason to get as close as you can to 90,’ and that’s all they want. Velo, velo, numbers, numbers. It’s trying to fit this cookie cutter.

“With Banana Ball, they don’t want you to be cookie cutter. They want you to come as yourself and be as you as you can and compete. And have fun.”

Time to ball out

That freedom has allowed Whitmore’s mind to wander when it comes to what the WPBL can become. She envisions the league hub as a place where a loyal, local following can be developed, along with a destination for out-of-towners to visit for a game.

She hopes the USWNT can, through the WPBL, develop more cohesion as a unit, since they’d be playing together or against one another, rather than convening biannually. That should only enhance their chances of breaking Japan’s stranglehold on the Women’s World Cup gold medal, which they’ve won seven consecutive times since the USA’s last gold in 2006.

She hopes a high quality of play will attract sponsorship and support from USA Baseball and MLB, which produces a Trailblazers Series for teen baseball players and in May partnered with Athletes Unlimited to “strategically invest” in their softball league.

And she hopes ballplayers can eventually join their sisters in soccer, basketball and tennis and “get to a point where us women in the league can make a living off this, honestly.”

It all starts this weekend, when Whitmore reconvenes with friends old and new and expects to have her eyes opened by the talent around her.

‘I’m excited to see girls that I don’t even know that show up and they’re balling out,” she says. “Women’s baseball is such a small world and we kind of all know each other. However, the ones that maybe haven’t played on the national team and I haven’t met them before – I’m excited to see those faces too. At the end of the day, it’s exciting to see how many girls love baseball and want to be a part of it.

“It gives reassurance that wow, I’m really not the only one that loves this game. It shows how powerful women in baseball are. We’ve been here, it’s just that now, we’re finally being seen.”

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Justice Kentanji Brown Jackson criticized on Thursday what she said were the ‘recent tendencies’ of the Supreme Court to side with the Trump administration, providing her remarks in a bitter dissent in a case related to National Institutes of Health grants.

Jackson, a Biden appointee, rebuked her colleagues for ‘lawmaking’ on the shadow docket, where an unusual volume of fast, preliminary decisionmaking has taken place related to the hundreds of lawsuits President Donald Trump’s administration has faced.

‘This is Calvinball jurisprudence with a twist. Calvinball has only one rule: There are no fixed rules. We seem to have two: that one, and this Administration always wins,’ Jackson wrote.

The liberal justice pointed to the Oxford English Dictionary’s definition of Calvinball, which describes it as the practice of applying rules inconsistently for self-serving purposes.

Jackson, the high court’s most junior justice, said the majority ‘[bent] over backwards to accommodate’ the Trump administration by allowing the NIH to cancel about $783 million in grants that did not align with the administration’s priorities.

Some of the grants were geared toward research on diversity, equity and inclusion; COVID-19; and gender identity. Jackson argued the grants went far beyond that and that ‘life-saving biomedical research’ was at stake.

‘So, unfortunately, this newest entry in the Court’s quest to make way for the Executive Branch has real consequences, for the law and for the public,’ Jackson wrote.

The Supreme Court’s decision was fractured and only a partial victory for the Trump administration.

In a 5-4 decision greenlighting, for now, the NIH’s existing grant cancellations, Chief Justice John Roberts sided with the three liberal justices. In a second 5-4 decision that keeps a lower court’s block on the NIH’s directives about the grants intact, Justice Amy Coney Barrett, a Trump appointee, sided with Roberts and the three liberals. The latter portion of the ruling could hinder the NIH’s ability to cancel future grants.

The varying opinions by the justices came out to 36 pages total, which is lengthy relative to other emergency rulings. Jackson’s dissent made up more than half of that.

George Washington University law professor Jonathan Turley observed in an op-ed last month a rise in ‘rhetoric’ from Jackson, who garnered a reputation as the most vocal justice during oral arguments upon her ascension to the high court.

‘The histrionic and hyperbolic rhetoric has increased in Jackson’s opinions, which at times portray her colleagues as abandoning not just the Constitution but democracy itself,’ Turley said.

Barrett had sharp words for Jackson in a recent highly anticipated decision in which the Supreme Court blocked lower courts from imposing universal injunctions on the government. Barrett accused Jackson of subscribing to an ‘imperial judiciary’ and instructed people not to ‘dwell’ on her colleague’s dissent.

Barrett, the lone justice to issue the split decision in the NIH case, said challenges to the grants should be brought by the grant recipients in the Court of Federal Claims.

But Barrett said ‘both law and logic’ support that the federal court in Massachusetts does have the authority to review challenges to the guidance the NIH issued about grant money. Barrett joined Jackson and the other three in denying that portion of the Trump administration’s request, though she said she would not weigh in at this early stage on the merits of the case as it proceeds through the lower courts.

Jackson was dissatisfied with this partial denial of the Trump administration’s request, saying it was the high court’s way of preserving the ‘mirage of judicial review while eliminating its purpose: to remedy harms.’

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