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Navigating off the hot seat is tough. Even coaches who temporarily turn down the heat usually experience a later flare-up that incinerates their tenure. Best to avoid the heat altogether. 

A year ago, Auburn’s Bryan Harsin entered his second season on the hot seat. His debut had flopped, recruiting stalled, and he was subject to a university inquiry in the offseason. Harsin’s goose was cooked, and it was just matter of when the oven would ding. Auburn fired him on Halloween, ending his tenure after 21 games.

No SEC football coach faces the heat Harsin experienced last year, but a few coaches could quickly move toward the hot seat if this season sours.

And hot-seat pressure is only one type of pressure SEC coaches face.

Here’s my ranking of the five SEC coaches facing the most pressure this season.

5. Zach Arnett (Mississippi State)

Promoting Arnett from defensive coordinator to coach became the logical move for MSU after Mike Leach’s unexpected death in December. Arnett had been in his position for three seasons, and he offered stability at a tumultuous time. Also, Arnett’s coaching stock had been rising, although, under normal circumstances, he probably would have been at least a couple of years away from an opportunity like this.

Zac Selmon became Mississippi State athletics director following Arnett’s hire, so it’s important that Arnett make a good impression on his new boss. Year 1 charts the course for a coach’s tenure. Arnett will be judged on his decision to pivot away from Leach’s “Air Raid” offense. If State’s offense flourishes, Arnett will be credited as a bold leader. If the offense stalls, his decision will be dubbed a hasty change that cost the Bulldogs’ their identity.  

4. Sam Pittman (Arkansas)

The Head Hog had the Razorbacks rumbling along after two seasons, and his personality is tailormade for Arkansas. But after receiving a contract extension and a raise last summer, Pittman’s third season became one of unattained potential, although Arkansas finished on an upswing by beating Kansas in the Liberty Bowl.

Pittman’s 19-17 record at Arkansas looks pedestrian, until you consider the Razorbacks were stuck in the muck before his arrival. Predecessor Chad Morris failed to win a single SEC game in two seasons. Pittman retains job security, and the Razorbacks should stabilize behind talented veteran quarterback KJ Jefferson. If they don’t, though, the question must be asked whether Arkansas’ nine-win season in 2021 was Pittman’s ceiling.

3. Nick Saban (Alabama)

Saban will coach there as long as he likes. Remember, this is not exclusively a hot-seat list. Saban and his Crimson Tide face heightened pressure. Kirby Smart and his Georgia Bulldogs are the SEC’s new kings, courtesy of their consecutive national championships. If the Bulldogs three-peat (something Alabama has never done), they’ll tighten their stranglehold on the sport.

Saban’s headaches don’t end with Georgia. He’s got two new coordinators and a starting quarterback competition. Alabama’s losses to LSU and Tennessee last season marked the first time it lost to both of those rivals in the same season since 2006. Brian Kelly, Josh Heupel and Hugh Freeze comprise the best collection of coaching talent among Alabama’s rivals during Saban’s tenure.

Saban has never gone three straight seasons without a national championship at Alabama. If the Crimson Tide does not reclaim its standing, questions about Saban’s age – he’ll be 72 in October – and whether he’s built to rule in the NIL era will gain steam.

2. Billy Napier (Florida)

Florida fans don’t just want to win. Spoiled by Steve Spurrier and Urban Meyer, they want to be entertained. The Gators were neither consistent winners nor particularly exciting in Napier’s debut. The highlights – a win against Utah and a trouncing of South Carolina – were overshadowed by a loss to Vanderbilt and a whipping by Oregon State.

Florida soured on Dan Mullen at warp speed, and Napier hasn’t won like Mullen. Losing blue-chip quarterback Jaden Rashada from the 2023 recruiting class didn’t help. It doesn’t much matter that the recruiting miss was more of an NIL snafu than anything Napier flubbed.

Napier inherited a thinner-than-usual cupboard at Florida, and his Louisiana tenure took flight in his second season. If Florida musters some patience with Napier, this still could work, but Florida’s schedule is brutal, its quarterback situation is bleak and an SEC coach doesn’t get a second honeymoon season.

1. Jimbo Fisher (Texas A&M)

Fisher’s buyout is a whopper. So is the pressure he’s facing. After a 5-7 season, Fisher’s record after five years is worse than predecessor Kevin Sumlin’s was. Coaches who rely on their buyout for job security usually wind up collecting that buyout eventually. Fisher’s buyout will still exceed $77 million come December. That affords him wiggle room, but it’s not an ironclad failsafe. Texas A&M is a revenue giant and has proven to be a big spender.

The Aggies’ disappointing 2022 came with caveats: They had a young roster, were hurt by injuries and lost numerous close games. But, Fisher had a hand in the disappointment. He neglected to solidify A&M’s young roster with transfers, and his offense stalled.

Now, the Aggies are older, they return their top quarterback, and Bobby Petrino is here to revitalize the offense. If those developments don’t fix the Aggies, what excuses will be left?

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The Boston Bruins’ record-setting 65 wins and 135 regular-season points have rolled back to zero.

The big number now is 16, the number of victories needed to capture the Stanley Cup, which the Bruins last did in 2011. They lost in the Final in 2013 and 2019. 

Their first opponent is the Florida Panthers, who had won the Presidents’ Trophy last season and needed a late-season surge to get back to the playoffs.

The NHL has released the schedule for the first round of the Stanley Cup Playoffs. 

All times Eastern, * denotes games played as necessary

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EASTERN CONFERENCE

Boston Bruins vs. Florida Panthers

Bruins lead 1-0

Wednesday, April 19: Florida at Boston, 7:30 p.m., ESPN

Friday, April 21: Boston at Florida, 7:30 p.m., TNT

Sunday, April 23: Boston at Florida, 3:30 p.m., TNT

*Wednesday, April 26: Florida at Boston

*Friday, April 28: Boston at Florida  

*Sunday, April 30: Florida at Boston

Toronto Maple Leafs vs. Tampa Bay Lightning

Tuesday, April 18: Tampa Bay at Toronto, 7:30 p.m., ESPN

Thursday, April 20: Tampa Bay at Toronto, 7 p.m., ESPN

Saturday, April 22: Toronto at Tampa Bay, 7 p.m., TBS

Monday, April 24: Toronto at Tampa Bay, 7:30 p.m., TBS

*Thursday, April 27: Tampa Bay at Toronto        

*Saturday, April 29: Toronto at Tampa Bay 

*Monday, May 1: Tampa Bay at Toronto

Carolina Hurricanes vs. New York Islanders

Hurricanes lead 1-0

Wednesday, April 19: N.Y. Islanders at Carolina, 7 p.m., ESPN2

Friday, April 21: Carolina at N.Y. Islanders, 7 p.m., TBS

Sunday, April 23: Carolina at N.Y. Islanders, 1 p.m., TNT

*Tuesday, April 25: N.Y. Islanders at Carolina

*Friday, April 28: Carolina at N.Y. Islanders

*Sunday, April 30: N.Y. Islanders at Carolina

New Jersey Devils vs. New York Rangers

Tuesday, April 18: N.Y. Rangers at New Jersey, 7 p.m., TBS

Thursday, April 20: N.Y. Rangers at New Jersey, 7:30 p.m., TBS

Saturday, April 22: New Jersey at N.Y. Rangers, 8 p.m., ABC

Monday, April 24: New Jersey at N.Y. Rangers, 7 p.m., ESPN 

*Thursday, April 27: N.Y. Rangers at New Jersey        

*Saturday, April 29: New Jersey at N.Y. Rangers

*Monday, May 1: N.Y. Rangers at New Jersey

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Colorado Avalanche vs. Seattle Kraken

Tuesday, April 18: Seattle at Colorado, 10 p.m., ESPN

Thursday, April 20: Seattle at Colorado, 9:30 p.m., ESPN

Saturday, April 22: Colorado at Seattle, 10 p.m., TBS

Monday, April 24: Colorado at Seattle, 10 p.m., TBS

*Wednesday, April 26: Seattle at Colorado

*Friday, April 28: Colorado at Seattle    

*Sunday, April 30: Seattle at Colorado 

Dallas Stars vs. Minnesota Wild

Wild lead 1-0

Wednesday, April 19: Minnesota at Dallas, 9:30 p.m., ESPN2

Friday, April 21: Dallas at Minnesota, 9:30 p.m., TBS

Sunday, April 23: Dallas at Minnesota, 6:30 p.m., TBS

*Tuesday, April 25: Minnesota at Dallas

*Friday, April 28: Dallas at Minnesota

*Sunday, April 30: Minnesota at Dallas

Vegas Golden Knights vs. Winnipeg Jets

Tuesday, April 18: Winnipeg at Vegas, 9:30 p.m., ESPN2

Thursday, April 20: Winnipeg at Vegas, 10 p.m., TBS

Saturday, April 22: Vegas at Winnipeg, 4 p.m., TBS

Monday, April 24: Vegas at Winnipeg, 9:30 p.m., ESPN

*Thursday, April 27: Winnipeg at Vegas        

*Saturday, April 29: Vegas at Winnipeg

*Monday, May 1: Winnipeg at Vegas

Edmonton Oilers vs. Los Angeles Kings

Kings lead 1-0

Wednesday, April 19: Los Angeles at Edmonton, 10 p.m., ESPN

Friday, April 21: Edmonton at Los Angeles, 10 p.m., TNT

Sunday, April 23: Edmonton at Los Angeles, 9 p.m., TBS

*Tuesday, April 25: Los Angeles at Edmonton        

*Saturday, April 29: Edmonton at Los Angeles     

*Monday, May 1: Los Angeles at Edmonton

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Toronto Blue Jays reliever Anthony Bass drew headlines this weekend after sharing his frustrations regarding an incident on a recent flight.

Bass revealed that his pregnant wife and two children were aboard a United Airlines flight and didn’t receive proper courtesy from flight attendants. Bass said that one of his children dropped some popcorn and his wife was forced to clean up the spill.

The situation didn’t sit well with him. Bass aired his grievance on social media in a slew of tweets that seemingly called out United Airlines for a lack of support. Bass’ wife says United provided her child with the popcorn. 

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Bass received backlash from fans on social media. Several people sided with the flight attendants and their initial reaction to the incident.

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He decided to respond to some of the comments that depicted his frustrations as entitlement.

According to Bass, the situation was handled internally. Bass is married to Sydney Rae James, who is the sister of Jessie James Decker.

This season, Bass has a 7.11 ERA in seven appearances for the Blue Jays.  

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The most important transfers of the offseason play the most important positions on the field: quarterback, cornerback and edge rusher.

In many cases, these transfers are joining some of the best teams in the Bowl Subdivision. At Georgia, Notre Dame, Oregon and elsewhere, experienced newcomers will have a deep influence on the College Football Playoff.

And we’re not done yet. A new transfer window began on April 15 and will remain open through the end of the month, ushering in another round of roster moves before teams retake the practice field this summer.

For now, these are the transfers set to have the biggest impact on the 2023 season:

Notre Dame QB Sam Hartman (Wake Forest)

After setting almost every meaningful record in program history at Wake Forest, Hartman elected to spend his final season of eligibility with the Fighting Irish. His arrival will have a dramatic impact on Notre Dame’s offense that hasn’t had a player of his caliber at the position and the broader playoff race. When healthy, he’s an elite college quarterback who will not be intimidated by the stage and bright spotlight that comes with starting under center for the Irish.

Colorado DB Travis Hunter (Jackson State)

There is absolutely no question about the overall talent level: Hunter was the top prospect in the 2022 class and shockingly chose Jackson State and the opportunity to play for Deion Sanders. He followed Sanders to Colorado and is the flashiest member of a rapidly reworked roster. Amid other story lines and subplots heading into Sanders’ debut, there is enormous intrigue over how Hunter will fare in the transition to the Pac-12 and the Power Five.

LSU DB Denver Harris (Texas A&M)

Harris missed seven games during his one season at A&M due to multiple suspensions from team activities. When on the field, however, Harris flashed All-America potential as a true freshman. He started all five games in which he appeared and more than held his own against SEC competition. Harris walks into a virtually empty room at cornerback for LSU and is expected to step right into a starting role.

Kentucky QB Devin Leary (North Carolina State)

Leary is the Wildcats’ replacement for Will Levis, who transferred from Penn State and developed into one of the top prospects in this year’s draft class. In comparison, Leary arrives on campus as a more polished passer after multiple seasons as the starter at North Carolina State, including a 2021 campaign that saw him throw for 35 touchdowns before a pectoral injury limited him to six games last season. Like Levis, he’s an NFL prospect who should play at an all-conference level.

Georgia WR Dominic Lovett (Missouri)

Lovett pulled down 56 receptions for 846 yards in 2022, leading the Tigers in both categories by a wide margin. The junior is an up-and-coming SEC talent set to occupy a key role as the Bulldogs undergo a series of changes on offense, including a new coordinator in Mike Bobo and a new quarterback, likely former backup Carson Beck. Lovett’s play-making ability will be a valuable asset.

Oregon DE Jordan Burch (South Carolina)

Burch was a five-star recruit who started to break through as a first-year starter in 2022, with 60 tackles, 7½ tackles for loss and 3½ sacks. After a sluggish start to his college career, these numbers in the SEC speak to Burch’s untapped potential and ability to anchor Oregon’s defensive front. He has an NFL frame and athleticism, so a big year could easily land Burch in the upper range of next year’s draft.

Michigan LB Josiah Stewart (Coastal Carolina)

The Wolverines added another promising defensive transfer in former Nebraska linebacker Ernest Hausmann. But Stewart has a longer track record of production on the Group of Five level for the Chanticleers. As a freshman in 2021, he ranked fifth nationally with 12½ sacks and earned first-team All-Sun Belt honors. While his numbers dipped last season, he was still a second-team all-league pick.

Florida State TE Jaheim Bell (South Carolina)

A number of FSU transfers could’ve landed in this spot, including cornerback Fentrell Cypress (Virginia), defensive lineman Braden Fiske (Western Michigan) and offensive tackle Jeremiah Byers (Texas-El Paso). Bell promises to make an impact as a receiver after making 25 catches for 231 yards in 2022. He added another 261 yards on the ground, showing off the unique package of skills now at coach Mike Norvell’s disposal. Overall, this incoming transfer class bolsters the case for picking the Seminoles to win the ACC and compete for a playoff berth.

UCLA RB Carson Steele (Ball State)

Steele is the Bruins’ replacement for Zach Charbonnet after rushing for 1,556 yards in 2022, good for ninth in the FBS. The All-MAC pick ran for 891 yards as a freshman and topped 100 yards in 11 of the 14 games in which he had at least 20 carries across two seasons at Ball State. UCLA will likely play five-star true freshman Donte Moore at quarterback, meaning Steele should play a big part in easing his way into the starting lineup.

Iowa QB Cade McNamara (Michigan)

McNamara was the given the chance to hang onto the starting role in 2022 but lost an extended competition to J.J. McCarthy that drifted into the first two weeks of the regular season. As the starter in 2021, he threw for 2,576 yards and 15 touchdowns to help lead Michigan to a win against Ohio State, the Big Ten championship and a playoff berth. Even taking away the infectious confidence McNamara has brought to Iowa’s much-maligned offense, his skills and experience make him a drastic upgrade over what the Hawkeyes have used at quarterback the past several seasons.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

A little more than a month after officially stepping down as the men’s basketball coach of Notre Dame, where he had spent the last 23 seasons, Mike Brey has found another job – and he’s making a jump to the pros.

Brey, 64, will join the staff of the NBA’s Atlanta Hawks for the 2023-24 season, a person familiar with the situation confirmed to USA TODAY Sports. The person requested anonymity because they were not authorized to publicly comment until the hiring is official. 

The South Bend Tribune, part of the USA TODAY Network, was first to report the news.

The hiring presents something of a reversal, as Notre Dame athletic director Jack Swarbrick had indicated in the school’s January announcement of Brey’s eventual stepping down that Brey would remain on the Fighting Irish staff in an as-yet undefined capacity.

Brey, who has several family members who live near Tampa, Florida, had also been linked to the previously open men’s basketball coaching job at the University of South Florida. Instead, Brey will make the jump to his first coaching job outside of the college ranks.

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Mike Brey has ties to Hawks coach Quinn Snyder

While an assistant at Duke, Brey coached current Hawks head coach Quinn Snyder, who played four seasons for the Blue Devils. Snyder joined coach Mike Krzyzewski’s staff in 1995, the same year Brey left Duke to become a head coach at Delaware. The two have since remained close. Brey spent a few days toward the end of the NBA’s regular season in Atlanta attending and scouting Hawks games.

On Monday morning, during an appearance on Dan Dakich’s ‘Don’t @ Me’ podcast, Brey said he watched all eight first-round NBA playoff games over the weekend. It’s the most time that he can remember watching the NBA, something he just didn’t have time to do at this point in the calendar as a college coach. 

‘That does intrigue me,’ Brey had said about the NBA during his 25-minute appearance.

Mike Brey’s record at Delaware, Notre Dame

Brey compiled a 483-280 (.633) record at Notre Dame, with the victories marking a school record. In his career, including five seasons at Delaware from 1995-2000, he has posted a 582-332 (.637) mark.

Brey’s teams at Delaware and Notre Dame made 15 NCAA Tournament appearances. He was instrumental in helping turn around a Fighting Irish program that was a bottom feeder in the Big East in the years before he took over. Brey led Notre Dame to tournament berths in 12 of his first 17 seasons there. In the most recent six, however, he led the program to the big dance just once, in 2021-22.

Brey is a three-time Big East Coach of the Year and was the AP Coach of the Year for the 2010-11 season. His 146 Big East conference victories still rank fifth all-time in the league, even though Notre Dame joined the Atlantic Coast Conference in men’s basketball and other sports in 2013. Notre Dame won the Big East under Brey during his first season there in 2000-01 and the ACC Tournament in 2014-15. He led the Irish to consecutive Elite Eight appearances in the 2015 and 2016 NCAA Tournaments. Brey played college basketball at Northwestern State in Louisiana and George Washington.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

If you want to understand just how remarkable the contract extension signed by Eagles quarterback Jalen Hurts truly is, the one that’s the richest contract ever, you need to go back in time. You need to look at how Black quarterbacks have been treated. How badly, awfully, disgracefully they’ve been treated. You need to understand history and that splendid bending of its arc.

We could start anywhere on the NFL timeline. Quarterback Marlin Briscoe in the 1960s was portrayed as a locker room agitator and released. Quarterback James ‘Shack’ Harris was deluged with hate mail throughout his career in the 1970s. Warren Moon is one of the most talented pass throwers ever but spent much of his early career in the CFL, where the racism in football was less structural. In the 1980s, before Doug Williams made Super Bowl history, he faced a career of double standards and racism.

In 2003, Rush Limbaugh, while an analyst for ESPN, said Pro Bowler Donovan McNabb only received accolades because he was Black.

‘Sorry to say this, I don’t think he’s been that good from the get-go,’ Limbaugh said. ‘I think what we’ve had here is a little social concern in the NFL. The media has been very desirous that a Black quarterback do well. There is a little hope invested in McNabb, and he got a lot of credit for the performance of this team that he didn’t deserve. The defense carried this team.’

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Limbaugh was fired by ESPN. So we’ve gone from one Eagles quarterback two decades ago being attacked for being Black to another Eagles quarterback being celebrated for his character.

There are numerous other examples of how far Black quarterbacks have come that go back a century. In the 1930s, NFL owners quietly banned Black players from joining the NFL for 13 years in what’s commonly and ironically called ‘the gentlemen’s agreement.’ Some 80 years later, Colin Kaepernick was effectively banned from playing in the NFL after leading a player protest movement starting in 2016.

In the recent past, and even now, the mental acuity of Black quarterbacks were commonly described quite differently from their white counterparts. Scouting publications, one 2004 examination found, described Black quarterbacks with great physical attributes and white quarterbacks with mental prowess.

It was common for Black quarterbacks to be told they should switch positions. Bill Polian, who is in the Hall of Fame and built multiple teams, said before the 2018 draft that Lamar Jackson should play wide receiver instead of quarterback. That was just five years ago.

These are just small pieces of the history, and even this little bit of data puts into context this remarkable moment for Hurts.

Other Black quarterbacks have signed rich contract extensions, but that’s not the point.

The point is Hurts’ contract is another evolution in the arc of the Black quarterback. From the days of NFL quarterback segregation, to the gentlemen’s agreement, to Kaepernick, and more. Black quarterbacks have had to fight for every yard, every dollar, every piece of dignity.

Players like Hurts and Patrick Mahomes have risen on the shoulders of past Black quarterbacks that sacrificed their dignities so players like Hurts don’t have to.

We won’t see the eradication of racism from the NFL anytime soon, in the same way we won’t see it eliminated from society. This isn’t the Federation. Not yet.

Hurts’ deal does show, however, what happens when racism is removed from the equation. When a player is strictly evaluated for the content of his football character — and by all indications Hurts is one of the NFL’s best leaders.

He said this after being named one of the team’s captains: “It means everything. It means everything. I think just trying to do things the right way for the team and putting the team first and doing everything I can with all my ability to play at a high level for the team, lead in the right direction and set the right example for everybody. I take it in high regard and I give a lot of value to being a captain.”

The Eagles might have gotten a bargain with this extension because Hurts is that much the real deal.

In NFL history, there have been other Black men who could have been Jalen Hurts, but racism kept that from happening. We will never forget that past. We shouldn’t. Hurts and this deal also shows the promise of what can be.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

NEW YORK — Imagine the excited throngs of people jamming into a brand-new ballpark on Opening Day, and not just any baseball park.

This was the first in the game to be dubbed a ‘stadium,’ and it became baseball’s most famous address and the home of many championship teams.

And when it opened on April 18, 1923, it was in grand fashion, with a 4-1 New York Yankees victory over the Boston Red Sox, and with the stadium’s first home run hit by … who else?

“Babe Ruth’s bat penned baseball history yesterday with a crashing homer in the dedication game of the Yanks at their monster new home in the Bronx,’’ was the New York Daily News’ front page tease the next day, under a photo of Ruth about to cross home plate.

Tuesday is the 100th anniversary of the original Yankee Stadium’s opening. To mark the occasion, fans attending the Yankees’ home game against the Los Angeles Angels will receive a commemorative ticket from the 1923 opener.

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Which is fine, but shouldn’t there be … well, something more?

Maybe a bigger way to remember that historic date?

Calling on a Yankees historian

With this thought in mind, the first idea was to call Yankees historian Marty Appel, whose first job was as a mail clerk at Yankee Stadium, answering Mickey Mantle’s fan letters. He has just authored another book, ‘Pinstripes by the Tale,’ a half-century of stories in and around Yankees baseball.

On the subject of marking the 100th anniversary, Appel says sagely that it’s a bit problematic to be “honoring a building that’s not standing anymore.’’

There is nothing really left of the old place, but at least they didn’t put up a massive building or pave over the field’s footprint, which is now a public ballfield.

In essence, the old Stadium of Ruth and Lou Gehrig’s days, and later Joe DiMaggio, Mantle, Whitey Ford and Elston Howard, was demolished after its 50th anniversary in 1973, for construction of the modern version.

And then that version was torn down after the 2008 season for the current structure, across the street.

There was an effort to save one piece of the old structure, Gate 2, which had remained intact from the two-year refurbishing, while the Yankees played the 1974 and 1975 seasons at Shea Stadium.

“I would have liked for them to save Gate 2,’’ Appel says of “a noble idea’’ that ultimately remained just that. The small piece of 1923 Yankee Stadium was bulldozed with the rest of it.

The Yankee Stadium of 1923

One hundred years ago Tuesday, Yankee Stadium opened to an estimated crowd of 65,000 fans.

They heard John Philip Sousa’s Seventh Regiment Band play as the Yankees and Red Sox marched out to the center-field flagpole, where the Yankees’ 1922 American League pennant flag was raised after the American flag went up.

It was the age of Prohibition, so ‘near beer’ was sold along with the hot dogs and pretzels. Gov. Al Smith, Commissioner Kenesaw Mountain Landis and New York Mayor John Hylan were in the crowd.

Those seeking additional forms of entertainment after the game could take a nickel subway ride back to Manhattan and catch a vaudeville revue or see the ‘Ziegfeld Follies’ at the New Amsterdam Theatre.

‘The House That Ruth Built’

Fifty years later, on Opening Day 1973 at Yankee Stadium, the Yankees gave out replica programs from the 1923 opener, complete with the advertisements — 50 ‘Bull’ Durham tobacco cigarettes cost 10 cents.

Bob Shawkey, who pitched a complete-game win for the Yanks in the 1923 opener, threw out the ceremonial first pitch in ’73, and Whitey Witt — the Yankees’ first batter at the Stadium — was at home plate.

Yankee Stadium became known as “The House That Ruth Built,’’ but as Appel once wrote, it was first the home that Yankees owner Col. Jacob Ruppert envisioned and turned into reality.

Not long after the 1919 fixed World Series scandal rocked the game, Ruppert “saw baseball growing from its smallness and would be the first to be ready to handle its new popularity,’’ Appel wrote.

Today’s Yankee Stadium

The current Yankee Stadium’s capacity is a non-colossal 46,537. The exterior is grand, and the field evokes the old park, with the shorter right-field distance and the wider — but not nearly as wide as in the old days — left-center field.

“I’m good with it,’’ says Appel, “still feeling Joe and the Babe’’ and all the Yankees history when he’s at the park. They did have the good sense to return the famous frieze around the stadium.

But when I say to Appel that it sometimes feels like we’re in exile, across the street from the real Stadium site, he doesn’t hesitate.

“Someday when they move back there and turn the current site into a parking lot, we’ll really appreciate it.’’

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

A source in Gov. Ron DeSantis’ political orbit tells Fox News he wouldn’t be surprised if up to 30-40 Republican members of Congress stop by a reception being headlined by the conservative two-term Florida governor late Tuesday afternoon and evening in the Capitol Hill neighborhood of Washington D.C.

The ‘meet-and-greet policy discussion’ gathering is being hosted by And to the Republic, a recently formed nonprofit group that organized the Florida governor’s February events in New York City and suburban Philadelphia and Chicago that supported law enforcement. And the DC mixer is taking place at a Heritage Foundation townhouse on Capitol Hill. Heritage is one of the oldest and most influential think tanks in the conservative movement.

The source told Fox News that DeSantis, who has rarely returned to the nation’s capital since he left Congress in 2018 amid his successful gubernatorial campaign, came back this week to say hello to old colleagues and friends, and because of the interest among congressional Republicans in the conservative legislative victories by DeSantis and GOP state lawmakers. The source added that the governor wanted ‘to thank these guys for holding the line against [President] Biden and encouraging them to keep doing it.’

Among the small group of Republican House members and senators who were co-hosting the event or expected to attend were Reps. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.), and Chip Roy (R-Texas), the only two members of Congress who have endorsed the Florida governor’s anticipated presidential run.

While he currently remains on the 2024 sidelines, DeSantis is expected to launch a presidential campaign after next month’s conclusion of the Florida legislative session.

Sources in DeSantis political orbit for months have told Fox News that a declaration of candidacy by the governor in the White House race – should it happen – would occur likely in late May or June, after state government legislative business in Tallahassee quiets down. 

Meanwhile, in the past couple of months, DeSantis has slowly started to build up his political operation. And a pro-DeSantis super PAC named Never Back Down – which sources say will be the main outside vehicle helping an expected DeSantis 2024 campaign – was formed in March and over the past month has dramatically beefed up its staff with top Republican operatives and communications. Never Back Down is now trading fire with MAGA Inc., the top super PAC supporter former President Donald Trump’s third White House bid.

The former president and his allies – who view DeSantis as Trump’s top threat to capturing the GOP presidential nomination – have been targeting DeSantis since last autumn, but have picked up the pace of attacks the past couple of months.

The DeSantis trip to DC – he’ll return to the DC area to headline the Friday morning session of Heritage’s leadership summit, which is being held at National Harbor – comes after Reps. Greg Steube, John Rutherford, and Brian Mast this week brought to seven the number of GOP House members to endorse Trump, who’s also a Sunshine State resident.

Trump’s presidential campaign in November was followed by only a trickle of endorsements from Republican members of Congress. 

But as Trump’s position as the clear front-runner in the burgeoning Republican presidential nomination race has become more pronounced this spring, the pace of congressional endorsements has accelerated.

Trump – as of Tuesday evening – could boast the backing of nine senators and 46 House members. 

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

U.S. prosecutors on Tuesday announced charges against a diamond and art dealer who had allegedly funded Lebanon’s terrorist wing Hezbollah. It also sanctioned what it believes is a vast money laundering network connected to him.

Nazem Ahmad, who had already been sanctioned in 2019 by the U.S. under global terrorism sanctions regulations for acting as a financier with the Iranian-backed group, is accused of being part of a group that used a complex web of businesses to obtain artwork from U.S. art galleries and diamond-grading services while hiding his involvement. 

The U.S. government says that approximately $160 million of artwork and diamond services were transacted through the U.S. system. 

One of the defendants was arrested in the United Kingdom and eight others, including Ahmad, are not believed to live in the U.S. Ahmad and eight co-defendants are charged with conspiring to defraud the U.S. and other governments, evading sanctions and making money laundering transactions by securing goods for Ahmad’s benefit.

The Treasury also announced additional sanctions against a network of 52 individuals and entities across the globe it says were involved in funneling money to Hezbollah.

Separately, the U.K. said it had frozen Ahmad’s assets in the U.K. because he financed Hezbollah, which is designated as an international terror group. Consequently, no one in the U.K. or U.S. is allowed to do business with Ahmad or his businesses.

‘The international actions we are announcing today against Nazem Ahmad for his involvement with the terrorist organization Hezbollah should serve as a reminder that the U.S. government and our allies will tirelessly prosecute those who are sanctioned for illicitly financing terrorist activities,’ said Deputy Secretary of Homeland Security John K. Tien. 

‘I am very proud to not only share the results of this investigation into the Ahmad criminal organization but also recognize the outstanding international and interagency collaboration that led to this moment.’

The actions are part of a years-long investigation into the group led by Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s Homeland Security Investigations (HSI).

‘This HSI investigation speaks to the unwavering commitment of the U.S. and U.K. governments to prevent art and diamond markets from becoming a haven of illicit financial activity,’ acting ICE Director Tae Johnson said in a statement. ‘I commend HSI and our investigative partners for their dedication in seeing this investigation through — over many years — to substantial actions. We will utilize every tool at our disposal to dismantle these illicit networks.’

Rewards for Justice, the U.S. State Department’s national security rewards program, is offering a reward of up to $10 million for information related to Ahmad.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.
 

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President Joe Biden and first lady Jill Biden reported a federal adjusted gross income of $579,514, according to their 2022 federal income tax returns, which were released by the White House on Tuesday.

The president and first lady filed their income tax return jointly and paid $169,820 in combined federal, Delaware and Virginia income taxes, according to the records reviewed by Fox News Digital.

The president and first lady paid $137,658 in federal income tax and $29,023 in Delaware income tax. The first lady also reported paying $3,139 in Virginia income tax – from her teaching at Northern Virginia Community College.

An annual presidential salary is $400,000.

In 2021, the president and first lady reported a federal adjusted gross income of $610,702. In 2020, the first couple earned $607,336, which was down from the $985,223 they reported in 2019.

The Bidens’ 2022 effective federal income tax rate was 23.8 percent.

The first couple also reported contributions of $20,180 to 20 different charities, with the largest gift being $5,000 to the Beau Biden Foundation.

The first couple also donated to the National Fraternal Order of Police Foundation, St. Joseph on the Brandywine Church, which is the Bidens’ home parish, and the Tragedy Assistance Program for Survivors, among other charities.

The White House said Biden has released 25 years of tax returns to the American public, which it says demonstrates his ‘commitment to being transparent with the American people about the finances of the Commander-in-Chief.’

Meanwhile, the White House also shared the tax returns of Vice President Kamala Harris and second gentleman Douglas Emhoff.

The second couple reported a federal adjusted gross income of $456,918. They paid $93,570 in federal income tax, with a 2022 effective federal income tax rate of 20.5 percent.

Harris and Emhoff also paid $17,612 in California income tax. Emhoff paid $9,697 in District of Columbia income tax. 

The second couple contributed $23,000 to charity in 2022.

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