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The president of the Canadian soccer federation resigned Monday following accusations by the women’s national team of unequal and inequitable treatment.

“Canada Soccer and both of our National Team Programs have the real potential to sign a historic collective bargaining agreement,” he wrote. “Once signed, it will be a landmark deal that will set our nation apart from virtually every other FIFA Member Association.

“While I have been one of the biggest proponents of equalizing the competitive performance environment for our Women’s National Team, I will unfortunately not be leading this organization when it happens.”

Resignation follows strike threat 

Bontis’ resignation comes less than two weeks after the women’s team tried to strike during the SheBelieves Cup over budget cuts that left the Olympic champions with significantly fewer resources ahead of this summer’s World Cup than the Canadian men had ahead of their World Cup last year.

The women said they can invite fewer players into training camps and have had their number of staff members cut. They also said they’ve been told they won’t play any home games ahead of the World Cup in Australia and New Zealand.

Informed they weren’t legally allowed to strike, Canada played in the SheBelieves Cup under protest instead, turning their warmup shirts inside out so the Canada logo could not be seen. They also came out for the national anthem before their first game, against the U.S. women, in purple shirts with “Enough is enough” written in big, bold letters.

The U.S. women and other national teams around the world wore purple wristbands in support of the Canadian women.

“To everyone who has supported us as we started this fight…the fans, players, coaches, thank you. We are inspired and motivated… and we will win,” the team’s players union said last week on Twitter.

Women’s team not alone in criticism of federation

The Canadian women are being backed by the men’s national team, which had its own issues with the federation last year. The Canadian men boycotted a June friendly against Panama in a protest over pay and what it said was the federation’s lack of transparency about its finances.

Much of the dispute stems from a deal between Canada Soccer and Canada Soccer Business, which runs that country’s professional league, that gives CSB a significant portion of the federation’s revenues in exchange for a guaranteed fee each year. The players say Canada Soccer is giving away money that should be used to develop the game, and squandering an opportunity to capitalize on growing interest in the game.

In addition to the women’s gold medal at the Tokyo Olympics, the men qualified for the World Cup for the first time in 36 years. Canada is also co-hosting the men’s World Cup in 2026 with the United States and Mexico.

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World Cup champion Lionel Messi was named best men’s soccer player in 2022 by FIFA during a ceremony held in Paris on Monday. Meanwhile, U.S. women’s national team star Alex Morgan finished second to Spain’s Alexia Putellas for the women’s 2022 award.

Messi now has won the men’s award for the second time (first since 2019), while Putellas won the women’s award for the second consecutive year. 

Messi finally won his first World Cup, delivering Argentina its first world championship since 1986, all the while cementing his status as arguably the game’s greatest-ever player. The 2022 tournament represented a record-tying fifth World Cup appearance for Messi. The top player from the team that Argentina defeated in the World Cup final, Kylian Mbappé, finished second in the voting for the men’s award, while Karim Benzema — the 2022 Ballon d’Or winner — finished third.

Polish soccer star Robert Lewandowski had won the previous two men’s awards.

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Alex Morgan’s big 2022 season gets recognized

For the second time in her career — 2019 being the other — Morgan has finished second for the Best FIFA Women’s Player. USWNT players Carli Lloyd (2016) and Megan Rapinoe (2019) have previously won the award.

Morgan played a vital role in helping the USWNT’s win the 2022 Concacaf Women’s Championship. Morgan’s three goals tied with three other players (Canada’s Jessie Fleming and Julia Grosso, and Jamaica’s Khadija Shaw) for the most in the tournament. The USWNT outscored opponents 13-0 over five games en route to securing automatic qualification for the 2023 World Cup and 2024 Olympics in Paris. 

Morgan also won the NWSL Golden Boot award after scoring a career-high 15 regular-season goals for San Diego Wave FC, an expansion team she helped direct to playoff qualification.

Who were 2022 FIFA Best winners?

A number of other awards were presented to goalkeepers, coaches and the player judged to have the most impressive goal.

Here are the 2022 winners (country and club team, if applicable):

Best FIFA Women’s Player: Alexia Putellas (Spain and FC Barcelona Femení)Best FIFA Men’s Player: Lionel Messi (Argentina and Paris Saint-Germain)Best FIFA Women’s Goalkeeper: Mary Earps (England and Manchester United)Best FIFA Men’s Goalkeeper: Emiliano Martínez (Argentina and Aston Villa)Best FIFA Women’s Coach: Sarina Wiegman (England)Best FIFA Men’s Coach: Lionel Scaloni (Argentina)FIFA Puskás Award: Marcin Oleksy (Poland and Warta Poznań)FIFA FIFPRO Women’s World 11: Christiane Endler (Chile and Lyon), Lucy Bronze (England and Barcelona), Mapi León (Spain and Barcelona), Leah Williamson (England and Arsenal), Wendie Renard (France and Lyon), Alexia Putellas (Spain and Barcelona), Keira Walsh (England and Barcelona), Lena Oberdorf (Germany and Wolfsburg), Alex Morgan (United States and San Diego Wave FC), Sam Kerr (Australia and Chelsea), Beth Mead (England and Arsenal)FIFA FIFPRO Men’s World 11: Thibaut Courtois (Belgium and Real Madrid), Achraf Hakimi (Morocco and Paris Saint-Germain), João Cancelo (Portugal and Bayern Munich), Virgil van Dijk (Netherlands and Liverpool), Kevin De Bruyne (Belgium and Manchester City), Luka Modrić (Croatia and Real Madrid), Casemiro (Brazil and Manchester United), Lionel Messi (Argentina and Paris Saint-Germain), Kylian Mbappé (France and Paris Saint-Germain), Karim Benzema (France and Real Madrid)

What makes the FIFA award different from the Ballon d’Or?

The Ballon d’Or is the more familiar —and prestigious — of the two, having been around since 1956, compared to 2017 for the FIFA awards.

Voting for the FIFA awards includes national team coaches and captains, selected journalists in each of FIFA’s 211 member countries, plus fans online. The Ballon’ d’Or, meanwhile, is awarded by France Football magazine.

The FIFA award was formerly known as the FIFA World Player of the Year, and was then the FIFA Ballon d’Or from 2010 to 2015. France Football magazine regained control of the Ballon d’Or in 2016.

Messi has won the Ballon d’Or a record seven times.

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Klay Thompson shook the internet on Sunday night with a long-distance 3-point shot that banked off the backboard.

He beat the buzzer by juking Austin Rivers with a pivot step in the fourth quarter of the Golden State Warriors’ 109-104 win over the Minnesota Timberwolves.

Thompson finished the night with a team-high 32 points and 42 against the Houston Rockets on Friday as he led the Warriors to back-to-back wins. Golden State, which is seventh in the Western Conference, is playing without superstar Steph Curry and defensive force Draymond Green due to injury. All-Star Andrew Wiggins has also been out while tending to a family matter.

In their absence, Thompson said he has had to handle the ball more and step into a leadership role like never before.

‘I’m out there talking more than I ever had to,’ he said on NBA TV after the win over the Timberwolves. ‘I’m out there calling sets, just being encouraging on the bench and it’s not really in my comfort zone because I’m not the most vocal person, but it has me grow so much as not only a player, but a leader and I’m having a great time during this stretch while our guys are getting healthy.’

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There are positives to other role players getting minutes as fifth-year player Donte DiVincenzo added 21 points and eight-year veteran Kevon Looney nabbing 17 rebounds. Thompson said that the added minutes will result in much-needed experience come playoffs.

‘We had an ugly stretch … and people were doubting our championship aspirations,’ the four-time champion said, ‘but I feel the same kind of resiliency from this squad this year and I think it’s just going to pay off so great come postseason.’

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Jimmy Butler made ‘an impossible shot’ Monday night to lead the Miami Heat to a 101-99 win over the Philadelphia 76ers.

The six-time All-Star dribbled from the three-point arc and rolled backwards past P.J. Tucker. He then leaped under the rim and over Tucker and Joel Embiid for a reverse layup.

The shot came with 1:28 left in the game, which was played in Philadelphia, and put Miami up 100-99. Butler then drained a free throw with 8.1 seconds on the clock after being fouled by James Harden for the final point of the game.

Butler finished with a team-high 23 points and added 11 rebounds and nine assists. Embiid finished with 27 points and 12 rebounds.

The win snapped a four-game losing streak for the Heat, who play the 76ers again on Wednesday.

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Butler, who is averaging 21.9 points per game, exchanged some words with Tucker and Embiid throughout the game, which he said were all in the spirit of friendly competition.

‘Those are my brothers. Anybody I’m in the trenches with I have mad respect for and they’re a really good team,’ he said in a post-game interview. ‘They’ve been playing incredibly well all year long. But always want to beat them, always want to beat any team that we go up against.’

‘But I hate you P.J.,’ he finished with a playful smile.

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Los Angeles Lakers superstar LeBron James could miss several weeks with a right foot injury, a person with knowledge of the situation told USA TODAY Sports.

The person requested anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly about James’ health

James sustained the injury late in the third quarter of the Lakers’ 111-108 comeback victory against Dallas on Sunday. He finished the game, scoring 26 points but was overheard on ABC telling the Lakers bench, “I heard a pop.”

James, who left Dallas’ arena with a significant limp, is listed as “out” with right foot soreness for Tuesday’s game at Memphis,, and the Lakers have not released additional details. The team is trying to determine the extent of in the injury.

“We’ll monitor it the next couple days, see how it feels and go from there,” James told reporters after Sunday’s game.

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James, 38, missed games earlier in the season and has played in 47 of Los Angeles’ 61 games. He has been a steady presence in the lineup since late November and is averaging 29.5 points, 8.4 rebounds and 6.9 assists and shooting 50.1% from the field and 30.8% on 3-pointers.

On Feb. 7, James passed Kareem Abdul-Jabbar as the NBA’s all-time leading scorer, and at All-Star Weekend in Salt Lake City on Feb. 19, James told reporters that the Lakers’ remaining games were the 23 most important regular-season games of his career.

‘I hope I can figure out a way to just make sure I’m available for every single night for these 23 games, to give us a chance, give our group chance to be able to compete every night and give us a chance to win every night,’ James said.

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At 29-32 and in 12th place in the Western Conference, the Lakers are trying to get into the playoffs. They are just a game behind 10th-place New Orleans for a spot in the play-in games and just 2½ games behind sixth-place Dallas for a guaranteed spot in the playoffs.

If the Lakers miss the playoffs, it will be just the second time in James’ career that he has missed the playoffs. The last time? Go back nearly two decades to his first two seasons in the league in 2003-04 and 2004-05.

Before the Feb. 9 trade deadline, the Lakers acquired Rui Hachimura from Washington, D’Angelo Russell from Minnesota and Malik Beasley and Jarred Vanderbilt from Utah. Russell missed Sunday’s game with a right ankle sprain and is listed as doubtful for Tuesday’s game.

“I’ve always been confident in any club I’ve been on, once we got to the playoffs that we can compete with anyone,’ James said in Salt Lake City.

Without James, the Lakers’ chances of making the postseason drop significantly.

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In a move that came as little surprise, the Washington Commanders chose to move on from quarterback Carson Wentz on Monday, releasing the 30-year-old journeyman after just one season with the team.

The Commanders had telegraphed the move, indicating they were planning to press forward with second-year signal-caller Sam Howell out of North Carolina, who only appeared in one game in 2022 as a rookie. That or they were going to address the position elsewhere this offseason.

Washington acquired Wentz last offseason in a deal with the Indianapolis Colts in which it traded a hefty draft haul that included a second and third-rounder in 2022 and a conditional third in 2023. But due to a combination of injuries and benchings, Wentz only appeared in eight games with seven starts, going 2-5 with an 11 to 9 touchdown-to-interception ratio and an 80.2 quarterback rating.

Following a year of diminishing play and injuries that continue to rack up season after season, many are questioning if Wentz’s time as a starter in the NFL is a thing of the past – whether he pursues a backup opportunity somewhere or, as others have speculated, chooses to walk away.

It’s a trajectory not many saw coming after his NFL career got off to a red-hot start. Wentz had typical struggles as a rookie as the No. 2 overall pick out of FCS powerhouse North Dakota State in 2016 for the Philadelphia Eagles. He’d get on an MVP pace before injury ended his second season in 2017, which resulted in a Super Bowl win for the Eagles led by backup Nick Foles.

Wentz returned the following year and delivered moderate production over the next two seasons. However, his play fell off considerably in 2020, resulting in his benching and – ultimately – a trade to the Colts for a third and first-round pick.

At times, that was a marriage that seemed to be working.

Wentz delivered arguably his most prolific campaign since his MVP-candidate season. But the season was marred by a loss to a previously 2-14 Jacksonville Jaguars team in Week 18 which cost Indy a playoff spot (and likely cost Wentz a chance to return to the team in 2022).

Now Wentz is a free agent and will potentially play for his fourth team in as many years. If he wants to play, it will be an option. He’s younger than several starting quarterbacks in the NFL and certainly still talented enough to occupy a roster spot.

Exactly what Wentz’s future holds is unclear at this point, and it’s always possible he can start again someday. But whatever happens, his future likely won’t include him occupying the title of a franchise quarterback.

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Diggins-Smith, a two-time First Team All-American, was one of the first prominent women’s college basketball players to embrace looking feminine on the court. Seeing a Black woman do that on a national stage had a lasting impact on Walker as a young Black player.

‘She’s so pretty and she just carries herself so nice and she looks so classy, but on the court she does the same thing,’ the Tennessee Lady Vols guard remembered thinking. ‘She still looks classy, looks put together, but she’s a beast, you know? She can knock down shots, play defense, all of that.’

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Chicago Sky point guard Dana Evans said Diggins-Smith, now a six-time WNBA All-Star, marked the beginning of the new generation of players – a generation of Black women who choose to be authentically themselves on the court.

‘I think she really changed things around where you’re looking girly, you’re able to show different things on the court,’ said Evans. ‘I think she was one of the players to kind of start that and I think a lot of players fed off of that.’

‘Seeing that made my heart hurt’

After Tennessee’s lackluster start to the season, a faction of fans attacked Key on social media for wearing eyelash extensions and nails, despite the fact that she wore them during her career-best junior season, too.

Some accused Key of caring about her looks more than winning, or claimed she was playing poorly because of her nails and eyelashes. Key declined to comment for this story.

The accusations highlighted how women’s basketball still deals with racism and misogyny.

‘Seeing those comments kind of made my heart drop, because nobody deserves to have to deal with that,’ South Carolina guard Brea Beal said. ‘Seeing that made my heart hurt, because I’ve seen those comments for myself and my teammates or people I’m friends with in the basketball community. It’s not a good feeling to have to deal with that, and it kind of weighs heavy on your mind, people blaming how I’m playing on my appearance. For some people, it starts to mess with them.’

Walker is one of several Lady Vols who wear eyelash extensions and said there’s a lack of understanding behind the criticism. Whenever she gets her lashes done, it’s after all her basketball responsibilities are taken care of.

‘They just have their opinions on it and it feels like, ‘Oh, she missed that shot because she can’t see because of her lashes,’ but no, I can see perfectly fine. I just missed the shot,’ Walker said. ‘I feel like a lot of comments are like that, but it’s just because they truly don’t understand and they don’t know. And so I think that the education piece is the best part.’

The racism behind the criticism

When Evans was at Louisville, people gave her the nickname ‘lashes.’

Some fans even got sunglasses with lashes on them. Evans, a two-time ACC Player of the Year, has worn eyelash extensions since high school, but it became part of her brand at Louisville. Now, she has a partnership with OpulenceMD Beauty, promoting safe eye beauty for all women – and it includes a lash vending machine at Louisville.

The only way Beal could express herself on the court growing up was painting her nails pink. But when she got to college, she found confidence in wearing lash extensions, nails and different hairstyles.

How Beal, Walker, Evans and other players choose to express themselves on the court is part of who they are. Evans said it’s clear that comments like the ones directed at Key are racist, and people know it.

‘It’s not fair to us, and as a fan, I feel like – you have a lot of Black women that are expressing themselves. Why are you trying to downgrade them?’ Evans said. ‘Why are you trying to make them feel less than themselves, when you should be supporting them when they’re playing for your team?’

Even though there are non-Black players who wear lashes, it’s Black women being targeted.

‘I think they have to just accept it, because the majority of the women are Black players. I mean, you can even look in the WNBA, majority of the players are Black,’ Evans said. ‘They have to adjust to Black women being able to express themselves and they have to live with it. They just have to accept it, because we’re here to stay.’

How players feel empowered and market themselves

With the new generation of players came a new era of college sports.

There is more at stake for players when it comes to how they present themselves on the court and on social media because of opportunities for name, image and likeness deals.

‘I definitely think for Black women in any sport, I feel like you have to do the extra things to be included, or to be broadcasted more compared to other athletes,’ Beal said. ‘So I do feel like naturally, as bad as it sounds, people do put Black athletes in that box, and they have to do crazy things or stand out to be actually talked about or noticed.’

WNBA players aren’t making millions of dollars like NBA players, and Evans said they constantly have to market themselves and find other avenues to make money.

‘We have to show how marketable we are,’ Evans said, ‘and how we’re also a basketball player – but we can also model, we can be pretty, we can do other things.’

But it’s also about inspiring the next generation of players, as Diggins-Smith inspired Evans and Walker.

‘It’s so many girls that sometimes are nervous to just be themselves,’ Evans said. ‘But I think as WNBA players, I think we’re setting a standard and letting them know that it’s OK to be you. It’s OK if you want to wear suits, if you want to wear heels. I think we’re setting that standard and letting people know that they can just be themselves.’

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Hudson Mayes’ coaches try the best they can to describe him in words that can actually describe a 15-year-old kid who is a kind of vintage basketball player.

Hudson is calm. He is selfless. He sees every inch of the court. He takes the charge, makes the extra pass and he likes – no, he loves – that antiquated, midrange jump shot.

Hudson is ‘an old soul,’ a ‘throwback player.’ Those are the words of his coaches, who say the sophomore at Redondo Union High in Redondo Beach, California, is certainly headed for a Division I program. A player, they say, colleges should clamor after, especially programs who want talent, grit and passion. Not hype.

Of course, Hudson can dunk with flashy NBA style. He is 6-4, 185 pounds with muscles starting to bulge on his maturing body. And he can drain those Steph Curry-esque, way-behind-the-three-point-line shots.

But Hudson can’t get away from the midrange jump shot. He laughs a little as he says it. What high school basketball player even thinks about the midrange jump shot?

Hudson does.

There is something magical about the old school basics of basketball, he says. ‘In this day, they don’t really utilize the midrange that much anymore. It’s usually either all the way to the basket or a 3, so I think I’m bringing that back,’ Hudson said. ‘I always grew up learning that.’

Growing up. That is where Hudson’s family legacy comes in, his roots, the people he grew up around – from the time he was a baby in a crib surrounded by plush basketballs instead of stuffed animals. From the time he toted a mini basketball around the living room as a toddler trying time and again to get the ball to fall through that plastic hoop.

‘I was always expected to be a pretty talented player,’ Hudson said from his home in California this month. ‘It’s kind of some big shoes to fill. But I have to. And I’m going to.’

Those shoes belong to Roger Brown, Hudson’s grandfather, one of the greatest Indiana Pacers to take the court. Brown is a Naismith Hall of Famer, a unanimous ABA All-Time Team selection and he was one of the best midrange shooters in basketball in the late 1960s and early 1970s.

Brown’s style was smooth as silk and he gladly took the jump shot over a dunk, almost never slamming a ball through the rim in a game, said his former teammate Darnell Hillman.

Brown was quiet, reserved, not flashy or boastful, but he fiercely wanted to win, said George McGinnis, who played with Brown on the Pacers.

The resemblances on the court between Hudson and his grandfather are uncanny, especially because Brown died in 1997, 10 years before Hudson was born.

‘Even early on, there was just a certain way that he moved that resembled my father,’ said Hudson’s mother Gayle Brown-Mayes, Brown’s daughter. ‘You can’t put your finger on it, but it’s there.’

And nearly 50 years later, as Hudson takes the court crafting his own graceful, sleek moves, those who watch him play say his grandfather, ABA great Roger Brown, lives on.

‘The greatest Pacer ever’

It was 1967 when Brown caught the eye of the Indiana Pacers. He was playing in amateur leagues in Dayton, Ohio, working at General Motors, as the Pacers were forming a team in a new league called the American Basketball Association.

Brown became one of the first players to sign with the team. The Pacers never regretted that.

‘Oh, he was just smooth, just an incredible player, just well skilled at every offensive area,’ said McGinnis. ‘He had that gene where he made every big shot he took.’

The 6-9 Hillman would play the 6-5 Brown every day after practice in a game of one-on-one. Hillman won just twice in two years.

‘Roger could beat two men easily,’ Hillman said, ‘the guy guarding him and whoever is going to pick him up. He was very self-conscious of where he was on the court, who was coming at him and he was very, very good about sharing the basketball.’

Brown, a three-time ABA champion ‘had a special skill for putting people in their proper place — opponents and teammates alike,’ IndyStar wrote in 2020. ‘A burst left, then right, from Brown on the hardwood was like swinging open a set of barn doors on the way to the hoop. Firing a pass at a teammate’s head at an innocuous moment would make certain that in crunch time, they would be ready for anything.’

At Brown’s Hall of fame induction in 2013, Reggie Miller called him, “the greatest Pacer ever.”

‘Hudson’s got some big shoes to fill,’ said Hillman, who has watched Hudson’s video clips. ‘But he’s off to a very good start.’

As Jeannie Brown, Hudson’s grandmother and wife of the late Roger Brown, watches Hudson play she said she sees so many similarities.

‘Roger was always very graceful and so is Hudson. Roger was never harried. Hudson isn’t either. He is always calm, collected when he is on the floor. He knows where everybody is, where he is supposed to be,’ she said. ‘I call him basketball smart. Roger was also. They both know how to make beautiful passes.’

Hudson, whose name is an homage to where he was born by the Hudson River on Riverside Drive in New York City and to his grandpa’s hometown Brooklyn, started showing signs of his sports legacy at a very young age, said his dad Derrick Mayes, an Indianapolis-bred Notre Dame football great and Super Bowl champion with the Packers.

Hudson was 4 when he took to the court in basketball leagues at the Crenshaw YMCA, playing with the older, 5-year-old teams.

Derrick Mayes said he knew his son was going to be special then and he captured it in a video where a tiny Hudson practices a shot and misses.

‘Good shot, alright, let’s try one more,’ Mayes says to Hudson on the video. ‘Make sure you look at the goal right?’ Hudson looks at the goal, makes the basket and then starts dancing.

‘That sums it up. From Day 1, he wanted to learn, he took direction really well, he responded incredibly fast,’ said Mayes. “I knew then, because there is a fine line between being good and being great.’

Around that same age, Hudson said he remembers seeing video clips of his grandfather playing for the first time. ‘I was like, ‘Wow, this is actually my grandpa.’”

Hudson took that legacy and started honing it.

‘We’ve always seen in Hudson his talent, just natural God-given talent,’ said Gayle. ‘He just has always had his head down, always been passionate about it. Coaches were coming to us saying this kid’s got something. We want to coach him.’

‘He’s a horse. He’s not a dog’

Brian Haloossim began coaching Hudson when he was 8 and spent the next five years with him through middle school club ball.

‘Hudson is just really mature. He is an old soul. He is very quiet, but extremely confident. But he is always learning,’ said Haloossim, who has coached high school and was an assistant men’s basketball coach for Division I California State University, Northridge. ‘That is so rare. I remember that was the case from the day I met him, he was just a sponge. He has a lot of raw skills. But he doesn’t rest on that. He works very hard.’

As Hudson’s grandmother, Jeannie Brown has told him, ‘You can have all the talent in the world but if you don’t work at it, that means nothing.’ Hudson has heard those same words, too, from his parents and his paternal grandparents, David and Annie Mayes.

‘I’m a really hard worker. I’m very determined and obsessive so making a certain amount of shots or getting a certain move down, my passion just brings me to work really hard and want to get better,’ Hudson said. ‘So the desire to feel myself getting better and go out and perform the next time and say, ‘OK, I know I did better this time because of all the work I put in,’ that pushes me to go do it again.’

Hudson is always the youngest player on the court, a 15-year-old sophomore, who won’t turn 16 until June. There was never a thought of holding him back, said Derrick Mayes. ‘In fact, I coined the term ‘true freshman’ for him last season in high school,’ he said. ‘We believed in helping him move forward, not holding him back.’

In California basketball circles, Hudson is ‘a known entity’ for many reasons, said Haloossim. He started as a freshman on his high school team and won all-league. In the city championship game, he scored 17 points.

‘That’s pretty unheard of as a freshman,’ Haloossim said. ‘He didn’t do it by being fancy or anything like that. He sort of figured out what coach needed him to do, put up good numbers and stood out.’

Hudson also plays for Team WhyNot, the only Nike EYBL basketball club in Southern California and one of the top EYBL programs on the west coast, sponsored by Russell Westbrook. 

‘He’s an aggressive player and he’s confident,’ said Reggie Morris, who is Hudson’s high school and Team WhyNot coach. ‘At his age, he’s big enough and strong enough to get some things done to match his confidence. He plays a brand of basketball that college coaches would lend their eyes to.’

A few D-1 college programs already have their eyes on Hudson, according to his parents.

‘As a former D-1 coach, a lot of my friends are still coaching and I’m telling them to start recruiting him,’ said Haloossim. ‘Coaches that are really looking for the talent and not the hype are going to come after him.’

‘He’s a horse. He’s not a dog,’ said Derrick Mayes. ‘He’s very graceful out there and he plays the game because he loves it.’

This season, Hudson’s high school team went 20-10 and finished second in the league championship. Morris said he figures next season, Redondo Union will be one of the top 10 to 15 programs in the state of California.

‘We have really good, young players,’ Morris said. ‘We can do great things, especially with Hudson leading the way.’

‘We attached immediately’

The story of Hudson on the court today can’t be told without going back to a romance in 1969 between Roger Brown and a dancer and waitress at a night club in Indianapolis.

Brown, along with his Pacers teammates, would come to the club which was owned by a man who had front row Pacers season tickets at the Indiana State Fairgrounds Coliseum. Brown walked into the club one night after a game and locked eyes with Jeannie.

‘We attached immediately,’ said Jeannie Brown, who married Roger in 1977. ‘And that was kind of that.’

Brown and Jeannie started dating and people started talking. Interracial dating in the late 1960s and early 1970s was rare, at least in public. Fewer than 3% of marriages were between interracial couples at the time, compared to more than 20% today, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.

‘You’d hear a lot of stuff,’ Jeannie said. ‘I just kind of ignored it all.’ All the talk about a white woman and a Black man dating. Jeannie said she never understood the fuss about any of that.

‘Whatever that is, I don’t have it. I’ve never had it my whole life,’ she said. ‘Yeah, I’ve got plenty of faults. Whatever people feel about color and religion, I don’t see those things.’

Jeannie grew up in a diverse neighborhood in Indianapolis. In elementary school, one of her best friends was a Black girl. The corner drug store was owned by Holocaust survivors who had prisoner camp entry numbers tattooed on their arms.

‘They were all just people to me,’ said Jeannie. ‘And so was Roger and I loved him. I loved watching him play.’

The couple had one child, Gayle, who grew up knowing Brown as a wonderful dad, not as some star basketball player.

‘It didn’t really dawn on me when i was younger,’ said Gayle. ‘I was going to old timers games with him. That probably didn’t have the same mystique as somebody that grew up watching him in his prime.’

Still, she said, her father was ‘always kind of bigger than life for me.’ Gayle always wanted to hang out with him and his buddies playing cards. She would sit in a corner and watch her dad with Uncle Mel (Mel Daniels) and Darnell Hillman and all those Pacers greats.

‘And you would see this smile and laugh when he was with those guys you didn’t normally see,’ she said. ‘He was a reserved guy, quiet.’ And a guy who instilled a love of sports in his daughter.

As a young girl and teenager, Gayle was a standout athlete – softball, track, barrel racing, figure skating and beating the boys at BMX bike races. Her dream was to go to UCLA to play softball on a scholarship.

But in high school, after multiple injuries and an ACL surgery, Gayle’s athletic career ended – and she began to forge another path.

Around that time, Oprah Winfrey was doing a model search in Chicago. Thousands of hopefuls entered. Gayle did too and she ended up finishing in the top 10, at 16 years old.

Gayle was quickly scouted by Elite Models and moved to New York City. ‘I never looked back,’ she said.

And as Gayle found success in modeling, a childhood love of hers named Derrick Mayes was setting records at Notre Dame. Their dreams had whisked them away from one another. But that wouldn’t last for long.

First there was football

Derrick and Gayle met in elementary school in Indianapolis. She was in third grade and he was in fourth. By that time, Derrick was football savvy. He had been playing since he was tiny, running through the house with a football in his arm.

‘If I took a liking to it, no matter what it was, my dad made sure that I could go out and experience it,’ Derrick Mayes said.

David Mayes became the president of Fall Creek Little League football so Derrick could play early. He was in second grade running the field with the third graders.

‘He was always outgoing,’ said Derrick’s mom, Annie Mayes. ‘Growing up, he was like a little daredevil. He would try anything.’ But out of everything he tried, Derrick loved football most.

‘I remember we would take him to the high school football games and while the team was playing in the stadium, Derrick was out in a field with friends,’ said David Mayes, ‘playing more football.’

Once at North Central, Derrick began to shine. ‘I started getting a lot of attention the same way Huddy has so there are a lot of parallels and similarities there.’ Derrick’s stellar high school career later landed him in North Central’s hall of fame.

In 1992, it led him to Notre Dame where, as a wide receiver, Derrick set the program record for career touchdown receptions, a feat that was broken by Jeff Samardzija a decade later.

In 1996, Derrick Mayes was drafted by the Green Bay Packers in the second round of the NFL Draft. He caught six passes in his rookie season and was part of the Packers’ Super Bowl-winning team. For the next two seasons, Mayes expanded his role with the team and had his best game in 1998, catching three touchdowns against the Carolina Panthers.

Before the 1999 season, Mayes was traded to the Seattle Seahawks where, in his first season, he caught a career-high 62 passes for 829 yards and 10 touchdowns, In 2001, after a 2000 season in which Mayes caught 29 passes and one touchdown, he was cut by Seattle. Mayes was signed by Kansas City in July 2001, but was released during final roster cuts.

That same year, Derrick and Gayle were married. The two had reconnected with Derrick spending his off seasons in New York City.

After football was over, they would eventually move to California and raise their only child, Hudson, instilling a love of school, basketball – and his family legacy.

Grandpa Roger, there are differences, of course

Hudson is 3.8 GPA student with big dreams.

‘I want to go somewhere and get a good education, just honor my legacy and my roots,’ he said. ‘I want to become a businessman and an entrepreneur.

‘When it comes to basketball, the end goal is to play in the NBA, be a really good NBA player, make All-Star teams, win MVPs and go into the hall of fame.’

Just like his grandpa.

There are, of course, plenty of differences between Hudson and Brown. Hillman recently saw a clip of Hudson playing.

‘And I saw him dunking the ball during play,’ Hillman said laughing. ‘And I find that very amusing in that his grandfather would never dunk in warmups or anything – and he could dunk.’ High, soaring two-handed dunks.

McGinnis said Hudson is ‘a little bit more athletic than his grandpa.’ ‘I never saw his grandpa dunk a ball. He was too cool for that. He’d say, ‘You get two points whether you lay it in or dunk it. So Roger chose to just shoot.’

Shoot the layup or, his favorite, that midrange jump shot. ‘I see Hudson doing that midrange, too,’ McGinnis said. ‘I see a lot of similarities. He looks like Roger, too.’

But McGinnis isn’t big on comparisons, mainly for Hudson’s sake.

‘When I’m around Hudson, everybody bombards him with ‘Roger this’ and ‘Roger that,” he said. ‘And I think he appreciates that. He is such a wonderful kid, so polite, he sits there and listens and smiles and says ‘Thank you,’ but you can see it in his face. He wants to live his own legacy. He wants to be his own person.’

Hudson said he is ‘fine’ with people coming up and talking about his grandpa. ‘But I’m also Hudson. I don’t go out on the court as Roger’s grandson.

‘I’m definitely focused on my own path. But I also want to honor him while doing it.’

Follow IndyStar sports reporter Dana Benbow on Twitter: @DanaBenbow. Reach her via email: dbenbow@indystar.com.

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A Washington D.C. effort to allow non-citizens, including undocumented immigrants and foreign diplomats according to the Wall Street journal, to vote in local elections is now law. 

The City Council passed the Local Resident Voting Rights Amendment Act amid criticism from Republicans. Congress had a 30-day review period, during which lawmakers could have pushed to block the legislation. 

The review period ended last week, the council said Monday, WAMU reported. The House pushed to block the D.C. law from taking effect but the Senate ran out of time before the review period ended. 

The bill, introduced by council member Charles Allen, says that if a noncitizen is otherwise qualified to vote, they can do so in local elections so long as they have resided in Washington, D.C., for at least 30 days.

‘This bill is in line with our D.C. values and this council’s history of expanding the right to vote and welcoming new voices into our political process and government,’ Allen said before the Oct. 6, 2022 vote. ‘Our immigrant neighbors of all statuses participate, contribute and care about our community in our city.

Republicans quickly tried quashing the law. Under the terms, voters would have to be 18 years of age by the time of the general election and must live in D.C. for at least 30 days before the election and not claim voting residence in any U.S. state or U.S. territory.

In January, House Oversight Committee Chairman Rep. James Comer, R-K.Y., introduced a resolution to disprove of the legislation.

‘Voting is a pillar of American democracy and a constitutional right that undeniably needs to be protected and preserved for citizens of this country,’ Comer said in a statement. ‘The D.C. Council’s reckless decision to allow non-U.S. citizens and illegal immigrants the right to vote in local elections is an attack on the foundation of this republic.’

Congress can find other ways to block the law, WAMU reported, such as prohibiting D.C. from spending money to implement it. 

The council urged Senate Democrats this month to reject efforts to overturn the law.

‘Today ALL 13 Councilmembers sent a letter to Senate leadership opposing the efforts to disapprove properly adopted DC laws,’ D.C. council chairman Phil Mendelson wrote Friday on Twitter.

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Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer was criticized for apparently enjoying herself at a show last week during a severe winter storm that caused hundreds of thousands to lose power.

The storm last week knocked out power for 700,000 Michiganders and led to school and office closures across the state, severe air travel delay, and the death of a firefighter. Much of the lost power was regained over the weekend, however the state has continued to be pounded with freezing rain.

According to an online post from site ‘The Midwesterner,’ Whitmer was apparently photographed attending a show in Detroit on Thursday night and posing for a photo with other attendees. 

‘Met the Governor, I can now say I have the key to the city,’ one Instagram user posted on Friday, including what appeared to be a photo of Whitmer posing with two other women at the theater.

Former Republican gubernatorial candidate Tudor Dixon ripped Whitmer over the photo of her at the show by contrasting her night out with a video of University of Michigan head football coach Jim Harbaugh stopping to help a police officer remove a fallen tree from the road during the storms.

‘Jim Harbaugh helps remove downed trees and serves his neighbors trapped without power. Meanwhile, Gretchen Whitmer rocks out to ‘90s tunes from ‘Jagged Little Pill’ while 700k are left in the cold,’ she wrote in a post on Twitter, referring to the musical that was showcasing at Detroit’s Fisher Theater last week.

Another state Democrat, State Rep. Helena Scott escaped the snow-drenched state altogether to head to sunny Las Vegas, Nevada, for what appeared to be a birthday weekend getaway according to posts on her Facebook.

Scott posted a photo on Facebook of what looked to be the view from a Las Vegas hotel with the caption, ‘Love that view, what happens in…’

She was criticized by a staffer for the Michigan GOP who said: ‘The priorities for the Dems are out of whack.’

The following day she was tagged in a number of posts on Facebook wishing her a happy birthday.

Additionally, Dixon slammed Scott for heading out of state, writing in a separate post, ‘Are there any Michigan Democrats who care about the plight of their constituents?’

Whitmer tweeted Friday regarding the winter storms: ‘I met with utility workers who’ve been on the frontline restoring power lines and clearing debris after this week’s winter storm. I’m extremely grateful for the hard work they’ve been doing to improve conditions throughout our state and keep Michiganders safe.’

She also warned of ‘high winds’ on Feb. 23 and urged caution around downed power lines.

Fox News Digital reached out to Whitmer and Scott for comment but did not immediately receive a response from either.

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