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All eyes are on White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre after additional classified documents were found at President Biden’s Delaware home more than a week after she said a search of the residence was ‘complete.’

On Friday, officials from the Justice Department seized ‘six items consisting of documents with classification markings’ from the Wilmington estate nine days after the press secretary strongly suggested no additional documents would be found.

‘On Jan. 20, 2023, the FBI executed a planned, consensual search of the President’s residence in Wilmington, Delaware,’ Joseph D. Fitzpatrick, an assistant U.S. attorney to U.S. attorney for the Northern District of Illinois John Lausch, told Fox News Saturday.

Biden’s personal attorney Bob Bauer later confirmed the ‘DOJ had full access to the President’s home, including personally handwritten notes, files, papers, binders, memorabilia, to-do lists, schedules, and reminders going back decades.’

The new discovery seems to come at odds with what Jean-Pierre previously said from the White House podium.

On Jan. 12, Jean-Pierre told reporters during a press conference that a search of President Biden’s Wilmington residence was ‘completed’ and that the matter is ‘in the hands of the special counsel’ before telling reporters they ‘should assume it has been completed, yes.’

Later in the press conference, Karine-Pierre reaffirmed ‘the search is complete.’

But, additional documents were found later that night and again on Friday.

On Jan. 13, a day after Jean-Pierre’s initial ‘complete’ remark, White House special counsel Richard Sauber said more classified documents were found Thursday evening.

‘Because I have a security clearance, I went to Wilmington Thursday evening to facilitate providing the document the president’s personal counsel found on Wednesday to the Justice Department. While I was transferring it to the DOJ officials who accompanied me, five additional pages with classification markings were discovered among the material with it, for a total of six pages. The DOJ officials with me immediately took possession of them,’ Sauber said.

A week later, on Jan. 20, the additional documents were found when DOJ officials, the FBI, and Biden’s personal lawyers conducted another search of the home.

The FBI did not allow former President Trump’s attorneys to participate during their raid on his Mar-a-Lago estate, where classified documents were also found.

Friday’s search started in the morning at 9:45 a.m. and concluded Friday night around 10:30 p.m.

Bauer said Saturday evening the search covered ‘all working, living and storage spaces in the home.’

‘At the outset of this matter, the President directed his personal attorneys to fully cooperate with the Department of Justice,’ Bauer said. ‘Accordingly, having previously identified and reported to DOJ a small number of documents with classification markings at the President’s Wilmington home, and in the interest of moving the process forward as expeditiously as possible, we offered to provide prompt access to his home to allow DOJ to conduct a search of the entire premises for potential vice-presidential records and potential classified material.’

There has been no further clarity on the issue or apparent inconsistencies from the White House as Jean-Pierre refused to answer questions about whether additional classified documents would be found.

Earlier this week, she brushed off several questions and referred reporters to the White House special counsel. Attorney General Merrick Garland named an independent special counsel to probe Biden’s alleged mishandling of classified documents on Jan. 12, 2023.

‘I’m just going to continue to be prudent here,’ Jean-Pierre said. ‘I’m going to let this ongoing review that is happening, this legal process that is happening and let that process continue under the special counsel. I’m not going to comment from here.’

‘One of the things that we have said for the last two years when it comes to the Department of Justice, when it comes to legal matters, when it comes to legal issues, we have been very clear that we are not going to comment. We are not going to politically interfere,’ she added Tuesday, Jan. 17. ‘I will say that we are consistent with what we have said on cooperating fully with the Department of Justice on this issue, and we will continue to cooperate fully with the special counsel.’

Later in the same press conference, Jean-Pierre defended herself by saying she has been ‘forthcoming’ with all information available to her and her office.

More than a dozen classified documents have been found at the Biden home. 

Additional classified documents were found at Biden’s private office at the Penn Biden Center in November.

Fox News’ Adam Sabes, Brooke Singman, Patrick Ward and Jessica Chasmar contributed to this report.

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A congressman from Florida who was seriously injured after falling more than 20 feet while cutting a tree outside his Sarasota home has been released from the hospital.

U.S. Rep. Greg Steube, R-Fla., shared on Twitter Saturday afternoon he will be recovering at home.

‘All praise and glory goes to God!’ Steube tweeted. ‘I’m grateful to be home and recovering after being discharged from the hospital today.’ 

He added: ‘Jen and I remain endlessly blessed by the prayers and support from our friends, family, and community.’

Steube spent four days in the hospital after he was knocked from a ladder on Wednesday and fell 25 feet. A bystander witnessed the fall and called 911. 

The lawmaker was then rushed to Sarasota Memorial’s intensive care unit.

Darrel Woodie, a part-time field representative for U.S. Rep. Vern Buchanan, witnessed the fall and called emergency services, according to 911 audio obtained by Fox 13 Tampa Bay.

‘A branch hit the ladder, took him out,’ Woodie said on the call. ‘I think his left arm is scarred up pretty good.’

Steube also thanked staffers at Sarasota Memorial Hospital on Saturday ‘for the excellent care’ they provided.

The Republican provided updates throughout as he was recovering in the hospital, tweeting on Wednesday that he was ‘making progress’ and was ‘in good spirits.’ 

Steube was first elected to the House of Representatives in 2018 and is serving his third term representing Florida’s 17th Congressional District.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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The Justice Department seized additional classified records from President Biden’s Wilmington, Delaware home after an FBI search on Friday, Fox News has learned.

‘On Jan. 20, 2023, the FBI executed a planned, consensual search of the President’s residence in Wilmington, Delaware,’ Joseph D. Fitzpatrick, an assistant U.S. attorney to U.S. attorney for the Northern District of Illinois John Lausch, told Fox News Saturday. 

Lausch was the DOJ official running the investigation into Biden’s improper retention of classified records ahead of the appointment of Special Counsel Robert Hur. Fox News has learned Lausch is still playing an integral role in the probe as Hur gets up to speed. 

The FBI search began Friday morning at 9:45 a.m. and concluded Friday night around 10:30 p.m. 

Biden’s personal attorney Bob Bauer said Saturday evening the search covered ‘all working, living and storage spaces in the home.’

‘At the outset of this matter, the President directed his personal attorneys to fully cooperate with the Department of Justice,’ Bauer said. ‘Accordingly, having previously identified and reported to DOJ a small number of documents with classification markings at the President’s Wilmington home, and in the interest of moving the process forward as expeditiously as possible, we offered to provide prompt access to his home to allow DOJ to conduct a search of the entire premises for potential vice-presidential records and potential classified material.’

Bauer said that by agreement with the Justice Department, representatives of both Biden’s personal legal team and the White House Counsel’s Office were present for the search. Neither the president nor the first lady were present during the search. 

‘DOJ had full access to the President’s home, including personally handwritten notes, files, papers, binders, memorabilia, to-do lists, schedules, and reminders going back decades,’ Bauer continued. 

‘DOJ took possession of materials it deemed within the scope of its inquiry, including six items consisting of documents with classification markings and surrounding materials, some of which were from the President’s service in the Senate and some of which were from his tenure as Vice President,’ Bauer said. ‘DOJ also took for further review personally handwritten notes from the vice-presidential years.’ 

Biden left the U.S. Senate in 2008 to serve as vice president to former President Barack Obama.  

Bauer added that the president’s team has ‘attempted to balance the importance of public transparency where appropriate with the established norms and limitations necessary to protect the investigation’s integrity.’ 

‘We will continue to do so throughout the course of our cooperation with DOJ,’ Bauer said. 

While Bauer’s statement addresses that the Justice Department took ‘six items consisting of documents with classification markings,’ it is unclear the exact number of classified documents seized during the search. 

‘The President’s lawyers and White House Counsel’s Office will continue to cooperate with DOJ and the Special Counsel to help ensure this process is conducted swiftly and efficiently,’ White House counsel Richard Sauber said in a statement Saturday evening. 

The search comes a week after Attorney General Merrick Garland appointed U.S. Attorney Robert Hur as special counsel to investigate the president’s possible unauthorized removal and improper retention of classified documents and records discovered at the Penn Biden Center in Washington D.C., and in his private residence in Wilmington, Delaware.

Classified records were found inside the Washington, D.C., offices of the Penn Biden Center think tank on Nov. 2, 2022, but only disclosed to the public last week. 

A second stash of classified documents was also found inside the garage of the president’s home in Wilmington. Last weekend, additional classified documents were found in the president’s home.

The White House has repeatedly declined to comment on the contents of the classified records, as well as the levels of the classification, saying instead that the records ‘have been turned over to proper authorities and will be part of the ongoing investigation.’

Fox News’ Jake Gibson and David Spunt contributed to this report. 

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Elizabeth Holmes, the founder of disgraced biotech firm Theranos, was still in possession of a one-way ticket to Mexico shortly after she was convicted of fraud last January, prosecutors said Thursday.

Holmes was found guilty on four counts of lying to investors on Jan. 3, 2022. According to a Thursday court filing, on Jan. 23, 2022, the U.S. government became aware of the ticket for a flight to Mexico departing Jan. 26, 2022 without a scheduled return trip.

In the response filing, prosecutors characterize her itinerary as ‘an attempt to flee the country.’

‘Only after the government raised this unauthorized flight with defense counsel was the trip canceled,’ prosecutors said.

It is not clear when Holmes originally purchased the ticket. In response to a Jan. 23, 2022, query about the ticket from the case’s lead federal prosecutor, an attorney for Holmes characterized the situation as a misunderstanding, according to an exhibit also filed Thursday.

‘In general, this was a reservation that was made before the verdict,’ Lance Wade said in response to Assistant United States Attorney Jeffrey Schenk, according to the exhibit. ‘The hope was that the verdict would be different and Ms. Holmes would be able to make this trip to attend the wedding of close friends in Mexico. Given the verdict, she does not plan to take the trip — and therefore did not provide notice, seek permission, or request access to her passport (which the government has) for the trip. But she also had not yet cancelled the trip, amidst everything that has been going on.’

The prosecutors’ response filing came as part of the government’s opposition to Holmes’ motion for release from detention pending appeal of her sentencing; in November, a judge sentenced Holmes to more than 11 years in prison. U.S. District Court Judge Edward Davila ordered Holmes to surrender herself into custody by April 27. It has not yet been determined where she would serve her sentence, but Davila has recommended a minimum-security prison camp in Texas.

Elizabeth Holmes, founder and former CEO of blood testing and life sciences company Theranos, walks with her mother Noel Holmes and partner Billy Evans into the federal courthouse for her sentencing hearing on November 18, 2022 in San Jose, Calif.Amy Osborne / AFP via Getty Images file

Holmes’ partner, William Evans, also bought a one-way ticket “and did not return until approximately six weeks later, returning from a different continent,” prosecutors said.

“The government anticipates (Holmes) will note in reply that she did not in fact leave the country as scheduled—but it is difficult to know with certainty what (Holmes) would have done had the government not intervened,” prosecutors said.

Prosecutors also allege Holmes maintains access to vast financial resources.

“(Holmes) has lived on an estate for over a year where, based upon the monthly cash flow statement (Holmes) provided to the U.S. Probation Office, monthly expenses exceed $13,000 per month,” they write.

They further note that a judge has found that Holmes “never fully appreciated that [s]he would be incarcerated” based on “ill-founded hopes that the Court would give [her] a probationary sentence.” Additionally, Holmes has not “demonstrated . . . in [her] words or manner, a genuine acceptance that [s]he stole a significant amount of money from [investors] by lying and falsifying documents,” the prosecutors say.

They thus vehemently object to any release.

“At the same time when her incentive to flee has never been higher, (Holmes) has requested the Court ease the restrictions on her travel, permitting her to travel outside of the Northern District of California and perhaps out of the state altogether ‘due to her significant other’s employment.’”

The U.S. has maintained bilateral extradition treaties with Mexico dating back to the 19th century — perhaps contrary to belief that crossing the southern border guarantees freedom. Since 2005, Mexico has deported between 150 and 200 fugitives to face charges in the U.S., according to the U.S. State Department.

In one prominent example, Wanda Lee Ann Podgurski, convicted of disability and insurance fraud in 2013, was apprehended in Mexico six months after an account in her name tweeted, “Catch me if you can.”

The U.S. Marshals service is the primary agency designated for tracking fugitives. In addition to maintaining an office in Mexico, the USMS works closely with law enforcement agencies along the borders of Mexico and Canada and with the U.S. Department of State’s Diplomatic Security Service.

An attorney for Holmes did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

CORRECTION (Jan. 20, 2023 10:30 a.m. ET): A previous version of this article misstated when Elizabeth Holmes bought the ticket to Mexico. She made the purchase before her conviction, not after.

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

It came off as a rare moment of candor for the airline industry on Wednesday, when United Airlines CEO Scott Kirby told analysts and reporters that after a year of constant disruptions, including canceled and delayed flights, lost luggage and worse, passengers could expect more of that in 2023.

“The system simply can’t handle the volume today, much less the anticipated growth,” Kirby said. “There are a number of airlines who cannot fly their schedules. The customers are paying the price.”

The year 2022 was one of the most stress-inducing for consumer air travelers in recent memory. A surge in travel demand after airlines slashed resources during the pandemic caught carriers flat footed. Unable to adequately staff flights, they nevertheless continued to sell record-breaking numbers of tickets, resulting in more than one in five flights being delayed, according to the U.S. Bureau of Transportation Statistics — the highest rate of delays since 2014.

By Memorial Day last year, airfares were soaring, and flight cancellations started to mount. The situation worsened over the summer, as bouts of disruptive weather left passengers stranded and forced Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg to call a meeting with airline CEOs.

While autumn was mostly free of disruptions, the year ended with a winter storm that brought airline travel to a standstill, especially at Southwest Airlines.

‘The days of flying being fun are long over,’ said William McGee, a senior fellow for aviation and travel at the American Economic Liberties Project, a nonprofit, nonpartisan, anti-monopoly group. ‘People will settle for noneventful.’

Not everyone agrees on the nature of the problem. According to Scott Mayerowitz, executive editor of The Points Guy travel website, on any given day, the current system is mostly fine.

‘It’s only these few instances when things go wrong, that they go horribly wrong, and it causes severe problems for such large numbers of people,’ he said. ‘And it’s horrible if you’re one of those passengers — but the next week, everyone moves along and the system works.’

Still, many agree about the short- and long-term challenges that plague the industry. Airlines will soon be hobbled by a lack of adequate staffing, something United’s Kirby alluded to. On a more distant horizon are modernization and market reform efforts that analysts fear might be stymied by political obstacles.

Those issues are likely to linger as long as Washington gridlock prevails, analysts say.

Labor shortages

As the pandemic swooped in, air travel was among the industries most affected, as more than 90% of flights were grounded. Bloomberg News calculated that some 400,000 global airline industry workers were set to lose their jobs as a result of the pandemic.

Today, labor shortages exist throughout the economy, but the problem drags on in the air travel sector, where more extensive employee training is usually required.

“The question on everybody’s lips is, ‘Where have they all gone?’” said Tim Clark, president of Emirates Airline, at an event this summer, as reported by The Wall Street Journal. “There are hundreds of millions of people that have disappeared from the labor market.”

First and foremost among the airline industry’s labor issues is a pilot shortage. By one estimate, some 12,000 more pilots are needed. Even before the pandemic, pilots were retiring in droves as the baby boom generation hit the federal mandatory pilot age limit of 65.

“The pilot shortage for the industry is real, and most airlines are simply not going to be able to realize their capacity plans because there simply aren’t enough pilots, at least not for the next five-plus years,” United’s Kirby said on a quarterly earnings call last April.

But pilot unions have resisted calls for reform. Some fear that proposed changes could jeopardize safety. Others worry that with younger, less experienced pilots among their ranks, some collective bargaining leverage would be lost.

On its website, the Air Line Pilots Association, the nation’s largest pilots union, calls the shortage a ‘myth’ and accuses airline executives of trying to maximize profit — in part by refusing to reduce their flight schedules.

But even ALPA acknowledges more measures could be taken to ‘maintain a robust pilot pipeline,’ like helping students pay for flight training and subsidizing loans to cover it. Having more pilots available to work would ease the burden on the system.

Other stakeholders seem to be on the same page.

The trade group Airlines for America, which counts American Airlines, JetBlue, Southwest and others as members, told NBC News its carriers ‘have been working diligently to address operational challenges within our control by hiring additional staff and adjusting our schedules to improve reliability.’ 

Sen. Lindsey Graham has introduced legislation to raise the pilot retirement age from 65 to 67. The bill is supported by the Regional Airline Association, which says that since 2019, 71% of airports have reduced flights, and nine airports have lost service completely as a result of the age limit.

“Under this legislation, approximately 5,000 pilots would have the opportunity to continue to fly over the next two years, and in turn, help keep communities connected to the air transportation system,” association senior director Drew Remos said, according to CNBC.

Travelers check in at an automated counter at Logan International Airport on Jan. 11, 2023, in Boston.Steven Senne / AP

Outdated technology and infrastructure

There is near-universal agreement that the infrastructure underpinning segments of America’s air travel system is outdated and vulnerable. That was on full display at the start of the year when a technology issue at the Federal Aviation Administration caused all planes to be grounded. The agency said it has continued to investigate, but Washington lawmakers said the glitch proved that more drastic changes were needed.

Rep. Sam Graves, R-Montana, said the incident highlighted ‘a huge vulnerability in our air transportation system.’

‘Just as Southwest’s widespread disruption just a few weeks ago was inexcusable, so too is the DOT’s and FAA’s failure to properly maintain and operate the air traffic control system,’ he said.

The Southwest incident, too, was blamed in part on Southwest’s aging scheduling system, which requires crew members to call into a central hotline to be rerouted when a disruption occurs.

The FAA has been working to implement what is known as the NextGen system to modernize the country’s air traffic control system, one part of which still uses paper strips to coordinate flight schedules. Reuters recently referred to that aspect as ‘long-ridiculed.’

“There’s a great deal of work needed to reduce the backlog of sustainment work, upgrades and replacement of buildings and equipment needed to operate our nation’s airspace safely,” FAA Deputy Administrator Bradley Mims said last April.

Delta Air Lines CEO Ed Bastian has said additional federal funding is needed to speed up modernization.

“I lay this on the fact that we are not giving them the resources, the funding, the staffing, the tools, the technology they need to modernize the technology system,’ he told CNBC’s ‘Squawk Box’ recently.

‘Hopefully, this will be the call to our political leaders in Washington that we need to do better,” Bastian added.

But Paul Hudson, president of the FlyersRights consumer advocacy group, said the Transportation Department already gets plenty of funding — and that the money is being misspent.

‘I would like to see an audit of where the money is,’ Hudson told NBC News. ‘DOT has gotten an enormous increase, and either it’s not being spent, or it’s being spent on other things than what’s causing cancellations.’  

But even this issue comes back to staffing. The FAA said in 2020 it was more difficult “to hire technical talent as quickly and effectively than in the past.”

Lawmakers across the political spectrum have called for an alternative solution: privatizing the air traffic control system. It’s a step that other countries have taken, including Canada, whose NAV Canada system has been a privately operated nonprofit company since 1996.

‘It’s the gold standard of air traffic systems in the world,’ said Scott Lincicome, director of general economics at the Cato Institute, a libertarian think tank. ‘It is efficient, innovative, and it is a nonprofit private company regulated by the government,’ Lincicome said, adding: ‘It’s a great example of what the US system could be if we could surmount our difficulties.’

Travelers line up for flights at O’Hare International Airport in Chicago, on Dec. 30, 2021.Nam Y. Huh / AP

Gridlock

But Lincicome said there is entrenched resistance to that solution — and to many other practical ones put forward by consumer advocates of all political stripes.

‘It doesn’t seem like there’s any appetite in Washington for that reform, regardless of the documented problems,’ Lincicome said. ‘It seems like a very tough nut to crack.’

In the meantime, flyers in the U.S. will remain at the mercy of their individual airline. Already, U.S. airline passengers enjoy fewer rights than passengers in Europe, according to Eric Napoli, vice president of legal strategy at AirHelp, a European-based consumer rights advocacy group. While European passengers are entitled to as much as 600 euros when there’s a flight disruption of more than three hours that’s not outside an airline’s control, travelers on U.S. flights are entitled merely to a refund — and even that can be hard to obtain.

‘It’s difficult to claim compensation from airlines,’ Napoli said of airline passengers in the U.S. ‘They don’t have great protections.’

Mayerowitz, with The Points Guy, said carriers would likely pass on the costs of stronger regulation to customers.

“Americans are used to $39 flights to Florida,” Mayerowitz said. “There’s probably not a desire by travelers to pay an extra $20 or $30 for each ticket in order to have these delay protections that they may or may not reap the benefits of” if their flight ends up being on time.

Airfares have been in a more or less steady decline since the mid-1990s, when adjusted for inflation. Compared with a ticket that cost an average of $558 in 1995, airfare in 2022 cost an average of $373, according to the Bureau of Transportation Statistics.

McGee, with the American Economic Liberties Project, hopes that flying in the U.S. becomes so difficult that lawmakers may finally take more comprehensive action.

‘It’s nearing a breaking point, and this is not a one party issue,’ McGee said. ‘There’s a general sense in the country; most Americans realize something is really wrong with this industry.’

But Mayerowitz said that until those actions are taken, passengers should be realistic about what to expect when they take to the skies.

‘Passengers should never lower their expectations, but should always prepare for the worst,’ Mayerowitz said. ‘We need to hold airlines and politicians accountable. Air travel should be predictable and consistent, and you shouldn’t have to wonder if air traffic control is going to be working today as you head to the airport.

‘That said, every traveler should always have a backup plan, and a backup for their backup. And that’s especially true over holidays.’

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Less than a month in, Ed Reed’s tenure at Bethune-Cookman University is over.

On Saturday morning, Reed took to social media and announced his contract would not be ratified by the university after an agreement between the parties had been in place. Later, via Instagram, Reed claimed he was being forced out of the position by B-CU. The post was accompanied by a 15-plus-minute video depicting Reed ranting about the situation at a podium.

The two sides reached an agreement in principle on Dec. 27, but no terms were ever released.

‘I am NOT withdrawing my name as the head coach at Bethune-Cookman,’ his Instagram post read. ‘The administration and the AD are forcing me out. Thank you to all that supported me and my staff through this process. Good day and God bless.’

That seemed to build upon a longer statement released through Reed’s foundation on Twitter in which a contract disagreement between the two parties was to blame for the rift.

“It’s my desire to not only coach football, but to be an agent of change that most people just talk about being,” it read. “However, after weeks of negotiations, I’ve been informed that the university won’t be ratifying my contract and won’t make good on the agreement we had in principle, which had provisions and resources best needed to support the student-athletes.

‘I was committed to coaching and cultivating a relationship with the university, players, community and the fans. It’s extremely disappointing this won’t be happening.’

The Pro Football Hall of Famer and former star with the Miami Hurricanes and Baltimore Ravens had been working without a contract throughout this month. He made headlines last weekend after criticizing Bethune-Cookman’s facilities during a profanity-laced social media live stream. He later issued an apology.

The university has not released a statement since the announcement of Reed’s hire. Athletic director Reggie Theus has not responded to the News-Journal’s requests for comment.

Bethune-Cookman tabbed Reed after back-to-back 2-9 seasons since joining the Southwestern Athletic Conference in 2021. It fired former coach Terry Sims, who tallied a 38-39 record across seven seasons, in November.

Reed, 44, had never been a college head coach before accepting the position. He had served one year as an assistant defensive backs coach for the Buffalo Bills and three years as an adviser on the Miami Hurricanes’ staff since retiring as a player in 2015.

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As the Jacksonville Jaguars savor their rare postseason appearance, and even rarer playoff win, there is finally something positive to say about Urban Meyer’s time with the franchise.

At least it didn’t last long enough to wreck Trevor Lawrence.

Some of Lawrence’s bad habits that went unaddressed under Meyer still linger, as evidenced by that four-interception performance in the first half against the Los Angeles Chargers on Saturday night. But more and more we see the progress, and the potential, of the overall No. 1 pick in the 2021 draft, and there’s little doubt who’s responsible for that.

It sure isn’t Meyer!

Doug Pederson has worked a minor miracle in his first season in Jacksonville, eliminating the dysfunction – last we checked, no kickers got kicked this season and Travis Etienne is still a running back – and transforming a three-win team into an AFC South champion.

Granted, the bar is low given the weakness of the division and Tennessee’s season-ending implosion. Still, give the man his due. The Jaguars tripled their wins from last year, from three to nine, and went from the bottom or near bottom of the league in both offense and defense to the upper third. They’re also the first team in NFL history to go from the league’s worst record to winning a playoff game in one season.

But Pederson’s biggest influence has been in the development of Lawrence.

“I think what you’re seeing is just him learning from mistakes that were made previously in the season, opportunities that we’ve missed,” Pederson said earlier this year. ‘That’s a good player that’s just taking correction and coaching, and understanding what we’re asking him to do, and just being better as a player.’

Lawrence came out of Clemson as the surest bet for success as a No. 1 pick since perhaps Andrew Luck in 2012. He’d won a national championship as a freshman, and his 34-2 record at Clemson was the third-best winning percentage for a college quarterback since 1978. He also was mature beyond his years, unlikely to be flustered by the larger, hotter spotlight of the NFL or rattled by its stepped-up level of competition.

And had Lawrence had a competent coach, that might have been the case. Instead, he got the almighty Urban, who couldn’t fathom that his success in college was partly because of the environment and never could accept that the NFL’s was completely different.

Meyer thought he could operate the way he had at Florida and Ohio State, and it was apparent almost immediately that wasn’t going to work. But as Meyer floundered, so did Lawrence.  

The QB who could conjure up touchdowns seemingly at will at Clemson had an eight-game stretch in which he threw a grand total of one. The Jaguars weren’t getting a whole lot of TDs from other people, either, scoring eight during that span, one of which was by the defense.

What Lawrence was throwing was interceptions. A lot of them. Seventeen in total – tied for the league lead in 2021 and as many as he’d thrown in three years at Clemson.

While Lawrence was too classy to criticize Meyer outright – the closest he came was stating the obvious, that running back James Robinson needed to be on the field rather than in Meyer’s doghouse – the strides he’s made this season damn his old coach by comparison.

It helps that Lawrence is getting better protection from a reconstructed offensive line. A healthy Etienne and playmakers Christian Kirk, Zay Jones and Evan Engram, who arrived as part of Jacksonville’s $260 million spending spree last offseason, don’t hurt, either.

But it’s obvious Lawrence is thriving under Pederson, a former quarterback himself who spent most of his 10-year NFL career as a backup to Brett Favre.

‘He’s a really, really smart offensive mind, and he played the position, great play-caller, all those things,’ Lawrence said of Pederson last month. 

‘One thing we really needed was someone that’s stable, comes in every day, he’s always the same no matter what,’ Lawrence added. ‘… He never panics, and I think that just shows the confidence he has in us, and that’s reciprocated in the way we practice, the way that we prepare, all that.”

Lawrence doubled his number of touchdowns, from 12 last year to 25, while cutting his interceptions in half, to eight. His completion rate this year was 67%, up from 60% last year, and his QB rating jumped more than 20 points.

One thing Pederson said has helped Lawrence’s progress is repeating play calls. It allows Lawrence to get different looks, depending on the situation and the opponent, giving him a deeper knowledge of the play and why it works. Or doesn’t.

That, in turn, has allowed him to see the field better and play faster, neither of which he did particularly well last year.

It’s all translated into wins, five in a row to close the regular season and clinch the AFC South title over the Titans.

Even after his abysmal first half against the Chargers, Lawrence regrouped and was then dazzling. Beginning with Jacksonville’s final possession of the first half, he went touchdown, touchdown, touchdown, touchdown, game-winning field goal to lead the improbable 31-30 victory. He was 23 of 29 in those drives.

The Jaguars now play Patrick Mahomes and the Kansas City Chiefs on Saturday. 

‘I’m just so happy for Trevor because he had to deal with Urban Meyer last year as a rookie. I don’t even know if he had a rookie year,’ safety Andrew Wingard told Action Sports Jax after the Jaguars upset the Baltimore Ravens on Nov. 27. 

‘And to see the growth he’s made, not just on the field, but his preparation, his demeanor, all that … I’m so happy for him.’ 

And it never would have happened under Meyer.

Meyer cost the Jaguars, and Lawrence, last season. They’re just lucky the price of his ineptitude wasn’t higher or longer lasting.

Follow USA TODAY Sports columnist Nancy Armour on Twitter @nrarmour.

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ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. – What happened the last time the Buffalo Bills were on the field with the Cincinnati Bills will never be forgotten. Shouldn’t be. Can’t be.

And here they are again, less than three weeks since the incident that shook the NFL to its core.

Bills vs. Bengals. The stakes will be even higher on Sunday at Highmark Stadium, with the winner advancing to the AFC Championship Game.

“They’re going to come in here with their best,” Dion Dawkins, the Buffalo left tackle, said on Friday. “We’re going to try to play our best. We’re going to keep swinging, blow after blow.”

Follow every game: Latest NFL Scores and Schedules

For as much as the respect between the teams grew on that Monday night and in the aftermath, a bond shared as they came to grips with the possibility of a man losing his life on a football field, the AFC divisional playoff will be more of the same. Sentiments will be separated from the task at hand.

Still, this week’s version of a big game – the Bengals have won nine games in a row, the Bills are riding a seven-game winning streak – is not complete without the layer of perspective added from the last time these teams met.

There has been much buzz about Hamlin, who returned home nine days after he suffered cardiac arrest and continued to progress in his recovery. He visited the team’s headquarters on multiple occasions this week after watching the first-round playoff win against Miami on television.

Will Hamlin show up in person on Sunday?

“I don’t know the answer,” Bills coach Sean McDermott told reporters on Friday. “We’re just going at Damar’s cadence. It’s what he needs and how we can help him. And how our training staff can help serve him. Walk at his pace, so to speak.”

BILLS SAFETY UPDATE: Hamlin faces ‘lengthy recovery,’ representative says

Imagine the jolt of energy on Sunday that Hamlin could provide fans if they got a glimpse of him in public for the first time since his collapse. Then again, as symbolic as a Hamlin appearance might be, his recovery can’t be jeopardized for show. According to a family spokesman this week, Hamlin still faces a “lengthy” recovery. Although it was previously reported that doctors believe he is neurologically intact, he still requires oxygen and gets winded quickly.

Hamlin’s teammates, though, have already received a jolt by his mere presence at headquarters.

“It’s just been great to see him back around the building,” Bills defensive end Greg Rousseau told USA TODAY Sports. “If you want to talk to him, chop it up with him, he’s got a big smile on his face. Just happy to have him back.”

Rousseau, a second-year pro, echoed what other players have said about dealing with the emotions that flowed from Hamlin’s situation. The initial days were tense due to uncertainty. As Hamlin’s condition improved, so did the spirits of teammates.

“It was hard, for sure,” Rousseau said. “But just knowing he was going to be okay, it was cool.”

Dawkins praised McDermott for connecting with players and setting the right tone. The Bills played their regular-season finale against New England six days after the Hamlin emergency, then last Sunday opened the playoffs with a victory against Miami.

The key to regaining focus?

“Just taking the pressure off of us, allowing us to go through our emotions naturally, not forcing what was next on us,” said Dawkins, one of the team’s captains. “Coach could have come in like, ‘Alright, fellas, you had two days. It’s time to go.’ He didn’t do that. He kind of let everybody flow in as fluid as they wanted to. Like nobody was rushed. For us not to be pushed and pulled in different directions, it was a good thing mentally.”

Handling the Hamlin situation was just the latest test to the Bills’ resolve. A month ago, they were part of a Buffalo community that was pounded by a blizzard costs the lives of 47 people. In November, a snowstorm prompted the NFL to move the Bills game against the Cleveland Browns to Detroit.

Also, many Bills players were moved by a racist attack in May that left 10 people dead and three wounded in a mass shooting at a Buffalo supermarket that served the African American Community.

“Since the spring, there’s been a lot of stuff,” Case Keenum, the veteran backup quarterback, told USA TODAY Sports. “It’s been like, ‘What’s next? What adversity do we have now?’’

Then there are the playoff setbacks of recent years that formulate another type of adversity. After a 17-year playoff drought, the Bills have been built into a legitimate Super Bowl contender under McDermott, in his sixth season at the helm, and GM Brandon Beane.

But last year, the Bills suffered a heart-breaking loss in the divisional playoffs at Kansas City. The Chiefs drove the length of the field in the final 13 seconds of the fourth quarter to force overtime – and then never allowed Buffalo to get the ball back by scoring a TD on the first possession of OT, which ultimately prompted an NFL rule change.

Two years ago, the Bills advanced to the AFC title game at Kansas City and lost.

On and off the field, the team’s resilience has been tested – and strengthened.

“It gives you a more sturdy foundation,” Bills quarterback Josh Allen told reporters this week. “The more struggle, the more adversity that you can see over the course of a year, just makes you that much stronger. We’ve been in some really weird situations this year that not a lot of teams have ever gone through. So, being able to have that under our belt, understand those emotions, those situations, and just trying to use it to our benefit.”

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If you like your NBA with a side of WWE, then Friday’s Memphis-Los Angeles Lakers game was for you.

If you prefer your NBA game focus on the on-court matchup featuring Ja Morant and LeBron James, the Grizzlies’ winning streak and James’ pursuit of Kareem Abdul-Jabbar’s all-time scoring record, then the game wasn’t for you.

The main takeaway from Friday’s game between the two teams wasn’t Los Angeles’ 122-121 victory, ending Memphis’ 11-game winning streak and James now trailing Abdul-Jabbar by 260 points.

It was the dustup between members of the Grizzlies, Ja Morant’s dad, Tee, and Shannon Sharpe, the Fox Sports commentator and Pro Football Hall of Famer.

The incident began at halftime when Sharpe began jawing at Memphis’ Dillon Brooks, who barked back. Grizzlies center Steven Adams walked toward Sharpe as security, team staffers and referees acted as a buffer between Sharpe and Grizzlies players. Ja Morant entered the fray as did Ja’s dad, Tee, and Sharpe and Tee Morant continued the back-and-forth as players left the court.

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In a brief interview with ESPN at halftime, Sharpe said: “They didn’t want this smoke, Dave. They do that talking and jockeying and I ain’t about that jockeying. It started with Dillon Brooks. I said he was too small to guard LeBron. He said, ‘(expletive) me. I said, ‘(expletive) you’ back. He started to come (at) me and I said, ‘You don’t want these problems.’ And then Ja came out of nowhere talking. He definitely didn’t want these problems. Then the dad came and he obviously didn’t want no problems. But I wanted anything they had. Don’t let these fools fool you now.”

Sharpe and Tee Morant reconciled, and all is good between them. The elder Morant has been a nuisance at games before, but in general, he has a good spirit about him and has said repeatedly he is there to support his son. After the game, Tee Morant tweeted, “up the chimney,” letting everyone know where that smoke went.

With that said, Sharpe should not have been allowed to return to his seat after causing the disturbance. If it had been any other fan, they would’ve been ejected. I get he’s a well-known person and of course, he is treated differently. But he had no business instigating and escalating the incident.

Turn it around: Had this person been jawing at James like that, they would not have been allowed to return to their seat for violating the league’s fan code of conduct which is printed and placed at courtside seats at every NBA game.

Allowing Sharpe to remain set a bad precedent, and it won’t surprise me if the Lakers hear from NBA headquarters.

ESPN play-by-play announcer Mike Breen chimed in with the most reasonable analysis: “It’s just silly.”

Silly indeed. The occasional pettiness is fine. It happens. But the NBA more than any other North American pro sports league seems to thrive on it to the detriment of the league.

I realize this sounds like an old grump, but as someone who is far more interested in the actual game, the NBA can do with less pettiness.

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The NFL is adding insult to injury for Tom Brady and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers after last week’s early exit from the postseason.

According to NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport, Brady was fined $16,444 by the league for trying to trip Dallas Cowboys safety Malik Hooker during their 31-14 wild-card playoff loss Monday night.

In the third quarter, Chris Godwin fumbled a pass from Brady. The ball was recovered by Hooker, who ran through a maze of players, including Brady, for a 19-yard return. After review, the play was reversed and the Buccaneers were given the football back.

Bucs center Ryan Jensen was also fined $8,333.33 for unnecessary roughness on the same play.

USA TODAY Sports+ producer Victoria Hernandez contributed to this story.

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