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With the passing of former President Jimmy Carter at 100, we may now take the full measure of the man. The 39th president’s legacy is that of a role model for us all, regardless of party, ideology, world view or position in life. Quite simply, Jimmy Carter led a heroic life and, for many, represents everything that’s right about public service. His was a life well lived.

I say this as a fellow Democrat who disagreed with Carter on his policies in the Middle East and in countries like Venezuela. But I say it not to criticize the former president, but rather to underscore his unbending commitment to principle, integrity and in unfailingly doing what he believed was the right thing.

Carter’s life reads like a storybook. He was a military leader and hero, a successful farmer and businessman, and a governor who was a trendsetter on civil rights. He did all this while understanding the concerns of those now known as the ultra-MAGA voters in America. Perhaps his greatest accomplishment was winning the presidency in 1976 on a simple program of convincing the American people that he was an outsider, a fresh face and someone who, in his words, ‘would never lie to you.’

His sole term in the White House saw a number of great successes as well as well-documented failures. He was most successful in the Middle East with the signing of the Camp David Accords. He gave back the Panama Canal and signed a nuclear arms reduction treaty with Russia. His failures were most notably the economic crisis that spawned the term ‘stagflation,’ and, of course, the Iranian hostage crisis and botched rescue attempt. His term also saw an energy crisis that burdened Americans with sky-rocketing gas prices and long lines at the gas pumps.

It is important also to know that Carter was a man of faith and God. He was private in his religious beliefs but also compassionate and committed in the most humble of ways possible. He taught Sunday School in his hometown of Plains, Ga., both before and after his presidency with little public notice or awareness.

Carter’s marriage to Rosalynn was a model for us all. It was a partnership that lasted 77 years, apparently without stress or discord but with a joint commitment to the private and public values they both shared and a desire to advance their worldview and values.

But it’s probably most important to note that Carter’s greatest accomplishment, after losing in a landslide to Ronald Reagan in 1980, was setting up the Carter Center, dedicated to promoting world peace. He was able to continue to work on the Israel-Palestinian crisis. He conducted peace negotiations around the world, helped to oversee contentious elections and political change as well as working to eliminate the scourge of highly infectious and contagious diseases.

This model of a post-presidency was and is something that set the stage for what others, including former President Bill Clinton, did post-presidency. After leaving the White House, Carter stimulated a period of extra-legal and judicial activism that produced both the presidential medal in 1999 and a Nobel Peace Prize in 2002.

But as I reflect on President Carter’s life, perhaps his final momentous decision, to go into hospice care in February of 2023, sends a powerful and profound message about end-of-life care and the decisions that we will all inevitably have to make.

By embracing the final chapter in his life with such grace and dignity, former Carter did something that I thought was almost impossible: He raised his own stature and served as a role model for us all, while providing a degree of leadership and service that, I think it’s fair to say, is unmatched in American political and civic life.

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President-elect Trump and President Biden reacted to the death of former President Jimmy Carter on Sunday, with Trump saying, ‘we all owe him a debt of gratitude,’ and Biden honoring his ‘dear friend.’

Carter, who was the 39th president of the United States and a peanut farmer whose vision of a ‘competent and compassionate’ government propelled him into the White House, died at his home in Plains, Georgia, on Sunday at the age of 100.

‘I just heard of the news about the passing of President Jimmy Carter. Those of us who have been fortunate to have served as President understand this is a very exclusive club, and only we can relate to the enormous responsibility of leading the Greatest Nation in History,’ Trump wrote on Truth Social. ‘The challenges Jimmy faced as President came at a pivotal time for our country and he did everything in his power to improve the lives of all Americans. For that, we all owe him a debt of gratitude.

‘Melania and I are thinking warmly of the Carter Family and their loved ones during this difficult time. We urge everyone to keep them in their hearts and prayers,’ the incoming president added.

Also weighing in was President Biden, who said, ‘the world lost an extraordinary leader, statesman, and humanitarian.’

‘Over six decades, we had the honor of calling Jimmy Carter a dear friend. But, what’s extraordinary about Jimmy Carter, though, is that millions of people throughout America and the world who never met him thought of him as a dear friend as well,’ Biden wrote. ‘With his compassion and moral clarity, he worked to eradicate disease, forge peace, advance civil rights and human rights, promote free and fair elections, house the homeless, and always advocate for the least among us. He saved, lifted, and changed the lives of people all across the globe.’

Biden referred to Carter as a man of great character and courage, hope and optimism.

He also said he and his wife will cherish seeing Carter and his wife, Rosalynn, together, noting that the love between the two is the ‘definition of partnership,’ while their leadership is the definition of ‘patriotism.’

‘We will miss them both dearly, but take solace knowing they are reunited once again and will remain forever in our hearts,’ Biden said. ‘To the entire Carter family, we send our gratitude for sharing them with America and the world. To their staff – from the earliest days to the final ones – we have no doubt that you will continue to do the good works that carry on their legacy.

‘And to all of the young people in this nation and for anyone in search of what it means to live a life of purpose and meaning – the good life – study Jimmy Carter, a man of principle, faith, and humility. He showed that we are great nation because we are a good people – decent and honorable, courageous and compassionate, humble and strong,’ Biden added.

Vice President Kamala Harris called Carter’s life ‘a testament to the power of service,’ whether it was as a lieutenant in the U.S. Navy, Governor of Georgia or President of the United States.

‘Throughout his life, President Carter was strengthened by the love and support of his partner of 77 years, First Lady Rosalynn Carter, whose life President Biden and I had the opportunity to celebrate in Georgia last year,’ Harris said. ‘After leaving office, President Carter continued his fight for peace, democracy, and human dignity through the Carter Center.

‘I had the privilege of knowing President Carter for years. I will always remember his kindness, wisdom, and profound grace. His life and legacy continue to inspire me — and will inspire generations to come. Our world is a better place because of President Carter,’ she added. ‘Doug and I send our love and prayers to the Carter family.’

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Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu successfully underwent surgery on Sunday, Fox News has learned.

The Israeli leader had his prostate removed after suffering a urinary tract infection, which had reportedly ‘stemmed from a benign enlargement of his prostate,’ according to Netanyahu’s office.

On Sunday, Netanyahu’s office announced that the surgery ‘ended successfully and without complications.’

‘The Prime Minister woke up from the anesthesia; his condition was good, and he was fully conscious,’ the statement, which was translated from Hebrew to English, read. ‘The Prime Minister has now been transferred to a secure underground recovery unit. He is expected to remain in the hospital for observation in the coming days.’

‘The PM wished to thank the dedicated team of doctors who operated on him.’

The Israeli leader has undergone several health procedures over the past two years. In March, Netanyahu underwent hernia surgery under full anesthesia, and Deputy Prime Minister Yariv Levin temporarily assumed his role during the process.

Months before the Oct. 7 attacks, Netanyahu suffered dehydration and was admitted to a hospital in July 2023.  The Israeli leader said that he became dehydrated after visiting the Sea of Galilee without water or sun protection during a heatwave.

A week after being admitted for dehydration, Netanyahu’s doctors implanted a pacemaker to regulate his heart rate and rhythm.

‘A week ago, I was fitted with a monitoring device. That device beeped this evening and said I must have a pacemaker and that I must do this already tonight,’ Netanyahu, then 73, said at the time. ‘I feel great, but I need to listen to my doctors.’

Netanyahu’s most recent operation came as the 75-year-old politician continues to testify in a corruption case against him in Israel.  He took the stand earlier in December and is expected to continue testifying in the new year.

Netanyahu is also currently leading the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) on multiple fronts across the Middle East, continuing to target Iranian terrorists and their proxies.

The IDF recently launched multiple strikes against Houthi rebels, hitting Sanaa International Airport in Yemen and Houthi infrastructure in the ports of Al-Hudaydah, Salif and Ras Kanatib.

Fox News Digital’s Anders Hagstrom and Chris Pandolfo contributed to this report.

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One of Former President Jimmy Carter’sdefining moments was being the president who managed to broker the first peace agreement in the Middle East, successfully ushering in peace between Israel and Egypt after 30 years of war.

With the Camp David Accords of 1978, Carter was able to stand out from his predecessors by notching a success in an area where they had failed. 

The feat became particularly notable amid a presidency known for various economic and foreign affairs shortcomings. 

According to Martin Indyk, the Lowy distinguished fellow in U.S.-Middle East diplomacy at the Council on Foreign Relations, ‘Arab-Israeli peace has always been the kind of Holy Grail for American diplomacy.’

‘There have been other agreements, but none of them so important, as the peace treaty that Jimmy Carter brokered between Israel and Egypt. It was the first, and it was the most important,’ Indyk, who was once special envoy for Israeli-Palestinian negotiations under former President Obama, continued. 

The Camp David Accords were signed by then-President Carter, Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin in September 1978, and signaled peace between the two countries. Egypt was considered the largest and most powerful Arab nation at the time. 

Negotiations had begun years earlier, in 1973, and were led by former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger. The start of discussions was prompted by the Yom Kippur War, which had proven an expensive conflict for both Israel and Egypt, as well as the Arab countries it led. 

Kissinger had managed to negotiate a ceasefire and disengagement pact, leading to Isreal withdrawing a third of its military forces from the Sinai Peninsula. 

Carter first sought to finalize a deal in November 1977, when Sadat historically traveled to Jerusalem and gave remarks on his desire for peace between the countries.

Indyk described those inital talks very difficult and noted they were ultimately unsuccessful.

‘So you had this… moment of great hope created by Sadat’s initiative, to go into the enemy’s den as it were, into Jerusalem and to speak of peace. But that proved very difficult to achieve agreement,’ he said. ‘And that’s when Carter took the risky decision to bring both leaders to Camp David to try to broker a peace agreement between them.’

The high-risk meeting with both leaders at Camp David was confidential and lasted 12 days.

‘They had no certainty at all that they would be able to bridge the gaps,’ Indyk said of the meeting’s sensitive nature. 

Carter faced an important question during the meeting: What would happen to the Palestinian people?

‘The Palestinian cause was a national cause for the Arabs and so Sadat felt he could not simply abandon them. That he had to have some understanding about what would happen for the Palestinians once he made peace with Israel,’ Indyk explained.

Indyk attributed Carter’s decision to focus solely on Israel and Egypt to the former president’s ‘genius.’ 

‘They had a kind of loose framework for what would happen on the Palestinian front, but essentially, the deal that he did, that he persuaded president Sadat of Egypt to do, was a standalone peace treaty between Israel and Egypt. That’s what he succeeded in negotiating that Camp David,’ he said.

But this result was contrary to what aides for Carter and Sadat both had advised, per Indyk. 

‘This was Carter’s decision. Against the advice of his advisers and against the advice of Sadat’s advisers, it was his decision to go for the separate peace between Israel and Egypt.’ 

The agreement with Sadat went on to become a foreign policy hallmark of Carter’s presidency and also earned him the Nobel Peace Prize in 2002.

‘He was an embattled president,’ Indyk said. ‘Nothing else was really going well for him. There were other things he achieved, but this was the most important one.’

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SAN ANTONIO – Colorado head coach Deion Sanders hopped on a golf cart next to his bodyguard and zoomed down a stadium tunnel on his way out of town.

He had just answered questions from reporters about what happened here Saturday night in the Alamo Bowl – a 36-14 loss against BYU in his final game coaching his two youngest sons in college.

He just didn’t want to dwell on it.

“That’s a wrap,” Sanders said. “It’s over.”

He said the loss wouldn’t overshadow the larger journey he’s had at Colorado because they’re already “on to the next.” Heisman Trophy winner Travis Hunter and Sanders’ sons will try to climb the ladder to the NFL next season after two seasons at Colorado.

“They’re gonna have tremendous careers,” Sanders said. “They’re gonna move on. They flush it.”

But it was still quite an egg they laid at the Alamodome in front of a sold-out crowd of 64,261, especially after all the build-up about how emotional this game would be for Sanders. Before the game, ABC television cameras even focused on him as he walked his final pregame walk with his quarterback son Shedeur and safety son Shilo.

Then came kickoff and – poof – their edge was gone.

Why did it end this way for the Sanders family?

BYU (11-2) seemed far more eager than the Buffaloes (9-4), who have been known for starting slowly this season, most notably in a devastating 37-21 loss against Kansas last month, when they fell behind 17-0 and never recovered.

In this case, they did it again, following the lead of their live bison mascot, Ralphie, who attempted to run on the field before the game but instead just kind of walked before heading for the exits.

The Buffs fell into a 20-0 hole at halftime, failed to score on their first six possessions and managed just 61 yards of total offense in the first half.

Where did it all go wrong on offense?

“Everywhere,” said Shedeur Sanders, who was sacked four times and finished 16-of-23 passing for 208 yards and two touchdowns with two interceptions. “It was nothing that we did great tonight.”

“Ditto,” said his father.

Shedeur Sanders still didn’t do what Cam Ward did

Despite what happened Saturday, Shedeur Sanders still might be the first quarterback selected in the NFL draft in April. It’s likely to be him or Cam Ward, the quarterback for the Miami Hurricanes.

But both took decidedly different approaches to how they handled their final college games on Saturday. Sanders decided to play the game even though it could have cost him millions of dollars in future earnings if he got injured in it despite the insurance policy he obtained for it.

Ward decided to play in his bowl game Saturday, too, but not after halftime. His Hurricanes, leading 31-28 at the half, ended up losing 42-41.

By contrast, Sanders played to the end in the fourth quarter, even when the game was well out of reach after BYU took a 36-7 lead with 5:28 left.

Why risk it?

“We started it, so we had to finish it,” Sanders said. “No matter what it was, if it was the other way around … we were still gonna play regardless.”

Hunter, the two-way star, also played most of the game and finished with four catches for 106 yards and a touchdown as a receiver, along with four tackles on defense. Luckily, there were no significant injuries.

‘You expect us to be exciting’

In many ways, the Buffs looked like last year’s team, when they finished 4-8 in Deion Sanders’ first season. They committed five penalties in the first half as Shedeur Sanders felt steady pressure from the BYU defense. They disappeared at times, looking nothing like the team that finished in a first-place tie with BYU and two other teams in the Big 12 Conference.

At one point in the fourth quarter, BYU linebacker Isaiah Glasker intercepted a pass from Shedeur Sanders and then did Deion Sanders’ old “Deion Shuffle” dance to celebrate in front of the Colorado sideline.

“I feel like going into this game, especially seeing Travis Hunter and Shedeur and these great players on Colorado, I feel like nobody on our team was nervous,” Glasker said. “We just was ready to play.”

Colorado was not, which was surprising for a reason, just two years after the Buffs finished 1-11 prior to hiring Sanders as coach.

“We established expectations,” Deion Sanders said. “So now you expect us to perform a certain way. You expect us to win. You expect us to be exciting. You expect us to be a lot more disciplined than we just played today. You just have expectations of us now. That’s what we’ve established.”

It still was Colorado’s best season since 2016, when the Buffs finished 10-4, also after a blowout loss in the Alamo Bowl. But it will be difficult for Colorado to measure up to those expectations after losing Hunter and Shedeur Sanders.

“It felt great representing Colorado and bringing it back to where it was in the past,” Shedeur Sanders said. “We laid the foundation of the program so now it’s able for the other players coming in to take off and pick up where we left off.”

Follow reporter Brent Schrotenboer @Schrotenboer. Email: bschrotenb@usatoday.com

(This story was updated to add new information.)

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The Philadelphia Eagles (12-3) are becoming one of the top contenders in the 2024 playoff picture. The Birds have one of the NFL’s deepest and most talented rosters. The NFC East has not had a repeat division champion for 20 consecutive seasons and the Eagles are one win away from locking up the division title. They came up short on Sunday in Week 16 against the Washington Commanders (10-5) without quarterback Jalen Hurts, who suffered a concussion in the first half. Still, Saquon Barkley continued to storm his way toward history.

In the offseason, the Eagles re-tooled the defense to pair with a star-studded offensive lineup including Hurts, A.J. Brown and DeVonta Smith. But no move this offseason was bigger than bringing in superstar running back Saquon Barkley. The last time a non-quarterback earned NFL MVP honors was in 2012, and Barkley has made a strong case to shake up the status quo in 2024.

Will Saquon Barkley break the single-season rushing yards record?

The former No. 2 overall pick is as explosive and electric as it comes in the backfield. Barkley rushed for 150 yards and two touchdowns in Sunday’s loss. He scampered for 109 yards in the first quarter but was held in check for the remainder of the game. He has 1,838 rushing yards through 15 games and leads the NFL with 42 runs of at least 10 yards.

Barkley could break the single-season rushing record of 2,105 yards set by Eric Dickerson in 1984. Heading into Week 16, he needed to average 139.3 yards per game to break the record and exceeded that pace against Washington.

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On his 68-yard touchdown run in the first half against the Commanders, he tied Adrian Peterson (2012) and Jim Brown (1963) for the most rushing touchdowns of 60 or more yards in a season, with four such instances apiece. Both Hall of Fame running backs won MVPs in those years.

Barkley runs behind an offensive line that has managed the most rushing yards before contact (3.9) in the NFL. Offensive linemen Lane Johnson, Jordan Mailata and Landon Dickerson have helped make this one of the most dominant rushing offenses in modern NFL history. Philadelphia leads the NFL with 554 rush attempts (Pittsburgh second-most 479). Only eight players have rushed for over 2,000 yards in a season and Barkley needs just 162 to reach that mark.

Eric Dickerson’s record is in Saquon’s sights with two games remaining in the regular season.

Barkley has averaged 122.5 rushing yards per game to this point and needs to average 134 per game over the final two weeks to break the record.

The Eagles and Barkley host the Dallas Cowboys in Week 17 and finish the regular season at home against the New York Giants. In the first meetings this season, he rushed for 66 yards against Dallas and 176 yards against Big Blue. The Cowboys have allowed the fifth-most rushing yards per game (135.9) and the Giants second-most (142.6).

The single-season rushing record could be broken against the team that let him walk to their division rivals in free agency.

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We all understand what college football era we’re in. 

Get what you can while you can. The players have the power. Loyalty? Pfft. 

Most of this stuff is fine. A decade ago, some people wanted to act like the sport would collapse if NFL-bound players opted out of meaningless bowl games. Now, you’re pleasantly surprised when they opt in. We adjust and the world keeps spinning. 

Still, what happened Saturday with Miami quarterback Cam Ward in the Pop-Tarts Bowl doesn’t sit right. 

Leading up to the game, Ward — a Heisman Trophy finalist — said he was playing. And he kept his word. But what he didn’t say is that he was only playing for the first half.

Just long enough to throw three touchdown passes, giving him 158 for his career and an NCAA Div. 1 record that Case Keenum held since 2011. 

And then Ward shut it down while his Miami teammates battled on, losing 42-41 to Iowa State. 

Is it the world’s worst sin? No, of course not. 

Ward has a right to play or not play. He was the main reason Miami won 10 games and came very close to making the College Football Playoff. And as we all know, these bowl games are little more than exhibitions at this point. For goodness sakes they painted the perimeter of the field with sprinkles and gave the winning team a giant Pop-Tart to eat. It’s not that big of a deal.

Still. 

The way Ward handled this makes it seem like he only cared about breaking the record, then removed himself once he got it. 

That’s not a good look for Ward, for Miami or for the sport. And Mario Cristobal, the head coach, should not have allowed it. 

Either play the game and try to help your team win or stay home. If you’re so worried about injury that you can’t play the second half, why play at all? It doesn’t make any sense. And neither Ward nor Cristobal offered any real clarity, as the coach told media members that his conversations with the quarterback were private.

I don’t want to be too harsh on Ward. A year ago, after the Pac-12 fell apart, he was 50-50 between the NFL Draft or transferring out of Washington State and playing one final college season elsewhere. The season he put together at Miami was arguably the best in the history of a program that has had a lot of really good quarterbacks. 

Ward earned the right to exit on his terms. And if he had simply opted out of the bowl game, nobody would have complained. 

Record chasing is part of sports, but it’s unseemly when an athlete sacrifices team success in the process. 

And when Miami got the ball back with 56 seconds left needing a field goal to win the game, it sure would have been nice for Ward to make himself available to lead his team down the field. 

Instead, sophomore backup Emory Williams got swallowed up and couldn’t advance the ball past the 50-yard line. 

Ward couldn’t have known the game would come down to that, but it’s clear he never intended to treat this last opportunity to play college football with the respect it deserved. Instead, he used it as a vehicle to put his name in the record books. 

Congratulations to Ward on that Pyrrhic victory while he forever owns this loss for his team. 

ACC’s disastrous postseason 

It’s important to be careful, even measured, about judging conferences based on bowl performance.

But the ACC will have a difficult time winning the narrative battle after this year’s postseason flop. 

At the moment of Miami’s loss, the ACC was 1-8 in postseason games including SMU and Clemson being eliminated from the Playoff last weekend. A little later on Saturday, NC State brought the record to 1-9 after giving up an 86-yard touchdown run to East Carolina with 93 seconds left in the Military Bowl. That leaves Syracuse as the only ACC winner so far, beating Washington State in the Holiday Bowl.

The ACC will have three more opportunities to put some wins on the board with Louisville playing Washington in the Sun Bowl, Duke playing Ole Miss in the Gator Bowl and Minnesota facing Virginia Tech in the Duke’s Mayo Bowl. So things could look a little better by the end — or they could look even worse. 

Regardless, the ACC has a lot of work to do over the next eight months to patch up its reputation as a power conference after a season where it was just very clear that the league was a couple rungs below where it should be.

Obviously Florida State’s implosion from 13-1 to 2-10 was a big part of it. New additions Cal and Stanford didn’t bring much to the table. NC State had an off year, and North Carolina was so mediocre that Mack Brown got fired.

Even though SMU was a fun story, it’s not a great sign that the Mustangs moved up from the American and went 8-0 in league play before losing the conference championship game. And Clemson, meanwhile, was good enough to win the league with a team that isn’t even close to the talent level Dabo Swinney had during its national championship era in 2016 and 2018. 

Though it wasn’t super controversial to pick SMU for the last at-large spot in the CFP given the uninspiring alternatives, the questions about its schedule were legitimate. The ACC, at the moment, is a 17-team league where nine programs are either severely underachieving or just flat-out bad. 

Bowl results have a lot of asterisks attached with injuries, opt-outs and coaching changes, but when the results are this dramatically bad and play into the season-long narrative about your conference, it’s a problem. Every year is different, but the ACC needs to do something next season to earn back the benefit of the doubt. 

Georgia is the mystery team 

For months, maybe even years, the entire premise of Georgia winning the first 12-team College Football Playoff revolved around Carson Beck being one of the best quarterbacks in the country. 

That didn’t happen, but somehow Georgia won the SEC.

Now he’s gone — not just from the lineup after a season-ending elbow injury but from college football entirely after declaring for the NFL Draft. Georgia, though, is still here.

But for how much longer? 

The Bulldogs’ hopes of winning a third national title in the last four years rest on Gunner Stockton, a backup with 51 career passing attempts, nearly all of them in low stakes situations — until, that is, he was forced to replace Beck in the second half of the SEC championship game. 

Stockton was just effective enough that day for Georgia to escape with a 22-19 overtime win over Texas. But make no mistake: How Georgia’s offense responds in Wednesday’s quarterfinal against Notre Dame is the most interesting storyline of the Playoff. 

Around the Georgia program, what you hear is supreme confidence that Stockton, a highly-rated recruit a few years back, is good enough to carry this team to a title.

But around college football at large, what you hear is a huge dose of skepticism that a quarterback who barely played for three seasons will be able to come out of nowhere and run the potential Playoff gauntlet of Notre Dame, Penn State and a national championship game against Oregon, Ohio State or Texas.

“His day in and day out, how he approached getting ready for the game as if he was the starter, I think has prepared him for this moment,” offensive coordinator Mike Bobo said Saturday during a Sugar Bowl press conference. “If you asked me that last year, I don’t think he had that same mindset.”

Maybe that’s just happy talk to keep Georgia’s players feeling hopeful and hungry as they head into a situation that anyone would consider far from ideal.

Or maybe the confidence is real that Stockton, from a town of fewer than 1,000 people in northeast Georgia, can rise to the occasion. 

Here’s what we know for sure, though: If it were any program other than Georgia in this situation, they’d have been written off as a championship contender. 

But given that it’s Kirby Smart and a roster loaded with legitimate NFL prospects, you just can’t pencil Notre Dame into the semifinals. 

In the SEC championship game, Stockton completed 12-of-16 passes but for only 71 yards and threw an interception. He also can run around a bit, which is an element Georgia’s offense didn’t really have with Beck.

The reality check for Stockton, though, will be facing a good defense that has had time to watch some film on him and prepare. Texas was on its heels when Stockton came in because the Longhorns simply weren’t ready for a different style of offense. Now that everyone knows what’s coming, it won’t fool Notre Dame — or anyone else. 

Stockton isn’t some walk-on underdog. He’s a real prospect with talent who has been in the system now for a few years. But if Georgia is truly good enough to win it all with him, it’s one of the great coaching achievements of the decade. 

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In his one term in the White House, the late President Jimmy Carter struck the Camp David Accords between Israel and Egypt, helped take the world further from nuclear proliferation with the second Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty (SALT), signed the Panama Canal Treaties, which ended a century of direct American control over the crucial canal, and deregulated the nation’s airline industry.

But Carter, a former Georgia governor who defeated Republican President Gerald Ford in the 1976 election, also confronted the socialist Nicaraguan revolution in Central America and the invasion of Afghanistan by the Soviet Union, which led to a resumption of Cold War tensions with Moscow and an embargo of the 1980 Summer Olympics by the U.S. And domestically, the one-term Democratic president battled massive inflation known as stagflation, and an energy crisis that led to the return of gas lines across the country.

As Carter struggled to cope with multiple domestic and international crises, the then-president went on national television in July 1979 to deliver what was titled ‘the crisis confidence’ address, but was later dubbed the ‘malaise’ speech, even though the world malaise never appeared in Carter’s actual address.

Carter called for Americans to return to a sense of civic duty that would unify the country through a call for shared sacrifice for the common good of the nation. While initially giving the president a boost in the polls, the goodwill was short-lived. A couple of days after the address, Carter fired several members of his cabinet and was unable going forward to be seen as a strong and effective leader.

Adding to Carter’s woes, was the overrunning of the American embassy in Tehran in the late autumn of 1979, which triggered the more than yearlong Iranian hostage crisis. 

Carter, politically weakened by a fierce and nearly successful primary challenge by the late Sen. Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts for the 1980 Democratic presidential nomination, was crushed by GOP nominee Ronald Reagan in the general election, with the former California governor sweeping 44 of the 50 states.

Historian and author Craig Shirley, who wrote multiple books about Reagan and Carter, pointed to the economic conditions at the time as a major contributor to Carter’s demise.

‘Interest rates were something like 18%. Inflation was almost as high. The value of a dollar wasn’t worth today what it was yesterday. It was really devastating to people’s savings,’ Shirley spotlighted in a C-SPAN interview a few years ago.

Veteran political scientist Wayne Lesperance, president of New England College, concurred.

‘While it is certainly true that the Carter Administration had its share of successes, such as the Camp David Accords and the Panama Canal Treaty, in the months leading up to the 1980 election, voters were focused on high inflation, low economic growth, an energy crisis and the growing perception that American power and influence in the world was in decline,’ Lesperance said.

‘The Iran hostage crisis and failed rescue attempt punctuated the feeling that the U.S. under Carter had become a paper tiger. Americans wanted John Wayne. They elected Ronald Reagan whose campaign projected strength, confidence, humor, and a nostalgic appeal to an America as the proverbial shining city on a hill,’ he emphasized.

But it’s the ‘malaise’ speech that still stands out more than four decades after Carter’s stinging rejection by American voters.

‘Jimmy Carter’s one-term presidency would be known for many things: stagflation, a terrible economy, weakness in the face of Soviet advances, but also the Camp David Accords and ushering in the Age of Reagan. Yet to his everlasting chagrin, Carter’s failed four years in office will always be reduced to the word ‘malaise,’ and his awful, terrible, embarrassing speech in July of 1979,’ Shirley wrote on the 40-year anniversary of the infamous address.

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An Israeli official said on Sunday that the return of normal civilian life in northern Israel along the border with Lebanon is the way ‘to truly defeat Hezbollah.’ 

‘In order to truly defeat Hezbollah—because militarily, we have already won, and our victory is very clear—to truly win, to achieve long-term victory, is to have many residents living here (northern Israel), vast tourism, to reopen the restaurants and cafes that used to be here, to have people coming to cycle, agriculture flourishing—everything thriving,’ Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) Chief of the General Staff, LTG Herzi Halevi, said while visiting southern Lebanon. 

‘This is a long-term victory. And the state must step in and strongly reinforce this responsibility,’ he added. 

Fox News confirmed that Halevi had conducted a situational assessment on Sunday in southern Lebanon with the Commanding Officer of the Northern Command, MG Ori Gordin; the Commanding Officer of the 146th Division, BG Yiftach Norkin; the Commanding Officer of the 300th Brigade, COL Omri Rosenkrantz; and other senior officers. 

A cease-fire deal between Israel and the Iran-backed terrorist group Hezbollah in Lebanon has held for a month as of Friday.

Since the 60-day agreement went into effect on Nov. 27, Israeli forces have been conducting operations in southern Lebanon that they say are meant to dismantle terror tunnels and Hezbollah’s command center.

According to the New York Times, Israeli forces have continued strikes as the cease-fire deal has held, mostly in southern Lebanon but now, as of days ago, also in the eastern Bekaa region. 

Israeli officials say Hezbollah is trying to test Israel by smuggling weapons across the Lebanese-Syrian border crossings. 

Thousands of Israelis have evacuated villages along the Lebanon border after Hezbollah, in allegiance with Hamas terrorists in Gaza, began launching rockets at Israel following the Oct. 7, 2023, attacks. 

Israeli forces in response have pummeled Lebanon, severely weakening Hezbollah, forcing the group to make concessions. 

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The Buffalo Bills clinched the AFC East and playoff berth long ago, but they will soon know their NFL playoff seed.

The Bills are facing the New York Jets in Week 17 with a chance to wrap up the No. 2 seed in the AFC. If Buffalo wins either of its final two games, the Bills will be playing at home at least until the AFC championship game.

Buffalo had originally hoped to catch the Kansas City Chiefs in the race for the No. 1 seed after beating Kansas City head-to-head in Week 11. However, the Chiefs clinched the top seed on Christmas, beating the Pittsburgh Steelers to improve to 15-1.

If the Bills can secure the No. 2 seed in Week 17, they can rest their starters for their Week 18 game against the New England Patriots.

Who will the Bills play in the postseason? Buffalo must wait until Week 18 to determine which team it will face in the wild-card round.

NFL STATS CENTRAL: The latest NFL scores, schedules, odds, stats and more.

Who will the Bills play in playoffs?

The Bills need to win just one of their last two games to clinch the No. 2 seed in the AFC. If they do that, they will face the AFC’s No. 7 seed, which can only be one of four possible teams. They are as follows:

Denver Broncos
Indianapolis Colts
Miami Dolphins
Cincinnati Bengals

The final spot in the AFC playoff picture won’t be clinched until Week 18, so the Bills must wait to see who they will officially play.

On the off-chance that the Bills lose each of their final two games and the Baltimore Ravens win in Week 18 against the Cleveland Browns, Buffalo would end up as the No. 3 seed in the AFC. The Bills would then face one of the following teams:

Pittsburgh Steelers
Los Angeles Chargers

Bills playoff scenarios

Below is a look at the Bills’ chances of playing each potential first-round opponent.

Denver Broncos

The Bills will face the Broncos if either of the following outcomes occur:

The Bills win one of their final two games;
The Broncos win or tie against the Chiefs in Week 18;
The Dolphins lose one of their final two games AND the Bengals lose to the Steelers in Week 18

Indianapolis Colts

The Bills will face the Colts if the following scenario unfolds:

The Bills win one of their final two games;
The Colts win their final two games;
The Dolphins to win their final two games (at Browns, at Jets) OR the Bengals to win in Week 18 (at Steelers);
The Broncos lose to the Chiefs in Week 18.

Miami Dolphins

The Bills will play against the Dolphins if the following happens:

The Bills win one of their final two games;
The Dolphins win their final two games;
The Colts lose or tie one of their final two games;
The Broncos lose to the Chiefs in Week 18.

Cincinnati Bengals

Here’s a look at what needs to happen for the Bills to play the Bengals in the No. 2 vs. No. 7 matchup:

The Bills win one of their final two games;
The Bengals must beat the Steelers in Week 18;
The Colts must lose or tie one of their final two games;
The Dolphins must lose or tie one of their final two games;
The Broncos must lose to the Chiefs in Week 18.

Pittsburgh Steelers

The Bills would only face the Steelers if they were the No. 3 seed. Here is what would need to happen for Buffalo to face Pittsburgh:

The Bills lose each of the final two games;
The Ravens beat the Browns in Week 18;
The Steelers lose to Bengals in Week 18 AND the Chargers win or tie against Las Vegas Raiders in Week 18.

Los Angeles Chargers

And here’s a look at how the Bills could face the Chargers in the wild-card round of the NFL playoffs:

The Bills lose each of the final two games;
The Ravens beat the Browns in Week 18;
Steelers win or tie against Bengals in Week 18 OR Chargers lose or tie against Raiders in Week 18.

NFL playoff schedule

The NFL playoffs kick off on Jan. 11 with the league’s Super Wild Card Weekend before concluding on Feb. 9 with Super Bowl 59 in New Orleans.

Super Wild Card weekend

All times Eastern

Saturday, Jan. 11

AFC/NFC wild card game: 1 p.m.
AFC/NFC wild card game: 4:30 p.m.
AFC/NFC wild card game: 8 p.m.

Sunday, Jan. 12

AFC/NFC wild card game: 4:30 p.m.
AFC/NFC wild card game: 8:15 p.m.

Monday, Jan. 13

AFC/NFC wild card game: 8:15 p.m.

Divisional round

Saturday, Jan. 18

AFC/NFC divisional game: 4:30 p.m.
AFC/NFC division game: 8:15 p.m.

Sunday, Jan. 19

AFC/NFC divisional game: 3 p.m.
AFC/NFC divisional game: 6:30 p.m.

NFL conference championship round

Sunday, Jan. 26

NFC championship game: 3 p.m.
AFC championship game: 6:30 p.m.

Super Bowl 59

Date: Feb. 9, 2025
Location: Caesars Superdome (New Orleans)
Time: 6:30 p.m.
TV: FOX

NFL playoff picture

Below is a look at the NFL playoff picture with most of Week 17 in the books:

AFC

Kansas City Chiefs (15-1, AFC West winners, No. 1 seed)*
Buffalo Bills (12-3, AFC East winners)*
Baltimore Ravens (11-5, AFC North leaders)*
Houston Texans (9-7, AFC South winners)*
Pittsburgh Steelers (10-6, wild card No. 1)*
Los Angeles Chargers (10-6, wild card No. 2)*
Denver Broncos (9-7, wild card No. 3)

In the hunt: Cincinnati Bengals (8-8), Indianapolis Colts (7-8), Miami Dolphins (7-8).

NFC

Detroit Lions (13-2, NFC North leaders)*
Philadelphia Eagles (12-3, NFC East leaders)*
Los Angeles Rams (10-6, NFC West leaders)
Atlanta Falcons (8-7, NFC South leaders)
Minnesota Vikings (13-2, wild card No. 1)*
Green Bay Packers (11-4, wild card No. 2)
Washington Commanders (10-5, wild card No. 3)

In the hunt: Seattle Seahawks (8-7), Tampa Bay Buccaneers (8-7)

An asterisk (*) denotes teams that have clinched a playoff spot. Teams that have clinched division titles are noted accordingly.

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