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Boeing has refused to tell investigators who worked on the door plug that later blew off a jetliner during flight in January, the chair of the National Transportation Safety Board said Wednesday.

The company also hasn’t provided documentation about a repair job that included removing and reinstalling the panel on the Boeing 737 Max 9 — or even whether Boeing kept records — Jennifer Homendy told a Senate committee.

“It’s absurd that two months later we don’t have that,” Homendy said. “Without that information, that raises concerns about quality assurance, quality management, safety management systems” at Boeing.

Lawmakers seemed stunned.

“That is utterly unacceptable,” said Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas.

Boeing did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Sen. Maria Cantwell, D-Wash., said she will ask Boeing to cooperate with the NTSB. Cantwell, who represents the state where Max jetliners are assembled, noted that the company is a leading U.S. exporter and major defense contractor.

“We need to get this right,” she said. “We need to help with the investigation so we can find out what in our system needs to be improved.”

Boeing has been under increasing scrutiny since the Jan. 5 incident in which a panel that plugged a space left for an extra emergency door blew off an Alaska Airlines Max 9. Pilots were able to land safely, and there were no injuries.

In a preliminary report last month, the NTSB said four bolts that help keep the door plug in place were missing after the panel was removed so workers could repair nearby damaged rivets last September. The rivet repairs were done by contractors working for Boeing supplier Spirit AeroSystems, but the NTSB still does not know who removed and replaced the door panel, Homendy said Wednesday.

Homendy said Boeing has a 25-member team led by a manager, but Boeing has declined repeated requests for their names so they can be interviewed by investigators. The manager of the team is on medical leave and unavailable, and security-camera footage that might have shown who removed the panel was erased and recorded over 30 days later, she said.

The Federal Aviation Administration recently gave Boeing 90 days to say how it will respond to quality-control issues raised by the agency and a panel of industry and government experts. The panel found problems in Boeing’s safety culture despite improvements made after two Max 8 jets crashed in 2018 and 2019, killing 346 people.

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

Boeing has refused to tell investigators who worked on the door plug that later blew off a jetliner during flight in January, the chair of the National Transportation Safety Board said Wednesday.

The company also hasn’t provided documentation about a repair job that included removing and reinstalling the panel on the Boeing 737 Max 9 — or even whether Boeing kept records — Jennifer Homendy told a Senate committee.

“It’s absurd that two months later we don’t have that,” Homendy said. “Without that information, that raises concerns about quality assurance, quality management, safety management systems” at Boeing.

Lawmakers seemed stunned.

“That is utterly unacceptable,” said Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas.

Boeing did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Sen. Maria Cantwell, D-Wash., said she will ask Boeing to cooperate with the NTSB. Cantwell, who represents the state where Max jetliners are assembled, noted that the company is a leading U.S. exporter and major defense contractor.

“We need to get this right,” she said. “We need to help with the investigation so we can find out what in our system needs to be improved.”

Boeing has been under increasing scrutiny since the Jan. 5 incident in which a panel that plugged a space left for an extra emergency door blew off an Alaska Airlines Max 9. Pilots were able to land safely, and there were no injuries.

In a preliminary report last month, the NTSB said four bolts that help keep the door plug in place were missing after the panel was removed so workers could repair nearby damaged rivets last September. The rivet repairs were done by contractors working for Boeing supplier Spirit AeroSystems, but the NTSB still does not know who removed and replaced the door panel, Homendy said Wednesday.

Homendy said Boeing has a 25-member team led by a manager, but Boeing has declined repeated requests for their names so they can be interviewed by investigators. The manager of the team is on medical leave and unavailable, and security-camera footage that might have shown who removed the panel was erased and recorded over 30 days later, she said.

The Federal Aviation Administration recently gave Boeing 90 days to say how it will respond to quality-control issues raised by the agency and a panel of industry and government experts. The panel found problems in Boeing’s safety culture despite improvements made after two Max 8 jets crashed in 2018 and 2019, killing 346 people.

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

Doritos said Tuesday that it has ended a social media campaign with Samantha Hudson, a transgender influencer in Spain. Right-leaning accounts on social media had called for a boycott, citing past comments Hudson was alleged to have made on social media.

Hudson, 24, a singer with 396,000 followers on Instagram, had posted a 50-second branded video on Instagram for a Doritos Spain campaign called “Crunch Talks.” It’s unclear when the video went up; as of Monday afternoon it had been removed from Hudson’s page. No other posts on her Instagram account feature promotion of the brand.

Efforts to boycott Doritos online ramped up Monday and Tuesday, when the hashtag #BoycottDoritos circulated on X. Many right-wing accounts, which re-shared the original Doritos promotional video, homed in on posts Hudson is alleged to have made on the platform when she was 15, which they described as offensive.

Hudson was reported to have tweeted in 2015 about wanting to do “depraved” things with a 12-year-old girl, according to Rolling Stone. NBC News has not seen the original posts on social media, and they appear to have been removed from X. Screenshots of the alleged posts resurfaced on X, where they were recirculated.

Hudson reportedly later expressed remorse for the past tweets, according to Rolling Stone’s translation of her past posts on X. However, it appears the post addressing her past comments, which was made in 2021, is no longer available on her page.

Others online pointed out that Hudson has been critical of the right wing in Spain. In an interview clip that resurfaced, she appears to say she advocates “for the abolition to destroy and eliminate the traditional monogamous nuclear family,” according to a translation of the video from Spanish to English.

Doritos, a PepsiCo brand, said Tuesday in a statement to NBC News that it ended its campaign with Hudson after it was made aware of the past tweets.

“We [Doritos Spain] recently created a content series with Samantha Hudson, a local influencer. After the campaign started, we were made aware of Samantha’s deleted Tweets from around 2015,” it said. “We have ended the relationship and stopped all related campaign activity due to the comments. We strongly condemn words or actions that promote violence or sexism of any kind.”

Hudson did not immediately respond to a request for comment Tuesday. She has also not publicly weighed in on the Doritos fallout on social media.

Anheuser-Busch last year attracted controversy with its partnership with the transgender TikTok influencer Dylan Mulvaney, who rocketed to fame in 2022 by documenting her gender transition in a TikTok series she calls “Days of Girlhood.’ Mulvaney was also among a small group of young advocates who met in 2022 with President Joe Biden at the White House, where she talked about transgender issues.

Following Mulvaney’s video, conservatives, including celebrities like Kid Rock, began posting viral videos of themselves trashing Bud Light cans, pouring them down the sink and even shooting them. Sales of the brand plummeted. 

U.S. CEO Brendan Whitworth said at the time that the company “never intended to be part of a discussion that divides people.” Mulvaney later said the company did not support her through the backlash.

Far-right accounts on X, including Libs of TikTok and End Wokeness, expressed disgust at Hudson’s Doritos video. Some referred to the Bud Light boycott. 

“Time to Bud Light Doritos,” Libs of TikTok wrote in a post re-sharing the video. “Unreal.”

A headline on The Daily Caller, a conservative news outlet, said: “Doritos Terrifying New Brand Ambassador Makes Dylan Mulvaney Look Like Sydney Sweeney.”

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

Doritos said Tuesday that it has ended a social media campaign with Samantha Hudson, a transgender influencer in Spain. Right-leaning accounts on social media had called for a boycott, citing past comments Hudson was alleged to have made on social media.

Hudson, 24, a singer with 396,000 followers on Instagram, had posted a 50-second branded video on Instagram for a Doritos Spain campaign called “Crunch Talks.” It’s unclear when the video went up; as of Monday afternoon it had been removed from Hudson’s page. No other posts on her Instagram account feature promotion of the brand.

Efforts to boycott Doritos online ramped up Monday and Tuesday, when the hashtag #BoycottDoritos circulated on X. Many right-wing accounts, which re-shared the original Doritos promotional video, homed in on posts Hudson is alleged to have made on the platform when she was 15, which they described as offensive.

Hudson was reported to have tweeted in 2015 about wanting to do “depraved” things with a 12-year-old girl, according to Rolling Stone. NBC News has not seen the original posts on social media, and they appear to have been removed from X. Screenshots of the alleged posts resurfaced on X, where they were recirculated.

Hudson reportedly later expressed remorse for the past tweets, according to Rolling Stone’s translation of her past posts on X. However, it appears the post addressing her past comments, which was made in 2021, is no longer available on her page.

Others online pointed out that Hudson has been critical of the right wing in Spain. In an interview clip that resurfaced, she appears to say she advocates “for the abolition to destroy and eliminate the traditional monogamous nuclear family,” according to a translation of the video from Spanish to English.

Doritos, a PepsiCo brand, said Tuesday in a statement to NBC News that it ended its campaign with Hudson after it was made aware of the past tweets.

“We [Doritos Spain] recently created a content series with Samantha Hudson, a local influencer. After the campaign started, we were made aware of Samantha’s deleted Tweets from around 2015,” it said. “We have ended the relationship and stopped all related campaign activity due to the comments. We strongly condemn words or actions that promote violence or sexism of any kind.”

Hudson did not immediately respond to a request for comment Tuesday. She has also not publicly weighed in on the Doritos fallout on social media.

Anheuser-Busch last year attracted controversy with its partnership with the transgender TikTok influencer Dylan Mulvaney, who rocketed to fame in 2022 by documenting her gender transition in a TikTok series she calls “Days of Girlhood.’ Mulvaney was also among a small group of young advocates who met in 2022 with President Joe Biden at the White House, where she talked about transgender issues.

Following Mulvaney’s video, conservatives, including celebrities like Kid Rock, began posting viral videos of themselves trashing Bud Light cans, pouring them down the sink and even shooting them. Sales of the brand plummeted. 

U.S. CEO Brendan Whitworth said at the time that the company “never intended to be part of a discussion that divides people.” Mulvaney later said the company did not support her through the backlash.

Far-right accounts on X, including Libs of TikTok and End Wokeness, expressed disgust at Hudson’s Doritos video. Some referred to the Bud Light boycott. 

“Time to Bud Light Doritos,” Libs of TikTok wrote in a post re-sharing the video. “Unreal.”

A headline on The Daily Caller, a conservative news outlet, said: “Doritos Terrifying New Brand Ambassador Makes Dylan Mulvaney Look Like Sydney Sweeney.”

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

Ronald Acuña Jr.’s injury scare appears to have been just a minor irritation for everyone waiting to see what he will do for an encore. But he’s not the only five-category performer in the outfield, where fantasy managers can find plenty of high-end talent.

Elsewhere in the National League, Corbin Carroll, Fernando Tatis Jr., Cody Bellinger, Nolan Jones and yes, Lane Thomas were all members of the 20-homer, 20-steal club last season. Top prospect Jackson Chourio of the Brewers has the raw talent to join them, but he’ll have to show he can handle major league pitching at the ripe age of 20. Depth begins to get a little shaky further down in the ranks. One potential value pick is former No. 1 overall pick Henry Davis, who will get some starts behind the plate in Pittsburgh and gain eligibility at catcher.

Young stars Julio Rodriguez and Kyle Tucker lead the way in the American League with their power hitting and 30-steal speed. (Luis Robert and Randy Arozarena have similar skills, but come at a slight discount. ) Meanwhile, Juan Soto will get his first taste of AL pitching, and his arrival in New York should make former MVP Aaron Judge even more productive.

In Texas, Adolis Garcia led all AL outfielders in 2023 with 39 homers and teammate Evan Carter looks primed for a breakout in his first full MLB season. Oakland’s Esteury Ruiz topped the league with 67 steals, though he offers very little help in the other offensive categories.

2024 fantasy baseball outfield rankings

Ronald Acuña Jr., Braves NL1
Mookie Betts, Dodgers NL2
Julio Rodriguez, Mariners AL1
Corbin Carroll, Diamondbacks NL3
Fernando Tatis Jr., Padres NL4
Kyle Tucker, Astros AL2
Juan Soto, Yankees AL3
Aaron Judge, Yankees AL4
Yordan Alvarez, Astros AL5
Luis Robert, White Sox AL6
Michael Harris II, Braves NL5
Randy Arozarena, Rays AL7
Adolis Garcia, Rangers AL8
Cody Bellinger, Cubs NL6
Josh Lowe, Rays AL9
Nolan Jones, Rockies NL7
Christian Yelich, Brewers NL8
Mike Trout, Angels AL10
Jazz Chisholm, Marlins NL9
Seiya Suzuki, Cubs NL10
Kyle Schwarber, Phillies NL11
George Springer, Blue Jays AL11
Bryan Reynolds, Pirates NL12
Evan Carter, Rangers AL12
Teoscar Hernandez, Dodgers NL13
Cedric Mullins, Orioles AL13
Spencer Steer, Reds NL14
Jordan Walker, Cardinals NL15
Esteury Ruiz, A’s AL14
Nick Castellanos, Phillies NL16
Ian Happ, Cubs NL17
Lane Thomas, Nationals NL18
Anthony Santander, Orioles AL15
Jackson Chourio, Brewers NL19
Chas McCormick, Astros AL16
Brandon Nimmo, Mets NL20
Riley Greene, Tigers AL17
T.J. Friedl, Reds NL21
James Outman, Dodgers NL22
Jorge Soler, Giants NL23
Jarren Duran, Red Sox AL18
Tommy Edman, Cardinals NL24
Masataka Yoshida, Red Sox AL19
Daulton Varsho, Blue Jays AL20
Christopher Morel, Cubs NL25
Kerry Carpenter, Tigers AL21
Steven Kwan, Guardians AL22
Starling Marte, Mets NL26
Taylor Ward, Angels AL23
Wyatt Langford, Rangers AL24
Lars Nootbaar, Cardinals NL27
Lourdes Gurriel, Diamondbacks NL28
Jarred Kelenic, Braves NL29
Leody Taveras, Rangers AL25
Bryan De La Cruz, Marlins NL30
Kris Bryant, Rockies NL31
Whit Merrifield, Phillies NL32
Jack Suwinski, Pirates NL33
MJ Melendez, Royals AL26
Max Kepler, Twins AL27
Tyler O’Neill, Red Sox AL28
Brandon Marsh, Phillies NL34
Jose Siri, Rays AL29
Jung Hoo Lee, Giants NL35
Brendan Donovan, Cardinals NL36
Giancarlo Stanton, Yankees AL30
Will Benson, Reds NL37
Henry Davis, Pirates NL38
Sal Frelick, Brewers NL39
Nelson Velasquez, Royals AL31
Matt Wallner, Twins AL32
Austin Hays, Orioles AL33
Jake Fraley, Reds NL40
Brent Rooker, A’s AL34
Tommy Pham, free agent

HOT STOVE UPDATES: MLB free agency: Ranking and tracking the top players available.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

But buyer beware: That advice about confidence seems to have double meaning.

“I don’t use cologne,” Sanders writes in the book. “Somebody might pick up on my scent and ask, `What is that you’re wearing?’ I just say, `Confidence.”

He didn’t mean that literally. Or did he? According to government records obtained by USA TODAY Sports, on Jan. 29, an attorney for Sanders filed an application to trademark the word “confidence” as a potential Sanders brand name to use for aftershave, cologne, deodorant, body sprays, lotion and soap.

Such is the marketing guile of Sanders, the master of many product endorsements now serving as head football coach at Colorado.

Sanders, a Pro Football Hall of Famer, recently has been paid to sell California almonds, KFC chicken, Blenders sunglasses and soon a new line of Nike shoes.

And now he’s selling this book – “Elevate and Dominate” – which aims to sell you, the reader, on his “21 ways to win on and off the field.”

What does Deion Sanders’ book say?

It casts himself as mentor in the mold of legendary self-improvement author Dale Carnegie. Much like Carnegie’s books, this one has platitudes about attitude and advice supported by anecdotes about how to succeed on a daily basis, such as by establishing a “good morning routine” and “paying attention to your grooming.”

The former two-sport star also describes lessons he learned from four of his all-time favorite athletes − basketball player Julius Erving, baseball player Hank Aaron, boxer Muhammad Ali and even O.J. Simpson, the former football star who later fell from grace after being put on trial for double murder.

“Not the O.J. YOU know, but the other O.J. that I GREW UP ON,” the book states. Sanders said he admired him because he had “power, influence, success, likeability from all ethnicities” and “you’d see him in TV commercials and movies.”

Sanders admired those traits from Simpson much like he still emulates Ali.

Ali was “brash and cocky,” Sanders book states. “He also had the comments to make headlines – and sometimes his lines even rhymed – but man could he back it up!”

The four of them had something in common, as Sanders sees it:

“Those guys knew how to present themselves well. They had a PRESENCE. The world needs more people with true presence.”

Why are there 21 chapters?

It has 21 chapters to describe his “21 ways to win” – a number that means a lot to Sanders and his brand. That’s because it’s not just the jersey number he wore in the NFL. On Feb. 21, 2021, he made his college coaching debut as the 21st head football coach for Jackson State in Mississippi. The number also is emblazoned in his personal “Coach Prime” logo and is the jersey number worn by his son Shilo, a safety at Colorado.

In this case, there’s another reason the book is structured by the number 21. It’s a tribute of sorts to a 1998 book he admired by speaker and author John. C. Maxwell, entitled “The 21 Irrefutable Laws of Leadership.” Maxwell also wrote the forward to Sanders’ book.

“This was kind of callout not just to his jersey number but to this book on leadership that had the most effect on him,” said Don Yaeger, the longtime author who worked with Sanders on the book.

In Chapter 21, Sanders revisits his attempted suicide in 1997, when he said he drove his custom-made black Mercedes off a cliff and crashed about 40 feet below.

“I wanted it to be the end,” Sanders’ book states. “But through the grace of God, it was the beginning. The beginning of something GLORIOUS.”

It’s not a new story. Sanders, 56, recounted this low point in his previous book in 1999, entitled “Power, Money and Sex: How Success Almost Ruined My Life.”

In his new book, he also ascribes his arrival in Boulder to divine intervention and ends with a religious message about how faith is driving his “second chance” after years of “pure emptiness.”

Colorado becomes ‘whole different assignment’

After being contacted by CU athletic director Rick George in late 2022, Sanders says he was having lunch with his assistant coach at Jackson State, Andre’ Hart, when he heard a whisper in his head that said one word: “Colorado.”

He described it as a message from God to take the Colorado job, even though two other schools “came out nowhere at the last minute and offered us a ton of money, significantly more.”

“I think God wanted me on a whole different assignment, where I could bring notoriety and validation to a football program in a completely different way,” Sanders says in the book. “He wanted me to unify people in a place with a Black school population of something like 3 percent. He wants me to change the game in a different way.”

Colorado finished with a 4-8 record during his first year on the job – up from 1-11 in 2022. Spring practice for his second season at CU begins March 18. His book publisher said he was not available for an interview.

In the meantime, he plans to promote his new book with a book tour that will take him to Ridgewood, N.J., on Wednesday, Atlanta on Friday, March 15, and Fort Worth, Texas on March 16 before returning to campus for a tour stop in Boulder March 18.

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

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

JuJu Watkins crossed over her defender, stepped into the lane and floated a pretty runner into the hoop. The whistle blew, and Watkins stepped to the line for an and-1. Over the Galen Center loudspeaker, the voice of DJ Malski, the Trojans’ in-house hype man, rang above the crowd. 

“Yeahhhhhhh, Ju,” Malski crowed as Watkins swished her free throw attempt. 

“Yeahhhhhhh, Ju,” the crowd parroted back. 

It’s understandable why Watkins, the front-runner for national freshman of the year, sparks this kind of reaction. The 6-foot-2 rookie from the Watts neighborhood of Los Angeles, has a silky smooth jumper, a veteran’s poise and a combination of skill, power and body control rarely seen. 

With Caitlin Clark headed to the 2024 WNBA draft, where she’s projected No. 1 overall, Watkins, the nation’s second leading scorer this season behind Clark, is positioned to become the face of women’s basketball. She’ll be joined by Notre Dame point guard Hannah Hidalgo, the other favorite for freshman of the year. 

Not lost on any of the powerbrokers in the game: Both of these players are Black. And in a game built by Black women, it matters that the faces of the future look like the faces of the past. 

Over the past few years, as women’s basketball has exploded in popularity, much of the media and marketing attention has focused on three prominent white players: Clark, UConn junior Paige Bueckers and Oregon’s Sabrina Ionescu, who graduated in 2020.

Too often, the Black players who built women’s hoops — and who now dominate the professional level, where the WNBA is 70% Black — haven’t been acknowledged. Occasionally their existence has been wiped from the record books completely, like with former Kansas standout Lynette Woodard’s Division-I scoring record not being recognized by the NCAA.

“I don’t think it’s anyone’s fault or been anyone’s intention,” Southern Cal coach Lindsay Gottlieb told USA TODAY Sports. “But there haven’t been enough commercial endorsements of Black female superstars in our society, period.”

As women’s basketball grows in popularity, white players get most attention

Part of that has to do with position. Casual fans fall hard for playmakers, athletes who have the ball in their hands and create shots. Paint players might have great footwork, but that doesn’t usually translate to highlight reels. Consider that power forward A’ja Wilson, arguably the best player in the world, whose award résumé is longer than a Walgreens receipt, doesn’t have near the star power of Clark. 

Watkins, one of the best playmakers at any level of the women’s game, understands why “people gravitate to shot creators and craftiness.” She and others know it’s about more than just who scores points, though. 

One key issue, WNBA players say, is that the college game is much more accessible than the pros. Clark and Iowa regularly play on Fox, as do Bueckers and UConn. Inoescu and the Ducks had numerous primetime ESPN games. For the first time ever last March, the NCAA women’s championship was broadcast on a non-cable channel (ABC), with the same planned this year. 

At a USA Basketball training camp last month, Las Vegas star Kelsey Plum quipped that it would be nice if the WNBA had a better media rights deal so “my mom doesn’t have to jump through 10 hoops to watch our games’ on some random streaming platform.  

But it goes deeper than that, too. 

During a speech at the 2021 ESPYs, Bueckers acknowledged as much, saying, ‘With the light I have now as a white woman who leads a Black-led sport … I want to shed a light on Black women. They don’t get the media coverage that they deserve. They’ve given so much to the sport, the community and society as a whole and their value is undeniable.’

In 2022, Plum told ESPN.com there was no question she was promoted heavily by the league early in her career because she is “straight and white.” Wilson, meanwhile, said the league can be guilty of pushing only what it thinks is marketable and “sometimes a Black woman doesn’t check off those boxes.” WNBA players feel the inequity every day.

Players like Watkins and Hidalgo can help change that narrative. 

“In the history of this game, some of the most legendary players and coaches have been Black women — Cheryl Miller, Sheryl Swoopes, Dawn (Staley),” said Niele Ivey, Notre Dame’s fourth-year head coach who played for the Irish from 1997-2001. “There are so many incredible Black women who have imprinted women’s basketball, whose legacy is basketball. To have Hannah be in that conversation already, it’s just a source of tremendous pride for me, especially as a woman of color myself.” 

Ivey calls Hidalgo and Watkins “must-see TV,” and believes the swagger they play with will draw new fans to the game. There’s something for everyone, Ivey said — including people who don’t care about basketball. With the invention of NIL, college athletes can now build personal brands and followings. Ivey thinks players’ interests outside of the gym — Hidalgo speaks openly about her faith, while Watkins is passionate about bettering her LA community — will widen their appeal.  

But make no mistake, their on-court play will lead the way. 

Ivey credits some of that to Clark and LSU All-American Angel Reese. When LSU beat Iowa for the title last year, major trash talk ensued between the two. Reese, who is Black, was called classless for jawing at Clark, though Clark had talked plenty of trash throughout the tournament herself. Reese told critics afterward: ‘This is for the girls that look like me.’ The superstars drew attention partially because of the emotion they showed. 

“Then their game followed,” Ivey said. “Their games backed everything up, and they were elite. That really helped enhance and elevate women’s basketball and now, the future of the game, Hannah and JuJu, they play with a boldness we need as we continue to put (women’s basketball) in the spotlight.”

‘It’s about time’ Black women got recognition, respect they deserve

The irony of Watkins dominating the college game is, she never watched it much. She was too busy following the pros, specifically the career of two-time WNBA MVP Candace Parker, who Watkins calls “my GOAT.” 

Parker, now with the Las Vegas Aces, played the first 13 years of her pro career with the Los Angeles Sparks. Watkins went to as many games as her youth basketball schedule and parents would allow, wearing Parker’s jersey, high-fiving and hugging her after the game. That Watkins is now mentioned in the same breath as Parker, who led Tennessee to two titles in the twilight of its powerhouse era, is inconceivable to her. And that because of her play she’s now friends — or at least friendly — with Parker is mind-bending. 

“Am I allowed to say we’re friends?” Watkins asked. “That seems weird. I don’t think I get to say I’m friends with the GOAT. But she knows who I am!”

It’s one of the only times the college freshman has acted her age. On the court, Watkins is the epitome of cool, consistently recognizing what her team needs and then making that exact play, often without a hint of emotion.

Earlier this season, Watkins dropped 51 points on Stanford, a stunning feat for anyone going up against one of the game’s best tacticians. She has almost single-handedly lifted the Trojans into Final Four contention, a destination they haven’t reached since 1986, when Cheryl Miller won her third player of the year award as a senior.

It’s not lost on Gottlieb, who likes to call Watkins “your favorite player’s favorite player,” that her star isn’t just changing the game but changing who wants to watch it. 

At USC, little girls in the stands often have their hair done up in a “JuJu bun.” During a trip to Arizona, Watkins walked out of the locker room to a group of teenage boys chanting her name. 

“Ju’s whole thing is, she’s an exceptional talent, a basketball savant, who is conscious of her wider reach,” Gottlieb said. “She has cross-cultural appeal, and she knows it.”

For years, USC drew virtually no crowd. Watkins has shifted that. USC nearly quadrupled its average attendance this season, and sold out its first game since 2007. The best part, Gottlieb said, is that the crowd now reflects the diversity of LA.

Many of those fans show up wearing No. 12, which Watkins called “very trippy” — in the best way possible. 

“To see the little boys in my jersey, that’s crazy,” she said. “It negates all the sexist points of views and sexist ways of thinking about our game. To know a boy can look up to a girl and not try to take anything away from her game, to not have to compare her to a man but just to love her game, that’s how barriers are broken. That’s how we make the world better.” 

At just 18, it’s a weight Watkins will gladly carry — because too many before her didn’t get that opportunity. 

“Black women have paved the way in this game,” Watkins said. “So many of them have broken down doors for us today. It’s about time Black women got the recognition they deserve in this sport.” 

With the way Watkins and Hidalgo play, that recognition and respect is likely to be undeniable, sooner rather than later. 

Follow Lindsay Schnell on social media @Lindsay_Schnell

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Minnesota Timberwolves All-Star forward Karl-Anthony Towns has sustained a meniscus injury in his left knee, according to multiple reports.

Minnesota is 43-19 this season, tied with the Oklahoma City Thunder for the Western Conference’s best record.

Towns’ injury comes at a critical time for the Timberwolves as they start a six-game road trip this week, starting with Thursday’s game against the Indiana Pacers, followed by a game with the Cleveland Cavaliers, a trip to Los Angeles to face the Lakers and the Clippers, plus two games against the Utah Jazz.

Karl-Anthony Towns 2023-2024 stats

Towns, a four-time NBA All-Star, including in 2023-24, is averaging 22.1 points, 8.4 rebounds, and three assists in 60 games this season, hitting a career-high 42.3% on 3-pointers. It is not his best season statistically, but it is one of his best all-around seasons, which is contributing to one of the best seasons in franchise history.

All things T-Wolves: Latest Minnesota Timberwolves news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

How long will Karl-Anthony Towns be out?

This is early in the process, and Towns and the team want to know the full extent of the injury before deciding on a course of treatment, even if that is surgery to repair the damage. The Athletic reported Towns is out indefinitely.

What does this mean for Timberwolves?

If Towns is sidelined for a significant number of games, it will make it harder for the Timberwolves to get the No. 1 in the West. Tied with the Thunder for the top spot, Minnesota is one game ahead of the third-place Denver Nuggets, the defending champ, and 2½ games ahead of the fourth-place Clippers.

Who will step in to replace Karl-Anthony Towns?

The Timberwolves have a solid rotation, but anytime an All-Star is out with an injury, there is a trickle-down impact on depth. Center-forward Naz Reid will receive more playing time in Towns’ absence. Reid signed a three-year, $41.9 million contract in the offseason and is another valuable contributor. He averages a career-high 12.3 points (shoots 48.2% from the field and 41% on 3s) and 4.8 rebounds in just 23 minutes per game. The Timberwolves also may go to a small-ball lineup more often with Kyle Anderson at power forward with Reid and center Rudy Gobert protecting the rim defensively.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

MLS club New York City FC revealed ‘The Cube’ on Wednesday, a state-of-the-art, all-LED main entryway to their new stadium set to open in 2027. It far from the only thing New York soccer fans will have to look forward to at the new stadium.

In an exclusive interview with USA TODAY, NYCFC CEO Brad Sims shared more details about the stadium, including its amenities, features and a timeline of its construction ahead of the 2027 opening.

The stadium, which will open across the street from the New York Mets’ Citi Field in Queens, is part of a larger ‘Willets Point Project’ that aims to redevelop the surrounding area into a new neighborhood. In addition to the stadium, the project will add 2,500 affordable housing units, a 250-key hotel, 650-seat elementary school, a new retail area with shops and restaurants, and ‘ample open space for public use,’ according to their website.

Here are all of the latest details on NYCFC’s planned new stadium.

The Cube is just one of the new stadium’s big features

The idea behind The Cube entrance, Sims says, was to give the club’s new stadium a unique aesthetic that differed from other stadiums in the MLS and in American sports in general. New York City FC believes that a seven-story tall main entry lined with over 11,000 square feet of LEDs will certainly stand out.

‘People are going to get off the subway, park their cars, and immediately, from hundreds and hundreds of yards away, it’s a ‘Wow’ moment,’ he said. ‘We think it sets the tone for the fans as they come into the building.’

Once fans walk through the immersive entryway, they will enter the main dining space in the stadium, an area the club has internally dubbed ‘the Five Boroughs Food Hall.’ It’s planned to be nearly 40,000 square feet in total and will feature local food vendors from each of New York City’s five boroughs – Manhattan, Queens, the Bronx, Brooklyn and Staten Island.

As each season progresses, different local food vendors will rotate in and out to provide new experiences for fans throughout the year.

Sims says it’s a feature that will give fans a reason to come to games early to dine at the stadium. It’s also another unique amenity that stands out from the generic stadium food (hot dogs, burgers, chicken fingers) that can be found at any other American sports venue.

NYCFC’s new stadium will be among country’s most sustainable sports venues

In addition to its unique amenities, NYCFC is committing to sustainability when building their new stadium, another thing Sims pointed to as a differentiator from other stadiums.

‘We’ll be the first 100%, all-electric soccer stadium in the U.S.,’ he said.

The MLS club’s new stadium will join Climate Pledge Arena in Seattle (home of the Kraken of the NHL) and Intuit Dome in Los Angeles (future home of the NBA’s Clippers) as one of the country’s first all-electric sports venues.

It will also be the first 100% electric outdoor stadium, soccer stadium and greater New York area stadium.

The new field will feature other sustainability elements as well, such as an ability to collect and recycle rainwater and on-site composting, ‘with the goal, ultimately, to have a net zero carbon footprint by 2040,’ Sims said.

New York City FC new stadium timeline

Sims was able to provide a general timeline for the construction at Willets Point in Queens, though a part of it depends on how quickly the plan will advance through the political process.

On Wednesday, it received unanimous support from the New York City Planning Commission, which was the third step of that process following approval from the local community board in Queens and from the borough’s president. The plan still has to go before the New York City Council and get approval from the mayor before construction can begin.

Sims couldn’t provide an exact date for the start of construction given the political process that remains, but he expects that it can begin as early as four months after that reaches a conclusion. For now, the target is ‘late summer/early fall, maybe late August/September.’

‘From there, it’s about a 30-month build, so we’re still fully on target to be able to start the beginning of the ’27 MLS season,’ Sims said.

The stadium won’t be called ‘Naming Rights Sponsor Stadium’

Fans on social media were amused by the inclusion of the placeholder name on the team’s new stadium rendering released Wednesday, but Sims made it clear that that will eventually change.

‘That would be something, wouldn’t it?’ he said in response to the idea of keeping the ‘Naming Rights Sponsor’ moniker.

Ultimately, Sims said, the idea behind sponsorships for stadium naming rights and other entitlements will help his club and others around the league bring in additional revenue to improve the product on the field.

‘Over time, the way to get bigger and bigger is to bring more and more top players to this league, and the way to do that is to generate more revenue, whether that’s New York City FC or all teams in the league collectively,’ he said.

‘We’re able to re-invest that in the players and the cycle keeps going in a positive way: you get better players, attract more fans and attract more sponsors, increasing broadcast arrangements and things like that. And then you’re able to reinvest that.’

For NYCFC, having a stadium the club can call its own is a major step in maximizing revenue opportunities and providing the best possible experience for its fans.

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Some U.S. fencers are concerned the selection of the men’s saber team for this summer’s Paris Olympics could be impacted by possible biased judging and match manipulation in favor of another American, and are asking international officials to investigate.

USA TODAY Sports obtained a copy of a Feb. 14 letter that Rob Koehler, director general of Global Athlete, sent on behalf of about a half-dozen fencers to Emmanuel Katsiadakis, the interim president of the International Fencing Federation (FIE).

Global Athlete is an international athletes advocacy group, and Koehler sent the letter because the fencers fear retaliation.

In his letter, Koehler references the decisions of a Bulgarian referee during a recent competition that “appear to consistently lean in favor” of the U.S. fencer.

“These occurrences raise significant concern regarding the impartiality and fairness of the competition in question,” Koehler wrote. “With the Olympic qualification upon us, we kindly ask that you investigate these allegations to ensure the rightful fencers have the opportunity to attend the 2024 Olympic Games.”

There is no proof of the alleged wrongdoing or even that the fencers know about it. But any allegations that cast doubt on the integrity of a sport should be investigated, Koehler said, especially when points earned at those matches help determine who makes the U.S. Olympic team.

USA Fencing agreed. In a statement to USA TODAY Sports, CEO Phil Andrews said USA Fencing has initiated an independent investigation “into recent allegations of bout manipulation in saber.”

“We are taking these allegations seriously, and this comprehensive investigation addresses concerns raised and seeks to find the truth,” Andrews said. “We remain steadfast in our dedication to transparency and fairness, along with our commitment and responsibility to the entire USA Fencing community. We will share our summary findings and any subsequent actions at the conclusion of that investigation.”

The FIE has not responded to his letter, Koehler said Wednesday. He has now sent a follow-up directly to Kit McConnell, the sport director for the International Olympic Committee, who was copied on the initial letter.

International Fencing and the IOC have not responded to requests for comment from USA TODAY Sports.

“I never put much faith in an international federation reacting or acting on an athlete’s complaint. But I would expect … them to take action and defend and support as much as they could to make sure things are investigated,” Koehler told USA TODAY Sports.

“When we see athletes coming forward with allegations, it’s not done lightly,” Koehler added. “And when it is done, we need to take it seriously.”

Koehler’s letter echoed concerns fencers and fencing fans have been raising on the internet for several months. Specifically, that some fencers are repeatedly drawing the same referees, which is itself unusual. And that at least four referees have allegedly made questionable decisions that have benefitted two athletes from the United States as well as athletes from Uzbekistan and Kuwait.

While there is no hard and fast proof of the alleged wrongdoing, many liken the decisions to the shady judging in figure skating under the old 6.0 scoring system. Backroom deals to benefit certain skaters or countries was an open secret in skating, but the shenanigans were not confirmed until a judge in the pairs competition at the Salt Lake City Olympics admitted she’d been pressured to “vote a certain way.”

In fencing, athletes earn points through “touches,” or hits to the body of their opponent. Though fencing has tried to make its judging more objective with electronic scoring, it is still the referee who determines which fencer had priority, or was on the attack, and decides who gets the point in the case of simultaneous touches.

Given the speed of the sport, there is always the possibility those decisions will be wrong. But the concern is that some calls are going beyond human error.

The issue is particularly concerning to the U.S. fencers because of its potential impact on the Olympic team.

The four athletes who’ve accumulated the most points at domestic and international competitions will make the Paris squad. The team will be named next month, after one last World Cup and a domestic event.

“Unless there’s an investigation into the potential or alleged wrongdoings, then the status quo remains the same,” Koehler said. “And athletes competing fairly are losing out to potential or alleged fixing of events.

“Surely the evidence that’s being presented needs to be looked at.”

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