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The Supreme Court on Wednesday granted review of former president Trump’s claims of presidential immunity in the election interference case brought by special counsel Jack Smith, which throws into question at least the timeline for a possible trial in an election in which Trump is the likely GOP nominee. 

While some legal experts question the likelihood of success in Trump’s arguments, they say that the high court’s review sets back Smith’s timeline to start a trial before an election and begs the question whether Attorney General Merrick Garland would — or should — approve going to trial just before the general election in November. 

Jonathan Turley, a practicing criminal defense attorney and professor at George Washington University, says ‘the runway for Jack Smith just got a lot shorter.’

‘I think that most people still believe that Smith can prevail before the Supreme Court. But the most immediate impact is that the runway for Jack Smith just got a lot shorter,’ Turley said in an interview with Fox News Digital. 

Smith’s ‘primary fight for the last few months has been to secure a trial before the election,’ Turley said, adding that if the trial is after the election, ‘there might not be a trial.’ 

Turley said that, should a decision come down from the Supreme Court as late as June, between a ‘host’ of pre-trial motions and other procedural elements at the district court level — even if the district court were as ‘motivated’ as Smith to get a trial scheduled before the election — the earliest a trial could start is the fall.

Turley noted the Department of Justice has a longstanding practice of avoiding any prosecutorial action that could be perceived as political within a certain time frame before the election. 

A Justice Department spokesperson declined to comment. 

The Justice Manual states, ‘Federal prosecutors and agents may never select the timing of any action, including investigative steps, criminal charges, or statements, for the purpose of affecting any election, or for the purpose of giving an advantage or disadvantage to any candidate or political party.

‘Such a purpose is inconsistent with the Department’s mission and with the Principles of Federal Prosecution.’ 

While the DOJ can make timing requests of the court, it’s ultimately up to a judge to set the court’s calendar. 

‘The attorney general has a responsibility to maintain consistent application of departmental policy. This has nothing to do with the merits. Merrick Garland has been hands-off, has granted Smith almost total discretion as to the prosecution of the case. The timing of the case raises questions that remain within the attorney general’s purview, in my view,’ Turley said. 

John Shu, a constitutional law expert who served in both the George H.W. Bush and George W. Bush administrations, said all the Biden campaign and the Democrats need is for one of Trump’s trials to start before the general election. 

‘If that happens, the news coverage will be ‘all Trump trial all the time,’ especially if it’s televised, and no one is going to be talking about the economy, illegal immigration, wars in Israel and Ukraine, Biden’s disastrous withdrawal from Afghanistan or super-high crime, gas prices, food prices and inflation,’ Shu said. ‘It’ll be worse than the O.J. Simpson trial.

‘The way Jack Smith has been acting, it indicates that he has been keeping his eye on the electoral calendar.’ 

‘This is all the more reason for the DOJ, in keeping with long-standing department policy in administrations from both parties, to delay trial if the date falls within two or three months before the presidential election,’ Shu added.

On the merits of the case before the nine justices, Turley said, ‘Trump will have a difficult time securing a majority in favor of the totality of his argument that Trump has offered a sweeping claim of immunity and is likely to produce a level of sticker shock for the justices.’

But, Turley said, ‘the justices may have a similar reaction to the lower court’s opinion that some justices may be uncomfortable with — the lack of a clear line of when immunity will protect a president.’ 

‘The interesting aspect of this is that many of us expected that many of the justices would have wanted this cup to pass from their lips. If they had simply denied review, they would not establish any precedent on presidential immunity,’ Turley said. 

‘The court has not been keen on delineating the lines of presidential immunity. The opinions that they have issued have had a certain room at the elbows in terms of the use of this protection.

‘So, this will force the court to set down some precedent. It’s very likely that some of the justices would like to see greater acknowledgment of immunity for the president, for a future president.’

Jim Trusty, former legal counsel for Trump and a former federal prosecutor, said ‘the Trump team argument that he has absolute unqualified immunity while he’s in office is not a winner.’

‘But I do think that there’s a strong possibility that the court confirms that immunity protects the president, acting even in the furthest reaches of his responsibilities. That could well be enough to win the day on both Jan. 6 and Mar-a-Lago classified documents cases,’ Trusty said.

The Justice Department declined to comment. 

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Sen. Katie Britt, R-Ala., will provide the Republican response to President Biden’s State of the Union address next week.

Britt’s planned response to the March 7 presidential address was announced Thursday by House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky.

‘I am truly honored and grateful for the opportunity to speak directly to my fellow Americans and have a candid conversation about the future of our nation,’ Britt said in a statement. ‘The Republican Party is the party of hardworking parents and families, and I’m looking forward to putting this critical perspective front and center.’

Britt, the first female elected to the U.S. Senate from Alabama, was sworn into office in 2023 and is the youngest female Republican to ever serve in the Senate.

‘There is no doubt that President Biden’s failed presidency has made America weaker and more vulnerable at every turn,’ she added. ‘At this decisive moment in our country’s history, it’s time for the next generation to step up and preserve the American Dream for our children and our grandchildren.’

Johnson praised Britt in a statement as a ‘champion’ for Republican priorities.

‘Americans are struggling amid a border catastrophe, crushing inflation, an increasingly dangerous world, and fears about a President not up to the task,’ he said. ‘Against this backdrop, Senator Katie Britt will share her incredible story as the first woman elected to the United States Senate from the state of Alabama. As the only current Republican mom of school-aged kids serving in the Senate, Katie is fighting to preserve the American Dream for the next generation. She is a champion for strong families, a secure border, national defense and a vibrant economy with stable prices and opportunities for all.’

‘The American people will tune in as the youngest Republican woman ever elected to the Senate turns the page on the oldest President in history,’ Johnson added.

Similar to that of Johnson, McConnell also issued high praise for Britt, saying she is an ‘unapologetic optimist’ who has quickly become a leading voice on issues most important to Republicans.

‘For three years, President Biden has tried to convince the American people to accept historic inflation, rampant crime, retreat on the world stage, and functionally open borders as the new normal. Next week, working families will hear a very different perspective,’ McConnell said. ‘Senator Katie Britt is an unapologetic optimist, and as one of our nation’s youngest Senators, she’s wasted no time becoming a leading voice in the fight to secure a stronger American future and leave years of Washington Democrats’ failures behind.’

Britt, who previously served as chief of staff to now-retired GOP Alabama Sen. Richard Shelby, and later as president and CEO of the Business Council of Alabama, was born and raised in Enterprise, Alabama.

Britt endorsed former President Donald Trump in December, writing in a Yellowhammer News op-ed that the ‘results of his strong leadership as the 45th President of the United States are clear for all to see’ after living under the Biden administration’s policies.

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More than 100 people were reported dead and hundreds more wounded after Palestinians rushing toward trucks loaded with humanitarian aid encountered fire in Gaza City early Thursday, according to local media reports. 

The exact circumstances surrounding the deaths remain unclear; while several reports suggested Israeli troops fired on the crowd as they descended upon the trucks, the Israeli military suggested that most who died were trampled.

Health Ministry spokesperson Ashraf al-Qidra said at least 104 people were killed and around 760 were wounded, describing the incident as a ‘massacre.’

‘Early this morning, during the entry of humanitarian aid trucks into the northern Gaza Strip, Gazan residents surrounded the trucks, and looted the supplies being delivered,’ Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) said in a statement. ‘During the incident, dozens of Gazans were injured as a result of pushing and trampling. The incident is under review.’

The IDF suggested that fewer than 10 civilians were injured by Israeli forces opening fire during the delivery of humanitarian aid, and that most deaths and injuries came from the stampede.

It released aerial footage of hundreds of people swarming and climbing onto trucks during the incident.

The deadly incident took place at al-Nabusi roundabout west of Gaza City in the northern part of the enclave, Gaza Health Ministry spokesperson Ashraf al-Qidra said.

Fares Afana, the head of the ambulance service at the Kamal Adwan Hospital, said medics arriving at the scene found ‘dozens or hundreds’ lying on the ground. He said there were not enough ambulances to collect all the dead and wounded and that some were being brought to hospitals on donkey carts.

Dr Hussam Abu Safia, director of the Kamal Adwan Hospital, said emergency personnel are struggling to cope with the influx of patients. 

‘Most of our patients are in critical condition, which requires urgent surgical intervention, but we have no operating rooms,’ Abu Safia told Al Jazeera.

‘I stand helpless. We are simply administering first-aid treatment only.’

Hamas says it holds Israel, President Biden and his administration ‘fully responsible’ for the incident and for the ‘ethnic cleansing’ of its people. The group called for worldwide demonstrations against Israel’s bombardment of Gaza. 

‘We have mercy on the souls of our people’s martyrs, and we affirm that their sacrifices and blood will not be in vain and that we will remain loyal to our cause, our land, and our sanctities,’ the group posted to Telegram.

Gaza City and the rest of northern Gaza were the first targets of Israel’s air, sea and ground offensive launched in response to Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack in which militants crossed the border from Gaza and massacred some 1,200 people. The area has suffered widespread devastation and has been largely isolated from the rest of the territory for months, with little aid entering.

The Health Ministry said the Palestinian death toll from the war has climbed to 30,035, with another 70,457 wounded. It does not differentiate between civilians and combatants in its figures but says women and children make up around two-thirds of those killed.

Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

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Speaker Mike Johnson bucked the House GOP’s right flank to pass a short-term federal funding bill on Thursday, setting up Congress to avoid a partial government shutdown.

The bill, known as a continuing resolution (CR), extends fiscal 2023’s government funding levels to two deadlines: March 8 and March 22. It passed the House, 320-99.

Majorities in both parties voted for the bill, although more Democrats than Republicans supported it – 113 GOP lawmakers voted for the CR while 97 voted against, and 207 Democrats voted for it versus just two who were opposed. In a modest win for Johnson, however, this CR got more GOP votes than the extension he put on the House floor in January, which got 107 Republicans’ support.

Congress is currently operating under a CR passed in January that extended funding for some of its 12 appropriations bills to March 1 and others to March 8.

House GOP leaders were forced to seek Democrat votes, which were likely anyway, to pass the bill. They fast-tracked it under suspension of the rules, meaning it forgoes the normal process of going through the House Rules Committee and a House-wide procedural vote in exchange for raising the threshold for passage to two-thirds instead of a simple majority.

It comes after GOP rebels weaponized procedural House votes several times to deliberately sink their own party’s legislation as a protest against leadership.

Many of those same rebels have pushed Johnson to allow for the government to shut down instead of extending the previous Democrat-controlled Congress’ funding levels. They argued that a shutdown, even a partial one, would give House Republicans leverage to push for conservative policies.

With expected furloughs of federal employees and suspension of government programs, however, a government shutdown is a politically perilous outcome for both Republicans and Democrats.

This is the fourth CR the House has passed since fiscal 2023 ended on Sept. 30.

‘We have to be willing to do what’s difficult to save America. I’m not scared of a government shutdown if it’s the price we need to pay to secure our border, get our debt under control and stop the government from going after my fellow Americans,’ said Rep. Eric Burlison, R-Mo., a member of the ultraconservative House Freedom Caucus.

But Johnson said during his weekly press conference that it would buy negotiators just enough time to release legislative text for their first six spending bills over the weekend while avoiding the negative effects of a partial shutdown.

‘All of our members will have 72 hours to review it. That’s our commitment. That’s our rule. We’re respecting it. And that’s the only reason we need the process CR, to allow us time to do that,’ Johnson said.

‘If I did it the way … [former House] Speaker [Nancy] Pelosi did, we just drop that bill and vote on it within hours. We’re not going to do that.’

The CR must now pass the Senate and be signed by President Biden to avoid a partial shutdown at midnight on Friday.

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Former President Trump is demanding that President Biden take a cognitive exam to prove his mental capacity for re-election.

Trump made the remarks on Thursday via his proprietary social media platform, Truth Social.

‘Crooked Joe Biden must take a Cognitive Test. Maybe that way we would be able to find out why he makes such terrible decisions,’ Trump wrote. ‘I took two of them, and ACED them both (no mistakes!).’

‘All Presidents, or people wanting to become President, should mandatorily take this test!’ the former president added.

White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre on Wednesday defended President Biden not taking a cognitive test as part of his physical exam, arguing that the demands of the job prove he does not need one. 

‘If you look at what a clinical cognitive test is – actually what it does – it is a 15-minute appointment that is administered by someone who, most of the time, people don’t actually know,’ Jean-Pierre said. 

A reporter asked why a cognitive test was not included in the president’s physical exam this week, given the recent scrutiny he has received over major gaffes that raised questions about his mental fitness. 

Jean-Pierre said Biden’s doctor felt it was unnecessary and added that ‘folks need to understand that the president passes a cognitive test every day.’ 

‘You think about the job growth, you think about the record small business action, you think about the bloom in that particular space of 16 million more small businesses have been created. You think about delivering historic investment that has been done by a president who has to deal with these issues every day, again, on a granular level and so his doctor, including the neurologist, do not believe that he needs one,’ Jean-Pierre said. 

In a release from Dr. Kevin O’Connor, the president’s physician, Biden was declared fit to ‘successfully execute the duties of the presidency.’

‘President Biden is a healthy, active 81-year-old male, who remains fit to successfully execute the duties of the Presidency, to include those as Chief Executive, Head of State and Commander in Chief,’ the release said.

Fox News Digital’s Bradford Betz contributed to this report.

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Former President Trump landed yet another solid victory over Nikki Haley in the Michigan primary, but there was more drama on the Democratic side.

A group of Democrats who started a movement in opposition to President Biden’s support for Israel’s war in Gaza sent a clear message in the Michigan primary, exceeding the amount of votes the group was aiming for and complicating the key battleground state ahead of this year’s general election.

‘Yesterday was a resounding victory,’ Dearborn Mayor Abdullah Hammoud, who joined the ‘Listen to Michigan’ movement, said during a news conference Wednesday claiming victory for the movement.

The comments come following the movement’s push to have Democratic voters select ‘uncommitted’ in Tuesday’s Democratic primary surpassed the group’s expectations, with just over 101,000 people selecting the option, according to Associated Press numbers as of Wednesday afternoon. That mark was more than 10 times the group’s stated goal, which was to get 10,000 people, or roughly the same as the margin of victory in the 2016 election in the state, to select the option.

Though two ‘uncommitted’ delegates from Michigan won’t impact Biden’s chances of winning the nomination at the Democratic National Convention this summer, it could presage a weak spot for the president heading into the general election.

A court in President Joe Biden’s home state determined a state law allowing 10 days of early voting and permanent absentee voting violated the Delaware constitution. 

After coming into office in 2021, Biden regularly launched rhetorical bombs at Georgia and other states as being ‘Jim Crow 2.0’ or ‘Jim Eagle,’ for requiring voter ID for mail-in voting. However, Georgia allows three weeks of early voting. 

Delaware Superior Court Judge Mark H. Conner ruled in a 25-page opinion, ‘The enactments of the General Assembly challenged today are inconsistent with our Constitution and therefore cannot stand.’ Delaware’s constitution in Article 5 Section 1 states that a ‘general election shall be held biennially on the Tuesday next after the first Monday in the month of November.’ The Delaware early voting law, enacted in 2019, allows in-person voting up to 10 days before an election.  

‘The conflict between these two passages is obvious,’ the judge wrote. ‘Our Constitution enumerates the one day an election shall be held biennially, and the Early Voting Statute allows for voting at least 10 days before that date.’

Several national polls in recent weeks suggest that President Biden is suffering from an enthusiasm gap when it comes to how excited his Democratic base and voters in general are about supporting him in November.

A Monmouth University poll conducted earlier this month showed that only 32% of registered voters feel at least somewhat enthusiastic about Biden’s candidacy and that number stands at just 62% among Democrats. 

The same number of registered voters, 32%, say they are at least somewhat confident in Biden’s physical and mental ability to be president. The same poll shows that confidence in Biden’s abilities among Democrats has dropped significantly to 72% after standing at 91% in 2020. 

 

‘His inflation is a cancer on the American dream. And the American people have figured it out and that’s why, if you believe the polls, the president is polling right up there with chlamydia.’

—  —GOP Sen. John Kennedy on ‘Bidenomics’

: In a Fox News Digital exclusive, On Sunday afternoon, Senate Minority Whip John Thune, the No. 2 Senate Republican leader, endorsed former President Donald Trump for re-election. ‘The primary results in South Carolina make clear that Donald Trump will be the Republican nominee for president in this year’s pivotal presidential election. The choice before the American people is crystal clear: It’s Donald Trump or Joe Biden,’ Thune told Fox News Digital.

It wasn’t clear before now whether Thune, who’s seen as one of McConnell’s potential successors to lead the Senate Republican Conference, would endorse either of the two major candidates for the 2024 GOP nomination. 

Fox News Digital’s Paul Steinhauser, Chris Pandolfo, Jamie Joseph, Andrew Miller and Thomas Phippen contributed to this report.

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SURPRISE, Ariz. — Here he was, a few months after touring the country as the most sought-after pitcher in baseball, signing the largest contract for a pitcher in history, facing the defending World Series champions in his Los Angeles Dodgers’ debut Wednesday – and the dude didn’t even break a sweat.

So, just what was Yoshinobu Yamamoto’s feelings after overwhelming the Texas Rangers in front of 7,714 fans at Surprise Stadium?

“Relief.’

And what was Dodgers teammate and countryman Shohei Ohtani’s assessment of Yamamoto’s performance?

“So-so.’

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Yamamoto laughed. Really, he was taken aback and honored, he said, that Ohtani decided to take the 30-minute drive in his convertible from the Dodgers’ spring-training complex to see him in action.

“What a good teammate,’ Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said. “It’s something that he didn’t have to do clearly. But he wanted to come here and support his teammate. So, for a guy like Yoshinobu to come here, and have the support of his own countrymen and his teammates, and obviously a good turnout of Dodger fans, it was pretty special.

“Really awesome.’

Yamamoto, after dominating competition in Japan for the past seven years, acted as if nothing changed faced the Rangers.

Yamamoto, throwing a mixture of 94-96 mph fastballs, curveballs, split-fingers and cutters, needed just 19 pitches in his two-inning outing.

He threw 16 of those pitches for strikes, striking out three batters, including All-Star second baseman Marcus Semien to open the game. The only baserunner he allowed was a soft single by Evan Carter.

“He’s obviously an incredible pitcher,’ Carter said. “His stuff is really, really good. …He throws really, really hard. He’s quick to the plate….

“His splitter is probably the best pitch, but the cutter/slider combo is going to play really well.’

The pitch sequence to Rangers first baseman Nathaniel Lowe to open the second inning actually drew gasps from the crowd. Yamamoto started him off with a 94-mph fastball that he took for strike 1. He came back with a 74-mph curveball for strike 2. And sent him back to the bench with a 90-mph splitter for strike 3.

It was the kind of first impression that players dream of, particularly when you’re in a foreign country, throwing a new baseball, and against the finest competition in the land.

“I don’t think it could have went any better than we had hoped,’ Roberts said. “He got to use his entire pitch mix. He was pounding the strike zone. He got a lot of swing-and-miss. He was efficient.

“So, I think for us, Shohei making his debut [Tuesday], Yoshinobu making his debut today, very, very exciting times right now.’’

Yet, as Yamamoto, 25, kept reminding everyone, it’s only spring training.

“I was trying to do my job, trying to stay calm, and then focus on what I have to do,’ Yamamoto said. “So, that was good. Let’s see how I do as I get more innings.’

If he continues doing this during the regular season, where he went 70-29 with a 1.82 ERA in his seven-year NPB career with the Orix Buffaloes – including a 1.24 ERA in 23 starts last season – only then might Yamamoto accept the accolades.

One of the most accomplished pitchers in NPB history, Yamamoto couldn’t have looked more relaxed. He looked every bit like the three-time consecutive Eiji Sawamura Award winner (Japan’s version of the Cy Young), two-time Pacific League MVP winner and two-time Gold Glove winner.

If he can face former MVPs Mookie Betts and Freddie Freeman in batting practice in the back fields of the Dodgers’ spring-training camp, he figured, then why should he be unnerved by a team getting fitted for World Series rings?

Still, despite the sheer dominance on display, Roberts can understand why Yamamoto felt more relief than euphoria.

“Obviously, there’s a lot of fanfare and expectations,’ Roberts said, “he’s still human like all of us. But for him to be able to channel that, compartmentalize all that, and still go out and do his job, it’s really impressive.’

Yamamoto was so locked in during the game that when he struck out Leody Taveras to end the second inning after throwing just eight pitches, he stood on the mound, forgetting how many outs there. It wasn’t until he saw his teammates running off the field with Ohtani jokingly waving him in that he joined them in the dugout.

So, just what did Ohtani say to him?

“You know, we play three outs here in the major leagues,’ Roberts said, laughing.

Surely, there will plenty more tests for Yamamoto. He pitched just once a week in Japan, making just 23 starts for Buffalo last season. The baseballs used in MLB are larger than the ones in Japan, and don’t have a tacky substance. The travel is also much more extreme than in Japan. And he happens to be just 5-foot-10, 176 pounds.

Still, after watching Yamamoto’s dominance, it’s easy to see why he attracted at least five offers worth $300 million or more before signing a 12-year, $325 million deal with the Dodgers.

No one was talking about his height after watching his performance Wednesday, with folks instead inquiring about his unique training regiment, abandoning weights in favor of javelins and soccer balls.

And for the Rangers, well, they’re just grateful he’s in the other league.

“You just know,’ Carter said, “he’s going to have a really good career.’

Yep, in case anyone had any doubts until Wednesday.

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The second annual NFL Players Association player survey was the first time head coaches and ownership groups were ranked and graded.

More than half of the league’s head coaches were given an A- or better, but three head coaches stood out as among the best bosses in the business.

Leading the way was three-time Super Bowl champion and Kansas City Chiefs head coach Andy Reid, who received a 9.77 out of 10 from his players. Minnesota Vikings head coach Kevin O’Connell was ranked second and was ranked first in the “willing to listen to the locker room” category. Dan Campbell, the Detroit Lions head coach, was third overall and the only other coach to receive an A+.

Nine coaches received “A” marks and another seven got A-.

On the flipside, former Washington Commanders coach Ron Rivera had the second-lowest grade (C), while fired Las Vegas Raiders head man Josh McDaniels received a D. Coaches were graded overall, how much they were willing to listen to players, and how efficient they were with players’ time.

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Here are the full rankings, according to the survey:

Reid
O’Connell
Campbell
Mike McDaniel, Miami Dolphins
Kyle Shanahan, San Francisco 49ers
Mike McCarthy, Dallas Cowboys
Sean McDermott, Buffalo Bills
Nick Sirianni, Philadelphia Eagles
Pete Carroll, Seattle Seahawks
Sean McVay, Los Angeles Rams
Mike Tomlin, Pittsburgh Steelers
Zac Taylor, Cincinnati Bengals
DeMeco Ryans, Houston Texans
Frank Reich, Carolina Panthers
Brian Daboll, New York Giants
Sean Payton, Denver Broncos
Jonathan Gannon, Arizona Cardinals
Shane Steichen, Indianapolis Colts
Doug Pederson, Jacksonville Jaguars
John Harbaugh, Baltimore Ravens
Matt LaFleur, Green Bay Packers
Mike Vrabel, Tennessee Titans
Matt Eberflus, Chicago Bears
Robert Saleh, New York Jets
Brandon Staley, Los Angeles Chargers
Dennis Allen, New Orleans Saints
Kevin Stefanski, Cleveland Browns
Todd Bowles, Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Bill Belichick, New England Patriots
Arthur Smith, Atlanta Falcons
Rivera
McDaniels

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According to former defensive lineman and three-time Defensive Player of the Year J.J. Watt, NFL players take two assignments more seriously than other tasks they are asked to participate in: the selection of team captains and the NFL Players Association’s team and facility report cards.

The NFLPA released its grades from players for the 2023 season Wednesday and, although there were no mentions of rats in this report as there was in last year’s inaugural version, players made their feelings over a range of 11 categories known.

“I would say things have improved and we’re glad that they are,” retired offensive lineman and NFLPA president J.C. Tretter said.

Here are several of the key takeaways from the 2024 edition of the NFLPA’s team reports cards:

Top five teams in NFLPA team report cards

Miami Dolphins
Minnesota Vikings
Green Bay Packers
Philadelphia Eagles
Jacksonville Jaguars

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Bottom five teams in NFLPA team report cards

28. Pittsburgh Steelers
29. New England Patriots
30. Los Angeles Chargers
31. Kansas City Chiefs
32. Washington Commanders

Charg-ering for daycare

The Los Angeles Chargers were one of six teams to receive a F or worse – the survey allows for F-minus – for treatment of families. The Chargers charge $75 for the first child in an off-site daycare facility and $50 for each additional child per family. They aren’t the only team to do so.

The Tampa Bay Buccaneers charge players’ families $90 per child. Most teams offer the service for free.

The Cincinnati Bengals, Patriots, Steelers and Commanders all received F- for their treatment of families, which focused on services available to players and their families on game days.

Commanders still have lots of work to do

For the second straight year, the Commanders finished in last place overall. Their locker room and training room also received F-minus grades, while the training staff and team travel were marked with an F.

“When asked what the number one issue respondents want to prioritize for fixing, most players couldn’t come up with just one,” the report said. “Instead, the common answer was the entire facility.”

Plumbing issues

Bengals players reported that half of the showers in the locker room do not work properly and lack either hot water or sufficient water pressure. They also said there are five functioning toilets for the entire team.

In Tampa, Buccaneers players described the locker room as “unclean” and “smelly.” They also cited seeing bugs consistently in the showers. Commanders players reported multiple sewage leaks in their facility, and the team’s home stadium lacked hot water after at least one game there in 2023.

Travel troubles

Two other clubs aside from Washington received failing grades for the way they travel: the Buccaneers and Tennessee Titans.

Tennessee makes players sit in back of plane where they don’t fit, while staff sits in first class. They are one of seven teams that require players to have roommates the night before games.

Tampa Bay at least gives younger players the option to not have roommates on work travel – if they pay the team more than $1,750 for their own room each season.

Did improvements after 2023 survey take effect?

The Bengals were chastised in the previous report for not providing players with three meals on Wednesdays – typically the busiest day of the NFL workweek during the regular season. That changed in 2023, but they are still one of two teams that does not supply three square meals a day for players and received a F nonetheless.

Arizona started providing daycare and a small family room and also stopped the practice of charging players for dinner. The Cardinals climbed to 27th overall after finishing last year’s survey 31st.

Cowboys fall

Dallas fell from fifth in 2022 to 12th in 2023. Players continued to give high marks to the locker room, weight room and head coach Mike McCarthy. But the problem for Dallas is in the training room. In total, 62% of players said they felt they received adequate one-on-one attention from the training staff, which ranked 30th in the league.

Jaguars biggest climbers

The survey made it obvious Jaguars players appreciate the upgraded workplace, as the organization opened a new training facility before last season. Without rats running around – a unanimous complaint in the previous year’s report – Jacksonville jumped from 28th in 2022 to fifth in 2023.

Bill Belichick

Head coaches were graded on how efficient they were with the players’ time and how willing they were to listen to the locker room. Only 55% of New England Patriots players felt that former head coach Bill Belichick was efficient with their time and that he rarely listened to them. He ranked 31st overall in both categories.

The only coach who graded out worse? Belichick’s former protégé, Josh McDaniels, who was fired by the Las Vegas Raiders in the middle of the season.

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From Steph Curry to Sabrina Ionescu, from Damian Lillard to Caitlin Clark, the 3-point shot rules across all levels of basketball.

One of the NBA’s biggest made shots in the past decade is a 3-pointer – then-Cleveland guard Kyrie Irving’s winning 3 against Golden State in Game 7 of the 2016 Finals.

The 3-point shot’s importance cannot be overstated. Consider that in LeBron James’ rookie year – 21 seasons ago – teams were attempting 14.9 3-pointers per game. This season, teams are shooting 35.0.

However, two Syracuse University professors are trying to reshape the way teams view and attempt 3-pointers.

In a paper titled, ‘Estimating NBA Team Shot Selection Efficiency from Aggregations of True, Continuous Shot Charts: A Generalized Additive ModelApproach,’ Shane Sanders and Justin Ehrlich analyzed seven seasons of shot chart data and discovered a ‘dispremium’ has been placed on 3-point shots and that the value of a two-point shot is greater than the value of a 3-pointer when taking into account foul shots.

‘We found that they kind of went in too far into the three point revolution, and I would say mild to moderate scaling back is in order,’ Sanders told USA TODAY Sports. ‘Now, this doesn’t mean that we can’t achieve the spacing benefits that the modern NBA offense runs on. And it doesn’t even mean that Curry or Lillard shouldn’t be pulling up from anywhere along the arc, but it does mean maybe some (players) should be tempering their proclivity to pull up from beyond the arc.’

Looking at extensive shot chart data from 2016-2017 through 2022-2023, Sanders and Ehrlich, professors at Syracuse’s David B. Falk College of Sport and Human Dynamics, found that the expected value of a 2-point attempt is worth 1.096 points and the expected value of a 3-point attempt is worth 1.083 points in the 2022-23 season. The true value, which takes into account free throw attempts, of a 2-point shot is 1.181 points and the true value of a 3-point shot is 1.094 in the same season.

In the process, they have created a new shot chart for teams and players that incorporates missed shots that included a foul but are not counted as shot attempts in field goal percentages. Ehrlich was in search of a better shot chart, and Sanders had begun to hear that perhaps too many 3s were attempted. Together, they found answers that could impact the next wave of basketball strategy.

The study is a finalist in the 2024 research paper competition at the prestigious MIT Sloan Sports Analytics Conference on Friday and Saturday in Boston. The conference is headed by co-founders and co-chairs Daryl Morey, the Philadelphia 76ers’ president of basketball operations, and Jessica Gelman, CEO of the Kraft Analytics Group.

These research papers can be influential and have potential implications on what happens in the evolution of games. Beside presenting their paper, Sanders and Ehrlich have sent their paper to analytics staffers at NBA teams who have told the professors “this is exciting and this is something that they’re going to consider going forward. And we have good relationships with a number of teams and even some assistant coaches,” Sanders said.

This information is sweet string music to San Antonio Spurs coach Gregg Popovich’s ears. He has long expressed his dismay over the 3-point shot’s growth and focus of modern offenses.

Sanders and Ehrlich are not suggesting an overhaul and a return to days when teams took 14 3s per game. The idea is to maximize offensive efficiency by being more judicious about taking 3s – and in particular, who is taking them. A player who is about a 32% 3-point shooter and used to help stretch the floor should limit 3s.

‘We started seeing that there was value added in the mid-range shots by including the additional information with free throws – certainly players just like James Harden,’ Ehrlich said.

They’re also not advocating for long 2s. Taking mid-range shots in the 8-10 feet range is more preferable for certain players, and because of the data they have mined, the belief is that scoring will increase if their theory is applied correctly.

There are corollary aspects of their research. In the past two decades, 2-point percentage has increased significantly and 3-point percentage has not increased as much. In the 2003-04 season, teams shot 46% on 64.9 2-point attempts per game and 34.7% on 14.9 3s per game. In 2023-24, teams shoot 54.6% on 54.3 2-point attempts per game and 36.7% on 35 3-point attempts per game.

‘It’s not that 3s are becoming less valuable, it’s that 2s are becoming more valuable,’ Ehrlich said.

The increase in percentages inside and outside the 3-point line illustrate the way the game is played with pace and space and the incredible amount of skilled offensive players. It’s all about taking the right 2s and 3s.

Sanders has a deep interest in game theory, and in this specific case, how shooting can be more efficient with the possibility of diversifying the offense and making it less predictable for the defense.

By getting this information to more people, Sanders and Ehrlich, who consult for a Euroleague team and college basketball teams, hope to see more teams apply the data to game situations.

As long as Curry and all the other great shooters continue to launch 3s.

Follow NBA reporter Jeff Zillgitt on social media @JeffZillgitt

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