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The Biden administration’s move Monday to try to block the $24.6 billion deal to combine Kroger and Albertsons supermarket chains came as no surprise. This White House has launched some of the most aggressive antitrust policies in living memory.

The Federal Trade Commission’s lawsuit holds big stakes for the grocery industry, millions of shoppers and hundreds of thousands of store workers. Yet there’s plenty of debate over who has the stronger case — the companies or the regulators — and how the battle will shake out.

“The FTC’s position that Kroger and Albertsons currently compete with each other, and that keeps prices lower — this is the first time that we’re really hearing that,” said Phil Lempert, a food industry analyst and founder of SupermarketGuru.com.

These are a few of the factors hanging in the balance.

The two companies and the FTC have opposite predictions for what would happen to grocery prices if Kroger is allowed to buy Albertsons.

Federal regulators say the merger would “eliminate fierce competition” between the two chains, reducing the need to keep prices low to lure in shoppers. The FTC alleged one executive involved in the proposed deal described it as “basically creating a monopoly” in the market.

Kroger and Albertsons insist a combined company could better vie with big rivals in pressing suppliers for the best deals, then pass the value on to customers. Kroger said in a statement Monday that it’s committed to investing $500 million on cost reductions as soon as the merger closes, and cited its “long track record of reducing prices every year, with $5 billion invested to lower prices since 2003.”

Neil Saunders, managing director of the retail consultancy GlobalData, is skeptical of the FTC’s price prediction. From behemoths like Walmart, Costco and Amazon to dollar stores, regional chains and discounters like Aldi, grocers of many sizes already compete on price, he said.

“Grocery is a very low-margin business where volume is a prerequisite for delivering what the market wants,” Saunders said. “With this degree of competition, a merged Kroger and Albertsons poses few real threats.”

Lempert tends to agree. By combining forces, “a lot of the duplication between buying and merchandising, really at the executive level, gets diminished,” he said. “They can really become a much more efficient operator.”

Lempert also cast doubt on the FTC’s concerns that the merger could dent quality. Kroger and Albertsons have about 35,000 private-label store brands, he estimated, “and store brands have increased quality over the past probably 10 years.”

But consumer advocates took the FTC’s side.

“Concentration in grocery retail has already caused food prices to skyrocket,” said Stacy Mitchell, co-executive director at the Institute for Local Self-Reliance, a nonprofit advocacy group for independent businesses. “This merger would have undoubtedly led to even more consolidation among processors and the closure of independent grocery stores, furthering the proliferation of food deserts in underserved rural and Black and brown communities across the country.”

Some labor advocates cheered the FTC’s push to block the merger as a potential victory for workers, who the agency estimated would number almost 700,000 in a combined company.

Seth Harris, a law and policy professor at Northeastern University, called it a sign that the agency “takes anticompetitive behavior in labor markets as seriously as it takes anticompetitive behavior in consumer product markets.”

“Huge employers merging so they can use their power to lay off workers or hold down wages is just as troubling as sellers combining to fix prices higher,” said Harris, who served as the Biden administration’s top labor adviser until 2022. “In both cases, working people are worse off.”

Walmart, the nation’s biggest seller of groceries, is planning to expand.Jeff Greenberg / Universal Images Group via Getty Images file

Kroger rejected allegations that merging with Albertsons would squeeze employees, vowing to invest $1 billion post-merger to raise wages and benefits. The companies also noted that their workforces are unionized, unlike their biggest competitors.

“This decision only strengthens larger, non-unionized retailers like Walmart, Costco and Amazon by allowing them to further increase their overwhelming and growing dominance of the grocery industry,” Kroger said in its statement. “As union membership continues to decline nationwide, especially in the grocery industry, this merger is the best way to secure union jobs.”

Other authorities share the Biden administration’s concerns about labor. A bipartisan group of attorneys general from eight states and Washington, D.C., backed the agency’s lawsuit Monday, and other state-level efforts have taken aim at the grocery chains on labor grounds.

Earlier this month, Colorado’s attorney general (who didn’t join the FTC’s effort but voiced support for it) backed local unions in a lawsuit alleging that Kroger and Albertsons had agreed not to poach each other’s employees during a strike seeking higher pay. The companies have denied the claims.

“The other retailers in the Denver area are nonunion,” Lempert noted. For regional labor leaders looking to maximize workers’ leverage, “it makes it harder to negotiate if there’s just one.”

The shadow of Walmart looms over the dispute. An FTC victory would crimp Kroger’s and Albertsons’ plan to better compete with the nation’s biggest grocer. Walmart’s stock recently hit an all-time high, and the company is now charting out plans to add more than 150 large-format stores over the next five years.

Walmart has found more success than many other big retailers in an era of inflation-fatigued consumers, including higher-income ones that have increasingly turned up searching for bargains.

But for now, “the average Walmart food shopper is very different than the average Kroger [or] Albertsons shopper,” said Lempert. The latter, he said, “wants more services, they want more prepared foods, they want a better retail experience. The average Walmart food shopper wants cheap prices.”

A geographic analysis by the mapping software provider Caliper found the merger could give Kroger greater access to younger, upwardly mobile customers in burgeoning metro areas — a cohort some experts see as a key target of Walmart’s expansion.

If the FTC prevails, “it leaves each company with some holes in their footprint,” said Michael Baker, managing director and senior research analyst at D.A. Davidson, a financial services firm. Kroger and Albertsons would “have to grow organically” while continuing as separate companies, he said, “but that becomes difficult because you have another competitor who is still in those markets.”

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Jimmy Butler brought back Emo Butler. This time with a side of country.

The Miami Heat star appeared in Fall Out Boy’s ‘So Much (For) Stardust’ video, which was released on Wednesday. In the visual, Butler rocks a straightened hairdo with one side covering his eyes and dons a purple fringed, bedazzled cowboy outfit, complete with purple cowboy hat and snakeskin boots.

Butler lip syncs to lead singer Patrick Stump’s voice, pondering, ‘We thought we had it all’ while shimmying around a dressing room and then a pool hall where he consults a glittery Magic 8 Ball.

‘this ain’t our first rodeo,’ the band, known for pop-punk hits like ‘Thnks fr th Mmrs’ and ‘Sugar, We’re Goin Down,’ posted on X, formerly Twitter, sharing the video with fans. ‘new video for So Much (For) Stardust starring @JimmyButler aka Heat Wentz just dropped.’

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“I’m very emotional right now. This is my emo state and I like this. This is me,” Butler told reporters at the team’s media day. “This is how I’m feeling as of late.”

The Bigface Coffee founder has dabbled in music himself. In an interview with The Guardian last month, Butler said he’s been working on a country album for the past year. He said he’s recorded 60 songs and isn’t planning on singing on the project, but wants to write, produce and curate artists like DJ Khaled does for his hip-hop albums.

‘There’s so many people out there, and I’m one of them, that are like, ‘Man, I can do that,” Butler said, ‘and you really don’t know how difficult it is to make a No. 1 song, how difficult it is to have all these songs on the back burner. And you got to pick the right ones. And it’s fun, and I do love it, but my goodness, it’s difficult.”

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The DJ’s sound system was not loud enough to drown out Cam Newton on Sunday in Atlanta as the former NFL quarterback watched a game at a 7-on-7 youth football event.

‘It’s tough to be my son, I know!’ he hollered. ‘I raised you!’

Newton, the No. 1 overall pick in the 2011 draft, seemed to be having fun at someone else’s expense.

Overlooking the field below, Newton was taunting TopShelf Performance (TSP), a team led by two men − Steph Brown and TJ Brown − who used to work for Newton’s 7-on-7 program, C1N.

‘I raised you!’ Newton shouted.

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Then all hell was raised.

The two coaches left the field with the game in progress, tracked down Newton and videotape that went viral captured the melee that ensued.

‘I was wrong for letting Cam get in my head,’ Steph Brown told USA TODAY Sports.

As of yet, no such apology from the quarterback who relished the nickname Superman.

Newton did not respond to requests for comment made by USA TODAY Sports through his representatives.

Newton, 34, hasn’t played in the NFL since 2021, but he’s still an All-Pro trash talker equipped with custom-made hats and freeform dreadlocks.

‘Cam’s always been a bit of a showman,’ said Chris Circo, CEO of Battle Sports, which hosts invite-only 7-on-7 tournaments. ‘Why would he turn it off?’

Get this guy out of here’

The fight in Atlanta was not the first altercation at a 7-on-7 tournament involving Newton this year.

On Jan. 27, a photographer captured an on-field incident between Newton and Jay Wimbrow, the director of operations for South Florida Express, another elite 7-on-7 team.

The teams were playing at a national Battle 7×7 tournament in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, and Wimbrow said tensions boiled over when Newton made himself at home on South Florida Express’ sideline.

‘When I was telling the refs, yo, get this guy out of here, (Newton) grabbed my wrist,’ Wimbrow said. ‘And in that (photograph) you see I’m pulling my wrist away from him, that’s what’s going on there.’

At 6-5 and 250 pounds, Newton towers over Wimbrow and most everyone else on the 7-on-7 circuit.

‘He tries to get in people’s face and tries to kind of just intimidate people,’ Wimbrow said. ‘And because he’s Cam Newton, people give him the benefit of the doubt.’

But Circo, who oversaw the tournament for Battle Sports, said Wimbrow should not have been on the field because Wimbrow is not a coach.

‘Jay was way out of line and came at Cam, which I thought was insanity,’ Circo said. ‘I didn’t see Cam do anything wrong at our event and I didn’t see him really do anything other than defend himself.

‘You know, he’s very vocal. But he’s fun. … he gets a bit of a bad rap.’

Circo later clarified by text message that if Cam ‘crossed the field during a game to the other team’s sideline that’s not acceptable.’

The bad blood between Newton and TSP’s Browns can be traced back to success.

When they were a trio working for Newton’s C1N program, the 18-under team won the Pylon 7×7 Nationals in Dallas in 2021. But the Browns, who are not related, said they began to think Newton was working against them.

Specifically, the coaches said, Newton was depriving them of film of C1N teams they coached separately from Newton. It was the type of film used to promote the teams and players online.

In 2022, they left C1N and started TSP.

Engaging in sideline antics

Since then, Steph Brown and TJ Brown said, Newton has poked and prodded at them on social media. Until last Saturday, when there was a chance for something else – to meet on the field at a 7-on-7 tournament sponsored by We Ball Sports, an athletic apparel company.

Before that game, videotape shows, Newton’s players crowded on TSP’s sideline. TJ Brown could be seen frowning before Newton’s players dispersed without incident.

At least one videographer working for Newton was filming the scene – the type of content that ends up online to promote teams or tournaments.

Ashley Green, a marketing consultant who began representing TSP after the fight, said a tournament organizer was taping the scene instead of directing Newton’s players to their own sideline.

‘It’s important to note the role that the organizers also played in not drawing a line in terms of disrespect,’ Green said, adding that a greater emphasis on sportsmanship could have kept the friction from escalating into a fight.

Nehemiah Mitchell, the co-founder of We Ball Sports and a tournament organizer, declined to comment.

Despite the sideline antics that day, TSP prevailed, 24-20.

On Sunday morning, TJ Brown said, he crossed paths with Newton in the parking lot at B.E.S.T. Academy, site of the tournament.

Brown recalled Newton saying, ‘Hey, what are we doing today? Let’s bet. I ain’t never running out of money. I got plenty of money.’

(Newton, who earned more than $130 million during his NFL career, is known for his talk of money. That includes offers to pay teams that beat his own for championships.)

‘You think money is everything,’ Brown recalled telling Newton. ‘You can’t buy me.’

And with that, TJ Brown said, he walked off.

On elimination day, their teams never met on the field. But the trash talk continued when they crossed paths. And when TSP played Money Team, Newton started trash talking – or, more accurately, bellowing trash – from above the field.

About five minutes into the game, the Browns did something unprecedented – they left the field with the game still in progress.

According to a statement issued by TSP, Steph Brown left the field to address the taunting with Newton. The two men met face to face at the stop of a set of stairs and, according to the TSP statement, Newton reportedly grabbed the coach ‘by his jacket trying to choke him.’

Close behind, TJ punched Newton ‘and the situation as a whole escalated,’ according to the TSP statement.

When order was restored, all three men – Newton, Steph Brown and TJ Brown – were asked to leave the premises.

‘Cam knew what he was doing,’ TJ Brown said. ‘He was trying to antagonize us during the games so that we’d lose and he was just trying to get us riled up. And this is not nothing new. This is typical Cam Newton behavior.’

Probably drive you crazy

Paul Nickel is the father of Luke Nickel, the starting quarterback on Newton’s 18-under team. He played tight end at Stanford from 1989 to 1993.

‘I’ve seen a lot of stuff,’ Paul Nickel said. ‘Even at a place like Stanford.’

But there is only one Cam Newton.

‘Does he sometimes jaw back and forth with people? Of course he does,’ Nickel said. ‘I mean, that’s kind of why he’s polarizing, right? He’s Cam Newton. That’ s just how he is.

‘If you don’t know him, he’ll probably drive you crazy.’

But Wimbrow suggests Newton is putting himself at risk.

‘Eventually, you keep poking the bear, somebody’s going to poke back,’ he said. ‘And they’re not going to care you’re Cam Newton.’

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Report cards for NFL teams are back, and the grades from members of the NFL Players Association are in.

For the second straight year, the Washington Commanders were ranked the worst team overall by their own players based on the 11 categories related to working conditions. Managing partner Josh Harris and his ownership group received a ‘B’ and ranked 18th in the league at the end of their first year, but the team did not finish above 25th in any other category except for strength coaches (fifth, A).

The back-to-back defending Super Bowl-champion Kansas City Chiefs were a clear indicator that coaches and ownership are often not viewed in the same light. Head coach Andy Reid received an A+ from players, while owner Clark Hunt got a F in willingness to invest in team facilities. The Chiefs finished 31st overall due to the quality of care players received from the training staff and the outdated facilities. (Kansas City unveiled renderings for a ‘reimagined’ Arrowhead Stadium Wednesday.)

The Arizona Cardinals, 31st overall last year, moved up to 27th in 2023.

‘Notable upgrades from last season include providing a daycare and small family room, and they stopped the practice of charging players for dinner,’ the NFLPA said in its overview of the Cardinals’ report card. ‘The club also upgraded their weight room with new equipment and replaced the hazardous floor from last season. ‘

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The NFLPA, which organized the surveys, would like for the practice to become a yearly exercise for players to participate – 1,706 did so this time. This year, the exercise included grades for the 32 head coaches and owners, along with a score for the team dietician/nutritionist. The survey was administered from Aug. 26-Nov. 16, 2023.

The Miami Dolphins dethroned the Minnesota Vikings as the top overall workplace according to the survey, although Minnesota finished No. 2 in 2023 with two categories (food/cafeteria, training staff). Dolphins owner Stephen Ross was the highest-rated owner in the NFL for his willingness to invest in the facilities, and Miami received straight As.

‘Minnesota, along with Miami, have separated themselves into their own tier in terms of what it means to run a world-class NFL workplace,’ the NFLPA said.

Said the NFL in a statement: “The league and its clubs always encourage and solicit player feedback to help improve all facets of their NFL experience. We look forward to getting the opportunity to review the union’s questionnaire, and the data supporting it, after its release to the media.’

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Caleb Williams said he would be ‘excited’ if the Chicago Bears selected him No. 1 in April’s draft.

The former USC quarterback ended any speculation about his plans amid talk about having a preference of where he wanted to play.

‘I’m not pushing any agenda,’ Williams said to ESPN.com. ‘At the end of the day, the Bears have the last say. Regardless of how I feel, I’m not pushing an agenda of, ‘Yeah, I want to go. Or no, I don’t want to go.’ I’m excited for whatever comes.’

Chicago still has a decision to make regarding the status of the No. 1 pick and if they are going to be committed to quarterback Justin Fields, who has a 10-28 record as a starter in three seasons with the Bears.

Williams, the 2022 Heisman Trophy winner, said he is looking forward to meeting with the Bears this week at the scouting combine in Indianapolis. He will not participate in throwing drills and plans to showcase those skills at USC’s pro day on March 20.

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‘If I get drafted by the Bears, I’ll be excited,’ Williams said. ‘If they trade the pick, and I get drafted by someone else, I’m just as excited. Speaking about Chicago, they have a talented team, a talented offense and defense. For anyone to be in that situation, I think they’d be excited.’

Williams completed 68.6% of his passes and threw for 3,633 yards with 30 touchdowns and five interceptions last season for USC.

The 22-year-old Williams is a Washington, D.C. native and said being drafted by the Washington Commanders, who have the No. 2 overall pick, would be ‘cool’ because of the familiarity with the team.

‘There’s a time and place for everything,’ Williams said. ‘My job and my hobby is being at the facility or on the field or watching film. Or relaxing and prepping for the next day or game.

‘My main goal and focus … is to go win games and stay focused on keeping the main goal the main goal.’

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The Kansas City Chiefs plan on releasing veteran wide receiver Marquez Valdes-Scantling, according to ESPN.

The move will save the Super Bowl champions $12 million against their salary cap.

Valdes-Scantling signed a three-year, $30 million free agent deal with the Chiefs in 2021 after spending four seasons with the Green Bay Packers.

Valdes-Scantling, 29, put up career-lows in catches (21) and receiving yards (315) in 16 games last season. He had eight more receptions in the postseason. He came up big in the 2022 AFC championship game against the Cincinnati Bengals with 116 receiving yards and caught a 16-yard touchdown in Super Bowl 58.

What’s next for Chiefs?

Despite dropping 44 passes to lead the league and having the highest drop rate in the NFL, the Chiefs still managed to win their second consecutive Super Bowl.

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With the release of Valdes-Scantling, the receiving core will rely more on Rashee Rice, who led the team with seven touchdown catches and eight drops, and 34-year-old tight end Travis Kelce, the team’s leading receiver. The Chiefs also have Skyy Moore, Justin Watson and Mecole Hardman, who caught the game-winning touchdown pass in Super Bowl 58, on the roster. The Chiefs ranked in the bottom third of the league in yards per reception.

The Chiefs have other pressing needs, such as figuring out whether to re-sign defensive tackle Chris Jones and cornerback L’Jarius Sneed, and have six picks in the 2024 NFL draft to address any other roster holes.

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In the face of several LIV Golf players being excluded from the Masters, one of those snubs is calling into question the legitimacy of men’s golf’s major tournaments.

Talor Gooch, one of LIV Golf’s top players, did not receive an invitation to the Masters, as Augusta National has continued to use the Official World Golf Rankings (OWGR) as a guide to quantify invitations. The OWGR has rejected awarding ranking points to LIV golfers for their performance in that circuit. The result is that several of the world’s more prominent players who are without automatic qualifiers for invitations to majors like the Masters have been absent from those events.

‘If Rory McIlroy goes and completes his (career) Grand Slam without some of the best players in the world, there’s just going to be an asterisk,’ Gooch told the Australian Golf Digest in an interview. ‘It’s just the reality. I think everybody wins whenever the majors figure out a way to get the best players in the world there.’

McIlroy, 34, has won all majors except the Masters, with his top finish in the tournament being a second-place finish in 2022.

Augusta National sent three special invites for the 2024 field, with only one of those going to a LIV Golf player, Joaquín Niemann, whose performance in European Tour-sanctioned events qualified him for the invitation.

‘It’s not surprising,’ Gooch continued. ‘I think the majors have kind of shown that they’re not getting on board with LIV. ‘Jaco’ went outside of LIV and played some great golf and they rewarded him for that. So hopefully the day will turn when the majors decide to start rewarding good play on LIV. Hopefully that’ll be sooner than later.’

Gooch, who is currently ranked 449th in the OWGR, isn’t the only LIV golfer to decry the exclusion of LIV players from golf’s top tournaments.

‘I think the Official World Golf Ranking has got itself into a real hole,’ LIV Golf’s Lee Westwood told the Australian Golf Digest. ‘It’s got itself to a point where it’s obsolete, really, if I’m being completely honest. It’s managed to be so stubborn that it no longer ranks all the best golfers in the world fairly. And it’s gone so far that I don’t see how it can come back from the hole that it’s in because you can’t backdate them.’

Westwood called on major tournaments to devise another system to include LIV golfers, many of whom have won several major championships in their careers.

‘You’ve got to find another way of doing it,’ he said, ‘otherwise you lose credibility as a major championship, don’t you?’

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WWE fans are mourning the loss of Mike Jones, who was known as Virgil during his career.

The wrestling organization confirmed to USA TODAY Sports that Jones died on Wednesday.

Wrestling referee Mark Charles III, known as The Count, first announced Jones’ death in a Facebook post published on Wednesday, saying that the wrestling star, who had many nicknames, ‘passed peacefully at the hospital’ that morning. Jones was 61.

‘My dear friends, it is with great sorrow that I bring news from the Jones family of the passing of our beloved Michael Jones, whom we know and loved as Virgil, Vincent, Soul Train Jones and more,’ he said. ‘… I ask that you pray for him and for his family. May his memory be eternal!’

The cause of death was not shared.

Jones was reportedly diagnosed with dementia and had two strokes in 2022, according to Ohio news outlet WTRF. In December, a GoFundMe was set up to help cover Jones’ living expenses.

Virgil rose to stardom in the late 1980s and early 1990s, first as Ted DiBiase’s bodyguard who assisted him in fights. WWE, which was WWF at the time, scripted for the duo’s relationship to sour, until 1991’s Royal Rumble where Virgil refused to put a championship belt on the Million Dollar Man’s waist, instead knocking him down. He beat DiBiase later that year at SummerSlam for the Million Dollar Title.

He also appeared in the nWo and spent time in the late 1990s in the WCW.

In a 2016 interview with Ring Rust Radio, DiBiase shared some insight on his working relationship with Jones.

‘When we were together, he was never a problem,’ the Million Dollar Man said. ‘The guy didn’t drink, he didn’t smoke, he didn’t do drugs, he was always on time. Of course, you know you lay the foundation down when the relationship begins, and I think Virgil understood at least, he knew what his job was and he knew where his place was in terms of the pecking order. … We would do our thing on the road and then I would see him in three days or a week, whatever it was and then we would come back. I didn’t really socialize a lot with him so to speak, but we had a great working relationship and were friends.’

DiBiase said Jones told him he was a substitute math teacher after wrestling. He said their relationship was strained when Jones would book autograph signings promising DiBiase and himself without the other knowing and then make up an excuse as to why DiBiase wouldn’t be in attendance. Later, Jones would allegedly look at DiBiase’s website to find where he had autograph signings booked and call the promoters and try to join.

‘I just had to put my foot down and say, ‘Look, Mike, I like you and more than happy to work with you, but if I think it’s right and that you should be there with me to do this, then I’ll let you know,” DiBiase recalled. ‘But do not call these promoters and try to invite yourself to these events. You just can’t do that. I think that’s what hurt him. … It’s just sad. I don’t wish Mike any ill at all. I just, sometimes you reap what you sow. You do things the wrong way and it comes back to bite you and I think that’s what’s happened to him.’

Several people who knew Jones posted tributes on social media upon hearing the news of his death, recalling his liveliness.

‘Shocked and saddened to hear the news about Virgil. Rest in peace, my friend,’ Jake ‘The Snake’ Roberts posted on X, formerly Twitter.

‘Virgil was a funny, unique individual that was always cool to me & I’m saddened to hear about his passing. My thoughts go out to his family, friends & fans,’ Matt Hardy wrote on his page.

‘I got to have a lot of fun with Virgil. Thank you and RIP to an unconventional icon,’ radio host Sam Roberts said on the social media platform.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

INDIANAPOLIS – Andy Reid had a parting message as we wrapped up a chat at the NFL scouting combine on Tuesday. It had nothing to do with football.

“It’s the youth,” the Kansas City Chiefs coach told USA TODAY Sports before shuttling to another session at the Indiana Convention Center. “We’ve got to do whatever we can to help our youth.”

Like so many, Reid was jolted by the senseless tragedy that occurred at the end of the Chiefs’ Super Bowl celebration at Kansas City’s Union Station nearly two weeks ago, when Lisa Lopez-Galvan, 43, a wife and mother of two, was killed by gunfire and 22 others were injured in the shooting.

Two men, Dominic M. Miller and Lyndell Mays, are facing second-degree murder charges and other charges, while two unidentified juveniles are also charged with gun possession and resisting arrest.

Reid’s parting message was an extension of his opening message. He began his press conference by expressing condolences for the family of Lopez-Galvan, a DJ and avid Chiefs fan whose local celebrity was bolstered by hosting the “Taste of Tejano” for community station KKFI-FM. It was a classy gesture from a classy man, setting the proper tone.

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Before Reid addressed any of the football matters – including the short offseason that comes with winning a Lombardi Trophy, the quest for a threepeat, the potential of losing key players in free agency – he paid respect to Lopez-Galvan.

He also sent a message to the youth of America.

“You’re our future and as great as we can make this place, we want to do that,” Reid said from the podium. “So, we can turn that, which was a negative, into a real positive. With just a little togetherness and love, we can fix a lot of problems.”

While the shooting sparked further outrage that fittingly calls for tougher gun laws, Reid has been moved by the effects on the younger generation. Obviously, it resonates that so many young people were victims of the shooting.

As he immediately grasped the severity of the scene that has repeatedly become a sad fact of American life, Reid – the last speaker on the stage at the rally – sought confirmation that his nine grandchildren were accounted for as people scrambled.

“Get ‘em all together and gather them in,” Reid recalled. “Make sure they’re safe.”

Yet beyond the safety of innocent kids, Reid thinks about the conditions that exist that would lead to teenagers feeling the need to carry and use weapons. Of course, the problem didn’t begin with the teenagers arrested at the Chiefs rally. During our chat after his news conference, Reid, who grew up in Los Angeles, didn’t profess to have the answers.

He just pledged to add personal purpose to the cause.

What can he do to turn a negative into a positive?

“I’ll do whatever is asked,” Reid said.

The Chiefs and the NFL have collaborated to donate $200,000 in establishing an emergency fund with the United Way to aid victims of the shooting. It is just the beginning. Although the team isn’t ready to announce specifics, Chiefs president Mark Donovan is in the process of developing projects that conceivably may reflect Reid’s desire to support troubled youth.

Reid, meanwhile, garnered insight from a great visit with Lopez-Galvan’s brother and points to connections with city leaders and the support from Chiefs owner Clark Hunt.

“The main thing is to just be available,” Reid said. “And then I look at all what Patrick (Mahomes) has done in the city. You put yourself out there. That’s kind of what the Chiefs do.”

Considering the twists and turns of the season, Reid arguably just pulled off the best coaching job of his career in producing the NFL’s first repeat champion in nearly two decades and guiding the Chiefs to their third Super Bowl crown in five seasons.

Yet even with such achievements, Reid quickly alludes to having a level head. This is hardly surprising to hear from Reid, who for many years has been one of the most down-to-earth human beings on the NFL landscape. A compassionate man, he gave Michael Vick a second chance at an NFL career after the quarterback’s prison sentence for dogfighting. A challenged father, he lost a son (Garrett) to a drug overdose and has another son (Britt) serving a prison sentence for a drunk-driving accident that left a young girl seriously injured.

Reid knows life and its ups and downs. Believe it when he says he refuses to let football get too high in the grand scheme of things.

“I know we’re lucky to be coaching and playing at this level,” he said. “It’s an honor and a privilege to be able to do it. You have to work hard, but there’s a lot of fluff that goes with it, too.”

Then comes a reminder such as the shooting to put football in another perspective in the context of life and real-world issues.

“That’s why I say we’re here to teach,” Reid said. “Part of teaching is communication. There has to be a love for it. And a sensitivity.”

Which has nothing to do with chasing a threepeat, but so much to do with a deeper purpose: the children.

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Argentina is playing four warmup games for this summer’s Copa América 2024, meaning four more chances for people to see Inter Miami star Lionel Messi in action.

The best part: All four matches will be in the United States, which is competing as a guest and hosting for the second time (the first was in 2016 for the 100th anniversary). Messi and Argentina kick off the competition June 20 against either Canada or Trinidad and Tobago.

Here’s what we know: There will be two friendlies in March and two in June — less than 10 days before the opening match in Atlanta.

Argentina vs. El Salvador at Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia, March 22.
Argentina vs. Costa Rica at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, March 26. 
Argentina vs. Ecuador at Soldier Field in Chicago, June 9.
Argentina vs. Guatemala at FedEx Field in Landover, Maryland, June 14.

Consider it tentative: Although Argentina has announced its plans, the venues have not yet formally announced the matches. 

Broadcast information and kickoff times will be announced in the coming months. American Express early access tickets will be available Friday at 10 a.m. local time, while seats for the general public will be available March 4 at 10 a.m. through Ticketmaster for Chicago, and Seat Geek for D.C.

Messi is expected to join Argentina, the reigning 2021 Copa América and 2022 World Cup champions, for the friendlies. Argentina still will need to select him during both of the FIFA international windows, but Messi said last year his focus was on getting to the tournament fit to play.

Which Inter Miami games will Messi miss for Copa América 2024? 

If Messi plays in the friendlies, he would definitely miss Inter Miami’s road game against the New York Red Bulls at Red Bull Arena on March 23, but he could play twice more in the New York area later this year. If all goes well, Messi could return in time for Inter Miami’s March 30 home game against New York FC.

Messi would miss at least five Inter Miami matches this summer if Argentina reaches the Copa América final again. The potential matches: June 15 at Philadelphia Union; June 19 vs. Columbus Crew; June 29 at Nashville; July 3 at Charlotte FC; and July 6 at FC Cincinnati.

When will Messi play in Copa América

Here is Argentina’s Copa América schedule: 

Argentina will play in the tournament opener against Canada or Trinidad and Tobago on June 20 at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta. 

Argentina’s second match is against Chile on June 25 at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey. 

Argentina will also play Peru on June 29 at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens, Florida. 

The Copa America final will be held at the home of the NFL’s Miami Dolphins on July 14.

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