Archive

2024

Browsing

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — The mental strength it took for Suni Lee to become Olympic champion was nothing compared to what she needed to get through this last year.

She’s used to bending her body to her will — literally — and now it was betraying her. A kidney ailment, and the medication necessary to treat it, often left her so swollen she couldn’t even put on her grips to train on her beloved uneven bars. The consistent training required of an elite-level gymnast was impossible because she didn’t know how she’d feel from one day to the next.

The detailed preparations she and longtime coach Jess Graba had for the Paris Games were derailed. So much so there were days Lee worried she wouldn’t be “good enough” to make another Olympic team.

“I wasn’t in the greatest mindset,” Lee, who won the all-around title at the Tokyo Games, said Friday.

Graba put it more succinctly: “She was just so depressed with how things have gone.”

But the 20-year-old is hopeful the nightmare of the last year is behind her. Lee has never said what the kidney issue is, but said Friday it’s now in remission. She and Graba have finally figured out what works for her training-wise and, just as importantly, how to adapt when it doesn’t.

Though she’s only been seriously training for about six weeks, she’s competing at Winter Cup on Saturday. Even debuting a new skill on bars that’s never been done before.

“It’s a really big relief,” Lee said. “I was looking back at my ‘one year agos’ (photos) and I think we were in Kentucky. That’s when I had the first flare-up. I’m like, wow. It’s crazy what happened in a year. Because here I am, a year later, competing my new skill. It’s so exciting.”

Lee is only doing bars and balance beam at Winter Cup, but she’s training in all four events, and Graba said the plan is for her to do the all-around again.

“Everything’s a possibility,” Graba said. “It depends on what Suni wants to do.”

For months, Lee just wanted to be herself.

The kidney issue began last spring, and she wound up having to cut her final NCAA season at Auburn short because she was having difficulty training. She went home to Minneapolis, and Graba has praised the care she’s gotten from specialists at the Mayo Clinic.

But every day was different as doctors worked to find both the right medication and right dose of it. Some days, Lee felt well enough to train like usual. Others, she could only do a limited workout. And there were still others when she couldn’t even get out of bed.

She competed at both the U.S. Classic and national championships last year, doing vault and beam and finishing in the top three on beam at both events. But she withdrew from the September selection camp for the world championships, unable to train consistently enough.

The months that followed were tough — for both Lee and Graba.

Lee was floundering, struggling to find her purpose when she couldn’t do the sport she loved, and Graba didn’t know how to help her.

“The last year, I’d rather forget it,” said Graba, who has coached Lee since she was a child.

“The hardest part was getting her out of her depression and into the gym,” Graba added. “At first, I didn’t really want her to do gymnastics, I just wanted her to come in and hang out. A bunch of the little kids, she’s like their big sister. I just wanted her to come in, hang out and do stuff.”

As doctors finally got Lee’s medication figured out, gymnastics became her motivation. Specifically, that new skill on uneven bars.

Lee had been playing with it for a couple of years, but began working on it in earnest the last couple of months. She hopes to be selected for the World Cup in Baku next month so she can get the skill — a release move where she launches herself off the top bar and does a full twisting forward somersault in a laid-out position before catching the bar again — named for her.

“It’s awesome. It’s impressive. I love seeing gymnasts continue to push those boundaries and these skills,” said Chellsie Memmel, the technical lead for the U.S. women’s team.

“If you can go out and be that first person to perform it successfully and have your name on it, it’s a really cool feeling,” added Memmel, who has a skill on floor named after her.

Because of how the last year has gone, Lee focuses on what’s right in front of her. She wants to get through Winter Cup and then, hopefully, the World Cup.

Only after that will she let herself think about the Olympics.

‘I’m way better,’ Lee said. ‘I’m in happy spirits. I’m just so happy to be here.’

With a new skill. And a newfound strength.

Follow USA TODAY Sports columnist Nancy Armour on social media @nrarmour.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

It took 35 WrestleManias for WWE’s flagship event to have a women’s main event match, and since then, there’s been some top match-worthy battles that could have had the special designation.

But for WrestleMania 40, WWE has its best title slate for the women’s division yet, with two championship matches that are more than deserving of being in the main event – each for different reasons.

At Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia will be 2024 Royal Rumble winner Bayley against Iyo Sky for the WWE Women’s Championship, and after Elimination Chamber on Saturday, it’ll be Becky Lynch challenging Rhea Ripley for the Women’s World Championship. 

Obviously, the main event of the two-night event will be the rematch of Roman Reigns and Cody Rhodes for the Undisputed WWE Universal Championship, but either women’s championship match could – and should – main event at least night one of WrestleMania, and it’ll be a major disappointment if neither ends up in the coveted spot.

Why Bayley vs. Iyo Sky should main event WrestleMania 40

Story wise, the matchup between Sky and Bayley has been pure cinema.

This goes all the way back to the pandemic days. With only a virtual crowd in the WWE Thunderdome in 2020-21, Bayley was arguably the best performer out of the entire roster, delivering week after week despite never getting the crowd recognition she deserved. By the time WrestleMania 37 came around, the first event in the pandemic-era to have a crowd, Bayley wasn’t in the picture and she had questionable booking ever since. 

After suffering her ACL injury, Bayley returned at SummerSlam 2022 with Sky and Dakota Kai to form Damage CTRL. It was a slow burn, but the faction really took off in 2023 when Sky won the Money in the Bank match and became the WWE Women’s Champions, as well as when Kairi Sane and Asuka joined the squad. The momentum carried into 2024 with Bayley winning the Royal Rumble.

The chemistry between the faction was so good, but it was fate for Bayley to get turned against by the group at some point. When it happened, it was one of the best segments of the early year.

This match is nearly four years in the making. Bayley never got her flowers for being the workhorse of the pandemic era, nor ever really got put in any position to succeed. That’s why so many fans were pleased to see her win the Royal Rumble. Plus, the story building with Damage CTRL from the very beginning has been a prime example of how good the build up for a match could be with long-term storytelling. The fans are already bought into it, and it’s clear they want to see this match between two great in-ring talents get the spot it deserves. 

Why Becky Lynch vs. Rhea Ripley should main event WrestleMania 40

Look at the names. Is there anything else that needs to be said?

This heavyweight matchup has been teased sporadically for more than a year, ever since Lynch and Ripley had a staredown in December 2022. Lynch even teased it to USA TODAY Sports. There was also the face-to-face moment that happened at the WrestleMania 40 kickoff, when Lynch delivered the epic line of “Mami is gonna learn what it’s like to be a bottom.”

This match is almost like a face-off between two eras given their status within the company. Lynch helped elevate the women’s division to levels it hadn’t seen before, becoming the face of the company in 2018 when she developed “The Man” gimmick, resulting in her being the one to win that historic WrestleMania main event match in 2019. Since then, Lynch has maintained her A-list status as one of the biggest names in the company.

Ripley has paved her own path to stardom. “The Eradicator” has emerged as a dominant force in the women’s division while showing how well she can pull a crowd with her status in The Judgment Day. She is one of the rare stars who can be a heel yet have everyone pulling for her. She is clearly the future of WWE, and she’s already giving people a taste of the legacy she can leave by making her recognizable to people that don’t even watch wrestling. 

Both Ripley and Lynch have their own aura that is tough to look away. What makes this matchup even more promising is they’ve each put on masterclasses in recent WrestleManias, so the high expectations for a fantastic match can pretty much be guaranteed.

In the past two years, cases could be made for women’s championship nights to main event WrestleMania, especially since the event became a two-day spectacle starting in 2020. This year, it would take something like The Rock competing in the ring to take the main event of night one away from the women, and even then, there’s still an argument for the women to keep their spot. 

The first two premium live events of the year, Royal Rumble and Elimination Chamber, began with women’s matches, and they wound up being the best matches of each night. WWE, time to give the women their respect by giving them the proper spotlight. 

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Supporters of former President Donald Trump attending his final rally ahead of Saturday’s South Carolina Republican presidential primary shared whom they’d like to see as his vice presidential running mate in the November general election.

Fox News Digital spoke with just a few of the nearly 6,000 supporters who showed up to Winthrop University’s campus in Rock Hill, South Carolina on Friday, waiting for hours in line to see and hear the former president bash President Biden, as well as his Republican rival Nikki Haley, a name not uttered once by those listing a number of others they said would make a good second-in-command.

‘I like Kari Lake a lot. I think she’d be great,’ one supporter told Fox, referencing the conservative firebrand and likely Republican nominee in the race to flip Arizona’s Senate seat. 

A number of others suggested Lake, as well as former presidential candidate and entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy, both of whom are strong backers of Trump’s bid to retake the White House.

‘I think Vivek … I like what he’s said,’ one supporter told Fox, citing Ramaswamy’s ‘refusal’ to bash Trump in the earlier days of the primaries, unlike the other candidates previously vying for the nomination. ‘He’s also a minority, so it’s not like it’s just another White person who supports him, so I think that’s a big thing.’

Some suggested Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem, neurosurgeon and former Trump official Ben Carson and Rep. Byron Donalds, R-Fla., but one name stood out more than all the others: South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott.

‘I like his Christian values, the way he stands for Trump, the way he loves Trump, and I believe he’s good support from Trump,’ one supporter said of Scott, while another praised his record as a conservative senator.

Trump revealed at least a few names on his shortlist for a running mate while participating in a Fox News town hall earlier this week. The list included Scott, DeSantis, Noem, Ramaswamy, Donalds and former Hawaii Rep. Tulsi Gabbard, a Democrat turned independent who became nationally known after her run for the presidency in 2020, as well as for her sharp criticism of Biden.

Haley, whom many considered a potential choice for Trump’s vice president earlier in the campaign cycle, acknowledged to Fox this week there was zero chance she would be selected as his running mate, a view likely solidified by her refusal to leave the race despite being a heavy underdog with little chance of becoming the Republican nominee.

‘I wouldn’t be doing this if I was worried about a political future,’ she said. ‘I would’ve gotten out already. I’m doing this trying to wake up our country.’

After providing the names on his shortlist, Trump also ruled out any suggestion Haley would end up his running mate.

Fox News’ Paul Steinhauser contributed to this report.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Former President Donald Trump claims that his wife Melania is expected to make more regular public appearances on the campaign trail.

Trump made the remarks during his interview at a Fox News townhall earlier this week with host Laura Ingraham. 

‘It’s funny, she was a very successful model, very, very successful, and yet she was a private person. She’s going to be out a lot. Not because she likes doing it, but she likes the results,’ he said Tuesday. ‘She wants to see this country really succeed. She loves the country.’

‘You know, a lot of first ladies would go out — they want to be everywhere. They get angry at their husband because he’s not introducing them,’ Trump continued. ‘If I didn’t introduce Melania, she’d be very happy about it. She’s just a different kind of a person.’

Melania has been largely absent from her husband’s 2024 presidential bid thus far, making few public appearances and staying out of the media.

Her absence, until recently, has been explained by the passing of her mother, Amalija Knavs, earlier this year. But as the campaign season becomes more intense, political commentators have questioned whether she will step back into efforts supporting Trump.

Trump also expressed appreciation that Melania has been dedicated to raising their son, Barron Trump.

‘Her life revolves around that boy. It’s so important to her,’ Trump said. ‘At the same time, it also revolves around our country and the success of our country. She’s raised a lot of money for charity. She’s a private person.’

‘And she loves the country,’ Trump added. ‘She’s going to be out a lot, but she does it for the good of the country, not for her. She’s somebody with a lot of confidence. She doesn’t need that.’

Trump’s Fox News town hall came four days before South Carolina’s Republican presidential primary, which commences Saturday. 

The latest public opinion polls indicate that he maintains a very large double-digit lead over former U.N. ambassador and former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, his last major rival for the GOP nomination.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

It’s the dark of night, the middle of the Red Sea, but it’s not quiet. The whine of several F-18 super hornet fighter jets produce an ear-splitting sound on the deck of the USS Dwight D Eisenhower. 

In bright primary-colored shirts, sailors on the flight deck tend to their specific jobs. The munitions officers, in red shirts, flip a switch that engages the sidewinder missiles on the outside of the fighter jet’s wings. It’s like taking the safety off your gun. The missiles are now ready to be fired. The pilot inches his jet forward so catapult officers can hook the tow-bar on his front wheel to the shuttle which runs down a steaming slot to the end of the flight deck.  

Through a series of hand signals, a deck officer with yellow flashlights tells the pilot it’s time. He throttles the jet engines to full power and everyone’s rib cages shake on deck. An officer with the title shooter triggers the catapult and with a mighty roar the super hornet is launched into combat over the Red Sea.

Each takeoff is a launch into combat. Everything happens in the ‘weapons engagement zone,’ close enough to Houthi controlled Yemen that they are in range of hostile fire.  

‘We are in constant self-defense out here when it comes to threats that can be shot at us,’ says Rear Admiral Marc Miguez, commander of the strike group. 

Self-defense does not mean they don’t go on the offensive. Often times, the F-18s launch with a planned target. Captain Marvin Scott, commander of the air wing on the carrier says his pilots have already degraded the ability of the Houthis to fire at cargo ships and warships crossing the Red Sea. ‘By targeting their ability to see us, their surveillance radars, and now we’re primarily focused on their military capabilities,’ he says.

Many of the targets are ‘dynamic targets’, something that presents itself after the F-18 is in the air. U.S. Central Command says on Thursday U.S. forces struck four drones and two anti-ship cruise missiles that were prepared to launch. On Friday, they shot down three drones near commercial ships in the Red Sea.  

The threats are constant and while the sailors have proven to be effective at shooting missiles out of the sky, it’s not an easy task and failure is not an option. ‘We have to be right 100% of the time and they only have to be right once,’ says Miguez.

The USS Eisenhower is one of six ships in strike group two. One of them is a cruiser, the USS Philippine Sea. It serves as a sentinel for the strike group, with layers of sailors who monitor high-tech electronics that detect incoming threats. In a matter of seconds, the ‘watchstanders’ determine the nature of the threat and how to respond. 

‘It just depends what the threat is and what’s coming at us,’ Says Captain Steve Liberty who defined what his ship is ready for, ‘Anything they can throw our way,’ he says.

In the end, their mission is as old as the Navy itself. Protecting safe maritime trade is the reason the Navy was created in the first place. ‘Freedom of Navigation,’ Says Captain Chris Hill, Commander of the Dwight D Eisenhower, ‘It’s something we’ve been doing since 1775, and it’s something we’re really good at.’

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Here come the Blue Devils. Five wins in a row has Duke in a tie for first place in the ACC and climbing to a No. 3 in our updated men’s tournament field.

Technically, North Carolina remains the league’s current automatic qualifier thanks to a head-to-head win against Duke earlier this month. The two teams will meet in Durham to end the regular season on Mar. 9.

The Blue Devils’ run hasn’t come against the cream of the crop in the ACC: Notre Dame (71-53), Boston College (80-65), Wake Forest (77-69), Florida State (76-67) and Miami (84-65). None of the five teams are in the updated bracket, though the Demon Deacons are one of the first teams out of the field. But with five more games to go before the ACC tournament, a strong finish could lift Duke to a No. 2 seed.

Another contender on the rise is Creighton. The Bluejays have won four in a row capped by an 85-66 takedown of No. 1 Connecticut that may qualify as the best win by any Division I team this season. The Bluejays join Duke on the No. 3 line and, like the Blue Devils, could continue to rise up the bracket. Creighton still plays Seton Hall and Marquette before heading into the Big East tournament.

Last four in

Gonzaga, Nebraska, Nevada, Butler.

First four out

Villanova, Wake Forest, Mississippi, Cincinnati.

Next four out

Utah, Colorado, Providence, SMU.

Conference breakdown

Multi-bid leagues: Big 12 (9), SEC (8), Big Ten (6), Mountain West (6), Big East (5), ACC (4), American Athletic (2), Atlantic 10 (2), Pac-12 (2), West Coast Conference (2).

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The Arizona Coyotes are looking to terminate the contract of a recently acquired player for the second time in less than eight months.

The Coyotes announced Friday that they were putting forward Adam Ruzicka on unconditional waivers for the purpose of terminating his contract.

The Associated Press reported that the move followed a Ruzicka social media post that appeared to show him plus white powder and a credit card on a plate.

The team said it would have no comment.

Ruzicka, 24, had been claimed off waivers from the Calgary Flames on Jan. 25 and he played in three games for the Coyotes this month. The 2017 fourth-round pick has 40 points in 117 career games.

All things Coyotes: Latest Arizona Coyotes news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

His contract can be terminated once he clears waivers, though the NHL Players’ Association can file a grievance.

The Coyotes had terminated the contract of forward Alex Galchenyuk shortly after he had signed as a free agent on July 1. He had been arrested on July 9 for hit-and-run and disorderly conduct, among other charges. The police report alleged that he had made threatening remarks to officers. Galchenyuk apologized, entered the NHL/NHLPA assistance program and is now playing in Russia.

Ruzicka would be the second NHL player to have his contract terminated during the 2023-24 season.

The Chicago Blackhawks terminated Corey Perry’s contract in November for ‘unacceptable’ conduct that violated ‘the terms of his Standard Player’s Contract and the Blackhawks’ internal policies intended to promote professional and safe work environments.’ He signed with the Edmonton Oilers less than two months later.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The University of Wyoming has identified the three members of the swim team who died in a single-car accident in northern Colorado on Thursday afternoon.

The university said Friday that the athletes were Carson Muir, 18, a freshman on the woman’s team, and men’s team members Charlie Clark, 19, a sophomore, and Luke Slabber, 21, a junior. Muir was from Birmingham, Alabama; Clark from Las Vegas, and Slabber from Cape Town, South Africa.

Two other members of the men’s swimming and diving team were injured in the crash, the university said, but their injuries are not believed to be life-threatening.

‘My thoughts and prayers are with our swimming and diving student-athletes, coaches, families and friends,’ Wyoming athletics director Tom Burman said in a statement. ‘It is difficult to lose members of our University of Wyoming family, and we mourn the loss of these student-athletes.’

Burman said counseling services were being made available ‘to our student-athletes and coaches in our time of need.’

The accident occurred on U.S. Highway 287 about 10 miles south of the Wyoming-Colorado border.

The newspaper said the accident site is near where three University of Wyoming students were killed in a 2021 crash.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

CHICAGO (AP) – Chicago Bears great Steve McMichael, who is battling ALS, is back home after spending more than a week in the hospital with several ailments, publicist Betsy Shepherd said Friday.

The 66-year-old McMichael, who went public with an ALS diagnosis three years ago, was admitted into intensive care at a suburban hospital on Feb. 15 with a urinary tract infection. He was hospitalized one week after being voted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

McMichael was also treated for pneumonia and MRSA – a staph infection that can be difficult to treat because it is resistant to certain antibiotics – during his stay, Shepherd said. He will have around-the-clock nursing care at home and receive IV antibiotics to treat his infections.

“The outpouring of love, support and prayers have helped Steve get through this latest battle,” Shepherd said in a statement. “All he wanted was to get home to (wife) Misty and (daughter) Macy where he feels most comfortable.”

McMichael, who controlled the interior of the line for the Bears’ famed “46 defense,” was an All-Pro during the 1985 Super Bowl championship season and in 1987. He played in a franchise-record 191 consecutive games from 1981-1993 and ranks second to Hall of Famer Richard Dent on the Bears’ career sacks list with 92½. His final season was with Green Bay in 1994.

All things Bears: Latest Chicago Bears news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

Whether he was harassing opponents or discussing the Bears on sports talk radio, the man known as “Ming The Merciless” and “Mongo” after the character in “Blazing Saddles” who knocked out a horse, remained a prominent presence in Chicago long after his playing days ended. He also spent five years in professional wrestling in the late 1990s.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The NFL’s salary cap increased an unprecedent amount for the 2024 season.

The NFL announced Friday that 2024 salary cap is set $255.4 million per club.

“The 2024 salary cap will be $255.4 million per club, with an additional $74 million per club payment for player benefits, which includes performance based pay and benefits for retired players. Total 2024 player costs will be $329.4 million per club, or more than $10.5 billion league-wide,” the NFL said in a statement. “The unprecedented $30 million increase per club in this year’s salary cap is the result of the full repayment of all amounts advanced by the clubs and deferred by the players during the Covid pandemic as well as an extraordinary increase in media revenue for the 2024 season.”  

The NFL’s salary cap was at $224.8 million in 2023, $208.2 million in 2022 and $182.5 in 2021.

The NFL’s 2024 salary cap official kicks in when the new league year begins at 4 p.m. ET on March 13.

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

This post appeared first on USA TODAY