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An early look at the Fox News 2024 Presidential Power Rankings predicts Georgia and Arizona to be among the closest contests. Those states were once thought to be Republican strongholds. Nevada, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania have all shifted between red and blue over the years, making it difficult to determine which nominee voters there will pick in 2024.

‘These were the closest last time around,’ said Jessica Taylor, the Senate and governors editor for the Cook Political Report. Florida is ‘what 2000 came down to.’

Twenty-four years and six elections ago, Florida was a presidential battleground state, along with current solid Republican states like Missouri, Tennessee and West Virginia, and now-solid Democrat states like Washington, Oregon and New Mexico.

‘Both [Texas Gov. George W. Bush and Vice President Al Gore] used these different campaign tactics and campaign memorabilia to kind of speak to certain voters,’ Museum of Democracy Chair Austin Wright said.

The Museum of Democracy in New York holds more than 1.25 million objects in its collection. Wright said in the 2000 election in Florida, Gore used a Gore-Lieberman yarmulke to cater to Florida’s large Jewish population. Bush campaigned by trying to sway more rural Florida voters with his Texas roots. 

‘Some of these pictures of Bush in his Texas campaign gear … we think that contributed to the more rural Panhandle,’ Wright said.

Bush won Florida by a narrow margin in 2000, prompting a recount. Without the state of Florida decided, Gore had 266 electoral votes and Bush had 246. The recount, certification process and legal battle lasted more than a month. The results eventually showed Bush won Florida with a tight 537-vote advantage over Gore.

‘I am thankful for America and thankful that we were able to resolve our electoral differences in a peaceful way,’ Bush said after the results were finalized.

Since 2000, Florida’s population has changed. The Cuban and Venezuelan populations are growing. In many cases, they fled their countries because of socialism and now tend to lean Republican.

‘I think there’s a misconception out there and just popular culture that there’s this monolithic Hispanic community,’ said Gerhard Peters, co-director of the American Presidency Project at UC Santa Barbara. ‘Cuban Americans in South Florida have historically been very reliable Republican voters.’

There has also been an increase in retirees in Florida. Former President Trump won among voters 65 and older in the state by 11 points in 2020.

‘To me, does Biden even play there?’ Taylor said. ‘It’s just very hard to imagine that being very competitive when you look at just the trends.’

Florida voters last favored the Democrat nominee in 2012, when President Barack Obama ran for reelection against former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney.  

‘I still consider Florida to be a battleground state,’ Peters said. ‘I think it’s a very fluid state in a lot of ways. We’ve seen a lot of migration to Florida from other states.’

Colorado is another state that has experienced population changes over the years. In 2000 and 2004, Bush won the state. During the Obama years, it was a swing state. Now, Colorado is in the solid-blue category.

‘Colorado is a great example of how the demographics changed,’ Wright said. ‘I think Obama’s ‘hope and change’ sentiment really contributed to that. I think that artwork really made an imprint on giving young people this hope that the country could be a better, different place.’

Denver grew by 20% between 2010 and 2020, with mostly minorities moving to the city. A lot of voters in the suburbs are wealthier and college-educated. Suburban voters have tended to lean Democrat since Trump became the standard-bearer of the GOP. 

‘A lot of suburban voters would have voted Republican in the past because they were thinking about their pocketbook issues,’ Peters said. ‘A lot of those voters, especially educated women voters, have moved away from the Republican Party.’

Suburban voters are also impacting presidential preference in other states.

‘Colorado to me is what possibly maybe Arizona could be in a couple of years if we see sort of the same trends,’ Taylor said. ‘I think Arizona right now is firmly in the toss-up column because you do still have a significant number of Republicans there.’

Arizona holds the nation’s largest county and largest suburb. The Hispanic vote has also been growing, with the majority leaning Democrat.

‘These campaigns have directed not only a number of ads that speak solely in Spanish, but we’ve seen a number of buttons and a number of posters that really touch on these different groups,’ Wright said.

Another western state is also in the battleground state column.

‘We’re doing a heck of a lot in the state of Nevada,’ President Biden said during a recent campaign stop in the swing state.

Nevada trended red in the 1980s. Since 2008, the majority of voters there have picked the Democrat nominee. Similar to Arizona, the state has seen an increase in Hispanic voters.

Minorities are also helping Democrats in Georgia. Republican presidential candidates won the state from 1996 until 2020. Atlanta’s thriving job market has brought in younger, more diverse voters and is now home to nearly half of the state’s population.

‘The digital side of it has really changed the way people campaign. And so I think that in places like Georgia … targeting young people in particular has kind of changed that whole dynamic,’ Wright said.

‘We weren’t even thinking about Arizona and Georgia a couple of presidential cycles ago. But when you look at the migration into the states – more diverse, more college-educated, that has put those on the map. Whereas Wisconsin and Pennsylvania, you have so many White working-class voters,’ Taylor said. ‘A place like Wisconsin that was more reliably Democratic, it’s now come on the map.’ 

The White working-class vote swung right as Trump gained traction in the Republican Party.

‘Pennsylvania is one of the most important battleground states in the nation,’ Trump said at a National Rifle Association event in Harrisburg.

Some political scientists say Hillary Clinton lost the 2016 election because she fell short in the Rust Belt states.

‘I think the key for the Democrats and for Joe Biden is No. 1 to show up, to campaign in those states, to not take them for granted,’ Peters said.

Pennsylvania and Wisconsin are still competitive because of the large number of suburban and minority voters.

‘Right now, every one of those general election polls show you … in Wisconsin, Trump doesn’t beat Biden. I win Wisconsin by 15 points,’ Republican presidential candidate Nikki Haley told reporters after a rally in Elgin, South Carolina. ‘Why would I do anything other than continue to fight and let the American people who don’t want this to be Trump and Biden, let them have a voice and be heard?’

While changing demographics have had an impact on many swing states, political preferences are also changing across the country.

‘The coalitions of people that make up the political parties change. And I think we’re in the midst of that right now. Political scientists will debate what is the Republican Party? Or, what is the Democratic Party? Who are the people that make up those coalitions? And I think we’re seeing that change right before our eyes,’ Peters said.

The battleground states could change again in coming years. Minnesota is trending in the direction of Wisconsin and Pennsylvania, with the shift being driven by farmers and agricultural workers who tend to not like Democrat messaging on environmental issues and gun policy.

Texas could go the other direction. Republicans have been winning by narrower margins in recent elections. Hispanic and young voters aren’t the only group moving to the state. Liberal voters from other states like California are also migrating in increasing numbers.

North Carolina could become a swing state once again after trending red in recent years. Many wealthy, urban voters moved to the state during the 2020 pandemic, whereas dozens of deep-red rural counties saw populations decline.

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The Biden campaign raised more than $42 million in January and has $130 million in cash-on-hand–a figure President Biden’s re-election team is touting as ‘the highest total amassed by any Democratic candidate in history’ at this point in the election cycle, Fox News Digital has learned.

The campaign has raised nearly $278 million since the president announced his run for a second term in April 2023.

‘January’s fundraising haul – driven by a powerhouse grassroots fundraising program that continues to grow month by month – is an indisputable show of strength to start the election year,’ said Julie Chavez Rodriguez, the Biden-Harris 2024 campaign manager, said in a statement.  ‘While Team Biden-Harris continues to build on its fundraising machine, Republicans are divided – either spending money fighting Donald Trump, or spending money in support of Donald Trump’s extreme and losing agenda.’

She added: ‘Either way, judging from their weak fundraising, they’re already paying the political price.’

Chavez Rodriguez said that the 2024 election ‘will determine the fate of our democracy and our freedoms,’ and stressed that the Biden campaign ‘is using its resources to build a winning operation that will meet voters where they are about the stakes of this election.’

Meanwhile, campaign senior communications advisor TJ Ducklo said the team is ‘particularly proud that January shattered our grassroots fundraising record for a third straight month.’

‘This haul will go directly to reaching the voters who will decide this election,’ Ducklo said. ‘That’s reason number 355 million that we are confident President Biden and Vice President Harris will win this November.’

The Biden campaign, in January, had its strongest grassroots fundraising month, breaking its previous record from December. The campaign said last month that 1.1 million supporters have made nearly 3 million contributions.

The campaign also touted ‘high-profile moments’ that motivated grassroots donors, saying that they raised $1 million each day in the three days following the GOP Iowa Caucuses.

‘January’s unprecedented fundraising numbers underscore the grassroots momentum to send Joe Biden and Kamala Harris back to the White House, and elect Democrats up and down the ballot this November,’ Democratic National Committee Chair Jaime Harrison said in a statement. ‘From coast to coast, Americans are rallying together to safeguard our democracy and defend our freedoms in a historic way.’

He added: ‘As this election year kicks into full gear, Team Biden-Harris and the DNC stand united, leveraging the power of grassroots donors to propel Democrats to victory at every level.’

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President Biden’s daughter, Ashley Biden, paid off thousands in taxes owed since 2015, Pennsylvania Department of Revenue filings show. 

As of Jan. 3 at 12:30 a.m., the Department of Revenue updated Ashley’s docket to ‘satisfaction filed,’ indicating the previous lien notification ‘should be removed from the court records’ in Philadelphia County.

On Dec. 18, Fox News Digital first reported Ashley’s tax delinquency after the issuance of a tax lien at the start of the month, indicating unpaid taxes totaling $4,985 plus a filing fee of $94.44, totaling $5,079.

A tax lien is a legal claim imposed by the government on a property or assets to secure unpaid taxes after repeated attempts to collect.

On Dec. 1, the Pennsylvania Department of Revenue in Philadelphia County notified Ashley Biden that the ‘amount of such unpaid tax, interest, additions or penalties is a lien in favor of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania upon the taxpayer’s property – real, personal, or both – as the case may be,’ according to the notice.

The period start date listed on the lien begins Jan. 1, 2015 – when Joe Biden was vice president in the Obama administration – and ends Jan. 1, 2021, days before he was sworn in as president.

Ashley Biden’s attorney and the White House did not respond to Fox News Digital’s multiple requests for comment.

Ashley worked as a social worker in the Delaware Department of Services for Children, Youth and Their Families from 2007 to 2012. She received her master’s degree in social work from University of Pennsylvania’s School of Social Policy and Practice in 2010.

In 2017, while working at the Delaware Center for Justice – a nonprofit criminal justice reform organization – she launched a charitable fashion brand, Livelihood. In 2019, she left her job at the Delaware Center for Justice to help her father’s presidential campaign.

Garrett Ziegler, one of the board members of the nonprofit Marco Polo and former President Trump aide, told Fox News Digital in a statement Monday that ‘Marco Polo is pleased that Ashley has come into compliance with the law.’

Ziegler, who Hunter Biden is suing for leaking the contents of his infamous laptop, first notified Fox News Digital about the tax filings.

‘However, to be clear, as a social worker who has had to deal with adversity and trauma from her past … and as the wife of a prominent surgeon, Ashley should have never had to deal with this — the people in her life should have done a better job of helping with her financial affairs,’ he said.

Ashley’s brother, Hunter Biden, meanwhile, allegedly carried out a multiyear scheme to bypass paying $1.4 million in federal taxes while living an indulgent lifestyle that included spending significant sums on escorts and illegal drugs, according to his California indictment on nine tax-related charges.

Special Counsel David Weiss said he ‘engaged in a four-year scheme to not pay at least $1.4 million in self-assessed federal taxes he owed for tax years 2016 through 2019, from in or about January 2017 through in or about October 15, 2020, and to evade the assessment of taxes for tax year 2018 when he filed false returns in or about February 2020,’ which was in the middle of his father’s presidential campaign.

Weiss added that in ‘furtherance of that scheme,’ Hunter Biden ‘subverted the payroll and tax withholding process of his own company, Owasco, PC by withdrawing millions’ from the company ‘outside of the payroll and tax withholding process that it was designed to perform.’

Hunter Biden had allegedly ‘spent millions of dollars on an extravagant lifestyle rather than paying his tax bills,’ and in 2018, ‘stopped paying his outstanding and overdue taxes for tax year 2015.’

Fox News’ Joe Schoffstall contributed to this report.

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Lionel Messi posted a video Monday on one of the largest social media platforms in China, to dispel “false stories” he did not play in Hong Kong earlier this month due to “political reasons and many other reasons that are totally untrue.”

Messi, the Inter Miami star, reaffirmed his reasoning to not play in Inter Miami’s sold-out preseason friendly game against a group of Hong Kong all-stars in Hong Kong Stadium on Feb. 4 due to an adductor injury.

The outrage grew after Messi played in a half-filled stadium in Tokyo on Feb. 7 and appeared close to fully healthy. Inter Miami coach Tata Martino last week confirmed Messi is “fully fit” and ready for the club’s MLS season opener against Real Salt Lake on Wednesday.

“I’ve read and heard many things that have been said after the game in Hong Kong. I wanted to record this video and give you the true version so nobody has to continue reading false stories,” Messi said in a video on Weibo.

“I’ve heard people say that I didn’t want to play for political reasons and many other reasons that are totally untrue. Had that been the case I wouldn’t have even travelled to Japan or visited China, as I have many times as I have since the start of my career. I’ve had a very close and special relationship with China.”

Officials in Hong Kong and the event organizers expressed disappointment in Messi for not participating in the friendly. Argentina was slated to play two friendlies in China in March, but they have been canceled because of the fallout.

“As I said in the press conference, I had an inflamed adductor and I couldn’t play in the first game in Saudi Arabia, which is when I felt it,” Messi reaffirmed.

“In the second game [in Saudi Arabia] I tried to play for a bit, but it got worse. Then on the day before the game [in Hong Kong], I tried to train and made an effort for all those who had come to watch training.

‘I did all I could, I also went along to the football clinic with the kids, but I really couldn’t play. I felt discomfort and there was a risk it could get worse. It felt a bit better a few days later, and that’s why I played for a bit in Japan to prepare fitness-wise for everything to come because I needed to play and get back up to speed.”

Messi finished his statement adding: “I’d already said all of this, but I think it was important to say it again now after everything that’s being said. As always, I send good wishes to everyone to China, who I’ve always had and continue to have special affection. I hope to see you again soon.”

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The Brookyln Nets have fired coach Jacque Vaughn, less than a year after signing him to a multiyear contract extension.

The Nets did not immediately name an interim successor, but ESPN reported that assistant Kevin Ollie would be promoted to the job.

Vaughn took over as interim coach after the Nets fired Steve Nash in November 2022. He led the team to a playoff spot last season before being swept by the Boston Celtics in the first round.

‘This was an incredibly difficult decision, but one we feel is in the best interest of the team going forward,’ Nets general manager Sean Marks said in a statement. ‘Jacque has represented this organization with exemplary character and class for the past eight years. The consistent positivity and passion he poured into our team daily will remain with the players and staff he interacted with throughout his tenure.’

Under Vaughn, the rebuilding Nets were 21-33 this season, 2.5 games out of the final spot in the postseason Play-In Tournament.

All things Nets: Latest Brooklyn Nets news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

Vaughn, 49, also served as an interim coach for 10 games in the 2019-20 season.

Over his two-plus seasons on the Brooklyn bench, Vaughn compiled an overall record of 71-68, but his teams went 0-8 in two playoff appearances.

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SARASOTA, Fla. – Before embarking on a 2023 season in which he’d claim American League Rookie of the Year honors, Gunnar Henderson adopted a puppy, a German Wirehaired Pointer named Chief.

He was a wily fellow when Henderson left him with family and didn’t see him again until the All-Star break. By season’s end, Henderson had ripped 28 home runs, played stellar defense at shortstop and third base and led the Baltimore Orioles in both WAR (6.2) and OPS (.814), a massive part of just their second AL East title since 1997.

Chief was getting ready, too.

The sporting dog was growing and learning, until Henderson returned to his Alabama home and, along with his younger brother, deployed Chief on quail and duck-hunting trips.

“He’s been getting his hunting in and his exercise in, which is the biggest thing,” says Henderson on a sleepy and rainy morning in Orioles training camp.

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

“Because he’s very energetic.”

Nobody’s mistaking Henderson’s workplace for a kennel, but the canine metaphor is apt: As the Orioles continue rocketing from rebuild to powerhouse – 110 losses to 83 and finally 101 wins – the picks of the litter just keep coming.

When Adley Rutschman, the No. 1 overall pick of the 2019 draft and All-Star catcher, gazes about the clubhouse, he can see his not-so-distant past come to life. At 26, Rutschman is no codger, and he’s just four years removed from his first major league spring training.

Yet as the faces grow younger but no less talented, Rutschman can at once feel wistful about his past and quietly pumped about what’s coming.

“It doesn’t feel that long ago that I was right there,” says Rutschman, whose 2022 call-up marked a turning point in franchise history. “To be able to see those guys do the same thing and go through the same process is cool. It’s a great clubhouse atmosphere – guys are excited to come to the ballpark, excited to be here.

“The fact that we get an opportunity to do this all together and make another run at it this year is really exciting. Everybody’s bought in – it feels like a very close-knit clubhouse, which has been cool to see.

“It kind of just develops and grows.”

And for as great as Rutschman – 2022 Rookie of the Year runner-up – and Henderson are, the talent pipeline that executive vice president and GM Mike Elias has developed means you could be winning hardware one year, and somehow sharing headlines with even more talent the next.

A little loud at Holliday house

When the Orioles selected Jackson Holliday with the first overall pick in July 2022, Rutschman was already two months into his rookie season. Henderson would debut the next month.

Holliday was 17.

That Holliday’s already sharing a clubhouse with the two – and claiming their modern Oriole birthright of consensus No. 1 prospect in baseball – speaks to how quickly he moves.

While many 20-year-olds spent last month beginning their spring semester of college, Holliday got married, to longtime girlfriend Chloe Cox. A month after their West Palm Beach nuptials, he was in Orioles camp and quietly declaring he felt prepared to break camp with the team.

And why not? Holliday, USA TODAY Sports’ Minor League Player of the Year, had an absurd season, climbing four levels from low-A to Class AAA, all the while compiling video game numbers against players often several years his senior: A .323/.942/.499 slash line, 12 homers, 27 steals and 51 extra-base hits in 125 games.

 Holliday has big hopes but also a realistic streak, calling baseball “an extremely difficult sport.” Yet it’s no easy feat already establishing his own rep beyond his father’s accomplishments: Matt Holliday spent 15 years in the big leagues, made seven All-Star teams, hit 316 home runs.

Jackson, born four months before his dad’s major league debut, saw almost all of it.

“You can definitely tell he’s spent his childhood in a locker room,” says Henderson. “He knows the game, knows how to be around everybody and it’s been really cool to see him go out there and work.

“Off the field, he’s a really great kid. I’ve got to spend time with him and it’s been really cool to hang out with him. I’m looking forward to sharing the field with him this year.”

Indeed, if there’s a sixth tool for these baby Birds, it might be fellowship. Henderson is always down for a fishing or hunting venture. Holliday, his father and his younger brother, Ethan – the consensus No. 1 prospect for the 2025 draft – are often posting hitting workouts held on their Oklahoma property to social media.

This offseason, Orioles outfielders Colton Cowser and Heston Kjerstad and prospects Anthony Servideo and John Rhodes were among those paying a visit to Holliday house to get their hacks in. Ethan makes out well: His older brother’s teammates leave a bat and batting gloves for the 6-4, 195-pound high school junior.

“A whole lot of guys able to come in and hang out and get to know. It was a really fun offseason,” says Holliday. Come spring training, he says, “it’s not the first time you’ve seen them since last year. That relationship has grown. You’re more comfortable with guys that you spend more time with and might be lucky enough to play with.

“It’s really cool for me to come back and say I was teammates with all these guys.”

Orioles manager Brandon Hyde, entering his sixth year, has observed the group’s arc from prospects to draftees to big league debuts and, in some cases, stardom. They’ve in many cases grown up in front of him and grown closer in the process, in ways both very public – such as the “Homer Hose” dugout celebration – and more private.

“Just seeing how a lot of those guys have matured is fun to watch,” says Hyde, the reigning AL Manager of the Year. “Feels like we have a lot of guys getting married, having babies. Just to watch their maturation process on and off the field has been a lot of fun. It’s a real mature group.

“I think they’re all very close. They’ve become good friends either through the minor leagues or mini-camps or spring training.”

Now, the stakes are suddenly much higher – as is the chance at least some of the group gets broken up.

Talent show

The loss of closer Felix Bautista to Tommy John surgery meant the Orioles used what’s become their annual free agent chit – a one-year deal worth about $10 million – on veteran reliever Craig Kimbrel. Yet after a disappointing sweep at the hands of the eventual champion Texas Rangers in the AL Division Series, Elias wanted to augment the starting pitching, even before ace Kyle Bradish’s elbow injury emerged.

So the Orioles won the sweepstakes for former Cy Young winner Corbin Burnes, exchanging infielder Joey Ortiz and pitcher DL Hall with Milwaukee. For now, their quintet of Baseball America Top 100 prospects – Holliday (No. 1), catcher Samuel Basallo (No. 10), infielder Coby Mayo (No. 25), Cowser (No. 34) and Kjerstad (No. 41) would stay intact.

It’s starting to get crowded at the inn: Cowser and Kjerstad debuted last year, but neither has a path to a 2024 starting job, while Mayo finds Henderson and Holliday wedged up the middle, with veterans Ramon Urías and Jorge Mateo and second-year player Jordan Westburg also around the infield.

At least Mayo – who hit 29 home runs between AA and AAA – knows he’s on the right train.

“When I got drafted, with Jordan and Gunnar the draft before me, I always felt I was on Gunnar’s path a little bit throughout the years,” says Mayo, 22, a hulking 6-5, 230-pounder taken in the fourth round in 2020. “It’s a good thing, the success they’ve had – they trust those guys, they’re young, and they can go up and make an impact.

“Especially Gunnar – 22 years old and Rookie of the Year. It’s impressive and shows how good a job the organization has done.”

Henderson might be the ultimate success story of the Elias regime – Rutschman was a relative no-brainer top overall pick in Elias’s first draft, while Henderson, chosen 42nd overall, wasn’t on many teams’ first-round radar.

He split time at third and shortstop last year and might ultimately cede short to Holliday. Yet while Henderson remains ever-polite – perhaps the “sirs” and “ma’ams” he peppered his speech with are just a bit less frequent – he also has the equity of a terrific rookie season in the bank.

“You can tell the subtle confidence that that gives him,” says Rutschman. “Knowing the dynamic, knowing what his role is, knowing how he can help out everyone else behind him. He exudes that subtle confidence that guys are willing to get behind.

“He sets the tone with the way he works as well.”

It doesn’t hurt when there’s a litter of high-pedigree talent behind him, all getting a little bit – or a lot – better every year.

“It’s hard not to be optimistic about it. They’re such a fun group,” says Elias. “I think the spirit of the team is going to be very similar.

“I can’t imagine we’re not going to have some young guys take steps forward.’

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A torn triceps derailed the WWE comeback and a possible WrestleMania 40 main event match for CM Punk, but the star said he is expecting to return this year.

Punk was at UFC 298 in Anaheim, California on Saturday and spoke with UFC on TNT Sports about how the injury changed his and WWE’s upcoming plans, revealing that he was likely going to be one of the headliners of WrestleMania in April.

‘Fingers crossed, yeah, I was going to headline WrestleMania. Obviously, now I’m not,’ Punk said. ‘It’s sports. It’s what happens to athletes. Mentally, I think it’s harder because the physical pain is whatever. But I look at it just like a bump in the road. This is an occupational hazard. It happens and I’ll be back bigger and better.’

Punk said being a ‘clumsy idiot’ was the reasoning behind the injury he suffered at the Royal Rumble in January, and his right triceps was ‘jealous’ since he tore his left triceps when he was part of All Elite Wrestling in September 2022, which resulted in him being out of action for nine months.

But when it comes to this injury, Punk is putting an even quicker timeline on a return for now.

‘I’m like an old car. I’m like a 72 Nova, you know what I mean? We have to change some parts every now and again. So once we fix up all the parts, the engine’s still strong, we’ll still be good to go,’ he said. ‘We’re thinking maybe six to eight months, but I’m not really in a rush to get back to compete. I’m in a rush to get healthy. I’m in a rush to get better. The sooner I do that, the better I’ll be when I come back.’

If Punk is able to return six months after the injury, he would come back just before the Money in the Bank premium live event, which will be July 6 at Scotiabank Arena in Toronto, Canada. If Punk would return in eight months, he would be coming back around SummerSlam, which hasn’t been announced yet, but is typically held in early-to-mid-August.

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Getting paid hundreds of millions of dollars to play a sport as a career might be a dream for children everywhere, but that may not be the case for Los Angeles Angels third baseman Anthony Rendon.

During a Monday media availability session at the Angels’ spring training facilities, Rendon told reporters that baseball has ‘never been a top priority for me.’

‘This is a job,’ he said Monday. ‘I do this to make a living. My faith, my family come first before this job.’

Asked whether his baseball career is still a priority for him, Rendon said, ‘Oh it’s a priority for sure. Because it’s my job. I’m here, aren’t I?’

The exchange began when a reporter asked about his mindset entering this season, a year after he said he was considering retirement. Rendon shared how his thoughts on his baseball career have shifted since the Washington Nationals drafted him in 2011. Since then, he’s gotten married and has four kids, he said, and his priorities have changed.

All things Angels: Latest Los Angeles Angels news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

‘My perspective on baseball has been more skewed,’ he said.

Mike Trout’s comments differ in sentiment from Rendon’s

Rendon’s comments are a sharp contrast from those of teammate Mike Trout, the Angels’ three-time American League MVP outfielder, who spoke to members of the media earlier on Monday.

Trout told reporters that he’s been ‘pushing’ team owner Arte Moreno and president John Carpino to pursue free agents all offseason. He also said despite the departure of former teammate Shohei Ohtani in free agency, he’s not looking to be traded from the Angels just yet.

‘I think the easy way out is to ask for a trade,’ Trout said. ‘When I signed that contract (in 2019), I’m loyal. I want to win a championship here. The overall picture of winning a championship or getting to the playoffs here is the bigger satisfaction than bailing out or taking the easy way out.’

Anthony Rendon contract

Rendon hit free agency right after winning the 2019 World Series with the Nationals. He signed a seven-year, $245 million contract in December of that year at the age of 29, and he’s set to make $38 million this season.

Anthony Rendon stats

In seven seasons with Washington, Rendon was an All-Star, won two Silver Slugger awards and finished as high as third place in National League MVP voting. He slashed .290/.369/.490 there while playing an average of 131 games per year.

In four seasons so far with Los Angeles, Rendon has played exactly 200 out of a possible 648 games (about 31%, or an average of 50 games per season) due to various injuries. When he’s been healthy, he’s slashed .249/.359/.399 for the Angels.

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Can new Chargers head coach Jim Harbaugh build a winner in Los Angeles?

Harbaugh accomplished his first task of forming a coaching staff and one thing is clear. The Chargers head coach placed an emphasis on continuity and familiarity when constructing his staff.  Most of the Chargers coaches have previous ties to the Harbaugh family.

‘Getting this staff, putting this staff together. We want an all-star staff that’s worthy to coach our players,’ Harbaugh said at his introductory press conference on Feb. 1.

USA TODAY Sports examines Harbaugh’s coaching staff as it currently stands:

Offensive coordinator: Greg Roman

Roman previously served as Harbaugh’s offensive coordinator with the 49ers from 2011 to 2014. He also worked as the Ravens offensive coordinator under Harbaugh’s brother, John, from 2019-2022. Roman offenses are typically good at running the football. A criticism of Roman is that his past offenses have lacked innovation and creativity.

All things Chargers: Latest Los Angeles Chargers news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

Defensive coordinator: Jesse Minter

Minter served as Harbaugh’s defensive coordinator at Michigan the past two seasons. Under Minter, the Wolverines were one of college football’s top teams in points allowed per game (10.4) and yards allowed per game (247.0) and helped the team earn a perfect 15-0 national championship season. Minter and new Seahawks coach Mike Macdonald run similar defensive schemes.

Special teams coordinator: Ryan Ficken

Harbaugh decided to retain Ryan Ficken after the coordinator helped turnaround what was a notoriously bad Chargers special teams unit before he arrived. Last year, Derius Davis led the NFL in average punt return yards (16), Cameron Dicker converted 31 of 33 field goals and made all of his extra-point attempts and JK Scott ranked in the top 10 with 30 punts inside the 20-yard line.  

Quarterbacks coach: Shane Day

Day returns to the Chargers as quarterbacks coach. Day was the passing game coordinator/quarterbacks coach from 2021-22. In 2021, Justin Herbert set single-season franchise records in completions (443), passing yards (5,014) and passing touchdowns (38) with Day as passing game coordinator/quarterbacks coach. In 2023, Day was the Houston Texans’ senior offensive assistant.

Passing game coordinator: Marcus Brady

The former CFL quarterback was the Eagles’ senior offensive assistant in 2023. He was previously the Colts offensive coordinator from 2021-2022. Brady’s knowledge in the passing game could be beneficial working alongside of Roman who specializes in the run game.

Tight ends coach/run game coordinator: Andy Bischoff

Bischoff worked with Harbaugh’s brother, John, with the Ravens from 2015-2020. He most recently was the Giants tight ends coach.

Offensive line coach: Mike Devlin

Devlin worked under Harbaugh’s brother, John, with the Ravens as an assistant offensive line coach from 2022-2023. Baltimore’s offensive line helped the team finish in the top two in rushing in each of the last two seasons.

Wide receivers coach: Sanjay Lal

Lal coached wide receivers for the Seahawks (2022-23), Jaguars (2021), Cowboys (2018-19), Colts (2017), Bills (2015-16), Jets (2012-14) and Raiders (2007-11). He’s coached standout wideouts such as DK Metcalf and Amari Cooper.

Senior offensive assistant: Marc Trestman

Trestman has over 30 years of coaching experience. Trestman was the head coach for the Bears from 2013-14. In his first season in Chicago, he led the Bears to the No. 2 ranked scoring offense in the NFL, averaging 27.8 points per game.

Defensive line coach: Mike Elston

Elston was an outside linebacker at Michigan from 1993–96. He decided to leave his alma mater for a chance to coach in the NFL with Harbaugh. Michigan’s stout defensive line played an integral role in the Wolverines allowing just 247 yards per game during their national championship run. His addition brings more continuity to Harbaugh’s defensive coaching staff.

Linebackers coach: NaVorro Bowman

Harbaugh coached the former standout 49ers linebacker for four seasons. Bowman was a perennial All-Pro while Harbaugh was the 49ers head coach. The four-time first-team All-Pro led the NFL in tackles in 2015. The former NFL linebacker was a defensive assistant at Maryland last season. He brings high-level playing experience to the Chargers defensive coaching staff.  

Defensive backs coach: Steve Clinkscale

Clinkscale is another coach who moved to Los Angeles with Harbaugh. He spent the past three seasons as the secondary coach at Michigan (2021-23). Minter and Clinkscale add continuity to the Chargers defensive coaching staff.

Senior defensive analyst: Rick Minter

Minter’s son, Jesse, is the Chargers defensive coordinator. He has over 40 years of coaching experience. The long-time coach most recently served as Michigan’s defensive analyst for two seasons.

Safeties coach: Chris O’Leary

O’Leary spent the previous six seasons on Notre Dame’s defensive coaching staff. He coached safety Kyle Hamilton at Notre Dame before Hamilton was drafted by the Ravens. He was a wide receiver at Indiana State from 2011-14.

Defensive assistant: Dylan Roney

Another former Michigan Wolverine. Roney was a graduate assistant at Michigan the previous three years.

Defensive quality control: Robert Muschamp

Muschamp was a defensive quality control coach on the Georgia Bulldogs coaching staff for the last two years.

Assistant special teams coach: Chris Gould

Gould is entering his second season with the Chargers. He’s set to help Ficken with the Chargers’ special teams unit. He previously spent seven years in Denver with the Broncos.

Assistant offensive line coach: Nick Hardwick

Hardwick was a third-round pick by the Chargers in 2004. The former center had an 11-year NFL playing career all with the Chargers, starting 136 games. He’s set to return to the team as an assistant offensive line coach, he announced on social media. Hardwick is a member of the Chargers’ 50th anniversary team.

Follow USA TODAY Sports’ Tyler Dragon on X @TheTylerDragon.

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The only set of rankings by any official group of selectors that truly matters is the last one. That was the case for the College Football Playoff, and it is equally true of the NCAA men’s basketball committee, which unveiled a preliminary peek at the top 16 seeds on Saturday.

With a month left in the regular season, those seeds will undoubtedly change, but it took less than 24 hours to demonstrate just how little relevance this set of rankings will have when all is said and done. Several of those slotted in the top 16 have already lost, including the committee’s initial choice as the No. 1 overall seed.

We did, however, get an indication that quality wins seem to be the most important criteria. As such, we can identify the most meaningful results, both positive and negative, from the weekend. Here are the biggest winners and losers:

Winners

Kentucky

Just a week after many observers had the Wildcats’ postseason prospects dead and buried – yes, including us – they turned in their most complete performance of the year at Auburn. That’s the same Auburn team that just three nights earlier on the same floor laid a 40-point thrashing on South Carolina. If Kentucky can continue that defensive intensity that had been conspicuously absent, it can still be dangerous in March.

HIGHS AND LOWS: Winners and losers among teams on tournament bubble

Connecticut

Whether the committee wanted to consciously convey the message that they don’t look at the polls, the defending champion Huskies left little doubt they’re still the team to beat with their wire-to-wire domination of Marquette. They’ll now in all likelihood be the unanimous No. 1 in the USA TODAY Sports Coaches Poll. UConn’s challenge now will be maintaining this level of play over the final month.

Iowa State

The bad news for the Cyclones is they can’t play their tournament games in Hilton Coliseum. But their home success might translate into a Big 12 regular-season title, no small feat in that conference. On Saturday they added Texas Tech to their list of home victims, which also includes the likes of Houston and Kansas. They won’t have long to enjoy it, however, with their road rematch against the Cougars up next on the Big Monday lineup.

Kansas

Elsewhere in the Big 12, the Jayhawks finally got a quality result away from home, completing a season sweep of longtime adversary Oklahoma. Though Kevin McCullar still wasn’t at full speed, his return after a two-game absence certainly helped as Kansas ended a four-game road losing streak in the conference.

San Diego State and Colorado State

The Aztecs got a busy weekend in the Mountain West started early by defending their home court Friday night against New Mexico, which had picked up a big road win at Nevada just a few days earlier. That win allowed last year’s tournament runners-up to climb back into a share of the league lead as the Rams took down Utah State on Saturday. Colorado State for its part remains within a game of the top spot in the tightly bunched league that might still be in position to send six teams to the Big Dance.

Saint Mary’s

The Gaels weren’t actually in action over the weekend, but they earn a spot in the winners’ column anyway. With Yale taking its first Ivy League loss at Princeton, SMC is the last team without a conference loss. The Gaels now get three of their last four West Coast Conference contests at home, having already defeated their closest pursuers, San Francisco and Gonzaga, on the road.

Losers

Purdue

In the grand scheme, the Boilermakers should still land on or very near the top line of the bracket, Sunday’s loss at Ohio State notwithstanding. But the result against the 13th-place team in the conference being led by an interim coach will do nothing to address concerns about Purdue, a team that will already be dogged by its recent history of postseason disappointment once March Madness arrives.

Wisconsin

The committee’s initial seeding confirmed that Wisconsin has a top-16 résumé. But the Badgers haven’t looked the part of a top-four regional seed for several weeks. Saturday’s overtime loss at Iowa was Wisconsin’s fifth setback in six outings. The Badgers are far from missing the field of 68 altogether, but they need to rediscover their winning form to have any confidence of sticking around.

South Carolina

After their disastrous midweek trip to Auburn, the Gamecocks seemed well on their way to getting a bounce-back win at home against LSU. But everything fell apart in the second half, and a 16-point lead somehow became a one-point loss to a mid-tier team. Coach Lamont Paris will now try to use a few days off to restore his team’s mindset before bubble dweller Mississippi comes to Columbia next Saturday in search of a high-end result.

Clemson

While not a crippling setback on its face, the Tigers’ one-point home loss to N.C. State now has them back at .500 in the ACC standings. Their chances of climbing into the top four and earning a double bye into the quarterfinal round of the league tournament also took a hit.

Florida Atlantic

The Owls dug themselves too big a hole Sunday at South Florida and now find themselves two games behind the league-leading Bulls in the American Athletic Conference. FAU almost certainly has the at-large credentials to go dancing if necessary, but any thoughts of simply dominating their new league after last season’s Final Four run have long since been extinguished.

Indiana State

The Sycamores’ first appearance in the Top 25 in 45 years will be short lived. That was already going to be the case thanks to Tuesday’s home loss to Illinois State, but Indiana State dropped a second consecutive game at Southern Illinois, allowing Drake to climb back into a tie with the Sycamores atop the Missouri Valley standings.

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