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The Senate is on track to pass the $95 billion national security supplemental package to assist Ukraine, Israel and the Indo-Pacific after the upper chamber passed several major procedural votes on Monday night. 

The supplemental package does not include any border provisions and several Republicans spent days — since Saturday — collectively filibustering the package on the Senate floor, which continued into Tuesday morning. The bill passed its final hurdle Monday night and the final vote could come anytime Tuesday, but no later than Wednesday, depending on how long Republicans can delay the vote.

The bill still has no time agreement, meaning a formal agreement between Sen. Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and Sen. Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., regarding the time allocated for debating the legislation or its amendments. Both leaders have been urging their party members to pass the package. 

Sen. Mike Lee, who spent four hours lambasting the bill on the floor on Saturday and continued his speeches overnight Monday, urged senators to reconsider voting for its passage. 

‘We cannot send billions of dollars to Ukraine while America’s own borders are bleeding,’ Lee said on Saturday. ‘This betrayal is all the more loathsome as it occurs at a time when the eyes of a nation are turned to sport, family and fun.’

By Monday, GOP senators were hoping for a breakthrough to get their amendments heard. Several amendments filed included hardline border security-related provisions. 

Sen. Susan Collins, R-Me., vice chair of the appropriations committee, said on Monday morning that ‘leadership on both sides of the aisle as well as the bill managers on both sides of the aisle have been working diligently night and day to try to get agreement to take consider debate and have votes on a series of amendments offered by senators on both sides of the aisle.’ 

‘Obviously, in order for that to occur, we would need the cooperation of all members and we would need to have time agreements because the number of amendments is considerable,’ she said.

Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., a hawkish figure against continued aid to Ukraine, also spent significant time on the floor Monday prior to the vote. 

‘Senate Republican leadership, including the senators who voted to get on this bill, assured us it would be an open amendment process,’ Paul told Fox News Digital on Monday. ‘Mike Lee spent four hours trying to bring down amendments and the Democrats allowed zero of them. So yeah, I do believe that the Democrats have not been honest or forthright about allowing amendments.’

On Sunday, Schumer said on the floor that there would be a ‘fair and reasonable amendment votes’ on the floor ‘if there’s any possibility of speeding this process up.’ 

However, Republicans who are against passing the aid bill don’t want the process to be sped up and argue they should be allowed to offer amendments even if they don’t support the overall bill. 

‘And members on their side have actually said since we’re not for the overall bill, we shouldn’t even have the right to have amendments,’ Paul said Monday night. ‘So no, it’s a terrible process and we’re going to continue to fight them on this and talking filibusters are ongoing as we speak, and the talking filibuster will be going on as long as we have speakers into the night.’

Sen. Tommy Tuberville, R-Ala., another dissenting vote for the foreign aid-only package, also told Fox News Digital on Monday night that ‘they don’t want amendments because they’d be bad votes for some of the senators and the Democratic side of their elections coming up.’ He explained the party is split on the issue of more aid to Ukraine. 

The former football coach also offered an amendment to the package he said, which would ‘pretty much close the border down’ and ‘doing the things at the border that we already have laws for.’

Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, also introduced an amendment identical to the House’s immigration bill, H.R.2, which would restore most Trump-era restrictions, hire additional border patrol officers and tighten asylum screenings.

Republican Sens. Roger Marshall, JD Vance, and Josh Hawley were just a few other senators who spoke in opposition to the bill on Monday, continuing the filibuster. Meanwhile, GOP Sens. Mitt Romney and Thom Tillis were just a few who urged their colleagues to ‘delay’ no further and pass the package. 

The package includes $60 billion for Ukraine, $14 billion for Israel, $9 billion in humanitarian assistance for Gaza and nearly $5 billion for the Indo-Pacific, including Taiwan. Democrats brought the package up for a vote after Republicans had blocked the $118 billion package that also included numerous border and immigration provisions last Wednesday. 

Republicans had previously said they would not approve funding for Ukraine unless the overwhelmed southern border was secured first. The GOP-led House said in a statement Monday they would not pass the Senate’s foreign aid bill without border security provisions, and instead, would work on their own bill. 

‘House Republicans were crystal clear from the very beginning of discussions that any so-called national security supplemental legislation must recognize that national security begins at our own border,’ Johnson said in a statement Monday evening, in part. ‘The mandate of national security supplemental legislation was to secure America’s own border before sending additional foreign aid around the world. It is what the American people demand and deserve. Now, in the absence of having received any single border policy change from the Senate, the House will have to continue to work its own will on these important matters. America deserves better than the Senate’s status quo.’

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

JERUSALEM — The arrival in Washington of Jordan’s King Abdullah II, accompanied by his highly prominent wife, Queen Rania, on Monday put a spotlight on the Hashemite Kingdom’s awkward position in the Middle East as the country’s leadership tries to walk the line between maintaining close ties with the U.S. and taking a hard stance toward Israel and its war in Gaza to placate its large Palestinian population.

Following their meeting, Biden thanked Jordan for its help in supplying humanitarian aid to Gaza and recognized the Arab nation as an important U.S. ally: ‘We’re grateful to our partners and allies like the king who work with us every single day to advance security stability across the region and beyond. It’s difficult times like these when the bonds between nations are more important than ever.’

In his remarks, Abdullah called for an end to the war: ‘We cannot stand by and let this continue. We need a lasting cease-fire now. This war must end. We must urgently and immediately work to ensure the sustainable delivery of sufficient aid to Gaza through all possible entry points and mechanisms. And I thank you, Mr. President, for your support on this.’

Abdullah’s visit to the White House on Monday was the first by an Arab leader to the U.S. since Hamas’ brutal Oct. 7 terror attack against Israel, which sparked a full-scale war in the Gaza Strip and increased tensions throughout the Middle East, including in Jordan.

While Jordan, unlike Qatar and Egypt, has not taken a direct role in mediating between Israel and Hamas, the king is likely to pressure Biden to seek an end to the four-month conflict and secure a role for itself in postwar efforts to rebuild Gaza.

Dr. Saud Al-Sharafat, a former brigadier general in the Jordanian General Intelligence Directorate, told Fox News Digital that both the Israelis and Americans have long been aware of the king’s dilemma and, despite the tensions, ‘relations between the three parties continue even in the most difficult circumstances, like the one we are facing today.’

Al-Sharafat, the founder and director of the Shorufat Center for Globalization and Terrorism Studies based in Jordan’s capital, Aman, said he believes the goal of Abdullah’s visit was to gain American assurances that Jordan will remain the custodian of Islamic holy sites in Jerusalem – a position it has held since Israel took over Jerusalem following the 1967 Six Day War – and to gain guarantees that Palestinian refugees from Gaza would not be sent to Jordan or the West Bank.

He also said that Jordan is vying for a role in Gaza’s postwar reconstruction and hoping to secure U.S. military aid to bulk up its air defense system, particularly following the deadly Jan. 28 drone attack by Iran-backed militants on a U.S. military base in northeastern Jordan. Three American soldiers were killed in that attack.

‘Politics is the art of managing long-term international political relations and managing emergency crises,’ said Al-Sharafat, adding that Jordan’s internal politics have dictated the country’s tough stance toward Israel’s actions in Gaza and also prevented the king and other top leaders from condemning the brutal attack carried out by Hamas terrorists in southern Israel on Oct. 7.

‘First, the king presents himself in the Arab and Islamic world and the world as a defender and guardian of Islamic sanctities in Jerusalem, which was part of the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan until 1967,’ said Al-Sharafat. ‘Second, the social and demographic factors of contemporary Jordan, with half of Jordan’s citizens being of Palestinian origin, put pressure on the regime to take a hard line and sometimes extreme positions against Israel and America as a supporter of Israel.’

Less than three weeks after Hamas’ murderous rampage, Queen Rania, herself a Jordanian of Palestinian heritage, harshly spoke out against Israel’s military response, refusing to acknowledge any of the atrocities carried out by the Iranian-backed terror group in interviews with Western journalists and on social media. Her comments were followed by accusations from Jordan’s Foreign Minister Ayman Al-Safadi, who called Israeli actions in Gaza a ‘war crime.’

‘To vent and control the feelings of the popular masses and the Islamist opposition, Queen Rania and Foreign Minister Ayman Al-Safadi were allowed to make strong statements,’ Al-Sharafat said.

Jonathan Schanzer, the senior vice president for research at the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies, a D.C.-based think tank, called Jordan’s position during the current conflict ‘bizarre.’

‘It has been vitriolic as it relates to Israel,’ he said, acknowledging that this stems from the country’s large Palestinian population.

However, said Schanzer, ‘Jordan is also battling Iran-backed militias on its border with Syria, and although the Jordanians may not like it, they face the same enemy as the Israelis. In addition, Israel remains pivotal to Jordan’s stability because of the water, gas and intelligence the Israelis provide.’

‘All this appears to be lost on the king,’ he continued. ‘Queen Rania has unquestionably emerged as a champion of the Palestinians since Oct. 7, and her voice has been rather disturbing, not because it is pro-Palestinian but because her commentary appears to be detached from the realities of Jordan’s vulnerabilities and its heavy reliance on Israel.’

Schanzer said that despite the apparent discrepancies between Jordanian and U.S. approaches to the conflict in the Middle East, ‘the Jordanians are still pinning their hopes on a strong America.’

He said that the fact the U.S. ‘has not nudged the Jordanians toward a more moderate position vis-à-vis Israel reflects an utter lack of American leadership.’

‘We need to keep our strongest allies in the region more unified,’ Schanzer said. ‘They may not be best friends, but they need to hang together or hang separately. … This should be our message.’

Calls and emails to the Jordanian spokesperson at its embassy in Washington, D.C., for comment were not returned.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Several conservatives agree with Sen. JD Vance’s memo circulated early Monday that there’s a ‘hidden’ clause in the national security supplemental bill that he believes could be grounds to impeach former President Donald Trump from office if elected to office later this year. 

Vance sent a memo to GOP lawmakers highlighting that the bill, which would send billions of federal dollars to Ukraine, assures the delivery of funding through September 2025. Trump, however, has vowed to end the war in Ukraine within 24 hours of gaining office, which would also end funding.

Vance’s memo claimed that the supplemental bill ‘represents an attempt by the foreign policy blob/deep state to stop President Trump from pursuing his desired policy, and if he does so anyways, to provide grounds to impeach him and undermine his administration,’ and he urged Republicans to block its passage. 

Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky, said he supported Vance’s memo on Monday, arguing that Democrats are ‘setting up’ for a possible Trump presidential win.

‘They’re locking in foreign aid that will even tie the hands of the next president,’ Paul told Fox News Digital in an interview. ‘So, I think it’s a terrible idea. But also, if the next President were to try to have a different policy, you can see the Democrats again starting an impeachment.’

‘I think they’re going to try to impeach him before he gains office now, and that’s exactly what this is,’ he said.

Mark Paoletta, former Office of Management and Budget (OMB) General Counsel during the Trump Administration, told Fox News Digital in a statement that the clause in the bill text is an ‘effort to inappropriately tie President Trump’s hands in his next term by locking in Ukraine funding for multiple years.’ 

‘In a presidential election year, Congress should not be making long-term funding commitments, particularly in foreign policy, that will attempt to tie the hands of the next commander in chief,’ Paoletta said. ‘President Trump had every right to pause the Ukraine funding for about 60 days, given his concerns about corruption in Ukraine and how best to spend those funds.’

He added, ‘As OMB General Counsel, I issued the legal justification to pause the funding, and would do it again today.’

Russ Vought, a former Trump cabinet member, also agreed with Vance’s memo and said in a post on X that Vance is ‘absolutely right to interpret these Ukraine provisions’ in this manner. 

Sen. Tommy Tuberville, R-Ala., said the provision in the bill ‘is gonna force him to send money and spend money for Ukraine.’

‘This is in the bill,’ Tuberville told Fox News Digital. ‘So, it’s just another situation where the Democrats are doing something and working towards making sure that money’s spent in a certain area where American taxpayers and this country don’t have.’

The Trump administration, through the OMB, withheld a total of about $400 million of security assistance from Ukraine in 2019. This came just before Trump asked Ukrainian President Voldomyr Zelenskyy to investigate the family of his 2020 rival, Joe Biden, and while the White House allegedly was withholding an Oval Office visit from Zelenskyy in exchange for that investigation.

These actions are what fueled the impeachment effort against Trump, in which he was ultimately acquitted. 

Trump has indicated that if he is elected president this year, he would resolve the war in Ukraine ‘within 24 hours.’ 

The supplemental package, on track for final passage this week in the upper chamber, would send billions of federal dollars to Ukraine, Israel and the Indo-Pacific. The bill text includes $1.6 billion to finance Ukraine’s military as well as just under $14 billion for the Ukraine Security Assistance Initiative, set to expire on Sept. 30, 2025. 

‘These are the exact same accounts President Trump was impeached for pausing in December 2019,’ Vance wrote in a memo distributed to GOP offices early Monday. ‘Every single House Republican voted against this impeachment solution.’

The Senate is gearing up for the last round of procedural votes Monday night to push the supplemental package forward for a final vote this week, despite several Republicans in opposition who are avoiding a time agreement to continue filibustering. It’s unclear if the bill would pass in the GOP-led House. 

A former version of this bill that included border-related provisions failed to pass in the Senate last week. 

The offices of Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell. R-Ky., did not respond to Fox News Digital’s requests for comment on Vance’s memo.

Fox News’ Tyler Olson and Anders Hagstrom contributed to this report. 

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

On today’s DecisionPoint Trading Room episode, Carl reviews the Magnificent 7 and gives you his opinion on their current and possible future states. He warns against two in particular and gives his stamp of approval on three others. Negative divergences are still a problem and Carl explains why.

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In this edition of StockCharts TV‘s The Final Bar, Dave highlights breakouts in home builders and Bitcoin and reviews key names reporting earnings including ABNB, SHOP, and MAR. He also shares an equity scan he uses every week to identify the next potential breakout candidates. Stay tuned until the end for a special performance to celebrate S&P 5K!

This video originally premiered on February 12, 2024. Watch on our dedicated Final Bar page on StockCharts TV!

New episodes of The Final Bar premiere every weekday afternoon. You can view all previously recorded episodes at this link.

Patrick Mahomes and Travis Kelce appeared in a State Farm Insurance ad earlier in these NFL playoffs, but they were busy Sunday night.

So State Farm opted for another set of ‘Twins’ – and ended up winning the hearts of Super Bowl viewers.

Arnold Schwarzenegger and Danny DeVito, first paired in a 1988 box-office smash, were reunited for State Farm’s Super Bowl entry and walked off with the top spot in USA TODAY’s 36th Ad Meter contest.

The 60-second spot features Schwarzenegger playing a State Farm employee in an action film, rescuing puppies and a pregnant woman from a burning home. Yet the Austrian-born bodybuilder/actor/former governor of California struggles to pronounce the insurance giant’s tagline, giving his pal DeVito an opening to save the day in a surprise cameo.

“Like A Good Neighbaaa” scored 6.68, outpointing Dunkin’s 6.52. The coffee giant’s ad once again teamed actor Ben Affleck and wife Jennifer Lopez, joined by Affleck’s Boston bros, Tom Brady and Matt Damon.

In a commercial lineup dotted by several current megastars – most notably Beyoncé, whose Verizon spot dovetailed with the release of two new songs off a forthcoming album – it was Schwarzenegger, 76, who carried the day.

The ‘Terminator,’ ‘Predator’ and ‘Kindergarten Cop’ star remains popular across generations – he has 26 million Instagram followers, nearly double Mahomes and Kelce combined – and revived his action-star iconography for this spot.

Yet it was a far campier vehicle – 1988’s ‘Twins’ – that first paired Schwarzenegger and DeVito. The film grossed $216 million and led to the 1994 follow-up, ‘Junior.’

“I’m always there for him,” DeVito, 79, told USA TODAY before his surprise turn was revealed during a commercial break after the first quarter. “He’s always there for me. We have a great relationship.

“He’s got an outstanding fan base. We’re looking forward to being together again, on the big screen, one day.”

One year after a rookie entry, The Farmer’s Dog, captured the Ad Meter crown, State Farm returned the title to a legacy advertiser. Dunkin’ was followed in the top five by Kia (6.36), Uber Eats (6.26) and the NFL (6.23), which like Dunkin’ recorded a second consecutive top-five finish.

It was a rougher second year for the Jesus-touting ‘He Gets Us,’ whose two entries finished eighth and 15th in its 2023 debut. “Foot Washing” finished 44th out of 59 rated ads, while “Who Is My Neighbor?” finished 55th. A spot for Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s presidential bid, which replays a jingle from his uncle John F. Kennedy’s campaign in 1960, finished last with a 3.41 rating.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Travis was ticked.

And one way or another, the internet has something to say about it.

Kansas Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce was clearly frustrated in the first half of Super Bowl 58 Sunday night, when he was caught on camera yelling at his coach Andy Reid and then shoving him on the sideline. 

After the game, Reid shook it off and said it wasn’t ‘a selfish thing’ on Kelce’s part.

‘He caught me off balance, I wasn’t watching. Cheap shot, but that’s alright’ Reid joked to reporters, adding that Kelce was asking to be put in the game.

SUPER BOWL CENTRAL: Latest Super Bowl 58 news, stats, odds, matchups and more.

During another interview after the game, Kelce spoke about the interaction briefly saying, ‘I’mma keep it between us unless my mic’d up tells the world, but I was just telling him how much I love him.’

Some viewers joked about the move while others called for Kelce to apologize for his actions. Here is how social media is reacting to the exchange.

*looking at playsheet*

Some users poked fun at how intensley Kelce charged at Reid, who was calmly looking at his play sheet.

‘This is who you are yelling at’

Another X user posted, ‘andy reid (subtweeting about travis kelce): when you yell at me this is who you’re yelling at’ above a photo of a small, brown bunny.

‘He should apologize publicly’

Former talk show host and political commentator Geraldo Rivera wasn’t afraid to voice his opinion on the encounter on X.

‘Huge fan of Travis Kelce, one of the greatest tight ends ever. His gritty play and epic love story made history. Didn’t like him screaming at coach Andy Reid, though,’ Rivera posted. ‘It was disrespectful, even hysterical. Good people have bad moments. Still, he should apologize publicly.’

The locker room meet up

‘Andy Reid to Travis Kelce when they get into the locker room,’ one X use posted, showing a video of a man sucker punching another man on a street and running off.

Fan poll questions anger problem or just passion for the game

Serious anger problem? Just sports passion? You vote.

‘I like singing Taylor Swift songs’

‘Hey, old man, just because I like singing Taylor Swift songs at the top of my lungs doesn’t mean you can take me out of the game,’ one user jokingly claims Kelce told his coach.

‘Ray Lewis, baby’

Happy Gilmore?

Natalie Neysa Alund is a senior reporter for USA TODAY. Reach her at nalund@usatoday.com and follow her on X @nataliealund.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The Kansas City Chiefs were able to two-peat Sunday night, winning their second consecutive Super Bowl in dramatic fashion with a game-sealing touchdown drive in overtime.

The team’s third championship since 2020, the victory was a rousing one for a fanbase than can now rightly consider their team to be a dynasty. But on the other end of that victory was a San Francisco 49ers fanbase left demoralized by a crushing, last-minute defeat after their team led much of the game.

Some 49ers fans took it better than others.

After the game, videos began surfacing of fans reacting, well, poorly after Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes found receiver Mecole Hardman in the endzone for the win. Destruction ensued, fights were broken up, guests at watch parties were left in a stunned silence.

Some televisions didn’t survive the night, instead becoming casualties to the raw pain of disappointed fans. Here’s a few videos shared on social media of some of them reacting to the loss by destroying their TVs.

SUPER BOWL CENTRAL: Latest Super Bowl 58 news, stats, odds, matchups and more.

Televisions, projectors come into 49ers fans’ crosshairs

In one video re-posted by Barstool Sports on TikTok, a user recorded his ‘huge 49er fan roommate’ reacting to the loss by throwing an object at what appears to be projector screen, breaking it and sending it crashing to the floor.

‘Bro couldn’t handle the 49ers loss,’ the caption reads.

In another video shared by user CBR_Basics viewed more than 192,000 times, a heartbroken fan in a Brock Purdy jersey lifts a coffee table and chucks it at a wall, where the game had been projected, before hitting the wall. Thankfully, there was no projection screen to break.

‘Punching the wall is next level tantruming,’ one user commented.

Another fan attacked his television set with a bottle of Jack Daniels, leaving it cracked and broken as others sat around in what appeared to be horrified silence.

In another video shared on social media site X, user Helzzy claims that ‘Bro lost $20,000 betting on the 49ers and smashed his TV.’

The video begins with a Chiefs fan celebrating the win before a 49ers fan flies into the frame, smashing the television before he had to be physically restrained by others from attacking the other man. As he’s dragged outside, a woman appears to attempt to ‘clean’ the cracked television with paper towels.

(Viewer discretion: Language.)

‘For those wondering, This is toxic masculinity,’ one user commented.

Another 49ers fans dispensed with fists and projectiles altogether, instead opting to slam his television set into the ground before stomping on it. DraftKings shared that video on X, along with the caption: ‘Gonna need a new TV.’

Eric Lagatta covers breaking and trending news for USA TODAY. Reach him at elagatta@gannett.com

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Super Bowl 58 really started with Usher. His show took us back in time to old school rhythm and blues, in what was the most gorgeous, stunning Super Bowl halftime show ever. Usher pulled off a neat trick: sensuality and likeability wrapped into a neat, bombastic bow.

Then came the game, and it really started with the second half. And we saw what makes Kansas City so good: stubbornness and Patrick Mahomes.

But after Kansas City won, we saw from that team what we always do: a bunch of likeable people.

Between Usher, who put on a stunning and likeable show, and Kansas City, who in the end put on an equally stunning and likeable show, this was the most likeable Super Bowl of all time.

It’s easy to hate great teams. That’s what we do. There’s no fun in liking a franchise that wins all the time if you’re not a fan of that team. In sports, we need hate. We feed off hate. It gets us to the games. It pushes us to watch. That’s how it normally goes. But there’s an exception, a historical one: this Kansas City team.

SUPER BOWL CENTRAL: Latest Super Bowl 58 news, stats, odds, matchups and more.

They’re Super Bowl champions (again) and coming into this contest they were called villains. But these aren’t the bad guys. This is one of the most likeable groups we’ve seen in recent sports history.

The coach is a big, jolly genius. The quarterback had one shaky outburst but doesn’t get in trouble off the field, is greatly respected by almost everyone who comes in contact with him, and is the biggest cheerleader on the team. The tight end (you know which one) may have been a jerk earlier in his career but isn’t now. His girlfriend (you know the one) seems like one of the most laid-back superstars we’ve ever seen. So do all of her friends.

There’s likeability all over this Super Bowl. There’s so much of it, it overrides how bad the NFL is. I mean, the NFL is really hated, and Usher and Kansas City are so likeable they make even the corporate monstrosity that is the NFL likeable. That is quite the feat.

Go throughout history. These aren’t the Dallas Cowboys’ dynasty with Michael Irvin. These aren’t the Patriots with Deflategate or Spygate. The Chicago Bears coached by Mike Ditka was one of the best teams ever, but they were loud and danced and beat the hell out of teams. They weren’t likeable. They were vicious.

These aren’t the Buffalo Bills who went to four consecutive Super Bowls and lost. You didn’t like them. You felt sorry for them. Some of the Giants Super Bowls teams were likeable adjacent, but Tom Coughlin was grumpy as hell. The San Francisco 49ers with Joe Montana had likeable components, but that franchise was like a corporation.

There are other Super Bowl teams that were cool, but none of them match up with Kansas City.

Other halftime shows were likeable, too, but not as much as this one. Prince was amazing but you can’t like Prince. He’s too powerful to like. Prince’s grinding isn’t something you like, it’s something you put on Mount Rushmore. Janet Jackson had her breast exposed, which was not cool at all of Justin Timberlake and far from likeable. Timberlake is a cad. Not likeable.

Usher smiled and danced and brought in Alicia Keys and did some naughty but likeable things, and man was there like all over the place.

I try to muster hate for the Chiefs but it’s almost impossible. After the game, defensive lineman Chris Jones did an interview with ESPN and he spoke like a guy who was sitting in your living room talking football with you.

Kelce and Taylor Swift have handled their extremely public relationship with grace and humor. When cameras caught Swift celebrating the game-winning touchdown, and she was jumping up and down with friends, it looked like genuine joy.

After the game, Kelce told ESPN he was going to shave his beard, keep it and put it in a bag. Goofy and likeable.

Even when Kelce berated Andy Reid on the sideline, it felt like you were watching an argument between family, not something particularly nasty. You know they’ll put that behind them.

After the game, Reid went over to a celebrating Jones and just belly flopped on top of him. It was such a joyous moment. But that’s them. That’s how they roll. Literally.

Usher left you wanting more and feeling good about what you saw. Kansas City did the same. It was all so likeable in the most likeable Super Bowl we’ve ever seen.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The Chicago Blackhawks have dropped to the bottom of the NHL standings as All-Star representative Connor Bedard remains out with an injury.

Now the San Jose Sharks will be without their All-Star for at least several weeks.

The Sharks announced Monday that Tomas Hertl was having surgery to clean out loose cartilage in his left knee. He played through it, including going to the All-Star Game, because doctors told him it couldn’t get worse.

The Sharks have the league’s second-worst record and are two points ahead of Chicago with a game in hand.

The Anaheim Ducks, Columbus Blue Jackets and Ottawa Senators round out the bottom five.

The Ducks, Blue Jackets, Blackhawks and Sharks were the bottom four teams last season. The Blackhawks won the lottery and drafted Bedard and the Ducks (Leo Carlsson) won the second pick.

NHL Central Scouting last month named Boston University center Macklin Celebrini as the top North American prospect in its midseason rankings.

Teams can move up a maximum of 10 spots in the lottery so only the bottom 11 teams have a chance to gain the No. 1 pick in the 2024 NHL draft.

Which NHL teams have the best draft lottery odds (this file will be updated during the season)?

Which NHL teams have the best draft lottery odds?

Odds in parentheses. Standings as of Feb. 11, based on winning percentage.

Chicago Blackhawks (25.5%): 52 GP, 14-35-3, 31, .298
San Jose Sharks (13.5%): 51 GP, 13-32-5, 33, .324
Anaheim Ducks (11.5%): 51 GP, 18-31-2, 38, .373
Columbus Blue Jackets (9.5%): 51 GP, 16-25-10, 42, .412
Ottawa Senators (8.5%): 48 GP, 21-25-2, 46, .458
Buffalo Sabres (7.5%): 48 GP, 22-25-4, 48, .471
Montreal Canadiens (6.5%): 52 GP, 21-23-8, 50, .481
Minnesota Wild (6.0%): 51 GP, 23-23-5, 51, .500
Arizona Coyotes (5.0%): 50 GP, 23-24-4, 50, .500
Seattle Kraken (3.5%): 48 GP, 21-20-10, 52, .510
Calgary Flames (3.0%): 52 GP, 25-22-5, 55, .529

Who is Macklin Celebrini?

The 6-0, 190 center is the top scorer for Boston University as a 17-year-old freshman and ranks second in the NCAA in both goals and points per game with 22 goals and 41 points in 25 games. He was Canada’s leading scorer at the world junior championship with eight points in five games.

Central Scouting says Celebrini plays a complete game and is a strong skater with a fluid stride and top-end NHL speed.

“Macklin plays at a level all his own and it’s truly impressive to see how he thrives in every environment he competes in,’ said Dan Marr, vice president of NHL Central Scouting.

Who are the top prospects in the 2024 NHL draft?

Behind Celebrini, the remaining top five North American skaters are:

Michigan State defenseman Artyom Levshunov
Medicine Hat center Cayden Lindstrom
University of Denver defenseman Zeev Buium
Tri-City (USHL) left wing Trevor Connelly
The top three international skaters are Finnish center Konsta Helenius and two Russians, 6-7 defenseman Anton Silayev and right wing Ivan Demidov.

How does the draft lottery work?

There are two drawings, first for a chance at the top pick and then for a chance at the second pick. The last-place team can draft no lower than third overall. Beginning with the 2022 lottery, a team cannot win more than twice in a five-year period. There are 14 ping pong balls in the machine and each team is assigned a series of four numbers. The lower a team is in the standings, the more series of numbers it gets. If a team’s numbers are chosen, it wins the lottery. If a team in the 12 to 16 range wins, the last-place team retains the No. 1 overall pick.

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