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No rookie has passed Chicago Blackhawks forward Connor Bedard in scoring since he was injured early this month.

He was placed on the injured list, along with forward Nick Foligno, who suffered a fractured finger during a later fight with Smith.

How has the Bedard injury timeline affected him and the NHL rookie race:

Connor Bedard will miss the NHL All-Star Game

Bedard, 18, the top pick in the 2023 NHL draft, was named as the Blackhawks’ All-Star representative the day before his injury. He would have been the youngest All-Star in NHL history. The All-Star weekend in Toronto is Feb. 1-3, and the injury timeline would have him out until late February or early March. The NHL announced on Jan. 22 that the Winnipeg Jets’ Kyle Connor and New York Rangers’ Vincent Trocheck will replace Bedard and injured Vegas Golden Knights forward Jack Eichel.

How does the Connor Bedard injury affect the rookie race?

Edmonton Oilers star Connor McDavid, like Bedard a generational prospect and No. 1 overall pick, was limited to 45 games as a rookie in 2015-16 because of a broken clavicle and finished third in the Calder Trophy voting behind Artemi Panarin and Shayne Gostisbehere.

Bedard still leads rookies in the scoring race with 15 goals and 33 points. He already has missed seven games. The 6-8 week timeframe means he would miss 17 to 24 games. Assuming he misses the full 24 games and is healthy the rest of the season, he’d end up playing 58 games.

Here are some players who could pass Bedard in the rookie race:

Brock Faber, Minnesota Wild: The defenseman is averaging nearly 25 minutes a game, kills penalties, blocks shots and has 27 points in 46 games. He has 24 assists to Bedard’s 18. He will continue to get key minutes with Jared Spurgeon out for the season.

Marco Rossi, Minnesota Wild: The forward is two goals and six points behind Bedard. He has 15 points in his last 25 games while playing in a top six role.

Luke Hughes, New Jersey Devils: The defenseman is averaging more than 20 minutes a game as the Devils deal with an injury to Dougie Hamilton. He’s nine points behind Bedard and plays on the league’s No. 5 ranked power play. Like Bedard, he has had some highlight-reel plays.

Adam Fantilli, Columbus Blue Jackets: The 2023 No. 3 overall draft pick filled in as Columbus’ top center in the absence of captain Boone Jenner and had 13 points in 14 games in December. Fantilli remains in a top six role after Jenner’s return and has shown himself to be an elite rookie.

Where does Connor Bedard stand in his recovery?

He took to the ice after a Jan. 15 practice, wearing a face shield and a no-contact jersey.

‘He’s been begging,’ Blackhawks coach Luke Richardson told reporters then. ‘I think they said it was OK, but he’s been getting specific instructions. He’s not allowed to take slapshots, so he’s not allowed to really clench (his jaw) right now.’

Bedard continues to go on the ice after the practice, but the timeline hasn’t changed, Richardson told reporters this week.

‘He’s no-contact,’ he said. ‘He’s still not where he’s supposed to be to take hard slapshots. … He can’t be maxing out on weights and really stressing the facial muscles.’

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Tony Romo made his mark in the broadcast industry by correctly predicting offensive plays before they happen.

Is he trying to do the same with Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce?

Less than a month after mistakenly referring to Swift as the ‘wife’ of the Kansas City Chiefs tight end, Romo made another familial reference to their relationship during Sunday night’s broadcast of the AFC Divisional Playoff game between the Chiefs and Buffalo Bills.

After Kelce scored a go-ahead touchdown in the third quarter of the game, the CBS broadcast cut away to a shot of Swift celebrating from her seat in a suite filled with other Chiefs fans, including Kelce’s brother Jason.

‘There’s your brother-in-law, right behind you,’ Romo exclaimed.

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Romo’s broadcast partner, Jim Nantz, audibly chuckled as the network went into a commercial break.

Whether it’s now a running joke between the two or not, Nantz has previously made references to Romo’s mischaracterization of the two superstars’ relationship.

The first instance came in Week 14 when the Chiefs and Bills met in the regular season. Then during a Chiefs game Christmas night against the Las Vegas Raiders, Romo said over a camera shot of Swift celebrating a catch by Kelce: ‘His wife loves it … I mean, girlfriend.’

Nantz laughed and said, ‘You’ve been down that road with that before.’

With the Chiefs’ 27-24 victory advancing them to next Sunday’s AFC championship game, Romo will have one final opportunity to discuss the happy couple when the Chiefs meet the Baltimore Ravens on CBS (3 p.m. ET) for a spot in Super Bowl 58.

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The road to WrestleMania will soon kick off with the 2024 Royal Rumble pay-per-view taking place this weekend.

The first WWE premium live event of the year is highlighted by the annual Royal Rumble men’s and women’s matches, where 30 competitors will enter the ring, try to throw each other over the top rope and be the last person standing. The winner of the men’s and women’s matches will get a championship match at WrestleMania, making the Royal Rumble match a potentially career-changing wrestling match for the victor.

With the event less than one week away, here’s what to know for the 2024 Royal Rumble:

When is Royal Rumble 2024?

Royal Rumble is Saturday, Jan. 27 at 8 p.m. ET.

Where is Royal Rumble 2024?

The 2024 Royal Rumble will be at Tropicana Field − home of the Tampa Bay Rays − in St. Peterberg, Florida.

How to watch Royal Rumble 2024

The event can be streamed on Peacock, but you must have their premium or premium-plus subscription to watch. Internationally, it will be available on WWE Network.

Royal Rumble 2024 match card

Matches not in order

Men’s Royal Rumble matchWomen’s Royal Rumble matchUnited States Championship match: Logan Paul (c) vs. Kevin OwensFatal four-way match for the Undisputed WWE Universal Championship: Roman Reigns (c) vs. Randy Orton vs. AJ Styles vs. LA Knight

Who is in the men’s Royal Rumble match?

As of Jan. 17, six men’s stars have declared for the Royal Rumble match. Here’s who is in it so far:

Cody RhodesCM PunkShinsuke NakamuraBobby LashleyDrew McIntyreGuntherChad GableOtisAkira Tozawa

Who is in the women’s Royal Rumble match?

As of Jan. 17, four women’s have declared for the Royal Rumble match. Here’s who is in it so far:

BayleyNia JaxBecky LynchBianca BelairMaxxine Dupri

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DETROIT − Rookie running back Jahmyr Gibbs took the football on Tampa Bay’s 31-yard line and burst out like a cannon shot, a piece of Detroit’s future trying desperately to outrun its past. He shot through the line, then deftly cut left, and it was a foot race to the end zone, with only safety Antoine Winfield Jr. chasing. Gibbs surged. The crowd leapt to its feet. And as the young Lion straight-armed his defender, crossed the pylon, and saw the referee throw two hands in the air, finally, finally, youth and freshness and something really new saw its day in the Detroit sun.

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Four outside law firms Kansas athletics department used while defending its NCAA infractions case combined to cost more than $10 million, but according to a spokesperson the department assumed all costs related to the case.

The four firms – Bond, Schoeneck & King, Husch Blackwell, Hogan Lovells; and Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman – participated across varying times on the case that was resolved in 2023 and concerned both the men’s basketball and football programs. The Kansas public records office provided The Topeka Capital-Journal with an estimate in December of an average of about $2.2 million each of the past five fiscal years and about $70,000 during the current fiscal year, in addition to 1,575 pages of documents related to outside legal fees amassed in relation to the case.

“I think it was obviously pretty established by the time I got to KU, as to the approach and to the notion that we were going to — I don’t want to say spare no resources — but to an extent spare few resources to make sure we had all the right expertise and experience to help us navigate it,” Travis Goff, who became the Kansas athletics director in 2021, said last month. “Going from the NCAA infractions approach to the IARP (Independent Accountability Resolution Process), which was really an unprecedented process, I think warranted additional kind of layers from the legal team perspective.”

Kansas men’s basketball was put on probation and ordered to take down its 2018 Final Four banner as a result of the case, which centered on violations stemming from a 2017federalinvestigation into college basketball corruption. Head coach Bill Self and assistant coach Kurtis Townsend also served a four-game suspension in 2022. The independent panel created by the NCAA to handle complex cases downgraded the most serious allegations lodged against the program. The case involved whether two representatives of apparel company Adidas were acting as boosters when they arranged payments to steer recruits to Kansas. The penalties were not as harsh as the allegations could have brought.

The Topeka Capital-Journal posed the question about whether Kansas athletics received assistance in paying the outside legal fees from university funds because not all the invoices in the documents provided specifically named someone with the department, or even the department itself.

The ones for Bond, Schoeneck & King did. For invoices related to the NCAA men’s basketball investigation, Megan Walawender was mentioned along with a related location. Walawender was referred to as ‘Corporate Counsel for KAI’ and currently on the Kansas athletics website is listed as a deputy athletics director for compliance and legal affairs.

But Hogan Lovells invoices listed the University of Kansas Medical Center and an address in Kansas City, Kansas. Hogan Lovells invoices routinely referenced ‘NCAA Proceeding.’

Husch Blackwell invoices listed an address on Jayhawk Boulevard in Lawrence. Its invoices referenced the NCAA in a few different ways — ‘NCAA infractions – (redacted),’ ‘(redacted)/NCAA’ and ‘NCAA Hearing Football.’

Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman listed the same address Husch Blackwell did and went as far as to specify KU’s Strong Hall. There were also times when people affiliated with KU’s legal affairs were named. Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman’s work routinely referred to the ‘NCAA Infractions Investigation.’

The Kansas athletics spokesperson’s explanation included that Walawender has also had other responsibilities with the university, other places Walawender has spent time and therefore other places Walawender could have been reached. For example, on the website for KU’s general counsel’s office Walawender is also listed as a senior associate general counsel. That office has a few different locations: two of those are at the addresses Hogan Lovells, Husch Blackwell and Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman listed.

Also, each law firm provided the option of paying electronically or wiring funds to pay.

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The Baseball Hall of Fame will announce results of its 2024 balloting on Tuesday (6 p.m. ET, MLB Network).

Candidates must appear on 75% of ballots to earn induction this July 21 in Cooperstown, New York; voters may vote for no more than 10 candidates on the 26-player ballot (14 holdovers and 12 first-timers).

USA TODAY Sports has multiple writers and editors who are at least 10-year members of the Baseball Writers’ Association of America.

Here is how they voted: 

Bob Nightengale (28th year voting)

My choices: Carlos Beltran, Adrián Beltré, Todd Helton, Andruw Jones, Gary Sheffield, Omar Vizquel, Billy Wagner

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

Steve Gardner (fourth year)

My choices: Carlos Beltran, Adrián Beltré, Todd Helton, Andruw Jones, Joe Mauer, Jimmy Rollins, Gary Sheffield, Chase Utley, Billy Wagner

Scott Boeck (second year)

My choices: Adrián Beltré, Andruw Jones, Joe Mauer, Manny Ramirez, Alex Rodriguez, Gary Sheffield, Omar Vizquel.

Who is on the 2024 Baseball Hall of Fame ballot?

Bobby Abreu (fifth year, 15.4% in 2023)José Bautista (first)Carlos Beltrán (second, 46.5%)Adrian Beltre (first)Mark Buehrle (fourth, 10.8%)Bartolo Colon (first)Adrian Gonzalez (first)Todd Helton (sixth, 72.2%)Matt Holliday (first)Torii Hunter (fourth, 6.9%)Andruw Jones (seventh, 58.1%)Victor Martinez (first)Joe Mauer (first)Andy Pettitte (sixth, 17%)Brandon Phillips (first)Manny Ramirez (eighth, 33.2%)Jose Reyes (first)Alex Rodriguez (third, 35.7%)Francisco Rodriguez (second, 10.8%)Jimmy Rollins (third, 12.9%)Gary Sheffield (10th, 55%)James Shields (first)Chase Utley (first)Omar Vizquel (seventh, 19.5%)Billy Wagner (ninth, 68.1%)David Wright (first)

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Remember the good ol’ days when the Baseball Hall of Fame election day used to be suspenseful? 

We always guessed who might be getting elected each year, but now those predictions are imprinted in the exit polls, with more than 50% of the Baseball Writers Association of America voters already publicly revealing their ballots. 

So, with the except of possibly one or two cases, we know what’s going to happen at 6 p.m. ET Tuesday when the Hall of Fame makes its official announcement. 

Third baseman Adrian Beltre will get the largest vote total and he can immediately start working on his speech and getting housing and hotel rooms for friends and family for July 21 in Cooperstown, New York.

The proud city of St. Paul, Minnesota, can start beating its chest with another homegrown player in the Hall of Fame with Minnesota Twins catcher/first baseman Joe Mauer being elected on the first ballot, joining Dave Winfield, Paul Molitor and Jack Morris. 

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

The Colorado Rockies should finally have something to celebrate with first baseman Todd Helton becoming their first homegrown player to be elected into the Hall of Fame. 

The greatest suspense likely will be whether closer Billy Wagner gets in now or has to wait until next year. 

Slugger Gary Sheffield’s popularity has dramatically increased among voters, but it appears to be just a little too late, and likely will have to rely on the Contemporary Era Committee. 

Everyone else on the ballot might as well turn off their cell phone for the day because the Hall of Fame is not calling. 

This is what surveys from Ryan Thibodaux (@NotMrTibbs) and the analytic studies from Jason Sardell (@sarsdell) have already informed us. 

It would seem that the Hall of Fame would politely ask writers to stop sharing their vote so the suspense of the day isn’t ruined, just as the BBWAA tells its voters not to disclose their choices on their MVP, Cy Young, Rookie of the Year and Manager of the Year ballots. 

The Hall of Fame’s greatest suspense is when the Contemporary Era Committee meets in December with no ody ever divulging their vote, before or after the meeting, which resulted in manager Jim Leyland getting elected this year and Lou Piniella falling a vote short. 

But in the BBWAA election, Hall of Fame officials say they actually enjoy the daily updates, the publicity, the banter, the debates, the public shaming, and the growing number of writers who simply are trying to appease their audience. 

Look, you don’t have to vote for the maximum 10 players. 

You don’t have to vote for anyone if you choose. 

All you need to know is that the writers who vote for the maximum number of players are universally praised in social media circles. 

The ones who have a small Hall of Fame ballot are mocked. 

The Hall of Fame will never have to worry about another empty class ever again at this rate. 

If everyone believed there are at least 10 Hall of Famers on every ballot each year, we’ll have 100 new Hall of Famers by the time Shohei Ohtani retires. 

What’s happening is that we have so many analytic and statistical studies now that we can make anyone on the ballot look like they belong in the Hall of Fame. 

Take a look, and you’ll see Bobby Abreu checking in at 19.9% of the vote on his fifth year of the ballot with several voters saying they wish they had room on their ballot to vote for him. 

Please, nothing against Abreu, he had a nice career, but was there ever a soul who wrote or uttered that he was a future Hall of Famer while watching him play? 

Anyone?

The guy made the All-Star team just twice and never finished higher than 14th in the MVP race, but because we look at on-base percentage differently now, he’s suddenly a Hall of Famer? 

Let’s see, we don’t elect Barry Bonds or Roger Clemens into the Hall of Fame because of their links to performance-enhancing drugs without ever being suspended or fined, but Alex Rodriguez and Manny Ramirez are still attracting more than 33% of the vote on public balloting. Rodriguez received the longest drug suspension in baseball history. Ramirez was suspended twice from baseball. 

Please, make it make sense. 

Mauer was sensational as a catcher when he first came up, winning three batting titles in his first five years, but wound up catching in just 921 games, and none in his last five years when he was a first baseman averaging eight homers and 58 RBI a season. 

So now he deserves to join Johnny Bench and Pudge Rodriguez as the only catchers in baseball history to be inducted in their first year of eligibility? 

No wonder why the likes of Don Mattingly, Keith Hernandez, Lou Whitaker, Kenny Lofton and Bobby Grich would have easily been elected to the Hall of Fame if voters viewed players the same way today. 

Then again, the way we analyze things today, Hall of Famers like Tony Gwynn and Rod Carew with their 33 All-Star selections, 15 batting titles and career .338 and .328 batting averages respectfully, might have had to wait. Sorry fellas, your exit velocity, lack of power and scarcity of walks aren’t worthy of first-time elections. 

We somehow have ignored the eye test, knowing a Hall of Famer by simply watching him, using statistics to merely support what we witnessed. 

There are only two players on this year’s ballot that I thought were no-doubt Hall of Famers while they still were playing, and I voted for both: Beltre and Sheffield. Beltre may be the greatest all-around third baseman since George Brett, and Sheffield was the most feared hitter outside Bonds. 

The other selections on this ballot: 

Todd Helton: I could never understand how Helton deserved to be in the Hall of Fame before Fred McGriff. Well, now that McGriff finally is in thanks to the Contemporary Era Committee,  Helton gets my vote. Maybe it wasn’t fair all of these years to punish him for hitting just 369 homers despite having 4,038 games at Coors Field. 

Carlos Beltran: He is not only one of the greatest switch-hitters in baseball history, one of only five players with at least 400 homers and 300 stolen bases, who dominated the postseason, but one of the greatest clubhouse leaders and respected players among his teammates I’ve witnessed. 

Billy Wagner: He was striking out the world (11.9 batters per nine innings) back when hitters were actually embarrassed to strike out. He also yielded a .187 on-base percentage, the lowest since 1900. 

Andruw Jones: He was spectacular his first 12 years, but his career absolutely cratered the last five years. He would have the lowest batting average (.254) of any Hall of Famer in history. He also was the finest defensive center fielder I’ve ever seen with 10 Gold Gloves to prove it. It’s time to forget the ugly ending. 

Seven players, and perhaps over time, they’ll all get in with time on the ballot and help of the Contemporary Era Committee. 

Next year, I’ll be checking the names of Ichiro Suzuki and CC Sabathia, too, who should be overwhelming choices to be elected on the first ballot, with Suzuki perhaps a unanimous choice. 

There will be no need to look at their stats or run any comparison charts. 

The eye test works just fine. 

Follow Nightengale on X: @Bnightengale

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It’s conference championship week in the NFL playoffs, which means fans of the Baltimore Ravens, San Francisco 49ers, Detroit Lions and Kansas City Chiefs have a chance to see their team clinch a spot in Super Bowl 58.

The two conference championship games will take place at M&T Bank Stadium in Baltimore and Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, California on Sunday. The AFC championship game will be the sixth consecutive season the Chiefs will appear in it, while it will be the Ravens’ first since the 2012 season. It will also be Baltimore’s first time hosting the game in franchise history.

On the NFC side, the 49ers will be in the NFC title game for the third consecutive season, and will host the game for the first time since the 2019 season. But for the Lions, this will be their first appearance since 1991.

With some history on the line this weekend, it will cost a few hundred dollars just to see the teams in action. Here are the ticket prices for the conference championship games.

How much are AFC championship game tickets?

Ticket prices for Baltimore’s first home AFC championship game are certainly high, with the average ticket costing $1,984, according to TickPick. If you’re wanting the cheapest seat to the game, it’ll still cost hundreds of dollars. The cheapest tickets can be found on Vivid Seats for $387, which is $522 with fees.

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Here are the cheapest tickets for the AFC championship game on the secondary market as of Monday afternoon:

TickPick: $570 including fees.Ticketmaster: $500 ($585 with fees).StubHub: $428 ($578 with fees).SeatGeek: $441 ($585 with fees).TicketSmarter: $452 ($574 with fees).Gametime: $414 ($560 with fees).Vivid Seats: $387 ($522 with fees).

How much are NFC championship game tickets?

It costs much more to see the NFC championship game than the AFC championship game. The average price of a ticket for Levi’s Stadium is $2,715, according to TickPick. It’s also more expensive than the AFC title game to get the cheapest tickets, which can be found on Vivid Seats for $493, which is $665 with fees.

Here are the cheapest tickets for the NFC championship game on on the secondary market as of Monday afternoon:

TickPick: $718 with fees (standing room available for $711).Ticketmaster: $598 ($699 with fees).StubHub: $559 ($755 with fees).SeatGeek: $560 ($740 with fees).TicketSmarter: $601 ($757 with fees, but standing room available for $752).Gametime: $522 ($705 with fees, but standing room available for $695).Vivid Seats: $493 ($665 with fees).

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Family members of Israeli hostages held by Hamas in Gaza stormed into an Israeli parliament panel to demand action on Monday.

Roughly 20 protesters burst into the Knesset Finance Committee meeting, with many holding pictures of their loved ones. Roughly 130 hostages are believed to remain in Hamas custody.

‘Just one I’d like to get back alive, one out of three!’ shouted a woman who had photos of three relatives being held hostage.

‘You will not sit here while they die there,’ others shouted. ‘Release them now, now, now!’

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has faced growing demands from relatives of hostages to cut a deal with Hamas. One lawmaker inside the committee meeting on Monday argued that disrupting Netanyahu’s government would not be helpful.

‘Redeeming captives is the most important precept in Judaism, especially in this case, where there is an urgency to preserving life,’ he said. ‘Quitting the coalition would not achieve anything.’

Netanyahu himself responded to similar protests on Monday as well, denying that Israel had rejected a proposal from Hamas.

‘There is no real proposal by Hamas. It’s not true. I am saying this as clearly as I can because there are so many incorrect statements which are certainly agonising for you,’ Netanyahu’s office quoted him as telling hostage relatives in a separate incident.

Israel says it remains open to a second wave of hostage exchanges if Hamas agrees to the correct terms.

The new negotiations come amid boiling tensions in the wider region, as Iran and its proxy terrorist groups attack Israel, the U.S. and international shipping lanes.

The Islamic Republic of Iran launched drone and missile attacks into Iraq, Syria and Pakistan in less than 24 hours last week. The regime’s open warfare follows its military aid to Hamas ahead of the organization’s massacre of 1,200 people on Oct. 7 in southern Israel.

The U.S. has sought to prevent Israel’s war against Hamas from spreading into a wider conflict in the region. Nevertheless, Israel has threatened to expand the war to include Hezbollah, an Iran-backed terrorist group operating Lebanon to Israel’s north.

Fox News’ Benjamin Weinthal and Reuters contributed to this report

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Rep. Nancy Mace, R-S.C., on Monday joined the list of South Carolina Republicans backing former President Trump over Nikki Haley ahead of the New Hampshire primaries. 

Mace, who notably ruffled feathers in the House GOP as one of the eight Republicans who voted to oust Kevin McCarthy as House speaker last year, told The Associated Press that she was backing Trump over Haley, who lives in her congressional district and supported her in 2022 against a Trump-backed challenger.

‘I don’t see eye to eye perfectly with any candidate. And until now I’ve stayed out of it,’ Mace told the AP. ‘But the time has come to unite behind our nominee.’

Mace later confirmed to Fox News Digital that she endorsed Trump in the 2024 race. 

‘Today I’m endorsing Donald J. Trump for President. I don’t see eye to eye perfectly with any candidate. And until now I’ve stayed out of it. But the time has come to unite behind our nominee,’ Mace said in an emailed statement Monday. ‘To be honest, it’s been a complete sh** show since he left the White House. Our country needs to reverse all the damage Joe Biden has done. By every barometer our lives and our nation were better under President Trump. The economy was booming, our border was locked down and our nation and her allies were safer because our adversaries feared him. Donald Trump’s record in his first term should tell every American how vital it is he be returned to office.’ 

Mace had stayed out of the 2024 Republican primary as two fellow South Carolinians – Haley, the former governor, and Sen. Tim Scott – entered the race last year. Scott, who ended his own 2024 bid in November and was appointed to the Senate by Haley in 2012, endorsed Trump over Haley on Friday in a rousing call-and-response speech in New Hampshire. 

On Saturday, Trump was joined on stage at another New Hampshire rally by South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster, the state’s lieutenant governor and other senior statewide officials, including the state’s attorney general, treasurer and House speaker, as well as U.S. Reps. Joe Wilson, William Timmons and Russell Fry. 

Haley, appearing on Fox News Monday morning, touted that she won South Carolina twice and expected a strong showing in the upcoming primaries in the Palmetto State. 

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’ departure from the race on Sunday leaves Haley as the main GOP candidate remaining to challenge Trump.

New Hampshire votes on Tuesday, but South Carolina’s primary is in a month, and the state’s Republican leadership has largely already lined up behind Trump. Mace’s endorsement means that Trump has secured four of the state’s six Republican U.S. House members. Rep. Ralph Norman is backing Haley and Rep. Jeff Duncan is saying he’s not endorsing before the primary.

Just two years ago, Mace and Haley were aligned in a congressional primary that tested Trump’s heft in South Carolina, where his own 2016 presidential primary win helped cement his nomination. After the Jan. 6, 2021, riot on the U.S. Capitol, Mace, who had just been sworn in as a freshman lawmaker, went on TV to criticize Trump for his role in the day’s events, saying the president’s accomplishments in office ‘were wiped out in just a few short hours.’ 

Trump responded by calling Mace ‘an absolutely terrible candidate’ and soliciting ‘any interest from good and SMART America First Republican Patriots’ to run against a list of sitting House Republicans, including Mace, whom he endorsed for her first run in 2020 and who worked for his 2016 campaign.

When Katie Arrington, who unsuccessfully sought the seat in 2018, launched her 2022 bid against Mace, she had Trump’s ‘Complete and Total Endorsement.’ During a pre-primary rally in South Carolina, Trump called Mace ‘crazy’ and ‘a terrible person.’

Haley, meanwhile, stumped with Mace, as she had in 2020, helping raise money and appearing in a television ad on her behalf, calling her a ‘fighter.’

But the two reportedly haven’t spoken since last year, when Mace’s name was floated as a possible running mate for Trump, should he win the GOP nomination.

On Monday, Mace said she felt Trump was the better option this year.

‘Donald Trump’s record in his first term should tell every America how vital it is he be returned to office,’ she told the AP. 

The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

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