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JERUSALEM — For the past three months, almost on a daily basis, Israeli ground troops fighting inside the war-weary Gaza Strip have been sending missives and images of tunnel shafts or underground complexes, including weapons dispensaries or bunkers, discovered beneath homes, schools, mosques and hospitals. 

In some cases, the tunnels are simple warrens enabling Hamas fighters to ambush Israeli soldiers; in others, the shafts are vast, elaborate creations replete with elevators, electricity and full ventilation systems. 

Some are even equipped with bedrooms, bathrooms and dining rooms, as well as command centers for Hamas to carry out its ongoing military operation against Israel. In one of those command centers, the IDF uncovered a video of Hamas’ Southern Brigade Commander, Mohammed Sinwar, brother of the group’s top leader in Gaza, Yahya Sinwar, driving a car through a broad underground passage. 

According to Israeli military estimates shared with Fox News Digital, Hamas, the Islamic terror group that sparked the war with Israel, has spent tens of millions of dollars — and the last 16 years as it governed Gaza — designing, digging and cementing an entire subterranean system rivaling London’s Underground or Paris’s Metro.

A report sent by IDF troops Thursday said it was likely Hamas ‘used more than 6,000 tons of concrete and 1,800 tons of metal to build hundreds of miles of underground infrastructure.’   

While the existence of what Israelis refer to as the ‘Gaza Metro,’ which Palestinians call ‘Lower Gaza,’ has been well known about for years, with Hamas leaders even boasting about it, the question remains how, in one of the world’s most poverty-stricken territories, which relies largely on aid from U.N. agencies, regional and Western powers, the terror group had the financial means to invest in such an intricate and expansive terror tunnel network.

‘I don’t know if anybody knows exactly how much money Hamas spent on building this tunnel system,’ Nitsana Darshan-Leitner, president of Shurat HaDin, the Israel Law Center, told Fox News Digital. 

Darshan-Leitner, whose 2017 book ‘Harpoon’ takes a deep dive into how terror groups, including Hamas, find their funding, said she did not believe that at this stage even the IDF understands the extent of Hamas’ underground metropolis.

‘Every day they are surprised to find another tunnel; they are surprised by its length, its complexity, how many floors it has, how wide it is. I don’t think they have the whole picture yet,’ she said.

She added that building such an elaborate system would likely have cost ‘tens of millions of dollars, if not more. The question is where did the money come from?’ 

As the governing body in Gaza, Darshan-Leitner said a large bulk of Hamas’ funds were levied from the Strip’s 2.2 million residents via ordinary taxes, even as aid agencies such as the U.N. agency for Palestinian refugees, UNRWA; the Palestinian Authority, which governs Palestinians in the West Bank; and regional powers like Qatar provided crucial humanitarian services or built key infrastructure projects in the coastal enclave. 

‘Hamas took taxes from its residents and let others pay for everything that, as a government, it was supposed to take care of,’ Darshan-Leitner said. She described how for most of the past two decades, Qatar supplied oil and funded humanitarian projects, the PA covered the costs of electricity, water, health and education, while UNRWA – including with funding from the U.S. – took care of a wide variety of needs for some 75% of the population considered refugees. 

‘Hamas does not need to pay a dime for the population. Everything is taking care of by others,’ she said. ‘This allows them to use their money for military purposes.’ 

Juliette Touma, director of communications for UNRWA, told Fox News Digital the agency had no knowledge that its activities, which she said were mandated by the U.N. General Assembly, enabled Hamas the freedom to build the tunnels. 

‘We are a humanitarian United Nations agency,’ she said. ‘We provide, through UNRWA staff, screened and scrutinized humanitarian assistance to people. There is no third party.’ 

However, Hamas leaders have admitted to taking advantage of the fact that the U.N. and others care for the civilians to build a vast tunnel network beneath the enclave. In a recent interview, Qatari-based Hamas leader Moussa Abu Marzouk said the reason Hamas built no bomb shelters for Gaza’s population — only tunnels for Hamas fighters to hide and fight — was because it was the U.N.’s responsibility to ‘protect’ the majority of Gaza’s population. 

Funding the tunnel project from inflated taxation and minimal governing responsibility, however, forms just a small portion of Hamas’ terror income, Dr. Ronnie Shaked, a researcher on Palestinian Affairs at the Truman Institute at Hebrew University, told Fox News Digital. 

He said the U.S-designated terror group, like other Islamic organizations in the region, was closely aligned with Iran and clandestinely received millions of dollars a year, as well as weapons and military training from Tehran.

‘It is all part of an Iranian doctrine,’ said Shaked, a former senior correspondent and commentator on Palestinian Affairs for the popular Hebrew daily Yedioth Aharanoth and author of a book studying the rise of Hamas within Palestinian society.

He said Hamas had not only invested billions of dollars in building the tunnels but also devoted a huge amount of manpower and effort to create an underground city, where the top Hamas leaders have been hiding for most of the past 100 days. 

‘In order to create a tunnel that is around 400 km (250 miles) over 15 years, then you need millions of dollars. You also need tools and tens of thousands of workers to dig and find ways to remove all the sand and dust from inside the tunnels,’ he said. ‘Then there’s the electrical system, ventilation system and special machinery needed to build it all.’ 

Shaked said designing such tunnels and mapping them out in a coastal territory like the Gaza Strip would also have required top-notch engineers who could contend with the unique topography and proximity to the sea, as well as designers mapping out complex routes beneath the densely populated enclave. 

According to the former journalist, Hamas’ tunnel project began in the early 2000s with underground passageways used to smuggle goods from Egypt into the enclave. The terror group quickly moved on to attack tunnels snaking beneath the border with Israel, which were used most notably in 2006 when Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit was attacked and kidnapped back to Gaza. At that same time, Hamas also started creating its complex network of tunnels beneath the homes, schools and medical centers of its own people.

While a large part of the covert funding came from Iran, Shaked also noted that, over the years, Qatar was also directly involved in sending millions of dollars into the Gaza Strip. In the early days, much of the funding arrived in cash-filled suitcases, first smuggled into Gaza via Egypt. But, later, after a special Mossad unit tasked with tracking and thwarting the flow of money to Hamas was disbanded, it arrived as part of a special arrangement with Israel. 

Beginning in 2018, Qatar’s Special Envoy to Gaza, Mohammed Al Emadi, was permitted to enter the Strip and hand-deliver millions of dollars in cash meant for humanitarian projects. Now, it appears that money too went straight into the hands of Hamas. 

‘In recent years, instead of fighting the terror financing, Israel began to allow money to flow into Gaza, including enabling Qatar to give the cash straight to Hamas,’ Darshan-Leitner said. She described an official Israeli policy aimed at keeping the Palestinian leadership — Hamas in Gaza and the PA in the West Bank — divided and therefore preventing the creation of a cohesive Palestinian state. 

‘Israel also thought that if they gave money to Hamas and if they allowed Palestinians workers to enter Israel — if they allowed the people in Gaza just a little bit better quality of life — then they would have no reason to terrorize Israel,’ she said.

That plan backfired Oct. 7 when thousands of highly trained Hamas terrorists stormed across the border massacring some 1,200 Israelis on army bases, in their homes and at a music festival in the area. That attack initiated the current war, and now Israeli forces are working hard to dismantle Hamas’ underground terror threat and locate more than 130 Israeli nationals who it believes are being held hostage in the tunnels. 

Brig. Gen. (Retired) Yaakov Nagel, Israel’s former acting national security adviser and now a senior research fellow at the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies, said Hamas built ‘a full city beneath a city.’

‘We knew about the tunnels, but we didn’t know the width, the depth or the length of them,’ he said. ‘People estimated there was about 200 kilometers [125 miles], but it now looks like there’s thousands of kilometers.

‘In some places, there are three layers of tunnels. And in other places it is wide enough to drive a jeep,’ Nagel said. He noted it was clear a large chunk of the Qatari money meant to help Gaza civilians rebuild the strip following a previous round of fighting in 2014 ‘went to the terrorist group’s programs, its tunnels, its missiles, its weapons production sites and into the pockets of corrupt leaders.’ 

Before Oct. 7, he said, the military’s focus was only on destroying the tunnels that crossed the border into Israeli territory. Following the 2014 war — and mass border protests in Gaza in 2018 — Israel ramped up its border defense system, investing $1 billion on an underground barrier to block those tunnels and develop new intelligence technology above ground to monitor what was happening on the other side. 

‘Unfortunately, we now know it was a mistake because it pushed them to attack the weakest part of our defense, the one that relied solely on technology,’ said Nagel. ‘We had the intelligence, but we did not fully understand or digest it. So, when 3,000 terrorists forced their way into Israel in 33 places along the border using heavy machinery, there were not enough people on our side of the border to physically stop them.’

The surprise attack and now the surprises that the Israeli military is revealing inside Gaza are among the reasons, he said, that Israel is pushing for greater control of the Strip once the war is over. 

‘What we are dealing with now is so big, and it will be a lot of work to dismantle it all,’ Nagel said. ‘If Israel is not inside in the future, then it can’t control what is happening. And that is why Israel favors having greater control over Gaza the day after the war — so we don’t encounter any more surprises.’ 

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS
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The late, very wise Andrew Breitbart famously and correctly said politics flows downstream from culture.  

Not unlike politics — though less cringey — the musical tone in the country is also set by culture. The power of music is real. It’s capable of eliciting strong emotional responses in us. 

The songs that resonate with us, and we gravitate toward, are the ones we find most relatable and are often a reflection of our values and worldview — a worldview which shapes our musical taste. 

Even if country music isn’t your thing, you’ve likely heard of the 31-year-old megastar with crossover appeal.  

His song, ‘Last Night,’ was the most streamed song of 2023 across all genres on Apple and Spotify, as well as the No. 1 song on the Billboard Hot 100 for the year. 

In addition to the most streamed song of the year, the unassuming country boy who is selling out Taylor-Swift-size stadiums surpassed Swift to land the top album of the year on Billboard’s 200 chart with ‘One Thing at a Time.’ 

He also racked up his eleventh career No. 1 hit on country radio in December with ‘Everything I Love,’ and finished the year with the highest grossing country tour. 

Put quite simply, Wallen dominated 2023. 

To say he’s an epic conundrum for the cancel culture class is an understatement. If it were up to them, this would have been the year that wasn’t.  

In 2021, while on a drunk bender, he was secretly recorded in a leaked video calling his white friend the ‘N’ word. He immediately apologized, canceled his concert tour, checked himself into rehab and donated half a million dollars to Black causes.  

Radio stations pulled his music, multiple media platforms including Cumulus, iHeart Radio, Sirius XM and Country Music Television canceled him. His record label suspended him, and he was banned from the Country Music Association (CMA) Awards. 

Despite all of that, it still wasn’t enough for the cancel culture crowd and media elites who wanted him completely erased from existence. You know, like they did with Hunter Biden after his racist text messages were released and like they do with all rap music.  

Just kidding.  

His fans believed he had done his penance, gave him time served and canceled cancel culture on his behalf. As it turns out, his comeback has proven greater than his setback. 

With the spotlight stuck on him, the raw talent of this not-so-average, small-town boy from Tennessee shined bright. 

Even many in the Black community seemingly agreed he atoned for his sin, as he ended 2021 No. 1 on Billboard’s R&B/Hip-Hop chart for his song with rapper Lil Durk. 

Laughably, the woke brass in the country music industry are still trying to shun Wallen out of existence. At last year’s CMA Awards, they gave the not-so friendly finger to their industry’s biggest star, leaving him empty-handed after he had a massive record-crushing year, and was nominated in three categories. His response on social media was all class: 

‘Walked in tonight a winner, didn’t leave no different.’ 

Billboard agreed, they awarded him 11 wins at their awards ceremony last year — the most wins by any artist since Drake in 2019. 

Oliver Anthony didn’t even bother with the woke music industry — one that would have canceled ‘Rich Men North of Richmond,’ the blue-collar song that rails against the government, before the last chord was played. Then, an unknown name, he uploaded the song on YouTube. It went viral and topped the charts on Apple, Spotify and Billboard Hot 100. 

And his fans most certainly agree. In case there’s still any misconception that his base is just a bunch of low-information hillbillies, he’ll be performing at MetLife Stadium this spring — that’s in New Jersey, not the deep south. The stadium seats 82,500 people. And he’ll be there for two nights. 

The out of touch suits at the CMAs might be the only ones who don’t understand winners and losers in this scenario. 

In country music recently — from Wallen and Jason Aldean to John Rich — we’ve seen cracks start to form in the foundation of cancel culture. 

If you remember last year they screamed ‘racism’ at Aldean for his music video ‘Try That in a Small Town,’ which called out violent crime in our cities. Aldean and his fans weren’t having it, and fans responded by sending the song to No. 1 on iTunes. 

Blackballed by Nashville’s Music Row because he’s too politically incorrect, Rich started going around the industry brass to release his music on various free speech online platforms. His fans are following him, and in 2022 his song ‘Progress’ hit number one on iTunes. 

Oliver Anthony didn’t even bother with the woke music industry — one that would have canceled ‘Rich Men North of Richmond,’ the blue-collar song that rails against the government, before the last chord was played. Then, an unknown name, he uploaded the song on YouTube. It went viral and topped the charts on Apple, Spotify and Billboard Hot 100. 

People want music they can relate to. 

For years, country music fans have been the brunt of overplayed jokes about beer, trucks and women. Hilarious.   

The truth is, the culture of country music goes much deeper, with traditions rooted in faith, family and patriotism, and fans who are fiercely loyal.  

Country music is recognizing the cultural moment. Fans don’t want their culture corrupted. Artists are noticing what happens every time one of them stands up against woke insanity — their fans rally firmly behind them, not the transplanted West Coast suits in the industry.  

This backlash is a contagious energy that will likely only embolden more artists to take a stand and stay true to their roots. If it continues, stay tuned for more sold-out stadiums in 2024. 

It could very well be this is the year cancel culture crumbles. 

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

No one loves a good bull market more than me. History tells us that we want remain mostly on the side of the bulls. Perma-bears have an awful long-term track record. They’ve called 30 of the last 3 secular bear markets. Honestly, those who cannot ever see anything other than a downtrend ahead should find a new occupation or hobby. Here’s the long-term chart of the S&P 500.

GDP + inflation + innovation = roughly an average 9% annual gain on the S&P 500. Ask yourself a question. How many times have you exited the stock market and wished you had just left your investment alone and untouched? Be honest.

Seriously, how often do perma-bears get it right? Hey, listen, there’s nothing wrong with being bearish from time to time if you’re a shorter-term trader. The stock market moves too far sometimes and rightfully needs to correct. And after years of secular bull market strength, there comes a time when stocks need more than a simple correction and a secular bear market is justified. In my opinion, that’s not now. Talk to me again in 2030. We won’t be in one for a long time as the current 11-year secular bull market rages on. But, even during a secular bull market, the bulls must acknowledge when short-term risks grow and portfolio adjustments should be considered.

I believe now is a good time to lean on perspective and the impact it could have in 2024.

We all know (or should know) that the three aggressive sectors – technology (XLK), consumer discretionary (XLY), and communication services (XLC) – tend to lead most secular bull market advances. But they don’t lead all of them. And there are examples right now that maybe our leaders have led for a bit too long.

The S&P 500 just advanced more than 16% in 41 trading days from October 27th through December 28th. We can use a 41-day rate of change (ROC) to see how often this 16% level is reached or exceeded in this time frame. Check this out:

This type of move typically occurs after a big bear market move lower or after a correction. The 2023 occurrence came on the heels of the July through October correction. These huge gains are not normal and rarely result in similar gains moving forward. We need to pause and allow these gains to be absorbed. Also, election years are weak historically during Q1, which is exactly where we’re situated right now. While I expected a scorching January in 2023 based on a few of my signals, I don’t expect that at all in January 2024. Lows in election years tend to coincide with March.

Currently, the largest sector in the S&P 500 is technology, which represents 28.79% of the benchmark. Discretionary represents 10.84% and communication services totals 8.55%. So these 3 aggressive sectors comprise 48.18%, or nearly half of the benchmark. If these 3 groups simply take a few months to absorb recent gains, we could easily see rotation move into other areas like industrials (XLI), financials (XLF), or health care (XLV). These 3 more value-oriented sectors represent more than 34% of the benchmark. While XLY is in the aggressive sector camp, it actually looks like it could still provide a lift to the S&P 500. More on that below.

Technology (XLK) is clearly the one to watch though as it has the biggest impact on the S&P 500. Currently, from this chart alone, I see significant risks ahead if you’re overweighting technology:

Nothing on this chart looks particularly encouraging for technology. The top part of this chart tells us that technology’s relative momentum was VERY stretched – similar to 2020 – and we know what happened next. It was a lengthy period of average to underperformance vs. the S&P 500.

The middle part of the chart shows that the XLK:$SPX relative strength is at the upper end of its relative uptrend, which makes it difficult to continue outperforming. In fact, it’s probably time to consider weak relative strength ahead. Finally, the bottom panel charts the 52-week relative performance. Money has poured into technology over the past year – again similar to 2018. It wouldn’t be normal for this to continue higher. Once again, this tells me the risk is to the downside and it’s not worth the risk of overweighting technology right now.

I’ll make one last point about the likely relative weakness in technology. Check out this 20-year weekly chart of the XLK:

We’re at the top of the XLK’s 15-year channel, which has been problematic at every point in this channel, with the exception of the after-effects of the pandemic. It just looks like time for a change in leadership for a bit.

So all of this leads me to a big question. If technology underperforms, where should we look for relative strength?

XLY:

The XLY is trading much closer to its lower uptrend line, suggesting strength could easily find its way here.

XLV:

The XLV has been consolidating and, therefore, underperforming the S&P 500 for quite awhile. The recent breakout may be the trigger this group needs to see a lot more money rotating IN.

XLF:

Technically, we don’t usually see this group lead. Given the circumstances of the 2008-2009 financial crisis, the XLF has been a tough place to make money. But I believe the group was undervalued while short-term rates jumped and resulted in an inverted yield curve. 2024 is likely to reverse that condition, which will benefit the net interest margin for banks ($DJUSBK), a significant fundamental tailwind. Should our economy grow in 2024, which I believe it will, it could be a goldilocks scenario for banks – a solid, and perhaps even improving, economy coupled with rising spreads.

It will be very interesting to see how the first quarter of 2024 develops. While I can’t guarantee outperformance or underperformance of any area, I do believe that we can assess risk and make more informed trading/investing decisions.

To become a FREE EB Digest subscriber (no credit card required) and to follow me at EarningsBeats.com, simply CLICK HERE and enter your name and email address. You may unsubscribe at any time.

Happy trading!

Tom

Colorado head football coach Deion Sanders has confirmed at least twice since November that Pro Football Hall of Famer Warren Sapp would be joining his staff in Boulder, calling Sapp a “teddy bear” with a “wealth of knowledge” that will benefit his players after a 13-year career in the NFL.

But Sapp also has another history, involving violence against women, that has raised concerns in Colorado at the same time, leading to questions about his hiring there and how the university would address it after a previous scandal there led to pledges of no tolerance for domestic violence.

In 2017, Colorado’s then-head coach, athletic director and chancellor were punished after an investigation found they mishandled domestic violence allegations involving a previous assistant football coach.

The university still never confirmed Sapp’s hiring and gave this response Friday after being asked about it by USA TODAY Sports:

‘There have been no conversations about hiring Warren Sapp for an assistant coach position at the University of Colorado,’ said Steve Hurlbert, spokesman for CU Boulder.

USA TODAY Sports then asked if there were conversations about hiring Sapp for any job there.

‘Not at this time,’ Hurlbert replied.

Hurlbert also said Sanders isn’t going to comment beyond what he’s already publicly said about Sapp, which included him saying he was excited about ‘Coach Sapp’ joining his staff.

It’s not clear what job Sanders had in mind for Sapp at Colorado or if Sanders was waiting for an opening on his staff before having conversations with the university about hiring him. Sapp didn’t return a message seeking comment.

His potential hiring has led organizations that support domestic violence survivors in Colorado to express concern.

“By recruiting someone with a history of public allegations of gender-based violence, including domestic violence, they risk promoting violence rather than speaking out against it,” said a statement to USA TODAY Sports by Violence Free Colorado, the federally recognized, anti-domestic violence coalition for the state of Colorado. “They risk saying that violence is excusable if the player or coach is successful. They risk undermining the public work CU has done to speak out against domestic violence. As advocates, we know the answer is not to ignore the allegations against Mr. Sapp, but to address them head on.”

Why does Deion Sanders want to hire Warren Sapp?

Sapp, 51, is a “dear friend” of his who visited Sanders at Colorado last year and hit it off with Colorado players because of his football reputation, affable personality and experience as a dynamic defensive lineman. It’s not clear if Sanders knew about Sapp’s history off the field. He hasn’t addressed it publicly. But Sanders previously has spoken about showing grace to those who make mistakes and not letting those mistakes define their lives.

“He has so much to give, man, and I can’t wait to see him on a daily basis,” Sanders said on ‘The Rich Eisen Show’ Dec. 20.

Eisen, the show’s host, didn’t mention Sapp’s history but asked Sanders, “Is he going to join your staff? Is that gonna happen? That will happen?’

“It better happen,” Sanders replied.

Sanders, who also is a Pro Football Hall of Famer, previously told Eisen that Sapp “wants to coach on this staff … and he is going to be a part of this staff.” He made similar comments on his weekly radio show in November when asked about Sapp joining him at Colorado. ‘I’m excited about Coach Sapp,’ Sanders said then.

What were the allegations against Warren Sapp?

In 2015, he pleaded no contest to misdemeanor domestic battery in Las Vegas after being accused by his girlfriend of biting her, throwing her on the floor and stepping on her head. He avoided a jail sentence by agreeing to a plea deal that included requirements that he undergo counseling.

Before that, he was fired from his job as an analyst at the NFL Network after being arrested on misdemeanor charges of assaulting and soliciting a prostitute in Phoenix that same year. He pleaded guilty in that case but also avoided jail time in a plea deal that would dismiss the charges after completing terms of the agreement.

In 2010, he was charged with misdemeanor domestic battery in Miami Beach. The victim had bruises on her neck and a swollen knee after saying Sapp threw her down and started to choke her, according to records in the case. That charge was dropped by prosecutors, who said they found inconsistencies in the woman’s statements and the evidence.

In a separate civil lawsuit in 2017, Sapp and other NFL Network employees were accused by a former NFL Network wardrobe stylist of inappropriate conduct and sexual harassment.

Sapp allegedly urinated in front of the stylist, Jami Cantor, according to her lawsuit, which stated he also gave Cantor “sex toys as Christmas gifts three years in a row,” showed her pictures of women he had relations with and “openly talked about his sex life in front” of her.

Cantor resolved the case against the NFL Network with a settlement in 2018. Sapp said in a radio interview in 2017 that there was no sexual harassment and characterized the sex toys as harmless fun.

Did Warren Sapp pay his debt to society?

He did, completing the terms of his plea deal in Las Vegas, including domestic violence counseling, 48 hours of community service and having no contact with the woman, according to court records.

He is free to find work where he can get it, but the issue is whether a higher standard applies in a high-profile coaching position at a major public university, especially one that went through a scandal over how it handled domestic violence allegations against a previous assistant football coach. University officials back then pledged to do better to raise awareness of domestic violence, not tolerate it and reform policies to prevent it.

Sapp’s history is “very concerning,” said Anne Tapp, executive director of the Safehouse Progressive Alliance for Nonviolence, which provides shelter and support for domestic violence survivors in Boulder. “Of course, people do change and shouldn’t be judged by past allegations, but I would hope that questions related to Sapp’s treatment of women and his ability to serve as a positive role model for the young men he’d be coaching would (be) part of a vetting process.”

What was the previous domestic violence case at CU?

In December 2016, less than three weeks before the Buffaloes were scheduled to play in the Alamo Bowl, the former girlfriend of assistant coach Joe Tumpkin told then-Colorado head coach Mike MacIntyre that Tumpkin had physically and emotionally abused her for two years. MacIntyre reported it to athletic director Rick George, who reported it to chancellor Phil DiStefano.

But an investigation later found that they violated university policy by not reporting it to the university’s Office of Institutional Equity and Compliance.

“DiStefano, George, and MacIntyre each took steps that had the effect of insulating the conduct, rather than elevating it to the appropriate campus resources so that any risk to individual or campus safety, or to University mission, posed by the allegation, or by Tumpkin, could be fairly and impartially evaluated,” the investigative report said.

Tumpkin was even allowed to coach in the Alamo Bowl and was essentially promoted to call plays in the game, nine days after a temporary restraining order was granted against him. After the allegations became public in early 2017, Tumpkin resigned. He later pleaded guilty to misdemeanor third-degree domestic violence assault and was sentenced to 30 days in jail.

DiStefano was suspended for 10 days and pledged to donate his salary for that period to programs that support students and employees in the CU Boulder community who have been affected by domestic violence. George and MacIntyre were fined $100,000 each and donated it to organizations that support domestic violence survivors.

Violence Free Colorado invited CU and Deion Sanders to begin a “real dialogue” about the matter if it moves forward with hiring Sapp at some point.

“It would be easy for CU to ignore public allegations of abuse, to deny them or to say they are in the past and move on,” the organization said in a statement. “We urge CU, instead, to use this moment to talk openly about the long history of domestic violence in sports.”

Follow reporter Brent Schrotenboer @Schrotenboer. Email: bschrotenb@usatoday.com

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

When Adam Yahn scouted players for an elite junior hockey team, he wouldn’t wear his team’s logo to games. That way, parents in the stands wouldn’t know he was the general manager of Ontario’s Cobourg Cougars.

Yahn heard the ones yelling in coaches’ and players’ ears, and he always found out who they were. Their kids were the first ones he wrote off.

“I didn’t care how good you were,” Yahn told USA TODAY Sports. “How your parents were behaving, a lot of the time, dictated whether I wanted you on my team.

‘I’d much rather a parent that lets their child be involved in their decisions and decide what they’re doing with their future, rather than a parent that’s trying to live vicariously through them.”

But is there a sport where they are at their absolute worst?

Through dozens of discussions with parents, coaches, sports officials and administrators, and through my own experiences, I have created a ranking of ‘worst’ parents by youth sport. Of course, there are lots of good fans out there who cheer and otherwise keep quiet. But I have found lots of traction with the negativity and mania around six particular sports.

Here are the worst offenders:

6. Football parents: Keep them away from the sidelines

Bigger players, perhaps more than in any sport, tend to dominate football at younger ages. They are hard to tackle and can easily knock over others. One dad in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, said he’s seen parents become convinced these kids are their meal tickets and point fingers at the coach if the kid struggles.

Football parents can be right on the sideline, all over that coach. It’s up to leagues to keep them away. Setting expectations is crucial in sports where there is no physical barrier (backstop, glass) to the action.

COACH STEVE: Sports parents, you’re out of control; behave or get off the sideline 

But by the time football players reach a certain age, parents are often seated in bleachers farther away, so they can’t disrupt as much. They can’t be heard as easily if an official makes a call at midfield. That separation keeps them, and parents of other field sports, from finishing at the top of our list.

5. Lacrosse parents: Behind the learning curve (and saved by ignorance)

Lacrosse parents can be right on the sideline, too, encroaching on players, coaches and referees.

“They’ll say, ‘That’s a ward (a type of technical foul), that’s a push-off,” said Jack Lally, a longtime assignor and referee for youth lacrosse in New Jersey. “Like, no it’s not. A lot of parents think they understand the game and they really don’t. And I see them getting in the way, sometimes getting in the way of kids as well.”

There tends to be a sense of entitlement with lacrosse parents, who might spend thousands of dollars per year on equipment and fees for club teams. One youth lacrosse coach in greater Boston said in his experience families with the most money feel they have the most license to open their mouths.

He coached his two daughters in a gateway city where there isn’t a lot of money. He finds those blue-collar lacrosse parents more appreciative of him than club parents. Like many lacrosse parents, those in his town also are a bit ignorant about the sport, so they generally keep quiet.

Brandon Boos, a youth and high school boys lacrosse coach for more than a decade, has few issues with his team parents for a similar reason.

“Unlike baseball or football, most of the parents never played the sport. They lacked the confidence to have many strong opinions about what was happening,” said Boos, who lives in Worthington, Ohio. “But, they also knew I wouldn’t have put up with it. We talked sportsmanship with players and parents alike. ‘This is what we do on this team, and this is how we do it.’ ”

COACH STEVE: Do you cheer for your kid the right way? Use these better options

4. Baseball parents: They all think they are experts

Every parent seems to know something about baseball because they probably played it at some basic level or have been to a major league game. In many ways, it’s still America’s favorite pastime.

Such familiarity makes criticism of umpires and coaches more natural. Bleachers are right behind home plate and constant catcalls can ring out toward an umpire.

This proximity, however, also allows an umpire immediate access to the fans. I have seen baseball parents (and coaches) intimidate umpires, but those umps are often teenagers unsure of their own ability. A self-assured umpire can take control of a game by confronting an offending fan, which often ends the chatter, and ejecting them if necessary.

Fans at baseball games can be more spread out, too, with some sitting in the bleachers around home plate but others in their fold-up chairs down the lines or even behind the outfield fences. Thus, the barrage of commentary isn’t loudly concentrated in one area.

Baseball parents can still represent the worst in us, though. I have seen a group of Little League parents cheer noisily for their players, who were already intimidating some of my players by their sheer size. These same parents also yelled loudly against any calls that went against their kids.

3. Soccer parents: They yearn to be part of the club culture

A lot of parents have played soccer, too. However, some of them may not know the rules as well as they know, say, baseball. In either case, they lay into refs at a level that has attracted national attention.

“We have some work to do,” said Skye Eddy, founder of the Soccer Parenting Association, which she described as a movement of level-headed parents, coaches and club leaders uniting to improve the environment around youth soccer. “There is an unhealthy focus on winning instead of competing, and a misalignment between values and behaviors is overwhelming us.”

Soccer parents can also hang around the sidelines, and the pressure they place on their kids can cut so deeply some simply quit playing. Zack Kampf, who runs the Intelligent Footballers Academy in suburban Phoenix, has seen it happen.

He’s watched soccer organizations, and the parents who sign their kids up for them, so obsessed with winning that it affects their kids’ play. And then parents wonder why the club doesn’t have a more attractive style of play.

“Well, you guys can’t because you have a reputation. You’re supposed to be the best. And so your kids are too afraid to fail. They tried to be brave in a certain situation and then they lost the ball and they got scored on,” said Kampf, who also coached soccer at the high school and collegiate levels. “Now, suddenly, it’s their fault this team that’s supposed to be the best lost the game. So now, your kids are going to play in a way that is risk-averse, which can have a huge consequence later on down the road.”

Which soccer club you play for is a status symbol for kids, and maybe even more so for their parents. Some clubs, however, have gotten creative with overbearing parents. One parent in Wisconsin told me that once criticism reached a coach’s wife, the head coach started videoing the sidelines. Suddenly, things got very quiet.

2. Hockey parents: They go all in on the dream

Yahn, who served as Cobourg Cougars’ GM from 2017 to 2020, sees two types of hockey parents: Ones who get very engaged in the game, yelling at the refs and barking commands at players (“Shoot the puck, Johnny!”); and ones who quietly sit and watch.

“I tend to find there’s a healthy balance, but sometimes the scales tip over to the erratic parents,” Yahn said.

Their noise echoes in small rinks where fans can be crammed together. One hockey coach and official (and sports parent) told me seating can make the distraction of hockey parents worse than other sports. In some rinks, both teams’ fans may be sitting next to each other. In outdoor sports, by contrast, fans are likely to be split up by sides.

Hockey and its rugged and violent nature also seems to bring out the primal natures of some parents. They have been known to come to blows with one another.

Ice hockey is the most expensive youth sport for a child to participate in, according to 2019 data from the Aspen Institute of Play and the Utah State University’s Families in Sports Lab. (Equestrian sports were not included in the study). Parents spend thousands of dollars per year between fees, equipment and extra training. And there’s heavy buy-in from parents to make their kid “the one.”

“It’s their dream, as opposed to their player’s dream, which causes so many other challenges, too, right?” Yahn said.

1. Basketball parents: A mind-numbing blur of noise and distraction

If you’re a true basketball parent, you know to bring your camping chair. You take it to a game and sit where you want, any spot you can find around the court. You’re often sit right near the baseline or sidelines.

Games are often held in a field house hosting a half-dozen games at once. But whether you’re in this setting or a small gym with a single court, noise is all around you. Noise is just a part of basketball, as are so many other factors that makes the environment around the sport an enabler for unruly parents.

“Everyone is packed into a fieldhouse that typically has no bleachers so parents are sitting in camping chairs a few feet from the court,” says Brian Curran, a basketball parent from Ardmore Pennsylvania. “The game moves very fast, and it’s indoors so the noise is louder.

“Also, coaches yelling is an inherent part of basketball; it’s basically expected. Parents see this and do it too. It’s awful.”

There is also a level of intensity in basketball that naturally inflames parents. Top youth basketball teams have fewer spots than those for other sports. The cutthroat nature of the sport makes parents, in my opinion, especially cold and cruel.

The final roster spots often go to the kids who are the toughest: the ones willing to bang for a rebound with a taller kid and dive on the floor for a loose ball. Parents act the same way beside the court. They scream for blood, even with an enormous lead. They scream over the coaches, often when players are in mid-action. There is no glass separating them, and kids often hear every word.

My wife and I have left basketball games with headaches from the cacophony of it all. I have also seen parents get up and walk away from others on their own team.

Takeaways for all sports parents

If you’re one of these offending parents, take a step back and walk away. Sit by yourself. It’s the way, I’ve found, parents of elite athletes do it. Washington Capitals center Nic Dowd was raised in Huntsville, Alabama, by British parents who put no pressure on him to advance within the sport as they carted him through the Southeast for games each weekend. They sat quietly at his hockey games. And they cheered.

Their actions, and their presence, showed their encouragement and affection much more than their words.

“What I’m learning about having a kid is that inevitably they’re gonna make their own decision when they need to, but it’s our responsibility to provide them with the best atmosphere and environment for them to make those decisions,” Dowd, who has two young children with his wife, Paige, told USA TODAY Sports last spring. ‘We try and let Louie know we love him every single day and how big a piece of our life he is.”

It’s a way you can approach youth sports, too.

Asia Mape, who founded website ilovetowatchyouplay.com, recently came up with 17bways she’s going to be a better sports parent in 2024. I recommend you read them, and focus on No. 17:

“I will tell them I love to watch them play consistently instead of what they need to do better,” she writes.

Steve Borelli, aka Coach Steve, has been an editor and writer with USA TODAY since 1999. He spent 10 years coaching his two sons’ baseball and basketball teams. He and his wife, Colleen, are now loving life as sports parents for a high schooler and middle schooler. For his past columns, click here.

Got a question for Coach Steve you want answered in a future column? Email him at sborelli@usatoday.com.

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Rejoice NFL fans, for the 2023 postseason has arrived. “Super Wild Card Weekend” – apparently the nomenclature is here to stay – starts Saturday afternoon and goes until Monday night, meaning the playoff pandemonium will flicker for more than 48 hours. 

Both No. 1 seeds, the Baltimore Ravens in the AFC and the San Francisco 49ers in the NFC, earned byes and will not be participating. The other 12 playoff teams are in action. 

Picking a matchup based on “watchability” compared to another may feel sacrilegious. It’s the NFL playoffs! But not all games are created equal. 

Luckily for those who prefer their playoffs with a side of drama, there is no shortage of storylines this round.  

6. Pittsburgh Steelers at Buffalo Bills (Monday, 4:30 p.m. ET, CBS) 

The Bills owning the No. 2 seed seemed impossible two months ago. The same could be said of the Steelers qualifying for the postseason following their loss to the Indianapolis Colts three weeks ago. Mason Rudolph helped Pittsburgh rattle off three straight wins, but the heartfelt third-string QB story can only last so long (unless you’re Brock Purdy). Buffalo has won five in a row since its Week 13 bye. 

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This game could go the blowout route, it could be ugly, and it might be a combination of the two. Plus, no T.J. Watt for the Steelers makes this one less intriguing. In 11 games without Watt since drafting the pass rusher, Pittsburgh is 1-10. 

5. Philadelphia Eagles at Tampa Bay Buccaneers (Monday, 8 p.m. ET, ESPN)

Tampa Bay hosts the “Monday Night Football” contest in the wild-card round for the second straight year.

As for the Eagles, 1-5 to end the season after starting 10-1: The last team to make the playoffs with five losses in their final six games was the 1999 Miami Dolphins. In Hall of Fame quarterback Dan Marino’s last game, they lost to the Jacksonville Jaguars, 62-7. The Eagles likely won’t suffer the same fate, but they have played like they are wandering the wilderness for an alarmingly long stretch. 

The Buccaneers’ offense is inconsistent, but Philadelphia’s defense is putrid to the point Mike Evans might have some vertical opportunities. Will it be a last stand for Eagles center Jason Kelce and the group of veterans brought back with goals of reaching a second straight Super Bowl?

4. Cleveland Browns at Houston Texans (Saturday, 4:30 p.m. ET, NBC)  

They played this matchup three weeks earlier, minus a key stakeholder: Texans QB C.J. Stroud, who missed the regular-season tilt while recovering from a concussion. The likely soon-to-be Offensive Rookie of the Year has dazzled with his ability to make all types of throws, and the Browns’ defense will present one of the biggest challenges he’s faced in his first season. 

Over five games, Browns quarterback Joe Flacco’s performance pushed him into the Comeback Player of the Year conversation. It was six weeks ago the 38-year-old was in charge of coordinating pickup and dropoff for his children. Now he returns to the stadium where he helped Amari Cooper set the Browns’ single-game receiving record on Christmas Eve. 

Worth noting: Flacco has an interception rate of 3.9%, which would rank last in the league if he’d thrown enough passes to qualify in 2023. Stroud led the league in that category (1.0%).

There is a potential for offensive fireworks from both sides. The betting spread indicates that Vegas expects a close game. Stroud and the Texans will have to overcome their inexperience to pull off the upset.

3. Miami Dolphins at Kansas City Chiefs (Saturday, 8 p.m. ET, Peacock)

This is the point in the rankings where the NFL scriptwriters start showing off. Tyreek Hill has already faced the team that traded him in 2022, except he’s yet to return to GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium to face the Kansas City Chiefs. That changes Saturday night. 

The forecast calls for chilly temperatures, and Miami QB Tua Tagovailoa, the native Hawaiian, hasn’t always fared well in such climes. A September game between these teams would have a better chance of being higher-scoring. But if the Dolphins’ offense can turn back the clock to earlier this season when the group looked like one of the most explosive units of all time, it should be a fun chess match between Miami head coach Mike McDaniel and Chiefs defensive coordinator Steve Spagnuolo. A depleted Dolphins defense should give Patrick Mahomes and the shaky Chiefs offense a chance. 

Important public-service announcement: The game is exclusively available on Peacock, a sign of the NFL’s all-in approach to the streaming era. 

2. Green Bay Packers at Dallas Cowboys (Sunday, 4:30 p.m. ET, FOX)

One of the most storied NFC postseason rivalries in league history takes center stage Sunday afternoon. From The Ice Bowl to the conference championship games of the 1990s to “Dez Caught It,” Cowboys-Packers has delivered across the decades when the stakes are highest. 

Dallas’ offensive performance at home gives the Packers plenty to be concerned with defensively, as coordinator Joe Barry’s unit has been inconsistent and uninspiring. But Green Bay’s ability to run the ball – something Dallas has struggled to defend and do themselves – could open the door for an upset. If Dak Prescott, CeeDee Lamb and the Cowboys offense get off to a fast start, it may not be an issue.

Cowboys head coach Mike McCarthy has already downplayed the emotional angle of the matchup; McCarthy coached in Green Bay from 2006-18 and won a Super Bowl with the Packers. If McCarthy’s current team doesn’t get the job done, his job security will become the topic of conversation in Dallas. 

1. Los Angeles Rams at Detroit Lions (Sunday, 8 p.m. ET, NBC)

Will the NBC broadcast have enough time to cover all of the connections in this one? (They will, because the Mike Tirico-Cris Collinsworth-Melissa Stark announcing crew has been top-notch all year.) 

There’s Rams QB Matthew Stafford, the first overall pick by the Lions in 2009 who played 12 seasons in Detroit, in what will be an emotional homecoming of sorts. 

There’s Lions QB Jared Goff, the first overall pick by the Rams in 2016 who played five seasons for Los Angeles, in what will be a revenge game of sorts. Lions general manager Brad Holmes also came from the Rams and rebuilt the Lions into a team that won 12 games for the first time since 1991. 

The environment should be electric, with Detroit hosting its first playoff game in 30 years. Two of the most energetic head coaches in Sean McVay and Dan Campbell will be head-to-head. On top of that, the game should be tightly contested. No team had a stronger second half than the Rams, who won seven of their last eight games – the one loss coming in overtime to the Ravens. The Lions can’t be sure what they will receive from record-breaking rookie tight end Sam LaPorta, who who suffered a knee injury in the regular-season finale against the Minnesota Vikings. Los Angeles will have its record-breaking rookie, though, in wideout Puka Nacua. 

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New York Gov. Kathy Hochul said Saturday that the Pittsburgh Steelers-Buffalo Bills AFC wild-card game will be moved to Monday at 4:30 p.m. ET due to severe weather in Western New York.

The game was originally scheduled for 1 p.m. ET Sunday. It will still air on CBS and stream on Paramount+.

Hochul’s official social media account posted that she had been in contact with NFL commissioner Roger Goodell ‘regarding the dangerous conditions in Buffalo this weekend.’ Western New York is in a state of emergency, the governor said.

The main concern is the storm is expected to begin around 6 p.m. ET Sunday, right around the time the game would end and all people would be leaving the stadium.

“The bullseye of this storm is scheduled to hit the Southtowns – probably Orchard Park – where at the time we’d have 60,000 people traveling,” Hochul said at a news conference.

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Beginning at 9 p.m. ET Saturday, a travel ban will be in effect ‘until further notice’ in Erie County, where the Bills play. AccuWeather forecasts predicted winds reaching nearly 50 miles per hour and potentially seven inches or more of snow.

The lake-effect snow, which can result in feet of it falling in a short period of time, has forced logistical issues for Bills games in the past. Last year, the Bills played a home game against the Cleveland Browns, at Ford Field, home of the Detroit Lions, due to significant snowfall in the region.

The primary concern, according to officials, isn’t whether the game could be played. Travel for fans would be dangerous. And plows and law enforcement officials must be dedicated to storm response.

Buffalo mayor Byron Brown said if weather conditions worsen, officials could ask the NFL to postpone the game again.

“If we see any change in the weather pattern, we will take action and ask for that game to be rescheduled,” Brown said. “Now that’s not the plan.”

The last time a game was changed during the playoffs also involved Pittsburgh. The 2016 AFC Divisional Playoff game between the Steelers and Chiefs in Kansas City was moved from 1:05 p.m. ET to 8:20 p.m. ET because of an ice storm.

NHL adjusts game times in Buffalo and Pittsburgh

The NHL moved up the starts of two of the league’s Monday games so fans can watch the Steelers-Bills game.

The San Jose Sharks-Sabres game in Buffalo was moved from 1 p.m. ET to noon, and the Seattle Kraken-Penguins game in Pittsburgh was moved from 6 p.m. ET to 1 p.m.

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Is it over? Has the flurry of shocking moves that dominated the NFL news cycle over the past week subsided?

Hey, they are no guarantees as the NFL playoffs begin this weekend that the shakedown of the coaching landscape has been completed.

After all, Bill Belichick is on the market now. And Jim Harbaugh is arguably an even hotter free agent. 

Besides, it’s difficult to predict how Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones would react if his team gets embarrassed with an upset loss to the Green Bay Packers on Sunday at JerryWorld.

And other cases involving coaches in the playoffs bear watching.

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It’s been a weird start to the NFL’s hiring cycle, with the surprises including the end to Pete Carroll’s run as Seattle Seahawks coach and the speed with which the New England Patriots on Friday named Jerod Mayo as the replacement for Belichick.

Already, Jones found himself this week on the defensive for his comments about McCarthy’s status following the Cowboys’ division-winning victory at Washington last weekend. As Clarence Hill of The Fort Worth Star-Telegramreported, Jones praised McCarthy’s results – he’s the first coach in franchise history to win 12 games in three consecutive seasons – but stopped short of ensuring that his coach could survive a playoff loss.

‘We’ll see how each game goes in the playoffs,’ Jones said after the win at Washington.

Jones has since backtracked in an effort to defuse speculation or provide clarity. McCarthy has one year left on his contract, Jones pointed out.

‘I couldn’t be more pleased with what he’s done and how he’s coached,’ Jones said Tuesday on his weekly radio show on 105.3 The Fan. ‘I certainly haven’t sat down here right in the middle of the playoffs and started talking to him about a contract. Why would you do that?’

As supportive as that sounds – and McCarthy’s work after taking over the offensive play-calling duties this season have been exemplary – it still didn’t completely rule out the possibility that Jones could make a switch.

In other words, this season began with McCarthy, in his fourth campaign, pressured to take the Cowboys deep into the playoffs. Rallying to win the NFC East crown put Dallas in a great position to advance. And an 8-0 home record built on blowouts – the Cowboys have a point differential of +172 at home – seemingly provides a great advantage for the No. 2 seed. But this is still a popular franchise that hasn’t advanced to the NFC title game in 28 years.

And McCarthy, like predecessors Jason Garrett and Wade Phillips, has a blemish on his record for blowing a home playoff opener. In 2021, the Cowboys fell to the San Francisco 49ers in a wild-card round matchup that ended with a mismanaged, last-minute sequence as the clock ran out before they could take a shot or two with Dak Prescott passes to the end zone. During the 2016 season under Garrett, they lost a divisional-round playoff opener against the Packers. And way back in 2007 under Phillips, they squandered a No. 1 seed by losing a playoff opener against the New York Giants.

That history is relevant right now, as much as McCarthy can rightfully contend that he and his current squad had nothing to do with the previous playoff setbacks. Suffer a big loss now, though, and the result would be added onto the pile of previous playoff failings – and the optics of that would not look good.

As Jones put it, we’ll see.

There’s also speculation in the Philadelphia media that Eagles coach Nick Sirianni could be in jeopardy, too, as they open the playoffs with a Monday night matchup at Tampa Bay. Say what? Sirianni nearly won the Super Bowl last season and has produced three consecutive playoff berths. But the NFL can be so fickle. Philadelphia started 10-1 before it dropped five of its past six games. Another embarrassment like the Week 18 blowout showing at the New York Giants and the questions will intensify for team owner Jeffrey Lurie, who has often maintained that he will do whatever is necessary to help him team win.

Considering the names on the market, Lurie just might be tempted.

Similarly, there have been media reports suggesting that the status of Bucs coach Todd Bowles bears watching, too. Bowles just won the NFC South crown for the second year in a row (and third straight for the franchise). It seems absurd that Bowles could be in trouble. But the available coaches fuel the buzz.

Then there’s Mike Tomlin. The Pittsburgh Steelers coach has never had a losing campaign in 17 seasons at the helm and may have done his best job yet in preventing his team from fading off the playoff map.

No, the Steelers — the NFL’s most stable franchise, with three coaches in 55 years — won’t push Tomlin out the door. In fact, with one more year on his contract, team owner Art Rooney II undoubtedly wants to sign him to an extension.

Yet buzz about Tomlin speaks to his leverage. If Sean Payton can take a year off to recharge his batteries, if Sean McVay could contemplate whether to bolt for a TV job (as was the case last year, before de decided to stay), it’s surely possible that Tomlin might explore his options before signing on for another tour of duty.

In any event, with Belichick gone, Tomlin now has the distinction as the NFL’s longest-tenured coach on his current job.

Which reminds us of another coach, back in the playoffs: Andy Reid.

The affable Kansas City Chiefs coach, 65, mindful of the surprises this week, anticipated that the question about his future would come up as he met the media on Thursday. Including his previous stint with the Eagles, Reid is in his 25th consecutive season as a head coach.

Ready to hang it up?

‘I figured that would come up when you guys were asking these questions because I’m old,’ Reid quipped. ‘But not that old.’

Then again, pass the chicken nuggies. Belichick and Carroll feel that way, too.

Stafford now public enemy No. 1 in Detroit

Matthew Stafford used to be so revered by long-suffering fans in the Motor City as the gritty Detroit Lions quarterback.

Now he’s no longer one of them. Stafford returns as the enemy. That’s some serious role-reversal fate that has the Los Angeles Rams quarterback headed back to Detroit as part of the opposition for the Lions’ first home playoff game in 30 years.

And it’s enough of a twist that a popular pub in downtown Detroit, Thomas Magee’s, won’t allow anyone wearing Stafford’s old Lions jersey inside the bar during the Sunday night opener a few blocks away at Ford Field.

There’s also a local real estate agent who has launched a jersey exchange program, offering fans to trade their Stafford jersey for one bearing the name and number of any current Lions player.

Stafford, traded to the Rams in 2021 in the blockbuster deal that sent Lions quarterback Jared Goff to Detroit, insists that he hasn’t paid attention to matters that include outlawing his jerseys. But he knows all about the passion – and suffering – after spending the first 12 years of his NFL career in Detroit.

‘I understand… I’m the bad guy,’ Stafford said. ‘I’m on the other team. They don’t want success for me. So, whatever happens, happens. I’m going to go experience it, play the game.’

Either way, Stafford and Goff are poised to make history. The winner becomes the first quarterback in league history to win a playoff game against a team that they previously started a playoff game for. 

Quick slants

The NFL will honor the legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. during wild-card weekend. In addition to announcing a five-year commitment with the King family through its ‘Realizing the Dream’ community service campaign, all players in games this weekend will wear MLK patches on their jerseys and a ‘Be Love’ phrase on the back of their helmets … With a win at Houston, Browns quarterback Joe Flacco would surpass Tom Brady for most road playoff victories by a quarterback (eight). Flacco, who has averaged 323.2 passing yards per game since coming off the couch for Cleveland, can also become the first quarterback 38 years or older to throw for 300 yards in five consecutive games, including postseason…Will McClay, the Cowboys’ vice president of personnel, has withdrawn his name as a candidate for a general manager job, citing a commitment made to his high school-aged son to stay put in Dallas. At least for now. McClay was tapped to interview for the vacant GM posts with the Carolina Panthers and Washington Commanders.

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Kalen DeBoer says Nick Saban will retain ‘100% access’ to Alabama football program, with DeBoer’s blessingNick Saban wasn’t over Kalen DeBoer’s shoulder at introductory news conference. He was right in front of him.Greg Byrne says he interviewed multiple candidates to replace Nick Saban and believes former Washington coach is right fit.

TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – Alabama hired a new football coach, OK?

His name is Kalen DeBoer, OK?

And he punctuates his sentences differently than his predecessor, OK?

Nick Saban retired, a’ight?

Saban’s “progrum” is now DeBoer’s “program.”

The torch of the nation’s most storied program officially passed Saturday. My eyes and ears told me that an inimitable coach truly did retire. When DeBoer says all right, he enunciates it as two words rather than as Saban’s trademark contraction.

A new era, indeed, but the old era isn’t being shuttled into the closet.

On my drive to the news conference at Bryant-Denny Stadium, I wondered two things: Would Saban and Miss Terry be present? (Answer: Yes.) Would Saban offer any remarks? (Answer: No.)

Makes sense. Alabama fashioned this day to present its hire, rather than salute the retiring king.

None of the six seats on the stage were reserved for Saban. That made sense, too. If Saban had been on the stage, DeBoer quite literally would have had a legend over his shoulder. That’s not the right image.

Instead, Saban took his seat in the front row, almost directly in front of DeBoer. Saban put eyes on his successor. That will continue.

Saban, 72, remains employed by Alabama athletics in an advisory role. His office shifted to Bryant-Denny Stadium. That’s less than a mile walk from DeBoer’s office in the Mal Moore Athletic Facility.

DeBoer, 49, spoke of Saban’s continuing presence as an asset. Of course, he’d say that. What else could he say? Only a stooge would block Saban’s number, and you don’t compile a 104-12 career record, like DeBoer has, by being a stooge.

Not only did DeBoer say it, I came away actually believing he wants a dose of Saban in his ear.

This situation also calls for boundaries, though. DeBoer must be the unquestioned captain of this ship.

Kalen DeBoer’s interest in Nick Saban advice ‘is genuine’

And yet, I imagine Saban’s presence will continue to loom large, at least until Alabama’s next national championship.

This situation is uncommon. Rarely does the former coach attend his successor’s introductory presser. One could easily see how this could go awry with the wrong coach occupying Saban’s old seat.

I think Alabama hired the right coach – one with enough sense to seek Saban’s input when he thinks he needs it, but who also possesses the experience and self-assurance to lead with confidence, rather than wither in a legend’s shadow that extends the length of Paul W. Bryant Drive.

Alabama athletics director Greg Byrne understood upon his 2017 arrival that his most scrutinized move would be the day when he eventually had to hire Saban’s replacement. All the while, he knew he’d want Saban’s heir to be someone who “is comfortable in their own skin,” someone who embraces being the guy to replace The Guy ‘as an opportunity, not as a detriment.”

Byrne told me that he interviewed multiple candidates for this job, without specifying the exact number. Hiring DeBoer, he said, was an easy choice. And although the DeBoer-Saban relationship remains in its infancy, Byrne feels confident in its direction.

“The interest from coach DeBoer (in using Saban as a resource) is genuine,” Byrne said.

DeBoer spoke with Saban for the first time ever on Friday. He called Saban for their second conversation on Saturday morning.

“One hundred percent access, OK? To everything,” DeBoer said of Saban’s role. “I would be a fool if that wasn’t the case. I’m going to ask that he shows up and gives me at least one thing every day. I’m sure he’s going to have 10 – and I’m going to be good with that – but at least one thing he sees that we can get better at.”

Kalen DeBoer strikes right tone in Alabama introduction

A fine line exists between useful advice and annoying side-seat driving, which can be a hindrance. It’s on DeBoer and Saban to strike the right balance.

“I feel confident enough in my abilities,” DeBoer said, “along with knowing that you have someone (in Saban) that wants this program to be so successful. I firmly, 100% believe, that he wants nothing but the best.”

Saban, wearing a crimson blazer, nodded along as DeBoer offered his prepared remarks. He clapped and smiled at the appropriate moments.

DeBoer struck the right notes. He showed genuine affection for Washington, where his 25 victories in two seasons became career jet fuel. He insisted that winning battles in the trenches will be a “staple of the program,” a vow that will resonate with the base.

And DeBoer showed the requisite respect for those who came before him, hailing Saban and Bryant as legends and leading the audience in a round of applause for Saban.

The whole thing would have looked natural, if it wasn’t so surreal.

The GOAT really did retire, a’ight? But, he’s not gone, OK? Certainly, he’s not forgotten. He’s right in front of DeBoer.

In the wrong hands, this situation could become a meddlesome mess that ends in pitfall.

With this combination, though, it might just be an asset.

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Caitlin Clark is the best scorer in women’s basketball this season. And soon, she might be the best scorer in NCAA basketball history.

Clark, known for her logo 3s, is on pace to top Kelsey Plum’s women’s scoring record (3,527), set in 2017. Perhaps more impressively, she could also top the men’s scoring record, set by Pete Maravich in 1970 (3,667 points), set back before the 3-point line existed. It would be an impressive feat for the senior All-American who led Iowa to the national championship game in April.

Clark started the 2023-24 season with 2,717 career points, and through 18 games she’s averaging 30.9 points per game. Given that she’s never averaged less than 26.6 per season, she’ll likely break Plum’s record toward the end of February (provided she stays healthy). Then again, this is a player who has a history of 40-point performances, so it could happen sooner. 

Should Clark return for a fifth year – because of COVID she has one extra season of eligibility if she wants it – she would undoubtedly shatter both records.

How many points did Caitlin Clark score in Iowa’s last game?

vs. Indiana, Jan. 13: Clark got 30 points and 11 assists to help No. 3 Iowa to a 84-57 win over Indiana, improving the Hawkeyes’ record to 17-1 overall and 6-0 in Big Ten play. 

How many career points does Caitlin Clark have?

Caitlin Clark has 3,274 career points (and counting!) after scoring 30 against Indiana.

Points shy of breaking Plum’s record: 254

Points shy of breaking Maravich’s record: 394

When does Caitlin Clark, Iowa women’s basketball play again?

Clark and the Hawkeyes will be back in action on Jan. 16, when they host Wisconsin. Tip is set for 9 p.m. ET and will be streamed on Peacock.

Caitlin Clark game-by-game points in 2023-24

Here’s a breakdown of Clark’s scoring this season for the Hawkeyes:

vs. Indiana, 1/13/2024: 30 pointsat Purdue, 1/10/2024: 26 pointsat Rutgers, 1/5/2024: 29 pointsvs. Michigan State, 1/2/2024: 40 pointsvs. Minnesota, 12/30/2023: 35 pointsvs. Loyola Chicago, 12/21/2023: 35 pointsvs. Cleveland State, 12/16/2023: 38 pointsat Wisconsin, 12/10/2023: 28 pointsvs. Iowa State, 12/6/2023: 35 pointsvs. Bowling Green, 12/2/2023: 24 pointsvs. Kansas State, 11/26/2023: 32 pointsvs. Florida Gulf Coast, 11/25/2023: 21 pointsvs. Purdue Fort Wayne, 11/24/2023: 29 pointsvs. Drake, 11/19/2023: 35 pointsvs. Kansas State, 11/16/2023: 24 pointsat UNI, 11/12/2023: 24 pointsvs. Virginia Tech, 11/9/2023: 44 pointsvs. FDU, 11/6/2023: 28 points

How many points does Caitlin Clark average per game?

Through 18 games in the 2023-24 season, Clark is averaging 30.9 points. Over her career, she’s averaged 27.7 points.

One of the most impressive parts of Clark’s game is that she’s averaged more points each season. Here’s how it breaks down:

Freshman year: 26.6 pointsSophomore year: 27.0 pointsJunior year: 27.8 pointsSenior year: 30.9 points

What is Caitlin Clark’s shooting percentage?

In a word: impressive. Clark is currently connecting on 48.2% of her shots and 39.9% from 3-point range, eye-popping when you consider the attention she demands from defenses. Her ability to score consistently from long-range is especially impressive considering that, according to ESPN, 68% of the 3s she takes are from 25 feet or deeper (the college 3-point line is 22 feet, 1.75 inches).

What is Caitlin Clark’s highest-scoring game?

Clark’s highest-scoring game came early in the 2023-24 season, when she hung 44 points on Virginia Tech, another 2023 Final Four participant. Clark shot 13-for-31 that game, including 5-for-16 from 3. She also grabbed eight rebounds and handed out six assists in the 80-76 win.

How tall is Caitlin Clark?

Clark is 6 feet tall, according to Iowa’s basketball media guide.

Is Caitlin Clark a senior?

Caitlin Clark is indeed a senior — but she has another year of eligibility left if she wants it.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY