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KawhiLeonard is expected to make his season debut for the Los Angeles Clippers in 2025.

Leonard has missed the first 31 games of the 2024-25 season, but recent comments from coach Tyronn Lue may indicate that the forward could be returning to the court soon.

Leonard averaged 23.7 points, 6.1 rebounds and 3.6 assists in 68 games last season. That was the most games he’s played in a single season since the 2016-17 season when he was with the San Antonio Spurs.

The former two-time Defensive Player of the Year signed a three-year, $153 million deal in January to remain with the Clippers.

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

Here’s the latest on when Leonard may return for the Clippers.

When will Kawhi Leonard play for the Clippers?

Leonard’s ‘target date’ is Jan. 4, The Athletics’ Law Murray reported on Friday. The Clippers will host the Atlanta Hawks at the Intuit Dome that evening.

Earlier Friday, Leonard shared a video on social media, which also doubled as a commercial for New Balance, hinting at his return to the court.

In the post, Leonard tells another version of himself ‘There’s been good days, there’s been bad days. But I keep coming back. It’s the nature of the game.”

Leonard has not played since March 31, when the Clippers defeated the Charlotte Hornets 130-118.

Has Kawhi Leonard returned to practice?

Leonard was a full-contact participant during the Clippers’ practice on Dec. 18.

“I don’t think he’s lost a step at all,”  Clippers guard Jordan Miller told reporters Thursday. “Kawhi is Kawhi.”

Leonard will not be eligible for the MVP award after missing more than 17 games, which is the maximum number of games a player can miss and be award-eligible, per the CBA. The NBA introduced the rule to discourage teams from resting healthy players excessively via ‘load management.’

While he may not be eligible for the top individual prize, he figures to be crucial in the Clippers’ push for a playoff spot.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

After suffering a brutal selloff in the week before this one, the Nifty spent the truncated week struggling to stay afloat just below the key resistance levels. With just four working days, the Nifty resisted each day to the 200-DMA and failed to close above that point. The trading range got much narrower, and the Nifty oscillated in just 291.65 points before closing with a minor gain. The volatility also cooled off as compared to the previous seek. Against the surge of 15.48%, this week saw India VIX declining by 12.17% to 13.24. Following strong consolidation, the headline index closed with a modest weekly gain of 225.90 points (+0.96%).

From a technical perspective, we are now at a very crucial juncture. On the one hand, the Nifty has closed below the 200-DMA placed at 23861. On the other hand, the Index is just above the 50-week MA at 23568. Rounding off, this puts Nifty in a very fragile range of 23860-23500. The Nifty will have to stay above the 23500 level; any violation of this level will instill prolonged weakness in the markets and push them into intermediate corrective trends. It also needs to be noted that the technical rebound would be sustained only if Nifty is able to cross and close above its 200-DMA. The longer the Nifty stays below 200-DMA, the more vulnerable it will be to testing the 50-week MA again.

Given the holiday season, no major moves are expected globally. The Indian markets are likely to start on a quiet note. The levels of 24000 and 24150 are likely to act as resistance points. The supports come in at 23600 and 23450.

The weekly RSI is 43.74; it stays neutral and does not show any divergence against the price. The weekly MACD is bearish and stays below the signal line. A Spinning Top occurred on the candles, depicting the market participants’ indecisive mindset.

The pattern analysis shows that the Nifty has retested the 50-week MA placed at 23568 again. While the Nifty has closed above this level following a modest rebound, it remains below the crucial 200-DMA. This means that so long as the Nifty is within the 23860-23500 zone, it is unlikely to adopt any sustainable directional bias. A trending move would occur only if the Nifty takes out 23860 on the upside or ends up violating 23500 levels.

Overall, it is important to observe that the markets are not totally out of the woods yet. So long as they are trading below the 200-DMA, they remain vulnerable to a retest of the 50-week MA. A violation of this level would mean a prolonged period of incremental weakness for the markets. It is recommended that all fresh buying must be kept defensive while keeping leveraged exposures at modest levels. For a rebound to sustain, it is immensely important for the markets to cross and close above 200-DMA. Until this happens, we need to approach the markets on a cautious and highly selective basis.

Sector Analysis for the coming week

In our look at Relative Rotation Graphs®, we compared various sectors against CNX500 (NIFTY 500 Index), which represents over 95% of the free float market cap of all the stocks listed.

Relative Rotation Graphs (RRG) continue to show Nifty IT, Banknifty, Services Sector, and Financial Services indices inside the leading quadrant. Although these groups are showing some slowdown in their relative momentum, they will likely continue outperforming the broader markets relatively.

The Midcap 100 index shows sharp improvement in its relative momentum while staying inside the weakening quadrant. The Nifty Pharma index is also inside this quadrant.

The Nifty PSE, Media, Infrastructure, Energy, Auto, Commodities, FMCG, and Consumption sectors are inside the lagging quadrant. They are likely to underperform the broader markets relatively.

The Nifty Metal index is inside the improving quadrant; however, it is rapidly seen giving up on its relative momentum. Besides this, the Realty and the PSU Bank indices are also inside the improving quadrant. They are expected to continue improving their relative performance against the broader markets.

Important Note: RRG™ charts show the relative strength and momentum of a group of stocks. In the above Chart, they show relative performance against NIFTY500 Index (Broader Markets) and should not be used directly as buy or sell signals.  

Milan Vaishnav, CMT, MSTA

Consulting Technical Analyst

www.EquityResearch.asia | www.ChartWizard.ae

Ohio State’s Will Howard can go from being ‘Just A Guy’ to ‘That Dude’ if he stays hot in CFP.
Ohio State vs. Oregon rematch is ‘a blessing,’ Buckeyes quarterback says.
Against Tennessee in the CFP, Will Howard looked nothing like the guy who lost to Michigan.

Some questions don’t require an answer, and we didn’t need Ohio State quarterback’s Will Howard’s words to tell us why he relished the Buckeyes’ game plan in a College Football Playoff smashing of Tennessee.

Jeremiah Smith’s targets told the story.

Howard threw to Smith, the ballyhooed freshman who became a USA TODAY All-America selection, seven times. Smith caught six of those passes, two for touchdowns.

Howard slung seven passes to Emeka Egbuka, his dependable veteran. Egbuka caught five.

On a 25-degree night, Ohio State’s quarterback supplied one of the best games of his career, torching the Volunteers and looking nothing like the guy who sputtered against Michigan.

“I was fired up about our game plan,” Howard said, “I think we did a hell of a job executing it.”

Do tell, why so fired up?

“I mean, you saw it,” Howard said, providing a dodging answer that really didn’t need elaboration.

Yeah, we saw it. We saw offensive coordinator Chip Kelly dial up an aggressive attack intent on putting the Buckeyes’ perimeter players into space and calling on Howard to let it rip, to the tune of 311 yards.

‘Will,’ Buckeyes coach Ryan Day said, ‘was excellent.’

As excellent as ever.

Is it fair to call Will Howard ‘Just A Guy?’

Ohio State’s offensive line kept Tennessee’s vaunted defensive front at bay. By the end of four quarters, Tennessee’s defensive backs were cooked, utterly outclassed by the Buckeyes’ receivers.

“I think we’ve got the three best receivers in the country, but I’m a little biased,” Howard said.

Biased, but not all that off base. Many would agree that Ohio State, collectively, features the nation’s best receiving corps.

What of its quarterback, though? Is Howard good enough for Ohio State to win a national championship?

The short answer is yes, particularly when you factor in his unmatched supporting cast of skill-position playmakers.

Examine the eight remaining quarterbacks in the playoff. If you’re selecting a quarterback to go win a national championship, Oregon’s Dillon Gabriel would come off the board first.

After that, give me Howard.

He’s no Justin Fields or C.J. Stroud, but Howard rates as an improvement over Kyle McCord, the Buckeyes’ quarterback last season.

Despite lofty stats, Howard generated limited buzz for the Heisman Trophy. He falls under the “Just A Guy” heading of quarterbacks. That label comes off a tad harsh to quarterback who’s had Howard’s season.

He ranks second nationally in completion percentage (73.2%) and fifth for touchdown passes (29). He’s third in quarterback efficiency, outranking Oregon’s Gabriel, Miami’s Cam Ward, Colorado’s Shedeur Sanders in that category, the three finalists for the Davey O’Brien Award, given to the nation’s best quarterback.

QUICK FIX: Making the College Football Playoff better is simple

HIGHS AND LOWS: Winners and losers of the playoff’s first round

‘Blessing’ for Ohio State to get rematch with Oregon

A quarterback’s lowlights are remembered as much as his highlights, depending on a game’s outcome, and that might influence perception of Howard. He threw two interceptions in Ohio State’s loss to Michigan. One set up the Wolverines at the 2-yard line for their lone touchdown. The other occurred inside the red zone and thwarted a Buckeyes scoring opportunity. Howard played at his worst in Ohio State’s biggest regular-season game.

That wasn’t the case when the Buckeyes lost to Oregon. Howard threw for a season-high 326 yards, but the play most remembered most was his moment-too-late slide at the end of a scramble, while time expired. If he had slid a couple of steps sooner, the Buckeyes would have had an attempt at a long game-winning field goal.

‘The way that last (game against Oregon) ended doesn’t sit right with me,” Howard said. “It still doesn’t. It still bugs me. And I’m just thankful for the opportunity that we get another crack at them.

“In life, you don’t get a lot of second chances. The fact that we’re getting a second chance here is a blessing.”

Howard’s execution of Ohio State’s game plan against Tennessee ensured that second chance materialized. Deliver a few more playoff victories, and Howard would alter the narrative that he’s “Just A Guy.” Win a national championship, and Howard would become ‘That Dude.’

Blake Toppmeyer is the USA TODAY Network’s national college football columnist. Email him at BToppmeyer@gannett.com and follow him on X @btoppmeyer. Subscribe to read all of his columns.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The Sacramento Kings fired head coach Mike Brown on Friday, a person with direct knowledge of the decision told USA TODAY Sports.

The person requested anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly about the move.

The Kings are 13-18 and are in 12th place in the Western Conference. They have lost five consecutive games and have won just five of their past 17 games after an 8-6 start. Kings associate head coach Jay Triano is the only member of the coaching staff with previous head coaching experience.

The Kings have not progressed the way that ownership and the front office had expected after making the playoffs with a 48-34 record in 2022-23. They were a play-in team last season, but did not make the eight-team playoff field in the Western Conference after beating Golden State but losing to New Orleans.

Brown, who previously was a head coach for Cleveland and the Los Angeles Lakers and spent six seasons as an assistant with Golden State under Steve Kerr, was 107-88 in two-plus seasons with the Kings.

All things Kings: Latest Sacramento Kings news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

Brown signed an extension with the Kings in July.

“Mike has done a tremendous job leading our team and this extension is well-deserved,” Kings general manager Monte McNair said in a statement at the time. “His commitment to success is second to none, and I look forward to building on the foundation he’s helped establish in Sacramento.”

Brown took over Sacramento in 2022 just as the Kings looked like they were headed in the right direction with De’Aaron Fox and Domantas Sabonis leading the team on the court. The Kings lost to Golden State in seven games in the 2023 playoffs, and the future looked promising.

But even a 46-36 record last season only got the Kings into ninth place in the West, illustrating how talented the West is. That’s even more true this season with teams like Memphis and Houston emerging as top teams in the West and San Antonio displaying growth with Victor Wembanyama.

The Kings lost to Detroit 114-113 at home Thursday after leading 98-83 with 8:12 left in the fourth quarter and 107-97 with 2:46 remaining in the fourth.

Sacramento, which resumes play Saturday against the Lakers, is 2½ games behind 11th-place San Antonio and three games behind Phoenix, Minnesota and Golden State, who are all 15-14.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

In a final push ahead of the impending Trump Administration, the Biden White House is set to announce an additional $1.25 billion in military assistance to Ukraine.

The large package of aid includes a significant number of munitions, including for the National Advanced Surface-to-Air Missile Systems and the HAWK air defense system. The package will also include Stinger missiles and 155 mm and 105 mm artillery rounds.

The officials are expected to make the announcement on Monday, the Associated Press reported.

The recent funding came after Biden earlier this month announced a $988 million aid package to Ukraine to ensure it ‘has the tools it needs to prevail in its fight against Russian aggression.’ 

‘This administration has made its choice. And so has a bipartisan coalition in Congress. The next administration must make its own choice,’ Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin previously said during a speech at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library in California. ‘But, from this library, from this podium, I am confident that President Reagan would have stood on the side of Ukraine, American security and human freedom.’ 

The Biden administration has been committed to giving Ukraine as much aid as possible before Trump takes office in January.

During the campaign, President-elect Trump and Vice President-elect JD Vance heavily criticized the Biden administration’s support for Ukraine after Russia’s 2022 invasion.

Trump also said he would end the war before even entering office without offering further details. Vance suggested earlier this year that the best way to end the war was for Ukraine to cede the land Russia has seized and for a demilitarized zone to be established, a proposal Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy flatly rejected. 

Since the campaign trial, Trump met with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy while at a ceremony commemorating the reopening of the Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris on Saturday after a devastating fire there in 2019. 

This latest announcement marks the administration’s 22nd aid package through the Ukraine Security Assistance Initiative. 

Earlier in December, House Speaker Mike Johnson rejected a request by the administration for Congress to authorize $24 billion in additional funding.

‘It is not the place of Joe Biden to make that decision now,’ Johnson previously said. ‘We have a newly elected president, and we’re going to wait and take the new commander in chief’s direction on all that. So, I don’t expect any Ukraine funding to come up now.’

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

NFL teams are running out of time to make a statement in the regular season.

With the penultimate week of the 2024 campaign already underway, the playoff picture has solidified, with only a few unknowns still yet to be resolved. And with more than a third of the league already eliminated from postseason contention and possibly looking ahead to 2025 as they close out disappointing runs, there’s only so much relevance to be squeezed from this weekend, which includes a Saturday tripleheader. Still, there are significant stakes for more than a few teams who have the chance to shake things up as they fight for berths or advantageous seeding.

Here are our bold predictions for NFL Week 17:

Michael Penix, Jr. will upstage Jayden Daniels

It has been quite a storybook season for Jayden Daniels, who has been the face — and arm and legs — of the Washington Commanders’ revival and is the heavy favorite to claim NFL Offensive Rookie of the Year honors. And the latest showing for the former Heisman Trophy winner, with a last-minute comeback drive capped by his fifth touchdown pass of the game to seize a stunning upset against the Philadelphia Eagles, marked just another chapter. The kid is special. Yet Penix Jr., the Atlanta Falcons rookie, is rather special, too. It’s just that Penix didn’t make his first start of the season until last Sunday. So, now that he’s knocked off some rust with the win against the New York Giants, the stage gets bigger and the spotlight more intense with a ‘Sunday Night Football’ showcase at Washington. The Falcons, needing to win their final two games to make the playoffs, benched Kirk Cousins for the strong-armed lefty drafted eighth overall. Now comes the “real” unveiling, with both teams needing to win for their playoff lives. Daniels, the OROY-in-waiting, is the house money, playing on his own turf. Penix will be the X-factor. And here’s to expecting a big night – including his first three NFL touchdown passes? – to lead the Falcons to an upset victory that marks Penix Jr.’s own storybook episode.

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

— Jarrett Bell

Michael Penix Jr. passes for over 300 yards, two touchdowns

In the first prime-time game in NFL history between rookie starting quarterbacks each selected in the first round, Penix shows off why the Falcons selected him No. 8 overall.

Penix has his first 300 passing yards game and throws for two touchdowns in a Falcons upset win over the Commanders.

The box score didn’t do Penix justice in his first career start last week. The one interception he threw was a straight-up drop by Kyle Pitts. Penix had command of the Falcons offense, was accurate throwing the football, he’s more athletic and has a stronger arm than his predecessor. I believe he’ll continue his positive trajectory in the nation’s capital in a game the Falcons need to win to keep their tiebreaker advantage over the Bucs, who come into Week 17 with the same record.

— Tyler Dragon

Bengals get a few breaks for playoff push … except

… their own victory. It’s been that type of season for Cincinnati.

Here’s what that means: the Denver Broncos beat the Bengals on Saturday afternoon and clinch a wild-card spot, the Indianapolis Colts lose to the New York Giants and the Miami Dolphins lose to the Cleveland Browns.

In this scenario, Cincinnati can still play spoiler to the Pittsburgh Steelers in Week 18 to deny them a division title. It would also be incredibly boring for the NFL, essentially locking the AFC playoff picture in with a week left in the season (outside of seeding arrangements and the AFC North battle).

If the Bengals made the playoffs as the No. 7 seed and traveled to Buffalo to face the Bills, it would be the best 2-7 matchup since the league expanded the postseason.

An essential step for the Bengals to make the playoffs would include Indianapolis and Miami losing at least one of their final two games. No matter how unlikely all of this is, how cruel would it be for those losses to come the same weekend Cincinnati blew the one outcome it controlled? The kind of cruel that this entire season has been for the Bengals, the kind that keeps Joe Burrow at home during the playoffs despite his MVP-caliber season.

Denver would also have to lose to the Kansas City Chiefs in Week 18 (with the Chiefs likely resting their starters), while the Bengals need a win over the Steelers, for Cincinnati to pull off a postseason miracle. But that means everything in Week 17 has to go right first. For the Bengals, it will – aside from their own game, of course.

— Chris Bumbaca

Panthers play spoiler again, deal potentially mortal blow to Buccaneers’ playoff hopes

I couldn’t quite bring myself to make this pick earlier in the week when we first had to make the call, but let’s go for it now. Despite standing at 4-11, the Panthers have exhibited remarkable resiliency since their Week 12 bye. That tenacity finally paid off last week, when Carolina eliminated the Arizona Cardinals from the playoff chase with a 36-30 overtime triumph. Now, they’ll again be looking to play the role of spoiler against the division-rival Buccaneers, who needed a fourth-quarter rally – including a 51-yard field goal as time expired – to set up a 26-23 win in overtime just four weeks ago. Tampa Bay this past week lost versatile defensive back Christian Izien for the season to a pectoral injury, and safety Antoine Winfield Jr. and cornerback Jamel Dean are also ailing. That could provide enough of a window for Bryce Young to continue his late-season upswing and do the Atlanta Falcons a solid by pulling off the upset.

— Michael Middlehurst-Schwartz

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The race to Super Bowl 59 is approaching. Twelve of the 14 teams to make the postseason will begin their playoff journeys in mere weeks.

The wild-card round of the 2024-25 NFL playoffs are set to kick off just one week after the regular season concludes in Week 18. Every team besides the No. 1 seed in each conference will play during the first weekend of postseason action for a chance to move on to the divisional round.

Entering the Saturday of Week 17, only the Kansas City Chiefs have clinched the top seed and a first-round bye so far, leaving the schedule for the NFC’s top contenders still up in the air.

Here’s what to know about the 2024-25 NFL playoffs, including their start date and format:

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

When do the NFL playoffs start?

The first round of the NFL playoffs is its wild-card round, which will take place from Jan. 11-13.

Seeds Nos. 2 through 7 in both conferences will face off in one of the six total matchups over the three-day opening round. This year’s playoffs will kick off with two games on Saturday, Jan. 11, continue with three more on Sunday, Jan. 12 and conclude with one game on Monday, Jan. 13.

The second round of the playoffs, the divisional round, will take place one week later over two days – Saturday, Jan. 18 and Sunday, Jan. 19 – and feature all eight remaining playoff teams. Conference championships take place the following Sunday, and the winners of each will get a week off before Super Bowl 59 on Feb. 9.

NFL postseason format, explained

The NFL’s playoff bracket is dynamic, meaning teams are not locked into a bracket with predetermined future matchups once their seeding is decided.

In the first round, the No. 1 seed from each conference receives a bye into the division round as the remaining teams – seeds Nos. 2-7 – play for a chance to move on.

Following the opening wild-card round, each No. 1 seed is matched against the lowest remaining conference seed in the divisional round. Meanwhile, the second-highest remaining seed gets a matchup with the second-lowest.

This format ultimately guarantees that the No. 2 and No. 3 seeds won’t play the No. 1 seed until the conference championship at the earliest – either they’re eliminated in the wild-card round, or they play each other or a lower-seeded team in the divisional round, pending upsets.

The two divisional round clashes determine who plays in their respective conference championships, both of which take place on the same day. This year, that’s Sunday, Jan. 26.

This year’s two conference championship winners will then get a week off before they head to New Orleans to play in Super Bowl 59 on Sunday, Feb. 9.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

SAN ANTONIO − Heisman Trophy winner Travis Hunter has suffered several injury scares during his college career, including a lacerated liver that kept him out of three games in 2023 and a shoulder injury that knocked him out of a game in October.  

But he isn’t too worried about getting hurt in his final college game Saturday in the Alamo Bowl against BYU. Unlike all the other top NFL prospects who are skipping bowl games to avoid the injury risk, Colorado’s two-way football star has thrown caution to the wind. He soared through the air and put on a dunk show before a recent Colorado basketball game and now he’s expected to play nearly every play Saturday on offense and defense.

“I’m thankful for being able to play another game,” Hunter said recently on his podcast. “I don’t think I could have went a whole ‘nother month without playing football.”

It helps that Colorado has paid the premium on insurance policies to cover him and others in case they’re injured in the Alamo Bowl. Yet history shows the many ways those policies can fall short when millions of dollars are at stake. Hunter’s decision also adds fuel to the debate about whether an NFL team should allow him to play both ways like he wants to, since that also adds to the injury risk for this unique freak of an athlete.  

“Is it really worth the risk of being permanently disabled and never achieving your dream of playing in the NFL, or playing in a Super Bowl, or signing several lucrative NFL contracts amounting to generational wealth, just to play in the 2024 Alamo Bowl on Saturday?” said Richard Giller, a renowned sports insurance recovery attorney in Los Angeles.

Giller said in an email that “there is absolutely NO reason that Hunter should ever play in what amounts to a meaningless, non-(playoff) bowl game, and risk his financial future to do so.”

The Willis McGahee case

As a projected top-10 NFL draft pick, Hunter stands to sign a multi-year contract for around $20 million-$40 million. The same goes for Colorado quarterback Shedeur Sanders, who also is playing in the bowl game instead of opting out. On Thursday, Sanders was asked why he’s risking it to participate.

He noted he could have turned pro after last season if he was concerned about an injury in college hurting his future earnings potential.

“We may not get to ever have a chance to play again together on the same team,” he said. “So it’s about cherishing the moment. It’s about knowing this is the final collegiate game. And each and every game we left it all out there. So there’s no regret. I don’t never want to go anywhere with regret.”

There still are enough cautionary tales to make them consider whether one last college game is worth it before the NFL draft in April. In 2003, University of Miami running back Willis McGahee also was projected to be a top draft pick before he severely injured his left knee in the 2003 Fiesta Bowl against Ohio State. He slipped to the 23rd pick in the draft and got a $7 million contract for five years, plus incentives.

Notre Dame linebacker Jaylon Smith also fell in the draft after injuring his knee in the 2016 Fiesta Bowl. So did Michigan tight end Jake Butt, who injured his own knee in the Orange Bowl later that same year.

All had insurance policies. But none really came close to covering the gap of what they really lost because of bowl game injuries, according to reports. In Butt’s case, he was due to collect $543,000 from his insurance but fell so far in the draft that he ultimately lost $2.8 million because of the injury, according to ESPN. In McGahee’s case, he took out a $2.5 million policy shortly before the bowl game but only could collect on it if he never played football again. He returned to play in 2004 and played 10 seasons in the NFL.

Fighting for insurance payouts

It all depends on what kind of policy the players have, if it’s more than just disability coverage and what the language of the insurance contract states.

Colorado declined to provide additional details about the insurance policies purchased for Hunter and Sanders but described it as disability insurance. There aren’t many publicly confirmed cases where insurers for these types of policies have paid out to college athletes, said Josh Lens, an associate professor at Iowa who has researched insurance coverage for college athletes.

“For permanent total disability policies, for example, a lack of publicly confirmed payouts can largely be attributed to the policy language, which typically requires an injury or illness that prevents the athlete from participating in their sport,” Lens said.

It also can turn into a battle when injuries happen and players file claims to collect on the insurance. Giller said he’s helped dozens of professional athletes with various types of disability insurance policies in which their claims were initially denied.

“I have recovered payouts in every case, but in my experience, the higher the loss (and $20 million would be a large loss), the more likely it is that the insurance company would try to find a way not to pay out under the policy,” Giller said in an email.

Travis Hunter’s other risk concerns

Hunter is unique in that he plays nearly every play as a cornerback and receiver and participated in 1,443 snaps this season. More plays mean more injury risk. Which is why NFL teams might be wary of letting him play both ways. They don’t want to jeopardize their big financial investment in him if another top player can fill in at receiver, for example, allowing Hunter to rest and focus on one position instead.

Giller also notes Hunter’s size of just 185 pounds.

“Very few NFL players have ever played both ways and it is highly doubtful, given Hunter’s size, that an NFL team would allow him to play both ways,” said Giller of the firm Greenspoon Marder. “The dollars being invested in first-round draft picks are just too high these days to take a risk.”

Yet there is insurance for that, too.  He said NFL teams can purchase a temporary total disability policy to cover the possible financial losses associated with the guaranteed portion of players’ contracts.

The counterargument

Hunter didn’t become the great football player he is by worrying about all the risks lurking around every corner and holding himself back. If future financial risk is the paramount concern, why even play in final regular-season games when your team is out of contention for a championship?

At some point, all the risk mitigation can limit the player’s potential, in addition to damaging the entertainment product as it has for many non-playoff bowl games.

Both players also take cues from their coach, Deion Sanders, who wanted both to play in this game even though he’s a strong advocate of players maximizing their financial futures.

“Our kids are gonna play in our bowl game, because that’s what we signed up to do and we’re gonna finish,” Deion Sanders said last month. “We’re not gonna tap out, because that throws off the structure of next season. There’s a couple (teams), you take note, they lay an egg in the bowl game and they haven’t recovered since. We don’t plan on doing that.”

Kickoff at the Alamodome in San Antonio is set for 7:30 p.m. ET on ABC.

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

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Russia is willing to work with President-elect Trump to help improve relations with Ukraine so long as the U.S. makes the first move, Kremlin officials said this week, adding fresh momentum for the possibility of peace talks as its war in Ukraine threatens to stretch into a third year. 

Speaking to reporters Thursday in Moscow, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov reiterated that Russia could be ready to come to the negotiating table regarding its ‘special military operation’ in Ukraine — echoing the phrasing used by the Kremlin to describe its war in Ukraine — so long as the U.S. acted first. 

‘If the signals that are coming from the new team in Washington to restore the dialogue that Washington interrupted after the start of a special military operation [the war in Ukraine] are serious, of course, we will respond to them,’ Lavrov said in Moscow.

But he stressed that the U.S. should move first, telling reporters that ‘the Americans broke the dialogue, so they should make the first move.’

His remarks come after Trump’s pick for Ukraine envoy, retired Lieutenant-General Keith Kellogg, told Fox News in an interview this month that both Russia and Ukraine appear to be willing to negotiate an end to the war — citing heavy casualties, damage to critical infrastructure, and a general sense of exhaustion that has permeated both countries as the war drags well past the thousand-day mark.

‘I think both sides are ready,’ Kellogg said in the interview. ‘After a thousand days of war, with 350,000, 400,000 Russian [soldiers] down, and 150,000 Ukrainian dead, or numbers like that — both sides are saying, ‘okay, maybe this is the time, and we need to step back.’’

To date, Russia has lost tens of thousands of soldiers in the war. As of this fall, an average of 1,200 soldiers were killed or injured per day, according to U.S. estimates. 

In Ukraine, the country’s energy infrastructure has seen extreme damage as the result of a protracted Russian bombing campaign, designed to collapse portions of the power grid, plunge the country into darkness, and ultimately, wear down the resolve of the Ukrainian people.

Most recently, Russia launched a Christmas Day bombardment against Ukraine’s power grid, directing some 70 cruise and ballistic missiles and 100 strike drones to hit critical energy infrastructure in the country. 

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said the Christmas Day timing was a ‘deliberate’ choice by Putin. ‘What could be more inhuman?’ he said in a statement. 

Meanwhile, Ukraine’s military has lost around 40% of the land it seized in Russia’s Kursk region — a loss that could further erode morale. 

Lavrov’s remarks also come as Kellogg prepares to travel to Ukraine in January for what he described to Fox News as an information-gathering trip. 

He declined to elaborate further on what he will aim to accomplish during the visit, saying only that he believes both countries are ready to end the protracted war — and that incoming President Trump could serve as the ‘referee.’

‘Think of a cage fight. You’ve got two fighters, and both want to tap out. You need a referee to kind of separate them.’

Meanwhile, Russian President Vladimir Putin said Thursday that he is open to having the peace talks in the third country of Slovakia, citing an offer made by the country’s prime minister during a visit to the Kremlin earlier this week. 

It is unclear whether Ukraine would be willing to have the talks held in Slovakia, a country whose leaders have been vehemently opposed to sending more EU military aid to Ukraine. 

Ukraine did not immediately respond to Fox News’s request for comment on the peace talks, or whether it would be open to Slovakia’s offer to host. 

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In this video, Mary Ellen highlights whether to buy last week’s pullback. She discusses the rise in interest rates and why, as well as which areas are being most impacted. Last up, she reviews potential winners with new Trump policy, how to spot a downtrend reversal, and the signals that you should use to exit a stock.

This video originally premiered December 27, 2024. You can watch it on our dedicated page for Mary Ellen on StockCharts TV.

New videos from Mary Ellen premiere weekly on Fridays. You can view all previously recorded episodes at this link.

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