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Sen. John Fetterman, D-Pa., said he would vote to confirm his former political opponent Dr. Mehmet Oz to serve as Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) administrator if Oz plans to protect the government programs. 

‘If Dr. Oz is about protecting and preserving Medicare and Medicaid, I’m voting for the dude,’ Fetterman tweeted.

Fetterman defeated Oz, a Republican, in Pennsylvania’s 2022 U.S. Senate race.

‘Our politics are obviously different, and we do have a history, but I don’t have any bitterness. I don’t hold anything against him,’ Fetterman said, according to CNN’s Manu Raju. 

President-elect Donald Trump announced Oz as his pick to head the CMS, which falls under the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).

‘America is facing a Healthcare Crisis, and there may be no Physician more qualified and capable than Dr. Oz to Make America Healthy Again,’ Trump said in a statement. ‘Dr. Oz will work closely with Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to take on the illness industrial complex, and all the horrible chronic diseases left in its wake.’ 

Kennedy, who Trump nominated to helm HHS, hailed the president-elect’s decision to tap Oz to serve as CMS administrator.

‘Very excited that my friend @DrOz has agreed to run CMS. Thank you ​@realDonaldTrump for this outstanding nomination. Welcome Dr​. Oz to ​The Avengers. ​Let’s Make America Healthy Again!’ Kennedy tweeted.

Oz said in a post on X that he is ‘honored’ by Trump’s nomination. 

‘I look forward to serving my country to Make America Healthy Again under the leadership of HHS Secretary @RobertKennedyJr,’ he noted.

Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., congratulated Oz, calling him an ‘excellent fit’ for the job.

‘His medical background as a cardiothoracic surgeon and public health advocate makes him an excellent fit for this position,’ Paul said in a tweet.

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President Biden ignored a reporter’s pleas to speak to the press as she screamed questions at him while he boarded Air Force One to depart from Rio de Janeiro.

On Tuesday, Biden finished up his trip to Brazil, where he attended the G-20 summit and met with world leaders, including Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum. 

Video shows that as Biden prepared to board Air Force One, an unidentified reporter tried to grab his attention. She can be heard yelling at the top of her lungs to break through the noise created by Biden’s Boeing 747 plane. It is not clear if Biden chose not to answer her or if he could not hear her questions over the roar from the plane’s engines. 

‘Mr. President, happy early birthday! For your birthday, will you talk to us, sir?’ the reporter said, her voice growing louder with each attempt to ask questions.

‘As a gift to the press will you please talk to us? Mr. President! President Biden, please! We haven’t heard from you all trip!’ 

Her voice sounded almost hoarse with the final cry of, ‘MR. PRESIDENT!’ 

Biden turns 82 on Wednesday and will finish office as the oldest person to serve as president in American history – until President-elect Trump, 78, assumes office in January and serves for four more years.  

Many news outlets have called out Biden for his habit of ignoring reporters’ questions and lack of direct interviews with the media. 

‘For anyone who understands the role of the free press in a democracy, it should be troubling that President Biden has so actively and effectively avoided questions from independent journalists during his term,’ The New York Times said in a public statement in April. ‘The president occupies the most important office in our nation, and the press plays a vital role in providing insights into his thinking and worldview, allowing the public to assess his record and hold him to account.’

The statement went on to say that while Biden may be within his rights to avoid the New York Times in particular, he needs to speak with major news outlets on principle. 

‘However, in meetings with Vice President Harris and other administration officials, the publisher of The Times focused instead on a higher principle: That systematically avoiding interviews and questions from major news organizations doesn’t just undermine an important norm, it also establishes a dangerous precedent that future presidents can use to avoid scrutiny and accountability.’

Fox News Digital’s Alexander Hall contributed to this report.

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The first lady of Brazil turned heads when she dropped an f-bomb directed at Tesla CEO Elon Musk during an official event over the weekend.

At the time, Brazil’s first lady, Janja Lula da Silva, was speaking about misinformation on social media during a pre-G-20 social event on Saturday. The G-20 summit began on Monday in Rio de Janeiro.

Lula da Silva, who is married to Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, stopped mid-speech when she heard a ship’s horn blaring in the distance.

‘I think it’s Elon Musk,’ the first lady joked in Portuguese. ‘I’m not afraid of you, by the way.’

‘F— you, Elon Musk,’ Janja added in English, prompting cheers from the audience.

The clip, which was posted on X, drew the attention of Musk, who responded with laughing emojis.

‘They will lose the next election,’ the entrepreneur wrote.

Brazil banned X in September, prompting outrage across the world. Brazilian Supreme Court’s Justice Alexandre de Moraes imposed the ban, citing misinformation on X, which the judge felt was not adequately moderated on the platform.

The country lifted the ban a month later, and de Moraes wrote that the decision ‘was conditioned, solely, on [X’s] full compliance with Brazilian laws and absolute observance of the Judiciary’s decisions, out of respect for national sovereignty.’

‘X is proud to return to Brazil,’ X said in a statement at the time. ‘Giving tens of millions of Brazilians access to our indispensable platform was paramount throughout this entire process. We will continue to defend freedom of speech, within the boundaries of the law, everywhere we operate.’

The Brazilian first lady’s joke took place two days before the G-20 summit officially began. President Biden was present at the summit, though he did not appear during the annual family photo with fellow world leaders and missed the photo-op ‘for logistical reasons,’ the White House said.

Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Walmart raised its forecast on Tuesday, as its customers bought more discretionary merchandise, ordered more deliveries to their homes and started their holiday shopping.

The discounter now expects net sales will grow between 4.8% and 5.1% for the full year. That compares with its previous forecast for between 3.75% and 4.75% sales growth for the period. The updated outlook came as Walmart posted third-quarter earnings and revenue that beat expectations. 

In a CNBC interview, Chief Financial Officer John David Rainey said sales of general merchandise — outside of the grocery department — grew year over year for the second quarter in a row after declines for 11 straight quarters. Still, he said consumers are waiting to make those purchases until they see a compelling deal, especially as they pay more for food.

“We’re expecting this holiday period to be very consistent with that,” he said. “They’re focused on price and value.”

Here is what the big-box retailer reported for the period compared with Wall Street’s estimates, according to a survey of analysts by LSEG:

Walmart shares climbed about 3% in early trading, hitting both a 52-week high and an all-time intraday high since it began trading on the New York Stock Exchange in Aug. 1972.

In the three-month period that ended Oct. 31, Walmart’s net income increased to $4.58 billion, or 57 cents per share, compared with $453 million, or 6 cents per share, in the year-ago period. Revenue rose from $160.80 billion in the year-ago quarter. 

Comparable sales, an industry metric also known as same-store sales, jumped 5.3% for Walmart and 7% at Sam’s Club, excluding fuel.

Customers visited Walmart’s stores and website in the U.S. more and tended to spend more when they did compared with the year-ago quarter. Walmart U.S. transactions rose 3.1%, and average ticket increased by 2.1% year over year. 

E-commerce sales rose 22% in the U.S., with gains coming from curbside pickup and home delivery, along with growth in Walmart’s advertising and third-party marketplace businesses.

Walmart shoppers have also been willing to pay more to get their purchases faster, Rainey said. For the past two quarters, 30% of customer orders in the U.S. have come with an extra fee to get delivery within a shorter time frame, like within one hour or within three hours.

He said Walmart’s e-commerce business is “getting very close to profitability because we’re able to use some of the cost of delivery with these incremental fees that customers are willing to pay for convenience.”

Walmart, the nation’s largest retailer, delivered its latest sales results and read on U.S. consumers as investors gauge sentiment and weigh the outlook for the most crucial shopping season of the year.

Retailers, including Walmart, are contending with a mixed bag of factors this holiday season. Inflation has moderated, with gas prices declining and grocery inflation remaining low year over year. Fears of a dragged-out process to determine the winner of the U.S. presidential race never materialized.

Yet President-elect Donald Trump’s proposal for tariffs on imports from China and other countries has fueled fresh concerns about prices rising again. The holiday season is also shorter this year and parts of the U.S. have had unseasonably warm weather, two dynamics that could hurt retailers.

Rainey said tariffs could force Walmart to increase prices, but said it’s too soon to say what merchandise may get more expensive. 

“We never want to raise prices,” he said. “Our model is everyday low prices. But there probably will be cases where prices will go up for consumers.”

He said about two-thirds of the items that Walmart sells are made, grown or assembled in the U.S., which reduces the tariff risk for those goods. And he added that Walmart, like other retailers, has been trying to diversify where it imports goods. 

“We’ve been living under a tariff environment for seven years, so we’re pretty familiar with that,” he said. “Tariffs, though, are inflationary for customers, so we want to work with suppliers and with our own private-brand assortment to try to bring down prices.”

Holiday spending is expected to increase this year, but at a modest rate. The National Retail Federation, a retail trade group, said it expects holiday spending in November and December to increase 2.5% to 3.5% compared with 2023, to a range between $979.5 billion and $989 billion. That would be lower than the 3.9% year-over-year jump from the 2022 to 2023 holiday season, when spending totaled $955.6 billion.

Rainey said the holiday period is “off to a pretty good start.” 

He said items like TVs, Apple AirPods, Beats headphones and even tires have been selling. On the other hand, clothing and other weather-dependent purchases like space heaters have been slower because of unseasonably warm weather in parts of the country.

Some of the general merchandise gains indicate that consumers are feeling relief from inflation, but some also have to do with Walmart’s strategy, he said. The company has deepened its assortment of toys, home goods and more through its third-party marketplace. 

As of Monday’s close, Walmart shares are up nearly 60% this year, more than the S&P 500′s approximately 24% gains during the same period. Walmart’s stock closed Monday at $84.08, bringing the company’s market value to $675.86 billion.

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Boston’s Jayson Tatum had the mismatch on Cleveland’s Georges Niang. The Cavaliers had erased the Celtics’ 21-point lead and trailed by just two points as the third quarter dwindled to its end.

Tatum drove hard to his left and put on the brakes. Niang tried to absorb contact in hope of getting a referee to call an offensive foul on Tatum. He failed, flailing and falling. Tatum took the 3-pointer and gave the Celtics a five-point lead headed into the fourth quarter.

The Celtics defeated the Cavaliers, 120-117, on Tuesday, giving Cleveland its first loss of the season and ending its 15-game winning streak, which matched the second-best start to a season in NBA history.

That Tatum 3 was one of six he made and part of a 33-point, 12-rebound, seven-assist, two-steal effort from the Celtics’ star.

Given Cleveland’s start and Boston’s role as defending champion and favorite to win the Eastern Conference again, it was a big regular-season game, and add in that it was an NBA Cup matchup – and a possible East playoff matchup – fans and media paid attention.

A truth emerged: If Tatum continues to play at an MVP level and if the Celtics continue to use the 3-ball so effectively and if they’re defense can stay in the top 10, they’re going to be tough to be beat in a seven-game series in April, May and June.

Boston made 22-of-41 3-pointers – the fifth time it has made 20 or more 3s this season and the third consecutive game with at least 20 3s – and hit 14 in the first half.

The Celtics relied on the 3 last season and clobbered opponents, including Dallas in the Finals, with their ability to connect from deep.

They are even more reliant on the 3 this season. They lead the league in 3s made (19.1 per game) and 3s attempted (50.5 per game) and are on pace to set single-season records in both categories. They are also No. 7 in 3-point percentage (37.9%).

Boston has rendered live and die by the 3 meaningless because it has so many players who can make 3s. Six players made at least two 3s against the Cavaliers: Tatum, Jaylen Brown, Al Horford, Derrick White, Jrue Holiday and Payton Pritchard. Sam Hauser and Kristaps Porzingis, who is rehabbing and injury and due to return later this season, are capable of making two more in a game.

Even if one or two players are off, they have enough shotmakers to compensate. The Celtics spread the floor and have capable finishers at the rim. They put immense pressure on opponents.

Much of that pressure begins with Tatum, who has been All-NBA first-team the past three seasons and is part of the early season MVP conversation at 29.9 points, 8.1 rebounds, 5.9 assists and 1.4 steals per game and 46.4% shooting from the field and 39.4% on 3s.

He made 11-of-22 shots against Cleveland and became the first Celtics player to record at least 30 points, 12 rebounds, seven assists, two steals and six made 3s, according to basketball-reference.com.

Tatum is coming off the strange Paris Olympics experience where he didn’t play in a group stage game or in the semifinal game against Serbia, and struggled with his jump shot. He has been reluctant to say what, if any, extra motivation that experience has provided him. Regardless, his game is as good as ever and possibly better.

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They’ll deny it. You bet your Golden Flakes, they will.

But when Saturday arrives and the first of the final three college football regular season weekends begins, officials in the big, bad SEC will have one of many monitors in the war room of the league offices turned to what’s unfolding in Columbus, Ohio.

Because if No. 2 Ohio State blows out unbeaten underdog and No. 5 Indiana, the odds of the SEC landing five teams in the first 12-team College Football Playoff dramatically increase. And if the Hoosiers win or keep it close?

Well then, Birmingham, we have a problem.

There are six CFP-worthy SEC teams, and unless Penn State stumbles against Minnesota or Maryland or Indiana gets blown out by Ohio State, four SEC teams will make the CFP field. It’s bad enough that the CFP selection committee virtually ignores strength of conference/schedule and has Penn State and Indiana – with a combined one win vs. teams in the College Football Playoff rankings (Illinois magically arrived in the poll at No. 25 this week) – ranked in the top five.

It’s worse that the committee has shown a clear preference to No. 3 Texas ― which has played one of the other five CFP-worthy SEC teams, and lost by 15 at home to Georgia. Alabama beat Georgia, which beat Tennessee, which beat Alabama. And Ole Miss beat Georgia, which beat Texas ― which hasn’t beaten anyone.

Get it?

Meanwhile, there’s the 13-member selection committee – which includes six athletic directors and four former coaches – valuing one-loss teams (and unbeaten Indiana) above all else. Difficulty of schedule be damned.

Indiana, the CFP darling, has the worst strength of schedule of any Power Four team.

‘We watch games and we see how teams are playing, and so we assess their body of work,’ said selection committee chairman and Michigan athletic director Warde Manuel, who all but admitted eye test is everything. ‘Watching the teams, watching the games, carries the day for most of us.’

BOWL PROJECTIONS: Alabama, Colorado make major moves in playoff

A look at three undervalued and overvalued teams in this week’s CFP poll.

Overvalued

No. 4 Penn State

Best win: No. 25 Illinois.

Worst loss: No. 2 Ohio State.

This week: at Minnesota.

Eye test: Wins over two Power Four teams with winning records (Illinois, Washington), a near loss at struggling Southern California, and a whole lot of nothing else. The four plays from the three against Ohio State with the game on the line should be emblazoned on the minds of the committee.

No. 6 Notre Dame

Best win: No.15 Texas A&M.

Worst loss: Northern Illinois.

This week: No. 19 Army (at Yankee Stadium).

Eye test: If you’re in the top six of the playoff rankings with three weeks to play, there should be a strong likelihood that you could absorb a loss and still make the 12-team field. But If Notre Dame loses to Army or at USC, it will fall all the way out of the top 12. Notre Dame – with an ACC-heavy schedule and two games against service academies and two games against MAC schools – is No. 6 on the strength of beating No.15 Texas A&M.

No. 8 Miami

Best win: Louisville.

Worst loss: Georgia Tech.

This week: vs. Wake Forest

Eye test: This is a joke, right? If you think Indiana and Penn State aren’t CFP-worthy, where does that leave the Hurricanes? The schedule is Indiana-bad, and Miami needed four second-half comebacks against noted heavyweights Virginia Tech, California, Louisville and Duke. Imagine Miami’s resume compared to any of the six SEC teams. Hideous.

Undervalued

No. 9 Mississippi

Best win: No. 10 Georgia.

Worst loss: Kentucky.

This week: at Florida.

Eye test: Who wants to play this team right now? Ole Miss is fourth in the nation in scoring offense (40.7 ppg.), and fifth in scoring defense (12.9 ppg.) ― and the only team in the nation in the top five of both scoring offense and defense. The Rebels lead the nation in sacks (46), and are No. 3 in long scrimmage plays on offense (190).

No. 10 Georgia

Best win: No. 3 Texas.

Worst loss: No. 9 Ole Miss.

This week: vs. Massachusetts

Eye test: Georgia’s ‘worst’ loss is to the hottest team in the nation. Georgia’s second loss is to No. 7 Alabama, and the Bulldogs have wins against No. 3 Texas, No. 11 Tennessee and No. 17 Clemson. Yeah, I’m sure the Penn State/Indiana/Miami resumes stack up to that. Hey, committee members: stop obsessing on one-loss and unbeaten teams with soft schedules, and start focusing on teams with losses against significantly better competition ― and big wins.

No. 12 Boise State

Best win: No. 24 UNLV.

Worst loss: No. 1 Oregon.

This week: at Wyoming.

Eye test: I’m going to write this until someone, anyone, on that selection committee wakes up: No. 1 Oregon needed a punt return for a touchdown, a kick return for a touchdown and a last-second field goal to beat Boise State.

Matt Hayes is the senior national college football writer for USA TODAY Sports Network. Follow him on X at @MattHayesCFB.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

UConn women’s basketball had the event planned months ago, well before Wednesday’s game against Farleigh Dickinson officially became coach Geno Auriemma’s first chance to surpass all the college basketball coaches before him.

The school announced in September it would celebrate the program’s 40 years under Auriemma and associate head coach Chris Dailey during the FDU game. More than 60 former Huskies players were already expected back in Storrs, Connecticut, perhaps confident their Hall of Fame coach would make history in front of them with another talented roster led by potential 2025 No. 1 WNBA draft pick Paige Bueckers. The UConn Dairy Bar even released new flavors in honor of Auriemma and Dailey.

Auriemma, 70, sits just one win away from breaking college basketball’s all-time wins record, a mark made possible by a decades-long run of dominance at UConn that produced some of the sport’s defining stars and helped fuel the rise in popularity of women’s basketball. He tied former Stanford women’s basketball coach Tara VanDerveer, who retired after last season, with 1,216 career wins when No. 2 UConn improved to 3-0 by beating No. 15 North Carolina last Friday.

Mike Krzyzewski, who retired in 2022, holds the record in men’s basketball after winning 1,202 games at Army and Duke.

This is just the second time UConn and FDU have played in women’s basketball. The Huskies, in their 74-28 win on Nov. 25, 2011, held FDU to five first-half points. The Knights are 4-1 this season with a 77-56 loss to Syracuse in their most recent game.

Here’s more information on how to watch Auriemma as he goes for college basketball’s all-time wins record when No. 2 UConn plays FDU on Wednesday, as well as more background on Auriemma’s history-making accomplishments:

UConn vs. FDU: Time, TV for Geno Auriemma all-time wins record

The UConn women’s basketball game vs. FDU is scheduled to tip off at 7 p.m. ET. It will be broadcast regionally on SNY and the UConn Sports Network.

Date: Wednesday, Nov. 20
Time: 7 p.m. ET
Location: Gampel Pavilion (Storrs, Connecticut)
TV: SNY (regional)

How to stream UConn vs. FDU

The UConn vs. FDU game will be available to stream through SNY to in-market (Connecticut, New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania) authenticated subscribers via the SNY app. Out-of-market fans who have FOX as part of their television package can stream the game through Foxsports.com or the FOX Sports app.

Watch live college basketball games with Fubo

NCAA basketball coaches all-time wins list

Here’s the current all-time wins list for Div. I men’s and women’s basketball coaches ahead of UConn’s game against FDU on Wednesday, Nov. 20.

Geno Auriemma: 1,216 wins (UConn women)
Tara VanDerveer: 1,216 wins (Stanford, Ohio State, Idaho women)
Mike Krzyzewski: 1,202 wins (Duke, Army men)
Pat Summitt: 1,098 wins (Tennessee women)
C. Vivian Stringer: 1,058 wins (Rutgers, Iowa, Cheyney women)
Sylvia Hatchell: 1,023 wins (North Carolina women)
Jim Boeheim: 1,015 wins (Syracuse men)*
Muffet McGraw: 936 wins (Notre Dame, Lehigh women)
Bob Huggins: 935 wins (Cincinnati, West Virginia, Kansas State, Akron men)
Jim Calhoun: 920 wins (UConn, Northeastern men)

*Does not include 101 vacated wins for NCAA violations

How old is Geno Auriemma?

Auriemma is 70 years old and will turn 71 on March 23, which also coincides with the first weekend of the 2025 NCAA women’s basketball tournament this season.

Geno Auriemma salary

UConn signed Auriemma to a contract extension last June that made him the highest-paid women’s basketball coach in the country at $3.34 million for the 2024-25 season. The five-year extension, which runs through the 2028-29 season, was worth at least $18.7 million, according to the university, and the value of the deal could increase based on performance incentives.

Under Auriemma, the Huskies have reached 23 Final Fours and won 11 national championships — completing six perfect seasons. The Huskies have advanced to at least the Sweet 16 every year since 1994, when the women’s NCAA Tournament expanded to 64 teams. Auriemma has been named Naismith National Coach of the Year eight times and AP National Coach of the Year nine times. He was inducted to both the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame and the Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame in 2006.

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Major League Baseball announced its Manager of the Year winners Tuesday, with Stephen Vogt of the Cleveland Guardians and Pat Murphy of the Milwaukee Brewers taking home the awards, as voted on by the Baseball Writers’ Association of America.

Vogt received 27 of 30 first-place votes, beating out American League finalists – and AL Central rivals – Matt Quatraro and A.J. Hinch. The first-year manager led Cleveland to a division title and a run to the American League Championship Series.

Murphy also won 27 of 30 first-place votes, finishing ahead of finalists Mike Shildt (San Diego Padres) and Carlos Mendoza (New York Mets). In his first year as a full-time skipper, Murphy led an injury-ravaged Milwaukee team to the NL Central title.

Here’s what to know about the 2024 Manager of the Year award winners:

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Manager of the Year voting results 2024

(voting on 5-3-1 basis)

American League

Stephen Vogt, Guardians (27 first-place votes): 142
Matt Quatraro, Royals (3 first-place votes): 73
A.J. Hinch, Tigers: 41
Joe Espada, Astros: 6
Aaron Boone, Yankees: 3
Mark Kotsay, Athletics: 3
Rocco Baldelli, Twins: 1
Alex Cora, Red Sox: 1

National League

Pat Murphy, Brewers (27 first-place votes): 144
Mike Shildt, Padres (1 first-place vote): 70
Carlos Mendoza, Mets (1 first-place vote): 35
Torey Lovullo, Diamondbacks: 8
Rob Thomson, Phillies (1 first-place vote): 5
Brian Snitker, Braves: 4
Dave Roberts, Dodgers: 3
Oliver Marmol, Cardinals: 1

AL Manager of the Year: Stephen Vogt, Guardians

Just two years removed from his playing career, Vogt led the Guardians to a 92-69 record and the AL Central title in 2024, ultimately falling to the New York Yankees in the ALCS.

Vogt was hired by the Guardians after Terry Francona stepped down following a disappointing 2023 season, the team’s 76-86 record the worst for the franchise since 2010.

A two-time All-Star catcher (2015 and 2016), Vogt retired after the 2022 season and was the Seattle Mariners’ bullpen coach for less than a year before taking the big job in Cleveland.

‘There’s more left on the table for this group,’ Vogt told his players after the Guardians’ final game of the season. ‘We know we can accomplish more, but be proud of what we accomplished overall and use this to fuel your offseason.’

Vogt is the second Cleveland skipper in three years to win the award, after Francona was named Manager of the Year in 2022. That was Francona’s third honor, previously winning it with Cleveland in 2013 and 2016. Eric Wedge (2007) was the first manager in franchise history to earn the hardware.

“This is fun. That’s one thing I tell these guys all the time: Don’t ever lose sight that we’re still playing a game. And for four hours a day, you get to go be a 12-year-old kid,” Vogt told USA TODAY Sports in June. “There’s a business side, there’s family and all these other things. That’s real, and that’s important, too.

“But for three, four hours a night, you get to go be a 12-year-old kid and suit up and play the game you love.”

NL Manager of the Year: Pat Murphy, Brewers

A full-time MLB skipper for the first time at age 65, Murphy led the Brewers to a runaway 2024 NL Central title after the offseason departure of longtime manager Craig Counsell, who bolted for the rival Chicago Cubs.

Murphy is the first manager in franchise history to win the award.

‘I love this team. I love them,’ Murphy told reporters in October. ‘I’ll never be able to duplicate 2024.’

Despite trading away ace Corbin Burnes before the season, the Brewers went 93-69, finishing 10 games ahead of the second-place Cubs. Milwaukee suffered another early postseason exit, losing to the Mets in the NL wild-card series.

‘Once we traded Corbin, look at the prognosticators, look what they said,’ Murphy said after the Brewers were eliminated. ‘They predicted a fourth and fifth place, and these guys rose to the occasion and basically went wire to wire, went late April to September in first place.’

Murphy had been Counsell’s bench coach since Milwaukee hired him in 2015 and spent 22 years as a college head coach with Notre Dame and Arizona State before earning the Brewers job for the 2024 season.

‘The Brewers organization has been to the postseason six out of seven years with not the biggest budget and quite frankly in a real small market,’ Murphy said. ‘I think that’s something to hang your hat on.’

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Kam Jones etched himself in Marquette men’s basketball lore.

The senior guard notched just the third triple-double in program history, and the Golden Eagles put on a defensive clinic in a 76-58 victory over sixth-ranked Purdue on Tuesday at Fiserv Forum.

MU (5-0) is ranked 14th in the USA TODAY Sports Men’s Basketball Coaches Poll.

Jones finished with 17 points, 13 rebounds and 10 assists.

Dwyane Wade had the the last triple-double for MU, famously coming in the 2003 Elite Eight against Kentucky. Tony Miller also had one in 1994.

MU’s harassing defense also frustrated Purdue (4-1).

The Boilermakers had 15 turnovers, including 11 steals by the Golden Eagles.

Stevie Mitchell added 21 and four steals for MU. Chase Ross also had four steals.

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The House Ethics Committee may meet on Wednesday to discuss its investigation into allegations against now-former Rep. Matt Gaetz one week after President-elect Donald Trump tapped him to be the next attorney general.

The meeting comes after a woman reportedly told the Ethics Committee that she had sexual relations with Gaetz when she was 17 years old, according to ABC News.

The Department of Justice (DOJ) had previously spoken to the woman, now in her 20s, as part of its yearslong investigation into Gaetz related to accusations of sex trafficking and obstruction of justice, according to the outlet.

The House Ethics Committee was investigating the accusations and was expected to vote on whether to release the committee’s report into Gaetz last Friday. However, the meeting did not take place after Gaetz announced his immediate resignation from Congress just two days prior.

Rep. Michael Guest, R-Miss., chair of the House Ethics Committee, told reporters after Gaetz’s nomination that his panel would lose jurisdiction over the Florida Republican if he left Congress.

‘If Mr. Gaetz were to resign because he is taking a position with the administration as the attorney general, then the Ethics Committee loses jurisdiction at that point,’ Guest said before news of Gaetz leaving. ‘Once we lose jurisdiction, there would not be a report that would be issued. That’s not unique to this case.’

Following his resignation from Congress, officials debated whether the investigation findings should be released ahead of Gaetz’s confirmation hearing.

Several Republicans, including GOP senators critical in determining his confirmation, have said the report should be released if Gaetz were to go through the attorney general vetting process.

A spokesperson for Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., who presides over the Senate Judiciary Committee, said he has advocated for the report’s release to the public.

‘There is longstanding precedent for releasing ethics investigation materials after a member resigns, whether in the House or Senate,’ said Josh Sorbe. ‘The now-former congressman shouldn’t be able to resign away an ethics investigation involving allegations of grave misconduct, especially when he will be nominated to be our country’s top law enforcement officer.’

A House Republican told Politico on condition of anonymity that Gaetz was stepping down from Congress to ‘stymie the ethics investigation that is coming out in one week.’

However, at a press conference, House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., said Gaetz told him he resigned abruptly to expedite the process of filling his House seat through a special election.

The House Ethics Committee’s investigation into Gaetz, which began in 2021, stems from accusations of illicit drug use and sex with a minor. The DOJ, which Gaetz has been tapped to lead, ultimately did not press charges, and Gaetz has consistently denied all wrongdoing.

Johnson has said he does not believe the report should be released.

‘The speaker of the House is not involved with those things. I am reacting to media reports that a report is currently in some draft form and was going to be released on what is now a former member of the House. I do not believe that that is an appropriate thing,’ the House speaker said.

‘That would open up Pandora’s box, and I don’t think that’s a healthy thing for the institution, so that’s my position.’

Fox News’ Daniel Scully contributed to this report.

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