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The first look at the expanded 12-team College Football Playoff has arrived.

Months of build-up and anticipation surrounding the new look of college football’s postseason will be cashed in on Tuesday as the first CFP rankings will be released at 7 p.m. ET on ESPN.

And while Oregon is considered the consensus No. 1 team by many heading into Tuesday’s CFP bracket unveiling, Tuesday’s top-12 release will answer several questions that have been posed over the last 10 weeks of the college football season.

Perhaps the most notable of the questions surrounding the CFP is who the seven at-large teams – i.e., seeds No. 5 through 11 – will be, as this year’s new format allows for teams with two losses on their résumé to make the field.

Here’s what to know on how to watch Tuesday’s CFP rankings release show, including a look at future CFP rankings release scheduled dates:

Watch first CFP rankings release show live with Fubo (free trial)

What channel are CFP rankings today?

TV channel: ESPN
Streaming: ESPN app | Fubo (free trial)

ESPN will nationally televise the first release of the College Football Playoff rankings on Tuesday. Streaming options for the CFP ranking release show include the ESPN app (by logging in with your TV provider credentials) and Fubo, which carries the ESPN family of networks and offers a free trial to new subscribers.

When do College Football playoff rankings release?

The College Football Playoff rankings will be released on Tuesday at 7 p.m. ET.

Tuesday’s unveiling of the top-12 College Football Playoff rankings will be the first of six releases leading up to the final CFP rankings on Sunday, Dec. 8.

College Football Playoff rankings TV schedule

All six of the College Football Playoff rankings release shows will be televised nationally on ESPN.

All times Eastern

Tuesday, Nov. 5: 7 p.m. | ESPN (Fubo)
Tuesday, Nov. 12: 8:30 p.m.* | ESPN (Fubo)
Tuesday, Nov. 19: 7 p.m. | ESPN (Fubo)
Tuesday, Nov. 26: 8 p.m. | ESPN (Fubo)
Tuesday, Dec. 3: 7 p.m. | ESPN (Fubo)
Sunday, Dec. 8: Noon | ESPN (Fubo)

* The second set of College Football Playoff rankings will be unveiled between games at the Champions Classic.

We occasionally recommend interesting products and services. If you make a purchase by clicking one of the links, we may earn an affiliate fee. USA TODAY Network newsrooms operate independently, and this doesn’t influence our coverage.

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There are 11 gubernatorial races down for decision on Election Day, with four being competitive, according to the Fox News Power Rankings.

This year, up to 150 million Americans are expected to cast ballots in the U.S. presidential election, while levers will also be pulled for gubernatorial races and other down-ballot races.

1. Neck and neck in New Hampshire

New Hampshire is the most difficult governor’s race to call and is considered a toss-up, as former Republican Sen. Kelly Ayotte takes on Democrat Joyce Craig, who served three two-year terms as mayor of Manchester, New Hampshire’s largest city.

They are bidding to replace GOP Gov. Chris Sununu, a popular governor with a large national profile, who decided not to seek re-election after winning four straight two-year terms as the Granite State governor. Ayotte received Sununu’s endorsement this summer.

Despite having a Republican governor, New Hampshire has voted for the Democratic candidate in every presidential election since 2004.

Ayotte is also a former state attorney general who narrowly lost her Senate re-election in 2016 after breaking with former President Donald Trump following the release of the infamous ‘Access Hollywood’ video. As she ran for her party’s nomination for governor, Ayotte endorsed Trump this year.

Morse, facing an uphill challenge against the higher polling and better funded Ayotte, repeatedly questioned her conservative record as a senator and her support for Trump.

The pair have clashed on local issues including taxes, the opioid crisis and housing homelessness, as well as abortion. New Hampshire law allows abortions up to the 24th week of a pregnancy.

Craig has accused Ayotte of voting against abortion rights and then changing her position to run for governor, according to WBUR. 

Ayotte voted to de-fund Planned Parenthood as a senator and says she will support the state’s right to decide the issue following the Supreme Court’s Dobbs decision.

‘I will fight with everything I have to defend New Hampshire’s right to decide this issue and protect our law,’ Ayotte said.

2. Keep an eye on Indiana

In Indiana, Republican gubernatorial candidate Sen. Mike Braun should have been able to cruise to victory against any Democratic opponent. However, Braun’s hardline position on abortion has given Democrat Jennifer McCormick an opening. The state enacted a near total ban on abortion two years ago, which McCormick argues is too extreme. 

Braun maintains that Indiana should be a ‘right-to-life state. He was endorsed by former President Trump before May’s GOP primary, who took the Hoosier state by large margins in 2016 and 2020.

Braun is aiming to extend the GOP’s 20-year hold on Indiana’s governor’s office by defeating McCormick, a former Republican who split with the party after serving as the state’s schools superintendent.

The GOP has controlled Indiana’s governor’s office since Mitch Daniels defeated the late Gov. Joe Kernan in 2004. Additionally, Democrats have not won a statewide office in Indiana since 2012.

There are also unusual partisan dynamics at play. The GOP’s candidate for lieutenant governor could impact support for the Republican ticket among moderates, and there is a Libertarian on the ballot.

Indiana’s governor race has moved from Solid R to Likely R.

3. North Carolina could see its first Black governor

In the key swing state of North Carolina, current Republican Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson faces an uphill battle to defeat Democratic state Attorney General Josh Stein in the battle to replace Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper, who is term-limited and not allowed to run for re-election.

The key talking point in the race involves allegations that Robinson made controversial comments on a porn website more than a decade ago.

Robinson has denied saying those words, and Republicans began to distance themselves from the candidate afterward, while at least four top staffers resigned in the wake of the report. Former President Trump endorsed Robinson before the March primary but also began distancing himself.

Stein has attacked Robinson for his stance on abortion. Since Reconstruction ended in the 1890s, North Carolina has only elected three Republican governors.

If elected, Robinson would be North Carolina’s first Black governor.

The race is Likely D.

4. Trump foe likely to take Washington 

Longtime Washington Attorney General Bob Ferguson is hoping to keep the governor’s mansion in Democratic hands, while former Rep. Dave Reichert is trying to become the state’s first GOP governor in 40 years. The Evergreen State has voted Democrat in every presidential election since 1988.

Reichert, who served as King County Sheriff for 33 years, is best known for his role in capturing the Green River Killer, a notorious serial killer. His tenure as sheriff and his subsequent service in Congress have been central to his campaign messaging, positioning him as a tough on crime public safety candidate. 

For his part, Ferguson’s campaign has been marked by his sharp criticism of Reichert on hot button issues such as abortion, as Ferguson has attacked the former Republican congressman for his previous support for a nationwide abortion ban as out of touch with Washington’s values. 

Ferguson, has been the state’s attorney general since 2013. He came to national prominence by repeatedly suing the Trump administration, including bringing the lawsuit that blocked Trump’s initial travel ban on citizens of several majority Muslim nations.

Ferguson’s endorsements include prominent state leaders like U.S. Senate Pro Tempore Patty Murray and Gov. Jay Inslee.

Reichert faced an uphill battle in a state considered a Democratic stronghold.

Remaining races

Of the remaining gubernatorial races, Delaware is considered Solid D, while Missouri, Montana, North Dakota, Utah, Vermont and West Virginia are Solid R.

Fox News’ Paul Steinhauser, Matthew Richter and Jamie Joseph, as well as The Associated Press, contributed to this report. 

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The Republican Party is determined not to be outmanned in the courts regarding the 2024 elections, with GOP leaders leaning heavily on a new, litigation-focused ‘election integrity’ effort launched earlier this year in a bid to avoid many of the same pitfalls as 2020.

The two-pronged effort seeks to improve the GOP ground game across the country, both by recruiting and training poll observers and by adding more transparency to the voting process, senior Republican Party officials told Fox News Digital in an interview.

To date, they have recruited some 230,000 volunteers across the country, RNC officials said, including 5,000 lawyers concentrated primarily in the battleground states of Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.

On the eve of Election Day, it is the lawyers whose talents could be especially useful in the days and weeks to come. 

That is because the second half of the election integrity push focuses on litigation. Some of the lawsuits are aimed at ensuring ‘poll worker parity’ and access for Republican observers at many election sites across the country, senior party officials told Fox News Digital.

However, they have also filed dozens of lawsuits aimed at cracking down on voter identification laws, tightening citizenship verification standards and adding new requirements for mail-in ballots and provisional ballots accepted by various states. 

The Republican Party has been especially aggressive in filing these pre-election lawsuits, which officials describe as helping ‘set the rules of the road in key swing states.’

As of this writing, party officials said they have filed more than 130 lawsuits—the vast majority of the roughly 200 election-related lawsuits in the 2024 election.

While the flurry of GOP-led lawsuits have dominated headlines in the final race to Election Day—primarily in the seven swing states considered to hold outsize importance in determining the next president— Republican Party officials pointed to courtroom victories won as early as this summer as some of their biggest achievements.

One example was the RNC’s successful lawsuit against the city of Detroit in August. 

The RNC had sued to add more Republican election inspectors to the city’s 300-plus voting precincts, citing a ‘7.5-to-one’ ratio of Democrat inspectors to Republican inspectors. Republicans successfully argued that the disparity ran afoul of state law, which requires ‘an equal number, as nearly as possible’ of election officials from both major political parties. More Republican observers were added as a result. 

A more recent win occurred last week in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, where a judge sided with the GOP’s request to extend early voting deadlines from Tuesday, Nov. 5, to Friday, Nov. 8.

Republican officials have touted success in achieving more transparency in state elections. 

‘We really view this as making America’s elections run in a transparent and trustworthy way. And that’s a net positive for everyone in this country, regardless of Republican or Democrat [party affiliation],’ a senior RNC official told Fox News Digital in an interview.

Still, on the eve of Election Day, it remains to be seen whether these efforts will have accomplished their stated goal of establishing more trust in U.S. elections.

That is because the concept of ‘election security’ not only requires certain safeguards to be placed around the voter registration and ballot-casting process, but also that the voters themselves then trust the results of the vote as legitimate.

A fresh AP-NORC poll found that Democrats are far more likely than their Republican counterparts to express confidence in the outcome of the 2024 presidential election. 

The poll found that while 71% of registered Democratic voters said they have ‘a great deal’ of confidence in the national election outcome, just one-third of their Republican counterparts, or 24%, reported the same. 

Looking ahead

While some of these lawsuits could be used by the RNC as a pretext to challenge the outcome of certain states after Election Day, legal experts said it is unclear what impact any of these legal challenges could have in contesting the results — even if the outcome in certain states is just as close as expected in a neck-and-neck election. 

Courts are highly disinclined to take up cases after Election Day, Andrew McCarthy, a former federal prosecutor for the Southern District of New York, told Fox News in an interview. 

‘We want to have the game be fair, in the sense that there’s bright lines way before you ever get to Election Day,’ McCarthy said. ‘So everybody has their eyes open about what the rules are.’

‘It’s really hard to get a court to involve itself after an election has taken place and where they’re in a position of potentially changing the outcome of the election,’ he added.

That is especially true of the nation’s top court, Trey Gowdy, a former federal prosecutor and member of Congress, told Fox News Digital in an interview.

‘I think the Supreme Court is very wary of being drawn into overtly political fights,’ he said. 

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Officials in battleground states say lawyers are ready on this Election Day to pursue legal action against any counties who try to disrupt or delay the vote certification process. 

The warnings come after a few counties in Arizona, Pennsylvania and New Mexico initially did not certify results or did so with incomplete tallies following the 2022 midterm elections, according to Politico. 

‘If you don’t certify an election at the county level, or certify a canvas, you’re going to get indicted,’ Arizona Secretary of State Adrian Fontes told Politico. ‘We’ve sent, on top of that, some what I would call sternly-worded letters out to folks to let them know.’ 

Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson also said that lawyers have prepared draft legal filings in order to sue any county that tries to avoid certifying this year’s results. 

‘We’ve got great attorneys that we’re working with at the attorney general’s office, who are prepared as well, who were there in 2020 and ready to go,’ Benson told Politico. ‘It’s more about just making sure we’re able to rapidly respond and are prepared to ensure that the law is followed.’ 

During the last presidential election, former President Trump urged two members of Michigan’s Wayne County Board of Canvassers not to certify the results, according to a report from The Detroit News. 

In September, during an event hosted by the nonprofit Center for Election Innovation & Research, Gabriel Sterling, the chief operating officer for the Georgia secretary of state’s office, said, ‘There are those who think they can magically hold up everything by one county… That is not going to happen, and the courts won’t allow for that,’ according to Politico. 

‘With the system we have in place, with the lawyers we have in place, we have game-planned a lot of this out,’ he reportedly added. 

State election officials tell Politico that local officials are duty-bound to certify results and the task is not optional. 

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Voters in 10 U.S. states will decide on major ballot initiatives this year that either expand or restrict abortion access for women, a highly polarizing issue but one that some advocacy groups do not believe will affect turnout quite as much as some had expected. 

It’s unclear to what extent this could impact Vice President Harris, who has focused heavily on abortion access and reproductive rights in her bid for the presidency.

In the final race to Election Day, some doubt the issue has lasting power to turn out voters to the same degree it did during the 2022 midterm elections, held just months after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade.

‘I think Democrats are dramatically overestimating the power of abortion,’ Shawn Carney, president of the pro-life nonprofit group ’40 Days for Life,’ told Fox News in an interview. 

The nonprofit has a grassroots presence in all 50 states and has canvassed heavily in the 10 states that will vote directly on abortion-related measures this year: Arizona, Colorado, Florida, Maryland, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, New York, Nevada and South Dakota.

The majority of these ballot measures seek to amend efforts passed in Republican-led states, whose leaders moved to restrict abortion in the wake of the Supreme Court’s June 2022 decision on Roe.

Notable policies will be on the books in Missouri, where voters will have the option to reverse the state’s near-total ban, and Arizona, where voters can amend the state constitution to allow abortions through the 24-week mark.

The most populous state deciding on abortion measures is Florida, home to more than 13 million registered voters.

Voters there will decide whether to lift an existing law that bans abortions after six weeks and instead extend it to the point of fetal viability between 23 and 24 weeks.

‘I think we have the best chance to win in Florida,’ Carney said, citing the popularity in the state of Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump and Gov. Ron DeSantis, a Republican and staunch advocate of pro-life issues.

‘We have a great presence in Florida. We have great ‘40 Days’ campaigns throughout that great state.’

Harris and other Democrats have worked to highlight the new risks to abortion access women face. But it’s not clear what impact this will have on turnout in a presidential election dominated by economic issues and immigration.

Former first lady Michelle Obama dedicated most of her stump speech at a Harris rally last week in Kalamazoo, Mich., to outlining the many ways women could see their reproductive rights diminished further.

‘Your niece could be the one miscarrying in her bathtub after the hospital turned her away,’ Obama told the audience. ‘Your daughter could be the one terrified to call the doctor if she’s bleeding during an unexpected pregnancy.’

Importantly, voters in states where abortion is on the ballot will vote on it independently, meaning it is ‘decoupled’ from their presidential vote and votes for down-ballot leaders. This means that some staunch pro-choice supporters could theoretically vote for Trump and Republicans in their states while also voting to support pro-life procedures. 

This ‘decoupling’ effort would indeed reflect public opinion that has shifted to support abortion. A Fox News poll conducted this year found that a record-high number of voters now say they support legalizing abortion in some form, including two-thirds who said they supported a nationwide law that would guarantee abortion access for women.

Fifty-nine percent said they believe abortion should be legal in ‘all or most cases,’ up from the previous high of 57% in September 2022. 

But how much the issue of abortion will drive voter turnout this year – for those who are either for or against the new ballot measure – is unclear. 

National polls have seen abortion ranked consistently by voters as the third-most important issue in the 2024 election cycle, behind immigration and far behind the economy. 

Just 15% of voters ranked abortion as their No. 1 priority in 2024, according to a recent Fox News poll, compared to immigration, which 17% of voters said they viewed as the No. 1 issue, and the economy, which a strong 40% of voters ranked as their top priority.

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American intelligence officials released a recent statement warning about Russian actors conducting ‘additional influence operations’ to impact the upcoming election on Tuesday.

The Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI) published the latest update on its website on Monday evening. Speaking on behalf of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), the ODNI detailed the latest intelligence findings.

Last week, officials said that they observed Russian actors creating and disseminating a fake video that showed individuals voting illegally, and a video accusing a politician of taking a bribe. Since then, the U.S. Intelligence Community (IC) has observed Russia and other foreign adversaries ‘conducting additional influence operations intended to undermine public confidence in the integrity of U.S. elections and stoke divisions among Americans.’

‘The IC expects these activities will intensify through election day and in the coming weeks, and that foreign influence narratives will focus on swing states,’ the statement read.

Of all the foreign adversaries seeking to impact the election, the ODNI said that Russia ‘is the most active threat.’

‘Influence actors linked to Russia in particular are manufacturing videos and creating fake articles to undermine the legitimacy of the election, instill fear in voters regarding the election process, and suggest Americans are using violence against each other due to political preferences, judging from information available to the IC,’ the ODNI continued. ‘These efforts risk inciting violence, including against election officials.’

‘We anticipate Russian actors will release additional manufactured content with these themes through election day and in the days and weeks after polls close.’

In recent days, Russian actors created an article reporting about false plans for swing state officials to orchestrate election fraud, and also made a recent video that ‘falsely depicted an interview with an individual claiming election fraud in Arizona.

Officials also believe that Iranian actors may be meddling with the election and disseminating false information, as they have done in the past. The meddlers may intend ‘to create fake media content intended to suppress voting or stoke violence, as they have done in past election cycles,’ the ODNI noted.

The FBI encourages anyone who observes suspicious or criminal activity to call 1-800-CALL-FBI. Cyber incidents impacting election infrastructure can be reported to the CISA through the number 1-844-SAY-CISA.

The report came less than 24 hours before polls are set to open on Nov. 5, in what is expected to be a toss-up election between Vice President Harris and former President Trump. Swing states across the country have been on the lookout for fake ballots.

On Monday, the chair of a Pennsylvania county election board announced that he had found 2,500 suspicious registration and mail-in ballot applications. At least 17% of the applications were fraudulent.

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Sports changes lives. It’s a message Baltimore mayor Brandon Scott has promoted within his city when he speaks to an audience, or when he drops by one of its recreation centers to play with kids.

When you ask Scott to go into more depth, though, about the role it has played for him, a product of Park Heights on Baltimore’s northwest side, he thinks of his high school days, when sports gave him a chance to leave home.

When Scott, 40, was growing up, kids across Baltimore lived in neighborhoods weighed down by violence and economic despair. He remembers witnessing death by drug overdose and fleeing gunfire as a boy.

City high school coaches found another way to avoid it. They pulled together a regional “super team,” as the mayor describes it, that competed nationally in the AAU Junior Olympics.

Those days of giving everything he had with a baton in his hand, and then handing it off — and trusting what his teammates would do with it — gave Scott lessons, for sure, ones he has taken with him during his dramatic rise as a politician.But they also did something else.

“Participating in track and field saved our lives,” Scott said in an interview with USA TODAY Sports last spring.

Sports not only took Scott away from the violence but it led him to his coach, a father figure, really, in Freddie Hendricks at Baltimore’s Mervo High School, and helped him realize his full potential in the classroom.

Scott rose from a high SAT score as a sophomore to a small public honors college in rural Maryland to Baltimore’s city council. He was elected the city’s youngest mayor in 2020, cradling the lessons and opportunities of his athletic career.

“I wouldn’t be here if I if I did not run track a Mervo High School,” Scott says. “Sports is what made me who I am. It’s where get discipline from. It’s where I get that deep spirit of competition and the understanding of how to work together and work with different types of people.”

A broader look at Scott, a Democrat who contests GOP candidate Shannon Wright for a second term in Tuesday’s balloting (he’s expected to win re-election), gives us all a chance to reflect on how profoundly our athletic experiences, as well as the ones we are now giving our kids can, can shape us.

Here’s what Scott’s journey teaches us about the value of sports that can help us better understand our own.

Sports are not just a means to an end. They can be ‘transformative,’ no matter where you come from, or where you end up.

Park Heights gets national recognition once a year as the host of the Preakness, the second leg of horse racing’s triple crown.

“Every other day, my neighborhood was ignored,” Scott told an audience last May at the Project Play Summit, which was hosted by his home city.

But Scott’s home neighborhood did have the Towanda Recreation Center, where he began running track at six years old.

We all get the sports bug somewhere different. You can’t put a price on the impact of that moment, or where it takes you. That might be a podium, like the one where Scott and Maryland Gov. Wes Moore spoke at Project Play, or the national stage, where the two found themselves last spring guiding constituents through the aftermath of the collapse of Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge.

Neither man can really remember his life without sports. You could say their sports experiences not only brought them to those critical moments last spring, but helped endure them.

“Some of my earliest, some of my best, some of my worst, some of my most informative memories are with sports,” Moore said at Project Play, which seeks to create sport-related access and opportunities for kids, especially those who need them most.

Like Moore once was. Raised by single mom, a daughter of immigrants from Cuba and Jamaica, he calls himself “probably the most improbable governor in America.”  

Moore’s dad died when he was 3. His mom took him and his two sisters to live with his grandparents in the Bronx, New York.

Basketball courts were a spot to which he could escape, and where he felt safe.

“It’s a place where you met some of your lifelong friends,” he says. ‘It was a place where you learned all of the beautiful things you can learn from team sport: How to win properly, how to lose properly, the importance of being able to trust the people to your left and your right and to make sure that you’re practicing so they can trust you back. I think that sports has always placed an outsized role in my life, in my understanding, in my acceptance.

‘I’m a big believer in the role that sports can be not only be unifying, sports can really be transformative.’

Sometimes, just the opportunity to play is enough to give kids the confidence to dream about what is next.

Sports teaches you about yourself, and it can make your ‘big rivals’ into your friends

Moore went on to play football at Johns Hopkins University. Scott just wanted to be a student at St. Mary’s College of Maryland, a decision heavily influenced by his coach.

Mervo didn’t have a track of its own but it had coach Hendricks, who, the mayor says, “forced me” into a college placement program known and CollegeBound.

Hendricks also took him away from the streets where, Scott has said, he lost friends and loved ones to gun violence, dealt with police harassment and was once handcuffed after being mistaken for a robbery suspect.

Scott has carried the lessons as a 3,000-meter steeplechaser like his baton.

It didn’t matter what you did with that baton, coach Hendricks would tell Scott and his teammates, if the person to whom you handed it off didn’t match your intensity.

“You’re only as good as your weakest leg,” he would say.

You can learn as much about yourself competing for your teammates as you can against an opponent.

Sometimes, like in politics, these were your adversaries from a previous competition. Scott found himself competing against his “big rivals” from across the region that formed his AAU Junior Olympics team. Then he found himself giving all he could for them, learning discipline in the process.

“We took that into life,” he says. “Think about how we challenge each other and push each other to see how we can can be the best version of ourselves. And that’s really what you learn from sports: You learn how you’re going to deal with adversity, you learn how you’re going to deal with pressure situations. And I think you learn how to be a leader, right? When you’re in sports.’

COACH STEVE: 70% of kids quit sports by 13. Why?

Sports exposes kids to role models and unforgettable people and experiences. Sometimes, parents just need to get them to practice.

You probably haven’t heard of a basketball player named Willie “Hutch” Jones, unless you’re from western New York. While the 6-foot-8 forward averaged 15.8 points per game for Vanderbilt in 1981-82, and played two seasons in the NBA, his true imprint has come in empowering kids through their sports.

According to the Greater Buffalo Sports Hall of Fame, of which Jones is a member, his educational and sports programs in his hometown have served more than 10,000 children in the city.

“The great thing about his work is that youth learn fundamentals, both of a sport and of life,” says Lucy Candelario, who runs Jones’ programs through here community center (TheBelleCenter) on the lower west side of Buffalo.  “That’s why the sports programs are effective: Sports are life.”

Once the kids are situated at their center, the benefits are off the charts in terms of personal development. ‘The Belle,’ Candelario says, has ‘graduates’ that include several lawyers and members of the military, including one man who graduated from high school and boot camp and recently came back to thank a counselor.

What complicates the process, Jones has found, is that moms and dads rely too much on him to get them there.

“The parents are lazy and don’t want to do it,” he told USA TODAY Sports. “They’d rather have me come and pick them up in a bus or a van and their car is in the driveway, and they’re sitting in there on a couch. So now the kid can’t have this opportunity. Our enrollment across the board probably would be higher if more parents bought in for their investment, their child. Don’t wait for Coach. It’s your child. You had that baby. You need to take care of that baby all the way around. You can’t just leave the baby on the porch, or just in the yard. They need to get out to get exposure.”

It’s a good reminder for those of us caught up in the rat race of travel and club sports: The true value of sports, like the programs Jones offers, is free.

Candelario has found that as long as a kid has a stable adult showing love and care, he or she will respond to it. She and Jones see kids who grew up in a cycle of neglect, which they are repeating as parents, or their kids are being raised by grandparents.

“The parents are incarcerated, strung out, or whatever the case might be,” she says. “We are the parents for these children.”

Many of us already have that stability. Scott had it through his sports, and through coach Hendricks. Back in Baltimore, he asks famous Baltimore athletes, like Super Bowl-winning receiver Torrey Smith, who had it, too, despite a childhood that constantly shifted from temporary housing situations, to speak to the city’s youth.

“They show these young people how how sports can help them,” Scott says, “that not everyone’s going to go and make a whole bunch of money. But they can use it to put themselves and their family in a better position.”

‘Winning is never the goal’: Sports stays with us, no matter when our career officially ends

Baltimore saw a 20 percent drop in homicides last year, ending a surge that began following the 2015 death of arrestee Freddie Gay from injuries suffered in police custody. Gay’s death led to looting and rioting.

Following the unrest, Scott, then a city council member, helped started the Volo Kids Foundation, a free sports access program that has expanded to eight U.S. cities.

Scott says he has helped open or renovate 11 new recreation centers in Baltimore, expanded middle school sports offerings and reinstituted summer midnight basketball that gives kids a safe place to play.

One of them is his stepson, Ceron, 9, who played in the Under Armour basketball development league earlier this year a the UA House, a modern facility built in large part through the company’s long-term investment in sports in Scott’s city.

“I’m the guy that lets the coach determine what happens on the court and how it happens,’ Scott says with a laugh.  ‘And I don’t question anything but just really be a supportive and attentive parent.”

He says he quiets his infant son, Charm, by watching ‘Auntie Angel Reese,’ a Baltimore-area native turned WNBA star. He plays in a league himself to “let all the 20-something-year-olds know that the mayor’s still faster than them and they can’t catch me.”

It’s all part of a message he continues to deliver of how sports creates and molds us, no matter how long our athletic career lasts. When he accepted the Democratic nomination for mayor in May, he closed with a line from late Congressman Elijah Cummings of Maryland that can apply to elections, of course, but also to sports.

“Winning is never the goal,” he said. “Completing the work is.”

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 sports parents for two high schoolers. His column is posted weekly. For his past columns, click here.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Jason Kelce apologized on his part for an incident he was involved in with an unruly fan during the weekend.

The former Philadelphia Eagles All-Pro was in Pennsylvania on Saturday when he appeared on ESPN’s ‘College GameDay’ prior to the Ohio State vs. Penn State matchup. Social media footage showed Kelce walking through a crowd near Beaver Stadium while several people asked for selfies and acknowledged him. However, one person in a Penn State hoodie hurled anti-LGTBQ slurs toward Kelce about his brother, Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce.

‘Hey Kelce! How does it feel your brother is a (expletive) for dating Taylor Swift?’ the person shouted.

Kelce turned around, grabbed the fan’s phone and spiked it into the ground before picking up the phone and continuing to walk. Another video shared on social media showed the fan chasing Kelce and saying ‘give me my phone.’ Kelce then replied, ‘Who’s the (expletive) now?’

Jason Kelce: ‘Not proud’ of incident

Now an analyst with ESPN’s ‘Monday Night Countdown,’ Kelce apologized for his role in the incident prior to the Chiefs vs. Tampa Bay Buccaneers game on Monday night.

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

‘Everybody’s seen on social media everything that took place this week,’ Kelce said. ‘Listen, I’m not happy with anything that took place. I’m not proud of it. In a heated moment, I chose to greet hate with hate, and I just don’t think that that’s a productive thing.

‘In that moment, I fell down to a level that I shouldn’t have.’

Kelce added he tries to live his life by treating people with decency and respect and he ‘fell short’ of his expectations.

The Super Bowl 52 champion is in Kansas City for ESPN’s coverage of the game that includes his brother, who is dating pop icon Swift.

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When the Philadelphia76ers signed Tyrese Maxey to an extension and signed Paul George in free agency in July, securing help for All-Star center Joel Embiid, a 1-4 start to a season marred by on-court and off-court problems was not expected.

But that’s where the Sixers are five games into a season that has them in the spotlight for the wrong reasons. George and Embiid haven’t played this season, and Embiid faces a suspension for a physical altercation with a sports columnist in the Sixers’ locker room.

The 76ers have themselves to blame.

On Saturday, Embiid confronted and made physical contact with Philadelphia Inquirer columnist Marcus Hayes, who wrote a column critical of Embiid and referenced Embiid’s brother Arthur, who died in 2014, and Embiid’s son Arthur.

“Joel Embiid consistently points to the birth of his son, Arthur, as the major inflection point in his basketball career,’ Hayes wrote. ‘He often says that he wants to be great to leave a legacy for the boy named after his little brother, who tragically died in an automobile accident when Embiid was in his first year as a 76er.

‘Well, in order to be great at your job, you first have to show up for work. Embiid has been great at just the opposite.’

It’s easy to understand why Embiid was angry, and after feedback, Hayes and the outlet removed the references to Embiid’s brother and son in the column online.

The NBA is investigating the incident. ESPN characterized it as a shove, and Philadelphia Inquirer Sixers beat writer Gina Mizell wrote that Embiid “struck and shoved” Hayes “during a profanity-laced tirade.”

Hayes told Mizell that Sixers president of basketball operations Daryl Morey and general manger Elton Brand “apologized for the incident, expressed regret that it happened, and asked me for my version of events. … They agreed that Embiid’s actions were unacceptable.”

Multiple things happened that led to the incident, which could’ve been avoided. Hayes should not have referenced Embiid’s brother and son in a column critical of Embiid’s availability, but the league can’t have an incident where a player is putting his hands on a reporter.

That too could’ve been avoided, starting with the Sixers being upfront about the extent of Embiid’s knee issue, which would’ve given reporters and columnists more context. It doesn’t mean Embiid is immune to criticism, but a complete picture helps shape informed opinions. (Embiid has struggled with injuries throughout his career and was limited to 39 games last season after he tore his meniscus in his left knee.)

The Sixers last week were fined $100,000 for violating the league’s player participation policy, and the league concluded Embiid has a “left knee condition,” an indication that the Sixers have not been forthright about the state of Embiid’s knee.

The Sixers suggesting Embiid, who has a history with injuries, shouldn’t play in back-to-backs didn’t help. Maybe the Sixers were trying to protect Embiid, but they did more harm than good. There’s no indication Embiid doesn’t want to play, and considering that he’s a 7-footer who weighs 280 pounds and moves the way he does and plays with the power he does, it’s not surprising he has a knee problem.

The Sixers also could’ve played a larger role in peacekeeping knowing that Embiid was angry and upset over the column and knowing that Hayes was in the arena.

“The next time you bring up my dead brother and my son again, you are going to see what I’m going to do to you and I’m going to have to … live with the consequences,” Embiid told Hayes, according to reports.

A team security officer asked journalists in the locker room to refrain from reporting on the altercation, according to reports.

One bad decision led to another.

And now, the Sixers could be without Embiid even longer.

Follow NBA reporter Jeff Zillgitt on social media @JeffZillgitt

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SAN ANTONIO – As baseball’s top executives swarm upon San Antonio for the annual general manager meetings, everyone has the same concern:

How in the world do we beat the Los Angeles Dodgers?

The World Series champions have become the ultimate gold standard in MLB, reaching the postseason 12 consecutive years and winning 11 division titles, four pennants since 2017 and two World Series titles in five years.

The scary part?

They may be even tougher to beat in 2025 considering they won the World Series with only three healthy starters in October and next year should be adding Shohei Ohtani, Tyler Glasnow, three-time Cy Young winner Clayton Kershaw, Dustin May and Tony Gonsolin back to the mix.

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DODGERS WIN WORLD SERIES: Celebrate with this commemorative coffee table book! 

Good luck if you’re competing in the National League West, a division so brutally difficult that the Dodgers privately wonder if the American League champion New York Yankees would have finished higher than fourth in the NL West.

The GM meetings are the place where you can at least start dreaming, setting the stage to construct your roster through trades and free agency, and setting up phone calls with agent Scott Boras, who represents most of the top free agents.

If you’ve got $700 million burning in your pocket, outfielder Juan Soto is there for the taking, vowing to go the highest bidder; teams were permitted to start making offers at 5 p.m. ET Monday. If you want to spend less, third baseman Alex Bregman, first basemen Pete Alonso and Christian Walker and outfielders Anthony Santander and Teoscar Hernandez are all available.

If you need starting pitching, Corbin Burnes, Max Fried and Blake Snell can be yours.

If you prefer the trade route, Gold Glove third baseman Nolan Arenado and starter Sonny Gray of the St. Louis Cardinals are available, along with Chicago White Sox ace Garret Crochet, All-Star closer Devin Williams of the Milwaukee Brewers, and perhaps Logan Gilbert or one of the other fabulous young Seattle Mariners starters.

No one is going to magically cure all of their woes at the GM meetings, but precious few items are ever checked off the to-do list for at least another couple of weeks, and sometimes, as we discovered last offseason, not until deep into spring training.

Here are the 10 more intriguing teams to watch as the meetings are underway:

New York Mets

The Mets may have the richest owner in all of baseball in Steve Cohen, who’s worth $21 billion, but that doesn’t mean they are going to go on a free agent spending spree. They already tried that. It backfired. Now, it’s in the hands of David Stearns, president of baseball operations, who has shown no inclination to spend wildly.

If Cohen wanted someone to simply write checks, he could have hired anyone. He hired Stearns to build a team like the Dodgers, a team that consistently wins and is deeper than any other organization in the game. This is why they told Alonso to feel free to look around and see if he can get more than the $150 million they thought he was worth this summer. It’s also why some executives believe the Mets might want to drive up the price for Soto but may not be one of the most serious suitors.

New York Yankees: All of their fundamental flaws got badly exposed on baseball’s biggest stage in the World Series, so will they just open their checkbooks to bring back Soto and perhaps sign first baseman Walker or Alonso, too? Or do they do something creative to make sure they’re not embarrassed on the national stage again?

St. Louis Cardinals

The Cardinals are waving the white flag before the holidays and are open for business, willing to listen to trades on anyone. You want Arenado? How about Gray? All-Star catcher Willson Contreras? All-Star closer Ryan Helsley? The Cardinals are all ears as they embark on a reboot.

San Diego Padres

No one will have more sleepless nights this winter offseason than the Padres. They were oh, so close to toppling the Dodgers in the NL Division Series. If they got past the Dodgers, they may have been wearing World Series rings for the first time. 

“I really thought San Diego was the key for this,” Dodgers minority owner Magic Johnson said. “They made us go to another level to beat them. I thought, once we beat them, we stayed on that level. They tested us. … Once we beat San Diego, I thought we were the best team standing.”

The Padres need pitching, particularly with veteran starter Joe Musgrove likely sidelined for the 2025 season, and always A.J. Preller is willing to be creative, completely unafraid in trading top prospects.

Philadelphia Phillies

The Phillies can’t believe they don’t have a ring in the Bryce Harper era, and after knocking on the door the past few years, they are willing to make a huge move to change their fate. Dave Dombrowski, president of baseball operations, has not internally discussed pursuing Soto with his staff but is painfully aware they need to shake up their lineup. Simply, scouts say, they’re just too easy to pitch to come crunchtime with their big swingers and contact-challenged hitters. If someone needs a slugger like Nick Castellanos, or outfield help in Brandon Marsh, or third baseman Alec Bohm, the Phillies are listening.

But don’t believe for a second the Phillies won’t keep spending, even if it means going beyond the third luxury-tax threshold of $281 million.

“For the right player,” Phillies owner John Middleton told reporters, “I have a high degree of confidence that Dave and I would go over the third limit.”

Toronto Blue Jays

Hey, they still have that $700 million that Ohtani didn’t take from them last winter. So, why not offer the same amount to Soto? The Blue Jays know they need to make a splash with their postseason window closing in a hurry with first baseman Vladimir Guerrero Jr. and shortstop Bo Bichette free agents after the 2025 season.

Seattle Mariners

The Mariners may have been the most dangerous team not to reach the postseason. Certainly, they had the best pitching staff and could have been a nightmare to anyone in their path. They haven’t made the postseason in 22 of their last 23 years. If the streak continues another season, heads will start to roll. Anything less than a playoff berth will be catastrophic. 

San Francisco Giants:

Buster Posey’s campaign promise to Giants fans? “Make the Giants Great Again.”

The Giants, tired of all the analytics, the platoons and the bullpen games are going old-school by emphasizing scouting once again. This is why Posey is now in charge instead of Farhan Zaidi. This is why Zack Minasian is their new GM instead of an Ivy Leaguer. And this is why the Giants will be fascinating to watch to see what moves they make. 

Cincinnati Reds

You don’t lure Terry Francona out of retirement and pay him big bucks if you don’t plan on winning the NL Central and go where no Reds team has gone since 1990. The Reds are knocking on the playoff door with their array of brilliant, young talent. There’s no way they should be mediocre with the best all-around talent in the division. The Reds plan to spend, and trade, acquiring a few key pieces to push them over the top. If they didn’t have big plans, Francona never would have taken the job.

Los Angeles Dodgers

The Dodgers, who used 40 different pitchers last season, know they don’t have to do much to their powerful lineup except for perhaps a minor tune-up. They’ve got more pitching stars coming off the injured list than any current rotation in baseball. Now, it’s just a matter of how greedy they want to be. They are expected to talk to Boras about Soto but won’t be a serious bidder. They instead would prefer to retain outfielder Teoscar Hernandez providing his price tag doesn’t become exorbitant. They also have strong interest in free agent shortstop Willy Adames, believing his personality and energy would be a great fit in Los Angeles.

The Dodgers will be lurking behind the scenes all winter, leaving their peers wondering when they’ll strike., And when it happens, they’ll be reminding everyone the World Series still must go through them.

In the words of Dodgers manager Dave Roberts: “Let’s get ready to run this thing back next year, too.”

This story has been updated to include new information.

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