Archive

2024

Browsing

Forget goblins, ghosts or ghouls: if you’re working for the campaign of Vice President Kamala Harris, the most frightening sight in the lead-up to Halloween has been her highest profile surrogates taking the microphone. As precious seconds tick off the clock, the last week of campaigning has been marred by mistakes, missteps and meltdowns – all from people supposed to be helping the Democratic effort.

Here are three examples.

First, as Harris delivered her closing pitch focused on unity, President Biden was describing half the country as garbage. You can’t make it up. Holed up in the White House, just steps from Harris’ highly choreographed speech on the Ellipse, Biden was – inexplicably – on a public Zoom call when he uttered the remark that took over the political debate: ‘The only garbage I see floating out there is his [Trump] supporters.’

Why an 81-year-old man who had been removed from the race because of widespread concerns about his age and ability was speaking at the same time as the person vowing to replace him remains a mystery. By the end of the week, the White House had altered the official transcript to quell the firestorm, but the damage was done. 

The incident occurred days after an Axios report headlined ‘Harris stiff-arms Biden’ detailing Biden’s unsuccessful attempts to campaign for his second-in-command. The response from the Harris campaign has been ‘we’ll get back to you,’ according to the reporting. Representing one half of an administration with its approval rating in the 30s, it’s not hard to see why.

Biden’s presence undermines Harris’ slogan of a ‘new way forward,’ a message that was further muddled later in the week by the second surrogate fail: former President Bill Clinton telling rallygoers in Michigan the economy was better under Trump. 

It’s said that a ‘gaffe’ is when a politician tells the truth, and to be fair, Clinton’s argument is supported by polling data. Seven in ten voters view the economy negatively, according to a Fox News poll. It’s also far and away the most important issue, and one where Trump has a clear eight-point lead over Harris. Still, it’s not a helpful comment for a candidate trying to connect on core bread and butter issues.

It wasn’t the first slip-up from the 42nd president. Earlier this month, he appeared to criticize the lack of security at the southern border, causing another viral moment and political headache for the Harris campaign. A once-in-a-generation political talent in his prime, the 78-year-old Clinton is a shell of his former self. Eight years ago, while campaigning for his wife, it was clear he had lost a few MPH off his fastball. These days, he can hardly get the ball across the plate.

Finally, and not to be outdone, was Mark Cuban, the billionaire Harris backer who accused Trump of failing to surround himself with ‘strong, intelligent women.’ The backlash was swift and severe, and Cuban was forced to apologize in an early Friday morning social media post.

Like Clinton, it wasn’t the first time Cuban got crossways with the campaign messaging. He had (correctly) described a proposed Biden-Harris tax scheme on unrealized capital gains as ‘an economy killer,’ saying he went ‘ballistic’ when he learned of it. 

Cuban’s presence on the trail is meant to reassure voters that Harris is not the wild-eyed California liberal her opponents are portraying her as. Why would one of America’s most recognizable and successful entrepreneurs sign up for a campaign pushing socialist-style redistribution policies demonizing success? Instead, Cuban became the story, burning precious time as the race entered its final weekend.

When she became her party’s nominee, Kamala Harris faced the unenviable task of introducing herself to voters, presenting herself as a change agent, separating from an unpopular incumbent and going toe-to-toe with one of the most dynamic political figures of modern times – and doing it all in a three-month time window. It was never going to be easy, even if everything went right. 

If Harris comes up short next week, there will be no shortage of finger-pointing and blame to go around. The slip-ups from her ‘supporters’ will be high on that list.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

More than a dozen financial officers from 15 states are sending a letter to public pension fund fiduciaries, urging them to cut ties with China-based investments due to the Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP) control over some firms.

‘Trustees of state funds have a duty to investigate investments and a duty to monitor investments and divest from imprudent investments, in order to ensure that those funds grow and are protected for future beneficiaries,’ the letter from 18 state treasurers stated to public pension fund fiduciaries, who include anyone managing a public pension fund. ‘The time has come to divest from China.’

The 18 financial officers – who include some state treasurers – are from Alabama, Arkansas, Alaska, Arizona, Indiana, Kansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, Nebraska, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, South Carolina and Wyoming.

Financial officers cited a crackdown by the CCP on due diligence firms, which has compromised the reliability of financial audits. They also pointed to CCP interference in stock and bond markets, where efforts to hide foreign investment outflows have been observed.

The CCP maintains extensive control over Chinese companies, including the placement of military and intelligence personnel within them, the letter also states, and keeps the legality of Variable Interest Entities (VIEs) hidden.

These VIEs are offshore shell companies that are often seen as illegal under Chinese law, yet they represent the most common form of investment available to U.S. investors in China. The SEC has warned that the CCP could abruptly declare VIEs illegal, creating significant risks for those who invest in them.

Geopolitical tensions, such as China’s potential invasion of Taiwan, are also of concern to investors. 

Moreover, there has been a notable decline in foreign investment in China, leading to substantial outflows from its markets, the officers warned. This trend has prompted other fiduciaries, including those from states like Florida Indiana, and Missouri, to reconsider their China-based investments.

‘Many fiduciaries, including state pension plans, failed to recognize similar warning signs before Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022. As a result, states lost billions of dollars in value that was held in trust for retirees,’ the letter states. ‘Pension boards should learn from the past, or they will be doomed to repeat it. As state financial officers, we urge public pension boards to analyze these issues, to identify China-based investments, and to divest from those investments in line with their fiduciary duties.’

The bipartisan House Select Committee on the Strategic Competition between the U.S. and the CCP released a report earlier this year detailing how asset managers and index providers facilitated investment of more than $6.5 billion to 63 companies in China that have been blacklisted or red-flagged by the U.S. government.

Under current law, U.S. government agencies maintain a variety of blacklists and red-flag lists that serve a range of purposes, from barring exports to covered foreign firms and blocking imports due to connections with the use of forced labor, to restricting purchases of equipment that poses a national security risk and more. 

Most of these lists do not restrict U.S. asset managers or investors from investing in listed companies. One list that does restrict U.S. investment in listed firms, the Treasury Department’s NS-CMIC list, blocks investment only in listed firms but excludes those companies’ subsidiaries, allowing them to receive U.S. capital.

Fox Business’ Eric Revell contributed to this report. 

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Peloton on Thursday said it has appointed Peter Stern, a Ford executive and the co-founder of Apple Fitness+ to be its next CEO and president. 

Stern, the president of Ford Integrated Services, primarily oversees the automotive company’s subscription services, such as BlueCruise, Pro Intelligence, connectivity and security. He also led the company’s digital product team. 

Stern is slated to step down from his role at Ford and take the helm of Peloton on Jan. 1. Interim co-CEO Karen Boone will stay in the role through the end of the calendar year, while her counterpart, Chris Bruzzo will step down from the co-CEO role on Friday. Both Boone and Bruzzo will stay on Peloton’s board.

Stern is the third CEO to lead Peloton in its history. The news came alongside Peloton’s fiscal first-quarter earnings report. Shares of the company jumped more than 20% in early trading.

“Peter is a seasoned strategist with a track record of driving sustainable growth through innovation, and we have every confidence in his ability to lead Peloton during this important time. He brings meaningful expertise in scaling differentiated technology-oriented platforms and has a deep understanding of the health and wellness sector — making him uniquely suited to serve as Peloton’s next CEO,” Jay Hoag, the chairperson of Peloton’s board, said in a news release.

“What’s more, Peter embodies Peloton’s core values, including operating with a bias for action, empowering teams of smart creatives and working together.”

The announcement comes about six months after Peloton announced that former Spotify and Netflix executive Barry McCarthy would be stepping down after about two years on the job. 

McCarthy had taken over from founder John Foley and had worked to bring Peloton back from the brink of extinction by dramatically cutting costs and redirecting strategy. 

Peloton’s decision to hire Stern indicates that it is tripling down on the company’s main value proposition to investors at the moment: its high-margin, recurring subscription revenue. 

Stern’s background running Ford’s subscription business will likely assist in building out, and sustaining, Peloton’s connected fitness subscribers and app subscribers.

In a news release, Peloton said that it sought out a new CEO who appreciates and loves Peloton’s products, understands the company’s challenges and opportunities, and is passionate about helping people achieve their fitness goals.

Stern was an early adopter of Peloton, having been a member since 2016, and “has spent over 20 years operating at the nexus of hardware, software, content and services at Ford, Apple and Time Warner Cable,” the company said.

As the co-founder of Apple Fitness+, he helped the vertical grow its subscription base into the millions and knows how to operate a “complex, subscription-based business,” Peloton said.

The company said it was also looking for a product innovator and strategist and pointed to the 30-plus patents Stern has secured over the years, including an online media content patent.

“Working for Peloton is a dream come true for me,” Stern said in a statement. “My goal is to help millions of people live longer, healthier and happier lives. Peloton, with its unique combination of people, products and passionate Members, provides me an opportunity to do just that.”

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

The 18-month civil war in Africa’s third-largest country has left tens of thousands killed and millions of others displaced amid catastrophic famine and raging diseases. The dire crisis in Sudan is currently one of the worst in the world, but as global attention remains focused on the conflict in the Middle East, the African nation is seemingly being forgotten.

Adding to the bleak picture is a new 80-page report from the United Nations Independent International Fact-Finding Mission for Sudan, which sheds light on how militias are preying on women. The fact-finding mission accuses both the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) and the army’s former paramilitary allies, the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), of rampant sexual violence. 

The U.N. report documents the pervasive sexual violence and human rights abuses in Sudan, affecting civilians from ages 8 to 75. It details how Sudanese women and girls are being abducted for sexual slavery, accusing the RSF of being behind the ‘large majority’ of cases. Furthermore, the mission reported credible accounts of men and boys being subject to rape and gang-rape. 

The situation has been exacerbated by a severe lack of medical services. The conflict has left most hospitals and clinics destroyed, depriving victims of much-needed medical treatment.

‘The sheer scale of sexual violence we have documented in Sudan is staggering,’ mission Chair Mohamed Chande Othman said in a statement. Sudan’s state of affairs ‘is deeply alarming and needs urgent address,’ he added.

Human rights groups have also sounded the alarm over the abuses women are suffering. Advocates report that sexual atrocities are prompting women to take their lives – either in response to the brutalities they have endured, or to escape it entirely. 

Sudan’s brutal war erupted in April 2023 after a simmering power struggle between the SAF and the powerful paramilitary RSF group exploded into an all-out war. Most recently, intense clashes in east-central Sudan led to the slaying of more than 100 people. The U.N. said that the RSF shot civilians, sexually abused women and girls, and looted properties. 

‘The people of Sudan are living through a nightmare of violence,’ U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres told the Security Council earlier this week. ‘The suffering is growing by the day, with almost 25 million people now in need of humanitarian assistance,’ he emphasized.

As Sudan nears collapse, foreign aid remains insubstantial. Only about half of the U.N.’s $2.7 billion humanitarian appeal for the Northeast African country has been funded. But even as the country faces the world’s worst famine in forty years, it remains forgotten, overshadowed by the Middle East conflict.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

A slew of new polls show Vice President Kamala Harris taking a narrow lead over former President Donald Trump in the ‘blue wall’ states many forecasters say she needs to win to clinch the presidency. 

Marist polls of battlegrounds Michigan and Pennsylvania released on Friday have the Democratic vice president ahead of her Republican rival by two points in each state, 50% to 48%. A third poll of Wisconsin voters shows Harris with a three percentage point lead, 51-48%. 

All these results are within the Marist polls’ margins of error, plus or minus 3.4 points for the Michigan and Pennsylvania polls and plus or minus 3.5 points for the Wisconsin survey. The surveys were conducted between Oct. 27-30. 

The numbers point toward another historically close election next Tuesday following the 2020 cycle, when just 44,000 votes spread across key battleground states handed President Biden the Electoral College votes he needed to unseat Trump. Similarly, in 2016, Trump captured the White House by just under 78,000 votes in the three ‘blue wall’ states. 

The small leads Harris holds are credited to independent voters, who appear to be moving in her direction in the final days of the election. Harris opened up a six-point lead over Trump among independents in Michigan, 52-46%, improving from a two-point lead in September. She also improved from a four-point edge with Wisconsin independents in early September to a six-point lead at the end of October.

However, the most dramatic swing comes in Pennsylvania, where Marist finds a 19-point shift among independents, with Harris at 55% and Trump at 40% compared to September, when Trump led Harris among independents 49-45%.

‘The Keystone State is the biggest prize of the three highly competitive so-called Blue Wall states,’ said Dr. Lee M. Miringoff, director of the Marist Institute for Public Opinion. ‘The good news for Harris is she is running stronger among independents and white voters than Biden did four years ago. The bad news is the gender gap is not as wide here as it was in 2020 or, in fact, where it is elsewhere now.’

More surveys released Friday show a tight race.

A new USA Today/Suffolk poll finds Harris and Trump tied in Pennsylvania with 49% of the vote each, according to a statewide poll of 500 likely voters conducted from Oct. 27 to 30 with a margin of error of 4.4 percentage points.

David Paleologos, director of the Suffolk University Political Research Center, called the race a ‘toss up.’ 

‘We have all the results within the margin of error … it’s basically a statistical tie,’ Paleologos said, according to USA Today.

Additionally, the final Detroit Free Press poll of likely Michigan voters shows Harris with a three-percentage-point lead over Trump, strengthened by support from women and Black voters, although the margin is still within the poll’s plus or minus 4-point margin of error. 

The Rust Belt states that comprise the Democratic Party’s ‘blue wall’ collectively are worth 44 Electoral College votes. Pennsylvania is the largest prize with 19 votes, Michigan has 15 and Wisconsin holds 10. 

If Harris can win Pennsylvania and one other ‘blue wall’ state, Trump would need to sweep the other swing states, which include the Sun Belt states of Arizona, Georgia, Nevada and North Carolina, to win the White House. 

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Now it’s the helmet communications, the latest in a long line of this thing doesn’t fit.

Or maybe it could fit — if we knew what in the world we were doing. 

“Sometimes, it feels like we’re running around plugging holes with good intentions,” LSU coach Brian Kelly told me in July about college football’s shoot-first, ask-how-the-darn-thing-works process of copying an NFL model. 

The latest misstep (and I can’t believe I’m writing this): college football decided to copy the NFL’s helmet communications model ― without signal encryption. As absurd as it sounds, it shouldn’t be a surprise.

We’ve seen this movie, and we know how it plays out.

College football is not the NFL. No matter how university presidents and conference commissioners and athletic directors and coaches and players try to make it fit. 

The SEC and the Big Ten aren’t the NFC and AFC. The College Football Playoff is not the NFL playoffs. 

Recruiting is not the NFL draft, free-player movement is not free agency and pay for play is not the salary cap. 

The NFL is a multi-billion dollar corporation with levels upon levels of research and contingency, all aimed at making one of the most successful sports on the planet bulletproof to outside influence. 

College football is a multi-billion dollar conglomeration of small businesses, each publicly standing together in search of common ground — and each doing everything they can behind the scenes to separate from the other. 

The NFL is a superhighway. One way in, one way out. 

College football is a maze of confusion and consternation, walls and obstacles moving and shifting with each passing season. A perfectly imperfect symphony of chaos. 

This brings us all the way back to college football’s latest failure to copy the NFL. Three decades ago, the NFL made the then-state of the art move to use helmet communications. They were tired of signals, and shuffling players in and out with play calls, and sign stealing from opponents. 

Sound familiar?

So this offseason, the NCAA rules committee adopted the most basic of processes with helmet communication, and I know this is going to shock you, it this week become a convoluted mess of blame and conspiracy. Texas Tech asked the Big 12 to look into its games against TCU and Baylor (both losses) just to make sure everything is copacetic.

If you can’t beat ’em, they must be cheatin’.

All of this coming months after defending national champion Michigan had a former staffer scouting future opponents and stealing signals. You would think – after the former head coach of the defending national champions was suspended by his own conference for three games during the season for the sign stealing fiasco – college football wouldn’t wade into the great unknown of helmet communication (that’s sarcasm) without the exact model the NFL uses. 

The exact model and process.

But instead of copying it to letter — including the all-important encryption of devices — college football decided to take this big step with open channels of communication, and now Texas Tech is (subtly) questioning how it lost to Baylor by 24 points. I swear, I’m not making this up. 

This, of course, leads to tinfoil conspiracies that someone, somewhere in the stadium, has a scanner and is listening to sideline communications and giving one team a competitive advantage over the other. 

So now the Power Four conferences have sent back the devices to the manufacturers, who will now install software updates that include encryption ― and send them back in time for Saturday’s games.

Absolutely hilarious. 

Watching this circus from outside the tent, I reached out to a Power Four coach Wednesday night, who was so flustered while explaining the overreaction of another sign stealing event, he finally blurted out that maybe blocking and tackling is the better way to go. 

Let’s just say a person in the stadium has a scanner, and let’s just say that person can find the correct channel despite most stadiums now full of Wi-Fi access, and anywhere from 65-105,000 cell phones in a confined space. Give or take an apathetic fan base.

That person is going to to find the correct channel, and it will be clear and can be heard and understood without interruption. And then the heavy lifting begins: figuring out the team’s play call verbiage.

Because the headsets cut off at the 15-second mark of the play clock, the person with scanner that hasn’t been affected in any way by all of those Wi-Fi signals and cell phones in close proximity of each other, then has to translate what amounts to Mandarin Chinese into football speak, switch to their team’s channel and send the play call. 

At that point, the staff on the sidelines has to assess the defense (or offense) of the opponent, decide how to adjust, and then signal the play call change onto the field. 

In all of 15 seconds. 

And you wonder why college football can’t figure out NIL guidelines, and free-player movement, and pay for play, and non-conference schedules, and just about every other thing the sport gets its hands on while moving closer and closer to the NFL model. 

Just block and tackle, baby. 

That’s about as perfectly imperfect as it gets. 

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

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The 2024 NASCAR Cup Series Championship Race is fast approaching, and two contenders are already locked in.

Joey Logano, who won the opening race of the third round of the playoffs two weeks ago in Las Vegas Motor Speedway, and Tyler Reddick, who won last weekend’s race at Homestead-Miami Speedway, clinched berths in the championship race. The final two berths will be decided this Sunday at Martinsville Speedway.

The Championship 4 drivers will then race the rest of the field on Sunday, Nov. 10 at Phoenix Raceway. The driver among the four with the best result will be crowned the 2024 NASCAR Cup Series champion.

Which drivers will race for 2024 NASCAR Cup Series championship?

Team Penske driver Joey Logano and 23XI Racing driver Tyler Reddick are locked into the Championship 4. The final two contenders will be determined this Sunday at Martinsville Speedway.

Logano won Cup Series championships in 2018 and 2022. Reddick is seeking his first Cup title.

Who are the other NASCAR Cup Series playoff drivers?

These are the other six championship hopefuls in order of points through eight races. If one of them wins Sunday’s race at Martinsville, they will clinch a berth in the NASCAR Championship Race. If none of them win, the final two championship berths will be decided by points after Martinsville.

Christopher Bell, Joe Gibbs Racing … 4,132
William Byron, Hendrick Motorsports … 4,110 (-22 points)
Kyle Larson, Hendrick Motorsports … 4,103 (-29)
Denny Hamlin, Joe Gibbs Racing … 4,092 (-40)
Ryan Blaney, Team Penske … 4,072 (-60)
Chase Elliott, Hendrick Motorsports … 4,067 (-65)

When is the NASCAR Cup Series playoff race at Martinsville?

The Xfinity 500 is scheduled for Sunday, Nov. 3 at 2 p.m. ET at Martinsville Speedway in Martinsville, Virginia.

Time: 2 p.m. ET
TV: NBC
Live stream: NBC Sports website, NBC Sports app and Fubo.

When is the NASCAR Cup Series Championship Race?

The NASCAR Championship Race is Sunday, Nov. 10 at Phoenix Raceway in Avondale, Arizona.

Time: 3 p.m. ET (1 p.m. local)
TV: NBC
Live stream: NBC Sports website, NBC Sports app and Fubo

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.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The largest marathon in the world returns to the Big Apple, and the 53rd edition of the 26.2-mile jaunt through the five boroughs of New York City figures to be the biggest ever.

More than 50,000 runners will run the TCS New York City Marathon on Sunday, along with millions more expected to watch on television.

American runners are looking to break a drought by crossing the finish line first. It’s been 15 years since Meb Keflezighi won on the men’s side in 2009. Shalane Flanagan, in 2017, was the last American woman to win the NYC marathon.

Three of the four professional winners from last year’s race are coming back to try to defend their crown. Tamirat Tola, the men’s professional winner, and Hellen Obiri of Kenya, the women’s winner, is back. Marcel Hug is going for his fourth consecutive victory in the men’s wheelchair division at the NYC marathon and seventh win overall.

The women’s wheelchair defending champion, Catherine Debrunner, who won five Paralympic gold medals in Paris and captured the title at last month’s Chicago Marathon, will not participate.

When is New York City Marathon?

The 2024 TCS New York City Marathon starts at 8 a.m. ET on Sunday, Nov. 3.

Start times for New York City Marathon

8 a.m. – Professional Men’s Wheelchair Division
8:02 a.m. – Professional Women’s Wheelchair Division
8:22 a.m. – Handcycle Category and Select Athletes with Disabilities
8:35 a.m. – Professional Women’s Open Division
9:05 a.m. – Professional Men’s Open Division
9:10 a.m. – Wave 1
9:45 a.m. – Wave 2
10:20 a.m. – Wave 3
10:55 a.m. – Wave 4
11:30 a.m. – Wave 5 

How long is New York City Marathon?

The official closure time of the marathon is 10 p.m. ET. Runners finishing after that time will not be recorded as official finishers but will receive finisher medals.

How to watch New York City Marathon

The national broadcast will air on ESPN2 at 8 a.m. ET and can be streamed via the ESPN App. A domestic Spanish-language broadcast will air live on ESPN3 starting at 8 a.m. ET.

For those watching in the New York City tri-state area, coverage on WABC-TV, Channel 7 begins at 6:30 a.m. ET.

From 3-5 p.m. ET, ABC will broadcast a live two-hour show featuring celebrities and thousands of everyday runners.

Patrons can cheer on their favorite competitors, friends and family in person from the grandstands located at West 62nd Street and Broadway. Tickets are available for the Grandstand Seating. Most of the course from mile 3 to mile 26 is open to spectators, who can find sidewalk space and watch for free.

Fans can also follow a runner’s progress via the TCS New York City Marathon App.

New York City Marathon route

The race starts at the Verrazzano–Narrows Bridge on Staten Island before runners work their way through Brooklyn, Queens, Manhattan, and the Bronx, with the finish line at Central Park, at 67th Street on West Drive.

New York City Marathon defending champions

Ethiopia’s Tamirat Tola won the men’s professional race in 2:04:58, setting a new open division course record, while Hellen Obiri of Kenya outlasted Ethiopia’s Letesenbet Gidey and defending champion Sharon Lokedi to win the women’s professional crown.

The Swiss pair of Marcel Hug and Catherine Debrunner won the men’s and women’s wheelchair events, respectively. Hug won the event for the third consecutive year, capturing his record-sixth NYC marathon victory, and Debrunner broke the course record by three minutes, set the previous year.

New York City Marathon prize money

Prize money is equal for men and women, and the top American finishers in the men’s and women’s races will receive $25,000. A $50,000 bonus will be paid to the Open Division and/or Wheelchair Division race winners who break the current event record.

1st – $100,000
2nd – $60,000
3rd – $40,000
4th – $25,000
5th – $15,000
6th –$10,000
7th – $7,500
8th – $5,000
9th – $2,500
10th – $2,000

New York City Marathon course records

Open Division Men: 2:04:58, Tamirat Tola, 2023
Open Division Women: 2:22:31, Margaret Okayo, 2003
Wheelchair Division Men: 1:25:26, Marcel Hug, 2022
Wheelchair Division Women: 1:39:32, Catherine Debrunner, 2023

New York City Marathon weather

Temperatures are expected to be pleasant, with very little wind and a high temperature of 57 degrees. There is no rain expected in the forecast.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Halloween is nigh, and it’s a scary time for quite a few NFL teams. Week 9 could be a last act of desperation for many squads attempting to escape a season-killing defeat.

Start with the New York Jets, who host the Houston Texans on All Hallows’ Eve and could have their nightmare of a season officially staked in prime time.

But other clubs will also harbor fears as the calendar reaches November. The Cincinnati Bengals, Cleveland Browns, Dallas Cowboys, Jacksonville Jaguars and Miami Dolphins all entered the 2024 season with, at minimum, playoff expectations – and those are in jeopardy of going up in a poof of smoke for any of them Sunday.

Two teams that do seem likely to stick around for a while are the NFC North rival Detroit Lions and Green Bay Packers, who will share the most anticipated stage of Week 9 – which will be at Lambeau Field, long a house of horrors for the Lions but now a building they’re hoping to leave with a three-game winning streak. Whoever prevails will sit alone atop the division.

Our panel of NFL warlocks gaze into their crystal balls to forecast the future …

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

(Odds provided by BetMGM)

Houston Texans at New York Jets
Dallas Cowboys at Atlanta Falcons
Denver Broncos at Baltimore Ravens
Miami Dolphins at Buffalo Bills
New Orleans Saints at Carolina Panthers
Las Vegas Raiders at Cincinnati Bengals
Los Angeles Chargers at Cleveland Browns
Washington Commanders at New York Giants
New England Patriots at Tennessee Titans
Chicago Bears at Arizona Cardinals
Jacksonville Jaguars at Philadelphia Eagles
Detroit Lions at Green Bay Packers
Los Angeles Rams at Seattle Seahawks
Indianapolis Colts at Minnesota Vikings
Tampa Bay Buccaneers at Kansas City Chiefs

All NFL news on and off the field. Sign up for USA TODAY’s 4th and Monday newsletter.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Orlando Magic star Paolo Banchero will be sidelined indefinitely.

The Magic announced that Banchero suffered a torn right oblique in the Magic’s 102-99 loss to the Chicago Bulls on Wednesday. Banchero will be reevaluated in four to six weeks, but no timetable has been set for his return.

Banchero’s injury halts a historic start to his season. Through five games, the 21-year-old averaged 29 points, 8.8 rebounds and 5.6 assists per game in 36.4 minutes of play.

He scored 33 points and had 11 rebounds in the Magic’s 116–97 season-opening win over the Miami Heat, joining Shaquille O’Neal and Tracy McGrady as the only players in franchise history to score 30-plus points and pull down 10-plus rebounds in a season opener. Banchero then dropped a career-high 50 points, 13 rebounds and nine assists in the Magic’s 119-115 win over the Indiana Fever, becoming the youngest player since LeBron James to score 50-plus points and record 10-plus rebounds and five-plus assists in a game.

Banchero, the No. 1 overall pick of the 2022 NBA draft, was named the NBA Rookie of the Year for 2022-23 and earned NBA All-Rookie First Team honors. He then earned his first All-Star nod last season.

All things Magic: Latest Orlando Magic news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

The USA TODAY app gets you to the heart of the news — fastDownload for award-winning coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, the eNewspaper and more.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY