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Benched. 

It sounds cold. Maybe even cruel. A sobering NFL reality check. 

Yet very necessary in the case of Anthony Richardson. 

If Richardson, 22, drafted fourth overall in 2023 to become the franchise quarterback for the Indianapolis Colts, ultimately lives up to his lofty promise – in 2025, 2027, in a Colts uniform or not – his benching this week might someday be viewed as some saving grace. 

Take a seat, young blood. Watch a grizzled vet, Joe Flacco, illustrate how to handle this enormous job. Shane Steichen, the Indianapolis coach, had to make this move – especially after the young quarterback checked himself out of the game for a third-down play in the third quarter during the loss to the Houston Texans on Sunday. 

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If not, combined with other factors, that’s one way for the young coach to lose the locker room. The words coming from veteran center Ryan Kelly on Monday were striking, with candor that is not so common in these types of situations. 

Kelly, a ninth-year pro, was taken aback by Richardson’s decision to remove himself from the game because, as the quarterback admitted, he was “tired, ain’t gonna lie.” 

“We had a conversation about it, and I think he knows that’s not the standard he needs to play up to and the rest of the team holds him to,” Kelly told reporters. “I’ll kind of leave the conversation we had at that. I know he’s going take some criticism for that, and rightfully so. That’s a tough look.” 

Ouch. Talk about accountability. If Kelly expressed as much publicly, imagine how many other players felt similarly as the Colts (4-4) are positioned to at least make a run at the playoffs.  

The optics of bailing amid the heat of adversity could take some time – and performance – for Richardson to overcome. Remember the defining image of potential that Richardson demonstrated in Week 1 against the Texans? His sizzling, 60-yard touchdown dime to Alec Pierce was something special. Now there’s an impressionable counterbalance with the sight of him tapping his helmet to call for a replacement when he wasn’t injured. 

Even deeper is the lesson that Richardson needs to heed about the tangible element of leadership needed for a quarterback. 

Then again, this switch largely reflects performance. Richardson is the NFL’s 32nd-ranked passer with a mark of 57.2 on the season. He has completed just 44.4% of his throws (4 TDs, 7 INTs) and didn’t post a completion rate better than 50% in any of the five games he finished (six starts) this season. That doesn’t cut it. 

At least Richardson, in speaking with the media on Wednesday, sounds like he will swallow this medicine in good faith. 

‘Of course, it hurts as a competitor,’ Richardson said, via ESPN’s Stephen Holder. ‘Definitely don’t want to be told you’re not the guy anymore for the upcoming week. But it’s all good. Using this moment as an opportunity to grow and just learn from my mistakes.’

He’s not the only one with a lesson to learn. Colts GM Chris Ballard and Steichen bet big on Richardson (6-4, 244 pounds) despite his limited college experience at Florida. He started just one season for the Gators (53.8% completion rate), as was the case at Eastside High in Gainesville, Florida.

The limited snaps before he arrived in the NFL seemingly provided a clue about the developmental curve Richardson needed. And it wasn’t helped by the shoulder injury, which required surgery, that limited his rookie year to four games. 

In short, the results show that it was too soon to throw Richardson into the fire. Still, it’s way too early to label him a bust…even though history shows that the success rate for first-round quarterbacks is roughly 50-50. 

Sure, Jayden Daniels, drafted second overall in April, has lit it up for the Washington Commanders. Caleb Williams (picked No. 1 overall by the Chicago Bears) and Bo Nix (12th, Denver Broncos) have made promising strides. Last year, C.J. Stroud (No. 2, Texans) was the NFL’s Offensive Rookie of the Year. In 2022, Brock Purdy entered the NFL as a seventh-round pick for the San Francisco 49ers and, after cracking the lineup as a rookie, went to the Super Bowl in his second season. 

Yet of those five, only Stroud, an Ohio State product, had less than three years of starting experience in college. Daniels started four years at Arizona State and LSU. Williams started for three years at Oklahoma and USC. Nix had five years as a college starter at Auburn and Oregon. Purdy started four years at Iowa State.

So, while expectations for instant impact from young quarterbacks have increased during an age when the passers are generally bettered prepared than they were a generation ago – bolstered by a developmental curve that is ramped up by factors that include seven-on-seven camps and quarterback tutors – each case is hardly identical. Some quarterbacks will need an old-school growth plan. That’s not a knock on Richardson, but instead a word of caution about expectations. 

It’s easy to understand why the Colts were so enamored by Richardson’s potential. His physical gifts include that rocket arm. And aligning him with one of the NFL’s best offensive lines and one of the league’s best running backs in Jonathan Taylor offered some ideal support. 

Yet even though Steichen has declared how much he believes that growth comes with the experience of playing, it’s up to well-compensated coaches and GMs to strike the balance. Never mind that the Colts have been so desperate to find the long-term quarterback answer since Andrew Luck’s retirement, having tried stopgap veterans such as Philip Rivers and Matt Ryan.  

The apparent miscalculation of Richardson’s learning curve has the Colts executing Plan B with another grizzled vet, the 39-year-old Flacco. Heading into the matchup on Sunday against the Minnesota Vikings, Flacco has thrown for seven TDs with one interception this season. 

Steichen explained that the move comes with the realization that he owes it to the entire 53-man roster. That should have been the case all along.  

No, he’s not giving up on the hope that Richardson could use his duty as an understudy and the practice reps as a means to someday develop into the vision that existed when they drafted him. When someone asked about the prospect of Richardson someday starting again, the coach said, “That would be great. We’ll see.” 

With Flacco, who last year came off the bench (and actually the sofa, too) to spark the Cleveland Browns run to a playoff berth, it’s about trying to win now. 

“We’ll get to the future when we get to the future,” Steichen said. 

Richardson promises that he’ll be ready for his next opportunity. “When it does present itself, I’m going to take advantage of it,” he said. 

When and where that chance comes is anybody’s guess. The Colts are clearly planning to roll with Flacco for the rest of the season. But it’s the NFL, where crazy things happen. 

Like the would-be franchise quarterback wanting a break from the action – only to find himself with a seat on the bench for what could be an extended period of time. 

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Former President Trump is suing CBS News for $10 billion in damages, stating the network practiced ‘deceptive conduct’ for the purpose of election interference in its interview with Vice President Kamala Harris.

Fox News Digital exclusively obtained the lawsuit filed Thursday. 

Trump attorneys said the complaint comes due to ‘CBS’ partisan and unlawful acts of election and voter interference through malicious, deceptive, and substantial news distortion calculated to confuse, deceive, and mislead the public.’ 

Trump attorneys also argued the edits were done in an effort to ‘attempt to tip the scales in favor of the Democratic Party as the heated 2024 Presidential Election — which President Trump is leading — approaches its conclusion.’ 

‘President Trump brings this action to redress the immense harm caused to him, to his campaign, and to tens of millions of citizens in Texas and across America by CBS’s deceptive broadcasting conduct,’ the lawsuit states.

The lawsuit comes after Trump’s attorneys wrote letters to CBS News demanding the network release the full transcript of the ’60 Minutes’ interview with Harris after it aired two different answers to the same question. Trump attorneys asked CBS to preserve all documents and communications related to the interview pending a potential legal battle. 

CBS News refused to release the full transcript, citing the First Amendment, and rejected the assertion that it had ‘doctored’ the Harris interview to mislead the American people. The network insisted that ‘the interview was not doctored’ and that the program ‘did not hide any part of the vice president’s answer to the question at issue.’ 

The lawsuit filed Thursday specifically references the exchange Harris had with ’60 Minutes’ correspondent Bill Whitaker. In a preview clip that aired on ‘Face the Nation,’ Harris was asked why it seemed like Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu wasn’t listening to the U.S. 

‘Well, Bill, the work that we have done has resulted in a number of movements in that region by Israel that were very much prompted by, or a result of, many things, including our advocacy for what needs to happen in the region,’ Harris responded in the ‘Face the Nation’ clip. 

Harris was mocked by conservatives for offering a lengthy ‘word salad’ to Whitaker. But when that same question aired the following night in the primetime election special, a shorter, more focused answer from the vice president followed.

‘We are not going to stop pursuing what is necessary for the United States to be clear about where we stand on the need for this war to end,’ Harris said in the primetime special. 

Critics accused CBS News of editing Harris’ ‘word salad’ answer to shield the vice president from further backlash, and there have been growing calls for the network to release the full transcript after it only shared transcripts of what had aired. 

‘To paper over Kamala’s ‘word salad’ weakness, CBS used its national platform on 60 Minutes to cross the line from the exercise of judgment in reporting to deceitful, deceptive manipulation of news,’ the lawsuit states.

Trump lawyers argue that news organizations ‘are responsible for accurately representing the truth of events, not distorting an interview to try and falsely make their preferred candidate appear coherent and decisive, which Kamala most certainly is not.’

‘Due to CBS’ actions, the public could not distinguish which Kamala they saw in the Interview: the candidate or the actual puppet of a behind-the-scenes editor,’ the lawsuit states, noting that Whitaker’s question ‘was of the utmost public significance — U.S. foreign policy on the matter of the Israel/Gaza war — at a time of immense importance, mere weeks before the most critical presidential election in American history.’ 

Trump is demanding a jury trial and at least $10 billion in damages for CBS’ alleged ‘ongoing false, misleading, and deceptive acts; the attorneys’ fees and costs associated with this action; and such other relief as the court deems just and proper.’ 

CBS News did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment. 

Fox News’ Brian Flood and Joseph Wulfsohn contributed to this report. 

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U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken confirmed on Thursday that 8,000 North Korean soldiers in Russia are expected to begin combat operations against Ukrainian troops in Kursk ‘in the coming days.’

The secretary said that of the 10,000 North Korean soldiers believed to have been sent to Russia for training, 80% of that force is now in the Kursk region, where Ukraine first launched an incursion in August.

Ukraine has since captured and held onto roughly 460 square miles according to reports earlier this month, not only prompting civilian evacuations from the region but also forcing Russia to fight its war on its own territory. 

Blinken, speaking alongside Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin and their South Korean counterparts in a joint press conference Thursday, said Russia has been training the North Korean troops in artillery and UAV basic infantry operations like trench clearing in an indication that Moscow ‘fully intend[s] to use these forces in frontline operations.’

The Russian military has also apparently provided these troops with uniforms and equipment in what Austin also said ‘strongly indicates that Russia intends to use these foreign forces in frontline operations in its war of choice against Ukraine.’

‘[Russian President Vladimir] Putin has been throwing more and more Russians into a meat grinder of his own making in Ukraine. Now he’s turning to North Korean troops, and that is a clear sign of weakness,’ Blinken said. 

The secretary also said Russian troops are seeing record high casualty rates with some 1,200 casualties reported a day in eastern Ukraine – a rate that is more than Russia has endured at any other time since the war began more than two and half years ago.

The deployment of North Korean troops to Russia, first confirmed by the Pentagon a week ago, is the first time in 100 years that Russia has invited foreign troops onto its soil, confirmed Blinken. 

When pressed by reporters about whether Ukrainian forces can continue to hold onto the territory in Kursk, Austin said simply, ‘Yes.’

‘If you take a look at what I said earlier in terms of the numbers of casualties that Russia is suffering on a daily basis… [and] you do the math on a given month – those are pretty big numbers,’ Austin said. ‘Ten thousand pales in comparison to those kinds of casualties.’

Blinken said additional security assistance will be announced for Ukraine in ‘the coming days.’

The joint address came just hours after North Korea on Thursday also launched its longest ever intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) roughly 620 miles over an 86-minute period in the direction of the East Sea, reported Japanese authorities.

Austin told reporters on Thursday he did not believe Russia had any involvement in the latest missile test but said the U.S. is continuing to work with allies and partners in the region to analyze the missile launch. Though Austin also warned that North Korea’s partnership with Russia is likely to ’embolden’ it.

‘[North Korea] stands a chance of gaining in this exchange,’ Austin said in reference to its partnership with Russia. ‘This is something we’re going to have to continue to watch very, very closely. 

‘It will… potentially embolden them to do more of the kinds of things that we’ve seen them do here recently,’ he added in reference to the ICBM launch. 

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Prominent conservative women are pushing back against billionaire and Harris campaign surrogate Mark Cuban for arguing that former President Trump would never surround himself with ‘strong, intelligent women.’

‘@mcubanI’ve been a CEO and professional sports team owner JUST like you,’ former Sen. Kelly Loeffler, R-Ga., said Thursday in response to Cuban on X. ‘I’m one of the millions of strong, conservative women who back Trump. You might think we’re stupid, or that we’re garbage. We think it’s time to replace you and Kamala with leaders who don’t hate us.’

Loeffler’s comments came in response to Cuban’s remarks on ABC’s ‘The View’ on Thursday morning.

‘Donald Trump, you never see him around strong, intelligent women. Ever,’ Cuban said. ‘It’s just that simple. They’re intimidating to him. He doesn’t like to be challenged by them.’ 

The remarks were quickly condemned by the Trump campaign, with campaign national press secretary Karoline Leavitt calling the comment ‘insulting.’

‘This is extremely insulting to the thousands of women who work for President Trump, and the tens of millions of women who are voting for him,’ Leavitt said. ‘These women are mothers, entrepreneurs, and industry leaders, and they are, indeed, strong and intelligent, despite what Mark Cuban and Kamala Harris say.’ 

Speaking to Fox News Digital, Leavitt added that ‘joy at Kamala HQ has been replaced by division, vitriol, and a disturbing level of disrespect for the millions of Americans who are supporting President Trump after four years of destruction under Kamala Harris.’

However, Loeffler and Leavitt weren’t the only conservative women to respond to Cuban, with many others taking to X to voice their frustrations with the billionaire’s remarks.

‘I’ll take this seriously when @mcuban can define what a woman is,’ conservative columnist Carly Bird said.

‘More of the same condescending rhetoric from Harris allies,’ said Sen. Joni Ernst, R-Iowa. ‘This strong, intelligent woman voted for Donald J. Trump — and I’ve been proud to be on the road across this great country with @TeamTrump!’

‘Trying to think of a response to sissy man @mcuban but I’m too dumb and weak to do so,’ quipped conservative columnist Julie Kelly.

‘Just when you think the Kamala camp can’t possibly alienate and divide people any more than they already have…now they attack women who support Trump. Nice job, Mark,’ added Republican National Committee co-chair Lara Trump.

Cuban’s comments came just a few days after President Biden apparently described Trump supporters as ‘garbage’ during a Zoom call with Voto Latino on Tuesday.

‘The only garbage I see floating out there is his supporters,’ Biden said in response to comments made by comedian Tony Hinchcliffe, who called Puerto Rico a ‘floating island of garbage’ during Trump’s rally at Madison Square Garden.

The White House has denied that the president was referring directly to the former president’s supporters with the remark.

Nevertheless, Trump has seized on the Biden comments, telling supporters in Wisconsin on Wednesday that Democrats have expressed too much ‘hatred’ towards those who disagree with them.

‘My response to Joe and Kamala is very simple: You can’t lead America if you don’t love Americans,’ Trump said. ‘And you can’t be president if you hate the American people, and there’s a lot of hatred there.’ 

The Harris campaign did not immediately respond to a Fox News Digital request for comment.

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Nondairy milk lovers, rejoice.

Starting next week, Starbucks will stop charging coffee drinkers who wish to customize their drinks with nondairy milk options an extra fee, the company announced Wednesday.

The change will go into effect on Nov. 7, the day the company will launch its holiday menu, Starbucks said in a release.

Starbucks said dropping the extra charge will make ‘it easier for customers to make their Starbucks beverage their own’ by customizing popular drink recipes with nondairy milk options, including soy milk, oat milk, almond milk or coconut milk, according to the release.

‘Core to the Starbucks Experience is the ability to customize your beverage to make it yours. By removing the extra charge for non-dairy milks we’re embracing all the ways our customers enjoy their Starbucks,’ Brian Niccol, Starbucks’ chairman and CEO, said in the release.

Substituting a nondairy milk is the second-most-requested customization from customers, according to Starbucks. It falls behind adding a shot of espresso.

The company estimates that customers who pay to modify their milk choices will get a price reduction of more than 10% when the change goes into effect.

‘This is just one of many changes we’ll make to ensure a visit to Starbucks is worth it every time,’ Niccol said in the release.

Starbucks announced earlier that it will discontinue its Oleato olive oil drinks in early November.

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

Jake Paul made tens of millions of dollars as a YouTube star, and now he’s doing the same as a boxer. He was among the world’s 50 highest-paid athletes in 2022, according to Forbes, and continues to rank among the highest-earning content creators this year through his social media fame, boxing career and new business endeavors.

Most Valuable Promotions is among Paul’s start-up companies, and it is behind the Nov. 15 fight between Paul and legendary boxer Mike Tyson at AT&T Stadium that will be streamed exclusively on Netflix. The event, headlined by the Tyson-Paul exhibition bout, is almost here after a delay related to health issues with Tyson.

So how much money could Paul make for this fight against Tyson? The answer isn’t completely straightforward.

Here’s everything there is to know about what Paul and Tyson stand to make when they meet in the ring, as well as information on how to watch and the current event card:

How much is Jake Paul getting paid to fight Mike Tyson?

Neither Tyson nor fight promoters have publicly revealed what Tyson’s payday will be for this fight, and there has been no official announcement about a purse or contract signed by Paul or Tyson.

About the only unofficial clue about the money involved with this event came from Paul at an Aug. 18 news conference promoting the fight.

‘I’m here to make $40 million and knock out a legend,’ Paul said.

Tyson, in explaining why money was not his impetus to fight Paul, said he ‘could be waiting on a check every day from cannabis,’ in reference to the Tyson 2.0 brand he co-founded three years ago. Forbes estimated the company made $150 million in revenues in 2023 off marijuana products.

Boxing industry experts have estimated Tyson could make somewhere in the range of $20 million at various times since the event was announced last March. Jimmy Kimmel, when Tyson was a guest on ‘Jimmy Kimmel Live’ on ABC last month, alluded to the alleged price tag while speaking to the former heavyweight champion.

‘I know you’re making a lot of money … at least $20 million or something like that,’ Kimmel said at one point during the interview. He did not ask Tyson to confirm the figure.

What is Jake Paul’s fight bet with Mike Tyson?

Paul released a video earlier last month offering Tyson $5 million if he can last more than four rounds in their fight. But it comes with a caveat, in addition to the apparent fake belly Paul wore while making the proposal.

If Tyson fails to make it past the fourth round, he must get a tattoo that reads: ‘I love Jake Paul.’ Tyson responded in an interview with USA TODAY Sports.

‘He should offer more,’ Tyson said, before suggesting ‘probably $20 (million).’

“Tell him probably about $20 (million),” Tyson added.

Tyson vs. Paul: Time, date and streaming

Date: Friday, Nov. 15
Time: Ring walk not yet announced (full event begins at 8 p.m. ET)
TV: Not available on TV
Streaming: Netflix

Jake Paul vs. Mike Tyson odds:

As of Oct. 16, odds from DraftKings give Paul the edge against Tyson.

Moneyline: Paul (-275) | Tyson (+210)

Jake Paul vs. Mike Tyson fight card

*Full card yet to be released

Super lightweight title bout: Katie Taylor vs. Amando Serrano
Middleweight: Neeraj Goyat vs. Whindersson Nunes
Welterweight: Mario “El Azteca” Barrios vs. Abel Ramos

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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Top House Republicans are coalescing behind the House Administration Committee’s subpoena of Democratic fundraising giant ActBlue.

Republicans have accused the company of having insufficient donor verification standards. Committee Chair Bryan Steil, R-Wis., has argued that the site is vulnerable to fraudulent and illegal foreign donations, though ActBlue has said it ‘rigorously protects donors’ security.’

‘ActBlue has a lot of explaining to do, and Chairman Steil is right to demand answers on these very serious allegations of foreign funds being funneled through the platform,’ Rep. Richard Hudson, R-N.C., chairman of House Republicans’ campaign arm, told Fox News Digital.

‘Just as we must protect the right to vote for American citizens, we must ensure our elections are free from foreign financial interference.’

House GOP Conference Chairwoman Elise Stefanik, R-N.Y., also credited Steil and pointed out that his accusations come amid reports that China and Iran are trying to influence the election.

‘Malign foreign actors are attempting to hijack American elections through the Far Left Democrat fundraising platform ActBlue by tipping the scales in favor of Kamala Harris and Congressional Democrats,’ Stefanik said. ‘It has never been more critical to ensure American elections are free from foreign manipulation.’

ActBlue did not require a card verification value (CVV) to be input for donations until recently, prompting a flurry of concern from Republican lawmakers and some GOP state attorneys general.

Steil sent multiple letters and requests for information to the platform, which has insisted it holds donor security to a high standard.

A spokesperson for House Majority Leader Steve Scalise, R-La., said he was ‘supportive’ of the subpoena, adding, ‘Only American citizens should be participants in our elections, and this investigation is critical to ensure that our elections remain secure and shielded from foreign actors.’

Steil issued a subpoena Wednesday to ActBlue for ‘documents and communications related to ActBlue’s donor verification policies and the potential for foreign actors, primarily from Iran, Russia, Venezuela, and China to use ActBlue to launder illicit money into U.S. political campaigns.’

ActBlue responded to Steil in a statement, ‘ActBlue has received Chairman Steil’s latest inquiry and will respond to address the continued inaccuracies and misrepresentations about our platform, as we have done previously. We rigorously protect donors’ security and maintain strict anti-fraud compliance practices. We have zero tolerance for fraud on our platform.’

But fellow Republicans on his committee are standing firm that the subpoena was necessary.

Rep. Laurel Lee, R-Fla., the chair of the panel’s subcommittee on elections, told Fox News Digital, ‘In our investigation so far, we have found that loopholes in ActBlue’s insufficient security protocols may be exploited by bad actors, potentially leading to countries like China, Russia and Venezuela donating to campaigns in the names of Americans without their consent.’

‘With the general election just five days away, Americans need to have confidence that our elections are secure and that there is no foul play involved,’ she said.

Committee member Rep. Greg Murphy, R-N.C., said, ‘The subpoena is critical for the committee to ensure federal campaign finance laws are not being violated, including laundering money into campaign coffers through inadequate security protections.’

Meanwhile, Rep. Stephanie Bice, R-Okla., told Fox News Digital, ‘Like the chairman, I have been concerned by the inadequate security protocols at ActBlue, who haven’t required CVV verification and allow for pre-paid cards for political donations.’

The accusations come at a critical time, with Election Day less than a week out.

The platform denied all GOP allegations of wrongdoing in a statement to Fox News before Steil’s subpoena, ‘These false claims about ActBlue have been discredited repeatedly by campaign finance experts. ActBlue protects donors’ information by maintaining a robust security program and fraud prevention measures, often beyond what is required by law.’

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Vice President Kamala Harris criticized former President Trump’s remarks at a rally about protecting Americans, particularly women, from migrant crime ‘whether the women like it or not,’ calling his comment ‘offensive.’ 

Speaking with reporters Thursday morning, Harris said, ‘It’s just, it actually is being very offensive to women in terms of not understanding their agency, their authority, their rights and their ability to make decisions about their own lives, including their own bodies,’ tying his comments on illegal immigration to abortion. 

During his Green Bay, Wisconsin, rally, Trump talked about the southern border under President Biden and Harris. ‘Kamala has imported criminal migrants from prisons and jails, from insane asylums and mental institutions all over the world, from Venezuela to the Congo, including savage criminals to assault, rape and murder our women and girls,’ he said. 

He then discussed conversations with his staff on whether he should profess that he specifically wants to protect women from the consequences of an unsecured border. According to Trump, his advisers suggested it could be inappropriate to say. 

‘I said, well, I’m going to do it. Whether the women like it or not, I’m going to protect them,’ he told the crowd before being met with cheers. 

‘I’m going to protect them from migrants coming in. I’m going to protect them from foreign countries that want to hit us with missiles, and lots of other things.’

Harris told reporters that ‘this is just the latest in a series of revelations by the former president of how he thinks about women and their agency.’

Trump is notably against a federal abortion ban and has emphasized that he wants the issue to remain in the individual states. 

The vice president referred to state-level abortion restrictions as a ‘Trump abortion ban,’ claiming, ‘one in three women live in a Trump abortion ban state and has legal restrictions on the right she rightly should have to make decisions about her own body.’ 

In a 2023 survey by the AP-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research, the nuance of public sentiment on abortion was revealed in greater detail. While most Americans believed that abortion should be legal to a certain extent, opinions changed drastically when the 15-week and 24-week markers were addressed. 

Overall, nearly three quarters believed in legal abortion at six weeks, including more than half of Republicans. However, just 51% supported legal abortion at 15 weeks, and only 27% backed it as far as 24 weeks. 

The poll was conducted June 22-26, 2023, and featured 1,220 respondents. The margin of error was +/- 3.9 percentage points.

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Intensity, tight games and several that verged on playoff-like atmospheres marked the first week of the 2024-25 NBA season.

And while the Boston Celtics have erased any concerns about a championship hangover, a few intriguing matchups headline the second weekend of the season.

The 3-1 Orlando Magic and 4-0 Cavaliers, two teams that have flashed improved play thus far, meet Friday night in Cleveland before the Cavs face a quick turnaround; Cleveland then heads to Milwaukee to face the struggling Bucks Saturday night on a back-to-back.

Friday also provides a rematch of the most compelling playoff series from last year, the Western Conference semifinal between the Denver Nuggets and Minnesota Timberwolves.

Yet, before we get to the weekend, here are some takeaways from the first week of the NBA season:

Lakers offense gets facelift under JJ Reddick

It was the second possession of the second game of the season, and the Lakers jogged calmly up the floor.

D’Angelo Russell underhanded the ball near midcourt to Anthony Davis, who then tossed it to Austin Reaves on the extended wing in one quick motion. The ball then found LeBron James (at the top of the key), who then fired it back to Davis (now on the left wing), who then no-looked a bounce pass to a rotating Reaves (now in the left corner). A quick return to Davis let Reaves shed his defender for a give-and-go feed.

Seven passes, four dribbles and an easy bucket with six seconds left on the shot clock.

JJ Reddick’s imprint on the L.A. offense has already been palpable in his first week: the Lakers will operate through Davis — often from the top of the key — emphasizing motion and off-ball movement, cuts and quick passes.

L.A. ranks sixth in the NBA in scoring (117.3 points per game) and fifth in offensive rating (117.3). It ranks fourth in assist-to-turnover ratio (2.20), one season after finishing 12th in the same category.

Perhaps put more simply: the Lakers are moving the ball more this season, ranking ninth in passes made per game (300), up from 25th last season (267.5).

Davis leads the league in scoring at 32.8 points per game, which would represent a career best, and is shooting 55% from the floor. This production should sneak him into MVP consideration. Reddick’s free-flowing, pass-happy philosophy has also extracted more from Reaves, who’s averaging 19.3 points per game — up from last year’s mark of 15.9 — and forward Rui Hachimura (17.5, up from 13.6).

More importantly, Los Angeles is 3-1, started 3-0 for the first time since the 2010-11 season, and has already felled the Timberwolves, Phoenix Suns and Sacramento Kings — all of whom are expected to seriously compete in the Western Conference.

Cavs make the case for running it back

Cleveland is running it back another season, with one massive exception. New coach Kenny Atkinson has embraced spacing, behind the progression of Evan Mobley as an inside-outside threat, to open lanes for Darius Garland to attack and Jarrett Allen to dominate in the low block.

Star guard Donovan Mitchell’s scoring is down — from 26.6 points per game last year to 23.8 — but the Cavs (4-0) have posted the top true shooting percentage (64%) this season and the NBA’s second-best offensive rating (122.3). Garland is shooting a career-best 50% from the field and Allen is putting them in at a remarkable 80.6%.

In fact, in a 135-point Cleveland outburst against Washington, Allen converted all 10 of his attempts.

Cleveland’s victory Monday over the Knicks was certainly impressive. Still, it’s far too early a sample size, and the first three Cavaliers opponents (Raptors, Pistons, Wizards) indicate that more accurate barometers lie ahead.

A Wednesday showdown against the Lakers should be telling.

Tyus Jones has stabilized the point guard position for the Suns

A team the Lakers have twice faced, the Suns, have found the answer to their point guard problem. Offseason signing Tyus Jones has stabilized the position, allowing Devin Booker and Bradley Beal to revert to their more natural positions.

Jones, as he has in his career, is an ultra-efficient distributor, and already has an assist-to-turnover ratio of 8.0, which ranks fifth in the NBA.

Perhaps one unintended consequence of all this, however, is that Booker and Beal still haven’t quite found their chemistry when Jones is on the floor. When one has played well, the other has had to defer.

Booker and Beal have played three games together this season; in those games, the lower scorer between the two has contributed just 15 points. This is a good problem to have, one that percolates when a team has three legitimate scoring options.

Paolo Banchero breakout season incoming?

He was always a rising star in the NBA, but, in Year 3, Paolo Banchero may be on the verge of elite superstardom. Banchero, 21, is tied for 11th in scoring (28.5 points per game) and has become far more efficient, particularly with his 3-pointer. He’s hitting them at a 39.1% clip, which is 5.2 percentage points more than last season.

His 50-point outburst against the Pacers was a career high.

With his vision and passing, body control and improving shot, his game is reminiscent of a young LeBron James. Banchero is averaging career highs in points, assists (6.0) and rebounds (9.3). He’s getting to the free throw stripe at nearly double the rate (13 attempts per game) than he did last year.

Defensive issues, lack of chemistry compounds slow start for Bucks

Milwaukee, stuck in a three-game losing streak, has several problems. Its defense, specifically its lack of perimeter defense, has allowed opponents to pop off for big shooting nights; in a Friday loss against the Bulls, Chicago laced 21 3-pointers on 44.7% shooting from beyond the arc.

In fact, the Bucks rank 26th in the NBA in defended field goal percentage (39.3%) on shots 15 feet or more from the basket. Defensive physicality and effort has been unacceptable, and the Bucks often look lost in help rotations.

Offensively, the ball stagnates. Milwaukee ranks 23rd in passes per game (268.5). Sometimes, the actions run through Giannis Antetokounmpo and other times it’s Damian Lillard. Yet, aside from the pick-and-roll, the two still haven’t played well off each other with consistency.

It may get worse. Milwaukee is entering a six-game stretch in which it plays the Grizzlies, Cavaliers (twice), Jazz, Knicks and Celtics.

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St. Louis City SC’s second season in Major League Soccer is capped with a new stadium naming rights deal.

The club’s stadium will be known as Energizer Park, the team announced Thursday. The renowned battery company is based in St. Louis, Missouri. The new name will go into effect Jan. 1, 2025, replacing the old name CITYPARK.

St. Louis City SC CEO Carolyn Kindle said Energizer ‘is part of the fabric of the St. Louis region’ and is showing its commitment to improving the area. She also compared the company to the high-energy team and its fans.

Energizer CEO Holdings President and CEO Mark LaVigne cited the growth of MLS and soccer in the United States, along with the upcoming 2026 World Cup as reasons for the partnership ‘as we find new ways to engage our community, connect with our consumers and expand’ reach.

And he said the team ’embodies the indominable spirit of the Energizer Bunny.’

Although St. Louis City did not make the MLS Cup Playoffs in 2024, the club has experienced success during its first two seasons in the league under Kindle, who helms the first women-led ownership group in the league.

St. Louis City won the Western Conference last year, becoming the first MLS franchise to do so in its inaugural season. The club also has had 34 consecutive sellouts to games.

The club’s stadium seats 22,500 fans in downtown St. Louis. It has become a frequent destination for international tournaments and friendlies, including U.S. men’s and women’s national team events. And it appeared on the Prix Versailles list of “World’s Most Beautiful Sports Venues List 2024.’

St. Louis City’s stadium rights deal with Energizer comes nearly two years after Centene Corp. ended a 15-year deal with the club after just eight months in 2022, according to the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.Details of Energizer’s deal with St. Louis City where not disclosed. MLS clubs have agreed to stadium naming deals worth $3 million to $10 million recently, highlighted by LAFC’s 10-year, $100 million deal with Bank of Montreal for BMO Stadium in Los Angeles.

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