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Green Bay Packers quarterback Jordan Love has exited Green Bay’s Week 8 game vs. the Jaguars.

The Packers quarterback came up hobbled after throwing a pass in the third quarter. It’s unclear when the injury occurred, as Love has seemingly been dealing with an injury throughout the game.

Love missed two games earlier this season with an MCL sprain. The leg on which Love seems to be limping is the same leg that he injured earlier this season.

Jordan Love injury update

The Packers listed Love as ‘questionable’ to return with a groin injury.

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Love seemed to be dealing with the injury throughout the game. It’s unclear when he was injured in the matchup.

While there was some speculation that Love reaggravated the left MCL sprain he had suffered earlier this season, the Packers did not list the ailment in their update.

This story will be updated.

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New England Patriots quarterback Drake Maye suffered a head injury in the second quarter against the New York Jets in Week 8.

The rookie quarterback exited the game and entered the blue medical tent on the Patriots sideline with an apparent head injury. He was listed as questionable to return.

Maye was making his third NFL start today, a matchup vs. the Jets. At the time of his injury, Maye was ripping up the Jets on the ground, with 46 rushing yards. He was 3-of-6 passing for 23 yards in the matchup.

Here’s the latest on the Patriots’ quarterback’s status:

Drake Maye injury update

Drake Maye exited the game early in the second quarter, with 13:45 on the clock. After exiting the blue tent, he went to the locker room.

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At the half, head coach Jerod Mayo announced that Maye would not return to the game.

Initially, the Patriots announced Maye as questionable to return.

The Patriots were leading 7-6 at the time of his injury. Maye scrambled out of the pocket and attempted to slide. On his way to the ground, linebacker Jamien Sherwood dove toward Maye from behind and hit him in the back of the helmet.

Drake Maye stats

Maye exited the game, completing 3 of 6 throws for 22 yards. He rushed for a team-high 46 yards on 3 carries before his injury. He scored the first touchdown against the Jets, showing off his dual-threat ability on a 17-yard scamper for a score.

Entering Week 8, Maye had thrown for 519 yards, five touchdowns, and two interceptions, completing 65% of his passes in his first two NFL starts.

Patriots QB depth chart

Jacoby Brissett
Joe Milton III

The Patriots have two quarterbacks behind Maye on the depth chart. Veteran Jacoby Brissett entered the game in relief for Maye. Brissett started Weeks 1-5 to begin the season and led New England to a 1-4 start.

Joe Milton III was drafted in the sixth round of the 2024 draft. He is listed as the emergency 3rd string quarterback for the Patriots in Week 8.

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LOS ANGELES – As Juan Soto lashed a single into right field leading off the ninth inning, the visitor’s dugout at Dodger Stadium erupted in a spasm of exultant hand gestures and merriment.

Sure, the New York Yankees had been held to just two hits from Soto by the Los Angeles Dodgers on Saturday night, but they were trailing by three runs in Game 2 of this World Series and suddenly, their most dangerous man, Giancarlo Stanton, loomed in the on-deck circle as the tying run.

And then Aaron Judge stepped into the batter’s box.

On almost any day this season, that would be cause for joy for the Yankees. But after Judge waited nearly a decade to reach the World Series, he is in grave danger of exiting in far quicker fashion, thanks in no small part to his own failings.

Facing Dodgers closer Blake Treinen, Judge flailed at the first pitch, a nasty sweeper that ducked out of the strike zone. Looked at the second pitch – a slider that landed on the outside corner. And then, a pitch later, lunged once again at a sweeper way outside and beneath the strike zone.

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It was Judge’s sixth strikeout in nine at-bats this World Series, his 19th in 40 at-bats this postseason – and it only looked all the worse when the Yankees got the tying and winning runs on base but couldn’t push them home in a 4-2 loss.

They packed up their visiting clubhouse at Dodger Stadium for the long flight home, hoping for a balm from Yankee Stadium, where Game 3 will commence Monday night. Yet a sign of life – a good plate appearance, a hard-hit ball, heck, how about a home run? – from their captain and presumed American League MVP would go so much further.

And Judge, the 6-7 force who hit 58 home runs and posted a 1.159 OPS this year, knows that better than anyone.

“I definitely gotta step up. I gotta do my job,” Judge said late Saturday night as the Yankees prepared to depart Los Angeles. “Guys around me are doing their job, getting on base.

“And I’m failing them, not backing them up.”

‘STADIUM WENT SILENT’: Dodgers know they can finish World Series despite Ohtani injury
YAMAMOTO: Dodgers’ $325 million rookie pitches a gem in Game 2

Two games does not a sample make, but October cannot wait for such technicalities. Judge is now 1 for 9 in this World Series, but it is the six strikeouts that are far more disconcerting.

They suggest a slugger discombobulated, out of whack mechanically and at least a little bit mentally. To a man, the Yankees say Judge is not pressing.

Yet Judge himself dusts off the time-worn adage that he must take what he is given, and if that are a few walks, so be it. Whether that defines pressing depends on your perspective.

“He’s got time to help us win some games,” says Stanton.

But how – especially when Judge is chasing almost anything?

The 6-6 Stanton cups his hands together – almost in a heart – to demonstrate.

“You gotta make your zone,” he says, “this big. When that happens, you feel like your plate is this big and you have to compress it.

“He’s going to help us win some games here.”

Indeed, Judge is somehow remaining sanguine, even as he realizes his failings are hurting the team. He says he they are getting close to a fix.

That sounds great in April, when Judge struggled through a rough month before going on, essentially, a five-month tear to drive the Yankees to the AL East championship.

How does one salvage his mechanics, his mind, when his team is two losses away from elimination?

“It’s all about one at-bat,” says Soto, who homered and has three hits in two games. “I know it’s tough but when you’re a hitter like him – and he’s one of the greatest – it’s only going to take one at-bat. One at-bat for him to be locked in and be on it.

“Whenever he hits that ball or whenever he takes that pitch, it’s going to get him going. Some guys, it takes a little while. But when you have a guy like that who’s so good, it’s only going to take one at-bat to get him going.”

And when Judge is neutralized, it serves to cut the Yankees as a whole down to size.

A club that led the major leagues in home runs and the AL in runs scored was held to four hits in Game 2 – and just Soto’s towering third-inning home run through eight innings.

After Soto touched home plate, tying the game 1-1, Judge was the next batter, and sent a harmless fly ball to right field, where Mookie Betts gathered it in – setting off a string of 11 straight batters retired by Los Angeles Dodgers starter Yoshinobu Yamamoto.

Yamamoto pitched into the seventh inning, the second excellent start this series after Jack Flaherty gave up only Stanton’s two-run homer in Game 1. The Dodgers are pitching them carefully and executing exquisitely, and it is impacting the Yankees’ greatest hitter.

“Sometimes, you want to make things happen rather than let the game come to you,” says Judge. “You see Gleyber on base, Juan get on base and you want to make things happen. But if you don’t get a pitch in the zone, you have to just take your walks and set it up for Big G.

“Plain and simple, I gotta start swinging at strikes.”

He knew that in April, when he batted .207 with a .754 OPS, and recouped all his numbers by season’s end.

“It’s all the same,” says Judge. “You just run out of games when it’s here.”

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The NFL’s Sunday slate for Week 8 of the 2024 season is loaded, as 28 of the league’s 32 teams will be in action. The 49ers and Cowboys are squaring off in a historic rivalry; the Bears and Commanders are facing one another in a battle of two playoff hopefuls with strong rookie quarterbacks; and the Chiefs will look to remain the NFL’s only undefeated team in a rivalry matchup against the Raiders.

There are also plenty of injury concerns entering Week 8. Tua Tagovailoa and Jayden Daniels are both questionable for their contests, while several other stars may also be out of action.

USA TODAY Sports will provide live updates on the latest actives and inactive players heading into NFL’s Week 8 1 p.m. ET slate of games on Sunday:

NFL Week 8 injury report

Players’ names which are italicized indicate they are listed as questionable entering today’s games or did not practice on Friday.

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

Arizona Cardinals

CB Kei’Trel Clark
OL Christian Jones
TE Travis Vokolek
DL Roy Lopez (ankle)
CB Sean Murphy-Bunting (neck)
WR Xavier Weaver

Atlanta Falcons

ILB Troy Andersen
DL Brandon Dorlus
OL Elijah Wilkinson
T Brandon Parker
DL Kentavius Street
S Justin Simmons
RB Jase McClellan

Baltimore Ravens

RB Rasheen Ali (ankle)
OLB David Ojabo
OLB Adisa Isaac
CB Marlon Humphrey (knee)
C Nick Samac
CB Nate Wiggins (shoulder/illness)

Buffalo Bills

LB Terrell Bernard (ankle/pectoral/personal)
LB Eddie Ulofoshio
S Mike Edwards
WR Curtis Samuel (pectoral)
G/C Will Clapp
DT Zion Logue

Carolina Panthers

RB Jonathan Brooks (knee)
WR Diontae Johnson
QB Andy Dalton
S Jammie Robinson
CB Dane Jackson
CB Shemar Bartholomew
OT Yosh Nijman
DE Jonathan Harris

Chicago Bears

OL Nate Davis
DB Jaquan Brisker (concussion)
DB Kyler Gordon (hamstring)
RB Khalil Herbert
DL Dominique Robinson
DL Zacch Pickens

Cincinnati Bengals

WR Tee Higgins (quadriceps)
Daijan Anthony
Cedric Jonhson
Tanner McLauchlan
Jay Tufele

Cleveland Browns

RB Jerome Ford (hamstring)
S Ronnie Hickman (ankle)
LB Jordan Hicks (elbow/triceps)
DT Quinton Jefferson
OT Jedrick Wills (knee)

Dallas Cowboys

DaRon Bland (foot)
CB Caelen Carson (shoulder)
LB Eric Kendricks (shoulder)
LB Micah Parsons (ankle)
DT Jordan Phillips (wrist)
TE John Stephens Jr. (knee)
LB Nick Vigil (foot)

Denver Broncos

DB P.J. Locke (thumb)
OT Alex Palczewski (ankle)
CB Kris Abrams-Draine
TE Greg Dulcich
OLB Dondrea Tillman
DL Eyioma Uwazurike

Detroit Lions

DE Josh Paschal (illness)
S Loren Strickland
TE Parker Hesse
OL Giovanni Manu
OL Colby Sordsal

Green Bay Packers

CB Corey Ballentine (ankle)
S Kitan Oladapo
LB Quay Walker (concussion)
DL Brenton Cox Jr.
T Andre Dillard
T Travis Glover

Houston Texans

LB Azeez Al-Shaair (knee)
LB Henry To’oTo’o (concussion)
S Jimmie Ward (groin)
CB Myles Bryant
G Nick Broeker
WR Steven Sims

Indianapolis Colts

DE Genard Avery (foot)
WR Anthony Gould
DE Isaiah Land
CB David Long Jr.
C Danny Pinter

Jacksonville Jaguars

RB Travis Etienne Jr. (hamstring)
DE Myles Coles
DE Esezi Otomewo (calf)
OL Javon Foster
DT Maason Smith (ankle)
OL Cole Van Lanen

Kansas City Chiefs

DE Michael Danna (pectoral)
WR JuJu Smith-Schuster (hamstring)

Las Vegas Raiders

TE Harrison Bryant (elbow)
LB Tommy Eichenberg (quad)
LB Kana’i Mauga (knee)
WR Jakobi Meyers (ankle)
G Dylan Parham (foot)

Los Angeles Chargers

LB Joey Bosa (hip)
WR DJ Chark (groin)
WR Derius Davis (hamstring)
TE Will Dissly (shoulder)
TE Hayden Hurst (groin)
WR Quentin Johnston (ankle)
WR Ladd McKonkey (hip)
LB Denzel Perryman (toe)

Miami Dolphins

DB Storm Duck (ankle)
CB Kader Kohou (neck)
RB Jeff Wilson Jr.
LB Mohamed Kamara
DE Zach Sieler (eye)
OL Andrew Meyer
TE Tanner Conner

New England Patriots

S Kyle Dugger (ankle)
LB Joshua Uche
DT DanielEkuale
WR Ja’Lynn Polk (concussion)
QB Joe Milton III
G Layden Robinson (ankle)

New Orleans Saints

QB Derek Carr (oblique)
OL Nick Saldiveri (knee)
WR Cedrick Wilson Jr. (hip)

New York Jets

S Tony Adams (hamstring)
S Ashtyn Davis (concussion)
DT Leki Fotu (knee)
WR Allen Lazard (chest)
RB Israel Abanikanda
G Alijah Vera-Tucker (ankle)
T Carter Warren

Philadelphia Eagles

OT Mekhi Becton (concussion)
TE Dallas Goedert (hamstring)
CB Eli Ricks
G Trevor Keegan

San Francisco 49ers

DL Kevin Givens (groin)
WR Jauan Jennings (hip)
TE George Kittle (foot)
K Jake Moody (ankle)
CB Deommodore Lenoir (illness)
S George Odum (knee)
WR Deebo Samuel (wrist/illness)

Seattle Seahawks

LB Trevis Gibson
G Sataoa Laumea
OT Abraham Lucas (knee)
WR DK Metcalf (knee)
DE Mike Morris (ankle)
CB Nehemiah Pritchett (ankle)
DT Cameron Young (knee)

Tampa Bay Buccaneers

WR Mike Evans (hamstring)
G Royce Newman
QB Michael Pratt
DB Tykee Smith (concussion)
DT Greg Gaines (calf)
OLB Jose Ramirez

Tennessee Titans

LB Jerome Baker (not injury-related)
OL Nicholas Petit-Frere
TE David Martin-Robinson
TE Thomas Odukoya
QB Will Levis (right shoulder)
CB L’Jarius Sneed (quad)
RB Tyjae Spears (hamstring)

Washington Commanders

OT Brandon Coleman (concussion)
S Darrick Forrest
TE Colson Yankoff
LB Dominique Hampton

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

UPDATE, SUNDAY 10/27: Dodgers say Ohtani is ‘in a great spot and will be playing in Game 3’

LOS ANGELES — The Los Angeles Dodgers don’t want to sound flippant.

They know just how much Shohei Ohtani means to their team, their franchise and the entire baseball world.

But if you think that Ohtani’s left shoulder injury, a partial dislocation, will be a huge impediment to the Dodgers’ road to a World Series championship, then you simply don’t know the Dodgers.

The Dodgers won again Saturday, 4-2, taking a 2-0 series lead over the New York Yankees at Dodger Stadium, believing that with or without Ohtani, they’re still going to win the World Series and have their first parade since 1988.

Follow every MLB game: Latest MLB scores, stats, schedules and standings.

“We’re really confident,’ Dodgers All-Star right fielder Mookie Betts said. “We have a great group of guys in here. We can take care of business, for sure. I believe in this team.’

AARON JUDGE:Yankees star says he’s ‘failing’ team in World Series
YAMAMOTO: Dodgers’ $325 million rookie pitches a gem in Game 2

Ohtani, baseball’s first 50/50 man – with 54 homers and 59 stolen bases this season – terrified the sellout crowd of 52,725 when he tried to steal second base in the seventh inning. He slid into the base, reached back with his left hand, and was tagged out.

Instead of getting back to his feet, he lay on the ground writhing in pain.

‘The whole stadium went silent,’ said Dodgers left fielder Teoscar Hernández, who homered in the third inning. ‘You know how big Shohei is for this team. Hopefully he’s okay, and the day off will help him get back on the field.’

Ohtani, who left the Dodgers clubhouse before reporters were permitted to enter, will undergo testing on Sunday, but the Dodgers are optimistic he’ll be back as their designated hitter in the World Series.

“Obviously when you get any one of your players that goes down,’ Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said, “it’s concerning. But after kind of the range of motion, the strength test, I felt much better about it. A lot of things go through your head, but you just have to stay positive.

“We’ll know more in the next couple days, but the strength was great, the range of motion good. So, we’re encouraged.’

Asked if Ohtani will still return without missing the rest of the World Series, Roberts didn’t hesitate.

“I’m expecting him to be there,’’ Roberts said. “I’m expecting him to be in the lineup.’

The Dodgers have dealt with more potholes this season than a highway in the winter. The Dodgers had 15 pitchers go on the injured list, leaving them with only three starting pitchers in the postseason. They played without infielder Max Muncy for two months. Betts was out 45 days. First baseman Freddie Freeman missed 15 games, the most in seven years, and is playing this postseason on a badly sprained ankle.

Still, they persevered, winning the most games in baseball during the regular season before zipping past the San Diego Padres and New York Mets in the postseason. Ohtani or not, they are still deep and talented enough to win their first World Series in a full season since 1988.

“When you got a group like this,’ Freeman said, “they picked me up when I’ve been down. That’s what they do. We’ve been doing it all year.’

Even watching Ohtani leave the game in pain, there was certainly sympathy for the human being, but honestly, no genuine concern for the team.

“Obviously, that’s a huge bummer,’ said Dodgers infielder/outfielder Tommy Edman, who hit one of the Dodgers’ three homers. “He’s the best player in the game, and to see him on the ground in pain, it’s not a good feeling for sure. We’re hopeful he recovers quickly.’

Still, the Dodgers’ mantra all season has been next-man up, and it’s not going to change now just because it’s Ohtani.

“Obviously it would be a huge hole,’ Dodgers infielder/outfielder Enrique Hernández said, “but there’s something about this team that guys are going to show up and be fine. We played some [postseason] games without Freddie in the lineup, and we won those games.

“We’re hoping we don’t have to play any games without Sho, but you know, if we do, I’m sure we’re going to find somebody to step up.’

The hyped matchup between Ohtani and Yankees center fielder Aaron Judge has been a early dud in these first two games, with Judge producing one hit while striking out six times. Judge’s struggles have lasted the entire postseason, hitting .150 (6-for-40) with 19 strikeouts and two homers.

The Yankees know that if Judge’s struggles continue, their World Series drought will continue. But if Ohtani can’t play Monday in Game 3 at Yankee Stadium, the Dodgers or is out the rest of the series, the Dodgers’ lineup is so deep that their confidence is undaunted.

“Oh, yeah, 1,000%,’ said Teoscar Hernández, who with Freeman became the second Dodger teammates to hit back-to-back World Series homers, joining Pedro Guerrero and Steve Yeager. “We were battling throughout the year with a lot of injuries.

“First, it was the starting pitchers, and then Mookie and then Freddie. And hopefully not Ohtani in this case. It’s not going to be a good feeling, but if he can’t go on Monday, we just have to keep doing the things we’ve been doing for the past couple weeks.’

The Dodgers, even with their injury-riddled rotation, have rolled right through the postseason. They didn’t need a dramatic walk-off grand slam by Freeman on this night. They simply relied on the arm of starter Yoshinobu Yamamoto, who gave up just one hit, a solo homer to Juan Soto, over 6 ⅓ innings, and watched their bullpen stave off a ninth-inning Yankee rally

The series now returns to New York where the Yankees are trying to become the first team to overcome a 2-0 deficit in the World Series since they achieved the feat in 1996 against Atlanta.

“No one said it’s going to be easy,’ Yankees manager Aaron Boone said. “It’s a long series, and we need to make it a long series now. We won’t flinch.’

The trouble for the Yankees is that neither will the Dodgers, with or without the big fella in the lineup.

“I know they’re going to come out ready to go,’’ Betts said. “They don’t have a choice. We don’t either. We have to keep going. We still have some business to take care of.’’

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Republican vice presidential candidate Sen. JD Vance, of Ohio argued that his running mate, former President Trump, has clashed with former Pentagon officials for refusing to enter ‘ridiculous wars,’ arguing that this was the reason why former officials like ex-White House chief of staff John Kelly have spoken out against him.

In a sit-down interview that aired on CNN’s ‘State of the Union’ Sunday morning, Vance sparred with host Jake Tapper over recent allegations brought by Kelly, who said Trump is the ‘definition of a fascist.’ 

Vance charged that Kelly and other critics like former Republican Rep. Liz Cheney disagree with Trump on policy and are ‘conservative in the sense that they want America to get involved in a ton of ridiculous military conflicts – they wanted America to police the world, and Donald Trump wasn’t.’ 

Tapper pushed back on this, noting that Kelly’s son died in the war in Afghanistan. Vance, a Marine veteran, defended his position, saying, ‘I know John Kelly’s worldview,’ and stating that while he honors Kelly’s son and his family’s sacrifice, ‘that doesn’t mean he wasn’t wrong about policy.’ 

‘Donald Trump wouldn’t listen to the leadership of the military when they wanted him to start ridiculous conflicts,’ Vance said. ‘A lot of former members of the Pentagon bureaucracy, a lot of neoconservatives, they have a fundamental difference with Donald Trump on the question of peace and war.’ 

‘I believe Donald Trump is the candidate of peace. I think the record supports that. The reason these guys go after him so vociferously, I don’t think it’s about his personality, Jake,’ Vance said. ‘I think that it’s about they don’t like that Donald Trump said no when a lot of them want to start a ridiculous war.’ 

Tapper challenged Vance on what he was basing this assertion on. Vance said that it was ‘based on people that I’ve talked to in the Trump administration.’ 

Tapper also cited other former Trump administration officials, including former Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Mark Milley, former Vice President Mike Pence, former Defense secretaries James Mattis and Mark Esper, and former White House national security adviser John Bolton, who criticized their ex-boss. 

‘You know one reason why Kamala Harris doesn’t have as many people criticizing her?’ Vance said. ‘Because she doesn’t fire people who fail. That’s why we haven’t had a real audit of the disastrous Afghanistan withdrawal is because Kamala Harris protects failures in government. Donald Trump fires them, and I’d much rather have a president who fires people who screw up.’  

Vance lambasted Tapper for not asking about the cost of groceries, housing and other issues impacting Americans’ livelihoods. 

‘They didn’t think he was unfit for office until they had a falling out with him because he fired them, and we’re not talking about the public policy,’ Vance added. ‘Can we talk about how Americans can’t afford groceries? Can we talk about how Americans can’t afford the cost of housing? Can we talk about the fact that a lot of people out there in Erie, Pennsylvania, they’re the ones that suffer and die when people like Mark Esper and Mark Milley don’t obey the commander in chief’s orders?’ 

Vance charged that Tapper would ‘much rather talk about what Donald Trump allegedly said than what he did in office.’ He said his running mate ‘wants to use American troops sparingly, he wants peace through strength’ and denied that Trump ever said he would use the U.S. military against the American people. 

In regards to Trump’s ‘enemy from within’ comments, Vance said Tapper was conflating Trump’s stance on ‘far-left lunatics’ and people who would riot in the wake of an election or who burned down American cities in the summer of 2020, adding that federal law enforcement should respond in those cases. 

Vance also appeared on CBS and NBC Sunday shows. 

On foreign policy, Vance told NBC’s ‘Meet the Press’ that Trump would stay in NATO, but other countries should pay their share, and that Russian President Vladimir Putin is ‘clearly an adversary’ but the United States needs to be ‘smart about diplomacy too,’ especially to end the war in Ukraine. 

‘Of course we’re going to honor our NATO commitment, but I think it’s important, Kristen, to recognize that NATO is not just a welfare client, it should be a real alliance,’ Vance told NBC’s Kristen Welker. ‘Donald Trump wants NATO to be strong. He wants us to remain in NATO. But he also wants NATO countries to actually carry their share of the defense burden.’

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Former independent presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. offered praise for former President Trump’s plan to fund his transition on his own, arguing it is something that’s never been done before.

‘Normally, the transition team is not created until Nov. 6th because GAO, the General Accounting Office, pays for all the cost of the transition team. Trump said, ‘I’m not going to do it this time. I’m not going to do it their way. I’m going tostart my own transition team three months early.’ And he got private donors to fund it,’ Kennedy said during a Trump-Vance campaign event over the weekend.

The comments come after Trump appeared on the popular Joe Rogan podcast where he discussed some of the mistakes he made during his first run for president in 2016, including putting people in positions he would later regret putting on his team.

This time around, Trump began the process of privately funding his transition early, hoping to learn from his experience and hit the ground running with a plan if he secures an election victory.

Trump has faced a wave of criticism over the last week for comments made by some former officials in his administration, with former Trump chief of staff John Kelly saying in an interview with the New York Times that his former boss met the definition of a fascist and at times offered praise for German dictator Adolf Hitler.

Trump has denied the praise for Hitler and fired back at Kelly, calling his former chief of staff a ‘lowlife’ in response to the interview.

Trump announced in August that Kennedy, who dropped his independent bid for president and endorsed the former president this year, would be added to his transition team along with former Democrat Rep. Tulsi Gabbard, who crossed party lines to support Trump in 2024.

Kennedy argued that such a broad group of supporters assisting in the transition would be an asset if Trump were to win the election.

‘There’s people of all different kinds of ideology and people who we’re going to have to go up against on that transition team and fight for our vision,’ Kennedy said. ‘But I can tell you this, which is unique: There are no corporate lobbyists on that transition team. And usually it’s 100% corporate lobbyists. So it’s very, very different, and it gives me lots of hope that this government is going to be different than any government we’ve ever seen.’

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The NFL’s Sunday slate for Week 8 of the 2024 season is loaded, as 28 of the league’s 32 teams will be in action. The 49ers and Cowboys are squaring off in a historic rivalry; the Bears and Commanders are facing one another in a battle of two playoff hopefuls with strong rookie quarterbacks; and the Chiefs will look to remain the NFL’s only undefeated team in a rivalry matchup against the Raiders.

There are also plenty of injury concerns entering Week 8. Tua Tagovailoa and Jayden Daniels are both questionable for their contests, while several other stars may also be out of action.

USA TODAY Sports will provide live updates on the latest actives and inactive players heading into NFL’s Week 8 1 p.m. ET slate of games on Sunday:

NFL Week 8 injury report

Players’ names which are italicized indicate they are listed as questionable entering today’s games or did not practice on Friday.

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

Arizona Cardinals

CB Kei’Trel Clark
OL Christian Jones
TE Travis Vokolek
DL Roy Lopez (ankle)
CB Sean Murphy-Bunting (neck)
WR Xavier Weaver

Atlanta Falcons

ILB Troy Andersen
DL Brandon Dorlus
OL Elijah Wilkinson
T Brandon Parker
DL Kentavius Street
S Justin Simmons
RB Jase McClellan

Baltimore Ravens

RB Rasheen Ali (ankle)
OLB David Ojabo
OLB Adisa Isaac
CB Marlon Humphrey (knee)
C Nick Samac
CB Nate Wiggins (shoulder/illness)

Buffalo Bills

LB Terrell Bernard (ankle/pectoral/personal)
DT DeWayne Carter (wrist)
RB Darrynton Evans (hamstring)
WR Curtis Samuel (pectoral)

Carolina Panthers

OLB Jadeveon Clowney (shoulder)
DT Jaden Crumedy (ankle)
QB Andy Dalton (thumb)
S Sam Franklin Jr. (personal/foot)
CB Dane Jackson (hamstring)
WR Diontae Johnson (rib)
DE A’Shawn Robinson (knee)
S Nick Scott (hamstring)
RB Jonathan Brooks (knee)
LB Claudin Cherelus (hamstring)
S Jordan Fuller (hamstring)
LB Josey Jewell (hamstring/groin)
OT Taylor Moton (elbow)
OT Yosh Nijman (knee)
S Jammie Robinson (knee)
WR Adam Thielen (hamstring)
TE Tommy Tremble (back)
OLB D.J. Wonnum (quadriceps)

Chicago Bears

OT Larry Borom (ankle)
DB Jaquan Brisker (concussion)
DB Kyler Gordon (hamstring)
RB Travis Homer (finger)
DL Jacob Martin (toe)

Cincinnati Bengals

WR Tee Higgins (quadriceps)
Daijan Anthony
Cedric Jonhson
Tanner McLauchlan
Jay Tufele

Cleveland Browns

RB Jerome Ford (hamstring)
S Ronnie Hickman (ankle)
LB Jordan Hicks (elbow/triceps)
DT Quinton Jefferson
OT Jedrick Wills (knee)

Dallas Cowboys

DaRon Bland (foot)
CB Caelen Carson (shoulder)
LB Eric Kendricks (shoulder)
LB Micah Parsons (ankle)
DT Jordan Phillips (wrist)
TE John Stephens Jr. (knee)
LB Nick Vigil (foot)

Denver Broncos

DB P.J. Locke (thumb)
OT Alex Palczewski (ankle)

Detroit Lions

DE Josh Paschal (illness)
S Loren Strickland
TE Parker Hesse
OL Giovanni Manu
OL Colby Sordsal

Green Bay Packers

CB Corey Ballentine (ankle)
S Kitan Oladapo
LB Quay Walker (concussion)
DL Brenton Cox Jr.
T Andre Dillard
T Travis Glover

Houston Texans

LB Azeez Al-Shaair (knee)
LB Henry To’oTo’o (concussion)
S Jimmie Ward (groin)
CB Myles Bryant
G Nick Broeker
WR Steven Sims

Indianapolis Colts

DE Genard Avery (foot)
WR Anthony Gould
DE Isaiah Land
CB David Long Jr.
C Danny Pinter

Jacksonville Jaguars

RB Travis Etienne Jr. (hamstring)
DE Myles Coles
DE Esezi Otomewo (calf)
OL Javon Foster
DT Maason Smith (ankle)
OL Cole Van Lanen

Kansas City Chiefs

DE Michael Danna (pectoral)
WR JuJu Smith-Schuster (hamstring)

Las Vegas Raiders

TE Harrison Bryant (elbow)
LB Tommy Eichenberg (quad)
LB Kana’i Mauga (knee)
WR Jakobi Meyers (ankle)
G Dylan Parham (foot)

Los Angeles Chargers

LB Joey Bosa (hip)
WR DJ Chark (groin)
WR Derius Davis (hamstring)
TE Will Dissly (shoulder)
TE Hayden Hurst (groin)
WR Quentin Johnston (ankle)
WR Ladd McKonkey (hip)
LB Denzel Perryman (toe)

Miami Dolphins

DB Storm Duck (ankle)
CB Kader Kohou (neck)
RB Jeff Wilson Jr.
LB Mohamed Kamara
DE Zach Sieler (eye)
OL Andrew Meyer
TE Tanner Conner

New England Patriots

S Kyle Dugger (ankle)
LB Joshua Uche
DT DanielEkuale
WR Ja’Lynn Polk (concussion)
QB Joe Milton III
G Layden Robinson (ankle)

New Orleans Saints

QB Derek Carr (oblique)
OL Nick Saldiveri (knee)
WR Cedrick Wilson Jr. (hip)

New York Jets

S Tony Adams (hamstring)
S Ashtyn Davis (concussion)
DT Leki Fotu (knee)
WR Allen Lazard (chest)
RB Israel Abanikanda
G Alijah Vera-Tucker (ankle)
T Carter Warren

Philadelphia Eagles

OT Mekhi Becton (concussion)
TE Dallas Goedert (hamstring)
CB Eli Ricks
G Trevor Keegan

San Francisco 49ers

DL Kevin Givens (groin)
WR Jauan Jennings (hip)
TE George Kittle (foot)
K Jake Moody (ankle)
CB Deommodore Lenoir (illness)
S George Odum (knee)
WR Deebo Samuel (wrist/illness)

Seattle Seahawks

CB Tre Brown (ankle)
OT George Fant (knee)
OT Abraham Lucas (knee)
WR DK Metcalf (knee)
DE Mike Morris (ankle)
CB Nehemiah Pritchett (ankle)
DT Cameron Young (knee)

Tampa Bay Buccaneers

WR Mike Evans (hamstring)
G Royce Newman
QB Michael Pratt
DB Tykee Smith (concussion)
DT Greg Gaines (calf)
OLB Jose Ramirez

Tennessee Titans

LB Jerome Baker (not injury-related)
OL Nicholas Petit-Frere
TE David Martin-Robinson
TE Thomas Odukoya
QB Will Levis (right shoulder)
CB L’Jarius Sneed (quad)
RB Tyjae Spears (hamstring)

Washington Commanders

OT Brandon Coleman (concussion)
QB Jayden Daniels (rib)

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Jeff Francoeur admits he’s not always right – especially as a dad, and especially when it comes to his kids’ sports.

Even as a longtime major league baseball player and a well-known broadcaster during MLB’s playoffs, he relies on conversations with friends for advice. Like one with George Brett, who once coached his son’s travel baseball team.

Even after entrusting their 11- and 12-year-olds to a Hall of Famer, parents couldn’t resist yelling tips to their sons — put your back elbow up! — while they batted.

‘These kids couldn’t think straight,’ Francoeur recalls. “And George said, ‘I had all the dads come to practice one day and I threw BP to the dads, and they stunk.’ He said to them, ‘Y’all can’t hit so stop yelling at your kids to do it.’

“To me, it’s a perspective change.”

The sharing of such stories, with sports celebrities but also with parents he meets on the fields around Atlanta, is the spirit of Francoeur’s youth sports podcast, Pure Athlete.

Francoeur had a 12-year run as a major league outfielder but, in many ways, is now one of us trying to negotiate his kids’ athletic journeys.

‘I tell people: I love sports. It’s given me my life,” he tells USA TODAY Sports, “but I also know that if it’s done the wrong way, it can ruin a lot of friendships.’

Francoeur, 40, shares the studio with two more experienced sports dads, Britt Lee and Brad Williams. Coaching his four kids, he has his own unfiltered takes on many hot topics, from toxic parents to participation trophies.

“This whole idea of all 12 teams in the league get a trophy, what are we teaching our kids?” he says. “Six, seven, eight years old you want to give a trophy to everybody for playing, I don’t care either way. But as they get older, you got to earn that trophy.”

Pure Athlete: Why Youth Sports are Becoming Toxic

Back home to watch the World Series with his family after covering the ALCS, Francoeur gave four quotes to live by for sports parents:

(Questions and responses are edited for length and clarity.)

‘Relationships suffer because of sports’ unless you’re having fun

Francoeur’s father, David, was an educator in Cobb County (Ga.) school system and viewed his youngest son not as a big-league prospect but “a goofy 13-year-old kid playing sports.”

Sports for Francoeur and his older brother and sister were kept in perspective and could quickly be taken away.

‘Growing up, do you know how many games I missed because of schoolwork or I lied about a test grade?’ Francoeur says.

USA TODAY: How did your upbringing shape your sports experience?

Jeff Francoeur: My dad was very old school. If you commit to playing, you’re going to finish out the season. But at the same time, there were a couple of the top travel teams in Georgia and the Southeast that wanted me. And I just always told my dad I want to play with my buddies on a small travel team through the park. We took our lumps, we weren’t as talented, but we always had fun. And as my dad kept saying, as long as you’re passionate and you’re learning about it and you’re having fun, I don’t care what team you’re on. My dad never came to high school baseball practices or football practices. Now, he never missed a game, but there’s these parents now that are at every practice in high school, watching their kids after school at 2:30.

USAT: When did he really think about you as a next level athlete?

JF: He didn’t know till probably 17, until I played on the U.S. junior national team. I can’t tell you how many parents (ask): ‘My son’s 10, what should he do?’ And I’m like, ‘Let him be a kid.’ I have talked to so many college baseball coaches, some of the best in the country, and they’ll tell you the same thing: ‘I don’t really even look at a kid until he’s 16.’ Especially with NIL and the way the coaches change now, you don’t know who’s going to be there in three years. I like to tell people all the time, ‘Just keep playing because eventually you’ll have an opportunity if you’re good enough.’

USA TODAY: What’s the biggest pet peeve with parents?

JF: The parent that says, ‘My kid played baseball the whole way through.’ I tell parents: There’s exceptions to everything. There’s always going to be your Serena Williams, your Bryce Harper, your Tiger Woods. They just are really good. They’ve never gotten burnout. They love it. But we’re talking to the 95% of parents. We’re talking to the majority of parents that have your average kid that they just want to play in high school and have a great experience.

I think a lot the reason that parent and kids relationships suffer is because of sports, in the sense of the seriousness of it. And I think so many parents have got it mixed up now, where sports is first. Family time just gets lost because of this obsession we all have with sports. There’s that family with three kids, and maybe the oldest is the one that gets all the attention because they’re doing travel, and these other kids don’t get an opportunity.

‘If you don’t want to do it, you don’t have to’

Sports were never forced on Francoeur, who naturally gravitated to football and baseball (where he became a first-round pick). It wasn’t so easy for his own kids – Emma Cate, 11; Brayden, 9; Ellie, 6; and Camden, 4 – given his major league pedigree.

At first, it seemed natural to be baseball or bust.

USAT: What have you learned about yourself since becoming a sports dad?

JF: That my kids have to be passionate about what they’re doing. My son, you would just think he’d love baseball. I used to be like, ‘Man, why is he not excited?’ And sure enough, one day we’re in the car ride on the way home after practice, I said, ‘Dude, you like playing? If you don’t want to do it, you don’t have to.’ Well, now he’s been playing lacrosse for two years. Absolutely loves it. We get home after school, and we’ve got practice, his bag’s packed, he’s ready to go. Let your kid drive their passion. It might not be what you want but it’s been a cool relationship for me and my son, for me to learn the game with him and to grow with him.

USAT: What have you learned from the coaching experience?

JF: One of the main things I’ve tried to teach my kids is to fight against the individualism of sports. Me and my wife do not post stuff on social media about our kids with sports because it gives your kids a false sense of expectation. We know this family around the area that does it a lot, and they posted a picture of their son hitting a home run a couple weeks ago, which is great. I mean, I’m happy for him. And then you find out from someone else he was like 1-for-16 in the series, and that was his only hit.

I tell my kids all the time: Just compete and be a good teammate. That’s why Aaron Judge is one of my favorite players. (Giancarlo) Stanton’s hitting the home runs. Judge has struggled. But he’s pushing his teammates all the time. That’s one thing I try to really teach my kids: Let them be secure with the type of player they are, (but) put those other people first.

Coach Steve:What is fun? It’s not winning. Just ask Andre Agassi.

‘Your kid’s not as good yet, and that’s OK’

Playing for the Yankees 21 years ago in Game 7 of the ALCS, Aaron Boone stepped to the plate in the bottom of the 11th inning of a tied game against Boston. He swung at the first pitch from Tim Wakefield and connected.

Boone had been a late-game replacement amid the blur of a frantic Yankees comeback. He didn’t really have much time to think. But, as a kid, he had plenty time to dream about this moment.

What about our children?

USAT: Is that lost on parents today? Making sure their kids have fun with sports?

JF: One thing we’ve talked about (on the podcast) is free play. Instead of having an organized baseball practice every night, on a Wednesday why don’t you let the neighborhood kids get together to play a pickup basketball game? Play something they can imagine things. We talked to Boonie. He’s like, ‘I got the biggest hit of my life to send us to the World Series. I dreamed of winning a World Series since I was a kid.’ Kids don’t play pickup games in the backyard anymore. You’re sitting as an organized practice, and the coach is like, ‘Hurry up, let’s go.’

And so I always say the ability for kids to to adapt and have fun, parents, we just mess it up a lot of time. Kids are smart. I got 11-year-olds on a travel softball team. And if I asked them to rank the girls 1 through 11 on just talent, I bet you they would get pretty close. Problem is the parents don’t. ‘Why can’t my kid do that?’ Well, your kid’s not as good yet, and that’s OK. In fourth, fifth, sixth grade, there’s just the boy or girl that’s stronger, faster, bigger, and then all of a sudden, you go through puberty, you get to 10th grade, and it’s like your son or daughter just totally goes by him.

‘Does it mean we’re not going to get ice cream?’

Francoeur was broadcasting a full season of Atlanta Braves games when he woke up on a 10-day West Coast swing in 2023. He called his wife, Catie.

“I can’t do this anymore,” he told her. ‘I’m gone too much.’

He scaled back to 25 games this past season, mostly home games, and he’s gone for two weeks during the postseason.

“The two guys I do this (podcast) with, their kids are grown up and there’s plenty they would change about their journey,” he says. ‘Enjoy that time with your kids, because you’ll never get it back.”

USAT: Has anything surprised you about being a dad and a coach?

JF: You’re like, ‘Come on, get a hit, make this free throw.’ You want it so bad. But then at the same time, we should want them to miss it. We should want them to learn that you’re not going to win every day. Last year there was a tournament where my daughter, we got in the car, and she goes, ‘Boy Dad, did I suck today.’ I’m like, ‘I’m glad you can see that.’ Does it mean I love her any less? Does it mean we’re not going to get ice cream? No. I think kids sometimes think that, ‘Oh, if I keep doing better, my parents will love me more.’ I told her: ‘I’m more proud that you realize you’ve got some stuff to work on than if you (had) 10 hits.’

USAT: What closing advice would you share?

JF: Just be cognizant and aware. It’s a billions and billions dollar business, youth sports. There’s plenty of parents that feel like, ‘If I don’t do this, my kid’s going to be left behind. If we’re not at that practice, or if we miss this tournament, my son’s not going to have a chance.’

That’s believing a lie. Because of the money and because of the amount of money that’s being thrown around in youth sports — 100 bucks to do a 45-minute hitting lesson — there’s people out there, they’re going to take advantage of that. That’s what our parents tell me. Their hitting coach said they should be hitting fourth in the lineup. And I’m like, ‘How much are you paying them?’ Of course, they’re gonna say that.

Coach Steve: Is it worth it? 10 questions for athletes to consider if they play on a travel team

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 story has been updated to fix a typographical error.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Week 7 was another rough injury week for fantasy managers, particularly at the receiver position. Chris Godwin and Brandon Aiyuk suffered season-ending injuries. Mike Evans and DK Metcalf suffered potentially multi-week injuries. Deebo Samuel, DeMario Douglas, and JuJu Smith-Schuster each barely played before exiting. Yowza.

To assist with your most difficult lineup decisions, you’ll find my Week 8 fantasy football rankings below. Toggle between standard, half PPR (point per reception), and full PPR to see where players rank in your league’s format.

Our team at the USA TODAY Sports Network also has you covered for all your fantasy football needs. Looking for up-to-date player news? We’ve got it. Need to know who the best starts and sits of the week are? We have an article for that. We also have fantasy defense rankings, kicker rankings, and a trade value chart to help with all your trade decisions.

Given the volatility of this league and fantasy football in particular, these rankings will be updated up until a half hour before the Sunday afternoon games kick off. Let’s get to it.

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

Week 8 fantasy football quarterback rankings

STOCK UP: Bo Nix has finished as a top-20 quarterback in five of his seven starts, including three top-13 outings in his last five games. He’s an excellent streamer against a Panthers defense that’s allowed the sixth-most fantasy points to opposing quarterbacks.
STOCK UP: Tua Tagovailoa is set to return this week, and he’ll get a delicious matchup to boot. In 2024, the Cardinals have ceded the fourth-most fantasy points to opposing signal-callers. Three passers have exceeded 23 points against Arizona.
STOCK DOWN: Patrick Mahomes finished as the QB19 in Week 7, which means he’s now ranked as the QB14 or lower in 11 straight games. A matchup with the Raiders provides some reason for optimism, but it’s tough to trust the two-time MVP as anything other than a QB2.
STOCK DOWN: Anthony Richardson has ranked as the QB19 or lower in three of his four full games this season, which is not what his drafters were hoping for entering the 2024 campaign. The Texans have been generous to quarterbacks, but it would take a real leap of faith to start Richardson.

Week 8 fantasy football running back rankings

STOCK UP: Kareem Hunt has totaled 200 scrimmage yards and three scores on 52 touches over his last two games. It’s as if it’s 2017 all over again. As one of the heaviest favorites on the Week 8 slate, expect the Chiefs to lean on Hunt once again versus a Raiders front that’s giving up the seventh-most fantasy points to opposing running backs.
STOCK UP: Javonte Williams erupted for 111 yards and two scores against the Saints in Week 7, and now he gets an even tastier matchup in the Panthers. Carolina is giving up 4.0 more half-PPR points per game to backs than any other team.
STOCK DOWN: Chuba Hubbard finished as a top-10 back for three straight games after Andy Dalton took over at quarterback, but his outlook is trending in the wrong direction for Week 8. This week, he’ll be facing a Broncos team that just limited Alvin Kamara to 24 yards on 13 touches, and he’ll be doing it with Bryce Young behind center. In two games with Young, Hubbard finished as the RB66 and RB26.
STOCK DOWN: Devin Singletary played just 22% of snaps and totaled six touches in Week 7, as he appears to be in a timeshare with Tyrone Tracy Jr. There are better options on waivers in most leagues.

Week 8 fantasy football wide receiver rankings

STOCK UP: George Pickens racked up five receptions, 111 yards, and one touchdown in his first game with Russell Wilson behind center for the Steelers. He’s a top-15 play in a favorable matchup with the Giants this week.
STOCK UP: Romeo Doubs led the Packers in routes, target share, and air yards in Week 7 versus the Texans. He’s an intriguing play against a Jaguars secondary that’s allowing the fourth-most points to opposing wide receivers.
STOCK DOWN: Josh Downs averaged 10 targets, 8 receptions, and 72.3 yards in three games with Joe Flacco but managed just one reception for 3 yards in Anthony Richardson’s return. With the gunslinger spraying the ball all over the stadium, Downs is nothing more than a bench stash.
STOCK DOWN: Wan’Dale Robinson tallied a season-low 5.3 half-PPR points in Week 7 and will now get an even stiffer test this week. The Steelers have surrendered the 10th-fewest fantasy points to opposing receivers in 2024.

Week 8 fantasy football tight end rankings

STOCK UP: Cade Otton recorded season-highs in targets (10), receptions (8), and receiving yards (100) in Week 7, and he’ll now be thrust into a bigger role with Chris Godwin out for the year and Mike Evans out until Week 12.
STOCK UP: David Njoku finished tied with Brock Bowers for the most targets in the league in Week 7 (14), posting a 10/76/1 line in the process. He now gets an upgrade at quarterback with Jameis Winston getting the start, and it comes against a Ravens team that’s allowed the most receiving yards to tight ends this season.
STOCK DOWN: Dalton Kincaid has finished higher than TE14 just once all season, and he has yet to eclipse 60 receiving yards. The matchup is not one to shy away from, but Kincaid is more of a TE2 than a TE1 at this point.

Week 8 fantasy football rankings: PPR and non-PPR

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