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The Drake Maye era rolls along into London, as the Patriots and Jaguars meet on the Wembley Stadium pitch in Week 7.

Maye had a wishy-washy first start in Week 6, throwing three touchdowns to two interceptions in a loss to the Texans. The No. 3 overall selection in the 2024 NFL draft, though, had some highlight throws that will give some Pats fans hope for the future despite their dismal 1-5 mark.

The Jaguars, however, are searching for a bit of hope themselves. Sitting at 1-5 entering their second London matchup this year, Jacksonville’s season is spiraling down the drain after a drubbing at the hands of Caleb Williams and the Bears in Week 6.

Questions surrounding the job security of Doug Pederson remain, even with a vote of confidence from owner Shad Khan coming recently. The heat under Pederson’s seat could get a little warmer, depending on how Jacksonville responds this weekend.

Here’s what to know about Sunday’s London matchup between the Pats and Jags:

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

What time is Patriots vs. Jaguars London game?

Start time: 9:30 a.m. ET (6:30 a.m. PT)
Date: Sunday, Oct. 20 (Week 7)

The Pats and Jags are set to kick off at 9:30 a.m. ET on Sunday morning.

The matchup should bring NFL fans almost up to the 1 p.m. slate of games, making for a roughly 14-hour day of NFL action.

Where is the Patriots vs. Jaguars game?

Location: London
Venue: Wembley Stadium

The Patriots and Jaguars are set to kick off from Wembley Stadium in London. It follows the Jets vs. Vikings Week 5 game and Jaguars vs. Bears matchup in Week 6, which both took place at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium.

Patriots vs. Jaguars TV channel, live stream

TV channel: NFL Network (national) | CBS 47 (Jacksonville market) | ABC 5 (Boston market)
Live stream:Fubo, NFL+

The Patriots vs. Jaguars matchup will air nationally on NFL Network. For those in the Jacksonville market, CBS 47 will carry the game. For those in the Patriots’ TV market, ABC 5 will show the contest.

For cord-cutters, Fubo carries NFL Network, as well as CBS, Fox, NBC and the ESPN family of networks, meaning you can catch NFL action all season with the streaming service.

The NFL’s proprietary streaming service, NFL+, will also carry the game.

NFL international games 2024

In addition to the Week 1 Packers-Eagles matchup in Brazil, the Week 5 Jets-Vikings showdown and the Week 6 Jaguars vs. Bears game, here is the rest of the NFL’s international series for 2024:

Patriots vs. Jaguars in London

Date: Sunday, Oct. 20 (Week 7)
Start time: 9:30 a.m. ET
Location: London
Venue: Wembley Stadium

The third consecutive week with an NFL London matchup concludes with the Jaguars against the New England Patriots in Week 7. The No. 3 overall pick, quarterback Drake Maye, should be starting for New England, adding to the intrigue.

Giants vs. Panthers in Germany

Date: Sunday, Nov. 10 (Week 10)
Start time: 9:30 a.m. ET
Location: Munich, Germany
Venue: Allianz Arena

The final international NFL game in 2024 features the Carolina Panthers and New York Giants. Both squads are off to slow starts and share the longest Super Bowl odds after the season’s first month.

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The Israel Defense Forces said that the war in Gaza is not over following the killing of Yahya Sinwar, Hamas’ top leader and the mastermind of the terrorist group’s Oct. 7 attack, and will continue until the hostages taken amid that day’s massacre are returned.

IDF Rear Admiral Daniel Hagari released declassified footage showing Sinwar hours before the Oct. 7, 2023, attacks, as well as his movements in Gaza as he fled over the past year. Hagari said 101 hostages remain held in Gaza after a year in captivity under ‘ruthless conditions.’ 

‘Killing Sinwar is the result of a year of operational and intelligence efforts to bring him and other Hamas leaders to justice. Sinwar has been eliminated. But our mission is not over,’ Hagari said in a video statement on Saturday. ‘We will not rest until we bring all our hostages home by any means possible. And we will continue to defend the people of Israel from all threats on all of our borders.’ 

Hours before the Oct. 7 attacks, during which Hamas terrorists murdered approximately 1,200 Israelis and took hundreds more as hostages into Gaza, Sinwar was captured on video alone hiding his family and equipment, including beds, pillows, food, water and a TV in an underground tunnel network, Hagari said. 

While Sinwar’s location was kept classified while he ordered the attacks from the underground tunnels, ‘this was a luxury that the people of Gaza did not have as Sinwar always prioritized himself, his money and the Hamas terrorists over the people of Gaza,’ Hagari said. ‘Each step was planned to maximize harm to Israeli and Gazan civilians and to minimize harm to himself and other terrorists.’

‘Throughout the war that Sinwar started, he continued to hide underneath the people of Gaza,’ Hagari said.

In February, Hagari said Israeli troops found Sinwar’s underground hideout in Khan Yunis that included money, food, beds, documents, a shower and a kitchen. IDF operations in Khan Yunis forced Sinwar to flee to Rafah last month, Hagari said. 

Sinwar’s DNA was recovered on a piece of tissue ‘a few hundred meters’ from a tunnel where six Israeli hostages were executed in Rafah before Sinwar fled again, Hagari said. 

‘When Sinwar was running for his life and went above the ground, this was the first and last time that he encountered Israeli soldiers in combat,’ Hagari said. ‘Sinwar was eliminated by the IDF in Rafah last Wednesday. I want to emphasize it again: This was the first and last time he encountered Israeli soldiers, and he was eliminated. There were no hostages with Sinwar when he was eliminated.’ 

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Before she became her party’s nominee for president, Kamala Harris had not made a substantial, discernable positive public impact during her nearly four years in the White House. She largely operated under the radar and fell short regarding some of her most high-profile assignments. 

She had not universally distinguished herself as a leader. She had not won over swaths of new fans. She had not fully earned her place as next in line. She was known more in Washington circles for her rocky relationships with her staff members and her sagging approval ratings than for anything she had actually accomplished.

To be sure, through the first few years of the Biden-Harris administration, the vice president received praise for assuming an outsize role in the fights for abortion and voting rights, and for building solid relationships with important foreign allies. Although mocked for her word salads and piercing guffaws, she did not overtly undercut the administration’s agenda. For those who saw her up close, she was impressive but not iconic, charismatic but not yet a superstar.

And on July 21, when Joe Biden stepped aside and Harris stepped in, she was good enough. Democrats and Never Trumpers had said it time and again. They just wanted someone healthy. Someone normal. Someone sane. Someone different. Someone not Biden, someone not Trump. Someone else.

I would vote for any functioning politician over Biden and Trump.

I would vote for that squirrel in that tree over Trump.

There’s no such thing as a perfect candidate.

The country needs to turn the page on tired, wacky, old men.

Harris is tolerable.

Maybe Harris will surprise us.

And surprise them she did.

On that sticky summer Sunday afternoon when Biden announced his decision to drop out of the presidential race and endorsed his number two to be the Democratic nominee for president, no one, not even Harris herself, knew what was going to happen.

A collective derecho-sized sigh of relief rose up from Democrats coast to coast, north to south, and every Blue enclave in between. 

President Biden’s disastrous June debate performance had exposed the extent of his decline and put a glaring and unequivocal spotlight on his limitations as a candidate and as a prospective second-term president. Democratic voters and staunch party loyalists, Trump detractors, Trump loathers, and Trump Derangement Syndrome sufferers had all feared the worst: They were stuck with an acuity-compromised octogenarian who could not deliver the votes and would surely lose the election. And then, their unthinkable, impossible nightmare would occur—Donald Trump would return to the White House.

After several weeks of party pressure and serpentine political machinations the likes of which have rarely been seen in this country, Biden agreed to withdraw his reelection bid. Bypassing a Democratic Party nomination fight, he handed the torch to Harris. In a statement, Biden asserted that bringing in Harris as his vice president was ‘the best decision I’ve made,’ and offered ‘my full support and endorsement for Kamala to be the nominee of our party this year.’

‘Democrats,’ he added, ‘it’s time to come together and beat Trump.’

This vigorous affirmation was standard but phony. Biden and his team, even members of the vice president’s office, had long thought Harris was not yet prepared to be president, and would be a weak candidate against Trump, maybe a doomed one. Some White House staff clung to the belief that Biden, with all his visible infirmity, remained the less risky option. Regarding their long-held view of Harris, they were as certain as they were worried.

Once Harris accepted the mantle from Biden, she seemingly became a political supernova overnight. She expanded, she leaned in, she improved. She showed charm and grit, confidence and swagger, grace and guts. She was, for the imperatives of the moment, great.

Democrats, once despondent over candidate Biden, now cheered as loudly as they had exhaled. The Dominant Media was euphoric—a fantastic story to cover, a Democratic heroine to bolster. The newspaper headlines and cable pontification surged beyond mere hagiography and well into farce. The blinders were firmly in place. The buzz words of summer were vibe shift and joy, and, of course, brat. 

Harris chose a running mate lickety-split, selecting Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz after a drastically abbreviated vetting process, and pulled off a strong convention in Chicago, which managed to be both dignified and buoyant. Harris was in command. Her polls were competitive, her fundraising boffo.

But vibes can’t sustain a presidential campaign, and supernovas, no matter how luminous and intense the explosion, fade within a few weeks. When the glow dissipated, voters were left with the same Kamala Harris they had before, the same Kamala Harris that always had been, the one about whom there were substantial doubts in her own camp. 

That Kamala Harris had no clear theory of the case for winning the race or governing, nor tested presidential-level skills. Reality set in. She began to stall.

By Labor Day, the brat summer had largely evaporated. The mood shift, it turned out, was not a national phenomenon at all, but rather a instinctive and manic reaction from the Democratic base.

By Labor Day, the brat summer had largely evaporated. The mood shift, it turned out, was not a national phenomenon at all, but rather a instinctive and manic reaction from the Democratic base.

Independents, double haters, and undecided voters, meanwhile, had taken a pause and paid attention, waiting to learn more about Harris’ positions and policy plans. But Harris didn’t set forth a rationale for her presidency, beyond blocking a second Trump term. By Labor Day, Harris had not challenged herself by sitting for a tough interview, nor offered consistent straight answers about her intentions once in office, nor reached out to Red America. She had not risked the customary ‘What my party has gotten wrong’ concession on anything, eschewing a way to show boldness and political self-awareness which every elected president since Bill Clinton had made a core part of their pitch.

Harris supporters enjoyed a fresh burst of adrenaline on Sept. 9 when Harris and Trump faced off in the presidential debate. Harris was performatively strong, but the debate ironically only highlighted her fundamental problem. She looked and sounded good, appeared relaxed and unflinching, and brilliantly manipulated Trump’s ego, but in front of a huge audience of engaged citizens, she neglected to hammer any hard facts or clarify her own agenda. It was a chillingly short-sighted example of style over substance, and an egregious wasted opportunity.

It was time for Harris to stop coasting on vibes and parables and start doing the work.

But could she?

Her professional history indicated that the arduous task of crafting a message and headlining a full-blown campaign might be an uphill climb. Biden and many White House operatives still feared Harris could not beat Trump, and their failed efforts to prepare her both for the presidency and the race remained still fresh in their minds.

Even those with short memories know that Harris had not in the past shown she was adept at assembling the basic building blocks of a viable national candidacy. During her extensive and prominent career in California, Harris made as many foes as friends, with a significant number of local Democrats, both political operatives and regular citizens, declining to support her enthusiastically or, in some cases, under any circumstances.  

Nor had Harris been a particularly distinguished or popular member of the Senate, unable to impress many colleagues on either side of the aisle. Indeed, some of her biggest detractors to date have been fellow senators who worked with her in the Capitol, although to be fair, she barely had time to establish herself in the position before moving out and up to the vice presidency. 

The presidential bid she launched in January 2019 ended before the year was up; she failed to convey a winning message or gain any traction, and she ran out of money before a single ballot was cast.  Postmortems on her campaign emphasized her apparent lack of decisiveness, authenticity, direction, and guiding principles.

The various criticisms that have threaded throughout Harris’ professional rise are intertwined with the weak filaments of her current campaign. For most of the fall, it has been difficult for her to drive a message. She has struggled to produce a winning soundbite from an interview or rally. Despite a freshly honed oratorical style, Harris has been too vague and cautious in her rhetoric to spark a crystallizing moment, a revelation of the soul. Her travel schedule for almost the entirety of the campaign has been curiously light, with few rallies, no coast-to-coast blitzes, and a lack of interconnection within her organization, the calendar and the polls.

The feeling remains strong, even among some Democrats who desperately want her to win, that the Harris who was on offer before her ascendancy to the nomination is the one too often on display now.  These Democrats see someone who is living in the moment rather than rising to the occasion.

If Harris loses on Nov. 5, it should be no surprise to anyone who has watched her political path these past several decades. The signs were all there. 

However, if Harris triumphs, sending Donald Trump once and for all into political retirement, at this point, it will be something somewhat short of a shock.

With less than three weeks to go, Harris is demonstrating new signs of life, hitting her stride and having more fun. Her latest anti-Trump tagline—unhinged, unstable, and unchecked—seems to have some resonance. She is emitting refreshing flashes of authenticity, as she pivots from something in which her heart seems divided (shredding her previously held liberal positions) to something she relishes (cheeky denunciations of Trump’s fitness for office).

Democrats are fired up, and the country is primed for a reset.  Harris has millions of supporters who are champing to vote for her, and not merely because they dislike Trump, or want to cast a ballot for a woman, or are true-blue Democrats. These citizens are voting for Harris herself now, because they have an appreciation for her accomplishments. Harris’ resume has always been solid and hard-earned—one must demonstrate true skill, stamina, and determination to become a United States senator and vice president. Despite the odd confluence of events that presented her with the Democratic nomination, Harris is now holding her own, in it to be sure, and with the potential to win it.

Even as the country hurtles towards Election Day, Harris still has time to meld her summer vibes with the steely gladiator focus that was on display this past week. Going up against Trump, one of the most formidable, most original, most agile campaigners of the modern era, is no simple feat. Among every other variable at issue in presidential campaigns, candidate quality matters a lot, perhaps most of all.

And no one ever said that winning the White House would be easy, even for a candidate – especially for a candidate, perhaps – who was given her party’s nomination without a fight.

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A man in Greece was given a suspended one-month prison sentence after his conviction for disturbing his neighbors by repeatedly sneaking onto their properties and smelling their shoes.

Addressing the court in the northern Greek city of Thessaloniki on Thursday, the 28-year-old man said he was unable to explain why he entered his neighbors’ homes to get a whiff of their shoes and said he was embarrassed by his behavior.

He said he had no intention of breaking the law or harming anyone during the incidents, according to the Associated Press.

The defendant’s neighbors also testified that he never displayed any sign of aggression when he visited during the night.

The man was ordered by the judge to attend therapy sessions.

Shortly before dawn on Oct. 8, the man was arrested in the small town of Sindos after police were called to a home by a neighbor who found the man in his front yard sniffing his family’s shoes that had been left outside to air out.

At least three similar incidents have happened in the past six months, even after neighbors asked the man’s family to make him stop entering their property to sniff their shoes.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

LSU football coach Brian Kelly’s basic annual compensation from the school doesn’t quite reach $10 million. But for the third time in as many seasons at the school, he has bridged that gap by qualifying for the $500,000 bonus he receives if the Tigers become eligible for a bowl game.

They reached that achievement for the 24th time in its 25 most recent seasons on Saturday night by defeating Arkansas on the road 34-10. LSU improved its record to 6-1 overall (3-0 in Southeastern Conference play).

It means that, at a minimum, Kelly’s pay for this season will be $10.475 million, unless takes an action like the one he did after last season. In late January 2024, he signed an amendment to his contract under which he renounced his right to $400,000 of the $500,000 he was due for the Tigers’ bowl eligibility last season (they played in the ReliaQuest Bowl). The amendment was effective only for the 2023-24 football postseason.

Kelly’s contract states that he can receive the $500,000 incentive if the team is “bowl eligible.” Under NCAA rules, that generally means winning at least six of 12 regular season games. Kelly can get additional bonuses if the Tigers meet an academic benchmark, further their success on the field or he wins coach-of-the-year awards.

However, as of the middle of this past week, Kelly’s agreement remained among the at least 40 that schools and coaches have not updated to reflect the College Football Playoff’s expansion to 12 teams from four. At present, Kelly’s contract calls for him to receive an additional $100,000 if LSU is a “New Year Six Bowl Participant.”

Many football head coaches’ contracts call for a bonus if the team plays in a bowl game. But among public-school coaches, Kelly’s is more than double the $200,000 payment that Indiana’s Curt Cignetti and Penn State’s James Franklin each can get if their respective teams play in a bowl game not connected to the College Football Playoff. Both of those teams already have reached at least six wins this season.

Under Cignetti’s contract, the Hoosiers’ presumptive bowl appearance also will give him an automatic one-year contract extension and a $250,000 pay increase that begins with the start of his next contract year, Dec. 1, 2024.

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Coach Deion Sanders and his Colorado football team just sent a clear message to the Big 12 Conference:

Beware of the Buffaloes.

Last week they showed they can hang with one of the best teams in the league. This week they showed how good they can be on the road. They beat Arizona on Saturday at Arizona Stadium, 34-7, and didn’t even really need Travis Hunter, their star two-way player.

Hunter returned from a shoulder injury last week to play in the first half, when he caught two passes for 17 yards and made one tackle. But he left the game and didn’t return after the Buffs built a 28-7 lead at halftime.

By then, the game was all but over anyway. Colorado quarterback Shedeur Sanders completed 23 of 33 passes for 250 yards and two touchdowns with two interceptions to lead CU. Colorado’s defense recorded seven sacks and held the Wildcats scoreless after giving up their lone touchdown in the first quarter.

The win improves Colorado to 3-1 in the Big 12 and 5-2 overall, which is one win more than the Buffs had last year in Sanders’ first season as coach. The victory also puts them one win away from being eligible to play in a bowl game with five regular-season games remaining. They next play at home Saturday against Cincinnati (5-2).

Arizona fell to 3-4 in front of an announced crowd of 50,724. Star receiver Tetairoa McMillan entered the game ranked third nationally with 123.7 receiving yards per game but had only five catches for 38 yards.

Linebacker Nikhai Hill-Green, a transfer from Charlotte, led CU’s defense with eight tackles and a sack.

Colorado vs. Arizona highlights

Buffaloes tack on field goal to extend lead to 34-7

With the game essentially over, Colorado’s backup players helped stretch the Buffaloes’ lead to 34-7 with 4:42 remaining at Arizona. Backup quarterback Ryan Staub led the short scoring drive after an interception by Colorado cornerback Colton Hood set the Buffs up on the Arizona 23-yard line. Colorado kicker Alejandro Mata then booted a 34-yard field goal to end the possession.

Starting quarterback Shedeur Sanders finished the game with 23-for-33 passing for 250 yards and two touchdowns with two interceptions. 

Colorado leads 31-7 in third quarter

Colorado didn’t need Travis Hunter to score on its first possession of the second half – a nine-play, 76 yard drive that ended with a 28-yard field goal by Alejandro Mata. The kick extended Colorado’s lead to 31-7 with 5:58 left in the third quarter.

Arizona has punted on three straight possessions, including its opening possession of the second half. 

Travis Hunter injury: Colorado star leaves out of caution

Two-way star Travis Hunter did not dress for the second half against Arizona and is done for the game after returning from a right shoulder injury last week against Kansas State. Hunter played in the first half Saturday and caught two passes for 17 yards, including a 14-yard catch on fourth down that set up a touchdown.

Fox reporter Allison Williams said Hunter slightly aggravated his shoulder injury and is sitting out for the second half out of caution with Colorado leading 28-7 at halftime.

Arizona linebacker Jacob Manu injured

Arizona has been bit by the injury bug in this game, including the loss of linebacker Jacob Manu in the first half. Manu is the Wildcats’ leading tackler and came out of the game with an apparent knee injury. He had four tackles Saturday before being removed.

HALFTIME: Colorado 28, Arizona 7

Colorado survived a strange sequence in the second quarter in which there were three turnovers in the span of six plays – a botched snap by Colorado, a fumble by Arizona quarterback Noah Fifita and then an interception thrown by Shedeur Sanders.

Arizona didn’t capitalize on it, though. Colorado instead took a 28-7 lead with 1:07 left in the first half after a 6-yard touchdown run up the middle by Sanders.

Sanders has led the Buffaloes to one of their best halves of football under head coach Deion Sanders. He is 15-for-21 passing for 173 yards and two touchdowns with one interception.

Colorado receiver LaJohntay Wester has six catches for 106 yards. Two-way star Travis Hunter has caught two passes for 17 yards. 

Travis Hunter comes up with big catch, Colorado up 21-7

Travis Hunter asserted his return from injury in the second quarter when he came up with a 14-yard catch on fourth down for Colorado. The catch brough the Buffaloes to the Arizona 16-yard line, where they set up to score on the next play – a 16-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Shedeur Sanders to receiver Will Sheppard, a transfer from Vanderbilt.

Sheppard caught the ball on the right side of the end zone and barely kept his left foot in bounds to help Colorado take a 21-7 lead.

The Buffs have scored touchdowns on all three of their possession so far.

Colorado leads 14-7 at end of first quarter

Arizona responded on its second possession of the game to cut Colorado’s lead to 14-7 with 1:17 left in the first quarter. Receiver Chris Hunter scored the touchdown from 1 yard out, capping a 75-yard, 10-play drive for the Wildcats.

Arizona Quarterback Noah Fifita is 3-for-5 passing for 27 yards and a touchdown. Colorado quarterback Shedeur Sanders is 6-for-6 passing for 78 yards and one touchdown.

Buffaloes up 14-0 after another touchdown

Colorado quarterback Shedeur Sanders is on a roll again. He has completed five straight passes to start the game against Arizona and has led the Buffaloes to touchdowns on his first two possessions. Colorado now leads 14-0 with 6:16 left in the first quarter after a 1-yard touchdown pass up the middle to freshman Drelon Miller.

Shedeur Sanders set a school record last week with 16 consecutive completions in a 31-28 loss at home against Kansas State. 

Colorado takes 7-0 lead

Colorado recovered an onside kick on the opening kickoff and used the short field position to take a 7-0 lead with 12:37 left in the first quarter. Running back Isaiah Augustave capped the drive with a 1-yard touchdown run just two plays after receiver LaJohntay Wester reeled in a 46-yard pass from quarterback Shedeur Sanders. Travis Hunter has returned from his shoulder injury last week and was working with the starting offense but hasn’t yet caught a pass.

When is the Colorado-Arizona game?

Kickoff is at 4 p.m. ET Saturday, Oct. 19 from Arizona Stadium in Tucson, Arizona.

How to watch Colorado-Arizona game

Watch on Fubo

Is Travis Hunter playing for Colorado?

Coach Deion Sanders said the receiver-cornerback should play vs. Arizona despite his shoulder injury last week. How much he plays is another matter. The nature of his shoulder injury hasn’t been revealed, such as if it was a “stinger” or nerve injury that could allow him to come back sooner than more serious shoulder problems.

Why is MC Hammer at the Colorado-Arizona game?

Hip-hop artist MC Hammer came to this game and has strong ties to it. Arizona’s running backs coach, Alonzo Carter, previously toured with him as a dancer. Colorado coach Deion Sanders also recorded a song and music video with Hammer that was released in 1994 entitled “Straight to my Feet.’

Follow reporter Brent Schrotenboer @Schrotenboer. Email: bschrotenb@usatoday.com

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Trying to piece together Brady Cook’s timeline of events is nearly as impossible as the comeback.

There’s a visit to the hospital in a Missouri’s staffer’s truck. An MRI. A moment where the pads came off and the starting quarterback for the Tigers believed his day was done.

A fix. “A lot,” the quarterback said with a knowing smile, that went into that fix. 

Plenty of time spent finding that fix in the Stephens Indoor Facility. Pads on, pads off. 

Game off, game on.

There’s a sprint out the south end zone tunnel. There’s a roar from the Memorial Stadium crowd. 

A comeback — an astounding, season-saving, belief-defying, 21-17 win over Auburn on Saturday — that will live long in Mizzou football lore.

And there’s a quarterback at the heart and soul of a team that is daring you to dream again.

This is the story of Brady Cook’s Saturday. It’s hard to believe. Bizarre, even.

Here’s the best we can tell it:

Missouri football quarterback Brady Cook leads game-winning drive. Here’s what happened

Let’s start at the end.

It’s 2:11 p.m. Ninety-five yards of Faurot Field stood in front of the banged-up Brady Cook. Four minutes, 26 seconds were left on the game clock.

A third-and-18 completion to Luther Burden III reduced the yards necessary to keep the comeback alive to fourth-and-5, which Cook sent, and completed, back to Burden. Later, there was third-and-10 completed to Theo Wease Jr. There were two health-out-the-window scrambles from the quarterback, a sack that surely stung. There were 17 total plays to end a manic day.

It’s 2:30 p.m., and running back Jamal Roberts got the handoff from Cook. Touchdown, 21-17. 

Ballgame.

Missouri coach Eli Drinkwitz, tears in his eyes and a rasp in his voice, sang his quarterback’s praises not too long after. He again reiterated the faith the team has in Cook. The faith everyone should have in Cook. Not much surprises him anymore about the St. Louis native under center.

But that? 

Do you believe what you’ve just seen?

“Don’t believe it,’ Drinkwitz said. ‘It’s one thing to come back. It’s another thing to be able to scramble for a couple of first downs, to move in the pocket and deliver accurate throws. Number-one characteristic of an elite quarterback is toughness, and that guy’s got it written all over him.”

‘Toughness’ might be underselling it. Cook came back from the hospital.

A trip in an un-tinted truck

Cook was in a truck driven by a Missouri staffer.

He was getting wheeled out of Memorial Stadium in the opposite of style while the game was still in the first quarter.

Cook called it a classic “hip-drop” tackle that took him out the game. He toughed it out for a handful of plays. Then, his leg folded as he took a step. He could not put weight on his right ankle. He ended up going down — collapsing — for an 11-yard loss. 

His day, seemingly, was done.

Cook first, per in-game reports, went to the locker room, where sideline reports emerged that he was getting taped up and was going to try to go again. And then halftime reports emerged that a return was unlikely.

Somewhere in the middle of it all, Cook was staring a fan in the eyes from an untinted truck.

People were clocking him from the passenger seat of the truck. He was on his way to the hospital.

“We’re driving through the tailgate areas, random areas,” Cook said, “I’m seeing people make eye contact with me. They’re like, ‘What is going on?’”

Finally at University Hospital, across the street from the stadium, Cook went for an MRI. He couldn’t have any electronics. While he was there getting tested, the quarterback said he received two updates.

Both were scores from the slog of a game: “3-0,” he said, and “3-3.”

“I was just sitting in silence for about 30 minutes,” Cook added, “looking at the ceiling.”

It felt over. Somewhere, unknown to Cook, Missouri’s day felt over, too.

Cook, maybe still in the hospital, maybe not — the timeline gets hazy here — missed a couple updates. 

It was Auburn 17, Missouri 3.

The season was slowly dying. A second loss was going to close Missouri’s path to the College Football Playoff.

The sprint and the eruption

Cook burst out of the south end zone like the past two hours hadn’t happened.

Helmet on. Ankle strapped. 

It’s 1:20 p.m., and there is life in Columbia again.

Cook jogged and tested the ankle out, pacing the Faurot sideline like a junkyard dog. Auburn was still driving, but Missouri’s defense was putting up a fight to match the sideline mettle.

The quarterback ran over to where the offensive starters were seated and nearly took hands off with high-fives as he rallied the troops. Cook was throwing passes at a graduate assistant that might have beat the wind out the staffer if they weren’t caught.

Drinkwitz asked Cook if he could play.

You know the answer.

But how did he get here? From hospital to sideline to, in a moment, on Faurot Field and starting the comeback with a four-play, 80-yard touchdown drive?

If you’ve been paying attention, you know that answer, too.

“He told the team that in the hospital,” Drinkwitz said, starting to get choked up and tears forming in the corners of the coach’s eyes. He pauses, and continues. “He realized, ‘I only got two-and-a-half games left on Faurot Field. There’s no way I’m spending it here in this hospital.’”

It’s 1:40 p.m., and the stadium is on its feet and loud — believing — for the first time in a while. 

Cook is about to start the comeback.

‘12 sure would die on that field for everybody’

Cook’s pads are off. So, too, is the tape around his ankle.

He’s been to the hospital. He hasn’t yet been to the field. Right now, the quarterback is in the Stephens Indoor Facility, adjacent to the stadium, trying to make it work. But it isn’t. The pain isn’t going away.

“I was pretty positive,” Cook said, “I wasn’t coming back.”

They’d tried with the medical team. Nothing, like the rest of the MU team, was working. 

You can want it all you want, but the level of want-it where you leave the hospital because this can’t be the way it ends? That only takes you so far. The ankle has to cooperate.

Cook and the Mizzou staffers keep trying. It’s last-gasp o’clock.

“There was one more thing we ended up trying,” Cook said.

What was the fix? Cook isn’t saying. Just that it took ‘a lot.’

The tape is back on. The pads are going on.

No. 12 is heading back to the tunnel.

“I mean, for all the criticism that young man takes, 12 (Cook) sure would die on that field for everybody,” Drinkwitz said. The tears are coming now. “For him to be out there, put his body on the line for us, is incredible and that ought to be inspiring to everybody that watched it today.”

Suddenly, Missouri football is back

Missouri is 6-1, and 2-1 in SEC play.

How healthy is Cook now? He handed that ball off to Jamal Roberts and, as he was celebrating with his backup Drew Pyne on the sideline, said that the pain set back in pretty quickly. He walked with a pretty noticeable limp as he came to meet the media and regale his near-superhuman day.

“I knew we needed to come back and find a way to win this game,” Cook said. “I think, you know, we lose that game, the rest of our season looks a little different. I recognize that, and I knew we needed to go win.”

Mizzou heads to Alabama next Saturday for a pretender-or-contender type game. Bryant-Denny. The mighty Crimson Tide. 

Win, and everything is on the table.

Has Missouri convinced you it’s possible?

The man who, beyond all odds, made it so? He’s convinced.

“I think this win is going to take us far,” Cook said. “I think this is one of those moments for our team that we hadn’t had yet. We really haven’t had one of these moments yet, where we band together, we fight and we go win an SEC football game like we need to. We go make plays to do it. 

“You know, I think our team needed that. It’s going to take us far.”

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Kobe.

His name was Kobe.

Francis Ngannou defeated 6-foot-8, 261-pound Brazilian Renan Ferreria with a devastating, first-round knockout inside the MMA cage at the PFL Super Fights in Saudi Arabia. But all he could think about was Kobe, the name of his son who died in April at 15 months old.

“I hope they can remember his name, because without Kobe we wouldn’t be here tonight,’’ Ngannou said with tears in his eyes. “I wouldn’t have (fought).”

In fact, Ngannou, the former UFC champion,, said he arrived for his heavyweight bouts unsure of his fate. And not because it was his first MMA fight since January 2022, after which he left the UFC because of a contract dispute.

It was his first fight since the death of his son. Less than six months since, according to Ngannou, doctors failed to detect a brain malformation that resulted in Kobe’s death. Before then, Ngannou said, he tried to understand how other parents who lost children must feel.

‘But never get anywhere close to how it feels exactly,” he said.

But here he was Saturday, still heavy with grief, headed back to the cage. He could have taken off more time, he said, but added, ‘I don’t think a lifetime will be enough to grieve.’

And so Ngannou agreed to fight one of the biggest and most fearsome fighters in MMA. He entered the ring looking sculpted at 6-4 and 255 pounds, but feeling uncertain.

‘This fight for me was also a way for me to find out if I could still fight, if I still have it,’ he said. ‘If I can deal with this, with the pressure, with the fight week, with the media and everything.”

And deal with the giant, in a pay-per-view even billed as the ‘Battle of the Giants.’

In the first round, Ngannou secured a takedown, knocked out Ferreira and then, as if unsure where to go next as a medical team tended to Ferreira, stayed on his knees.

“It’s like, ‘OK, it’s over. I did what I came here to do,” he said. ‘I have to go back into my reality. You know, to face it.’

Soon after came the tears. And a postfight interview where he got to say the name he wants to be remembered.

Kobe.

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Following Arizona State football’s loss to Cincinnati on Saturday, Sun Devils coach Kenny Dillingham said the team is looking to make a change at kicker — including open tryouts coming Monday in Tempe.

Trailing in the fourth quarter of Saturday’s Big 12 road game against the Bearcats, Sun Devils kicker Ian Hershey missed two field goals of 48 and 41 yards, respectively. Hershey’s struggles Saturday prompted a candid postgame response from Dillingham on the Sun Devils’ kicking:

‘You can be aggressive but just because you convert doesn’t guarantee you can make it one possession. So you would hope that you can make a kick one of those. But our kicking game’s atrocious,’ Dillingham said. ‘So if you can kick and you’re at Arizona State, email me. We’re going to have kicking tryouts on Monday, so bring it on. Kicking tryouts Monday and let’s go.’

The second-year head coach said he was serious about the open tryouts when a member of the assembled media in Cincinnati asked if he was joking or not with his statement.

‘Yeah, I’m dead serious. We’re going to put it out on our socials. We’re going to have a kick tryout on Monday,’ Dillingham said. ‘We got to find somebody who can make a field goal.’

If Hershey made both field goals, the Sun Devils would have been able to bring their deficit closer. But even if Hershey converted both, or at least one, Arizona State would have needed a touchdown and extra point to tie the game.

Arizona State has had ongoing kicking struggles through the first eight weeks. Hershey is 7 of 12 on field goal attempts this season — 3 of 7 from 30 yards or more — while 20 of 21 on extra point attempts, per Arizona State’s stats page.

‘We got to do a better job getting him (Hershey) in the better mental state to kick. But at the same token, I got to do a job and I got to get guys on the field that can perform in those situations as well. And we’ll go to work, we’ll get better and we’ll have a tryout and see if somebody’s good enough,’ Dillingham said.

‘And if somebody’s not, then you know what? Status quo. Keep going to work. If somebody is, then we will add them to the team and rock and roll from there.’

Arizona State (5-2, 2-2 in Big 12 play) will head into the bye next week before traveling to Oklahoma State on Saturday, Nov. 2.

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FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. — The best regular season in Major League Soccer history belongs to Lionel Messi and Inter Miami.

Messi scored his first hat trick in a Inter Miami jersey, his second in a five-day span, while Luis Suarez added two goals as Inter Miami beat the New England Revolution, 6-2, on Saturday night to set the MLS record with 74 points in a season.

It was a brilliant performance by Messi, who might have secured MLS MVP with the dynamic effort that left Inter Miami co-owner David Beckham almost dumbfounded from his seat on the bench at Chase Stadium.

The club celebrated its MLS Supporters’ Shield title with Beckham and Inter Miami co-owner Jorge Mas handing the trophy to Messi, goalie Drake Callender and mindfielder Sergio Busquets. The trio collectively raised the trophy as the club celebrated with fireworks and flying pink confetti on a historic night.

Inter Miami was also named the host team for the FIFA Club World Cup, taking place this summer in the United States, during the postgame ceremony by FIFA president Gianni Infantino.

“Our players are what has made this season successful,” Beckham said. “Our captain has led us. Our players have led us in times where it was difficult. But now, tonight we celebrate. Tomorrow, we prepare for Friday, the playoffs.”

Suarez scored twice in a three-minute span (40’ and 43’) to spark the comeback.  Messi entered off the bench in the 58th minute, and immediately assisted Benjamin Cresmachi’s goal with Jordi Alba.

Then, Messi scored twice in a three-minute span (78’ and 81’) for Inter Miami’s commanding lead. His third goal came in the 89th minute for the hat trick.

It was Messi’s first match since he scored three goals with two assists for Argentina in a 6-0 win over Bolivia last Tuesday during a World Cup 2026 qualifying match.

“You’re just in awe, even as his teammate,” Inter Miami’s Julian Gressel said of Messi. “It’s incredible to see him [have] back-to-back hat tricks now in games, and to come in 30 minutes and do that is incredible. Hopefully, he can do it more in the playoffs.”

Inter Miami begins the MLS Cup Playoffs next Friday, against the winner of the Eastern Conference wild-card game set for Tuesday between CF Montreal and Atlanta United. With the best record (22 wins, four losses, eight draws), Inter Miami has home-field advantage throughout the playoffs with hopes to reach the MLS Cup final on Dec. 7.

Inter Miami’s points record tops the previous mark of 73 points set by the Revolution in 2021. New England’s Luca Langoni (2’) and Dylan Borrero (34’) scored early goals, setting the stage for Miami’s comeback.

“This gives our team an injection of confidence,” Inter Miami coach Tata Martino said of the points record. “These 74 points is not something we aimed for at the start of the year, but as soon as it was within reach, we tried to get it and we did it. … It’s a triumph for the whole Inter Miami family.”

Messi and Suarez finish the MLS season with 20 goals each, becoming the first teammates in league history to score 20 goals for the same club. They only trail D.C. United’s Christian Benteke, who will win the MLS Golden Boot with 23 goals.

Messi played in 19 of 34 games, or 55.8% of the season, for Inter Miami. He finished the regular season with 20 goals and 16 assists, becoming just the fifth player in league history to record at least 36 goal contributions in a season.

Three players in the MVP race – Columbus Crew’s Cucho Hernandez, Cincinnati’s Lucho Acosta and Portand’s Evander – finished with 33 goal contributions this season. MLS MVP voting will end Sunday, while the winner of the award will be announced during the playoffs.

More important, Messi is in pristine form after missing two months due to a right ankle ligament injury he suffered during the Copa America final on July 14. Messi has played in eight total matches, scoring 11 goals, since his return on Sept. 14.

“The feeling I have now is that we have him in an ideal situation to face the most important part of the season,” Martino said of Messi.

USA TODAY Sports provided updates, highlights and analysis from the game:

Inter Miami vs. New England Revolution highlights

Lionel Messi hat trick goal: Inter Miami 6, New England 2

Messi scored again, thanks to an assist by Luis Suarez and Leo Campana. It’s the first hat trick of his Inter Miami career, and his second in five days.

Lionel Messi goal: Inter Miami 5, New England 2

Lionel Messi. Again. This score just three minutes after his last score. Messi scored in the 81st minute, and has a brace in Inter Miami’s 5-2 advantage over New England Revolution.

Lionel Messi goal: Inter Miami 4, New England 2

The goat is on the board, and Inter Miami’s lead has doubled. Lionel Messi scores in the 78th minute on an impressive shot outside the box, and into the back of the net. Inter Miami leads 4-2, and likely will set the MLS points record.

Bobby Wood goal disallowed: Inter Miami 3, New England 2

New England’s Bobby Wood scored in the 70th minute, nearly tying the match with Inter Miami. But Wood’s goal was disallowed after video review. Wood’s kick near the net ricocheted off goalie Drake Callender, hitting his arm.

Benjamin Cremaschi goal: Inter Miami 3, New England 2

Lionel Messi entered in the 58th minute, and within his first minute he has affected the scoreboard. Messi to Jordi Alba, then Benjamin Cremaschi found the back of the net. Inter Miami leads 3-2 over the Revolution.

Luis Suarez goal: Inter Miami 2, New England 2

Just like that, we have a tied game in Fort Lauderdale. Luis Suarez has a brace, scoring his second goal of the match in the 43rd minute. That’s two goals in three minutes for Suarez, who has 20 goals this season. He’s three shy of MLS scoring leader Christian Benteke of D.C. United.

Luis Suarez goal: New England 2, Inter Miami 1

Inter Miami is on the board after striker Luis Suarez scored in the 40th minute. It’s the 19th goal during the MLS season for Suarez, the club’s leading scorer this season. Suarez scored thanks to an assist by defender David Martinez.

Dylan Borrero goal: New England 2, Inter Miami 0

Messi can’t get off the bench fast enough. Inter Miami trails 2-0 in the first half after New England’s Dylan Borrero scored in the 34th minute after a weak defensive effort.

Luca Langoni goal: New England 1, Inter Miami 0

Inter Miami trails after New England’s Luca Langoni scored a goal in the second minute past goalie Drake Callender.

How to watch Inter Miami vs. New England Revolution live stream?

The Inter Miami match against New England Revolution is available to live stream via MLS Season Pass on Apple TV.

Is Messi playing tonight?

Messi will play, but it’s likely he will come off the bench in Saturday’s game, Inter Miami coach Tata Martino said on Friday.

Inter Miami starting lineup vs. New England Revolution

Here’s the starting lineup for Inter Miami, which has Messi on the bench.

Here’s the latest on Messi

Messi has just returned from international duty, where he scored a hat trick with two assists in Argentina’s 6-0 win against Bolivia last Tuesday. Argentina also settled for a 1-1 draw in Venezuela on Oct. 10.

Messi has played in seven total matches, scoring eight goals, since his return on Sept. 14 from a right ankle ligament injury during the Copa America final that sidelined him for two months.

Will Messi play in World Cup 2026?

Messi has not yet committed to playing for reigning champion Argentina in the next World Cup.

“I don’t get ahead of myself. I try to enjoy day by day. When the time comes, we’ll see,” Messi said about the next World Cup after accepting the MARCA America Award on Thursday.

“I don’t like to accelerate time or look ahead. I try to enjoy every day. I hope I can keep playing at this level to feel good and be happy. When I get to do what I love, I am happy. I value that more than reaching the 2026 tournament. I haven’t set a goal to reach the World Cup, but more so to live day-to-day and be well.”

Who will Inter Miami face in the MLS Playoffs?

Inter Miami’s first playoff game is Oct. 25, with its opponent still to be determined. It will play the winner of the Eastern Conference wild-card match on Oct. 22 between the No. 8 and No. 9 seeds in the playoff picture.

No. 8 D.C. United, No. 9 CF Montréal, No. 11 Philadelphia Union and No. 12 Atlanta United are in contention for the final two playoff spots on MLS Decision Day Saturday. No. 10 Toronto has been eliminated.

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