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MINNEAPOLIS — Minnesota Lynx coach Cheryl Reeve is, by her admission, not warm and fuzzy. 

She can be brash, demanding and prickly — her word. She snaps back at media when she disagrees with or dislikes the premise of a question, gets blunt in her postgame assessment of her team’s performance and does not mince words with players. 

“I’m not just gonna, like, hug Cheryl,” said Lynx guard Kayla McBride, laughing. “I think that the way Cheryl coaches hasn’t gone out of style necessarily, but the way this league has shifted, the younger generation doesn’t really like being held accountable for a standard of excellence.”

But she’s a damn good coach, McBride says, even if some players can’t handle her tough exterior. 

You know who else can’t handle it? Lots of people new to the WNBA this season, including fans and media who often still expect women in sports to fit into a nice, girly box. Reeve can come off as brash and rough around the edges, and she’s unapologetic for both those things, or for being authentic. 

She’s more than proven her strategy works, and wins. 

Reeve is trying to become the first WNBA coach in the league’s nearly three-decade history to win a fifth title, this time with a roster made up mostly of afterthoughts and overlooked players. The New York Liberty’s super team roster features two former No. 1 picks (Breanna Stewart and Sabrina Ionescu) and two players with MVP trophies (Stewart and Jonquel Jones). Minnesota’s best player was the No. 6 pick in the 2019 draft and Napheesa Collier is frequently left out of the conversation about the world’s best players. 

Now the Lynx will have to do it with their backs against the wall, after blowing a 15-point lead on their floor and allowing New York to steal Game 3, 80-77. Game 4 is Friday night at the Target Center and many are predicting the Liberty will wrap up the championship. Reeve is usually at her best when she’s being doubted. 

After all, no one thought Minnesota was capable of this type of run this year — no one except Reeve, who was bullish about her team deserving fanfare and attention early this season. 

On May 3, the first day of the preseason, Reeve tweeted that “the W is more than one player” — a reference to the fact that the league was only promoting Caitlin Clark’s preseason game, and ignoring the Lynx’s game against the Chicago Sky (featuring another rookie, Angel Reese).

Social media went crazy, accusing Reeve, also the 2024 Olympic coach, of having a personal vendetta against Clark.

When Clark was left off the roster for Paris, many blamed Reeve, even though the team is put together by a USA Basketball selection committee that does not include the head coach. 

Speaking of the Olympics, that’s something else Reeve did this summer, leading Team USA to an unprecedented eighth consecutive gold medal. That’s a thankless job that, no matter the gold, is going to result in the head coach getting grief because inevitably, some All-Stars are going to get benched. Reeve described the experience as “taking bullets” for USAB. 

Again, blunt honesty — the type that’s often celebrated in male coaches like the NBA’s Gregg Popovich, who is so gruff his interactions with the media can make root canals seem pleasant.

But players say Reeve is much more than what anyone sees on the court, or reads on social media. 

When the Lynx pursued McBride in free agency in 2021, Reeve got on the phone with McBride’s mom to assure her that Minnesota would take care of her daughter even though “I was 27, a grown woman!” McBride said. When Collier returned to the court just 74 days after giving birth to daughter Mila, Reeve told Collier that if she ever needed to stop or leave practice to nurse or pump, she could. 

She’s fought for others, too. The WNBA is known now as a player activist league but for years the coaches led that charge, with Reeve at the forefront. It was Reeve who penned an open letter in a 2021 “Sports Illustrated” issue arguing for the inclusion of trans women in women’s sports. Her coaching “uniform” every home game consists of jeans, a blazer and a T-shirt with a political statement, often expressing support for the LGBTQ+ community, gun control or encouraging people to vote. 

“When I became a head coach, it became easier for me to use my platform,” Reeve told USA TODAY Sports. “And I felt like things needed to be said, things needed to be out in the open and if I could be an example to our players and empower them with my leadership in difficult spaces, then it would … give them the confidence to know, ‘it’s not easy what she’s doing, wow she’s getting a lot of grief, a lot of criticism,’ whatever — but that’s what courage is. And if you believe in something and stand up for it, it’s the right thing to do, to be a voice for the voiceless.” 

Reeve isn’t looking for anyone’s praise or validation. She gets all she needs from her players and the Lynx trophy case — which might have an addition soon. 

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Two mighty swings saved the Cleveland Guardians’ season. 

They are alive in the American League Championship Series thanks to a ninth-inning, game-tying two-run home run by Jhonkensy Noel, and David Fry followed an inning later with a similar two-run clout to give Cleveland a 7-5, 10-inning victory over the New York Yankees in Game 3 Thursday night at Progressive Field. 

The Guardians will wake up Friday morning very much in this ALCS, even as they were just one out away from falling into a surely insurmountable 3-0 ALCS deficit. 

Instead, the Yankees lead the series 2-1, and while their greater pitching depth still bodes well for their first AL pennant since 2009, this thing just got a lot more interesting. 

Fry’s second huge homer this postseason – he hit a go-ahead shot in Game 4 of the AL Division Series to turn that series around – walked off the Yankees and reliever Clay Holmes, the second previously indomitable New York reliever to succumb. An inning earlier, it was closer Luke Weaver who gave up a laser two-out double to Lane Thomas to give the Guardians life in the ninth, before Noel – they call him ‘Big Christmas in Cleveland – pulverized a pitch and sent it 404 feet to tie the game. 

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

All this came one inning after Yankee sluggers Aaron Judge hit game-tying and go-ahead homers off Cleveland closer Emmanuel Clase, who’d given up just two home runs all season. No matter: Noel’s blast erased Clase’s poor inning along with a ninth-inning misplay in which the Guardians botched a rundown and allowed an insurance run to score. 

Game 4 is Friday night, pitting Yankees rookie Luis Gil vs. all of Cleveland, seemingly. That formula tilted in the Guardians’ favor in Game 3. 

– Gabe Lacques

Here’s how Thursday’s thriller unfolded:

Jhonkensy Noel homer sends Game 3 to extras

Down to their final out before falling into a practically hopeless hole in their American League Championship Series, the Cleveland Guardians were brought back to life thanks to a gift-wrapped delivery from Jhonkensy Noel.

The hulking slugger they call ‘Big Christmas’ sent a pitch from New York Yankees closer Luke Weaver 404 feet over the wall in left center field, tying Game 3 at 5-5 through nine innings at Progressive Field. 

Just when it seemed a back-to-back power display from Aaron Judge and Giancarlo Stanton – who in the eighth inning hit two-run and solo game-tying and go-ahead homers, respectively – would vault the Yankees to the edge of the AL pennant, the Guardians roughed up the previously indomitable Weaver. 

Playoff hero Lane Thomas nearly hit one out to dead center but settled for a ringing double, setting the stage for Noel’s pinch-hitting appearance. He did not miss. 

Noel clocked a 1-0 changeup far beyond the left field wall to send the game to extra innings, where the Yankees will have a slight upper hand.

Sure, they’re the road team but still have one high-leverage weapon – Clay Holmes – left in their bullpen, while the Guardians had to use all their top arms to get the game this far. 

Reminder: There is no automatic runner placed on second in postseason games.

Aaron Judge, Giancarlo Stanton go back-to-back: Yankees lead

The American League MVP looked buried against the game’s best closer. But even when Aaron Judge is down, he’s often not out. 

And now the New York Yankees are on the verge of a commanding lead in the American League Championship Series. 

Judge hit a two-out, two-strike, two-run home run with two outs in the eighth inning off Cleveland Guardians closer Emmanuel Clase, followed immediately by a go-ahead blast form Giancarlo Stanton, as the Yankees took a 4-3 lead in Game 3 at Progressive Field. 

The Yankees had struggled through five innings against Guardians lefty Matthew Boyd, and then Cleveland’s usual cavalcade of clutch relievers maintained a 3-1 advantage entering the eighth. But Juan Soto drew a two-out walk against Hunter Gaddis, prompting manager Stephen Vogt to summon Clase, who converted 47 of 50 save chances this year. 

He also nailed down five-out and two-inning saves in the AL Division Series against Detroit. But the Tigers didn’t have Judge. 

Gearing his approach toward right field the entire at-bat, Judge blasted a ball on a line toward the right field wall, and it struck the top of it and spun over. Tie game. 

Before the stunned crowd could recover, Stanton – batting fourth only because manager Aaron Boone juggled the lineup against a lefty starter – crushed a ball to 390 feet to right center field. And now the Yankees are six outs from a 3-0 ALCS lead. 

– Gabe Lacques

Andrés Giménez extends Cleveland lead in sixth

Ian Hamilton took over to the start the bottom of the sixth for the Yankees, but walked leadoff man Lane Thomas, who eventually got to third with one out. Tim Mayza came out of the bullpen to face lefty Andrés Giménez, who jumped on the southpaw to deliver an RBI single and extend Cleveland’s lead to 3-1.

Guardians retire 13 in a row.

It’s another quick 1-2-3 inning with Cade Smith retiring Soto, Judge and Stanton in the sixth. Yanks still without anyone on base since the second inning.

Ian Hamilton enters for the Yanks in the bottom of the sixth, Cleveland still up 2-1.

– Pete Caldera, NorthJersey.com

Kyle Manzardo home run puts Guardians ahead

CLEVELAND — Rookie Kyle Manzardo hit his first playoff home run in the third inning Thursday to give the Guardians a 2-1 lead over the Yankees in Game 3 of the ALCS at Progressive Field.

Manzardo drilled a 3-1 pitch by Yankees starter Clarke Schmidt 395 feet into the seats in right field to give the Guardians their first lead of the series. Manzardo’s homer had a 108 mph exit velocity and also scored Brayan Rocchio, who led off the inning with a single.

– Michael Beaven, Akron Beacon Journal

Jose Trevino gives Yankees second-inning lead

The New York Yankees are proving that maybe it’s good to take a few weeks off from live pitching. 

Jose Trevino, who had not taken an at-bat in the postseason while backing up starting catcher Austin Wells, singled sharply to right field in his first plate appearance since Sept. 29 to stake the Yankees to a 1-0 lead in the second inning of ALCS Game 3 at Cleveland. 

Trevino got the start against left-hander Matthew Boyd as the lefty-swinging Wells, who is 2 for 24 this postseason, got the night off. Trevino came up after a one-out walk to Anthony Volpe and an Alex Verdugo double, and drove home Volpe with the shot to right. 

Trevino was picked off first, however, with Verdugo on third, blunting the potential for a bigger inning. 

The Yankees got instant offense earlier this series from first baseman Anthony Rizzo, who singled in his first at-bat after a 15-day hiatus due to finger fractures, and he tallied three hits in his first seven at-bats.

– Gabe Lacques

ALCS Game 3 underway in Cleveland

After the Yankees stranded a pair in the top of the first, the Guardians got runners to first and second with nobody out on a Steven Kwan walk and Kyle Manzardo single. New York starter Clarke Schmidt then struck out Jose Ramirez and got back-to-back groundouts from Josh Naylor and Lane Thomas to end the threat.

Yankees lineup, ALCS Game 3

Gleyber Torres (R) 2B
Juan Soto (L) RF
Aaron Judge (R) CF
Giancarlo Stanton (R) DH
Jazz Chisholm Jr. (L) 3B
Jon Berti (R) 1B
Anthony Volpe (R) SS
Alex Verdugo (L) LF
Jose Trevino (R) C

Guardians lineup, ALCS Game 3

Steven Kwan (L) LF
Kyle Manzardo (L) DH
José Ramírez (S) 3B
Josh Naylor (L) 1B
Lane Thomas (R) CF
Daniel Schneemann (L) RF
Andrés Giménez (L) 2B
Austin Hedges (R) C
Brayan Rocchio (S) SS

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This post appeared first on USA TODAY

University of Virginia men’s basketball coach Tony Bennett, who led the Cavaliers to the 2019 national championship, is retiring, the school confirmed Thursday. Bennett will formally announce his retirement at a news conference Friday morning, the school said.

Bennett accepted the UVa job prior to the 2009-10 season following a three-year stint at Washington State. Overall, he amassed a career record of 433-169, including a 364-136 mark with the Cavaliers, and was named national coach of the year three times.

His national title squad earned a huge measure of redemption after becoming the first No. 1 regional seed to lose to a No. 16, Maryland-Baltimore County, in the opening round the previous year.

The announcement less than three weeks prior to the start of the new season comes as a surprise and one week after he appeared at ACC media day. The Cavaliers ended last year in the NCAA tournament but lost to Colorado State in a lackluster showing in the First Four.

Bennett then signed an offer sheet in June that extended his deal with the school for four years through 2030 and kept his compensation at more than $4 million per year .

“I love UVA and it has always been a special place for me and my family,” Bennett said in a release when the contract was announced this summer. ‘My staff and I look forward to adapting to the new landscape of college athletics. We will continue to build one of the best basketball programs on and off the court without compromising the values of our university.”

The school did not immediately announce plans for who would replace Bennett. Associate head coach Ron Sanchez is starting his 11th season on Bennett’s staff. He left in 2018 to coach Charlotte for five seasons and returned to Virginia before last season. Jason Williford is the team’s other associate head coach. A former Cavaliers player, Williford has been on Bennett’s staff since Bennett was hired at Virginia in 2009.

Earlier this week, UVa was picked to finish fifth in the ACC in preseason media balloting.

(This story was updated with additional information.)

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The judge in former President Trump’s federal election interference case on Friday made public more documents from Special Counsel Jack Smith’s investigation into the former president just weeks before the 2024 election. 

U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan ordered on Thursday night that additional documents be made public. The hundreds of pages of documents are Smith’s appendix of exhibits in the fight over whether Trump has a level of presidential immunity that negates the charges against him.

‘Radical Democrats are hell-bent on interfering in the presidential election on behalf of Lyin’ Kamala Harris,’ Trump campaign spokesman Steven Cheung told Fox News Digital. ‘With just over two weeks until Election Day, President Trump is dominating this race and Crazed Liberals throughout the Deep State are freaking out.’ 

Cheung added, ‘As mandated by the Supreme Court’s historic decision on Presidential Immunity and other vital jurisprudence, this entire case is a sham and a partisan, Unconstitutional Witch Hunt that should be dismissed entirely — as should ALL of the remaining Democrat hoaxes.’

The majority of pages released to the public remain under seal and are not viewable by the public. Much of the unsealed material has been previously released in some form, including transcripts by the House Select Committee on Jan. 6. Other documents include old Trump campaign press releases, fundraising emails, White House press conference transcripts and news articles. 

In the order to release the documents, Chutkan cited Trump’s claim that the ‘asymmetric release of charged allegations and related documents during early voting creates a concerning appearance of election interference.’ 

According to the judge, while there is a public interest for courts to avoid involving themselves in elections, ‘it is in fact Defendant’s requested relief that risks undermining that public interest.’

‘If the court withheld information that the public otherwise had a right to access solely because of the potential political consequences of releasing it, that withholding could itself constitute — or appear to be — election interference,’ she argued. 

She added that the court would continue keeping political considerations out of decisions, despite the defense’s request. 

Trump has pleaded not guilty to all charges brought against him by Smith. 

The Supreme Court earlier this year ruled that a president is immune from prosecution for official acts. 

Smith was then required to file another indictment against Trump, revising the charges in an effort to navigate the Supreme Court ruling. The new indictment kept the prior criminal charges but narrowed and reframed the allegations against Trump after the high court’s ruling that gave broad immunity to former presidents. 

Trump pleaded not guilty to all charges in the new indictment as well. 

In a filing unsealed earlier this month, Smith outlines a ‘factual proffer,’ alleging Trump ‘resorted to crimes to try to stay in office’ after losing the 2020 presidential election.

‘With private co-conspirators, the defendant launched a series of increasingly desperate plans to overturn the legitimate election results in seven states that he had lost — Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, New Mexico, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin,’ Smith wrote. 

Smith claims that the ‘throughline of these efforts was deceit,’ claiming Trump and co-conspirators engaged in a conspiracy to interfere with the federal government function by which the nation collects and counts election results, which is set forth in the Constitution and the Electoral Count Act (ECA); a conspiracy to obstruct the official proceeding in which Congress certifies the legitimate results of the presidential election; and a conspiracy against the rights of millions of Americans to vote and have their votes counted.’ 

Fox News’ Julia Johnson, Jake Gibson, David Spunt and Bill Mears contributed to this report. 

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Walt Disney Co. (DIS) has struggled as a business over the past few years and isn’t on many investors’ radars these days. However, Disney seems to have turned a corner last quarter and is positioned for a resurgence in its core theme parks and streaming businesses.

With consumer spending in the travel sector remaining robust, demand for Disney’s theme parks is increasing. Additionally, Disney+ is on track to become profitable by Q4, and the inclusion of ESPN could further enhance Disney’s edge in the streaming space. These factors provide upside potential for Disney’s stock price, particularly as the company recovers from recent challenges and realigns its strategic focus.

Disney’s stock price has recently broken above its trading range, pulled back, and bounced off its $92 support level (see chart below). This suggests there is momentum to target $102 to the upside and $113 as an extended target to the upside.

FIGURE 1. DISNEY’S STOCK PRICE HAS THE POTENTIAL TO MOVE HIGHER. An improving relative performance and moving average convergence/divergence support a potential higher price move in Disney.Chart source: StockCharts.com. For educational purpose.

With the relative performance of DIS to the S&P 500 ($SPX) improving and the moving average convergence/divergence (MACD) showing signs of strengthening, this confirms the upside potential as DIS potentially breaks out above its $97.50 resistance.

Disney stock appears modestly undervalued, trading at 18x forward earnings, slightly below the industry average. Its expected earnings per share (EPS) growth of 14.5% aligns with the industry average, while its revenue growth forecast of 4% aligns with its peers. However, Disney’s net margins of 5% surpass the industry average of 3%, indicating a stronger outlook on profitability, especially with anticipated improvements from its streaming business and sustained demand in its theme parks.

Options on DIS are expensive, with the IV rank at 67%. So, to capitalize on a potential major breakout for DIS, I suggest buying a December $95/$110 call vertical for $5.09 debit.

A call vertical involves buying a call option and selling another with a higher strike price. The two options have the same expiration date.

FIGURE 2. CALL VERTICAL ANALYSIS. Here, you see the cost of the trade, the risk curve, and the risk/reward tradeoff of the call vertical for DIS. Image source: OptionsPlay.

This structure allows an offset for the relatively expensive Dec $95 call options and reduces the overall risk by selling the $110 calls. This structure entails:

Buying the Dec 20 $95 Call @ $6.25Selling the Dec 20 $110 Call @ $1.16

 This call vertical spread allows for a maximum reward of $991 per contract if DIS is above $110 at expiration, with a maximum risk of $509 if DIS is below $95 at expiration.

In Matt Holtry’s 16 years of coaching high school football in Homedale, Idaho, he needed to pack two jerseys – one for offense and the other for defense – for just one player. 

So when it came time to retire Scott Matlock’s number this summer, Homedale had to decide which jersey number would go in the rafters: 44 or 99? Drafted by the Los Angeles Chargers in the sixth round last year, Matlock wore “99” as a defensive lineman, same as he did at Boise State. The No. 44 jersey went into the glass case. 

Little did Matlock – or anybody – know then that a few months later he would don the number once again. 

“It was kind of surreal that happened the way it did,” Holtry told USA TODAY Sports.

Matlock is still playing on the Chargers’ defensive line and contributing on special teams, but he’s emerged as a mainstay in the team’s offense under first-year head coach Jim Harbaugh and offensive coordinator Greg Roman. At the end of training camp, they switched his jersey number to 44, signaling he’d have a greater role in the offense. Through five games, Matlock has been on the field for 37% of the Chargers’ offensive snaps, compared to 18% of defensive plays (he also plays more than half the time on special teams).

All things Chargers: Latest Los Angeles Chargers news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

According to an analysis of snap-count data on Pro Football Reference after Week 6, seven teams (including the Chargers) have had players take snaps on both offense and defense this season – eight players for a total of 25 plays. Matlock has been on the field for 166 plays from scrimmage, and that number excludes the 74 times he’s trotted out there on special teams. Matlock may have to wait until Travis Hunter, the potential No. 1 pick in the 2025 draft who plays both cornerback and wide receiver for Colorado, for any real competition in that department. 

“The last six weeks, seven weeks, they’ve definitely been fun,” Matlock told USA TODAY Sports. “It’s just been going by so quick, as life does.”

At 24, Matlock knows that better than many people with more life experience. His journey is not only one of defense to offense, but from foster care to unheralded college football prospect to NFL draft pick. 

“He’s been through so much. If there’s anybody that deserves this, it’s him,” Holtry said. “But he’s so good about it. He’s so humble about it.”

Forging through tragedy – and realizing a football dream

Matlock’s father, Doug, died from cancer when Scott was 9. Four years later, Matlock found his mother dead on the couch after she succumbed to heart disease. With his older brother Steven at the University of Idaho as a freshman offensive lineman, Scott Matlock entered the state’s foster care system. 

He eventually wound up with Mike and Donna Marose of Homedale, Idaho, about 45 miles away from where Matlock grew up in Boise. Before Matlock began his freshman year at Homedale, Donna set up a meeting with the new family and Holtry, the school’s football coach and principal.

“He was kinda like, almost, that beat dog,” Holtry said. “He didn’t want to be there. You could tell this was not part of his plan.”

Matlock was skinny and awkward on the junior varsity football field; the coaches called him “bambi.” The potential was there, though. There was hope he would grow into his frame, as Stephen had. 

Pretty soon, Holtry could tell Matlock was destined for something beyond being a good small-town high school football player. He would practice pass rush moves on the pillars in Homedale’s hallway. 

“He was always thinking about football. He was always talking about football,” Holtry said. 

Sometime around spring of his sophomore year, Matlock got in trouble for sneaking out. Donna was upset and threatened to take away football and transfer him to a different school. Holtry talked her off that ledge. 

“They held him to a high standard and they had expectations for him,” Holtry said. “They were going to make sure that he was doing the right things and being the right person. It was great for him. Because he needed that.” 

Matlock knows he wouldn’t have made it through that trying time in his life without the Maroses. 

“I wouldn’t be here if it wasn’t for them, that’s for sure,” he said. “They took me in, loved me like one of their own, raised me to be a responsible young man. Couldn’t say enough about them.” 

Matlock’s ability to play multiple positions dates back to Homedale. Holtry’s strategy with Matlock on the field was simple enough: put him at the point of attack. Matlock played defensive tackle, defensive end, tight end, H-back and all five offensive line positions.

“The kid literally was like the Swiss-Army knife of high school football,” Holtry said, “and it’s awesome to see that this is the story that’s unfolding at the NFL level. Because that’s what he was for us.”

Harbaugh is somebody Holtry has followed since he coached at the University of San Diego two decades ago. The foundations of their offense – the power and counter-iso scheme –  are similar, Holtry said.

“The guy’s a machine,” Holtry said. “If a guy is in his way, he’s going to move them.”

As Matlock’s senior season approached, Holtry placed a call to his teammate at Boise State, Andy Avalos, then the school’s linebackers coach. 

If there was a kid worth taking a shot on, it was Matlock, he told Avalos. The school didn’t offer a scholarship right away. Eastern Washington, Weber State, Idaho State and the University of Idaho came through with offers of their own. Finally, Boise State told Matlock there was a scholarship with his name on it. 

“The rest is history,” Holtry said. 

“It was definitely a dream come true,” Matlock said. 

Embracing a do-it-all mentality

At Boise State, the coaches called the package “Clydesdales.” The big bodies from the defensive line would run onto the field to provide the heft to help the Broncos in short-yardage situations, usually near the goal line. 

Matlock would often stand behind Avalos, who became the Broncos’ head coach in 2021, and slam his heel into the ground, acting like a horse ready to go. “You know what time it is,” he’d tell Avalos. 

“I loved it,” Avalos, now the defensive coordinator at Texas Christian, told USA TODAY Sports. “Because you knew what you were getting out of those dudes on the field.” 

Matlock showed up to Boise State at 240 pounds. Over five years, he molded himself into a dominating physical presence. What Avalos misses about coaching Matlock is that “he just brings a vibe in the hardest of times – training and preparation – that you just love.” He works hard without making it difficult for those around him.

“I don’t care what locker room you put that guy in,” Avalos said. “He’s going to die for the cause – to do what’s right for the team.” 

By the time his senior season arrived in 2022, Matlock worked his way onto the Bednarik and Outland Trophy watch lists after a seven-sack campaign the year prior. He caught a touchdown against Utah State in 2021 and did the same on Senior Day in 2022, which became one of his favorite college memories. 

“From a defensive standpoint, his football IQ is extremely high,” Avalos said. 

Matlock could distinguish a run or pass play from his three-point pass before the ball was snapped. After he did that all game against Air Force, the academy’s future opponents hit Matlock up for weeks on social media to figure out how he did it.

But his biggest impact came by simply entering the game, former Boise State offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach Tim Plough said. 

“Just him being around those guys in the huddle instantly improved our mentality down there, and so we were much better in those situations,” Plough, now the head coach at UC-Davis, told USA TODAY Sports. 

The Broncos coaching staff could line Matlock up in the backfield to be the lead blocker or put him in-line at tight end to dominate the edge if there was a matchup they liked. 

“He would completely cave his side, and we would basically just run behind him,” Plough said.

No one expected him to be involved in the pass game, but the coaching staff was certainly aware of his athleticism – even beyond the football field. Avalos said his “loose hips” made him one of the best golfers he’s ever seen. He dominated team bowling events. 

But catching passes in the NFL from Justin Herbert (Matlock has one reception for seven yards)? 

“Seeing him do that now is not shocking,” Plough said. “Seeing him have success is not shocking.”

For Matlock to have the physical capability is one thing. The mental aspect is the key, Plough said. 

In college, Matlock would return to the football coaches’ offices after class Monday or Tuesday and watch the five or six plays he needed to learn on tape. At practice, usually Wednesdays, he’d sprint from one side to the other for his package of plays during the offensive goal-line period. 

“Immediately, the offense would raise its level of play because they had someone driving them with that mentality. Like, ‘We’re going to get this yard guys. We’re going to get this done.’ That was infectious. And I’m sure it still is today.” 

An unlikely NFL idea takes shape

Maybe Matlock took Travis Kelce a little too literally. 

Following the Kansas City Chiefs’ defeat of the Chargers last October, Matlock approached the Chiefs tight end. He asked for advice. 

“You know what it is?” the nine-time Pro Bowler told Matlock in a conversation captured by microphones. “Understand the other side of the ball just as well as you know your side of the ball.”

After the game, Matlock had an idea.

“I was like, ‘Well, I’ll just play offense, too,’” he said. “It’s kind of ironic.”

The joke of Matlock playing offense first popped up when former Chargers offensive coordinator Kellen Moore, a fellow Boise State product, told reporters questioning the team’s tight-end production “maybe we’ve got something here.” 

Harbaugh and his staff came in, and suddenly no one was laughing at the idea of Matlock on offense. 

“It wasn’t really my idea,” Matlock said. “There may have been some juking around in training camp. Obviously, they knew I played that package in college and I caught two touchdown passes and had some good hands.”

Matlock juggles his different hats every morning. Offensive meeting. Defensive meeting. Walkthrough on offense. Walkthrough on defense. There’s a special teams meeting somewhere in there and walkthroughs for that unit, too. He practices mostly with the defensive line but also mixes in repetitions with the offense.

“It’s a lot more than in college,” said Matlock, who is now responsible for mastering an entire playbook at the professional level – not exactly the same as five plays to memorize for Mountain West opponents.

Roman converted another former defensive lineman into an offensive player with the Baltimore Ravens in Patrick Ricard, the four-time Pro Bowl fullback who dabbled as a two-way threat early in his career.

“Scott has a lot on his plate, and it’s amazing how he’s handling it,” Roman said in September. “I can’t speak enough about how diligently he’s preparing, and he’s getting better every week. How impressive is that?” 

In Roman’s offense, Matlock takes on the role of the H-back, which is similar to the position he played in Holtry’s scheme back in Homedale. 

“I don’t think (Roman) was all too against doing it,” Matlock said. “We started slow. It just kind of built up from there into what it is. No one really saw this coming, I don’t think.” 

Remembering his roots

At his jersey retirement in Homedale, Matlock stood in the beating sun for 45 minutes to sign everything the kids in attendance handed him. 

Matlock could have quit or made excuses given everything he went through as a child and nobody would have thought twice, Holtry said. That’s not what Matlock did, though.

“He’s got such a good heart,” Holtry said. “People that know him, he’s such a teddy bear.” 

Steven Matlock has lived with Scott Matlock since the latter’s junior year at Boise State. They’re golfing buddies. Matlock said his big brother is his inspiration, motivator and role model. 

“He’s been my rock for a while,” Matlock said. 

Matlock served on the leadership council at Boise State. His main message to teammates, Plough said, often revolved around “have to versus want to.” 

“He had that mindset with everything he did, from training in the offseason, to playing offense or defense. I think he felt really grateful. He had that humility about him.” 

Matlock never panicked. He was always solution-oriented. Negativity wasn’t acceptable. 

“The adversity that has shaped him would break a lot of people,” Plough said. “All it did for him was make him such a strong individual and someone who’s able to go through adversity and overcome it.” 

Last season, Matlock recorded 15 tackles and one quarterback hit in 12 games. Now he’s a presence in three phases. 

“I still got GMs and D-line coaches in the NFL that are like, ‘We screwed up,’” Avalos said. “He was a guy. And I’m so happy for him, that he’s doing what he’s doing now.” 

How Matlock made it to this point is something he asks himself. 

“I still wonder that to this day, honestly,” Matlock said. “Took it one day at a time. That’s all I really could do, just make it to the next day. Just keep moving on.”

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The House Democrats’ campaign arm filed a lawsuit against the Federal Election Commission (FEC) Thursday, alleging the agency’s failure to take action has led to Republican candidates using a campaign finance loophole in their television advertisements. 

The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee (DCCC) filed its initial complaint for declaratory judgment and injunctive relief in D.C. District Court, which was first reported by Axios. The DCCC is arguing that Republicans are disguising attack ads paid for by joint fundraising committees as fundraising ventures, therefore circumventing fundraising caps.  

The suit comes after Senate Democrats previously accused Republicans of using the tactic and appealed to the FEC to rule if such a strategy is allowed. The commission voted 3-3 along party lines last week, thus allowing the GOP to continue with its ads. 

‘Federal law is clear that party committee expenditures coordinated with candidates are subject to limits. Republican candidates are so cash strapped that they’re now brazenly exploiting a self-created loophole to spend party committee money on candidate ads, well in excess of applicable limits, at the lowest unit charge,’ Rachel L. Jacobs, general counsel for the DCCC, told Fox News Digital in a statement. 

‘Their actions require DCCC and Democratic House candidates to make a choice between engaging in conduct they think is illegal at the risk of getting penalized by the FEC and/or Department of Justice, or being at a competitive disadvantage to their Republican counterparts to the tune of tens of millions of dollars.’

The DCCC is now asking the federal court to rule on whether the practice is illegal ahead of the Nov. 5 election.

FEC Chairman Sean Cooksey told Axios, ‘I fully expect the FEC to prevail in this frivolous lawsuit. We will see the DCCC in court.’ 

The FEC declined to provide additional comment on ongoing litigation when asked for a statement by Fox News Digital. 

In a statement to Axios, National Republican Senatorial Committee General Counsel Ryan Dollar called the suit ‘a desperate stunt,’ saying the television ads were ‘approved unanimously in 2007 and reaffirmed last week.’

‘I’d be curious to hear what Harris Victory has to say about this ridiculous lawsuit, given that they have engaged in these ads themselves,’ Dollar told the outlet. 

With just a few weeks out from Election Day, Republicans are fighting to maintain control of the House and take over the Senate. The Congressional Leadership Fund (CLF), the leading outside group supporting House Republicans and closely aligned with House Speaker Mike Johnson, reported its highest fundraising quarter ever earlier this month, announcing an $81.4 million haul during the July-September third quarter of 2024 fundraising.  

The CLF also announced at the time that it would be funneling another $11 million in new ad reservations, sharing the news first with Fox News Digital. 

Likewise, the Senate Leadership Fund, the leading super PAC supporting Republican incumbents and candidates, announced it hauled in $114.5 million during the same fundraising quarter. 

Fox News’ Paul Steinhauser contributed to this report. 

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In a now-deleted social media post, the head of operations for the left-wing British Labour Party indicated ‘nearly 100’ current and former party staffers will be headed to the U.S. to help Vice President Kamala Harris during the final stretch before the election.

The Labour Party leader, Sofia Patel, took to LinkedIn earlier this week to solicit help from current and former members of the party who would be willing to campaign for Harris in the key battleground state of North Carolina. Patel indicated in her post that she had already organized ‘nearly 100 Labour Party staff’ to stump across the key battleground states of Nevada, Pennsylvania and Virginia but had about 10 spots left for anyone willing to head to North Carolina. 

‘We will sort your housing,’ Patel assured anyone interested. ‘Email me on labourforkamala@gmail.com if you’re interested.’ 

Patel, in addition to deleting the post, appeared to delete her entire LinkedIn page as of Friday morning as well.   

There is no indication the Labour Party’s efforts have been coordinated with the Harris campaign. Fox News Digital reached out to both for comment but did not receive any on-the-record response by publication time. 

Following news of the Labour Party’s plans to help Harris, critics took issue with the move, with some slamming it as foreign election interference. 

‘Yet another reason to vote for President Trump,’ Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., said. ‘More foreign election interference from the Democrats,’ added Rep. Claudia Tenney, R-N.Y. 

Meanwhile, Rep. Mike Collins, R-Ga., called for an investigation. ‘Election interference from foreign nationals. Investigate!’ Collins wrote on X. 

Elon Musk and Rep. Marjorie Taylor Green, R-Ga., both outright called the move illegal.  

‘You are breaking FEC laws,’ Greene said in a social media post directed at the Labour Party. ‘Foreign nationals are not allowed to be involved in anyway in U.S. elections. Please go back to the UK and fix your own mass immigration problems that are ruining your country.’ 

Musk, meanwhile, simply responded ‘This is illegal.’

X’s ‘Community Notes’ function, which serves to provide context for inaccurate or misleading information on the platform, flagged Greene’s remarks for additional context, however. According to the additional context added to her post, while federal election law does not allow foreign-nationals to make monetary or in-kind contributions in connection with federal races, it is permissable to participate in campaign activities as an uncompensated volunteer.

American journalist Isaac Saul, who founded a digital news project called Tangle News aimed at providing a non-partisan take on news headlines, echoed the arguments from X’s community note.

‘Elon Musk claiming Labour Party leaders are violating the law by coming here to campaign. They aren’t,’ Saul wrote on X in response to Musk’s comments that the Labour Party’s work was ‘illegal.’

‘This is only illegal if they are being compensated – the FB post indicates they are seeking volunteers,’ Saul pointed out.

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The judge in former President Donald Trump’s federal election interference case on Friday made public more documents from special counsel Jack Smith’s investigation into the former president just weeks before the 2024 election. 

U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan ordered on Thursday night that additional documents be made public. 

The hundreds of pages of documents are Smith’s appendix of exhibits in the fight over whether Trump has a level of presidential immunity that negates the charges against him.

The majority of pages released to the public remain under seal and are not viewable by the public. 

Much of the unsealed material has been previously released in some form, including transcripts by the House Select Committee on Jan. 6. Other documents include old Trump campaign press releases, fundraising emails, White House press conference transcripts, and news articles. 

In the order to release the documents, Chutkan cited Trump’s claim that the ‘asymmetric release of charged allegations and related documents during early voting creates a concerning appearance of election interference.’ 

According to the judge, while there is a public interest for courts to avoid involving themselves in elections, ‘it is in fact Defendant’s requested relief that risks undermining that public interest.’

‘If the court withheld information that the public otherwise had a right to access solely because of the potential political consequences of releasing it, that withholding could itself constitute — or appear to be — election interference,’ she argued. 

She added that the court would continue keeping political considerations out of decisions, despite the defense’s request. 

This is a developing story. Please check back for updates. 

Fox News’ Julia Johnson, Jake Gibson, David Spunt and Bill Mears contributed to this report. 

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Last week, ESPN’s ‘College GameDay’ followed a new conference rivalry in Oregon vs. Ohio State. This week, it follows another new conference rivalry as a new member of the SEC, No. 1 Texas, hosts No. 4 Georgia in a contest that could shape the SEC moving forward.

This will be Texas’ maiden SEC matchup with Georgia, and Rece Davis, Nick Saban, Pat McAfee, Lee Corso, Desmond Howard, and Kirk Herbstreit wouldn’t dare miss it. While the Longhorns boast an undefeated 6-0 record, the Bulldogs remain the highest-ranked one-loss team in the country.

Here’s what to know for the eighth ‘College GameDay’ of the season.

Where is ESPN’s ‘College GameDay’ this week?

‘College GameDay’ is going to DKR-Texas Memorial Stadium in Austin, Texas, for the 10th time and the first time since 2022.

Who is the ‘College GameDay’ celebrity guest picker this week?

The guest picker is expected to be world No. 1 golfer Scottie Scheffler. During an interview on ‘The Pat McAfee Show’ on Thursday, Kirk Herbstreit told McAfee ‘I think it’s Scottie Scheffler.’

When is ESPN’s ‘College GameDay?’

‘College GameDay’ will air from 9 a.m. ET to noon ET on Saturday, Oct. 19. 

How to watch ESPN’s ‘College GameDay’

‘College GameDay’ will air on ESPN. It is also available to stream via ESPN+ and/or Fubo. 

Stream College GameDay with Fubo

ESPN’s ‘College GameDay’ crew

Recently retired Alabama coach Nick Saban is a new addition to ‘College GameDay’ this season. Alongside Saban will be:

Rece Davis
Kirk Herbstreit 
Lee Corso
Desmond Howard
Pat McAfee
‘Stanford’ Steve Coughlin

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