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Several political figures on both sides of the aisle increased their profile in 2024 and are primed to become key voices in their respective parties in 2025 and beyond.

Democrats suffered a major blow in 2024, in a year that saw President Biden bow out of the political race and be replaced by VP Kamala Harris and Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, who lost both the Electoral College and popular vote in November. Going forward, several Democrats are expected to fill that leadership void heading into the midterms.’

Shapiro was widely considered to be the strongest vice presidential candidate to join the Harris ticket this summer, and Harris received criticism for her decision to select Walz instead. Shapiro, viewed as a moderate by some, has been governor of the state since January 2023 and will face a re-election test in 2026 before any potential 2028 run.

Pennsylvania’s 19 electoral votes make it a key state in presidential elections, making Shapiro’s position as governor of that state an appealing attribute for any presidential candidate.

‘Probably the biggest winner on election night,’ Mike Manzo of Triad Strategies told ABC 27 last month. ‘If 2026 turns out to be a bad midterm for the Republicans, (Shapiro’s) sitting on the top of the ticket for in Pennsylvania. You know, so if he runs away with that the following January, he’s in Iowa.’

Ryan, who represents New York’s 18th Congressional District, was considered one of the most vulnerable incumbents heading into the November election but defeated his Republican challenger by 14 points in a swing district.

Since the election, Ryan has been one of the most outspoken Democrats on the subject of what went wrong for his party in November.

‘First and foremost, if you’re using the words ‘moderate’ or ‘progressive’ you’re missing the whole f***ing point,’ Ryan wrote on X. ‘It’s not ideological. It’s about who fights for the people vs. who further empowers and enables the elites.’

‘Most importantly, I told folks exactly who it was that was ripping them off, and I grounded it locally. It’s the billionaires and big corporations making record-breaking profits while the rest of us struggle.’

Ryan wrote, ‘It’s not enough to throw these seemingly disparate policies at people. We must articulate a unifying principle, and clearly tell folks who’s at fault.  For me, it was Freedom. and Patriotism. And the fault lies with the same elites, in both parties, who’ve run this country for far too long.’

Alsobrooks, who previously served as the chief executive of Prince George’s County in the suburbs of the nation’s capital, defeated popular Republican Larry Hogan by 11 points in the Maryland Senate race, becoming the first Black candidate to win a Maryland Senate race.

Alsobrooks campaigned heavily on gun control and abortion and won the clear support of women, Black and Latino voters, urban voters and college graduates over Hogan, according to AP VoteCast, a sweeping survey of more than 3,700 voters in the state. Even though Alsobrooks underperformed Vice President Harris among suburban and moderate voters, majorities backed her over Hogan in the heavily blue state.

‘At times we struggle together, and we work to build a better future for all of our children,’ Alsobrooks said after her victory in November. ‘And to those Marylanders whose support I have yet to earn, I may not have won your vote, but I want you to know that I hear your voice, and I will be your senator, too.’

Maryland’s governor, Wes Moore, is also believed to be a rising voice in the Democratic Party after being elected as the state’s first Black governor in 2022.

Moore, a graduate of Johns Hopkins University and a Rhodes scholar, served as a captain in the Army before spending time as an investment banker and has labeled himself a ‘social moderate and strong fiscal conservative.’

Moore’s leadership was thrust into the national spotlight this year when a container ship slammed into the Francis Scott Key Bridge in the Baltimore harbor, causing a collapse that took the lives of six construction workers.

In a post on X after the disaster, Moore said, ‘We are Maryland tough. We are Baltimore strong. In the face of danger, we hold out. In the face of heartbreak, we come together, and we come back stronger. That is what we’ve always done. That’s what we will continue to do.’

While Newsom is not a political newcomer, he is expected to be one of the top candidates to run for president on the Democrat side in 2028 after establishing himself as one of the top surrogates for Biden and Harris during the last presidential cycle. 

Newsom, who has served as California governor since 2019, is term limited once his current tenure ends in January 2027. 

Republicans will enter the new year with control of the White House and Congress as the party prepares for four years of Trump’s leadership, while other Republicans will rise to become leaders in the party as the attention shifts to determining which voices will shape the party in the years to come during and post-Trump’s term.

Vance, 40, will be the presumptive frontrunner for president in 2028 given his position as Trump’s vice president and is expected to be one of the more prominent voices in the Republican Party over the next few years.

‘The vice president will be in the catbird seat. No question about it,’ longtime Republican consultant Dave Carney told Fox News Digital last month. Carney, a veteran of numerous Republican presidential campaigns over the past four decades, said that Vance ‘is the guy to beat.’

David Kochel, another longtime GOP strategist with plenty of presidential campaign experience, told Fox News that Vance is the frontrunner due to ‘the size and the scope of last week’s victory and the implied passing of the torch from Donald Trump.’

Donalds, who has represented Florida’s 19th Congressional District since 2019, was a top surrogate for Trump on the campaign trail in 2024 and many believed he was on the short list of vice presidential candidates.

The Florida congressman has been an outspoken voice on cable news promoting Trump’s agenda and has also been one of the most prominent voices pushing back against the media’s attacks on Trump, often appearing on liberal networks defending the president-elect in hostile environments.

Donalds served on the Financial Services Committee and the Committee on Government Oversight and Accountability in the 118th Congress and was a member of the Congressional Blockchain Caucus, Freedom Caucus, and Republican Study Committee.

Cleveland area businessman Bernie Moreno ended Dem. Sen. Sherrod Brown’s 17-year tenure in the Senate in November in a state Trump carried by 11 points. 

Since being elected senator, Moreno has established himself as one of Trump’s most loyal allies and was the first freshman senator to publicly defend and support Trump’s Cabinet picks and is expected to be one of Trump’s top representatives in Congress. 

Moreno, a supporter of term limits, has pledged to only serve two six-year terms in the Senate.

Hamadeh previously served as a prosecutor and Army intelligence officer before being elected to represent Arizona’s 8th Congressional District in November.

The 33-year old, born to Syrian immigrants, has been a vocal supporter of Trump and the ‘Make America Great Again Agenda’ and he told Fox News Digital last month that he and fellow Republicans will ‘hit the ground running with something very historic in the first hundred days.’

Hamadeh is set to serve on both the Veterans Affairs Committee and Armed Services Committee in the 119th Congress. 

‘I am honored to serve on the Veterans Affairs and Armed Services Committees—two assignments I intentionally sought because our veterans and military deserve leaders who will fight for them,’ Hamadeh told Fox News Digital in a statement about his committee assignments. ‘Putting America first starts with defending our homeland and honoring our veterans and their families.’

‘Throughout my campaign, I made a promise to bring veterans’ issues to the forefront of our national priorities, and today, I am proud to fulfill that promise. This is a ‘promises made, promises kept’ moment as I lead the charge to honor our military leaders, support those who have served our nation, and ensure our veterans receive the care and respect they’ve earned. Serving those who served us is not just my duty—it’s a privilege.’

Ramaswamy, a biotech entrepreneur believed to have a net worth of around $1 billion, burst onto the political scene in 2023 after throwing his hat into the 2024 presidential race before dropping out in January 2024 and quickly becoming a top surrogate for Trump’s campaign.

Ramaswamy was appointed to co-lead, along with Space X and Tesla CEO Elon Musk, the Department of Government Efficiency, which will focus its efforts on trimming federal spending when the new administration takes over in January.

The 39-year-old native of southwest Ohio has been floated as a contender to replace outgoing Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine and Ramaswamy hasn’t ruled out that possibility and has said he is open to considering it. 

Fox News Digital’s Paul Steinhauser and the Associated Press contributed to this report.

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The NHL fined the Dallas Stars $100,000 on Monday, ruling that the team had held a disallowed practice on Thursday during the three-day holiday break.

According to Article 16.5 (b) of the collective bargaining agreement between the league and NHL Players’ Association: ‘December 24, Christmas Day, and December 26 shall be off-days for all purposes, including travel, and no Club may request a Player’s consent to practice on such days for any reason.’

The Stars hosted Minnesota on Friday and the Wild had flown in that morning under the rule. Theoretically, the younger players skating could have given the Stars an advantage, though Minnesota rallied to win the game 3-2 in overtime.

The fine money will go to the NHL Foundation.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

A light holiday week schedule in men’s college basketball resulted in few changes in the USA TODAY Sports coaches poll.

Top-ranked Tennessee and No. 2 Auburn continue to monopolize the first-place votes. The Volunteers again were picked first by 20 of the 31 panelists, with the remaining 11 first-place votes going to the Tigers. The next seven positions also remain unchanged, with Iowa State, Duke and Florida rounding out the top five. There is just one minor alteration of the top 10 as Oklahoma nudges ahead of Kentucky at the No. 10 spot, but the SEC still has six of the top 12 teams in the poll.

A couple of notable outcomes during the week produced some shuffling farther down the rankings. UCLA moves up three places to No. 18 thanks to a win against Gonzaga, knocking the Zags down four positions to No. 19. Mississippi takes a seven-position hit falling to No. 23 after a loss to Memphis, which joins the poll at No. 25.

No. 24 Maryland also moves in this week, as San Diego State and St. John’s fall out.

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A string of burglaries targeting professional athletes’ homes has prompted the FBI to get involved.

The FBI issued a formal warning to professional leagues on Monday, informing them about a string of burglaries that began in early September and have persisted through the end of 2024.

The FBI reported that ‘at least nine professional athletes’ had their homes burglarized, including Kansas City Chiefs stars Patrick Mahomes and Travis Kelce, as well as Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow, Dallas Mavericks guard Luka Doncic and Minnesota Timberwolves guard Mike Conley, among others.

The break-in at Doncic’s home happened Friday night, the Dallas police department told USA TODAY Sports. 

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

What does the FBI say about the burglars?

Not much is known about the identity of the burglars. The FBI reports that they are an organized group stemming from South America who conduct thorough technical and physical surveillance in order to best prepare for each house.

‘These preparation tactics enable theft groups to conduct burglaries in a short amount of time. Organized theft groups bypass alarm systems, use Wi-Fi jammers to block Wi-Fi connections and disable devices, cover security cameras and obfuscate their identities,’ says the FBI.

The FBI also claimed that oftentimes, the burglars already know where the athletes hide their valuables, making the grabs that much easier.

The NFL and NBA have known about this for a while

This is not the first time we are hearing regarding the thefts. In November, both the NFL and NBA sent memos to their players informing them of the crime group and urging them to invest in security options.

The burglars target athletes while they are away for games and other team events. Athletes’ schedules are very well known, making them easier to target than other celebrities.

The most well known of these burglaries was Burrow. His home was invaded on Dec. 10, while the Bengals played the Dallas Cowboys. According to reports, model Olivia Ponton, who was staying at Burrow’s home at the time, returned to find broken windows. Ponton called the police and informed them of the crime.

Are these criminals violent?

It does not appear so. According to the FBI’s report, some of these burglaries have happened while others were still in the homes. No violence has occurred. However, the FBI also states that the best course of action is ‘to seek law enforcement help and avoid engaging with criminals, as they may be armed or use violence if confronted.’

The criminals usually try to target athletes when they know the homeowners are away, likely attempting to avoid confrontation altogether.

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Six former Florida State men’s basketball players are suing coach Leonard Hamilton over nonpayment of NIL compensation they claim they were promised.

According to a complaint filed Monday in Leon County (Florida) Circuit Court, players Darin Green Jr., Josh Nickelberry, Primo Spears, Cam’Ron Fletcher, De’Ante Green and Jalen Warley claim they were supposed to receive $250,000 each from Hamilton’s ‘business partners.’

The players’ frustration over the delay in payments led to them walking out of practice last season before a Feb. 17 game against Duke. According to the complaint, all six were also planning to skip the Duke game until Hamilton found out about it and reassured the players the money would be deposited into their accounts.

They ended up playing, but were never paid, according to the suit.

The complaint, which contains several text-message exchanges between players and some between players and Hamilton, says that ‘all hope is lost’ for the plaintiffs to recover the money they’re owed now that they are no longer at Florida State.

Green and Nickelberry concluded their college eligibility last spring. The others all transferred to other schools after the season: Spears is now at UTSA, Fletcher is at Xavier, Green is at South Florida and Warley is redshirting at Gonzaga.

The 76-year-old Hamilton is in the final year of his contract at Florida State. The Seminoles have a 9-4 overall record, and are 0-2 in ACC play.

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Russia’s foreign minister has rejected a reported peace deal involving Ukraine and NATO, claiming that the proposals have been made by President-elect Trump’s advisors.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov made the comments during an interview with TASS, a state-run Russian news agency, on Monday. During the interview, Lavrov claimed that the U.S. plans ‘to suspend hostilities along the line of contact and transfer responsibility for confrontation with Russia to the Europeans.’

‘We are not happy, of course, with the proposals made by members of the Trump team to postpone Ukraine’s admission to NATO for 20 years and to station British and European peacekeeping forces in Ukraine,’ the foreign minister said, though that deal has not been announced by any American officials.

Lavrov said that the proposal came through ‘leaks’ and Trump’s recent interview with TIME Magazine, but Trump’s interview did not contain any references to NATO. The foreign minister also claimed that NATO ‘has been expanding its reach for many years, which became one of the primary causes of the Ukraine crisis.’

‘Those who accuse Russia of various doings should be advised to look in the mirror instead,’ the foreign minister later said during the interview. ‘NATO military and mercenaries openly participate in the planning of combat operations and fighting on the side of the Armed Forces of Ukraine.’

‘NATO is complicit in the invasion of the Kursk Region and long-range missile strikes inside Russia,’ Lavrov continued. ‘President Vladimir Putin made this very clear in his recent public statements.’

During his TIME Person of the Year interview, Trump said that it was ‘an advantage to both sides,’ to end the Russo-Ukrainian war, and claimed that Russia would not have invaded Ukraine if he were president in 2022.

‘I disagree very vehemently with sending missiles hundreds of miles into Russia. Why are we doing that?’ Trump said at the time. ‘We’re just escalating this war and making it worse…[but] I want to reach an agreement, and the only way you’re going to reach an agreement is not to abandon.’

Lavrov’s recent interview came over a week after Russian President Vladimir Putin expressed willingness to compromise with Trump, though he insisted that Russia is in a stronger position than it was in 2022.

‘Soon, those Ukrainians who want to fight will run out. In my opinion, soon there will be no one left who wants to fight,’ Putin was quoted as saying. ‘We are ready, but the other side needs to be ready for both negotiations and compromises.’

‘We have always said that we are ready for negotiations and compromises.’

Fox News Digital reached out to Trump’s team for comment, but did not immediately hear back.

Reuters contributed to this report.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

The Miami Dolphins could be without their starting quarterback in a second straight must-win game.

Tua Tagovailoa’s status for the Dolphins’ Week 18 game against the New York Jets is ‘firmly in the unknown,’ according to head coach Mike McDaniel. He told reporters Monday that the quarterback’s hip injury did not improve as much as the team had hoped in the last week.

Tagovailoa suffered the injury at some point ahead of Miami’s Week 16 game against the San Francisco 49ers. Though he was able to play through that game, the injury got aggravated during the win. The 26-year-old had to miss the Dolphins’ Week 17 matchup with the Cleveland Browns – a must-win game for the team’s playoff hopes – as he recovered.

This week, McDaniel says, backup Tyler ‘Snoop’ Huntley will continue to get more practice reps than Tagovailoa and get prepared to start the regular-season finale. Huntley led the team to a 20-3 win over the Browns on Sunday, keeping Miami alive in the battle for the AFC’s final playoff spot.

The Dolphins are 2-3 this season without Tagovailoa starting. They need a Week 18 win and a Denver Broncos loss to the Kansas City Chiefs to make the playoffs.

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What happened to Tua Tagovailoa?

Tagovailoa sustained a hip injury at some point before Week 16. The quarterback was initially listed on the Dolphins’ injury report ahead of that week’s game for a hip issue but ultimately was able to play.

In Week 17, Miami listed Tagovailoa as a limited participant in practice all week – on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday – and gave him a designation of questionable before Saturday’s downgrade to ‘doubtful’. Eventually, the team declared him out.

CBS’s Tracy Wolfson reported last week that the issue was with the same hip Tagovailoa severely injured in college but that the pain was in a different area.

Tagovailoa has already missed four games this season due to a concussion. The Dolphins went 1-3 in those games and are 6-5 in games with their starting quarterback. The latest hip injury has also already kept the quarterback out for one game.

Tua Tagovailoa injury updates

After missing the Dolphins’ Week 17 game with a hip injury, Tagovailoa may have to miss another while still recovering.

McDaniel told reporters Monday that the starter’s hip had not improved as much as he or the team had hoped in the weeks since the injury. As a result, Tagovailoa was not medically cleared for Sunday’s game against the Browns.

How long is Tua Tagovailoa out?

Tagovailoa’s status for Week 18 is a ‘gray area, firmly in the unknown,’ according to McDaniel. The Dolphins are practicing with the anticipation that Huntley may have to start again.

Tagovailoa may miss the regular-season finale if he doesn’t turn the corner in his hip injury recovery sooner rather than later. Should he have to sit, Huntley will need to pull out another victory in a must-win game.

If the Dolphins are eliminated with a loss to the Jets in Week 18 or a Broncos win over the Chiefs in Kansas City, Tagovailoa’s recovery timeline is moot. He’ll likely be ready to go by the start of next season, but his short-term timetable won’t matter as Miami begins its offseason.

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New York Jets quarterback Aaron Rodgers was benched late in his team’s 40-14 loss to the Buffalo Bills despite chasing a milestone 500th career touchdown pass in the contest.

The 41-year-old made it clear that he had no qualms about being benched given the circumstances.

In fact, Rodgers may have been the one to broach the subject of heading to the bench early in the fourth quarter with Jets interim head coach Jeff Ulbrich, as he explained during a postgame news conference.

‘I mean, it was 33-0,’ Rodgers detailed. ‘We were sitting there and I said at some point, ‘Probably go to [backup quarterback] Tyrod [Taylor] here, huh?’ Then the next play [the Bills] threw a screen for a touchdown, so it was 40-0.’

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At that point, Rodgers was removed from the game and Tyrod Taylor played the rest of the way. The 35-year-old veteran led the Jets on two touchdown drives with the game already decided to make the final score slightly more respectable.

Rodgers didn’t seem upset about coming out of the game even despite his chance to become the fifth player in NFL history to join the 500-passing touchdown club. He was more focused on the Jets’ inability to compete at a high level on Sunday – and throughout the 2024 NFL season.

‘It’s kind of like the season – it just got away from us,’ Rodgers told reporters. ‘Too many games got away from us. This game got away from us. We were moving the ball well, and then we just hit a wall. And that’s been kind of the season too.’

Rodgers still managed to make NFL history with his performance against the Bills. Buffalo sacked him four times, bringing his career sack total to 568. He passed Tom Brady (565) to become the most sacked quarterback in NFL history.

‘Yeah, I got Tom on that,’ Rodgers responded with a wry smile upon being made aware of the ignominious mark.

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The Missouri Tigers (9-3) may not have been able to secure a spot in the College Football Playoff, but they’ve put together an incredibly strong campaign and went out on a high note by defeating the Iowa Hawkeyes (8-4) in this year’s Music City Bowl, 27-24.

Prior to this contest, this looked like it was going to be a fun contest. After all, it was SEC vs. Big Ten, one of these teams ended the season ranked, and both programs had both strung together a few solid seasons in a row. However, it wound up being much more than that. The Music City Bowl was the only college football game played on Dec. 30, giving both programs an opportunity to shine in a national spotlight, and shine they did.

After the Hawkeyes got out to a first half lead, the Missouri Tigers came up big in the second half, holding the Hawkeyes to just three points in the second half. Despite an incredibly efficient run game for Iowa, they just couldn’t string together enough explosive plays to pull away early on, giving Missouri the opportunity to hang in there. Thanks to heroics from kicker Blake Craig, which included two field goals from over 50 yards, the Tigers ended this season on a tremendous high note.

Here’s everything that went down during the 2024 Music City Bowl.

2024 Music City Bowl highlights

FINAL: Missouri 27, Iowa 24

This was an instant classic as the Missouri Tigers came from behind, hitting two 50-yard field goals and coming up big on defense to earn the victory over Iowa.

Quarterback Brady Cook went bananas in this contest, throwing for 287 yards and two touchdowns to propel his team to victory. Of course, the biggest play came on the last offensive play of the game for Iowa. On 4th & 1, Iowa quarterback Brendan Sullivan tried to sneak for a first down, but the Tigers’ defense pushed him back for a loss.

This was an instant classic, but in the end, Missouri came out victorious, 27-24.

Blake Craig has the clutch gene

It was a big drive for the Missouri Tigers. Not only did quarterback Brady Cook surpass 9,000 career collegiate passing yards, but they were able to take their first lead of the game thanks to kicker Blake Craig’s second 50-yard field goal of the game.

This time, the boot came from 56 yards out, marking Craig’s sixth field goal of 50+ yards on the year. It’s 27-24 Missouri with under five minutes to play.

Missouri ties it 24-24

With just over ten minutes to go, it’s Missouri that keeps their foot on the gas. Although their drive stalled out around the 35-yard line, kicker Blake Craig came up big with a 51-yard field goal to tie this one up.

End of Q3: Iowa 24, Missouri 21

The offenses are starting to heat up.

After a slow start to the third quarter, a few big throws from Mizzou quarterback Brady Cook brought the Tigers back within one score. In retaliation, the Hawkeyes have put together a very methodical, but solid drive that has yet to conclude.

If Iowa can find the end zone one more time, they might be able to run the clock out given the effectiveness of their ground game. This will be a very pivotal drive in determining this contest’s outcome.

Tigers touchdown: Iowa 24, Missouri 21

After their first touchdown of the drive was taken back thanks to an illegal formation penalty, the Tigers made sure there was no doubt two plays later on a jet sweep handoff to Joshua Manning.

The Tigers’ offense looked to be in for another quick out at the beginning of their drive, but some clutch throws from quarterback Brady Cook got Mizzou in position to score quickly. Momentum may be shifting with less than two minutes to play in the third quarter.

Iowa field goal: Iowa 24, Missouri 14

A key roughing the passer penalty may have given the Hawkeyes a few extra shots at the end zone, but Missouri’s defense held tough when it mattered most, holding the Hawkeyes to only three points.

While this contest is now a two-possession game, neither offense has gotten into a groove thus far in the second half. If Missouri can start building momentum quickly, they’ll have a very good chance to get ahead.

End of 1st half: Iowa 21, Missouri 14

The Hawkeyes have to feel fantastic about their first-half production on offense. The team hadn’t scored 21 points in the first half of any game this year. But in arguably the biggest moment of their season, they come up big.

Sure, one of their scores came on special teams, but Iowa’s production on offense has still been outstanding. Quarterback Brendan Sullivan is 8-of-9 passing with a touchdown. The Hawkeyes’ rushers are averaging over six yards per carry. While Missouri might be outgaining the Hawkeyes, Iowa has been able to turn their offense into points, and that’s why their ahead.

Hawkeyes Touchdown: Iowa 21, Missouri 14

It was a wild series of events before this score. First down necessitated video review, but ultimately pushed the Hawkeyes back to the eight-yard line.

Second down saw Iowa quarterback Brendan Sullivan run all over the field, improvising a masterful run, leaping into the end zone at the end, but getting stuffed at the half-yard line.

Third down came with under a minute left in the half, and finally, the Hawkeyes were able to breakthrough, thanks to an inside zone handoff to the redshirt freshman Kamari Moulton.

It’s 21-14 Hawkeyes lead with less than 50 seconds to go in the first half.

Tigers touchdown: Iowa 14, Missouri 14

Brady is indeed cooking.

The Missouri QB is now 8 for 9 on the day for 111 yards and two touchdowns. The most recent was a seven-yard dime to Marquis Johnson to tie the game up. As we have seen, the Hawkeyes will be prepared to answer.

End of Q1: Iowa 14, Missouri 7

Cook and the Tigers are again threatening to end the quarter. It’s be an electric game so far that has included three touchdowns, including a punt return for a touchdown.

Kaden Wetjen gave the Hawkeyes the lead with a 100-yard return to the house.

Hawkeyes 100-yard touchdown return: Iowa 14, Missouri 7

Well, we have ourselves an explosive game with Iowa taking no time at all to get the lead back.

Kaden Wetjen corraled a 65-yard punt only to return it 100 yards for an already entertaining game’s most exciting moment.

Tigers touchdown: Iowa 7, Missouri 7

Well, it didn’t take long for Brady Cook and the Tigers to answer back.

In what has been a frantic game of rushed passes, the Tigers showed resolve and marched 80 yards to tie the game. The drive was capped off with a Cook pass to Theo Wease Jr. for an eight-yard touchdown reception.

Hawkeyes touchdown: Iowa 7, Missouri 0

Brendan Sullivan started to cook early with a couple of nice pass completions to Jarriett Buie. That’s when Terrell Washington Jr. delivered the final flourish to this 70-yard drive.

Washington Jr. gets six-yard run to give the Hawkeyes the lead.

When is the Music City Bowl between Iowa and Missouri?

The TransPerfect Music City Bowl game between the Iowa Hawkeyes and the Missouri Tigers kicks off at 2:30 p.m. at Nissan Stadium in Nashville, Tennessee

How to watch Iowa and Missouri in the Music City Bowl

The TransPerfect Music City Bowl game between the Iowa Hawkeyes and the Missouri Tigers will be televised nationally on ESPN.

Live streaming is available on Fubo, which has a free trial.

Watch UConn take on North Carolina with a Fubo subscription

Iowa vs. Missouri: Music City Bowl odds

The Missouri Tigers are favorites to defeat the Iowa Hawkeyes, according to BetMGM.

Odds as of Sunday, Dec. 29

Spread: Missouri (-2.5)
Moneyline: Missouri (-145); Iowa (+120)
Over/under: 40.5

Music City Bowl predictions: Iowa vs. Missouri

USA TODAY: Majority picks Missouri

Scooby Axson: Missouri
Jordan Mendoza: Missouri
Paul Myerberg: Missouri
Erick Smith: Iowa
Eddie Timanus: Iowa
Dan Wolken: Missouri

ESPN: Missouri 25, Iowa 21

Bill Connelly writes: ‘Both teams have had significant NFL draft opt-outs as Iowa will be without running back Kaleb Johnson, a Doak Walker Award finalist, while Missouri won’t have wide receiver Luther Burden III. Iowa should get quarterback Brendan Sullivan back for the game, and will lean on running back Kamari Moulton, who actually opened the season as the starter, and a defense that ranks 10th nationally in fewest points allowed. But a Missouri team with more offensive sizzle and a knack for winning close games claims another.’

BetMGM: Missouri will win

Staff writes: ‘The winning team model predicts Missouri will win this game with 57.2% confidence, based on game simulations, offensive & defensive matchups and recent game results.’

Bowl game picks  

Here are USA TODAY Sports’ expert picks for all of the college football bowl games. 

Iowa vs. Missouri all-time record 

The Iowa Hawkeyes and Missouri Tigers have faced off 13 times in their history. The Tigers have a 7-6 record in the series.

Iowa beat Missouri 27-24 in their last matchup on Dec. 28, 2010.

College football bowl game schedule: Entire postseason lineup

College football bowl season began Dec. 14 and will run through Jan. 20 with the College Football Playoff championship game in Atlanta. Click here for the schedule of all upcoming bowls, including the College Football Playoff, and the results of already completed games.

College football bowl game rankings: 35 matchups from best to worst

We’ll begin with a couple of stipulations. First, we’ll operate under the assumption that all the first-round playoff games, as well as the quarterfinal and semifinal bowl contests, will be appointment viewing anyway, so they won’t be included in this exercise. We’ll also add that while some matchups look attractive in terms of records and rankings, whether the games will turn out to be good hinges upon which key players actually show up. We also recognize that your interest in a particular game might differ based upon your rooting interest.

We try to put these in order of what we think will have the highest entertainment value, but circumstances can change before the games kick off. Click here for our watchability rankings for all 35 non-playoff bowls. — Eddie Timanus

The uncertain future of the college football bowl system

For an industry that has gone out of its way over many decades to accommodate the bowl industry, even cutting them in on the spoils of the College Football Playoff, there’s been a disturbance in the force.  

Though everyone knew a decade ago that creating the CFP would change the nature of and interest in college football’s larger postseason, the bowls were still considered untouchable. Despite a financial model that ensured most schools lost money on bowls, schools and conferences dutifully participated in them, believing in their necessity as a reward for players, a vehicle for coaches to squeeze in extra practices and a marketing tool for the university. — Dan Wolken

College football, CFP games and NIL impact

If players are employees, then they’ll negotiate College Football Playoff bonuses for each round completed. Not unlike the NFL and its playoff bonus structure. 

You can’t ask players to play more games (to increase your bottom dollar with booming media rights deals), and not give them a bonus structure for those extra games. I’ll say this again because it’s getting lost in the greedy players narrative: Penn State and Texas could play 17 games this season. 

That, everyone, is insanity for two rosters that aren’t yet paid directly to play. A majority of the players on those rosters make little to nothing in NIL deals. — Matt Hayes

College football players drivven by money bother you? Get over it

College Football Playoff bracket: CFP schedule

The first round of the College Football Playoff concluded with all four home teams winning.

FRIDAY, DEC. 20

Game 1: No. 7 Notre Dame def. No. 10 Indiana, 27-17

SATURDAY, DEC. 21

Game 2: No. 6 Penn State def. No. 11 SMU, 38-10
Game 3: No. 5 Texas def. No. 12 Clemson, 38-24
Game 4: No. 8 Ohio State def. No. 9 Tennessee, 42-17

CFP quarterfinals schedule

The four quarterfinal games will be played on New Year’s Eve and New Year’s Day, with one game on Dec. 31 and three on Jan. 1. All games will be televised by ESPN.

All times Eastern

TUESDAY, DEC. 31

Fiesta Bowl: No. 3 Boise State vs. Penn State, 7:30 p.m. (ESPN)

WEDNESDAY, JAN. 1

Peach Bowl: No. 4 Arizona State vs. Texas, 1 p.m. (ESPN)
Rose Bowl: No. 1 Oregon vs. Ohio State, 5 p.m. (ESPN)
Sugar Bowl: No. 2 Georgia vs. Notre Dame, 8:45 p.m. (ESPN)

CFP semifinals schedule

The semifinal games will be played on Jan. 9 and Jan. 10. Both games will be televised by ESPN.

All times Eastern

THURSDAY, JAN. 9

Orange Bowl: Fiesta Bowl winner vs. Sugar Bowl winner, 7:30 p.m. (ESPN)

FRIDAY, JAN. 10

Cotton Bowl: Peach Bowl winner vs. Rose Bowl winner, 7:30 p.m. (ESPN)

CFP national championship game schedule

MONDAY, JAN. 20

Game: Orange Bowl winner vs. Cotton Bowl winner
Location: Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta
Time: 7:30 p.m. ET
TV: ESPN

CFP rankings 

Oregon (Big Ten champion, No. 1 seed)*
Georgia (SEC champion, No. 2 seed)*
Texas (No. 5 seed)
Penn State (No. 6 seed)
Notre Dame (No. 7 seed)
Ohio State (No. 8 seed)
Tennessee (No. 9 seed)
Indiana (No. 10 seed)
Boise State (MWC champion, No. 3 seed)*
SMU (No. 11 seed)
Alabama
Arizona State (Big 12 champion, No. 4 seed)*
Miami
Mississippi
South Carolina
Clemson (ACC champion, No. 12 seed)**

*first-round bye; **automatic bid

How does College Football Playoff format work? 

The 12 participating teams in the College Football Playoff bracket are the five conference champions ranked highest by the CFP selection committee, and the next seven highest-ranked teams.

The four highest-ranked conference champions are seeded one through four and received a first-round bye. The fifth conference champion is seeded where it was ranked among the top 12 teams, or at No. 12 if it is outside the top 12 in the CFP rankings. Non-conference champions ranked in the top four will be seeded beginning at No. 5.

‘Because of this,’ the CFP warns on its website, ‘the seeding, 1 through 12, could look different than the final rankings.’

For the first round, the higher-ranked team in each pairing (5 vs. 12, 6 vs. 11, 7 vs. 10, 8 vs. 9) will serve as host on campus. The winners advance to the quarterfinals and match up with the corresponding top-four conference champion based on seeding. Quarterfinal games will played at the Fiesta Bowl, Peach Bowl, Rose Bowl and Sugar Bowl on New Year’s Eve and New Year’s Day. The semifinals – played at the Orange Bowl and Cotton Bowl Classic – will take place Jan. 9-10.

The two semifinal winners will play for the national championship Jan. 20 at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta. — Mark Giannotto

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SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. − Penn State football coach James Franklin was asked to offer his opinion on how to fix college football two days before his team plays its biggest game in years.

Franklin took a few minutes away from previewing his 12-2 Nittany Lions against Fiesta Bowl foe Boise State to talk bigger picture. The question came in reference to losing backup quarterback Beau Pribula to the transfer portal − with the hope of more playing time and big NIL money − right as this new College Football Playoff is taking off here in the quarterfinal round on New Year’s Eve in State Farm Stadium.

What can be done, the question went, to ‘incentivize playing for the team you’re on, as opposed to thinking about what’s going to happen next?’

Franklin said college football needs a commissioner to attack such issues.

And he’s got a name: retired Alabama legend Nick Saban.

‘We need somebody that’s waking up every single morning and going to bed every single night thinking about what’s in the best interest of college football,’ Franklin said during a Fiesta Bowl media day news conference.

‘Right now, I think that’s being done by the (league) commissioners, but whenever you have people (who) are making decisions and running college football, they’re going to be biased towards what’s best to their conference. That’s not in the best interest of college football and the student-athletes.’

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Franklin said he would propose getting rid of conference championship games − extra games which, he said, are mostly about producing revenue and unlevel the playing field.

He wants teams to play the same number of conference games, as well. Now, for example, the Big Ten plays nine league games each season; SEC teams only play eight.

‘When you have a (playoff) committee sitting in a room trying to compare apples to apples or oranges to oranges, it’s hard to do that when not everybody is playing under the same model,’ Franklin said. ‘Get rid of the conference championship game. That will shorten the season and help with the window a little bit.’

He also would like the regular season to start a week earlier.

‘If you can take some of the stress off of the academic calendar … again, God forbid we talk about academics, right? That used to be every conversation started with academics, and that’s becoming less and less. Maybe I’m old-school and maybe a traditionalist, but I still believe in the model.’

So who would help drive oversight and change in college football?

‘I think Nick Saban would be the obvious choice. I think if we made that decision … (Nick will probablycall me tonight and say, ‘Don’t do this.’),’ Franklin said.

‘But I think he’s the obvious choice, right? … That would be a very, very important step moving forward to come up with some solutions and do what’s best for our sport.’

Frank Bodani covers Penn State football for the York Daily Record and USA Today Network.

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