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Melania Trump is not the only first lady to express pro-choice views. She joins several former Republican first ladies who have shared similar perspectives, often in their memoirs, despite this stance historically contrasting with the GOP platform.

Other spouses of Republican presidents, such as Pat Nixon, Betty Ford, Nancy Reagan, Barbara Bush and Laura Bush, have been recorded either during or after their husbands’ tenure in office expressing pro-choice views.

‘I feel very strongly that it was the best thing in the world when the Supreme Court voted to legalize abortion and, in my words, bring it out of the backwoods and put it in the hospital where it belongs,’ Betty Ford said in a CBS News’ ’60 Minutes’ interview in 1975, two years after Roe v. Wade was handed down.

Following Ford’s comments on premarital sex, marijuana and abortion during the CBS interview, then-President Gerald Ford reportedly joked that she had cost him votes.

As a more conservative first lady, Nancy Reagan avoided taking a public stance against abortion that would put her at odds with former President Ronald Reagan. However, she later revealed her personal position on the issue.

‘I’m against abortion, I don’t believe in abortion,’ Reagan said at George Washington University in 1994, five years after her husband left the Oval Office. ‘On the other hand, I believe in a woman’s choice. So, it puts me somewhere in the middle, but I don’t know what you’d call that.’

Barbara Bush, former President George H. W. Bush’s wife, was more reserved in her public statements about abortion and was at odds with her husband’s anti-abortion stance. While she was not as outspoken as Betty Ford, she wrote in her 1994 memoir, ‘I hate abortions, but I just could not make that choice for someone else.’

Former first lady Laura Bush, wife of former President George W. Bush and daughter-in-law to Barbara Bush, also differed with the former Presidents Bush on abortion. 

‘I think it’s important that it remain legal, because I think it’s important for people for medical reasons and other reasons,’ she said in an interview with Larry King Live in 2010. 

Pat Nixon, then-President Richard Nixon’s wife, told reporters during a 1972 press conference – as Roe v. Wade arguments were being considered by the Supreme Court – that she supported the right to choose an abortion, but opposed ‘wholesale abortion on demand.’

Trump, wife of Republican presidential candidate and former President Donald Trump, wrote the memoir entitled ‘Melania’ that is scheduled to come out on Oct. 8, per the Amazon release date. In the book, according to a preview by The Guardian, she expresses a viewpoint closely aligned with that of former first ladies before her.

‘It is imperative to guarantee that women have autonomy in deciding their preference of having children, based on their own convictions, free from any intervention or pressure from the government,’ Trump reportedly wrote.

‘Why should anyone other than the woman herself have the power to determine what she does with her own body? A woman’s fundamental right of individual liberty, to her own life, grants her the authority to terminate her pregnancy if she wishes.

‘Restricting a woman’s right to choose whether to terminate an unwanted pregnancy is the same as denying her control over her own body. I have carried this belief with me throughout my entire adult life.’

The former first lady drew criticism from pro-life advocates on social media after the excerpts were published just a month away from Election Day. This year, the Republican Party’s official platform also softened its language on abortion, as former President Trump also said he would not support a federal abortion ban.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

This morning, September nonfarm payrolls soared past expectations, 254,000 vs. 132,500. Adding to the bullishness was the upward revision to August nonfarm payrolls as the prior reading of 142,000 was boosted to 159,000. This is solid news, especially in an environment where the Fed is committed to lowering interest rates. We did see a tick higher in average hourly earnings for both September and August, however, but initially that is being ignored in terms of market reaction. Let’s see how we close today.

Immediate Reactions

Bonds sold off hard as yields surged. Look no further than the 10-year treasury yield ($TNX), which is higher by 12 basis points, at last check, to 3.97%. I see overhead yield resistance from 4.00% to 4.20%. Remaining below that level keeps the TNX in a downtrend – at least in my opinion:

We still have some room to the upside in the TNX, but as we move higher and higher, don’t the odds begin to turn more in favor of another leg lower?

Next is the U.S. Dollar Index ($USD). Many market participants were worried about the long-term direction of the dollar as the greenback had been downtrending since double-topping in April/May. Here’s the 1-year USD chart:

After the USD moved just beneath support from the late-December 2023 low, it has quickly rallied, and today cleared what appears to be channel line resistance. This could likely reignite the long-term uptrend in the USD:

We know that a rising dollar typically impacts commodities in a negative way, so what should we expect in Q4 and into 2025?

Finally, the initial spike in the TNX has really spooked homebuilder ($DJUSHB, -3.03%) stocks, which have fallen rather harshly today, despite the overall market rally. Personally, I think this is probably a bit overblown, but the group does show a negative divergence on its daily chart, so perhaps a little more selling would set the group up for a long trade:

When a chart shows an uptrend, pullbacks to bring the RSI level down to the 40-50 range generally represent nice buying opportunities. Will this one?

MarketVision Q4 Outlook Event

EarningsBeats.com is hosting our 1st MarketVision mini-series event, “Q4 Outlook” on Saturday, October 5th at 10:00am ET. I’ll be providing my outlook for Q4, reviewing areas like stocks, bonds, commodities, the dollar, sentiment, seasonality, market rotation, etc. It’s open to ALL members of EarningsBeats.com, including FREE 30-day trial members. Previously, MarketVision-related events have required an annual membership to EarningsBeats.com in order to attend. However, we’re offering the event to FREE 30-day trials for this inaugural event. You can CLICK HERE for more information and to register for this event!

You can always register later this weekend and receive a recording of the event.

See you tomorrow morning!

Tom

Virtually all of the world’s supply of a mineral that is critical to semiconductor production comes from one tiny town in the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains that has been devastated by Hurricane Helene.

Spruce Pine, North Carolina has no running water or electricity, more than a week after Helene ripped through the town of 2,200. Roads and railways in and out of the area are severely damaged, according to local officials.

Mines in Spruce Pine produce the world’s purest form of quartz, which plays a central role in chip manufacturing.

Now, the town’s exceedingly valuable supply of high-purity quartz is at risk, threatening to cripple the $600 billion global semiconductor industry.

The natural disaster unfolding in Spruce Pine also highlights the continued instability of global supply chains, more than four years after Covid-19 drove home to Americans how dependent they had become on imported goods.

Two companies, Sibelco and The Quartz Corp., extract the high-purity quartz in Spruce Pine, refine it and export it to manufacturing facilities based primarily in China and other parts of Asia.

Much of the refined, high-purity quartz is then used to create a vessel called a crucible, which holds silicon as it is melted and transformed into the wafers on which semiconductors are made.

But mining, refining and shipping are all on hold, for now.

Both Sibelco and the Quartz Corp. were forced to halt operations on Sept. 26 due to the storm, which dumped more than two feet of rain on Spruce Pine, according to the National Weather Service.

The companies say there is no timeline right now as to when they expect to resume normal operations.

“The Spruce Pine community has been hit particularly hard,” Sibelco said in a statement on Sept. 30. “We have temporarily halted operations at the Spruce Pine facilities in response to these challenges.”

The Quartz Corp. said in an Oct. 1 statement that the company has “no visibility” as to when their operations will be able to resume.

For the semiconductor industry, the challenges that any long-term disruption to the Spruce Pine mines would present cannot be overstated, experts say.

“This is the only plant in the world right now that serves the semiconductor industry in its entirety,” said TECHCET CEO Lita Shon-Roy, who has studied the quartz supply chain for more than two decades. “If something were to happen to these mines, it can put the entire industry on its ear, period. There’s no other capability.”

What happens next, experts say, is a two-part question. First, operators need to determine whether there has been any damage to the quartz mines themselves, or to the equipment the companies use to extract or refine the mineral.

If mining operations can start up again, the secondary question is how either company will transport refined quartz to export markets, given the state of some of the infrastructure in western North Carolina.

TECHCET estimates it could be four to six weeks before the companies’ operations are running at full throttle again. But that forecast, Shon-Roy says, is dependent on roads opening back up, given that both companies rely primarily on trucking to move their minerals.

Early indications, however, are that transit infrastructure will require extensive rebuilding. 

“Roads are gone,” said Spencer Bost, the executive director of Downtown Spruce Pine, a nonprofit that partners with the city. In some areas, he said, “The roads just don’t exist anymore.”

When it comes to electricity, said Bost, “it’s not like power lines are down — telephone poles are gone.”

Yet there are still two glimmers of hope for the semiconductor industry.

The first is that there is likely some inventory of high-purity quartz stockpiled for the components it helps create. This could give the industry a cushion of two or three months, while Spruce Pine recovers from Helene, Shon-Roy said.

As the semiconductor industry emerges from its own downturn, demand has been fairly soft, said Shon-Roy. Additionally, ever since the pandemic most companies have been keeping larger inventories in stock.

“That will help cushion the delay in getting these plants restarted,” Shon-Roy said.

The other upside: The crucibles that quartz is used to create have a shelf life of about 300 to 400 hours — or roughly two weeks — before they need to be replaced, said Dustin Mulvaney, an environmental studies professor at San Jose State University who studies solar energy commodity chains.

As a result, there could be some lag before chip manufacturers are hurting for more. 

“But once they start having to replace the crucibles, that’s where you will run into the potential for disruption,” Mulvaney said.

The longer it takes for Spruce Pine’s mining industry to get back to work, the bigger the impact will be.

“A month’s delay is not bad,” said Shon-Roy. “Two months is getting difficult. Three months becomes a real problem.”

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

In a fiery political climate, one word has become both a term used to describe being conscious of issues and a demeaning name of certain ideologies: woke.

It’s almost a taboo word, but there’s one place in the East Bay of California that not only doesn’t mind it, but has embraced it to thrust themselves into the national spotlight.

Welcome to the California Golden Bears football team, and “The Woke Agenda” of the Calgorithm.

For those fans that aren’t chronically online, they may be shocked to see the academic powerhouse university even has fans. But in fact, Cal fans have already taken the award for the most creative online presence in college football this season. 

Throughout social media, many fans have owned the idea that people who support or attend UC Berkeley are left-leaning, progressive nerds that preach ideals like diversity, equity and inclusion, as well as communism and critical race theory. Mix that with the fact Cal is now in the ACC and playing schools from places that may have different political preferences than them, and you got gold.

While hilarious in its fun memes, the Calgorithm has worked because the Golden Bears are in the middle of something special. An enigma in the new ACC, Cal has started the season a surprising 3-1 that includes a road win at Auburn. Now, Cal football is on the national radar with ESPN’s “College GameDay” headed to Berkeley for the first time in history. The game? Against No. 8 Miami for its first ACC home contest. 

No one could have predicted the hype surrounding Cal just a few weeks ago, let alone know it was possible. But thanks to a bunch of meme-loving fanatics, Cal football is ready to show out.

“With all the kind of disruption that college football has entered into in the last couple years, it’s an incredibly opportunistic time for a place like us that has untapped potential, and we’re looking forward to being the ones to tap that potential,” said head coach Justin Wilcox.

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AWARD TIME: The highs and lows of college football’s first month

The science of the Calgorithm

If you’re one of the several people who were introduced to the Calgorithm this year, it’s nothing new. There’s been a circle, albeit small, that has been rabid for their Golden Bears for years. 

With the success online and on the field, the circle has ballooned over the weeks. Now it’s a mix of longtime online fans like Admiral Bear, students like Miles Goodman and people like Callie who got heavily involved in the fandom just a few weeks ago. Admiral Bear and Callie requested anonymity to keep their identities private for work reasons. 

Heading into this season, most Cal fans were “cautiously optimistic,” according to Admiral Bear. Opening the season with a win over UC Davis was expected, but few saw Cal going into SEC territory and defeating Auburn at Jordan-Hare Stadium. 

After that game, the Calgorithm exploded onto the scene. Admiral Bear said it was Goodman that did it, posting an image that said “you just lost to the woke agenda.” In it are President Joe Biden, Vice President Kamala Harris, Cal’s mascot Oski, a rainbow and the electoral map of the 2020 election.

“That was kind of a result of us trying to play into the fact that there are a lot of assumptions made about Cal as a university historically,” Goodman said of the meme. “By tackling that label from basically like a satirical lens, we are forming our own relationship with it, defining our own terms, while simultaneously poking fun at how other teams have perceived our community.”

Since then, college football timelines have been swarmed by memes you’d think come from the most stereotypical California resident perceived by someone that despises the state. Ahead of the Florida State game, Goodman posted a meme calling the Seminoles stadium “Woke” Campbell Stadium with Harris presidential signs, Admiral Bear posted a photo of a bear with a shirt that says “open borders” at the stadium and Callie made a joke that she needed to know which bathrooms had litter boxes since her “daughter identifies as an ocelot,” playing on the conspiracy theory from 2022. 

Even after the Golden Bears lost to Florida State and the Seminoles got their first win of the season, the Calgorithm spun it around by saying the team was just spreading communism by giving out wins to teams in need.

There’s a lot of ridiculousness in the Calgorithm, and it’s all planned. Whether it’s made by using layers of Photoshop or using artificial intelligence, there are group chats that discuss how and what memes will be made based on whom Cal is playing.

But one rule in the Calgorithm is to never make fun of the opponent’s fans. Yes, most of the stuff said is bait, but only to make fun of themselves.

“It’s not about punching down on somebody,” Callie said. “It’s about goofing on an idea that has been accepted as some kernel of truth has been accepted in a community. So, like the more right wing, wacky ideas of what leftists or left-leaning people do, and then taking it to a 12.”

The Calgorithm has gotten so massive the team is even aware of it. Wilcox said he’s heard of some of the stuff but he has “enough to consider” when it comes to his job. But sophomore linebacker Cade Uluave is deep in it.

Just to show how dedicated the Calgorithm is to its craft, on Saturday, Callie – with the help of Admiral Bear and others – posted “Ott to go,” a song admiring star running back Jaydn Ott that parodies Chappell Roan’s hit song “Hot To Go!” Callie made the “music video” for it and Calgorithm members actually paid an artist named Micky Hage – not A.I. – to sing it in Roan’s style. 

Uluave saw the video and said Tuesday he couldn’t stop singing it at practice. He even went up to Ott and sang the song to him.

“All the Cal burners, or whatever you want to call them, they’re doing a great job,” Uluave said. “Whoever made that, and whatever it was, I’ll give it a 10 out of 10.”

The Calgorithm in fact has infected all of Berkeley.

Putting Cal in the spotlight

It was just over a year ago when Cal athletics looked to be in a spiral. Already facing massive debt, the university was left out of its former Pac-12 conference members bolting for the Big Ten and Big 12. 

Cal, along with rival Stanford, petitioned to join the ACC, but an early straw poll about the idea of the conference expanding resulted in there not being enough votes to add. A month later, there were enough votes to add Cal, Stanford and SMU and provide a safety net to the Bears.

The turbulent past year is what made those in the Calgorithm realize they needed to spearhead extra care not only for the team, but the entire athletic department, to make sure this doesn’t happen again.

“We can’t afford a catastrophe. We were really staring death in the face and the ACC gave us a life raft, barely,” Admiral Bear said. “That kind of existential crisis for our football program that we care about so much has really inspired us to double and triple our efforts to raise the profile of this program.”

The extra effort has also given Cal a chance to rebrand itself as its introduction to its new conference mates. ACC schools may have thought they were just getting another top-rated university where sports don’t have much interest, but the Calgorithm has smashed that perception.

“I think it is very slowly chipping away at the whole ‘Cal has no fans narrative.’ Cal is obviously a school that’s known for academics, they don’t really invest a lot in athletics. And that’s just false,” Goodman said.

“It’s important that we make sure that everybody in the ACC on the East Coast kind of knows we’re here, we are to be taken seriously,” Callie added.

The Calgorithm, mixed with the team’s solid start to the season, has been successful, and that likely is the reason why ‘College GameDay’ is headed to Berkeley for the first time. Cal is one of seven Power Four schools that hasn’t hosted the show since it started touring in 1993.

Those within the Calgorithm don’t want to take all the credit for getting the popular ESPN show to finally visit, but it certainly played a role. Yes, playing a top 10-ranked team like Miami is a factor, but College GameDay and the national spotlight don’t work if there aren’t fans. Goodman said Cal “memed our way” into getting the show, and Admiral Bear said the Calgorithm likely gave ESPN some comfort that people would actually show up if it went to the campus.

It’s looking like it’ll be quite the crowd for the show that will start at 6 a.m. local time and Cal has sold a significant amount of tickets to the game. Goodman is seeing – and feeling – all the buzz as well. A graduate student, Goodman said his cohort and students around campus keep talking about the football team. They want to be up early for the show and make sure they are in California Memorial Stadium for kickoff. 

A filled-up stadium will be a welcome site for a fanbase that hasn’t really seen much of it outside of “The Big Game” against Stanford. Like its UC counterpart UCLA and pretty much every team in the Golden State, if there isn’t constant success, no one is going to show up.

“If you’re kind of a middling team, much less a bad team in California, nobody in SEC country knows who you are or cares,” Admiral Bear said. “We have to be good and we have to give people a reason to come.”

Knowing how big the moment is at an academically-driven place, Wilcox also encouraged students to “get their studying done at another time, so they’ll be there bright and early” for ‘College GameDay.’ The BART public transportation service in the Bay Area is even part of the Calgorithm and is offering early rides to make sure all fans can get to campus.

“There’s a lot of interest, and also kind of an acknowledgement that this is a moment. This is arguably the team’s biggest game in the past 20-25 years,” Goodman said. “I think a lot of students are cognizant of that and are really, really excited for the chance to kind of be involved in something like that.”

It’s certainly a moment in Berkeley. The Calgorithm has shown how the lengths it will go for its team. As Goodman puts it, he’s glad to be surrounded by people who have the same values and humor as him and “all want to do their part in kind of putting this program on a national spotlight.”

“It’s a very, very tight knit community, and we’re bonded by obviously the tough losses, the gut-wrenching losses, but also a lot of joy and optimism for the future of this program,” he said.

The best part about it? It’s not going to go away. 

“Regardless of what happens this Saturday or in the Saturdays to come, the Calgorithm will still be there,” Callie said.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The FBI is refusing to give the House Judiciary Committee a briefing on Iran’s hack of the Trump campaign and other key issues, Chairman Jim Jordan told Fox News Digital, saying that the American people deserve to have the information before Election Day. 

Jordan, R-Ohio, spoke exclusively with Fox News Digital and said that he and his committee have been seeking a briefing in an unclassified setting to obtain information relating to Iran’s hack of the Trump campaign, and whether the former president and his team had been given a defensive briefing on the matter.

The FBI has told Fox News Digital that it is committed to working with the committee but did not say if or when officials would brief Jordan. 

‘This hacking of the Trump campaign by Iran — it looks like there was a dossier on JD Vance — that dossier winds up at the Harris campaign, and somehow, it happens to wind up in the press,’ Jordan said. ‘There are lots of questions, like when did you find out about this? How did you find out about this? Did you give Trump a defensive briefing? Who was the person in the Harris campaign who got the information? How did they get the information? When did they tell you they had the information? How did it then get to the press?’ 

Jordan said, ‘Those are just questions off the top of my head.’ 

‘It makes no sense, because we know if everything were reversed and the Iranians hacked the Harris campaign and there was a dossier on Tim Walz that ended up in the Trump campaign and then in the press, we know that they would all be going crazy,’ Jordan said. ‘There would probably already be a special counsel.’ 

Jordan also pointed to the fact that the hack was taken by an adversarial nation — Iran. 

‘This is the same country that says they are trying to assassinate President Trump. This is the same country who is the chief sponsor of terrorism. This is the same country that wants to assassinate [Israeli] Prime Minister Netanyahu. And this is the same country who just sent rockets to our best ally — ballistic missiles to our best ally — the State of Israel,’ Jordan said. ‘And we want to be briefed on this hacking, and they won’t do it.’ 

The Trump campaign said that the documents had been obtained ‘illegally from sources hostile to the United States,’ who ‘intended to interfere in the 2024 election and sow chaos throughout our Democratic process.’ 

The hack by Iran came ‘after recent reports of an Iranian plot to assassinate President Trump around the same time as the Butler, PA tragedy.’ 

The documents were sent to Politico and included a 271-page ‘dossier’ that the Trump campaign had put together on his eventual running mate Sen. JD Vance, R-Ohio, that dated back to February, the outlet said. 

It included Vance’s past stances on issues, statements and previous criticisms of Trump in a section called ‘POTENTIAL VULNERABILITIES.’

Meanwhile, Jordan also said his committee has other questions relating to Trump, the GOP presidential nominee, including why the Justice Department released the ‘bounty letter’ from the second attempted assassin, Ryan Routh, who offered $150,000 to someone who could ‘complete the job’ against Trump if he were to fail.

The DOJ, in a court filing last month, released Routh’s letter as evidence in a detention memo by the Justice Department in an effort to ensure Routh’s detention. 

Jordan also told Fox News Digital he wants information from Justice Department Inspector General Michael Horowitz, who testified last week that he would include in his highly anticipated report on Jan. 6, 2021 details about confidential human sources from the FBI and whether they had been embedded in the mob during the Capitol riot. 

During the hearing last week, Horowitz was asked whether he would ‘expose that there were confidential human sources at the Capitol’ on Jan. 6, and ‘how many went into the Capitol?’ 

Horowitz replied, ‘I’ll have that information in the report.’

Horowitz, though, indicated his report would not be made public until after Election Day. 

‘Well, for goodness’ sake, it’s been four years,’ Jordan said. ‘Why not give us that information now, right?’ 

But Jordan said that ‘the FBI will not sit down with the committee.’ 

Jordan stressed that the House Judiciary Committee is ‘the authorizing committee for the Justice Department.’ 

‘They will not sit down and talk with our committee, and it’s ridiculous,’ Jordan said. ‘This is important information for the American people to know before a consequential election.’ 

Fox News Digital has learned that representatives for the House Judiciary Committee began requesting the briefing during a phone call on Sept. 24 with the FBI. The committee then had two phone calls on Sept. 25 with the FBI requesting a briefing, a call with the Justice Department on Oct. 1 requesting a briefing, and two calls with the FBI on Oct. 1 requesting a briefing. 

A source said representatives of the committee also left a voicemail for the FBI on Oct. 1 requesting a briefing and had a call with the FBI again on Oct. 2. 

An FBI spokesperson told Fox News Digital that the bureau ‘has continually demonstrated its commitment to working with the Committee to accommodate its requests, and we have provided numerous documents and briefings.’ 

‘The FBI recognizes the importance of congressional oversight and remains committed to cooperating with the Committee in good faith,’ the FBI spokesperson said. 

But that cooperation has not met Jordan’s requests, the chairman said, and warned that all options are on the table. 

‘We have done more than 100 subpoenas this Congress, so every option is on the table for us to try to get the information that we believe the American people are entitled to have before making a decision, as I said, in an election that is so consequential,’ Jordan told Fox News Digital. 

‘We’ve got important questions about important issues that impact our country and one of the major candidates for political office,’ he said. ‘Give us the briefing, for goodness’ sake. Answer our questions.’ 

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

SEC commissioner Greg Sankey was speaking on the Triple Option podcast earlier this week, and the future of college football was laid out for all to see.

If it wasn’t clear already, it will be now after the most powerful man in college sports pulled back the curtain.

The SEC and Big Ten are in the process of taking their ball home — and making billions with it.   

“They want to be us, and that’s on them to figure it out,” Sankey said. “Not on me to bring myself back to Earth.”

How about that for the NCAA’s long-held mantra of collegial cooperation of like minds?

Understand this: Sankey says nothing without intent. He’s measured and detailed, and there’s purpose to everything.

 So it should come as no surprise that this latest revelation comes a week before SEC and Big Ten officials meet again to discuss the future of their place in the sport. Together. 

They’ll deal next week with the fallout of the House case awarding billions to former players, moving forward with millions in revenue sharing (see: pay for play) possibly as soon as the 2025 season, and finding new streams of revenue through non-conference scheduling to help pay for it.  

Sankey’s comments also came shortly after something called the College Student Football League was officially unveiled as an option to “grow FBS college football and adapt to a legal and political landscape.”

WEEKEND FORECAST: Expert picks for every Top 25 game in Week 6

AWARD TIME: The highs and lows of college football’s first month

A 136-team “league” that has 72 teams in its top division (essentially, the current 68 Power conference teams and Notre Dame), and the remaining 64 in another — with the concept of regulation and promotion movement between divisions. 

This, of course, has about as much of a chance to succeed as the XFL. 

Because the idea of such a league is based on the SEC and Big Ten coming back to the pack, their 34 universities choosing to share the wealth with all involved out of the goodness of their hearts.

So when Sankey was asked on the Triple Option podcast about being the “commissioner of college football” — this nebulous idea of a management of one directing the most dysfunctional and unwieldily association in the history of associations — he balked. 

Then threw high and tight on the College Student XFL.

“I’ve studied it a little bit, and I come back to I don’t want to dumb down the Southeastern Conference to be part of some super league notion with 70 teams that some people speculate would happen,” Sankey said.

Hello, reality. 

Look, in a Pollyanna world, college football finds a way for all to be fat and happy, strolling hand in hand down the yellow brick road. That’s not how this is going to play out. 

Television consumers of football want big games and big moments and big stories. Advertisers who pay the bills want the same. 

They want Georgia vs. Alabama and Ohio State vs. Oregon and Michigan vs. Texas. They don’t want Alabama vs. Western Kentucky or Ohio State vs. Marshall. 

We’re five weeks into the season, and of the top 12 games in television ratings, the SEC has a team playing in 10. Four of the top 12 are SEC vs. SEC games. 

All of the top 12 games have at least one SEC or Big Ten team involved. The final breakdown of conferences in the top 12: 10 SEC, three Big Ten, two ACC, one Big 12 and one Notre Dame.  

And you want Sankey to go to his 16 university presidents, currently hemorrhaging cash from the House case, future revenue sharing and the facilities boom, and offer up the fiscally reckless idea of everyone eats in the College Student whatever it’s called?

The SEC and Big Ten aren’t necessarily breaking away from the rest of college football as much as they are moving forward. Because a clean break comes with legal hurdles and public scorn. 

So Sankey and Big Ten commissioner Tony Petitti have painted this canvas as a “working group” to deal with “challenges” facing college sports. It’s brilliant in its simplicity.

Moving forward and creating natural separation from the rest of the pack by creating a favorable College Football Playoff format, and a scheduling monopoly with non-conference games that increase media rights revenue — and essentially boxes out the remainder of the field. 

And who among us will argue with more Michigan vs. LSU, and Ohio State vs. Alabama, and Georgia vs. Penn State in the regular season? To say nothing of similar games in the CFP.

This thing has surged like a rocket since the SEC announced expansion to 16 teams and the Big Ten moved to 18.

It’s not coming back to Earth any time soon.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Mets first baseman Pete Alonso stepped up to the plate with one out and two runners on base in the top of the ninth inning as the Mets trailed the Milwaukee Brewers 2-0 in Game 3 of the NL wild-card series

After watching a changeup for a strike, Brewers pitcher Devin Williams threw three straight balls. Alonso sent the fifth pitch of the at-bat — an 86 mph changeup right down the middle — over the right field wall at American Family Field in Milwaukee to give the Mets a 3-2 lead.

Alonso gave the crowd a chef’s kiss as he rounded first base during his home run trot.

The Mets tacked on another run in the ninth inning to defeat the Brewers 4-2 to win the best-of-three series, moving on to face the Philadelphia Phillies in the NLDS on Saturday.

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This post appeared first on USA TODAY

New York Mets outfielder Brandon Nimmo was playing with a heavy heart.

Amidst the champagne-soaked clubhouse celebrations following the Mets’ stunning 4-2 comeback win against the Milwaukee Brewers on Thursday, Nimmo told reporters that he learned his grandmother had passed away about an hour before the game began.

‘What it puts in perspective is that you can’t take any of this with you when you’re gone,’ Nimmo said. ‘And the moments like these, the experiences like these – this is what life is all about.’

Nimmo said he hadn’t yet told anybody else around the team and that his grandmother had gone to the hospital a day earlier.

Nimmo had a key single in the Mets’ ninth-inning rally, setting up Pete Alonso’s go-ahead three-run homer that gave New York its first postseason series win since 2015.

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‘Her and my grandpa watched every game,’ Nimmo said, noting that he was fortunate to have visited with his grandmother recently.

“To score four runs in the ninth inning and to come back, I know she would have loved that and she would have been cheering us on,’ Nimmo said, per the New York Post.

The 31-year-old Nimmo was the Mets’ first-round pick in 2011 and signed an eight-year, $162 million contract with the team after the 2022 season.

New York will face the Philadelphia Phillies in the best-of-five National League Division Series beginning Saturday.

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Barely a year after Terry Francona managed his last game with the Cleveland Guardians, the Cincinnati Reds hired the man many consider one of the top two or three managers in the game in recent years to replace David Bell.

Multiple sources confirmed the hiring to the Cincinnati Enquirer, part of the USA TODAY Network, of the hiring Thursday night immediately after the wild-card round of the playoffs finished.

Francona declined to comment when reached by phone Thursday night.

He joins the Reds on a three-year contract, sources said.

Francona, 65, left the Guardians after 11 seasons last year in large part because of health reasons. He made a point at the time to say he wasn’t ‘retiring’ and said then that he hoped to stay in the game in some capacity.

All things Reds: Latest Cincinnati Reds news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

“I don’t foresee managing (again),’ he said at the time. ‘I don’t have a crystal ball. Nobody does. Because if I was gonna manage, I like doing it here (in Cleveland). But I also don’t want to just turn away from the game.” 

A report in April said that his health had improved enough that he anticipated managing again, possibility in 2026.

It’s the second time in two years that a Hall of Fame-bound manager has come out of ‘retirement’ to manage again. The Texas Rangers hired Bruce Bochy before the 2023 season after three seasons away from managing, and the Rangers won their first World Series championship that season.

Francona, an outfielder and first baseman for 10 years in the big leagues, has 1,950 managerial wins in 23 years managing the Philadelphia Phillies, Boston Red Sox and Cleveland.

His 921 in Cleveland are a franchise record.

Francona won World Series with the Red Sox in 2004 and 2007, and took Cleveland to Game 7 against the Chicago Cubs in 2016.

He has a career .538 winning percentage as a manager, winning 90 or more games 12 times.

The 22nd overall pick in the 1980 draft out of the University of Arizona, Francona spent one season of his playing career with the Reds, in 1987, a teammate of Barry Larkin and Buddy Bell.

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The 2024 NFL season is rolling into October – which means the first round of bye weeks with the Chargers, Eagles, Lions and Titans all enjoying early breaks.

That doesn’t mean Week 5 will be lacking for good matchups, including an NFC South battle Thursday night when the Atlanta Falcons host the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. The International Series is also kicking off this weekend with the wobbling New York Jets taking on the scorching (and still unbeaten) Minnesota Vikings at London’s Tottenham Hotspur Stadium on Sunday morning.

The typical Sunday windows will feature some must-see meetings, including the next chapter of the Stefon Diggs reunion tour as the Buffalo Bills visit the Houston Texans. The still-winless Jacksonville Jaguars will again attempt to break into the win column … and apparently several folks believe that’s quite possible against the Indianapolis Colts. ‘Sunday Night Football’ has a classic pairing of flagship franchises − Dallas Cowboys at Pittsburgh Steelers – only slightly diluted by multiple injuries to both squads. Monday night, the Kansas City Chiefs will attempt to run their record to 5-0 but will have to manage without injured WR Rashee Rice.

Will they? Our panel of NFL experts picks that game and the other 13 – and, don’t forget, past performance is not indicative of future results …

USA TODAY Sports 2024 NFL season predictions: Our picks to win Super Bowl 59, MVP, rookies of the year, Nate Davis’ updated win projections and more

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Falcons vs. Buccaneers
Vikings vs. Jets
Bears vs. Panthers
Bengals vs. Ravens
Texans vs. Bills
Jaguars vs. Colts
Patriots vs. Dolphins
Commanders vs. Browns
Broncos vs. Raiders
49ers vs. Cardinals
Rams vs. Packers
Seahawks vs. Giants
Steelers vs. Cowboys
Chiefs vs. Saints

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