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Top Senate Democrats Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and Senate Appropriations Committee Chairwoman Patty Murray, D-Wash., made clear they only intend to move forward on the original stopgap spending bill plan that Republicans scrapped after pressure from billionaire Elon Musk and President-elect Donald Trump.

Murray said she is prepared for a partial government shutdown and to stay in Washington D.C., for the Christmas holiday if Republicans do not return to the original short-term spending bill that was released earlier this week and subsequently killed after Musk and others publicly opposed its provisions.

‘I’m ready to stay here through Christmas because we’re not going to let Elon Musk run the government,’ she said in a Friday morning statement, hours before the government could be sent into a partial shutdown if a bill is not passed. 

As of Thursday, the U.S. national debt was at $36,167,604,149,955.61 and continues to climb rapidly. 

‘Put simply, we should not let an unelected billionaire rip away research for pediatric cancer so he can get a tax cut or tear down policies that help America outcompete China because it could hurt his bottom line. We had a bipartisan deal-we should stick to it,’ Murray said. 

In floor remarks on Friday morning, Schumer said, ‘if Republicans do not work with Democrats in a bipartisan way very soon, the government will shut down at midnight.’

‘It’s time to go back to the original agreement we had just a few days ago. It’s time the House votes on our bipartisan CR. It’s the quickest, simplest and easiest way we can make sure the government stays open while delivering critical emergency aid to the American people.’

He also said that if Speaker Mike Johnson were to put the original bill on the House floor for a vote, ‘it would pass, and we could put the threat of a shutdown behind us.’

Murray added, ‘The deal that was already agreed to would responsibly fund the government, offer badly needed disaster relief to communities across America, and deliver some good bipartisan policy reforms. The American people do not want chaos or a costly government shutdown all because an unelected billionaire wants to call the shots — I am ready to work with Republicans and Democrats to pass the bipartisan deal both sides negotiated as soon as possible.’ 

After Musk and conservatives railed against the 1,547-page bill, President-elect Donald Trump and Vice President-elect JD Vance ultimately condemned it as well, killing whatever chance it had left. 

Murray’s Friday statement came shortly after it was revealed that House Republicans were planning a new continuing resolution (CR) vote in the morning on a different proposal. It’s unclear whether negotiations are taking place across party lines or bicamerally, however. 

Rep. Anna Paulina Luna, R-Fla., told reporters Friday morning that House Republicans were ‘very close to a deal’ and that a vote could happen in the morning.

However, if that deal is not the original stopgap spending bill, it sounds like Murray and Democrats in the Senate would be prepared to oppose it. 

Murray also isn’t the only one who says they are prepared to let the government’s funding expire before the holiday. Several Republicans have expressed their willingness to let it shut down if Republicans aren’t able to get a better deal. 

Trump himself wrote on Truth Social Friday morning, ‘If there is going to be a shutdown of government, let it begin now, under the Biden Administration, not after January 20th, under ‘TRUMP.’ This is a Biden problem to solve, but if Republicans can help solve it, they will!’

Congress must pass a measure, and it must be signed by President Biden by midnight on Saturday morning in order to avoid a partial shutdown. 

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

It was former President Obama who famously quipped that ‘elections have consequences,’ and one of the consequences of the 2024 election is that President-elect Donald Trump asked Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy to help him straighten out the government’s books.

Now, just days before Christmas, the United States is staring down a federal government shutdown as Democrats cling to power while the hourglass runs out on the 118th Congress, all because Musk exposed the bloated spending being proposed to fund the feds.

‘We had a deal!’ the Democrats whine. And they did have a terrible, pork-laden, censorship-riddled, and at 1,500 pages, needlessly long disaster of a bill, that Republican Speaker of the House Mike Johnson never should have agreed to in the first place. 

The purpose of the continuing resolution that Congress is struggling to pass is to keep the lights on until March, when a new Republican-controlled Senate will be in power and Trump will be in the White House. Instead, as Musk rightly pointed out, we got, if not an omnibus bill, at least an omni-minivan bill, bloated to the gills.

In Washington, the most typical route is the path of least resistance, and Republicans figured they could give in to one last big Biden spending package before Trump takes over. But that was when Musk and Ramaswamy stepped in.

On Wednesday, just hours before a planned vote in the House of Representatives, Musk started firing off X posts about every 30 seconds or so, decrying the congressional pay raise hidden in the bill, and the money to fund the Global Engagement Center, a sham operation that censors conservatives, along with a plethora of other pork.

Proving the power of Trump and new media forms such as X, the ship of state started to turn almost immediately, away from the shambolic ‘everything’ bill towards a cleaner, ‘plain’ continuing resolution that just funds the basics.

On Thursday night, every single Democrat in the House voted against that bill, along with 38 bloody-minded objectors in the Republican caucus.

First, as to the recalcitrant Republican no votes, let’s take Rep. Chip Roy, as an example. If he was dying, and Congress voted on a ‘save Chip Roy’s life’ bill, the congressman from Texas would be a hard ‘no’ if there weren’t spending offsets. It’s just who he is.

This is to say that the GOP ‘no’ votes were baked into the cake, and Democrats thought they could use them to push through their CVS receipt of absurd and expensive demands.

And they would have gotten away with it too, if it wasn’t for those meddlesome kids, Musk and Ramaswamy.

Come Saturday, the government may be shut down. If it is, it will not be the fault of Republicans who have now put a perfectly reasonable bill on the floor, but of Democrats who prize their own power more than federal employees being paid on Christmas week.

Elections have consequences, and Trump was clear that, if elected, outsiders like Musk and Ramaswamy were going to have not just a seat at the table, but real power and influence in furtherance of the Trump agenda.

Perhaps more than anything, what voters were asking for when they handed the keys of the state back to Trump on Election Day was change. Anything but more of the same. And this week, that is exactly what the voters got.

Make no mistake, Trump is taking a real political risk here. Democrats are going to do all they can now to blame him for the shutdown, paint him as Musk’s puppet and to stir up rank partisanship to dampen the optimism and enthusiasm ahead of the inauguration.

But what Trump and Musk are both counting on is that this kind of radical change, as much as it looks like chaos, is exactly what voters asked for. 

Politicians are ultimately judged on results, not tactics. As ugly as the scene in Congress is right now, the result, the death of a terrible spending package, should bring results that Americans will eventually cheer.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

The House Select Subcommittee on the Weaponization of the Federal Government released a more than 17,000-page report detailing its work this Congress, touting their success in protecting Americans against censorship of speech and the weaponization of federal law enforcement agencies, Fox News Digital has learned. 

Fox News Digital obtained the 17,019-page report compiled by the subcommittee, which falls under the House Judiciary Committee, led by Chair Jim Jordan, R-Ohio. 

‘The Weaponization Committee conducted rigorous oversight of the Biden-Harris administrations weaponized government and uncovered numerous examples of federal government abuses,’ Jordan told Fox News Digital. ‘Through our oversight, we protected the First Amendment by investigating the censorship-industrial-complex, heard from numerous brave whistleblowers, stopped the targeting of Americans by the IRS and Department of Justice, and created serious legislative and policy changes that will benefit all Americans.’ 

The report, first obtained by Fox News Digital, states that the ‘founding documents of the United States articulate the ideals of the American republic and guarantee to all American citizens fundamental rights and liberties. 

‘For too long, however, the American people have faced a two-tiered system of government—one of favorable treatment for the politically-favored class, and one of intimidation and unfairness for the rest of American citizens,’ it continues. ‘Under the Biden-Harris Administration, the contrast between these two tiers has become even more stark.’ 

The committee was created to ‘stand up for the American people,’ the report says, highlighting its work to ‘bring abuses by the federal government into the light for the American people and ensure that Congress, as their elected representatives, can take action to remedy them.’ 

The mission of the subcommittee was to ‘protect and strengthen the fundamental rights of the American people,’ the report said, noting that by investigating, uncovering and documenting executive branch misconduct, lawmakers on the panel have taken ‘important steps to ensure that the federal government no longer works against the American people.’ 

‘This work is not complete, but it is a necessary first step to stop the weaponization of the federal government,’ the report states. 

The committee, from its inception, says it has been working to protect free speech and expand upon the constitutional protections of the First Amendment. 

‘Throughout the Biden-Harris administration, multiple federal agencies, including the White House, have engaged in a vast censorship campaign against so-called mis-, dis-, or malinformation,’ the report states, noting that the subcommittee revealed the extent of the ‘censorship-industrial complex,’ and detailed how the federal government and law enforcement coordinated with academics, nonprofits, and other private entities to censor speech online.’ 

The panel is touting its work, saying its oversight has ‘had a real effect in expanding the First Amendment.’ 

‘In a Supreme Court dissent, three justices noted how the Select Subcommittee’s investigation revealed that ‘valuable speech was..suppressed,’’ the report states. 

And in a letter to the subcommittee, Facebook and Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg admitted that the Biden-Harris administration ‘pressured’ Facebook to censor Americans. 

‘Facebook gave in to this pressure, demoting posts and content that was highly relevant to political discourse in the United States,’ the report states. 

And in another win for the subcommittee, in response to its work, universities and other groups shut down their ‘disinformation’ research, and federal agencies ‘slowed their communications with Big Tech.’ 

The committee also celebrated a ‘big win’ in October after it prevented the creation of a new ‘GARM,’ an advertising association that engaged in censorship and boycotts of conservative media companies. The committee revealed, before it was disbanded, that GARM had been discussing ways to ensure conservative news outlets and platforms could not receive advertising dollars and were engaged in boycotts of conservative voices and Twitter once it became ‘X’ under the ownership of Elon Musk. 

Meanwhile, the subcommittee also investigated the alleged weaponization of federal law enforcement resources. 

In speaking with a number of whistleblowers, the subcommittee learned of waste, fraud and abuse at the FBI. 

‘When these whistleblowers came forward, the bureau brutally retaliated against many of them for breaking ranks—suspending them without pay, preventing them from seeking outside employment, and even purging suspected disloyal employees,’ the report states, noting that the subcommittee revealed that the FBI ‘abused its security clearance adjudication process to target whistleblowers.’ 

The report references the FBI’s response, in which the bureau admitted its ‘error’ and reinstated the security clearance of one decorated FBI employee. 

The subcommittee also was tasked with investigating the executive branch’s actions in ‘intruding and interfering with Americans’ constitutionally protected activity.’ 

For example, the subcommittee revealed ‘and stopped’ the FBI’s effort to target Catholic Americans because of their religious views; detailed the DOJ’s directives to target parents at school board meetings; stopped the Internal Revenue Service from making ‘unannounced visits to American taxpayers’ homes;’ caused the DOJ to change its internal policies to ‘respect the separation of powers and limit subpoenas for Legislative Branch employees; and highlighted the ‘vast warrantless surveillance of Americans by federal law enforcement.’ 

The panel also investigated the federal government’s election interference, highlighting the FBI’s ‘fervent efforts to ‘prebunk’ a story about the Biden family’s influence peddling scheme in the lead-up to the 2020 presidential election.’ 

The panel also investigated and demonstrated how the 2020 Biden campaign ‘colluded with the intelligence community to falsely discredit this story as ‘Russian disinformation.’’

The report includes a list of hearings the subcommittee held, letters sent by the subcommittee and subpoenas issued by the panel.

It also includes depositions and transcribed interviews conducted by the subcommittee. The subcommittee conducted 99 depositions and transcribed interviews during this Congress.

Depositions and interviews included in the massive report are of former FBI officials and CIA officials, like former Director John Brennan, former prosecutor in the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office involved in the original hush money probe against President Trump, Mark Pomerantz, and interviews with Facebook, Meta and Google officials.

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SPY and QQQ remain in long-term uptrends, but three big negatives are currently hanging over the stock market. Two negatives are tied to important cyclical groups and the third is reminiscent of summer 2022. The semiconductor business is cyclical and the Semiconductor ETF (SOXX) is one of the weakest industry group ETFs. Housing is an important part of the domestic economy and the Home Construction ETF (ITB) broke down. On top of this, the 10-yr Treasury Yield is breaking out and appears headed back to 5%, just as it did in summer 2022. The charts below tell the story.  

The Semiconductor ETF (SOXX) remains in a long-term downtrend. The chart below shows SOXX breaking down in July, forming a rising wedge into October and breaking wedge support at the end of October. Notice how this wedge retraced around 61.8% of the July decline and met resistance near the July support break. This advance was a counter-trend bounce and the wedge break signals a continuation lower. This is negative for semis, and by extension, the Technology sector and QQQ.

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The Home Construction ETF (ITB) failed to hold its late November breakout and reversed its long-term uptrend this month. ITB surged in November with a momentum thrust, similar to the July breakout. The July breakout held and ITB hit new highs in mid October. The November breakout, in contrast, failed as the ETF broke support and the 200-day SMA in December. ITB is in a long-term downtrend, which is negative for housing, and by extension, the Consumer Discretionary sector and the broader market.  

The 10-yr Treasury Yield is on the rise as it broke out of a 13 month falling channel, which was in place since November 2023. This breakout targets a move toward the October 2023 high around 5%. The chart below shows the falling channel extending from October 2023 to December 2024. TNX hit the upper line in late November and fell rather sharply into early December. The yield firmed in the 41-42 area (4.1%-4.2%) as a falling flag took shape. TNX broke out of the flag on December 11th and followed through with a channel breakout this week. This move reverses the long-term downtrend and argues for a higher 10-yr Treasury Yield. Much like summer 2022, this could weigh on stocks.

Even though SPY and QQQ are still in long-term uptrends, this negative trifecta will likely weigh on the market. Small-caps and mid-caps were slammed this week and breadth has been deteriorating for a few weeks. Our breadth models at TrendInvestorPro have yet to signal a bear market, but we will watch them closely in the coming days and weeks.

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The NFL schedule is sure to get a little wacky in Week 16.

To be sure, Sunday is distinctly light on marquee matchups. But much of that is a function of the league trying to push into the Saturday spotlight, with two major tilts the Houston Texans at the Kansas City Chiefs and the Pittsburgh Steelers at the Baltimore Ravens taking place that afternoon, putting the league in direct competition with the first round of the College Football Playoff. Those four teams, of course, will also reconvene on Christmas for two rare midweek showdowns. It’s all a reminder that NFL fans will need to keep their calendars open for the next several weeks as the final pieces of the playoff picture come together.

Here are bold predictions for NFL Week 16:

Mike Evans will clown on the Cowboys

Sure, it’s only so ‘bold’ to predict the Bucs star receiver will have a big night at Jerry World on Sunday. The Cowboys have allowed the third-most points in the NFL (380), which includes 33.4 points per game at home this season. And the last high-profile wideout to visit – Cincinnati’s Ja’Marr Chase – went off for 14 catches, 177 yards and 2 TDs, including the 40-yard game-winner, on a Monday night in Week 14. Besides, the Dallas defense is now without cornerback Trevon Diggs, done for the season by knee surgery. Yet with Tampa Bay (8-6) inspired to win to hang onto first place in the NFC South and red-hot quarterback Baker Mayfield declaring that he wants to do his part to help Evans notch an 11th straight 1,000-yard season – despite missing three games with a hamstring injury, he’s just 251 yards away – the table is set for another big prime-time showing. So, expect nothing less than a 100-yard game with 2 TDs from Evans. Last weekend, the Bucs faced a Chargers D at SoFi Stadium that was tied for allowing the fewest points per game in the NFL and they hung 40 on L.A., with Evans posting a season-high 159 yards with 2 TDs on nine catches. And now they visit a place that has been so inviting to visitors. Get your popcorn ready.

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– Jarrett Bell

MVP race heats up after Lamar Jackson has four total touchdowns in win

The Steelers have been Jackson’s kryptonite. He has a career 2-5 record versus Pittsburgh. Jackson will turn the tide at home on Saturday. Jackson has 3,580 passing yards, 34 touchdown passes and just three interceptions this year. Plus, he’s produced 743 rushing yards and three rushing touchdowns. Jackson will pass for three touchdowns and run for another in what will be a comfortable Ravens win. Jackson’s performance will make him the first player in NFL history with at least 35 touchdown passes and three or fewer interceptions in his first 15 games of a season. Additionally, he will be the first player ever with at least 40 combined passing and rushing touchdowns with three or fewer interceptions in their first 15 games.

Cue the Jackson MVP chatter after Sunday’s performance in Charm City.

– Tyler Dragon

Patrick Mahomes takes no more than one sack in leading Chiefs past Texans

Houston Texans defensive tackle Tim Settle provided some fun midweek banter when he pointed out the trouble that might be posed by the combination of the Kansas City Chiefs’ recent struggles up front and Patrick Mahomes’ ankle injury, saying, ‘Pat better make good decisions. I ain’t making no threats, I’m making promises.” Seems unwise to rile up the two-time NFL MVP who still remains capable of tilting an entire game on any given play. But Mahomes, who has taken a career-high 35 sacks this season in just 14 games, might need to have an even quicker trigger than usual to stave off Will Anderson Jr. and Danielle Hunter, who have combined for 22 ½ sacks.

Steering clear of the league’s premier edge-rushing duo is no easy feat, especially not for a player who has taken multiple sacks in 11 games this year and will be without D.J. Humphries, the late-season addition at left tackle who remains sidelined with a hamstring injury. But with Marquise ‘Hollywood’ Brown expected to make his regular-season debut for the Chiefs after suffering a sternoclavicular shoulder joint injury in the preseason, Mahomes could have more favorable looks for quick-developing plays in the short to intermediate areas. Expect Kansas City and its star signal-caller to minimize risk as the team closes in on another potential No. 1 seed for the AFC playoffs.

– Michael Middlehurst-Schwartz

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The 20 years of estrangement between the Chicago Cubs and Sammy Sosa was wrong.

It was petty, malicious and really made no sense.

Under chairman Tom Ricketts, the Cubs refused to permit Sosa, the greatest home run hitter in franchise history, back into the club’s good graces unless he apologized for steroid use.

The Cubs were the only organization in Major League Baseball who took such a stance.

Players linked to PED use have long been punished by the BaseballHall of Fame voters. There has never been a player who publicly tested positive or admitted to steroid use who has been elected into the Hall of Fame.

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While they may have been shunned by the Hall of Fame, those players still have been widely celebrated and honored by their former teams.

EXCLUSIVE: Mark McGwire still gets emotional reliving 1998 Home Run Chase

The San Francisco Giants have opened their arms to Barry Bonds, baseball’s all-time home run king, where he remains a hero despite the involvement with BALCO and his personal trainer going to prison for refusing to testify against him. He’s in the Giants’ Hall of Fame.

The St. Louis Cardinals worship Mark McGwire, who was in the famous 1998 home run chase with Sosa. He admitted to PED use after retirement and is in the Cardinals’ Hall of Fame.

Roger Clemens, who was accused of steroid use by his former trainer, remains welcome and widely accepted in the Yankees, Red Sox and Astros organizations.

Andy Pettitte, who acknowledged using human growth hormone after his name appeared in the Mitchell Report, is revered by the New York Yankees.

There are hundreds of players who used steroids over the years and still have fabulous relationships with their former teams.

But until Thursday, the Cubs refused to even extend an offer to Sosa to throw out a ceremonial first pitch or be a guest singer for the seventh-inning stretch, let alone retire his number or permit him in club Hall of Fame.

Now, after Sosa issued a formal apology in a letter to Cubs’ fans on Thursday, Ricketts responded by inviting him to their annual Cubs’ convention for the first time since he left the organization after 2004.

Sosa, who testified in front of Congress in 2005 that he never used performance-enhancing drugs, made sure not to commit perjury in his apology, but strongly alluded to past transgressions at a time when PED use was rampant throughout baseball.

“There were times I did whatever I could to recover from injuries in an effort to keep my strength up to perform over 162 games,’ Sosa said in his letter. “I never broke any laws, bit in hindsight, I made mistakes and I apologize.’

Sosa, who hit 60 or more homers three times with the Cubs, and hit 545 of his career 609 homers in his 13 years with the Cubs, was a seven-time Al-Star, 1998 MVP and Roberto Clemente award winner. He hit .310 and averaged 61 homers, 149 RBI with a 1.058 OPS from 1998-2001. Yet, he never received more than 18.5% of the votes in his 10 years of eligibility on the Hall of Fame ballot.

‘I understand why some players in my era don’t always get the recognition that our stats deserve,’ Sosa said in his statement.’

Now, 20 years later, Sosa at least is being recognized by the Cubs for his greatness, helping fill Wrigley Field and generating millions of dollars to the Cubs during their lovable losing years, helping end an eight-year postseason drought in 1998, and coming within one game of reaching the 2003 World Series.

‘We can’t change the past, but the future is bright,’ Sosa said. “In my heart, I have always been a Cub and I can’t wait to see Cubs fans again.’

Sosa, who accepted an invitation in September and attended the Club 400 event – a non-profit charity designed for Cubs fans in need – said at the time that he badly wanted to be reunited with the Cubs. Club 400 founder Stewart McVicar vowed to help facilitate a reconciliation.

“That was our main goal,’ McVicar said, “for Sammy to be invited back to the 2025 convention, We were offering a free vessel for him to use to get the word out. The Cubs fans still love him.

“I couldn’t be happier.’

Yes, indeed, Christmas came early.

Now, Sosa has the opportunity to be celebrated and worshipped once again in front of thousands of Cubs fans at their Jan. 17-19 convention.

“We appreciate Sammy releasing his statement and for reaching out,’ Ricketts said in a statement. “No one played harder or wanted to win more. Nobody’s perfect but we never doubted his passion for the game and the Cubs. It is an understatement to say that Sammy is a fan favorite.

“We plan on inviting him to the 2025 Cubs Convention and, while it is short notice, we hope that he can attend. We are all ready to move forward together.’

Sosa, according to one of his close friends, is making plans to be there and hopes to savor every moment.

Forget the Cubs’ active player roster, Sosa will be the star attraction, and a reminder to Ricketts and everyone else in the organization of his immense popularity.

He’s back.

And this time, for good.

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The Los Angeles Chargers just did something that hasn’t been done in an NFL game since 1976: successfully executed a fair catch kick. But what is a fair-catch kick?

According to the NFL rules, if a player makes a fair catch, his team may attempt a kick from the spot rather than begin its next possession. If the kick goes through the goalposts on the scoring end of the field, it’s worth three points — as many as a field goal.

On a fair-catch kick, the ball does not have to be snapped, and the kicker can have a bigger running start before kicking the ball. Essentially, it’s just like a kickoff attempt but with a holder instead of a tee.

Dicker attempted the 57-yard fair-catch kick after the Denver Broncos’ punt coverage team was flagged for fair catch interference at the end of the first half of Thursday night’s game. Chargers head coach Jim Harbaugh elected to attempt the kick on an untimed down since the Broncos would not be allowed to return it on a potential miss.

Fair-catch free kick rule

Here’s the exact wording of the NFL’s rule on fair catches, from Rule 10, Section 2, Article 4:

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‘After a fair catch is made or is awarded as the result of fair catch interference, the receiving team has the option of putting the ball in play by a snap or fair catch kick (drop kick or place kick without a tee) from the spot of the catch or succeeding spot after enforcement of any applicable penalties (3-9 and 11-4-3). This includes the 15-yard penalty enforced from the receiving team’s 20-yard line as applicable if the fair catch is made or awarded in his end zone from fair catch interference or illegal contact with the receiver after he has made a fair catch.’

Also according to the rulebook, the fair-catch kick is technically distinct from a free kick. The NFL only considers kickoffs, safety kicks or onside kicks to be free kicks and specifically states that a fair-catch kick ‘is not a free kick.’

There’s also this from Rule 10, Section 2, Article 5:

‘If time expires during a play in which a player has signaled for a fair catch, the following shall apply:

…If the kicking team interferes with a receiver who has signaled for a fair catch, the receiving team will have the option to extend the period by attempting a fair catch kick or by a snap from scrimmage after enforcement of any applicable penalties.’

Fair-catch kick history

Dicker’s kick was the first fair-catch kick attempted since Joey Slye did it with the Carolina Panthers against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in 2019.

It was the first to score points since 1976, when Ray Wersching of the then-San Diego Chargers knocked one through from 45 yards out at the end of the first half against the Buffalo Bills.

At 65 yards, Dicker’s fair-catch kick was the longest successful attempt in NFL history.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

With just three weeks remaining in the 2024 NFL regular season, the construction of the playoff picture is predictably drawing most of the attention from the league’s fans and those who cover it. But this is also the point when it becomes apparent who could achieve individual glory by taking down one of the game’s notable records.

The biggest one that might be in jeopardy is Hall of Famer Eric Dickerson’s single-season mark for rushing yards – set in 1984, when he churned out 2,105 in 16 games while with the Los Angeles Rams. There was something of an asterisk attached to it at the time as Dickerson overtook Hall of Famer O.J. Simpson, who posted 2,003 yards in 1973, when the league had a 14-game regular season.

Now it’s Dickerson who could lose his spot in the record book at a time when players – namely Philadelphia Eagles superstar Saquon Barkley – have the benefit of a 17th game. Despite a statistical setback in Sunday’s win against the Pittsburgh Steelers, Barkley still has a reasonable shot to catch Dickerson … not that a man headed for his first rushing title with 1,688 yards is obsessing over the possibility.

‘I’m fully aware of how far I am. I’m not scared of it,’ Barkley said this week. ‘If I don’t get it, I’m not gonna be depressed. If I get it, I’m not gonna be that crazy happy, either.

‘It’s a record. Records are meant to be broken. But my mindset is to focus on winning games and competing for a championship, and that’s the only thing that really matters.’

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But records matter, too, especially for players toiling on teams without championship aspirations. Here are 10 that might go down in the coming weeks:

Rushing yards, single season

Barkley got a bit banged up Sunday and sat out a chunk of the game against the Steelers. His 65 rushing yards were his second-fewest in a game since he sprinted down I-95, bolting from the woeful New York Giants to join the Super Bowl-caliber Eagles. Physically, Barkley says he’s fine moving forward.

He’ll need to average 139.3 yards over the final three games in order to beat out Dickerson – and it doesn’t appear Philadelphia will be able to rest Barkley much given the three-way race they’re in for the No. 1 seed in the NFC playoff field. It’s a big lift, but Barkley has topped 140 rushing yards in five games this season already. It is noteworthy that he’s generally downplayed the importance of breaking the record, which stands in stark contrast to Dickerson – who’s freely admitted for years that he doesn’t want anyone to supersede him.

Yards from scrimmage, single season

If Barkley is able to make a renewed push for the rushing record, then he’s probably going to also have a reasonable shot at piling up the most yards from scrimmage in one campaign. He’s 36 yards – one Barkley burst for a first down – from 2,000, which would be the 73rd instance which that threshold has been reached. (For contest, 2,200 yards has only been achieved 24 times.) He’d need to average 182 a week the rest of the way to bypass Chris Johnson’s 15-year-old standard of 2,509 combined rushing and receiving yards. Barkley’s had at least 182 yards four times so far with the Eagles.

Passer rating, single season

Two-time league MVP Lamar Jackson, who could well be a three-time MVP once this season is a wrap, is very much a threat to statistically be the most efficient quarterback of all time. He currently boasts a passer rating of 120.7, which ranks as the fourth best ever at the moment but is well within striking distance of the 122.5 Aaron Rodgers posted in 2011, his first MVP season. One factor that could make it hard for Jackson is that he throws much less frequently than players like Rodgers or Peyton Manning historically have – meaning Jackson will have to be especially precise given his body of work won’t have the same statistical weight. However he did already set the mark this season for career games (4) with a perfect passer rating of 158.3.

Passer rating by a rookie

The Washington Commanders’ Jayden Daniels is on track to become the fifth rookie quarterback to eclipse a 100.0 passer rating over an entire season. Currently at 101.2, a strong finish could propel Daniels past Dak Prescott’s rookie record of 104.9 set in 2016.

Rushing yards by a rookie quarterback

Daniels is also among an exceptional group of five as the fifth rookie QB to rush for at least 600 yards, joining a list that included Robert Griffin III, Cam Newton, Jackson and Josh Allen. Daniels is 160 yards from overtaking RG3 (815 rushing yards in 2012), who won Offensive Rookie of the Year honors for Washington – another standard Daniels could match.

Rushing yards by a quarterback, career

Last Sunday, Jackson joined Michael Vick as the only NFL QBs with 6,000 career rushing yards. With 109 more, Jackson will overtake the 6,109 by Vick, who needed 13 seasons to do what Jackson has basically done in seven.

Touchdown-to-interception ratio, single season

More Jackson, whose individual numbers this season are largely more impressive than his MVP campaigns in 2019 and ’23. One of his most sublime stats is his TD/INT ratio, currently 34 touchdowns against three interceptions. If Jackson can throw at least nine more scoring strikes without being picked off, he’d eclipse what Tom Brady did in 2016 (28 TD passes against 2 INTs).

Receiving yards by a rookie tight end

Brock Bowers, the Las Vegas Raiders’ first-round pick in April, has already bested Sam LaPorta’s mark (86) – which didn’t stand even a year – for most catches by a rookie tight end with 90 and counting. Now, Bowers has a pretty good runway, assuming he can get some passable quarterback play, to get the 109 additional receiving yards he needs to rewrite Hall of Famer Mike Ditka’s 63-year-old record (1,076) for most by a rookie tight end. Two notes: Ditka only needed 14 games to reach his number, while Kyle Pitts (2021) is the only other rookie tight end to hit the 1,000-yard receiving plateau.

Receptions by a rookie

It hasn’t been a year, either, since the Rams’ Puka Nacua became the third rookie with a 100-catch season, his 105 grabs topping Jaylen Waddle’s rookie mark set in 2021 by one reception. But Bowers can claim this one, too, with 16 more snatches. Given he’s averaged 6.4 per game, he’ll get it if he simply maintains that pace.

Pick-sixes in a season

It was already going to be a long shot – even more so now that the Tennessee Titans have benched second-year QB Will Levis. But this could have been a fun one to track (for everyone but Levis), given four of his 16 touchdown passes this season have gone to the other team. In order to match the seven Jameis Winston served up in 2019, Levis would need to get back on the field and gift-wrap another three pick-sixes … though it doesn’t seem like Titans rookie head coach Brian Callahan can endure any more.

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Follow USA TODAY Sports’ Nate Davis on X, formerly Twitter, @ByNateDavis.

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With a chance to advance to the quarterfinals, who will step up in the first round of the College Football Playoff?

Whether it’s at the quarterback, receiver or defensive position, there are plenty of stars that will take part in the inaugural first round of the expanded 12-team playoff. But as the road to a national championship gets tougher against some of the best squads, those stars won’t be able to do all of it on their own. It’ll likely take an underrated player to become an unsung hero and be the catalyst in front of a home or hostile crowd.

The stakes have been raised, so here are one player from each team playing in the first round that could provide a big spark in taking care of business or pulling off the road upset:

Jailin Walker, LB, Indiana

One of the several former James Madison players that followed Curt Cignetti to Bloomington, Walker has helped form a solid linebacker duo alongside Aiden Fisher. Walker is second on the team in tackles (72), tackles for loss (9) and 8 pass break ups, but he’s been one of the key pieces that brings the energy and positive attitude to the defense. Cignetti said he’s a guy that he’ll really miss when the season is over.

Walker has been consistent this season, and he really turned it on in the final stretch of the season when he recorded a tackle for loss in the final three games − four of which came in the season finale against Purdue. Indiana is facing a Notre Dame team a strong rushing attack, and while the Hoosiers are among the best at stopping the run, Fisher will need Walker to help him out in preventing big plays and the scrambling ability of Notre Dame quarterback Riley Leonard.

Jadarian Price, RB, Notre Dame

Leonard and Jeremiyah Love do most of the damage running the ball for Notre Dame, but don’t forget about Price. The back adds power to the running game with a great eye for finding holes at the line of scrimmage and quickly making cuts to break free. He’s run for 651 yards this season − 54.3 per game − and 10 touchdowns.

Price is coming off a big game against Southern California where he had a career-high 111 rushing yards and showcased why the Irish have one of the best 1-2 punches in the country. As mentioned before, Indiana is great at stopping the run and will focus on stopping the stars in Leonard and Love. Price will have to make the most of his opportunities and could be the person to erupt for big plays.

Roderick Daniels Jr., WR, Southern Methodist

Whether its returning kicks, running or catching the ball, Daniels can do it all. The receiver has a punt return for a touchdown, three rushing touchdowns and three receiving touchdowns this season, while leading the team in receiving yards at 599 this season.

Daniels was more of a receiver in the second half of the season as the running back room got healthy, and he had productive games with more than 50 receiving yards in four of the last six games, including 97 yards on eight catches in the ACC title game. When going against a stout defense like Penn State, Daniels has the ability to get the ball moving in any position he lines up in.

Harrison Wallace III, WR, Penn State

Tyler Warren does any and everything Penn State needs from him, but someone else will have to come up with big receiving plays. Enter Wallace. After dealing with injuries last season, Wallace has found himself a productive role in the offense and has 638 receiving yards along with four touchdown catches this season.

There haven’t been any big days for Wallace that make you do a double-take at the stat sheet, but Wallace is great at helping generate explosive plays for the Nittany Lions outside of Warren. He averages 16.4 yards per reception and can help Penn State get out of those offensive lulls that tend to happen in big games.

Bryant Wesco Jr., WR, Clemson

In a day where transfers make the big difference for national championship worthy teams, Wesco has had an immediate impact as a freshman for the Tigers. Whether it’s using his speed or maneuvering through defenders, Wesco finds open spaces and gets plenty of yards after the catch. His 678 receiving yards are second-most on the team even with only 38 catches.

Wesco is coming off a big game in the ACC championship game when he had eight catches for 143 yards and two touchdowns, and that effort is going to be needed against a Texas defense that is the best at stopping the past. Cade Klubnik is going to need help and Wesco is prime option to get big plays.

Andrew Mukuba, CB, Texas

Nothing like facing your old team in the College Football Playoff. Mukuba spent his first three seasons of his career at Clemson before transferring to Texas. Mukuba said he left the Tigers because he ‘wasn’t really getting better’ and he certainly helped the Longhorns become one of the best passing defenses in the country. His range allows him to patrol the field and evidenced by his four interceptions.

Texas will be tested by the passing ability of Cade Klubnik, and Mukuba will have to cover plenty of ground so the defense doesn’t give up big plays. Mukuba showed in the SEC championship game he can come up to the line of scrimmage and get tackles for loss. If he’s able to do that against Clemson, the Texas offense shouldn’t have to score too much to advance.

Joshua Josephs, DL, Tennessee

James Pearce Jr. is the man that spearheads the Tennessee defensive, but offenses are in for a tough night if Josephs is also on his game. Coming off a down year in 2023, Josephs has rebounded with nine tackles for loss and eight quarterback hurries with a team-high three forced fumbles.

Josephs has shown he can perform in the big games, notably when he pressured Jalen Milroe in a defeat of Alabama. Ohio State quarterback Will Howard is coming off a rough game against Michigan. He could have another struggle if the Buckeye offensive line can’t hold up with Josephs causing problems.

Quinshon Judkins, RB, Ohio State

For all the playmakers Ohio State added the season, Judkins was supposed to be a difference-maker for the Buckeyes, but he’s been inconsistent throughout the season and he’ll have to prove himself on the biggest stage. It made sense his numbers would dip sharing a backfield with TreVeyon Henderson, but he’s coming off just 82 combined yards in two games against Indiana and Michigan. The Tennessee defense can stop the run as well as the Hoosiers and Wolverines. But this is the game Judkins came to Ohio State for. Now time to prove it was worth it.

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Most NFL draft experts and scouts agree that Deion Sanders’ Colorado Buffaloes have two of the top prospects of the 2025 NFL draft. Heisman Trophy winner Travis Hunter is widely regarded as the top overall prospect in the class and Sanders’ son Shedeur is expected to go high as well.

Deion thinks he’ll go sooner than any other prospect come Round 1 of the 2025 NFL draft.

The Pro Football Hall of Fame player and Buffaloes head coach appeared on ‘The Pacman Jones Show’ and confirmed his conviction that his son will be the top selection.

‘Shedeur’s going to be the No. 1 pick,’ Sanders said.

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

‘If the [New York] Giants have the No. 1 pick, who is the No. 1 pick?’ Jones asked.

‘Shedeur’s going to be the No. 1 pick,’ Sanders repeated.

Entering Week 16 of the 2024 season, the Las Vegas Raiders have the first overall pick in the 2025 NFL draft. They’re one of two 2-12 teams, along with the Giants, but are favored this week against the Jacksonville Jaguars. A win over Jacksonville would drop the Raiders from the top spot.

Shedeur and Miami’s Cam Ward are considered the top quarterbacks in this draft class and are very likely to be the top two selections if the quarterback-needy Raiders and Giants are in those spots.

‘The Giants are not going to give up their pick,’ Sanders said.

Following his prediction, Jones asked what will happen if the Giants pick Shedeur first overall and the Raiders are next at No. 2.

‘See, that’s when the game starts to play,’ Sanders said. ‘The Raiders could go with Cam [Ward], or it could be some junk in the game and the Raiders could take [Hunter]… or they could slide back.’

2025 NFL draft No. 1 overall pick odds

Shedeur is currently the favorite to go No. 1 overall, per BetMGM’s latest NFL draft odds. The odds point to a three-horse race between him, Ward, and Hunter.

Shedeur Sanders, QB, Colorado (-190)
Cam Ward, QB, Miami (+200)
Travis Hunter, CB/WR, Colorado (+800)

Edge rushers Mykel Williams of Georgia and Abdul Carter of Penn State are next in odds at +3500 each.

2025 NFL draft order

Las Vegas Raiders: 2-12 record; .538 strength of schedule
New York Giants: 2-12; .550 SOS
New England Patriots: 3-11; .462 SOS
Jacksonville Jaguars: 3-11; .483 SOS
Carolina Panthers: 3-11; .496 SOS
Tennessee Titans: 3-11; .508 SOS
Cleveland Browns: 3-11; .525 SOS
New York Jets: 4-10; .508 SOS
Chicago Bears: 4-10; .559 SOS
New Orleans Saints: 5-9; .496 SOS
Miami Dolphins: 6-8; .424 SOS
Indianapolis Colts: 6-8; .475 SOS
Cincinnati Bengals: 6-8; .479 SOS
Dallas Cowboys: 6-8; .521 SOS
San Francisco 49ers: 6-8; .567 SOS
Atlanta Falcons: 7-7; .517 SOS
Arizona Cardinals: 7-7; .529 SOS
Seattle Seahawks: 8-6; .513 SOS
Los Angeles Chargers: 8-6; .471 SOS
Tampa Bay Buccaneers: 8-6; .496 SOS
Los Angeles Rams: 8-6; .517 SOS
Washington Commanders: 9-5; .441 SOS
Denver Broncos: 9-5; .483 SOS
Baltimore Ravens: 9-5; .534 SOS
Houston Texans: 9-5; .479 SOS
Pittsburgh Steelers: 10-4; .479 SOS
Green Bay Packers: 10-4; .542 SOS
Minnesota Vikings: 12-2; .483 SOS
Buffalo Bills: 11-3; .462 SOS
Philadelphia Eagles: 12-2; .445 SOS
Detroit Lions: 12-2; .534 SOS
Kansas City Chiefs: 13-1; .483 SOS

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