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In his speech before the United Nations General Assembly last week, President Biden proposed building a ‘more effective and more inclusive U.N.’ by ‘bringing in new voices and new perspectives.’ 

What he should have said instead is that the U.N. has lost its way, and it will need to be seriously reimagined if it is to remain relevant.

To be sure, the creation of the U.N. system to reconstruct global order after World War II was inspired, and its specialized agencies, such as the Food and Agricultural Organization, have done important work for decades.

Today, however, the U.N. suffers from a fundamental flaw: it gives too much power to revisionist autocracies like China and Russia that want to tear down the U.S.-led global system. Beijing, Moscow and other revisionist authoritarians use their influence in the U.N. to turn the institution against its founding mission.

The list of abuses is long. 

Russia chaired a U.N. Security Council meeting on the situation in Ukraine as it was launching an invasion of that country. China continues to prevent the World Health Organization from investigating COVID-19’s origins, making a future outbreak more likely. 

Russia and China also use their seats in the U.N. Security Council to weaken sanctions efforts against the illegal nuclear programs in North Korea and Iran. The U.N. Human Rights Council includes repressive regimes – such as China – ensuring that these countries escape scrutiny for their barbaric human rights records. 

And employees of the U.N. Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) participated in the Oct. 7 attacks against Israel. 

These are only the most prominent examples.

Nevertheless, the proceedings last week demonstrate that many still believe the U.N. remains the best possible forum to bring countries together to address shared global challenges.

This is wishful thinking.

Biden is right when he says we are at an inflection point in history, but we will only rise to this challenge if the United States and its allies can revitalize and adapt multilateral institutions to reflect new realities.

Instead of Biden’s platitudes about global cooperation, the next U.S. administration should acknowledge that America’s adversaries have transformed the U.N. into another arena for competition between free nations and an axis of revisionist autocracies. 

They should use speeches at the General Assembly to call out the bad behavior of U.S. adversaries, such as China, Russia, Iran, North Korea and Venezuela, and encourage close allies to join in the condemnation. They should be unrelenting in opposing this axis’ threats to their neighbors, their unfair trade practices and their abhorrent human rights abuses.

They should unrelentingly defend U.S. allies, like Israel, from unfair attacks, and acknowledge that the U.N. is becoming even more obsessively antisemitic. 

In both 2022 and 2023, the number of U.N. General Assembly resolutions condemning Israel exceeded the combined total of those condemning all other countries. Yet, the body refrained from condemning Hamas after the abhorrent Oct. 7 attack – even after it fired nine UNRWA employees for likely involvement in an act of war.

To counter the U.N.’s capture by cynical autocracies, Washington and its allies should use their diplomatic weight to place U.S. and allied officials in leadership institutions in key U.N. bodies, including the Human Rights Council.

The United States provides one-third of U.N. funding, giving it enormous potential influence if it is willing to use it. But the U.S. should move from mandatory assessments to voluntary contributions in order to prioritize programs that advance U.S. interests and defund others.

In addition, Washington should advance multilateralism by selectively routing around the U.N. system in favor of institutions that include America’s democratic allies and exclude authoritarian regimes such Russia and China. These groupings, like the G-7 and NATO, are often the only places where genuine international cooperation happens today. 

Finally, there is no need to cling to the preexisting system. After WWII, there was an explosion of creativity as Washington and its allies invented new bodies from scratch. The world needs a new burst of such innovative thinking now to design the multilateral frameworks necessary to meet contemporary challenges. 

Priority should be given to frameworks that bring together U.S. allies in North America, Europe and the Indo-Pacific. NATO, the Quad, AUKUS, IP4 (Australia, Japan, New Zealand and South Korea), and the American–Japanese–Korean trilateral pact are promising steps in this direction.

Last week’s U.N. proceedings show that hope for multilateral cooperation remains alive. But to transform that spirit into effective governance, Washington will need to reimagine the U.N. and other global institutions to return them to their founding mission of promoting peace, prosperity and freedom.

Matthew Kroenig is vice president of the Atlantic Council’s Scowcroft Center, a professor at Georgetown, and a former Pentagon strategist. Dan Negrea is a former State Department special representative for commercial and business affairs and an Atlantic Council distinguished fellow. The authors write only in their personal capacity and not on behalf of any person or organization.

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HOUSTON — Pop the champagne.

Spray some more beer.

The young, surprising Detroit Tigers are celebrating once again.

Pinch-hitter Andy Ibañez smacked a bases-clearing, two-out double down the left-field line off Astros closer Josh Hader, and the Tigers swept the favored Astros with a 5-2 victory Wednesday in Game 2 of the American League wild-card series at Minute Maid Park.

The Tigers advance to the best-of-five ALDS vs. the No. 2 seed Cleveland Guardians. Game 1 is Saturday in Cleveland (1:08 p.m., TBS). The Tigers will host Game 3 next Wednesday, and, if necessary, Game 4 a day later.

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Pop the champagne.

Spray some more beer.

The young, surprising Tigers are celebrating once again.

Pop the champagne.

Spray some more beer.

The young, surprising Detroit Tigers are celebrating once again.

They stunned the Houston Astros on Wednesday afternoon, coming from behind with a 5-2 victory, winning the wild-card series and advancing to the ALDS, which will begin Saturday in Cleveland.

It’s the continuation of a two-month long magic carpet ride for this young team that just swept the Astros, a team that had advanced to the ALCS seven-straight seasons.

This time, everything turned in the top of the eighth inning.

The game was tied, 2-2, and the bases were loaded with two outs. Tigers manager A.J. Hinch turned to Ibañez to face Josh Hader, the Astros talented closer. Ibañez came out swinging, fouling off three pitches.

Then, Ibañez ripped a double into the left field corner, clearing the bases and giving the Tigers a stunning lead, 5-2.

Sean Guenther handled the end of the seventh and eighth.

And Will Vest got the save thanks, in part, to Parker Meadows, who made a leaping catch in the ninth.

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The debate between the candidates for vice president — GOP nominee Ohio Senator JD Vance and Minnesota Governor Tim Walz — was dominated by Vance, and all but a handful of hardened partisan pundits agree on that conclusion. 

Walz wobbled and panicked from the first question — which everyone in the world knew would be about Iran’s ballistic missile attack on Israel earlier in the day. Yet Walz still fumbled his response, and it got worse from there until the CBS moderators invoked the unwritten mercy rule for left-wing moderators watching the Democrat melt and tossed Walz some softballs on J6 at the debate’s close, by which time the internet was howling and laughing at the Minnesota governor. 

There were three important takeaways:  

First, Vance is a superb and calm debater and a reassuring figure on the national stage. 

Second, Walz is not, and he represents the one big decision Vice President Kamala Harris has had to make since President Joe Biden dropped out. It was a terrible decision. Imagine her Cabinet and White House staff if somehow, she wins.  

Third, legacy media is irretrievably broken and cannot be reclaimed from its lurch into rote leftism and extreme partisanship, or even pulled back to a minimum level of seriousness on big occasions.  

Do executives at these networks — ABC, CBS, CNN and NBC— not see what has happened? Americans don’t trust the news divisions at the legacy networks. It’s as if those divisions are run by a combination of fresh-from-campus-demonstration interns and hardened partisans from the Obama years.  

The CBS debate was not, however, as overtly biased against Vance as ABC’s earlier debate was against Trump, but it was still very, very biased against the center-right and conservative audience. Viewers saw the question set veer quickly from a world crisis and the border crisis to get to the left’s favorite issue of abortion.  

With the world tuning in only hours after Iran launched 180 ballistic missiles at Israel, the moderators Norah O’Donnell and Margaret Brennan did open with an obligatory round of questions on that crisis. But, after 10 minutes, they plowed on to a quick exchange on immigration and the Biden-Harris massive fail on the relief efforts in the aftermath of Hurricane Helene’s savaging of North Carolina, Tennessee, Georgia and Virginia in order to get to … abortion, which had been discussed at length in the ABC debate and about which there are zero mysteries.  

Three rounds of questions on abortion, really? And three rounds marked by the rote framing favored by the hard left? Predictable but still shocking.  

The debate ended in a morass of childcare questions and then the obligatory ‘Wasn’t January 6th terrible?’ questions.  

What a farce. Not one question on China’s vast military build-up and its threat against Taiwan and the Philippines. Not one question on the Chinese Communist Party spies shot through our country, including the office of New York’s current and past governor.  Not one question on the Russian invasion of Ukraine.  

Yes, there was a quick dash through the consequences of more than 10 million illegal immigrants flowing across the southern border under the Biden-Harris regime, but also a quick cut-off when Vance began what was an obviously embarrassing factcheck of the CBS factcheck on the ‘legal status’ of the Haitians in Springfield, Ohio. ‘We have a lot to get to,’ was the trigger for cutting off anything uncomfortable.  

Walz was asked about his lying about his trips to China — sort of. It was left hanging. A knuckleheaded answer for a knuckleheaded team of debate organizers. Chinese President Xi Jinping is a sort of Voldemort for the networks — never to be named — perhaps because ABC and CBS all have corporate ties to companies that must do business there?  

Look, whatever votes were moved by the debate moved toward the GOP because Vance hammered that the costs of everything from food to gas skyrocketed under Biden-Harris, gave a quick tutorial on why construction costs have soared and thus the price of houses, and repeatedly reminded the audience of Harris’s failure in her job as ‘border czar,’ while also stressing the need for more domestic energy production. Tim Walz provided comic relief.  

The loser wasn’t just Walz though. It was also CBS, which joined ABC in a legacy media hall of shame. When we get back to debates in four years, the good news is the ‘debate commission’ is already dead and that, by 2028, the idea of the big networks hosting debates unchecked by center-right moderators will be as well. The candidates will call on C-SPAN and find some fair moderators. Siri could have done a better job in our past two debates this year.  

What has to be dawning in the C Suites of networks — if they are at all self-aware — is that their product and their talent are awful, and their audiences have already left or will soon leave. Tuesday night was just the most recent example of why. 

Hugh Hewitt is host of ‘The Hugh Hewitt Show,’ heard weekday mornings 6am to 9am ET on the Salem Radio Network, and simulcast on Salem News Channel. Hugh wakes up America on over 400 affiliates nationwide, and on all the streaming platforms where SNC can be seen. He is a frequent guest on the Fox News Channel’s news roundtable hosted by Bret Baier weekdays at 6pm ET. A son of Ohio and a graduate of Harvard College and the University of Michigan Law School, Hewitt has been a Professor of Law at Chapman University’s Fowler School of Law since 1996 where he teaches Constitutional Law. Hewitt launched his eponymous radio show from Los Angeles in 1990.  Hewitt has frequently appeared on every major national news television network, hosted television shows for PBS and MSNBC, written for every major American paper, has authored a dozen books and moderated a score of Republican candidate debates, most recently the November 2023 Republican presidential debate in Miami and four Republican presidential debates in the 2015-16 cycle. Hewitt focuses his radio show and his column on the Constitution, national security, American politics and the Cleveland Browns and Guardians. Hewitt has interviewed tens of thousands of guests from Democrats Hillary Clinton and John Kerry to Republican Presidents George W. Bush and Donald Trump over his 40 years in broadcast, and this column previews the lead story that will drive his radio/ TV show today.

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The Royals scored just three runs in two games, got a pair of go-ahead singles from their superstar shortstop that hardly registered on the exit-velocity scale and feature nearly a dozen players who hadn’t tasted postseason baseball until this week. Yet Kansas City did just enough to suppress the Baltimore Orioles and sweep their American League wild-card series at Camden Yards.

They will face the top-seeded New York Yankees in the best-of-five series beginning Saturday. It is a matchup rich in history: New York beat Kansas City in the 1976, ’77 and ’78 AL Championship Series before George Brett and the Royals returned the favor in 1980.

That was a few baseball generations ago. In this one, Witt may reign supreme.

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He had a pair of hits Wednesday night, the latter a smash up the middle with runners at the corners and two outs in the sixth. It was speared by a diving Jordan Westburg, but the Baltimore second baseman could not get enough on the throw to retire Witt – the fastest runner in the major leagues.

‘The embodiment of our entire season is hustle and heart,’ Royals starter Seth Lugo said after the game. ‘Just really proud for him to do what he’s done all year.’

From there, it was all on the underrated Kansas City bullpen, which combined for 4 ⅔ innings of scoreless relief, with six strikeouts. Lucas Erceg capped the mastery with a scoreless ninth inning – and punched their ticket north to New York. 

The Orioles won 91 games this season but were swept in their opening round playoff series for the second consecutive year. Baltimore has lost 10 consecutive playoff games dating to 2014 – when the Royals swept them in the ALCS. 

Here’s how Wednesday’s game unfolded:

Royals take lead into eighth inning

Witt drove in the go-ahead run in the sixth inning for the second consecutive game as Kansas City took a 2-1 lead after seven innings of Game 2 of their wild-card series at Camden Yards.

After softly struck singles by Kyle Isbel and Michael Massey off Orioles lefty reliever Cionel Perez put runners at the corners, Yennier Cano replaced Perez. Witt Witt grounded a ball sharply up the middle that second baseman Jordan Westburg dived to snag. But he could not get enough on the throw to retire Witt – the fastest man in the major leagues – and the go-ahead run scored with two outs.

Kansas City relievers Angel Zerpa, John Schreiber and Sammy Long have combined for 2 2/3 innings of scoreless relief, with five strikeouts. 

Orioles tie it up vs. Royals : 1-1 through 5

Baltimore chased Kansas City Royals starter Seth Lugo in the fifth inning of Game 2, after Cedric Mullins hit a solo home run – halting a scoreless streak that stretched to last year at 18 innings – and the club loaded the bases with nobody out, the game tied, 1-1. 

But 44-homer man Anthony Santander popped up a 1-1 pitch from Lugo for one out, and then Colton Cowser swung at a ball from reliever Angel Zerpa that was so far inside, it struck him on the left wrist. What could have easily been a go-ahead hit-by-pitch instead became a strikeout, the second out of the inning. 

Adley Rutschman then grounded to shortstop for the final out, ending the golden opportunity. 

Lugo and Orioles starter Zach Eflin are both out of the game. Four innings of bullpen battle remains, as the Royals aim to end the series with a two-game sweep. 

– Gabe Lacques

Royals take first-inning lead in Baltimore

Leadoff batter Michael Massey grounded a double down the right field line and scored on a single by recently activated Vinnie Pasquantino to give Kansas City a 1-0 lead after one inning at Camden Yards. 

Starter Seth Lugo encountered a brief first-inning hiccup when he hit Jordan Westburg on the left hand with one out, but Lugo recovered to strike out Anthony Santander and Colton Cowser to end the inning. 

Orioles vs Royals starting lineups for Game 2

MLB wild card predictions

Who will move on? Here’s how the USA TODAY Sports MLB team sees this week playing out.

Kansas City Royals (86-76) at Baltimore Orioles (91-71)

Bob Nightengale: Orioles in 3
Gabe Lacques: Orioles in 2
Steve Gardner: Orioles in 3
Jesse Yomtov: Orioles in 2
Scott Boeck: Orioles in 3

Detroit Tigers (86-76) at Houston Astros (88-73)

Bob Nightengale: Astros in 3
Gabe Lacques: Tigers in 2
Steve Gardner Astros in 3
Jesse Yomtov: Astros in 3
Scott Boeck: Tigers in 3

New York Mets (89-73) at Milwaukee Brewers (93-69)

Bob Nightengale: Brewers in 2
Gabe Lacques: Brewers in 2
Steve Gardner: Brewers in 2
Jesse Yomtov: Mets in 3
Scott Boeck: Brewers in 2

Atlanta Braves (89-73) at San Diego Padres (93-69)

Bob Nightengale: Padres in 2
Gabe Lacques: Padres in 2
Steve Gardner: Padres in 2
Jesse Yomtov: Braves in 3
Scott Boeck: Padres in 2

Royals passed first postseason test in Game 1 win

And for 10 Kansas City Royals whose names would dot the box score, Game 1 of their American League wild-card series was their first glimpse of postseason baseball, a battle not only against the talented Orioles but also in regulating their own emotions, calming the heart when needed and letting it rip when the situation dictated.

The youngest team in Major League Baseball passed the test like the savviest of veterans.

– Gabe Lacques

MLB playoffs bracket

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The daunting task ahead of Mauricio Pochettino, at least in the early going, was evident in his first roster as coach of the U.S. men’s national team.

Of the 25 players Pochettino picked Wednesday for games against Panama and Mexico, 19 were also on the roster for the Copa America debacle. Only six of the 25 have made fewer than 10 appearances with the USMNT, and two of those are goalkeepers.

There might be other players out there who could be contributors to the USMNT in the 2026 World Cup, which the United States is co-hosting with Canada and Mexico. But having been introduced just three weeks ago, and with the World Cup less than two years away, time is at a premium for Pochettino.

So instead of hopscotching the globe in search of new wunderkinds, Pochettino watched as many games of current players as he could remotely. He sought advice and information through Zoom sessions and phone calls. He leaned heavily on the intel from the existing national team staff.

“That is why you are going to see a very similar roster from the last camp,” Pochettino said.

That might disappoint fans hoping Pochettino would send a message with a roster shakeup. But the USMNT’s problem, Pochettino insists, is not a lack of talent.

This is arguably the golden generation for the USMNT, with many of its key contributors not only playing in Europe but having success. It’d be hard to find someone playing better in Serie A right now than Christian Pulisic, who has five goals and two assists in AC Milan’s first eight games. Weston McKennie went from being a goner at Juventus to a must-have in the lineup, scoring in Juve’s Champions League opener. Antonee Robinson is an anchor on the backline at Fulham, which has allowed five goals in six matches, tied for second-fewest in the Premier League.  

Ricardo Pepi got a rare start for the Dutch league’s PSV last weekend and responded with two goals. In England’s Championship, one step below the Premier League, Josh Sargent has three goals and three assists at Norwich City while Brenden Aaronsen has two goals and an assist at Leeds.

But the lack of success at the World Cup — the USMNT hasn’t gotten beyond the round of 16 in more than 20 years — coupled with a recent string of poor results means something isn’t working. Figuring that out is just as important, maybe even more so, than unearthing new talent.

“It’s so important … to set principles and to be ready when the players arrive this week,” Pochettino said.

“What we want to feel for them is the commitment, their personality, their character, their capacity to adapt to a new era, a new way to approach the games. That is going to be the key,” he added. “The capacity to adapt, thinking (first of) the collective and to give everything to try to be better.”

This doesn’t mean players called in for these first games — the USMNT plays Panama in Austin, Texas, Oct. 12 and then travels to Mexico to face El Tri on Oct. 15 — can be complacent. This is Pochettino’s starting point and his player pool, as well as how he uses it, could look vastly different by the summer of 2026.

Take the USMNT goalkeepers. Pochettino picked Matt Turner, the USMNT’s No. 1 ‘keeper since the World Cup in 2022, and longtime backup Ethan Horvath. He also called in Patrick Schulte, who has 10 clean sheets with the Columbus Crew and is considered one of the best young goalkeepers in Major League Soccer.

But in perhaps the biggest surprise of all on the roster, Pochettino recalled Zack Steffen, the USMNT’s former No. 1 goalkeeper who lost his starting job and then a spot on the 2022 World Cup squad amid injuries, lack of playing time and some very visible blunders.

Steffen has not played for the USMNT since a World Cup qualifier in March 2022. But he’s a starter in MLS, and Pochettino signaled that playing time will be a factor in his choice for goalkeeper.

“He deserves the opportunity to be with us,” Pochettino said of Steffen. “This will be a good opportunity to see him and analyze.”

The same goes for everyone on this roster. With the World Cup fast approaching, Pochettino doesn’t have time to make change for change’s sake. He’s starting with what he’s already got, and will go from there.

The USMNT roster

GOALKEEPERS: Ethan Horvath (Cardiff City), Patrick Schulte (Columbus Crew), Zack Steffen (Colorado Rapids), Matt Turner (Crystal Palace)

DEFENDERS: Marlon Fossey (Standard Liege), Kristoffer Lund (Palermo), Mark McKenzie (Toulouse), Tim Ream (Charlotte FC), Antonee Robinson (Fulham), Miles Robinson (FC Cincinnati), Joe Scally (Borussia Monchengladbach), Auston Trusty (Celtic) 

MIDFIELDERS: Brenden Aaronson (Leeds United), Gianluca Busio (Venezia), Johnny Cardoso (Real Betis), Weston McKennie (Juventus), Aidan Morris (Middlesbrough), Yunus Musah (AC Milan), Malik Tillman (PSV Eindhoven)

FORWARDS: Folarin Balogun (Monaco), Ricardo Pepi (PSV Eindhoven), Christian Pulisic (AC Milan), Josh Sargent (Norwich City), Timothy Weah (Juventus), Haji Wright (Coventry City)

Follow USA TODAY Sports columnist Nancy Armour on social media @nrarmour.

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The news that Towns would be traded from the Minnesota Timberwolves to the New York Knicks in exchange for Julius Randle, Donte DiVincenzo and a first-round pick broke last week. The blockbuster trade was officially announced by the teams on Wednesday, prompting a farewell letter from Towns to the state where he played for nine seasons.

‘Nine years ago, I arrived in Minnesota as a young man with a dream. Little did I know that this place would become my home, and its people would become my family,’ Towns wrote. ‘Your love, support, and unwavering loyalty have fueled my journey and inspired me to be the best player I could be. Thank you to my teammates, coaches, and the entire Timberwolves organization for the countless opportunities and experiences. I’ll cherish the friendships I’ve made and the battles we’ve fought together.’

Towns’ message was accompanied by a video that highlighted his accomplishments in Minnesota, from being drafted out of Kentucky by the Timberwolves with the No. 1 overall pick of the 2015 NBA draft, to winning Rookie of the Year in 2016 and becoming the first center to win the 3-point contest at the 2022 NBA All-Star Game.

‘To the incredible fans, your support has meant the world to me. It gave me strength on and off the court. I’ll never forget it,’ Towns wrote. ‘You’ll always hold a special place in my heart. Thank you for everything.’

All things Knicks: Latest New York Knicks news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

The feeling is mutual. The Timberwolves shared several graphics across social media celebrating Towns.

‘Thank you for everything, 32,’ the Timberwolves wrote on X. ‘You’ll always be a part of the Wolves family.’

Towns’ trade comes on the heels of the Timberwolves’ first Western Conference finals appearance in 20 years. They lost the series to the Dallas Mavericks in five games. In 573 regular-season games with the Timberwolves, Towns averaged 22.9 points, 10.8 rebounds and 1.3 blocks and earned four All-Star nods (2018, 2019, 2022, 2024) and two All-NBA Third Team selections (2018, 2022).

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Before becoming the head coach of the Las Vegas Aces in 2022, Hammon served as an assistant coach to Gregg Popovich on the San Antonio Spurs from 2014-21. With the two-time defending champion Aces trailing the New York Liberty 0-2 in the WNBA playoffs semifinal matchup, Hammon is drawing parallels between the Spurs and Liberty.

‘You think about the Spurs — I do all the time — with the Miami Heat. (The Spurs) lose an absolute heartbreaker in Miami on basic things: offensive rebounds and kick-out three,’ Hammon said, referring to the Spurs’ 95-88 loss to the Heat in Game 7 of the 2013 NBA Finals. ‘(The Spurs) should have walked away with a title that year. They lost it that year. The next year they came back with so much drive, so much discipline, so much focus that there was no way someone was beating them in 2014.’

The New York Liberty are the Spurs in this scenario. The Aces narrowly defeated the Liberty 70-69 in Game 4 of the 2023 WNBA Finals in New York last year to clinch the series 3-1 and win their second consecutive WNBA championship.

That was the last time the Aces defeated the Liberty. New York swept the Aces this year, winning all three of their matchups, including one in New York and two on the road in Las Vegas. And so far, the Liberty have taken a 2-0 lead on the Aces as the best-of-five semifinal series shifts to Las Vegas for Game 5 on Friday.

‘(The Spurs) took a huge loss (in 2013). The Liberty took a huge loss last year and I liken it to that a little bit,’ Hammon said. ‘(The Spurs) had it, they felt like they had it and we walked away with it. I did think we were the better team. … I’m sure they feel like something was stolen a little bit.’

Hammon added: ‘At the end of the day in two years, we’ve won (in New York) one time … Game 4. Other than that, they’ve kicked our (expletive).’

Hammon called the Liberty the best team in the league this year and said her team’s latest struggles highlight the difficulties of winning three titles in a row.

‘We haven’t had the edge all year. We found it the last month. We’ve gained a lot of ground, but the feel was different from the jump. This is why three-peating is hard,’ Hammon said. ‘The whole league hasn’t been pissed off the past eight months and my players are in commercials and freaking celebrities and you get distracted. That’s why it’s hard, because human nature’s distracting.’

The Aces will look to keep their three-peat dreams alive on Friday in Game 5.

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Here’s the next question now that we know Deion Sanders passes muster. Can he sustain success at Colorado? Does he even have that desire?
Deion Sanders’ recruiting class ranks last in the Big 12. Is that evidence that he’ll permanently live in the portal, or a sign that he’s got one foot out the door.
Ole Miss football schedule not as much of an issue as its offensive line.

The stars whom Sanders packed up and brought with him from Jackson State to Colorado proved they can excel anywhere. Travis Hunter and Shedeur Sanders helped Coach Prime answer the question of whether he can win at this level.

He can, and he has.

“I’m so excited,” Sanders said Saturday after his team’s 48-21 victory over Central Florida that put Colorado in a tie atop the Big 12 standings. “You have no idea.”

So, here’s the next question now that we know Sanders passes muster.

Can he sustain success at Colorado? Does he even have that desire?

Sanders operates as if he plans to live out of his suitcase rather than unpack and set down roots.

Yes, I know he said he plans to coach Colorado for at least 10 seasons and that he doesn’t desire an NFL job. He also once said God called him to coach Jackson State, and he pledged on “60 Minutes” to “change the perspective of HBCU football.” He did that, briefly, until someone else called. Colorado was on the line. He gathered his luggage and jetted off.

And I don’t blame Sanders a bit for accepting a better job and a bigger paycheck, but there’s what you say, and there’s what you do.

And Sanders’ actions make him a flight risk.

Check out Colorado’s recruiting class. It ranks dead last in the Big 12 in the 247Sports Composite. Only eight prospects are committed to the class. He’s recruiting (or not recruiting, rather) like a guy who plans to vamoose.

Because, Sanders has plenty to sell, if he had the appetite for recruiting. He’s 8-9 at Colorado, including 4-1 this season.

If you don’t think that’s applaudable, you’ve forgotten the rubbish bin this program lived in before Sanders’ arrival. Colorado joined Northwestern as the nation’s worst Bowl Subdivisions programs in 2022. Colorado hired Sanders to spice things up. Has he ever.

Which makes Colorado’s stalled recruiting all the more noteworthy. Sanders shouldn’t struggle selling his vision to high school prospects.

Sanders lived out of the transfer portal the past two years. His strategy fared better than many expected it would.

A star quarterback like Shedeur who can pass and run remains a great equalizer. He puts a spiffy coat of varnish on this team.

And, to Prime’s credit, he improved the defense.

But, how long can he sustain this?

Shedeur Sanders and Hunter will head to the NFL after this season. Transfers of their ability are more the exception than the rule. Shilo Sanders, another of Prime’s sons, is a sixth-year senior safety. What’s stopping Prime from following his sons out the door?

The portal provides valuable tire patches for a program stranded on the shoulder, and coaches who ignore transfers live foolishly. But, building a program almost exclusively out of the portal becomes a highwire act. You can’t miss a step.

Signing and developing elite linemen remains the engine behind championship programs. Prime knows this. If there’s one thing he isn’t, it’s dumb.

I don’t think it’s that Sanders can’t recruit. Mostly, I think he just doesn’t want to, because why recruit to a place where you don’t plan to be?

If Sanders hears another calling after this season, Colorado will have received the full Prime experience.

Sanders magnetized eyeballs to a program that starved for attention. His presence helped ensure Colorado didn’t get left behind in realignment. And it’s no coincidence Colorado’s admissions applications surged after his first season. He put the university in the spotlight, and he made Colorado football fun, and college students like having fun.

And when he packs his luggage and listens for a voice from on high, Colorado would do well to go hire the next Sanders, except that won’t be possible, because Coach Prime can’t be duplicated.

Here’s what else is brewing in this “Topp Rope” view of college football:

Did Ole Miss get foiled by cupcake schedule?

It’s easy to rip Mississippi’s soft schedule throughout the first four weeks and use that to explain the Rebels’ 20-17 upset loss to Kentucky, but that cupcake feast didn’t cause this loss.

Ohio State opened the season with a few joke foes before crushing Michigan State in its first conference game.

The Rebels opening the season against Furman did not form their chief issue. Rather, Lane Kiffin’s “Portal King” strategy fell short in offensive line development.

Kentucky pushed around Ole Miss. If the Rebels had faced tougher opponents earlier in the season, they might have two losses by now, not one.

Emails of the week

Gary writes: You hit it right the other day when you said Hugh Freeze was no longer a QB whisperer. In the Oklahoma game, he should have yelled to Payton Thorne, run the ball, and we’ll punt. Thorne never should have thrown the ball for the pick-six, but there’s where coaching comes into play. You, as a coach, take charge, and run the ball. 

My response: Agreed. Auburn should’ve run the ball.

Here’s the scenario you referenced: Auburn led 21-16 with less than five minutes remaining and faced third-and-4 from Oklahoma’s 43-yard line. Call a run play, and one of three things happen. You gain a first down, you set up fourth-and-short and go for it, or you get stuffed and punt on fourth-and-medium to pin Oklahoma deep. The one thing that wouldn’t happen: A turnover-prone quarterback throws a pick-six.

But, hey, Freeze says he dialed up one of his best game plans ever in that loss. Phew. If that’s Freeze’s best game plan, then Auburn needs a new coach.

Burt writes: Did we watch the same game? Alabama roared to a large halftime lead. Georgia fought back and took the lead late in the game as the Alabama offense completely shut down. Alabama was lucky to hit on a deep ball to win the game. The Alabama quarterback was completely ineffective in the second half except for one play.

My response: We watched the same game, but you must have missed Jalen Milroe torching Georgia for 491 total yards. If Milroe hadn’t been so ‘ineffective,’ as you say, he might have gone for 800 yards.

Three and out

1. If Missouri wins Saturday at Texas A&M, I’ll take the Tigers seriously as a playoff contender, while Google searches spike for Eliah Drinkwitz in Gainesville, Florida. He’s 15-2 the past two seasons at Missouri, and he even wears a visor like Steve Spurrier.

2. I can hear it now: Come early December, if Georgia is 9-3 with losses to Alabama, Texas and Tennessee, SEC Commissioner Greg Sankey will quote “Sesame Street” again.

3. If you’re wondering why Chip Kelly left his UCLA coaching gig to become Ohio State’s offensive coordinator, he recently offered this whiff of insight into the perks of being an assistant: “You can go to the bathroom between series if you have to.” For further explanation, see UCLA’s 1-3 record this season. Kelly stepped down the ladder in exchange for leaving a program that’s in the toilet.

Blake Toppmeyer is the USA TODAY Network’s national college football columnist. Email him at BToppmeyer@gannett.com and follow him on Twitter @btoppmeyer.

The ‘Topp Rope’ is his football column published throughout the USA TODAY Network.

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The Florida Panthers won the 2024 Stanley Cup one year after falling short in the 2023 Final, the first team to do that since the 2008 and 2009 Pittsburgh Penguins.

Can the Edmonton Oilers follow suit?

USA TODAY’s Mike Brehm and Jace Evans and For The Win’s Mary Clarke think highly of Edmonton, which lost in seven games in the final. Two have the Oilers winning the Stanley Cup and all three have them winning the Pacific Division and Connor McDavid winning the Hart Trophy as MVP to his team.

There’s also full agreement on rookie of the year and the Metropolitan Division winner.

Their 2024-25 NHL season predictions:

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The NFL MVP race is heating up after the first month of the season, and there’s at least two standout candidates at the top of our rankings.

Detroit Lions quarterback Jared Goff had an MVP performance in Week 4, setting an NFL record by completing all 18 of his passes to fuel six touchdown drives in a 42-29 win over the Seattle Seahawks.

But it wasn’t enough to crack our MVP list just yet.

The two starting quarterbacks at the top of our list have led their teams to surprising starts and even outplayed big-name candidates.

They hold the top spots in our MVP rankings after Week 4:

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

5. Baltimore Ravens QB Lamar Jackson, stock up

Jackson scored a touchdown, and threw two more in the 35-10 win over the Buffalo Bills. He was 13 of 18 for 156 yards, and rushed for 54 yards on ‘Sunday Night Football,’ so not earth-shattering by any means. His running back Derrick Henry, who had 199 rushing yards in the win, certainly set the pace.

It may not be the stats we’re used to seeing from the reigning, two-time MVP, but leading the Ravens to a blowout win over the Bills on prime time is the perfect recipe to get noticed. It also sets the stage to see if Jackson can stay in the MVP discussion this season.

4. Kansas City Chiefs QB Patrick Mahomes, stock even

Mahomes has relied on his defense tremendously during the first month of the season, including Sunday’s 17-10 win over the Los Angeles Chargers, who were held scoreless after the first quarter.

Mahomes executed two touchdown drives to secure the win, including a 54-yard score to rookie Xavier Worthy. He also reignited his connection with star tight end Travis Kelce, who had seven catches for 89 yards.

But the right knee injury to leading receiver Rashee Rice will make a difference in how much Mahomes must carry the offense if the Chiefs plan to three-peat this season.

3. Buffalo Bills QB Josh Allen, stock down

Allen was our top pick for MVP in Week 3, after he torched the Arizona Cardinals, Miami Dolphins and Jacksonville Jaguars for 14 touchdowns. But the Bills could only muster one touchdown drive against the Baltimore Ravens last week. Allen was 16 of 29 for 180 yards, and got roughed up in the process after a strip sack in Baltimore.

More important, the Bills’ playmakers need to continue maturing and show their reliability if Buffalo is going to make a deep playoff run this season. Allen and the Bills must rebound quickly with a matchup on the road against C.J. Stroud and the Houston Texans in Week 5.

2. Washington Commanders QB Jayden Daniels, stock up

Daniels’ stock saw the highest rise on this list and, with a look at his stats, you can argue he’s even deserving of the top spot. But we’ll keep him at No. 2 for the time being.

Daniels has led the Commanders on more scoring drives (23) than he’s thrown incompletions (19). He’s scored more touchdowns than the likes of Ja’Marr Chase, Breece Hall, Tyreek Hill and CeeDee Lamb in the first month of the season.

Daniels leads the NFL with an 82.1 completion percentage, is fifth with a 73.4 QBR and has scored four of the team’s league-leading 10 rushing touchdowns.

The Commanders are third in the NFL with 30.3 points per game, and Daniels is showing no signs of slowing down.

1. Minnesota Vikings QB Sam Darnold, stock up

Sam Darnold is the NFL’s leader with 11 touchdown passes, a 118.9 passer rating and a 4-0 record as the Vikings new starter after the first month of the season.

After victories over preseason-Super Bowl contenders like the San Francisco 49ers and Texans, Darnold boosted his early MVP case again by leading the Vikings to a crucial, NFC North win over the Green Bay Packers last week.

Darnold led four touchdown drives in the first half, and the vaunted Vikings defense withstood a 22-point fourth quarter by the Packers to secure the win.

The Vikings are second behind the Bills and New Orleans Saints with 14 total touchdowns scored this season thanks to Darnold, who could be a lock for at least NFL Comeback Player of the Year if he doesn’t wind up with the MVP this season.

It’s an incredible turnaround for Darnold, the former No. 3 pick in the 2018 NFL draft who was casted away by the New York Jets, made stops with the Carolina Panthers and 49ers, before finding a home in Minnesota this season.

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