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Here, at Camden Yards, 24-year-old Bobby Witt Jr. realizes his good fortune.

The Kansas City Royals shortstop won his first batting title this year, will finish in the top three or four of American League MVP voting and, on top of that, will lead his team into the best-of-three wild card series against the Baltimore Orioles.

He calls this an “unbelievable opportunity” and knows to cherish it because “you never know when you’re going to get that opportunity again” and heck, getting a shot at the World Series tournament in just your third season is a pretty fortunate turn of events.

Yet Witt’s talent is so transcendent, his skills so diverse, his ceiling so unrealized that maybe we’re going about this the wrong way.

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

Perhaps we’re the fortunate ones to witness his arrival.  

“You get to be around players like that who are head and shoulders more talented than everyone else,” says Royals outfielder Robbie Grossman, a 12-year major league veteran, “but he just plays the game at a different speed than everyone else. It reminds me a lot of when (Mike) Trout came up and the impact he made on games. But he’s playing shortstop and is involved in a lot more plays.

“It’s a special talent, a special human. One of those guys you’ll look back at the end of your career and think, ‘Wow, I got to play with that guy.’”

The measurables are impressive enough. Witt batted .332 to lead the major leagues in hitting, this in an era where the league average of .243 was tied for the worst mark in nearly 60 years. He’s already a 30-30 man, his 32 homers and 31 steals putting him in that long vaunted power-speed combo club.

Don’t think it’s all due to liberalized stolen-base rules, though: Witt’s sprint speed of 30.5 feet per second, as measured by Statcast, is the fastest in baseball, nearly a half-second faster than No. 2, and his 150 “bolts” – or runs at least 30 feet per second – are nearly 50 more than the next guy.

His outsize offensive contributions – he drove in a team-best 109 runs, fourth in the AL – take on greater meaning on these pitching-centric Royals. With first baseman Vinnie Pasquantino out with a hand injury – he’s close to a return, perhaps in this series – the Royals lineup revolves almost entirely around Witt and veteran catcher Salvador Perez.

Yet it has been enough. The Royals won 85 games to ease into the playoffs and Witt says, for all his accomplishments, that the win total probably gives him utmost gratification, with the throughline from production to prosperity.

Tangibles and the immeasurable, all equally valuable to the Royals.

“Everything about that kid, man: I always say that he’s the best player I’ve played with,” says Perez, the nine-time All-Star in his 13th major league season. “People see it on the field every day but I get to see that kid in the clubhouse, the way he prepares himself.

“It’s amazing. The way he runs, the way he hits, he plays hard. Even if he hits it back to the pitcher, he runs hard.”

‘Just scratching the surface’

He does seem to make it look easy, and sound easy. The son of longtime major league pitcher Bobby Witt, the younger Witt has been on this track for more than a decade. He was chosen No. 2 overall in the 2019 draft by the Royals and gets an up-close view this week of fate’s fickle hand.

Witt, then a Dallas-area prep star, and Oregon State catcher Adley Rutschman were the consensus 1-2 in that draft. The Orioles did all right: They chose Rutschman No. 1 – he’s now a two-time All-Star – and backed that up by taking All-Star shortstop Gunnar Henderson in the second round.

“It’s been pretty special just to see what he’s done, and all the stuff for Baltimore he’s done,” Witt says of Rutschman. “It’s pretty crazy just to see that 1-2 and now we’re matching up in the postseason.

“It’s special and it’s an honor.”

Witt and Henderson, though, are more closely joined at the hip. They were teammates on many occasions in the youth baseball circuit and part of what may someday be viewed as an epic shortstop draft class that also includes Anthony Volpe, Bryson Stott and CJ Abrams.

They spent considerable time together at their first All-Star Game, both participating in the Home Run Derby.

“He seems like he’s progressed each and every year he’s played and only getting better,” says Henderson, who had his own fantastic year, batting .281 with an .893 OPS, hitting 37 homers and stealing 21 bases. “It’s really fun to watch and really fun to follow him.”

Not unlike Ohtani, Witt seems to have some preternatural control over his output. He stole 49 bases in 2023, yet only batted .276. This year he upped his average to the very top of the major leagues, even as his steals total fell.

His strikeouts have gone down in all three seasons, from 135 to 121 to 106. The progression is a little scary.

“I want to continue doing that and I believe I’ll keep doing that,” says Witt. “Just from more experience, you get better, just from being around the game, you get better, and just from knowing yourself, you get better.

“Once you get into a good routine, you just gotta be able to control what you can control. Just go out there and play the game I love, and that takes care of a lot of worry, a lot of doubts.”

At 6-1, 200 pounds and nine months shy of his 25th birthday, Witt is far from a finished product. He’s only just beginning a seven-year, $148.7 million contract that will take him through 2030 and potentially 2037 in Kansas City, thanks to various club and player options.

Surely, the Royals will go through multiple peaks and valleys in that period. Maybe Witt will be an annual October guest in your living room. Perhaps a Troutian drought between playoff berths is looming.

Yet something else entirely is unfolding.

“What a season. What a couple seasons,” says Grossman. “And he’s only going to get better. He hasn’t grown into it all yet. He’s 23, 24 years old. If the league isn’t on notice yet, wait ‘til he’s 27, 28 years old.

“He’s just scratching the surface on what he can do, which is crazy to say.”

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This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The ‘significant’ role the U.S. played in helping Israel fend off Iran’s aerial assault on Tuesday came just hours after Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin assured Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant that the U.S. had ‘increased force readiness’ and stood ready.

‘This is a significant escalation by Iran,’ White House National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan told reporters Tuesday. ‘It is equally significant that we were able to step up with Israel and create a situation in which no one was killed in this attack in Israel.’

The comments were made following massive missile strike fired by Iran in which some 180 missiles were fired at Israel.

According to Iranian state media, the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) said the attack was in retaliation for the Friday assassination of Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah, who was killed alongside IRGC commander and military advisor Brig. Gen. Abbas Nilforushan, as well as Ismail Haniyeh, the leader of Hamas who was killed in July during a visit to Tehran.

‘In response to the martyrdom of Ismail Haniyeh, Seyyed Hassan Nasrallah and Martyr Nilfroshan, we targeted the heart of the occupied territories,’ the IRGC said in a statement reported by Iranian media. ‘If the Zionist regime reacts to Iran’s operations, it will face crushing attacks.’

Following the attacks, Israel closed its airspace, residents in Tel Aviv and Jerusalem were ordered to shelter in place and the Israeli security cabinet said it would convene Tuesday night in a bunker in Jerusalem, according to Israeli news outlet the Jerusalem Post.

It remains unclear if Iranian missiles had made contact with any targets, though the Israeli Defense Force (IDF) told Fox News Digital that no casualties were yet known.

In a statement to Fox News, a U.S. defense official said, ‘[In] accordance with our ironclad commitment to Israel’s security, U.S. forces in the region are currently defending against Iranian-launched missiles targeting Israel. 

‘Our forces remain postured to provide additional defensive support and to protect U.S. forces operating in the region,’ the official added.

Earlier on Tuesday, the Pentagon said in a readout regarding the second call Austin has held with Gallant in the last 24 hours, that the secretary ‘made it clear that the United States is well-postured to defend U.S. personnel, allies, and partners in the face of threats from Iran and Iran-backed terrorist organizations and is determined to prevent any actor from exploiting tensions or expanding the conflict in the region.’

Three U.S. guided-missile destroyers have been positioned off the eastern Mediterranean to help defend Israel, including the USS Arleigh Burke, USS Bulkeley and USS Cole — which reportedly played a closely coordinated role in defending against the Iranian attack on Tuesday.

‘Today, Iran launched nearly 200 ballistic missiles towards targets in Israel. The United States military coordinated closely with the Israeli Defense Forces to help defend Israel against this attack,’ Sullivan said.  ‘U.S. naval destroyers joined Israeli Air Defense units in firing interceptors to shoot down inbound missiles.’

In April, during the last major attack that Iran levied at Israel when it fired more than 300 drones and missiles, the USS Arleigh Burke and the USS Carney shot down more than 81 attack drones and at least six ballistic missiles using guided-missile destroyers.

The ballistic missiles were shot down using the SM-3 ballistic missile interceptors from the ships that were also positioned in the eastern Mediterranean at the time. The SM-3 has a range of up to 1,550 miles.

Israel has several of its own defense systems outside of what its offshore allies provide, including the infamous Iron Dome which is designed to intercept short-range rockets and artillery shells fired from distances of two to 43 miles away.

But it also has systems that are capable of stopping missiles fired from greater distances, like its Arrow Missile Defense System, which can intercept missiles fired from up to 1,500 miles away and above the earth’s atmosphere. 

The air defense system known as David’s Sling is also designed to intercept enemy planes, drones, tactical ballistic missiles, medium to long-range rockets and cruise missiles fired at a range of 25 to 190 miles away. 

IDF spokesman Rear Adm. Daniel Hagari said that it was believed the Iranian strikes had stopped, and told Israelis it was safe to leave their shelters.

‘During the defense, we carried out quite a few interceptions. There are some impacts in the center and areas in the south of the country,’ Hagari said Tuesday night local time. ‘At this stage we are still carrying out an assessment [of the attack], but we are unaware of casualties.’

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

The 12 teams in the 2024 MLB postseason are all settled after the Atlanta Braves and New York Mets each clinched spots by splitting the doubleheader they needed Monday to sort out the playoff race in the National League.

Now come the games baseball fans have been waiting to see.

All four best-of-three wild card series begin Tuesday, starting with Game 1 between the Houston Astros and Detroit Tigers in the American League, and every decision and call will be magnified. That goes for the umpires, too.

Though replay was introduced to the game several years ago, it still very much matters to players, managers and fans alike who’s serving as a crew chief for a postseason series, and especially who’s calling balls and strikes for a particular game. Ahead of the start of the wild card round Tuesday, MLB announced the umpires working each series and where they’ll be positioned.

Here’s a rundown of what umpires to expect working games when the 2024 MLB postseason begins Tuesday, what the schedule looks like, and what channel to watch all the action:

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

2024 MLB wild card series umpire schedule

Note: Umpires rotate from right field to left and then clockwise around the bases starting at third during an MLB postseason series, so the ump at second base for the opener will be behind the plate for a potential Game 3 in the wild card round.

Detroit Tigers at Houston Astros

Alfonso Marquez (crew chief): Third base for Game 1
Tony Randazzo: Home plate for Game 1
Jordan Baker: First base for Game 1; Home plate for Game 2
Will Little: Second base for Game 1; Home plate for Game 3
Jeremie Rehak: Left field for Game 1
Junior Valentine: Right field for Game 1

Kansas City Royals at Baltimore Orioles

Bill Miller (crew chief): Third base for Game 1
Ryan Additon: Home plate for Game 1
Ben May: First base for Game 1; Home plate for Game 2
Nic Lentz: Second base for Game 1; Home plate for Game 3
David Rackley: Left field for Game 1
Malachi Moore: Right field for Game 1

New York Mets at Milwaukee Brewers

Alan Porter (crew chief): Third base for Game 1
Alex Tosi: Home plate for Game 1
Chris Segal: First base for Game 1; Home plate for Game 2
Vic Carapazza: Second base for Game 1; Home plate for Game 3
Mike Estabrook: Left field for Game 1
Brennan Miller: Right field for Game 1

Atlanta Braves at San Diego Padres

Dan Iassogna (crew chief): Third base for Game 1
Nestor Ceja: Home plate for Game 1
Phil Cuzzi: First base for Game 1; Home plate for Game 2
Jansen Visconti: Second base for Game 1; Home plate for Game 3
Mark Wegner: Left field for Game 1
Erich Bacchus: Right field for Game 1

2024 MLB postseason schedule

Wild Card Series (Best-of-3):

TUESDAY, OCT. 1

Game 1: Tigers at Astros | 2:32 p.m. ET | ABC
Game 1: Royals at Orioles | 4:08 p.m. ET | ESPN2
Game 1: Mets at Brewers | 5:32 p.m. ET | ESPN
Game 1: Braves at Padres | 8:38 p.m. ET | ESPN

WEDNESDAY, OCT. 2:

Game 2: Tigers at Astros | 2:32 p.m. ET | ABC
Game 2: Royals at Orioles | 4:38 p.m. ET | ESPN
Game 2: Mets at Brewers | 7:38 p.m. ET | ESPN
Game 2: Braves at Padres | 8:38 p.m. ET | ESPN2

THURSDAY, OCT. 3 (if necessary)

Game 3: Tigers at Astros | 2:32 p.m. ET | ABC
Game 3: Royals at Orioles | 4:08 p.m. ET | ESPN
Game 3: Braves at Padres | 7:08 p.m. ET |ESPN
Game 3: Mets at Brewers | 8:38 p.m. ET | ESPN2

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Live coverage begins today at 8 p.m. ET for the .

The first rule of deciding who won a major political debate is that nobody wins a major political debate. There is no final score as the buzzer sounds, no final wink to be tiddled, it is a purely subjective matter. And that will be true of the vice-presidential debate between Republican nominee JD Vance and Democratic nominee Tim Walz.

That having been said, I’ve recently adopted a method of scoring debates from the world of pugilistics, that I think actually gives a pretty decent assessment of what most American voters see. 

My advice in picking a winner is to borrow the scoring system of a boxing match. The basic rules are relatively simple. In each round the boxer who wins the 3 minutes gets 10 points, the loser gets 9, unless there is a knockdown or it is overwhelming, in which case the round is scored 10-8. A tie is 10-10.

Obviously, a knockout ends the fight.

I first tried this approach last month with the Trump vs. Harris debate. And I wound up with Trump winning 157 to 150. It wasn’t the only reason I thought and wrote that night that Trump won the debate, despite overwhelming media insistence that girl boss Kamala had kicked ass. But it was part of it. 

And with polling showing no significant bump for Harris since their face-off and the fact that we’ve even seen some Trump swing state surge since their debate, my ostentatious declaration of a Trump victory looks a little less crazy today.  

The legacy news media, who wanted any excuse to hand Harris a W anyway, viewed the tête-à-tête as a kind of Lifetime movie in which Harris had finally spoken truth to power, but I find in most of America that narrative doesn’t have a whole lot of purchase. The voters want answers.

That’s where boxing scoring comes in. If openings, closings, and each question, are the ’rounds’ of the debate, you wind up with about 15. See what I’m saying? The incremental 10-9 or 10-8 scores of each, mirror the nuance of how swayable voters watch the event.

The basic philosophy behind boxing scoring is that the primary job is to survive the round, so if you manage that, you get an automatic 8 points, winning the round, and can only bump that up by at most 2. 

One could argue there is a fundamental unfairness here, that if I am 40 percent better at landing punches in a round than my opponent, I only get a 10 percent point advantage in scoring, but that is also the beauty of the system. Fights aren’t just about math.

This actually tracks very well with how political debates work. 

The audience, which is to say the voters, do tend to see each question or issue as one round, and if Walz can get a 10-8 on abortion, or Vance can on the border, that goes a long way towards the kind of 7 point win I gave Trump over Harris. 

Another way to think of this is that 90 percent of Americans likely already know who they are voting for, only 10 percent can be swayed, and boxing’s unique scoring system almost perfectly corresponds to this. 

Eighty to 90 percent we are just scoring as a wash.

There is, of course, the chance of a knockout, but these days, that chance seems remote. Back when Reagan said ‘There you go again,’ or Obama, in retrospect wrongly, told Romney the 1980s wanted their foreign policy back over fears regarding Russia, the possibility of something near consensus on the question existed.

Those days are no longer with us, if they aren’t over forever.

Nobody really wins a debate, but we can still score them, we can still pay close attention to who is and isn’t actually answering the questions, and that has a lot of value. 

So give a shot, grab a pad and paper, if you still have those, and just jot down your score for each question, 10-10, 10-9 or 10-8. Like a Ouija board your political leanings might push the pen a bit, but even so, you might be surprised by the results.

As Mike Tyson once put it, everyone has a plan until they get punched in the face. Let’s keep a close eye on the flying rhetorical hands of Tim Walz and JD Vance.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

In this video from StockCharts TV, Julius takes a detailed look at the monthly charts for all US sectors and the S&P 500. With many sectors breaking to new highs, he highlights how the long-term uptrend for the S&P 500 remains intact. Julius also examines the monthly timeframe RRG, showcasing how various sectors are performing relative to one another. All sectors are “strong,” but some sectors are “more strong” than others.

This video was originally published on October 1, 2024. Click anywhere on the icon above to view on our dedicated page for Julius.

Past episodes of Julius’ shows can be found here.

#StayAlert, -Julius

There was always going to be significant changes needed to the College Football Playoff bracket this week with Georgia and Alabama facing off in the final Saturday of September.

What wasn’t expected was a surprising loss by Utah that knocked the Utes completely out of the playoff field. Granted, Utah is still missing quarterback Cam Rising, and it’s possible his return gets them back to the favorite position in the Big 12. But with that uncertainty lingering, Kansas State – fresh off its defeat of Oklahoma State – goes from out of the field into a first-round bye as conference championship. Iowa State still looms behind the Wildcats. Cyclones have their toughest games in November and potentially move up.

AWARD TIME: The best and worst of the first month in college football

BRACKET OUTLOOK: Alabama now top seed in playoff after big win

The Group of Five representative also gets a revision. UNLV dominated Fresno State, showing no ill effects of losing its quarterback to an NIL dispute. The Rebels play Boise State in Week 9 that could be the first of two games between the Mountain West teams that decide a playoff spot. James Madison, which occupied the position last week, still remains in the mix but may be hurt by a lack of schedule strength. Time will tell.

Note: Legacy Pac-12 schools in other conferences will fulfill existing Pac-12 bowl agreements through the 2025 season.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Patrick Mahomes may have taken out the Kansas City Chiefs’ best shot at a third straight Super Bowl and his fourth Lombardi Trophy overall.

The Chiefs appear to be without leading receiver Rashee Rice, who suffered a right knee injury initially feared as season ending. Rice has reportedly sought multiple options on the injury after Mahomes collided into him while diving toward a player returning an interception. 

Rice entered Sunday’s game with 24 catches, triple what star tight end Travis Kelce had before the win. It’s clear he became a focal part of the offense in his second season. 

Now, Rice joins receiver Hollywood Brown (out for the season with a shoulder injury) and running back Isiah Pacheco (who could return in the second half of a season after leg surgery) on the sidelines. That’s three major injuries limiting what the Chiefs can do offensively – even as great at Mahomes is. 

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

There’s plenty of season left for the Chiefs to either falter or overcome the adversity. It would be foolish to underestimate Mahomes, future Hall of Fame coach Andy Reid, and the vaunted Chiefs defense under Steve Spagnuolo. And they’ve won at least one Super Bowl (2023) with less at receiver. 

Still, we’re going to overreact now and say the three-peat looks out of reach. 

Here are some more NFL overreactions from Week 4: 

The fairytale is over in Jets land

Sean Payton got the last laugh after the Denver Broncos handed Aaron Rodgers and the New York Jets a 10-9 loss at home last week. 

The loss left Rodgers dismissing Jets coach Robert Saleh’s postgame comment about Rodgers’ cadence being an issue on offense. And let’s not forget about Rodgers rejecting a hug from Saleh earlier this season. The fairytale is over in Jets land. 

Remember, Payton criticized Nathaniel Hackett for ‘one of the worst coaching jobs in the history of the NFL’ after taking over the Broncos last year. Rodgers and Saleh defended Hackett, who became the Jets offensive coordinator. 

Sure, it was an abysmal day offensively due to some rain. But star running back Breece Hall is touted to be way better than his 10-carry, 4-yard rushing performance. The Jets also had 13 penalties in the loss. It was an amazing let down after their 2-1 start.

Commanders are a favorite to win NFC East 

You read that right. The Washington Commanders are a favorite to win the NFC East this season after an incredible 3-1 start behind No. 2 draft pick Jayden Daniels. 

New Commanders owner Josh Harris hired the right, experienced coach in Dan Quinn. Kliff Kingsbury was the right hire by Quinn at offensive coordinator. And the buy-in to have Daniels, who won the Heisman Trophy at LSU, run a college-styled offense was another great decision. 

Daniels is an early MVP candidate with this eye-opening stat as a rookie: He’s led more scoring drives (23) than he’s thrown incompletions (19). 

Daniels leads the NFL with a 82.1 completion percentage, is fifth with a 73.4 QBR, and scored four of the team’s league leading 10 rushing touchdowns. The Commanders are third in the NFL, scoring 30.3 points per game, and showing no signs of slowing down.  

Bills offense isn’t ready for prime time yet 

Josh Allen and the Buffalo Bills’ offense got roughed up on Sunday Night Football against the Baltimore Ravens – showing their offense needs more time to grow and misses big-play receiver Stefon Diggs after all. 

It didn’t help Buffalo to be playing from behind after Derrick Henry opened the game with a 87-yard run for Buffalo. The Bills could only muster a touchdown against the Ravens after torching their first three inferior opponents for 13 touchdowns this season. 

Allen was shaken up after a strip fumble, taking a hard fall in the third quarter, and finished 16 of 29 for 180 yards.

The Bills weren’t ready for the Ravens. They’ll likely scrap it out again with the Chiefs, in the NFL’s best rivalry, because of their stars. The 49ers and Lions could also be troublesome later this season. And they need to figure out their corrections quickly because they could be out-dueled again by C.J. Stroud and the Texans next week. 

The USA TODAY app gets you to the heart of the news — fast.Download for award-winning coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, the eNewspaper and more.

(This story was updated because an earlier version had an inaccuracy.)

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The 12 teams in the 2024 MLB postseason are all settled after the Atlanta Braves and New York Mets each clinched spots by splitting the doubleheader they needed Monday to sort out the playoff race in the National League.

Now come the games baseball fans have been waiting to see.

All four best-of-three wild card series begin Tuesday, starting with Game 1 between the Houston Astros and Detroit Tigers in the American League, and every decision and call will be magnified. That goes for the umpires, too.

Though replay was introduced to the game several years ago, it still very much matters to players, managers and fans alike who’s serving as a crew chief for a postseason series, and especially who’s calling balls and strikes for a particular game. Ahead of the start of the wild card round Tuesday, MLB announced the umpires working each series and where they’ll be positioned.

Here’s a rundown of what umpires to expect working games when the 2024 MLB postseason begins this week, what the schedule looks like, and what channel to watch all the action:

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

2024 MLB wild card series umpire schedule

Note: Umpires rotate from right field to left and then clockwise around the bases starting at third during an MLB postseason series, so the ump at second base for the opener will be behind the plate for a potential Game 3 in the wild card round.

Detroit Tigers at Houston Astros

Alfonso Marquez (crew chief): Third base for Game 1
Tony Randazzo: Home plate for Game 1
Jordan Baker: First base for Game 1; Home plate for Game 2
Will Little: Second base for Game 1; Home plate for Game 3
Jeremie Rehak: Left field for Game 1
Junior Valentine: Right field for Game 1

Kansas City Royals at Baltimore Orioles

Bill Miller (crew chief): Third base for Game 1
Ryan Additon: Home plate for Game 1
Ben May: First base for Game 1; Home plate for Game 2
Nic Lentz: Second base for Game 1; Home plate for Game 3
David Rackley: Left field for Game 1
Malachi Moore: Right field for Game 1

New York Mets at Milwaukee Brewers

Alan Porter (crew chief): Third base for Game 1
Alex Tosi: Home plate for Game 1
Chris Segal: First base for Game 1; Home plate for Game 2
Vic Carapazza: Second base for Game 1; Home plate for Game 3
Mike Estabrook: Left field for Game 1
Brennan Miller: Right field for Game 1

Atlanta Braves at San Diego Padres

Dan Iassogna (crew chief): Third base for Game 1
Nestor Ceja: Home plate for Game 1
Phil Cuzzi: First base for Game 1; Home plate for Game 2
Jansen Visconti: Second base for Game 1; Home plate for Game 3
Mark Wegner: Left field for Game 1
Erich Bacchus: Right field for Game 1

2024 MLB postseason schedule

Wild Card Series (Best-of-3):

TUESDAY, OCT. 1

Game 1: Tigers at Astros | 2:32 p.m. ET | ABC
Game 1: Royals at Orioles | 4:08 p.m. ET | ESPN2
Game 1: Mets at Brewers | 5:32 p.m. ET | ESPN
Game 1: Braves at Padres | 8:38 p.m. ET | ESPN

WEDNESDAY, OCT. 2:

Game 2: Tigers at Astros | 2:32 p.m. ET | ABC
Game 2: Royals at Orioles | 4:38 p.m. ET | ESPN
Game 2: Mets at Brewers | 7:38 p.m. ET | ESPN
Game 2: Braves at Padres | 8:38 p.m. ET | ESPN2

THURSDAY, OCT. 3 (if necessary)

Game 3: Tigers at Astros | 2:32 p.m. ET | ABC
Game 3: Royals at Orioles | 4:08 p.m. ET | ESPN
Game 3: Braves at Padres | 7:08 p.m. ET |ESPN
Game 3: Mets at Brewers | 8:38 p.m. ET | ESPN2

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Georgia falls out of the top spot in the USA TODAY Sports College Football Playoff bracket projection but stays inside the 12-team field after dropping Saturday night’s thriller at Alabama.

The win is enough to vault the Crimson Tide to No. 1, given the strong probability the playoff selection committee puts the eventual SEC champion as the highest-ranked seed.

Coming out of a 28-0 hole to take the lead late in the fourth quarter makes this a strong loss for the Bulldogs. Looking down the line, one-loss Georgia would reach the SEC championship game with a chance to secure a top-four seed; in that case, the Bulldogs would be in the field regardless of what happens in a possible rematch with the Tide.

The odds of a playoff berth get fuzzier when you add another loss, though. That Alabama’s offense was able to find flaws against an unfailingly elite defense – the Tide gained 547 yards after the Bulldogs had allowed just 606 yards through three games – could spell real trouble for Georgia in three enormous SEC matchups against No. 1 Texas, No. 4 Tennessee and No. 12 Mississippi.

While currently in the bracket, the Bulldogs have to button things up defensively and get quarterback Carson Beck back on track to avoid a second playoff miss in as many years. The first four teams out of the field include two from the SEC in Missouri and Mississippi along with Notre Dame and Michigan.

AWARD TIME: The best and worst of the first month in college football

BOWL PROJECTIONS: Major changes to playoff field after wild Week 5

College Football Playoff bracket projection

There are obvious front-runners in three of the Power Four leagues as the regular season heads into October. Alabama is atop the SEC. Ohio State leads the Big Ten. Miami stays in front in the ACC after surviving a serious scare against Virginia Tech.

But the Big 12 remains very hard to predict. Kansas State was in the lead before losing at Brigham Young. Utah took over before Saturday’s loss to Arizona. The Utes really need quarterback Cam Rising to get back into the starting lineup.

Another team that has quietly surged up the rankings is Iowa State. The Cyclones have a very strong non-conference win at Iowa but have yet to dig into the meat of Big 12 play. In fact, they may stay off the radar until later in the year, with games against the Utes and Kansas State to end the regular season.

For now, Kansas State’s convincing win against Oklahoma State moves the Wildcats back into the top spot while Iowa State replaces Utah as an at-large team.

Lurking outside the field are plenty of contenders from power leagues: Southern California, Missouri, Michigan, LSU, Notre Dame and even Mississippi after last week’s loss to Kentucky. Missouri is the unbeaten among this group but there are enough games in front of all of them to win their way into the field.

Four teams to watch

SMU

Now 4-1 after a blowout of Florida State, SMU is exceeding early expectations as new members of the ACC. A huge, must-win matchup at Louisville comes this Saturday. A victory there would put the Mustangs on the path to the conference title game, especially given that they miss Miami and Clemson during the regular season.

Indiana

Chew on this: Indiana is 5-0 for the first time since the program’s last won the Big Ten and reached the Rose Bowl in 1967. With Northwestern, Nebraska, Washington and Michigan State ahead, the Hoosiers are in position to climb the playoff rankings before playing Michigan and Ohio State in early November.

Boise State

UNLV earned the top spot in the Group of Five after obliterating Fresno State with a new quarterback, Hajj-Malik Williams, in place of former starter Matthew Sluka. But Boise State can’t be ignored after a 45-17 win against previously unbeaten Washington State. The Broncos go to UNLV on Oct. 25 in what may be the biggest game of the regular season in the Group of Five.

Army and Navy

Both service academies are 4-0 for the first time since 1945, with each already posting three wins in American Athletic play to rank atop the early conference standings. Navy has been particularly good on offense, ranking fifth nationally in yards per play, fifth in rushing yards per game and ninth in scoring. Army has won every game by at least 17 points.

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Democratic California Gov. Gavin Newsom has signed legislation banning local governments from requiring voters to present an ID at the ballot box in order to cast a vote – a move which sparked backlash from Elon Musk, who branded Newsom as ‘The Joker.’

‘Wow, it is now illegal to require voter ID in California! They just made PREVENTING voter fraud against the law,’ Musk wrote on X late Monday. ‘The Joker is in charge.’

The bill was passed by the California Assembly in August after being introduced earlier in the year by state Sen. David Min, a Democrat. Newsom signed the bill into law on Thursday. 

The new law was in response to the beachside city of Huntington Beach passing a voter ID amendment, Measure A, in March with the support of a majority of residents which would allow the city to require voter identification, increase in-person voting sites, and monitor ballot drop boxes in local elections. The measure won at the polls in March with 53.4% approval, county election data shows.

But Attorney General Rob Bonta and California Secretary of State Shirley N. Weber challenged Huntington Beach’s voter ID law, which would have amended the city’s charter to allow voter ID requirements by 2026.

In their lawsuit, Bonta and Weber argued that the city’s voter ID law ‘unlawfully conflicts and is preempted by state law.’ 

California is one of 14 states that does not require voter ID at the polls, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.

‘The right to freely cast your vote is the foundation of our democracy and Huntington Beach’s voter ID policy flies in the face of this principle,’ Bonta said in a statement earlier this year. 

He argued that state elections already contain ‘robust voter ID requirements with strong protections to prevent voter fraud.’ He said the new requirements would disproportionately burden ‘low-income voters, voters of color, young or elderly voters, and people with disabilities.’ 

While that lawsuit made its way through the courts state, Min introduced Senate Bill No. 1174. It passed out of the State Assembly in a 57-16 vote and in the State Senate in a 30-8 vote.

The Huntington Beach City Council placed the voter ID measure on the March ballot after taking a series of hotly contested decisions on topics ranging from flag flying to the removal of books from the public library’s children’s section over concerns about the appropriateness of materials. The moves were initiated by a politically conservative council majority, which took office in 2022, and have drawn scores of residents on all sides of issues to city meetings.

Huntington City Attorney Michael Gates said in March that the passage of the amendment approved by voters was ‘not only permissible’ but backed by the state constitution. 

Last week he vowed to continue to enforce Measure A. 

‘That bill means nothing to the city of Huntington Beach,’ Michael Gates said, per OrangeCountyLawyers.com. ‘The city is going to proceed with its voter ID laws because it has a constitutional right to do so.’

Musk’s outburst is not the first time he has sparred with Newsom.

Musk last month encouraged his 198 million X users to share an AI-doctored video of Vice President Kamala Harris after Newsom signed a bill into law banning digitally altered political ‘deepfakes.’

Musk said he also plans to move the California headquarters for SpaceX to Texas after Newsom signed a bill into law that will bar school districts from notifying parents if their child uses different pronouns or identifies as a gender that’s different from what’s on school records.

The Space X owner has also said Democratic states are gaining an unfair advantage over red states in elections as a result of illegal immigration since the census is based on a simple headcount of all residents, both legal and illegal. He said congressional representation and electoral votes are apportioned based on all residents instead of just focusing on citizens.

Musk has often weighed in on voter integrity and immigration matters, writing on X in March that ‘failure to require photo ID to vote obviously makes it impossible to prove voter fraud. That is why the far left refuses to require photo ID to vote.’

Fox News’ Bradford Betz contributed to this report.

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