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Three men connected to Iran have been indicted in relation to a hacking plot against former President Donald Trump’s campaign, the Department of Justice announced Friday.

Masoud Jalili, Seyyed Ali Aghamiri and Yasar Balaghi are the three suspects named in the case, according to a federal indictment unsealed Friday afternoon.

The indictment shows the trio are facing a long list of charges, including: Conspiracy to Obtain Information from a Protected Computer; Defraud and Obtain a Thing of Value; Commit Fraud Involving Authentication Features; Commit Aggravated Identity Theft; Commit Access Device Fraud; and Commit Wire Fraud While Falsely Registering Domains.

The three hackers, who are accused of working for Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, were allegedly ‘engaged in a wide-ranging hacking campaign that used spearphishing and social engineering techniques to target and compromise the accounts of current and former U.S. government officials, members of the media, nongovernmental organizations, and individuals associated with U.S. political campaigns.’

Fox News Digital has reached out to the FBI and Department of Justice.

Last week, the U.S. revealed the Iranian hackers had obtained information on the Trump campaign and tried to distribute it to people linked to the Biden campaign and media organizations since June. 

The federal government acknowledges that the Trump campaign has been a specific and repeated target of Iran since he ordered the killing of Qasem Soleimani, the former commander of the IRGC Qods Force.

Trump was briefed Tuesday about ‘real and specific threats’ from Iran to assassinate the Republican presidential candidate, according to his campaign. 

Iran’s aim to assassinate Trump is part of the Islamic Republic’s efforts to ‘destabilize and sow chaos in the United States,’ Trump Campaign Communications Director Steven Cheung said in a press release. 

‘Intelligence officials have identified that these continued and coordinated attacks have heightened in the past few months, and law enforcement officials across all agencies are working to ensure President Trump is protected and the election is free from interference,’ Cheung said. 

This is a developing story and will be updated. 

Fox News Digital’s Bradford Betz and Morgan Phillips contributed to this report.

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Former President Donald Trump met with the president of Ukraine at Trump Tower in New York City on Friday, saying he has a ‘very good relationship’ with Volodymyr Zelenskyy.

‘It’s very important to share our plan, all of our steps on how we can strengthen Ukraine,’ Zelenskyy said. He explained to reporters that he decided to meet with both Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris because ‘after November, we don’t know who Americans [will decide to] be the president.’

Speaking with Fox News after the meeting, Trump said, ‘We both want to see this end and we both want to see a fair deal made. And it’s got to be fair. And I think that’ll happen at the right time. I think it’s going to happen.’ 

Neither Trump nor Zelenskyy publicly explained details of a potential deal.

‘It’s an honor to have the president with us, and he’s been through a lot’ Trump said of Zelenskyy’s visit, at one point saying ‘[Zelenskyy has] gone through hell, his country has gone through hell.’

The meeting at Trump Tower comes just after Zelenskyy met with Harris in Washington, D.C. 

Harris and Zelenskyy gave a joint address at the White House on Thursday, where she pledged unwavering support for the Ukrainian effort and criticized Trump’s consideration of negotiated peace at the cost of some captured regions of the country.

‘In candor, I share with you, Mr. President, there are some in my country who would, instead, force Ukraine to give up large parts of its sovereign territory, who would demand that Ukraine accept neutrality and would require Ukraine to forego security relationships with other nations,’ Harris said.

Zelenskyy affirmed on Friday after meeting with Trump that the former president shares the ‘common view that the war in Ukraine has to be stopped.’

‘He’s going through a tremendous amount,’ Trump said on Friday. ‘We’re going to have a discussion and see what we can come up with.’

A brief exchange between the two leaders highlighted the high stakes of the Russian invasion of Ukraine and the U.S.’s role in ending the conflict.

‘We have a very good relationship. I also have a very good relationship, as you know, with President Putin,’ Trump said. ‘And I think if we win we’re going to get [the war] resolved very quickly.’ 

‘I hope we have more good [sic] relations,’ Zelenskyy interjected, emphasizing his desire to have a stronger relationship with the U.S. than Russia.

‘It takes two to tango, and we will,’ Trump responded.

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Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu underscored the conflicts in the Middle East as a choice between ‘a blessing or a curse,’ as he warned Iran’s ‘tyrants’ about Israel’s ability to defend and avenge itself.

‘If you strike us, we will strike you,’ Netanyahu said. ‘There is no place in Iran that the long arm of Israel cannot reach, and that’s true of the entire Middle East: Far from being lambs led to the slaughter, Israel’s soldiers have fought back with incredible courage and with heroic sacrifice.’  

Netanyahu took the podium in front of a partially empty General Assembly, with some delegates walking out, but those who gathered to hear him offered raucous applause ahead of his speech. Seemingly absent from the speech was the U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations, Secretary of State Antony Blinken, who was hosting a global health security event on the sidelines of UNGA.

He revealed that he almost did not attend the U.N. High-Level Week, but he felt a need to ‘set the record straight,’ which included laying out the choice the world faces. 

Netanyahu brought several families with loved ones held hostage by Hamas terrorists in Gaza to New York and once again called for their freedom, noting that, ‘I’ll say this one more time, we remain focused on our sacred mission, bringing our hostages home. And we will not stop until that mission is complete.’

‘Israel seeks peace,’ Netanyahu said. ‘Israel yearns for peace. Israel has made peace and will make peace again – yet, we face savage enemies who seek our annihilation, and we must defend ourselves against those savage murderers.’ 

Netanyahu framed the issue as a choice between ‘a blessing or a curse,’ with Iran’s ‘unremitting aggression’ as the ‘curse’ against the ‘blessing’ of reconciliation between Arab nations and Israel.

‘A normalization deal between Saudi Arabia and Israel seemed closer than ever. But then came the curse of Oct. 7,’ Netanyahu said. ‘Thousands of Iranian-backed Hamas terrorists from Gaza burst into Israel in pickup trucks, on motorcycles. And they committed unimaginable atrocities.’ 

The prime minister hammered again on Iran’s aggression, warning that if left unchecked, it will ‘endanger every single country in the Middle East and many, many countries in the rest of the world.’ 

‘Iran seeks to impose its radicalism well beyond the Middle East,’ Netanyahu warned. ‘That’s why it funds terror networks on five continents. That’s why it builds ballistic missiles for nuclear warheads to threaten the entire world.’

‘For too long, the world is appeasing Iran. It turns a blind eye to its internal repression. It turns a blind eye to its external aggression,’ he added. ‘Well, that appeasement must end, and that appeasement must end now.’

Netanyahu called on the U.N. Security Council to ‘snap back’ sanctions against Iran and do everything in the organization’s power to ‘ensure that Iran never gets nuclear weapons.’ 

However, he lamented that the organization has an apparent bias against Israel and in favor of the Palestinians, citing the ‘automatic majority’ of countries that will vote in favor of any policy that hurts Israel.

‘For the Palestinians, this U.N. House of darkness is home court,’ Netanyahu said. ‘They know that in this swamp of antisemitic bile, there’s an automatic majority willing to demonize the Jewish state on anything in this anti-Israel, flat Earth society. Any false charge, any outlandish allegation can muster a majority.’ 

‘It’s always been about Israel, about Israel’s very existence, and I say to you, until Israel, until the Jewish state is treated like other nations, until this antisemitic swamp is drained, the U.N. will be viewed by fair-minded people everywhere as nothing more than a contemptuous force,’ he added. 

Fox News’ David Hammelburg contributed to this story.

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Despite a backdrop of conflicting market signals, there are still sectors within the S&P 500 that are showing promising movements and potential opportunities for investors. Today, I’d like to highlight two sectors in the S&P 500 that are worth a closer look: Industrials and Materials.

The market’s mixed signals

The S&P 500 has recently broken above its resistance, a move that has been met with some skepticism due to the negative divergence observed between the RSI (Relative Strength Index) and price, as well as the MACD (Moving Average Convergence Divergence) and price. Additionally, sector rotation, as indicated by the RRGs (Relative Rotation Graphs), suggests a defensive posture still prevalent in the market.

This creates a somewhat confusing landscape for investors (well at least it does for me), with these conflicting signals flying around.

However, this doesn’t mean that there are no opportunities to be found.

Spotlight on Industrials and Materials

When we focus on the Relative Rotation Graph for US sectors, two sectors stand out: Industrials (XLI) and Materials (XLB). Both sectors are currently positioned in the improving quadrant and are rotating towards the leading quadrant with a strong RRG heading. This means that they are gaining on both axes.

Industrials Sector (XLI)

Looking at the price chart for the industrial sector, we can see that XLI broke to new highs a few weeks ago, well before the S&P 500 did. However, the raw RS (relative strength) line is still in a downtrend, with major highs being lower. We’re approaching a crucial resistance in the RS line, and for the sector to continue its improvement, it needs to break above this falling resistance.

In the coming weeks, it will be more important to monitor the move in relative strength for the industrial sector rather than the price itself. The price is performing well, but a breakthrough in relative strength is needed to push the sector further into the leading quadrant.

Materials Sector (XLB)

The Materials sector has a similar setup to Industrials. The price has also broken to new highs, albeit slightly later. The relative strength series of lower highs and lower lows is still in place, but the RRG lines are both moving higher, pushing the tail further into the improving quadrant toward leading.

Both Industrials and Materials sectors are showing signs that they are worth a closer look for investors seeking to trade individual stocks rather than the market as a whole.

Identifying Strong Performers in Industrials

To find individual stocks within the industrials sector, we bring up the RRG that shows its members. The routine is to look over the individual tails and find those with a strong RRG heading, particularly those that are rotating from leading into weakening and then turning back up towards leading.

Highlighted Stocks: Caterpillar (CAT) and W.W. Grainger (GWW)

Caterpillar (CAT) is positioned in the improving quadrant, having just crossed over from lagging. The price chart shows Caterpillar breaking to new all-time highs after a corrective move, which is causing the relative strength to jump and pushing the RRG lines higher.

This combination of improving relative strength and an upward break in price is a strong indicator.

W.W. Grainger (GWW) is in a similar situation, with the price chart showing a break to new highs and the relative strength line having less of a decline. The RRG lines are indicating a new relative uptrend for GWW against XLI.

Since the sector itself is already in a relative uptrend or starting to move into one versus the S&P 500, stocks like GWW and Caterpillar are strong stocks in a strong sector.

Exploring the Material Sector’s Potential

Using a similar approach for the material sector, we look at the RRG showing the rotations for the individual members and focus on the tails with a strong RRG heading.

Highlighted Stocks: CF Industries (CF) and Eastman Chemical Company (EMN)

CF Industries (CF) is approaching heavy overhead resistance and needs to break above $86. The relative strength line is improving, and the RRG lines are pushing the tail of CF into the leading quadrant. This could be a very good addition to any portfolio, especially if CF breaks and holds above the $86 resistance.

Eastman Chemical Company (EMN) has already broken out of a consolidation period and is moving towards all-time high levels. The raw RS line has broken its previous peak, starting a series of higher highs and higher lows. The RS ratio line is above 100, indicating that EMN is starting a new relative uptrend, which is usually a good sign.

Conclusion

Despite the conflicting signals in the market, there are still pockets of strength to be found.

The industrial and material sectors are two such areas that offer interesting opportunities for investors.

By focusing on individual stocks within these sectors, particularly those with strong RRG headings, we can find potentially strong performers that may outperform both their sector and the broader S&P 500 index.

#StayAlert and have a great weekend. –Julius

Jamaal Sanford received a disturbing email in May of last year. The message, whose sender claimed to be part of a “Russian shadow team,” contained Sanford’s home address, social security number and his daughter’s college. It came with a very specific threat.

The sender said Sanford, who lives in Springfield, Missouri, would only only be safe if he removed a negative online review.

“Do not play tough guy,” the email said. “You have nothing to gain by keeping the reviews and EVERYTHING to lose by not cooperating.”

Months earlier, Sanford had left a scathing review for an e-commerce “automation” company called Ascend Ecom on the rating site Trustpilot. Ascend’s purported business was the launching and managing of Amazon storefronts on behalf of clients, who would pay money for the service and the promise of earning thousands of dollars in “passive income.”

Sanford had invested $35,000 in such a scheme. He never recouped the money and is now in debt, according to a Federal Trade Commission lawsuit unsealed on Friday.

His experience is a key piece of the FTC’s suit, which accuses Ascend of breaking federal laws by making false claims related to earnings and business performance, and threatening or penalizing customers for posting honest reviews, among other violations. The FTC is seeking monetary relief for Ascend customers and to prevent Ascend from doing business permanently.

It’s the latest sign of the FTC’s crackdown on e-commerce money-making schemes on top of some of the internet’s leading marketplaces, like Amazon and Airbnb. Since mid-2023, the agency has sued at least four automation companies, alleging deceptive marketing practices and falsely telling customers that they could generate passive income.

The FTC isn’t just focused on e-commerce automation businesses. On Wednesday, the agency said it’s stepping up enforcement against companies that use artificial intelligence “as a way to supercharge deceptive or unfair conduct that harms consumers.” The agency pointed to Ascend as a company that it took action against in part because of its claims that it used AI “to maximize clients’ business success.”

The FTC has also pledged to go after companies that try to suppress negative reviews online as part of new rules issued this year targeting fake reviews.

Automation businesses like Ascend promote their easy money opportunities on Instagram, TikTok and YouTube. But their promises go mostly unfulfilled, and often the storefronts get shut down for violating policies around dropshipping — the selling of products to customers without ever stocking inventory — or counterfeits.

The FTC’s complaint against Ascend accused co-founders Will Basta and Jeremy Leung of defrauding consumers of at least $25 million through their scheme. Formed in 2021, Ascend has done business under several entity names with operations registered in states including Texas, Wyoming and California.

The filing shows that the threats against Sanford grew more menacing. Two days after the initial email, Sanford’s wife’s phone lit up with a text message containing an image of a severed head that again urged the removal of the unflattering review.

“Your husband has angered some people with his ignorance,” the text message said. “The type he does not wish to anger.”

Sanford soon purchased a security system for his home.

Sanford said in an interview that Ascend had promised his Amazon storefront would generate enough revenue to cover the cost of inventory the company bought each month on his behalf. Months went by and his store amassed a “smorgasbord” of items, from LED lights to vitamins, which Ascend purchased from other retailers like Macy’s and Home Depot and then sold on Amazon, Sanford said. The company used the dropshipping model, Sanford said, which often led to the stores getting suspended on Amazon.

Amazon prohibits merchants from dropshipping unless they identify themselves as the seller of record, meaning their name is listed on the invoice, packing slip and other materials.

As Sanford’s sales sputtered and his debts swelled, he made a series of complaints to Basta and Leung. When they went unanswered, he left the negative reviews. Sanford said Ascend eventually offered to refund him $20,000 if he would take down the review, but he declined.

“I think I’m resigned to the fact that I won’t be getting my money back and now I just want accountability,” he said.

Karl Kronenberger, a lawyer for Ascend, said in a statement that the company denies ever threatening customers and it attempted to resolve any disputes “in good faith.”

“We are investigating whether a competitor of Ascend may be the driving force behind some of the allegations in the case,” Kronenberger said.

Ascend’s marketing pitch claimed customers could quickly earn thousands of dollars from sales generated on Amazon, Walmart and other platforms. The company said it had developed proprietary artificial intelligence tools that it used to identify top-selling products.

E-commerce automation companies are increasingly exploiting Amazon’s third-party marketplace, which now hosts millions of merchants and accounts for more than half of all goods sold on the site.

Amazon didn’t provide a comment for this story.

Ascend promoted the scheme as “risk free,” the FTC said, because of its buyback guarantee, which effectively committed to make clients whole if they didn’t recoup their investment within 36 months.

“After consumers invest, the promised gains never materialize, and consumers are left with depleted bank accounts and hefty credit card bills,” the regulator wrote in its complaint.

To add an air of legitimacy, Ascend falsely claimed it had been featured in media outlets like Forbes, Yahoo! Finance and Business Insider, the FTC said. It primarily advertised its business on social media platforms TikTok, X, YouTube and Instagram.

Ascend faces two lawsuits in California that allege breach of contract and other claims, according to the FTC. In January, an arbitration action was filed against Ascend in Florida on behalf of 30 customers. Nima Tahmassebi, an attorney representing the Ascend customers, told CNBC that the clients chose to withdraw the claim once they learned of the FTC case.

Tahmassebi said he has been contacted by more than 100 individuals who “all but begged for legal assistance” because they lost money after paying for Ascend’s automation services.

“I’m talking to people who said I can’t get Christmas gifts this year because of my situation with them,” Tahmassebi said. “People took money they could have applied to their kid’s college tuition. Now it’s gone, and they’re left bewildered.”

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The final week of the NFL’s September slate has the chance to be its most volatile set of games so far this season.

While the first three weeks of the season have featured several surprises, many of the matchups promoted consensus among prognosticators. This weekend, however, several games have divided USA TODAY Sports’ panel for picks. And while many of the five undefeated teams have experts siding with them, each should be on alert.

With all that in mind, we asked USA TODAY Sports’ staff of NFL writers and columnists for their bold predictions for Week 4. Here are their responses:

Aaron Rodgers will bust the Broncos with his first 300-yard game since 2021

What a time for A-Rod to produce his first 300-yard game as a Jet. Denver’s coming to the Meadowlands and I’d suspect that Rodgers will want to put a little extra mustard on it to prove a point. Remember his reaction last year when Sean Payton pilloried the Jets and Nathaniel Hackett? He called Payton ‘insecure’ and contended that Payton should keep his coordinator’s ‘name out of his mouth.’ Bet he hasn’t forgotten the ridicule. 

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Rodgers has called Hackett, Payton’s predecessor in Denver, his ‘favorite’ coach, which is undoubtedly why the coordinator landed with the Jets in 2023 for a reunion with the QB to pick it back up after their three years together in Green Bay. Maybe there’s no better way for Rodgers to show that he has Hackett’s back than by putting up a monster, in-your-face performance against Payton and the Broncos.

It’s certainly been a long time since the four-time NFL MVP has cracked 300 yards. You’d have to go back to December 2021 for that, when he torched the Bears for 341 yards and 4 TDs – the last of three consecutive 300-yard games. Since then, Rodgers has played 25 games (including a playoff loss, or 26 if you count the Jets debut last year that went for one series before he suffered a torn Achilles) without striking 300. It was stunning to discover in checking the game-by-game log that Rodgers started all 17 games during his final season with the Packers in 2022 without a 300-yard outing. So, hey, the dude is overdue. And the early-season pattern during his comeback season suggests it, too. In breaking back in, Rodgers has passed for more yards in each successive game – from 167 in the opener at San Francisco, to 176 in Week 2 at Tennessee, to 281 against the Patriots in the home opener a week ago Thursday night. And now come the Broncos. Bet he’s licking his chops.

— Jarrett Bell

At least three unbeaten teams will lose in Week 4

I wish it was bolder, but this weekend sets up as a tough one for the NFL’s quintet of 3-0 clubs. All are on the road with the Buffalo Bills (at Baltimore) and Seattle Seahawks (at Detroit) playing in prime-time slots against teams that reached their respective conference title games last season. The Pittsburgh Steelers may get their toughest test – over the course of 60 minutes anyway – at Indianapolis after overcoming the depleted Chargers last Sunday, and the Minnesota Vikings can hardly ever expect to waltz into Green Bay’s Lambeau Field and raid and pillage – regardless of who’s playing quarterback for the Packers. The Kansas City Chiefs seem like a safe bet to beat those undermanned Bolts – again – and could very well stand as the league’s lone 4-0 squad by the end of Monday night.

— Nate Davis

Jayden Daniels will be NFL Offensive Rookie of the Year front-runner after Week 4

Rookie Jayden Daniels was named NFC Offensive Player of the Week for Week 3 after he completed 21 of 23 pass attempts (91.3%) for 254 passing yards and two touchdowns in Week 3. He had the highest completion percentage in a game by a rookie in NFL history (minimum 20 attempts) in the victory. He’s just the third rookie quarterback to win the award in the past five seasons.

What will Daniels do for an encore?

I expect Daniels to have a big-time game versus the Cardinals that will make him the early front-runner for NFL Offensive Rookie of the Year. Daniels will be motivated to show out versus Arizona in what will be a homecoming of sorts. The Commanders QB played at Arizona State (2019–2021) before transferring to LSU (2022–2023).

Daniels will have his first 300-yard passing game and he’ll also rush for 50+ yards to help Washington win its third straight game. The Commanders haven’t won three games in a row since the 2022 season.

— Tyler Dragon

A breakout game is incoming for the Steelers offense

Pittsburgh has been an incredibly tough out to start the season, but it has been almost singularly on the back of its defense. This is the game the Steelers offense will figure it out. The unit currently ranks 24th in total offense (289 yards per game), 29th in passing (158.3), 28th in yards per carry (3.63) and 24th in scoring (17 points per game). This, however, is a matchup that should favor the Steelers.

Indianapolis’ defense has been banged up to start the season, and inconsistent production has followed. The Colts are in the middle of the pack in scoring defense, ranking 14th (20.3), but they have ceded huge plays. Indy ranks second to last in total defense (398.3) and rushing defense (179). This is a game in which I expect offensive coordinator Arthur Smith to unleash quarterback Justin Fields and his propensity to effectively run the ball. The Steelers have asked Fields to run less, and his average of 30 rushing yards per game would be a career low and is far below his mark from last year (50.5) and the season before that (76.2).

The converse is that Fields is setting a career best in completion percentage at 73.3%, a jump of 11.9 percentage points from last year. He has become more efficient. But this matchup is begging for him to take over on the ground, further compromising a banged up defense, and opening up the passing game.  

— Lorenzo Reyes

Nick Herbig will pass T.J. Watt as the Steelers’ sack leader

Maybe this doesn’t seem that outlandish given Herbig already has two sacks to Watt’s three in the early going. Still, it would have been hard to fathom this offseason that the Steelers could exit September thriving with someone other than Watt or Alex Highsmith leading the way in this category. Herbig stepped in for Highsmith when the staring outside linebacker suffered a groin injury late in last week’s win over the Los Angeles Chargers, and the 2023 fourth-round pick out of Wisconsin delivered two sacks in just 19 snaps. His most impressive rep came when he screamed past standout Chargers left tackle Rashawn Slater on a second-and-10 in the third quarter, forcing a strip sack of Justin Herbert.

Replicating that performance could be tough, as bringing down a 6-4, 244-pound quarterback in Anthony Richardson – who has taken just four sacks in three games – is no easy feat, especially for a 6-2, 240-pound edge rusher like Herbig. But the Steelers’ stout run defense (ranked second with 3.5 yards allowed per carry) seems bound to put the Colts in some obvious passing scenarios, and there’s little question that Indianapolis’ primary objective will be in accounting for Watt, who has been chipped a league-leading 44% of the time, according to Pro Football Focus. Herbig has already established that he’s ready to capitalize when the opportunity presents itself, and that trend could continue Sunday.

— Michael Middlehurst-Schwartz

Josh Allen will rush for more yards than Lamar Jackson 

Through the first three games of the season, Josh Allen has not used his legs too much in Bills offensive coordinator Joe Brady’s “everybody-gets-the-ball” scheme (17 rushes, 85 yards). His arm has been more than effective, but a prime-time matchup against the Ravens will force Allen to go deep into his bag of tricks for the Bills to move to 4-0. 

The other component of this is that Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson has never run efficiently, especially by his standards, against the Bills. Jackson’s most yards (73) on the ground in the matchup came in his lone regular-season loss to the Bills, in 2022. He rushed 11 times for 40 yards during a 2019 contest, and in a Week 1 2018 matchup – Jackson’s first career game he entered in a blowout – he had seven attempts for 39 yards. 

— Chris Bumbaca

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One game and a handful of plays, and there’s no telling who’s playing quarterback for Georgia right now. 

Which fits perfectly with Carson Beck’s career. 

“I’ve been here before, for sure,” Beck said in July. 

Only this time, this mega-clash of a game against rival Alabama Saturday in Tuscaloosa means more than the last time opportunity arrived and changed the quarterback job at Georgia. 

And the course of Beck’s career. 

That was 2021, when in Week 3 he was primed to play for injured quarterback JT Daniels but didn’t practice well. Georgia coach Kirby Smart went with experienced third-stringer Stetson Bennett, and the next thing you know, Bennett was a star and Georgia won back-to-back national titles.

Fast forward to last season – Beck’s first as a starter – and No. 1 Georgia’s 27-24 loss to Alabama in the SEC championship game. A handful of plays, Beck says, and everything could’ve changed. 

Georgia could’ve won, advanced to the College Football Playoff and won the whole darn thing again. And more than likely, Beck isn’t playing quarterback for the Bulldogs this time around. 

He’s in the NFL. 

“Sitting in that locker room (after the SEC championship game), that was motivation enough to come back.” Beck said. “I had to make it right.”

So instead of making millions as an NFL first-round pick, Beck returned — with the help of aggressive NIL deals — to take another shot at Alabama. To finish the story of perseverance from 2023, and return Georgia to the top of the college football mountain.

What’s the sense of sitting and waiting three years to play, and when your time finally arrives, the last thing you remember are the handful of plays not made in a game that meant everything?

When asked if he knew Alabama was on the 2024 regular-season schedule before he made his decision to return to Georgia, Beck said, “100 percent.”

He smiled, and quickly added, “Even if they weren’t, you’re going to have to beat them at some point. We all want another shot, not just me.”

So here we are, staring at the first all hands on deck game of the new 16-team SEC, and it begins with Beck finishing his story. Playing out his path, and figuring a way to vanquish the only real blemish in Georgia’s rise to college football greatness. 

Big, bad Alabama. 

The Tide and Bulldogs have played six times since Smart returned in 2016 to coach his alma mater, and Alabama has won five. Each loss as haunting as the next.

The second-and-26 touchdown throw in overtime of the College Football Playoff title game in the 2017 season. The blown 14-point lead in the 2018 SEC championship game.

The 17-point humiliation of a loss in 2020, and another 17-point loss in the 2021 SEC championship game. Only the 33-18 Georgia win the 2021 season national title game is the outlier, including last year’s loss to the Tide.

Even though Georgia has firmly entrenched itself over the last three years as the team to beat in college football, even though the Bulldogs are the first road favorite at Tuscaloosa for the first time since former Tide coach Nick Saban’s first season in 2007, Georgia may as well be little brother to Alabama. 

In the fine line between winning and losing within the high-level play of Georgia vs. Alabama, every snap counts. Every missed throw, every dropped pass, every protection breakdown.

Like the 32-yard missed deep throw from Beck to Arian Smith in the second quarter last year that – but for Tide cornerback Kool-Aid McKinstry’s leaping, slight deflection affecting the trajectory enough to confuse Smith – should’ve changed the game. 

Or the false start four plays later, a penalty that pushed a field goal attempt from 45 to 50 yards — and contributed to it clanking off the right upright to end a scoreless drive.

Or Beck missing running back Daijun Edwards in the end zone from the Alabama 16, instead throwing incomplete underneath to tight end Brock Bowers.

From the potential of 14 points, to absolutely nothing. 

“So close here and there, plays you have to convert when opportunity arrives,” Beck said.

Opportunity is here again for Beck.

He’s playing at a high level again this season, and could be the first quarterback taken in the 2025 NFL draft. Maybe even first pick overall. 

But like it or not, his college career will be judged on this game, and a few more in what is Georgia’s toughest schedule in years. Games against No. 2 Texas, No.5 Mississippi and No.6 Tennessee loom. 

So does a potential rematch against any of those teams (and Alabama) in the SEC championship game — and maybe a third game against one of those heavyweights in the College Football Playoff.

“You come here to play in those games,” Beck said. “Those games lead to where you want to be at the end of the season.”

Which is why Beck came back in the first place. 

Matt Hayes is the senior national college football writer for USA TODAY Sports Network. Follow him on X at @MattHayesCFB.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Veteran broadcaster Al Michaels made it no secret he was frustrated by the sloppy, slow-moving first half of the Dallas Cowboys vs. New York Giants ‘Thursday Night Football’ game.

In particular, the Amazon Prime play-by-play broadcaster voiced his disdain for the amount of penalties called by Clay Martin’s crew over the first 30 minutes.

The Cowboys and Giants were whistled for a combined 12 infractions in the first half, but flags hit the field more often than that. The officials picked up a couple of flags and had some instances of offsetting penalties, creating many stoppages throughout the first half.

By the two-minute warning, an annoyed Michaels was cracking jokes to color commentator Kirk Herbstreit about the sheer number of flags they had witnessed in the first half.

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‘It looks like June 14th out here, otherwise known as Flag Day, as you know,’ Michaels quipped before saying Martin ‘looked like a referee straight out of central casting.’

Michaels became increasingly disenchanted as the half dragged on. He initially sounded excited when Giants edge rusher Kayvon Thibodeaux jumped offside on a third-and-12, but the life came out of his voice as more infractions were called on the play.

‘We’ve got another flag. You have two more flags in the backfield. No more laundry left,’ Michaels said, exasperatedly. ‘And any number of calls coming your way.’

Martin then announced that there were fouls on both teams during the play. Michaels’ response?

‘I’ll bet,’ he said.

Michaels’ sass didn’t stop there. When the Cowboys were whistled for a false start before a punt with 14 seconds left in the half, Herbstreit asked if that foul was the eighth of the half on Dallas.

‘No, it’s the 147th,’ Michaels responded, eliciting a laugh from his partner.

Herbstreit decided to continue to prod Michaels to discuss the penalties. He asked if Michaels had ever seen that many penalties called in a single half in his career.

The veteran broadcaster thought it was, in fact, a record for a game that he called.

‘You’re going to need some new flags to throw in the second half,’ Michaels joked. ‘These ones are filthy.’

Michaels continued to bemoan the state of the game throughout the second half. He expressed amazement that the first penalty of the third quarter wasn’t called until the 5:20 mark and was surprised that the Giants had been called for just four penalties early in the fourth quarter.

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NASCAR enters the second round of the 2024 Cup Series playoffs with 12 drivers still in championship contention.

Four drivers – Martin Truex Jr., Brad Keselowski, Ty Gibbs and Harrison Burton – were eliminated from the playoffs following last weekend’s race at Bristol Motor Speedway as the first round concluded.

The second round begins this Sunday at Kansas Speedway – the first of three races before the playoff field is trimmed from 12 to eight drivers. The second round features three very different tracks that will test drivers’ skills and patience. Following the 1.5-mile Kansas oval, the series moves to Talladega Superspeedway, NASCAR’s biggest, fastest, and at times, wildest track for a pack-racing extravaganza. Then, it’s a trip to Charlotte Motor Speedway, where drivers will tackle the roval – a part road course, part oval circuit – before another round of eliminations.

The points were reset after the first round, putting 2021 Cup Series champion Kyle Larson at the top of the standings. The Hendrick Motorsports driver, who won at Kansas in May in the closest finish in NASCAR history, will take a 15-point lead over second-place Christopher Bell into the second round. Two-time series champion Joey Logano currently sits in eighth place, the last driver above the cutline.

NASCAR playoff standings entering second round

Rank, driver, team, points, deficit to leader. Through three races; points reset after first round.

Kyle Larson, Hendrick Motorsports … 3,047
Christopher Bell, Joe Gibbs Racing … 3,032 (-15 points)
Tyler Reddick, 23XI Racing … 3,028  (-19)
William Byron, Hendrick Motorsports … 3,022 (-25)
Ryan Blaney, Team Penske … 3,019 (-28)
Denny Hamlin, Joe Gibbs Racing … 3,015 (-32)
Chase Elliott, Hendrick Motorsports … 3,014 (-33)
Joey Logano, Team Penske … 3,012 (-35)
Austin Cindric, Team Penske … 3,008 (-39)
Daniel Suarez, Trackhouse Racing … 3,006 (-41)
Alex Bowman, Hendrick Motorsports … 3,005 (-42)
Chase Briscoe, Stewart-Haas Racing … 3,005 (-42)

What is the full schedule for the NASCAR Cup Series playoffs? 

Here is the schedule with dates, tracks, times and TV for each of the 10 races of the NASCAR Cup Series playoffs (All times Eastern) 

Sunday, Sept. 8: Atlanta Motor Speedway. Winner: Joey Logano 
Sunday, Sept. 15: Watkins Glen International. Winner: Chris Buescher 
Saturday, Sept. 21: Bristol Motor Speedway. Winner: Kyle Larson 
Sunday, Sept. 29: Kansas Speedway, USA, 3 p.m. 
Sunday, Oct. 6: Talladega Superspeedway, NBC, 2 p.m. 
Sunday, Oct. 13: Charlotte Roval, NBC, 2 p.m. 
Sunday, Oct. 20: Las Vegas Motor Speedway, NBC, 2:30 p.m. 
Sunday, Oct. 27: Homestead-Miami Speedway, NBC, 2:30 p.m. 
Sunday, Nov. 3: Martinsville Speedway, NBC, 2 p.m. 
Sunday, Nov. 10: Phoenix Raceway, NBC, 3 p.m. 

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‘Marginalized,’ ‘powerless,’ living in the ‘Twilight Zone.’

Parents of a trans teenager living in Geneva used those words to describe how they have lived in shock and fear over the last 19 months after their then 15-year-old daughter was removed from their home by court order following their objections to giving her puberty blockers.

Now, they are fighting under threat of criminal charges to preserve her identity and stop her from making potentially irreversible changes to her body.  

‘This is not a question of human rights,’ the father told Fox News Digital. ‘This is a question of conducting medical experiments on children.’

The parents of the now 16-year-old – who wish to remain anonymous to preserve their family’s privacy – claim they have struggled to combat the institutional powers that have accused them of parental abuse for their refusal to give their daughter elective medicine.

The tumultuous journey began when the girl sat her parents down in 2021 and told them she identified as a boy.

‘It was an absolute surprise. She was 13 at the time, and she had never previously demonstrated any inclination toward masculinity or any proclivity for masculine behavior ever,’ the father explained.

The father – who said he and his daughter were always very close – detailed how she reached this conclusion following a difficult time for their family after first his work took him abroad for several years, and then the coronavirus pandemic hit.

The pandemic forced school closures, which meant increased isolation for kids around the globe, and a significant amount of time spent online.

‘We said to our daughter, ‘Well this is a surprise, but we will listen to you, and we will seek medical advice. We will all learn together and make decisions together,” he said.

At the recommendation of their child’s pediatrician, they took their daughter to the public children’s hospital in Geneva, where she was shown a ‘gender unicorn’ and was asked to identify with various aspects of the image, after which it was determined that she was ‘likely experiencing gender dysphoria.’

The director of the ward then met with the parents and explained that the hospital was conducting ‘rigorous research’ around the question of gender identity and that their daughter would receive a ‘comprehensive and serious assessment.’

The advice was to ‘support her in her identity’ by allowing her to cut her hair, dress as a boy and wear breast binders if that’s what she wished.

‘And so, initially, we did that. We followed the medical advice,’ the father said.

However, after seeing a psychiatrist at the hospital for a few months, the parents were told the next step they should pursue for their daughter would be to begin the use of hormone blockers – a medication that prevents puberty-related changes to the body, like breast growth.

‘We’re not at the stage where we’re going to be giving our daughter any medication,’ he said, reflecting on their response to the psychiatrist.

‘We saw firsthand in our interaction with the hospital, that there was no serious medical assessment being conducted. It was simply, well your daughter has pointed to these elements on the gender unicorn, and therefore, she’s a boy because she says so,’ he added, noting that they then sought out a private psychiatrist.

In response to Fox News Digital’s questions, the Geneva University Hospital (HUG) said they could not comment on individual cases but said in cases of gender dysphoria the hospital works ‘to promote dialogue between the child and his parents.’

Spokesperson for the hospital, Nicolas de Saussure, also said the ‘HUG does not push any patient in the direction of a legal or medical transition but supports them in their individual journey according to their values and preferences by referring to existing scientific data and international recommendations.’

According to the statement sent to Fox News Digital, the hospital has received roughly 100 minors with gender dysmorphia, about half of which have begun hormonal treatments after they have reached the age of 16. 

However, the father described a sense of frustration regarding what the parents felt was a lack of adequate medical care and support offered for their daughter and their family – a frustration that marked only the beginning of what would become a long and arduous journey as they struggled to maintain their parental rights.

Against the parent’s wishes, the private school their child attended began to ‘socially transition’ their daughter and connected her with a transgender advocacy organization.

By the time their daughter was 15, a school psychologist – who she saw in addition to the private psychiatrist hired by her parents – reached out to the Swiss Child Protection Agency (SPMI) and claimed the minor needed protection from her ‘transphobic’ parents following their continued objection to puberty blockers.

‘The school was facilitating meetings between our daughter and [the transgender advocacy agency], and our daughter and the SPMI – not only without our knowledge, but fraudulently because they were marking her absentee form as if she was doing school activities,’ he told Fox News Digital. ‘We later found out she wasn’t. She was out of school meeting with [the transgender advocacy group] and meeting with the SPMI.’

The school, which Fox News Digital has not named for the sake of the family’s anonymity, rejected the accusation that it did anything untoward and said, ‘The school abides by Swiss law and complies with the decisions of the child protection authorities. 

‘We refute all allegations implying otherwise,’ a school official added, though questions regarding how the child was marked absent were not directly answered. 

Eventually, based on alleged mental and physical health concerns, a Swiss court decided their daughter should be placed in a supervised home run by social services known as a ‘foyer’ – where the now 16-year-old has remained for more than a year.

‘International law holds that a child shall not be separated from her parents against their will, except in cases of abuse,’ legal counsel for ADF International, Dr. Felix Boellmann, said in a statement.

The father told Fox News Digital that it is still unclear to him and his legal team what abuse was identified in order to allow them to remove his daughter from her home. 

In return to Fox News Digital’s questions, Swiss authorities with the République et canton de Genève said they would not comment on ‘individual situations’ but provided a broad response to Switzerland’s legal system. 

‘The SPMI respects parental authority, unless the exercise of this authority endangers the child concerned, in which case it is up to the judge to decide the child’s best interests,’ communications officerConstance Chaix said. ‘No child is removed from his or her parents because of ‘a lack of consent to the transition.”

‘No child is placed for lack of consent or opposition to treatment,’ Chaix said.

A series of battles have ensued as the parents desperately try to maintain a relationship with their daughter and return her to their home.

But as their daughter continues to age, the harder the fight becomes. 

In Switzerland, minors are allowed to legally change their name and registered sex at the age of 16, which her parents fear could make it that much easier for her to physically transition.

‘We’ve met too many other parents and kids who have been victimized and now regret the situation they’re in, in life. And we are up against these institutions,’ he said, referring to the court, the school and the SPMI, which he argues have not taken an evidence-based approach when it comes to minors experiencing gender dysphoria.

‘Our inclination was to not only, of course, follow doctor’s advice, but LGBTQI – everybody – we support that,’ he continued. ‘But as we started to get educated about gender identity, we started to understand that this was not a question of sexual orientation, but a question of cosmetic surgeries, hormones and other sort of Frankenstein-like experiments on children.’

The father said the education system in Switzerland has put trans children on a ‘pedestal for being somehow more courageous,’ which influences hasty solutions like puberty blockers that could have lasting consequences.

The effects of hormone blockers are reportedly reversible, though government institutions like the U.K.’s National Health Institute have noted the limited research there is on its use in children, and the unknown long-term effects it could have on physical development like bone density or reproductive health.

‘We [need to] start taking decisions based on facts and evidence instead of a radical, harmful ideology,’ the father said. ‘This is not a question of human rights. This is a question of conducting medical experiments on children.

‘I want her to come home so that we can get her back on a healthy track,’ he said. ‘For her own well-being and that of her entire family.’

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