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St. Louis Cardinals third baseman Nolan Arenado informed the Astros Tuesday that he will not waive his no trade clause to Houston, according to a baseball official who spoke with USA TODAY Sports about the potential trade.

The Cardinals and Astros were working on a deal, but Arenado rejected it now with hopes he could be traded to a Southern California team – where he lives – or New York, Boston or Philadelphia. He could eventually accept a trade to Houston if none of his preferences come to fruition this winter and with the uncertainty surrounding free agent Alex Bregman.

Earlier this offseason, the Cardinals informed the eight-time All-Star that they would do everything possible to trade him this winter to a contender, and even granted his agent Joel Wolfe permission to help facilitate a deal.

“He would strongly consider it if it’s the right place to go,’ Wolfe said during the Winter Meetings, “but he’s not going to go just anywhere. We hope something good happens, but he’s not going to approve and move his family and go play somewhere that would be (a lateral move).

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“He’s in a good place with the Cardinals. He’s not going to go just to go.’

Arenado, who turns 34 in April, still has three years remaining in his contract worth $74 million. The Colorado Rockies, his former team, are responsible for $10 million as part of their 2021 trade with the Cardinals. But with the Cardinals plan to ‘reset’ before the 2025 season, Arenado is not likely in their plans.

Arenado, a 10-time Gold Glove winner, hit .271 with 16 homers and 71 RBI last season, his lowest totals since 2014 with a career-low .394 slugging percentage.

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Let Buffalo Bills offensive lineman Dion Dawkins tell it: one of the keys to peace and happiness and a good record in the NFL is having the right significant other in your corner.

In this case, he was referring to his teammate and MVP candidate Josh Allen and the success he is having. Allen has led the Bills to an 11-3 record while throwing for 25 touchdowns and announced last month that he was engaged to singer/actress Hailee Steinfeld.

‘Josh is having fun [and] we’re having fun watching him,’ Dawkins said when commenting on Allen this week.

‘I don’t want to keep bringing energy to it, but I’m telling you, when you have a strong female behind you, and when you’re in the right mental space… there’s something about it.’ 

Allen has 14 total touchdowns (seven passing, six rushing, one receiving) since he announced his engagement on Nov. 22.

All things Bills: Latest Buffalo Bills news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

“She’s been a huge part. The morale, the support. When I get home, she’s my biggest fan, my biggest supporter. She’s just the best,” Allen told The Associated Press.

Dawkins added that support is the key, especially when things can go bad in a game like football.

“When you’re in this world that we’re in, and a lot of people pulling at you and a lot of sources of ups and downs of a roller coaster, and you have that one stable person that you can rely on and go home and hug and get a laugh no matter what, I think that’s dope,” Dawkins said. “And that’s what I think is going on.”

The Bills have already clinched the AFC East for the fifth straight year and play the New England Patriots (3-11) on Sunday.

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Approaching Christmas, All-Star third baseman Alex Bregman remains unsigned, arguably the top position player still on the Major League Baseball free agent market.

The 31-year-old reached the postseason in all eight of his full seasons with the Houston Astros, winning the 2017 and 2022 World Series titles. A Gold Glove winner at the hot corner in 2024, Bregman has indicated he would move to second base for his new team, but is coming off a down year with a career-low .768 OPS.

Expected to command a contract between $150 and $200 million, a return to the Astros remains a possibility for Bregman – particularly after the St. Louis Cardinals’ Nolan Arenado used his no-trade clause to nix a potential trade to Houston.

Some of the other teams reported to be interested in Bregman include the New York Yankees, Boston Red Sox, Detroit Tigers and New York Mets.

Here’s a look at some of his possible destinations and why they may or may not make sense:

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Houston Astros

Getting Isaac Paredes and 3B prospect Cam Smith from the Cubs in the Kyle Tucker trade would seem to signal that the Astros are preparing for Life After Bregman – but doesn’t preclude a reunion. Houston was working on a trade with the Cardinals for Arenado, who used his no-trade clause to block a deal, so the club clearly isn’t satisfied heading into spring training with Paredes atop the depth chart.

New York Yankees

The Bronx Bombers have been on a warpath since losing out on Juan Soto, signing Max Fried to a $218 million deal and pulling off trades for All-Star closer Devin Williams and former MVP Cody Bellinger. They may have been favored for Bregman a few days ago, but the ensuing moves – and Yankees’ increased salary commitments – have changed the equation.

Boston Red Sox

Red Sox baseball officer Craig Breslow is adamant that Rafael Devers will remain Boston’s third baseman, indicating that Bregman would have to move to second base – something that agent Scott Boras has said he’s willing to do. Bregman, who has a 1.240 OPS in 80 career at-bats at Fenway Park, would add balance to the Red Sox’s lefty-heavy lineup and vastly improve the infield defense even if he’s adjusting to a new position.

Detroit Tigers

Bregman’s long history with Tigers skipper A.J. Hinch, who managed him from 2016-2019, could be a driving factor here with the Tigers coming off their first postseason appearance in a decade. Jace Jung is (lightly) penciled in as the team’s third baseman, with the 2022 first-round pick coming off a mixed performance (.362 OBP but 0 HR) in his 79 at-bat cup of coffee last year.

New York Mets

After committing $765 million to Juan Soto, the Mets could still bring in Bregman to play third base and push Mark Vientos to first base or designated hitter. But at the same $150-200 million price point, the Mets may intrinsically value Pete Alonso more than Bregman.

Toronto Blue Jays

For the second winter in a row, the Blue Jays lost out on a $700 million free agent. Will somebody please just take their money?!

Philadelphia Phillies

Yet to make a splash this winter, the Phillies could still pair a Bregman signing with an Alec Bohm trade.

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There are certain moments in a person’s life during which they’ll never forget where they were or what they were doing when something monumental happened. This will undoubtedly be the case for Michael Penix Jr. when he heard the news he was being handed the keys to the starting quarterback job this week.

Earlier this week, the Falcons announced that they would start the rookie following the bench of Kirk Cousins ahead of the team’s Week 16 matchup against the New York Giants.

Penix Jr. told reporters he was shopping at Costco and ordering one of the famous $1.50 hot dogs when he received the news.

‘I was shopping with my girlfriend. We was at Costco,’ Penix said during media availability on Wednesday. ‘I got the call, they told me that I was gonna be the starting quarterback for the rest of the season. As you can imagine, it was some nerves, it was excitement, but just super blessed to be in this position.’

Penix was actually in search of a sustenance when he got the news.

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‘I was actually getting a hot dog, and whenever I got the call, I wasn’t hungry no more.’

Penix Jr. added he’s been mentally prepared in case a day like Tuesday ever came.

“I wasn’t going to be surprised by it or anything. Not saying it’s something I expected, but at the end of the day, I just wanted to be ready,” he said.

The rookie told reporters he has received at least 35 ticket requests from family and friends for Sunday’s game.

The Atlanta Falcons sent shockwaves through the NFL during the 2024 draft when they selected Washington quarterback Penix Jr. with the eighth overall pick.

Just weeks before the draft, Atlanta made one of the biggest splashes in 2024 free agency when they signed veteran quarterback Cousins to a massive contract. With three games remaining in the regular season, they have benched the 36-year-old in favor of the rookie.

The left-handed passer from Washington comes from a pass-heavy system run by Ryan Grubb, now the Seattle Seahawks offensive coordinator. Atlanta felt that Penix Jr. fits what their new offensive coordinator, Zac Robinson, from Sean McVay’s offense, would like from a quarterback. He excels as a pocket passer, similar to Matthew Stafford and Cousins.

In his final season at Washington, Penix Jr. led the FBS with 4,903 passing yards, ranked third in passing touchdowns with 36 and was a Heisman Trophy finalist.

The Falcons host the Giants on Sunday.

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Russian President Vladimir Putin on Thursday promised to ask former Syrian President Bashar al-Assad for help in locating American veteran and journalist Austin Tice following a letter from Tice’s mother pleading for assistance. 

‘I haven’t seen President Assad yet, since he came to Moscow – but I plan to do so. I will have a conversation with him,’ Putin told NBC during a press conference according to a translator, though he appeared to cast doubt on the former president’s ability to help. ‘We are adults, we understand – 12 years ago, a person went missing in Syria, 12 years ago.

‘We understand what the situation was and 12 years ago acts of hostilities were ongoing from both sides. Does President Assad himself know what happened to that U.S. citizen, a journalist who performed his journalistic duty in a combat area?’ he asked before giving a shrug.

‘Nonetheless, I do promise that I will ask this question to him,’ he added. 

Putin’s comments came after Debra Tice on Wednesday appealed to the Kremlin chief in a letter to help find her son who went missing after he was detained in Damascus in August 2012.

The Syrian government for more than a decade refused to negotiate the release of Tice, who was abducted while reporting on the uprising against the Assad regime during the early stages of the Syrian civil war, which ultimately ended earlier this month after the Syrian president was ousted and fled to Moscow. 

‘The current situation in Syria compels us to ask for your help in finding Austin and safely reuniting our family. You have profound connections with the Syrian government, which can be a great benefit for our unrelenting efforts to find our Austin,’ she wrote in the letter obtained by Fox News. ‘In this holiday season of peace and goodwill, we respectfully request your assistance in finding Austin and safely reuniting him with our family.

‘We would, of course, be willing to travel to Moscow or any other place on Earth to put our arms around our precious Austin and bring him home safely,’ she added. 

In an interview with NBC News, Debra defended her decision to write to the authoritarian leader, one of the U.S.’ chief adversaries, and said, ‘Of course I am reaching out to powerful people, so they can help us.’

‘Russia has had a port there in Latakia forever, so I do think they have the ability to know what’s going on the ground. We are still trying to find out where he is,’ she emphasized. 

The State Department has escalated its efforts to find Tice following the fall of the Assad regime, including by offering a $10 million reward for information relating to his release.

‘We have fanned out everywhere with every possible source, every possible actor who might be able to get information,’ Secretary of State Antony Blinken said Thursday in his interview with MSNBC’s ‘Morning Joe,’ in a transcript sent out by the State Department. ‘This involves anyone and everyone who has some relationship with the different rising authorities in Syria. We’ve been in direct contact with them ourselves. We have other partners on the ground, and we’re looking at getting on the ground ourselves as quickly as we can.

‘But the most important thing is this: Any piece of information we get, any lead we have, we’re following it. We have ways of doing that irrespective of exactly where we are,’ Blinken continued. ‘And I can just tell you that this is the number-one priority… to get Austin.’

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As President-elect Donald Trump prepares to return to the White House next month, what sort of foreign policy can Americans expect during his second stint in the Oval Office?

Trump will pursue an ‘America first foreign policy,’ J. Michael Waller, senior analyst for strategy at the Center for Security Policy, suggested during an interview with Fox News Digital, describing Biden’s approach as ‘America last.’

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell is advocating for the soon-to-be commander in chief to significantly increase military spending in a bid to build up the nation’s ‘hard power.’

The long-serving lawmaker is also warning against an isolationist approach to foreign policy, asserting in a piece on Foreign Affairs that ‘the response to four years of weakness must not be four years of isolation.’

‘Trump would be wise to build his foreign policy on the enduring cornerstone of U.S. leadership: hard power. To reverse the neglect of military strength, his administration must commit to a significant and sustained increase in defense spending, generational investments in the defense industrial base, and urgent reforms to speed the United States’ development of new capabilities and to expand allies’ and partners’ access to them,’ McConnell contended.

‘To pretend that the United States can focus on just one threat at a time, that its credibility is divisible, or that it can afford to shrug off faraway chaos as irrelevant is to ignore its global interests and its adversaries’ global designs,’ he argued.

Waller, who authored the book ‘Big Intel,’ explained that America-first foreign policy does not mean isolationism. 

‘It means for the United States to define its national interests very strictly,’ without suggesting that every crisis around the globe is ‘of vital, existential interest to our country,’ he noted.

Waller opined in Foreign Affairs that McConnell was seeking to ‘maintain the uniparty consensus for the United States’ present global commitments that are stretching us beyond our means … without even stepping back to reassess what is really in our national interests and how can we best marshal our resources to ensure them.’

Fox News Digital attempted to reach out to request comment from McConnell, but did not receive a response.

Trump has tapped Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., for secretary of state, a choice Waller graded as a ‘really good pick.’ 

Regarding the ongoing Ukraine-Russia conflict, Rubio has said that the U.S. is funding a ‘stalemate war.’

Trump has called for a ceasefire.

‘There should be an immediate ceasefire and negotiations should begin. Too many lives are being so needlessly wasted, too many families destroyed, and if it keeps going, it can turn into something much bigger, and far worse,’ he declared in a post on Truth Social.

Trump has also called for the release of hostages in the Middle East, warning in a post on Truth Social that if they are not released by when he assumes office, ‘there will be ALL HELL TO PAY in the Middle East, and for those in charge who perpetrated these atrocities against Humanity. Those responsible will be hit harder than anybody has been hit in the long and storied History of the United States of America,’ he declared.

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To describe the historic start of Jayden Daniels’ rookie season, Washington Commanders head coach Dan Quinn referenced the supernatural.  

“I definitely understand our fan base has been waiting for the franchise QB,” Quinn said in late September, “but I also don’t want Jayden feeling any ghosts.”

The ghosts of QBs past have haunted Washington for decades. Daniels became the 27th quarterback to start a game for the franchise since 2000. The “ghosts” included Gus Frerotte and Jason Campbell, Kirk Cousins and Robert Griffin III, Ryan Fitzpatrick (for one quarter) and Alex Smith, Mark Brunell and Donovan McNabb.  

Then the quarterback of the future – or the ghost of QB present, depending on one’s perspective – arrived. Daniels is the favorite to win Offensive Rookie of the Year, and the Commanders are 9-5 for the first time since 1992.

It’s not the first time a rookie in Washington, taken second overall that year, has set the league on fire and looked like a franchise-changing player. But even Griffin III – perhaps the most relevant “ghost” Quinn alluded to – sees a promising future for Daniels and the Commanders.

All things Commanders: Latest Washington Commanders news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

“I think he’s handled this year like a franchise quarterback,” Griffin III told USA TODAY Sports. “That’s something that this team hasn’t had in decades.”

Daniels and the Commanders reeled off four straight victories after losing in Week 1 to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. The San Bernardino, California, native’s completion percentage through his first four games was 82.1%, the highest of any player in NFL history over a four-game stretch, breaking a record that belonged to Tom Brady. He became the first quarterback to have two consecutive games with a completion of 85% or better. Despite a hip injury he suffered against the Carolina Panthers in Week 7, Daniels has thrown for 3,045 yards with 17 touchdowns and seven interceptions through 14 starts.

After his historic 2012 campaign, Griffin III acknowledged things went “sideways” for him in Washington. The devastating knee injury he suffered in the playoffs that season against the Seattle Seahawks did him no favors. Neither did the emergence of Cousins, who started for three seasons but likely won’t be facing Daniels and the Commanders when the Atlanta Falcons visit on Dec. 29.

“Jayden, I think, is off to a great start … I think anything I would tell him, he would already know,” Cousins said earlier this season. “And he seems to be enjoying it, has a smile on his face, he’s playing well.”

With managing partner Josh Harris and his ownership group, general manager Adam Peters and Quinn, the Commanders’ infrastructure is much healthier now for a young quarterback than it was when he starred for the franchise, Griffin III said.

“He doesn’t ‘need’ me. I never want people to feel like these guys ‘need’ someone, but to be able to use that experience, to help him navigate some of the things that affected you and your career?” said Griffin III, who formed a relationship with Daniels by calling three of his college games at LSU and has stayed in contact since the rookie landed with Washington. “I think that’s valuable to give back. That’s what I try to do, I try to approach it – but back then, I didn’t know what I know now. And I can use what I know now to help the next generation.”

While Daniels displayed a knowledge of the team’s quarterback struggles along with the tradition of Black signal-callers going back to Doug Williams, the fan base’s starvation for a franchise quarterback caught Griffin III by surprise. He didn’t grow up learning about sports in that way, he said.

“It’s early,” Williams told USA TODAY’s Jarrett Bell earlier this season. “You don’t want to put no pressure on the kid. You want him to play football. You don’t even want to bring it to his attention. You don’t even want to talk about it. We’ve still got a long way to go.

“The fans are excited, and they’ve got a reason to be excited. But if you work in the football office here, that’s what you try to protect against.”

Performance under pressure

That type of pressure could fluster any young professional, said Alex Smith, taken No. 1 by the San Francisco 49ers in 2005 before spending time with the Kansas City Chiefs and Washington.

“When you’re a top pick, that expectation’s there – to come in and turn the organization around. That’s part of the weight that I think QB’s have to deal with,” Smith told USA TODAY Sports.

Because there were six quarterbacks taken in the top 12 picks of the 2024 draft, they’ll all be compared to one another for their entire careers, Smith said – similar to how Griffin III and Andrew Luck were coupled as 2012 draftmates, or Smith and Aaron Rodgers from the Class of 2005.

“It just kind of continues to mount, just kind of continues to grow,” Smith said of the pressure.

Smith doesn’t know Daniels personally, but everything he’s heard from people in the building indicates that he’s somebody who is “so prepared for even the weight of that conversation, of being the savior.”

“That’s part of what Jayden here is battling – maybe the greatest start to a rookie season of all time and continuing to not let all of the hype – or any of the hype – get to him,” Smith said.

Joe Theismann, a Super Bowl-winning quarterback for Washington, said he’s seen Daniels handle his “fanship” up close. People ask him how Daniels can possibly deal with the expectations.

Theismann offers a one-word answer: “Heisman.”

Daniels, following three seasons at Arizona State, transferred to LSU in 2022 and won the 2023 Heisman Trophy.  

“Being where he is, as far as the media goes, as far as the exposure goes, as far as the expectations go, it’s not something new to him,” Theismann said. “It just hasn’t all of a sudden happened.”

About halfway through last season at LSU, he accepted that his name would be a constant part of the national conversation through the draft. He turned on the television and people were talking about him.

‘It’s kind of awkward to see people talk about you,’ Daniels said in October. ‘I don’t really like it, so I kind of try to stay away from that. But it’s kind of normal to me now.’

And social media is a totally different realm of fan expectations and reaction.

‘It’s a lot. I mean, I see it,’ he said. ‘I don’t really pay attention. I don’t look too much into it, but just know I’ll be seeing some stuff for sure. It is in the back of my mind for sure.’

For Fitzpatrick, while evaluating college prospects, whether they’ve experienced adversity is something he monitors.

“It wasn’t just a straight path for him to the Heisman and to the top of the NFL,” Fitzpatrick told USA TODAY Sports.

The transition to the NFL left quite an impression, though.

“It’s almost as if Jayden doesn’t know that football is supposed to be hard,” Fitzpatrick said. “When you watch it, he makes it look so easy. I go back to, you know, for him, one of the great things that he has going for right now is that he’s so athletic and he’s a really intelligent player.

“If he doesn’t like what he’s seeing again, going back to that, he has the ultimate ‘get-out-jail-free’ card, which is, he’s going to be able to scramble around. He’s going to be able to make plays either with his legs or he’s great at throwing on the run.”

And even though Fitzpatrick suffered a hip injury during the first half of the season-opener in 2021, his only game in Washington, he “definitely” sensed the desire from fans to have an answer at quarterback.

“I think the thing that appealed to me even a couple of years ago in Washington was there was a lot of talent,” Fitzpatrick, now an analyst with Amazon Prime Video, said. “You always talk about young guys walking into situations where there’s a good infrastructure, and some of that is coaching and a lot of that is the players that you have around them.”

From rebuild to excitement

Ron Rivera was hired as head coach in 2020 and had a roster, particularly on defense, that looked ready to contend. But the revolving door at quarterback – Taylor Heinecke, Carson Wentz, Sam Howell and Kyle Allen all started for his teams – made that difficult beyond the 2020 NFC East title, which was won with a 7-9 record.

“When you’re looking for that guy, that’s the hardest thing to find,” Rivera told USA TODAY Sports. “There’s so much emphasis put into it.

“I really do see the improvement in them because of the play of the young quarterback and the last time we saw that was with RGIII when he was (with Washington) and he was healthy.”

Unlike with Griffin III, however, Rivera recognized almost immediately Washington fans’ clamoring for a quarterback to call their long-term answer.

“Mostly because having been in the league and trying to find that guy again and how hard it is, when you’re never set up to get that guy, that’s tough, that really is,” said Rivera, who was let go after last season and replaced with Quinn.

Smith said he understood that Washington was a proud, storied franchise.

“There have been little moments of success and nothing sustained and nothing, certainly, to the expectations of that fan base and organization,” said Smith, an analyst for ESPN.

At the late stage in his career when he arrived in Washington, he felt prepared to enter that type of environment and embraced it.

“It was an amazing challenge, probably short-lived, and also very cool – I loved the history of the organization and certainly the aspiration to get back to that,” Smith said. “It was not totally different from what I experienced with the Niners in that regard.”

During Rivera’s tenure, the Commanders went from having a defense that was ready to be a contender without the proper quarterback to requiring an entire rebuild – starting at quarterback.

‘I think that’s been that’s been the feeling in Washington for a while … there’s more excitement in Washington right now than maybe anywhere in the league and the fact that they found, I mean, new ownership and the fact that they found their guy quarterback,’ Fitzpatrick said.

Looking at the team now, Rivera sees a core of veterans and younger players to complement Daniels.

“You have an opportunity to establish who this team could be for the future,” he said.

On behalf of the fan base that had its collective patience tested, Smith said he’s enjoyed watching the team compete for a division title ahead of schedule.

‘They’ve deserved better for a long, long time,” he said. “Just to see the way the team is playing right now and the energy of the entire area, it’s been really cool to watch from afar.”

Quinn said he wanted Daniels to understand “there’s only one name on the back of that jersey, and that’s for him.” The coach also said he can’t wait to see who Daniels is becoming because he is a 24-year-old who is still growing.

“I don’t want to compare him to anybody but him,” Quinn said.

Not even a ghost.

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The NBA took a collective day off Wednesday after the Milwaukee Bucks swept through the NBA Cup.

With their victory over the Oklahoma City Thunder, players earned a nice payday, but Milwaukee won’t have a chance to catch its breath; on Friday, the red-hot Bucks — winners of 13 of their last 16 games — face the No. 1 seed in the Eastern Conference, the Cleveland Cavaliers.

The losers of the NBA Cup final, the Thunder, will look to bounce back on a Florida road trip that sees them play the Orlando Magic Thursday and the Miami Heat Friday.

And then on Saturday, a pair of teams trying to claw out of a play-in spot in the West, the No. 7 seed Minnesota Timberwolves and No. 8 Golden State Warriors, battle up north.

Here are some takeaways from the eighth week of the NBA regular season.

Surging Bucks looking more and more like legitimate contender

Though their NBA Cup final victory over the Thunder won’t count in the standings, the Bucks (14-11) are playing complete ball on both sides and — suddenly — look like a threat to disrupt the balance of power in the Eastern Conference.

Milwaukee held the Thunder to (technically unofficial) season-lows in points (81), field-goal percentage (33.7%) and 3-point percentage (15.6%).

“We believe we can beat anybody,” coach Doc Rivers said before the NBA Cup championship.

The Bucks have also become more deliberate on offense, slowing down their pace and working the ball in search of higher-percentage shots. In October, Milwaukee ranked sixth in the NBA in pace (102.7 possessions per 48 minutes), 15th in true shooting percentage (57.2%) and 13th in effective field-goal percentage (53.6%). Over the last 15 games, the Bucks rank 21st in pace (98.75), fourth in true shooting (60.8%) and third in effective field-goal percentage (58.1%).

It’s no surprise that Damian Lillard has returned to form and that Giannis Antetokounmpo (32.7 points, 11.5 rebounds, 6.1 assists per game) is playing like an MVP. Sixth man Bobby Portis has also had the occasional big game.

Another boost has been the return of forward Khris Middleton (ankles), who made his season debut Dec. 6. While the scoring hasn’t quite been there yet, Middleton has injected playmaking and ball movement into the offense; he has 23 assists in four games, although he has averaged just 21.3 minutes per game.

Timberwolves reclaim their identity, but issues still linger

Minnesota’s effort was so bad the first month-and-a-half of the NBA season that Anthony Edwards called out his team as “front-runners” and “soft.”

He especially lamented the Timberwolves’ defensive effort.

Over the last seven games, however, no team has come close to Minnesota’s defensive competitiveness. The Timberwolves (14-11) rank first in defensive rating (92.8 points per 100 possessions) over that span while the Thunder — the next closest team — posted a defensive rating of 103.5. By way of comparison, the Timberwolves had posted a defensive rating of 111 during November.

More importantly for Minnesota: it has won six of its last seven.

Jaden McDaniels and Nickeil Alexander-Walker have once again become full-court, on-ball demons, and the Timberwolves have rotated well, clamping perimeter shooters; over the last seven games, the Timberwolves are holding opposing 3-point shooters to a league-worst 28.6% conversion rate, which is seven full percentage points off Minnesota’s mark from November.

The Magic have lost three of their last five. Can they survive until they get healthy?

All signs point to that being the case, which is crazy to say given that their best two players — Paolo Banchero and Franz Wagner — have now missed extended time with their respective torn obliques.

Orlando (17-11) is still in a great spot, sitting atop the Southeast Division and in the No. 4 seed in the East. Banchero still appears to be a few weeks away, but he put up jumpers after a recent practice.

The Magic also have a pristine 10-1 record at the KIA Center in Orlando, and they have the league’s third-best defensive rating (106.1).

Orlando has a tough stretch coming up, with games against the Thunder, Celtics, Knicks and two against the Heat, but players like Jalen Suggs, Mo Wagner and rookie Tristan da Silva have each stepped up.

Has the window closed for the Sacramento Kings?

It simply hasn’t worked out for Sacramento (13-14), which sits last in the Pacific Division and is the current No. 12 seed, overall, in the Western Conference. And, as star De’Aaron Fox has openly expressed uncertainty about his future in Sacramento, it’s safe to wonder if a sell-off is on the horizon.

Offseason trade addition DeMar DeRozan (22.5 points, 3.9 rebounds, 4 assists per game) has been steady, though his numbers have dipped some from last year. But because he finds comfort in the mid-range, and as NBA offenses move more toward the risk-reward of the 3-point shot, the fit in Sacramento has not materialized into victories.

Forward Keegan Murray, who showed he could ignite from 3 during his first two seasons, is averaging career-lows in 3-pointers made (1.7), attempts (5.5) and percentage (29.9%).

The Kings are tied for 21st in 3-point percentage (34.4%), two seasons after they ranked ninth (36.9%).

What’s interesting is that Sacramento has shown it’s capable of explosive, efficient play. Among win-loss splits across all NBA teams, the Kings rank second in the NBA in offensive rating (123.2 points per 100 possessions) and fourth in net rating (plus-14.7 point differential per 100 possessions) during victories.

The Trail Blazers must confront their Scoot Henderson problem

Portland (8-18) is winless in December and has the NBA’s longest active losing streak at six games. More frustratingly for Blazers fans, this rebuild already seems as though it has peaked.

There are some bright spots: rookie Donovan Clingan has been a force on the glass and Toumani Camara and Deni Avdija have been solid. But Henderson — the No. 3 overall draft pick in 2023 — has struggled to find any type of efficiency. Henderson is averaging only 10.8 points per game (down from 14 his rookie season) and is shooting just 27.9% from 3-point range. He’s averaging 2.8 turnovers per game, despite falling out of the starting lineup and playing 25.6 minutes per game, which is a reduction from his rookie total of 28.5.

The issue is magnified on the defensive end, where Henderson is tied for 460th in the league in defensive rating (118.8) among players averaging at least 20 minutes per game.

Henderson, though, is still just 20 years old and has plenty of athleticism. It’s incumbent on Chauncey Billups and the coaching staff to get him to play looser and more efficiently, or drastic changes could be forthcoming.

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These days, it’s the event Tiger Woods is most likely to play and this year will be no different.

The 2024 PNC Championship, originally known as the Father/Son Challenge when it first started more than 30 years ago, is back this weekend and so are Woods and his son, Charlie. They’ll headline the field for the fifth year in a row, although they’re still looking for their first win in this tournament. Tiger Woods has not played in a competitive golf event since he missed the cut at The Open Championship last July. Charlie Woods, 15, is now a sophomore in high school at The Benjamin School in Palm Beach, Florida.

There will be 20 two-person teams competing at the Ritz-Carlton Golf Club in Orlando, with Bernhard Langer and his son Jason, returning as the defending champions. But watching Woods and his son has become the biggest attraction annually, with their swings and mannerisms often highlighted because of the similarities.

‘I’m very excited to head back to the PNC Championship next week with Charlie,’ Woods said in a statement announcing his commitment to play again. ‘Playing together is something we look forward to and it’s always more special when you’re surrounded by friends and family.’

Here’s how to watch this year’s PNC Championship, as well as information on the weekend TV schedule, tee times and tournament format.

2024 PNC Championship: TV coverage, streaming, schedule

Thursday pro-am: No TV, streaming
Friday pro-am: 12 p.m.-2:30 p.m. ET (Golf Channel)
Saturday Round 1: 11 a.m.-12:30 p.m. ET (Golf Channel); 12:30-4 p.m. ET (Peacock)
Sunday Round 2: 11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. ET (Golf Channel); 12:30-1:30 p.m. ET (Peacock); 1:30-4:30 p.m. ET (NBC)

Watch 2024 PNC Championship with Fubo

2024 PNC Championship teams: Saturday first-round tee times

All times ET

9 a.m — Lee Trevino and Daniel Trevino; Nick Price and Greg Price
9:13 a.m. — Mark O’Meara and Shaun O’Meara; Gary Player and Alexander Hall
9:26 a.m. — Nick Faldo and Matthew Faldo; Trevor Immelman and Jacob Immelman
9:39 a.m. — Matt Kuchar and Carson Kuchar; Tom Lehman and Sean Lehman
9:52 a.m. — Padraig Harrington and Paddy Harrington; Stewart Cink and Connor Cink
10:05 a.m. — Annika Sorenstam and Will McGee; Steve Stricker and Izzi Stricker
10:18 a.m. — John Daly and John Daly II; David Duval and Brady Duval
10:31 a.m. — Nelly Korda and Petr Korda; Fred Couples and Hunter Hannemann
10:44 a.m. — Tiger Woods and Charlie Woods; Justin Leonard and Luke Leonard
10:57 a.m. — Bernhard Langer and Jason Langer; Vijay Singh and Qass Singh

2024 PNC Championship format

The field has expanded since the original Father/Son Challenge to include female golfers, daughters or other family members. All primary participants must have won a major championship or THE PLAYERS Championship for eligibility. In addition to Tiger Woods, this year’s teams include Annika Sorenstam, Nelly Korda, Justin Thomas, Nick Faldo and Lee Trevino, among others.

There are two rounds and 36 holes total played by each team. Woods and his son will again be paired with Justin Thomas, who is playing with Justin Leonard and his son, Luke, who is a Villanova golf commit.

Here’s how the competition works, according to the PNC Championship website: ‘On each hole, each player drives and the best drive is selected. Each player then plays a second shot from the spot where the selected drive lies, and the best second shot is selected. This process is repeated until the hole is completed.’

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Members of President Biden’s staff noticed his fading stamina and increasing confusion within the first few months of him entering office, according to a new report from the Wall Street Journal.

The Journal based its report on interviews with nearly 50 people, including current and former White House staffers who interacted directly with the president, as well as lawmakers.

One former aide recalled a national security official explaining why a meeting in the spring of 2021 was canceled altogether.

‘He has good days and bad days, and today was a bad day so we’re going to address this tomorrow,’ he recalled the official saying.

Democratic lawmakers in Congress reported that Biden was less available than past presidents. He had few meetings with members of Congress, and those meetings were often brief, they said.

‘The Biden White House was more insulated than most,’ Rep. Adam Smith, D-Wash., told the Journal. ‘I spoke with Barack Obama on a number of occasions when he was president and I wasn’t even chairman of the committee.’

‘I really had no personal contact with this president. I had more personal contact with Obama, which is sort of strange because I was a lot more junior,’ Rep Jim Himes, D-Conn., echoed.

Even members of Biden’s own Cabinet soon stopped requesting calls with the president, perceiving from interactions with staff that calls were unwelcome, WSJ reported.

A source familiar with the Journal’s reporting said the outlet had on-record interviews with a number of Cabinet members who rejected claims that Biden lacks mental acuity. Those Cabinet members included Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg and EPA Administrator Michael Regan and others, the source said. The Journal did not include their comments in its report.

Biden held fewer than half as many full Cabinet meetings as his most recent predecessors. President-elect Trump held 25 such meetings and former President Obama held 19 in their first terms, but Biden had just eight.

The White House pushed back on the substance of the Journal’s report in a statement provided to Fox News Digital, saying Biden’s policy accomplishments provide ‘indisputable proof’ of his qualifications and leadership.

‘President Biden speaks with members of his Cabinet daily, and with most members multiple times a week, staying in close touch with them about implementation of key laws and strengthening our national security. During every presidency, there are inevitably some in Washington who do not receive as much time with whomever the president is as they would prefer; but that never means that the president isn’t engaging thoroughly with others, as this president does,’ said White House spokesman Andrew Bates.

‘Cabinet meetings are an important tradition, but the contemporary work environment means they can be fewer and far between. As academics who study the presidency have emphasized, every member of the Cabinet – to say nothing of the President – are busy principals and more can be accomplished on behalf of the American people speaking with the President one-on-one or in smaller settings with officials who have related portfolios,’ he added.

Fox News Digital reached out to Cabinet officials and their departments, asking them if they believed Biden was fit to serve this week, and if they stood by past statements of confidence in his ability to continue.

DHS Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, in a statement in September, said that he has ‘full confidence in President Biden’s ability to carry out his job. 

‘As I’ve said before, I come fully prepared for my meetings with President Biden, knowing his questions will be detail-oriented, probing, and exacting. In our exchanges, the President always draws upon our prior conversations and past events in analyzing the issues and reaching his conclusions,’ he said.

On Monday, DHS said that the secretary stands by those comments.

Secretary of Commerce Gina Raimondo has called Biden ‘one of the most accomplished presidents in American history and continues to effectively lead our country with a steady hand.’

‘As someone who is actually in the room when the President meets with the Cabinet and foreign leaders, I can tell you he is an incisive and extraordinary leader,’ Raimondo said.

A spokesperson said this week that Raimondo stands by those comments.

Sabrina Singh, deputy Pentagon press secretary, told Fox in September: ‘As Secretary Austin has said before, he has watched President Biden make tough national security decisions and seen his commitment to keeping our troops safe – he has nothing but total confidence in our Commander-in-Chief.’

This week, Singh said those comments still stand.

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