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ESPN’s ‘College Gameday’ is headed to the sooner state this Saturday in preparation for a huge SEC matchup between Oklahoma and Tennessee.

Both teams have won their first three games this season, and while Oklahoma has struggled at times, Tennessee leads the nation in scoring offense and is second in total defense.

It’s the first Southeastern Conference game for the Sooners, who are coming off a 34-19 victory over Tulane. The Volunteers rolled over Kent State 71-0 in a game they led 65-0 at halftime and 740 yards of total offense.

Tennessee is No. 7 in the latest US LBM Coaches Poll, while Oklahoma checks in at No. 13.

Here’s what to know for the fifth ‘College GameDay’ of the season:

Where is ESPN College GameDay this week?

‘College GameDay will be held at South Oval at the University of Oklahoma in Norman, Oklahoma.

The Sooners are making their 41st appearance on ‘GameDay.’ Only Ohio State (59), Alabama (58), and Florida (41) have appeared on the program more.

Oklahoma has a 27-13 record when featured; the show last visited Norman in 2020, with the Sooners routing Oklahoma State 41-13.

Who is the College GameDay celebrity guest picker this week?

No announcement has been made about who will be the celebrity guest picker.

When is ESPN College GameDay?

‘College GameDay’ will air from 9 a.m. to noon ET on Saturday, Sept. 21.

How to watch ESPN College GameDay

‘College GameDay’ will air on ESPN and ESPNU. It is also available through ESPN+ streaming. 

ESPN College GameDay crew

Recently retired Alabama coach Nick Saban is a new addition on ‘College GameDay’ for the 2024 season. The crew now includes: 

Rece Davis
Kirk Herbstreit 
Lee Corso
Desmond Howard
Pat McAfee
Nick Saban
‘Stanford’ Steve Coughlin

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The end of the WNBA season is in sight.

Caitlin Clark and the Indiana Fever have just one regular-season game before the playoffs as they travel to Washington to face the Mystics and fellow rookie Aaliyah Edwards on Thursday evening. 

Clark has had a record-breaking rookie campaign after being selected as the No. 1 draft pick this year and has also made strides off the court, contributing to historic levels of WNBA viewership and social engagement. On Sunday, Clark became the all-time rookie scoring leader by breaking Seimone Augustus’ mark of 744 points. Clark poured in a career-high 35 points during the Fever’s 110-109 win against the Dallas Wings, and she currently has 761 points on the season.

Here’s what you need to know about the WNBA star’s final regular-season game this season.

When is Indiana Fever at Washington Mystics?

Date/Time: Thursday, Sept. 19
Time: 7 p.m. ET
Location: Capital One Arena in Washington, D.C.

The Fever has just one regular-season game left – a road matchup against the Washington Mystics on Thursday evening.

All three of these teams’ previous meetings this season have been decided by seven points or fewer. The Fever won the first two games in June, but the Mystics survived a fourth-quarter surge from Indiana to take the most recent game July 10.

How to watch Caitlin Clark and Fever at Washington Mystics

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Caitlin Clark and the Indiana Fever in the playoffs

The Fever clinched their playoff spot with seven games to spare in the regular season, thanks in large part to Clark’s on-court impact. Her playmaking and shooting abilities have re-energized Indiana, leading the team to its 14th playoff appearance in history – and its first since 2016. This season also marks the end of a seven-year playoff drought – the longest in WNBA history.  The last WNBA regular-season games will be played Thursday, Sept. 19 with the playoffs scheduled to begin Sunday, Sept. 22.

Caitlin Clark rookie season stats

Clark leads the WNBA in both assists and made 3-pointers this season – a remarkable achievement for a rookie. She has been instrumental in Indiana’s success this season, playing an average of more than 35 minutes per game and averaging 19.5 points. She also made WNBA history as the only player to record a triple-double in their rookie season, accomplishing this feat twice this season. 

Clark is the favorite to win the rookie of the year award over the Chicago Sky’s Angel Reese, whose season was cut short with a season-ending wrist injury Sept. 6.

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INDIANAPOLIS — Rebecca Lobo did the research. She did extensive research. She went back and watched tape of WNBA rookies for the past 27 seasons just to make sure she wasn’t missing something or forgetting something. She watched film of Kelsey Plum as a rookie, of Sabrina Ionescu as a rookie, of Sue Bird as a rookie, of all the great guards as rookies.

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The Kansas City Chiefs earned a walk-off win over the Cincinnati Bengals in Week 2 to improve to 2-0 on the season, but the victory came at a cost. The Chiefs lost starting running back Isiah Pacheco to a fractured fibula.

Pacheco’s injury occurred when the third-year running back bent back awkwardly while being tackled on a 1-yard run in the final minutes of the game. He left the field and exited the stadium on crutches and in a walking boot.

Pacheco is set to miss 6-8 weeks because of the injury, according to ESPN’s Adam Schefter. That will sideline him at least until Kansas City’s Week 9 date with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers on Nov. 4, so the Chiefs will need to create a suitable running back rotation to complement Patrick Mahomes until then.

The Chiefs already are missing backup Clyde Edwards-Helaire, as he landed on the NFI (non-football injury/illness) list before the season and will be out through at least Week 4. That leaves the Chiefs with just two healthy backs on their 53-man roster, and neither has been a three-down starter in the NFL to date.

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That’s part of the reason that the Chiefs signed veteran running back Kareem Hunt to their practice squad on Tuesday. They needed to add depth to their thinning backfield.

Chiefs RB depth chart after Isiah Pacheco injury

The Chiefs have just two healthy running backs on their 53-man roster after Pacheco’s injury. They are:

Samaje Perine
Carson Steele

Perine is an eight-year veteran whom the Chiefs signed before the season after his release from the Denver Broncos. Perine has developed into a quality third-down back, so he figures to see plenty of action in pass-catching situations and as a do-it-all threat out of the backfield.

That said, Steele may be ahead of Perine in the rotation as a between-the-tackles runner. The undrafted rookie logged nine carries for 27 yards in the first two games while Perine’s only touches came on two receptions for 13 yards. That may indicate that Andy Reid wants to use Steele on early downs and Perine in passing situations.

Either way, those two figure to handle the bulk of Kansas City’s workload, though the Chiefs will still need a third back for game day duties.

Kansas City has a few candidates for that role on its practice squad. The team could call up Keaontay Ingram — a 2022 sixth-round pick by the Arizona Cardinals who has 134 yards and a touchdown on 62 career carries — or Emani Bailey, an undrafted free agent from TCU, to serve as a third-string option behind Perine and Steele.

They also could call up Hunt, who the team signed to its practice squad after his visit on Tuesday. His status may depend on whether the Chiefs believe he is in game shape or will need a week or two of practice to get up to speed on the team’s offense.

Chiefs sign Kareem Hunt to practice squad, per report

The Chiefs brought veteran running back Kareem Hunt in for a visit on Tuesday. Evidently, they liked what they saw, as ESPN’s Adam Schefter reports Kansas City signed the 29-year-old Hunt to its practice squad.

Kansas City originally selected Hunt in the third round of the 2017 NFL draft, and he led the NFL in rushing yards during his rookie season with 1,327. It looked like he was going to be a star for the Chiefs, but he was released during the 2018 season after a video of him throwing a woman to the ground and kicking her emerged.

Hunt signed with the Cleveland Browns during the 2019 offseason and remained there for the next five seasons. He primarily served as a complimentary player behind Nick Chubb and only eclipsed 1,000 scrimmage yards once.

Still, Hunt provides the Chiefs with some needed backfield experience. He has 1,030 career carries, which is nearly double the amount that Perine, Steele, Ingram and Bailey have combined (525).

And while Hunt’s 411 yards on 135 carries during the 2023 season aren’t overly impressive, he scored nine rushing touchdowns for the Browns. That could allow him to carve out a goal-line role in Kansas City.

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Colorado football coach Deion Sanders recently had a discussion with NFL scouts about Travis Hunter.

The topic was his potential, according to Sanders. Can Hunter do in the NFL what he’s been doing at Colorado?

In other words, can he play on offense and defense at the next level without taking much of a break?

In last week’s 28-9 win at Colorado State, Hunter had 13 catches for 100 yards and two touchdowns on offense. On defense, he had five tackles, an interception return for 38 yards and a pass breakup. He played 123 of 138 snaps from scrimmage, according to Colorado.

Now, Hunter and the Buffaloes (2-1) play Baylor (2-1) at home Saturday in an 8 p.m. ET game on Fox.

Sanders said Hunter “cannot help but be a great pro” on both sides of the ball.

“I think he’s a great complement to their game (in the NFL), and he can continue to do what he’s doing now,” Sanders said at a news conference Tuesday in Boulder.

How Deion Sanders broke it down

Georgia’s Champ Bailey and Michigan’s Charles Woodson also played both ways in college but generally only played one way in the NFL. Both are Pro Football Hall of Famers after settling in as defensive backs in the NFL, in addition to returning punts.

Sanders, also a Pro Football Hall of Famer, still broke it down like this: The NFL would be a slower game for Hunter because offenses there huddle more than they do in college, giving Hunter a break from the faster “tempo” offenses in college.

“A lot of teams are tempo (in college), so he don’t get a lot of rest,” Sanders said. “Just think about this. I just finished talking to scouts about this, about what he can and cannot do. Pros go to huddle, so he’s even getting more time to rest, so most teams you play (in college), they run some type of a tempo or the transition is much greater than pros from snap to snap. So with him getting that amount of rest, he cannot help but be a great pro. The practices are limited. There’s barely no contact. You can’t even hit a receiver downfield in the NFL no more.”

Hunter last week became the first player in school history to have four straight games with 100 yards receiving. He ranks second nationally in catches per game with 10 and second in touchdown catches with five.

Hunter praised his blockers after the win at Colorado State and admitted he got tired at one point, but only for a moment. He took himself out of the game after a long chase-down of a Colorado State player in the fourth quarter.

“It’s probably the first time I did that,” he said of taking himself out.

The Baylor-Colorado game, injuries and RGIII

Saturday’s game is a homecoming game and Colorado’s Big 12 Conference opener. The game at Folsom Field is sold out. Sanders said running back Dallan Hayden, a transfer from Ohio State, is questionable to return with an unspecified injury after missing the CSU game. He said defensive linemen Taurean Carter, a transfer from Arkansas, recently had surgery for an unspecified injury and is out for an indefinite time.

Saturday’s game also will test the friendship between Sanders and Robert Griffin III, who won the Heisman Trophy at Baylor in 2011. Griffin has been on Colorado’s campus at times to meet with Sanders and on Tuesday he released a podcast discussion with Sanders’ sons, Shedeur and Shilo.

“RGIII, when he was at Baylor, it was poetry in motion,” Sanders said. “He had the country by the throat, and he was applying pressure. I love what he stands for as an athlete, as a father, as a man, period, especially for our culture. I’ve got nothing but love for RGIII, but I’m pretty sure he’s gonna be conflicted inside, because he wants us to do our thing. But that’s his alma mater, so I’m pretty sure he’s leaning, he’s gonna be wearing green with probably a gold necklace on.”

Follow reporter Brent Schrotenboer @Schrotenboer. Email: bschrotenb@usatoday.com

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(This story was updated to change or add a photo or video.)

With no more than seven games separating the top five teams in each league, Major League Baseball’s playoff field remains an exercise in fluidity as the regular season winds down.

While a handful of division leaders have comfortable leads – or counting down increasingly granular magic numbers to clinch – the wild-card spots and overall seedings are very much up for grabs.

Here’s how the American and National league playoff fields stack up if the postseason began today:

(Updated through games played Sept. 17)

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

American League

Top seeds

No. 1 New York Yankees (88-63) – bye to AL Division Series, vs. Royals-Orioles winner

No. 2 Cleveland Guardians (87-65) – bye to AL Division Series, vs. Twins-Astros winner

AL wild card series

No. 6 Minnesota Twins (80-71) at No. 3 Houston Astros (82-69)

No. 5 Kansas City Royals (82-70) at No. 4 Baltimore Orioles (84-67)

National League

Top seeds

No. 1 Philadelphia Phillies (91-60), bye to NL Division Series vs. Padres-Mets winner

No. 2 Los Angeles Dodgers (89-62), bye to NL Division Series, vs. Diamondbacks-Brewers winner

NL wild card series

No. 6 Arizona Diamondbacks (83-68) at No. 3 Milwaukee Brewers (87-64)

No. 5 New York Mets (83-68) at No. 4 San Diego Padres (86-66)

Mets hold tiebreaker vs. Diamondbacks

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NFL power rankings entering Week 3 of the 2024 season (previous rank in parentheses):

1. Kansas City Chiefs (1): The bid for an unprecedented Super Bowl three-peat remains on track – even with an average margin of victory of four points, albeit against two perceived AFC contenders. (And when you’ve got backup OT Wanya Morris snatching TDs, it doesn’t matter if TE Travis Kelce is averaging fewer than 20 receiving yards per game.) Still, this does feel like a flimsy perch given the serious injuries to WR Hollywood Brown and RB Isiah Pacheco.

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6. New Orleans Saints (24): They destroyed a bad team in Week 1, then destroyed a decent one Sunday. New OC Klint Kubiak’s system has certainly suited QB Derek Carr (league-best 5 TD passes and 142.4 passer rating while leading team to points on his first 15 drives of the season) and RB Alvin Kamara (league-best 5 TDs and 290 yards from scrimmage). Amazing how apparently declining vets can be revived by a fresh approach.

8. San Francisco 49ers (3): RB Christian McCaffrey is on IR, WR Deebo Samuel is going to be inactive the next few weeks with a calf strain, and WR Brandon Aiyuk has only been a notch better than inactive as he continues to work his way back from an inactive summer spent on angling for his new contract. And Pro Bowl S Talanoa Hufanga (ACL) still hasn’t been quite ready to return. Otherwise? All’s splendid here.

9. Philadelphia Eagles (5): They looked more comfortable in South America than they did in South Philly given the ways HC Nick Sirianni’s decision-making, RB Saquon Barkley’s hands, the secondary’s general ‘coverage’ and QB Jalen Hurts’ game-sealing interception produced a collective failure Monday night.

10. New York Jets (12): On the plus side, DE Will McDonald IV had a career-best three sacks, matching the total from his rookie year (2023), in Sunday’s win. On the down side, DE Jermaine Johnson is lost to a torn Achilles. Sure seems like time to forge a breakthrough with holdout LB Haason Reddick.

11. Green Bay Packers (16): One of the league’s oldest franchises became its first to win 800 regular-season games. That century-plus of history side, for the second straight year, the Pack feature the league’s youngest roster – the players with an average age of 24.91 years in 2024 … including a 25-year-old quarterback (Jordan Love) who doesn’t seem like he’ll be sidelined by his MCL injury for long.

14. Los Angeles Chargers (18): The schedule’s been Charmin soft yet conducive to launching redemption tours for RB J.K. Dobbins, WR Quentin Johnston and OLB Joey Bosa. The Bolts are half the equation to a .500 start from the Harbaugh brothers in 2024.

16. Cincinnati Bengals (14): A faceplant against an inferior team and a near miss against the Chiefs mean an 0-2 record in Cincy as well. Yet the issues here have the potential to linger much longer if disgruntled WR Ja’Marr Chase continues to come unglued.

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25. Miami Dolphins (13): Between WR Tyreek Hill and QB Tua Tagovailoa, not many opportunities to focus on football for a franchise with a very uncertain outlook moving forward after Tua’s latest concussion.

29. Tennessee Titans (29): Rookie HC Brian Callahan didn’t get into this business to entertain us. But his unsparing criticism of, well, football-irresponsible QB Will Levis has at least been refreshing.

31. New York Giants (32): Unclear if it’s possible to overuse a rookie wideout, but the G-Men might be testing that notion – the Rams’ injured Cooper Kupp the only one in the league with more targets than Malik Nabers’ 25.

32. Carolina Panthers (31): If Joe Flacco could come off the couch to save the Browns at age 38 a year ago, why shouldn’t Andy Dalton be able to do it at age 36 by simply turning his clipboard, er tablet, over to Bryce Young after the team stunningly pulled the ripcord on him after two 2024 starts?

***

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

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: New House Freedom Caucus Chairman Andy Harris, R-Md., wants to focus on two key issues for the remainder of this year – government funding and next year’s House GOP Conference rules. 

‘I’ve been on the Freedom Caucus, really, since, since the beginning,’ Harris told Fox News Digital on Tuesday night, in his first interview since being elected chair of the ultra-conservative group.

‘I’ve watched, you know, all our chairs do a great job pushing the conservative agenda with Congress, and with the American people. And right now our big fight is going to be on controlling spending. It’s going to be on what the rules look like for the next Congress.’

Harris promised, ‘I’m going to roll up my sleeves and battle those two issues.’

The Maryland Republican, who was first elected in 2010, was chosen to lead the Freedom Caucus for the remainder of the year after Rep. Bob Good, R-Va., vacated the role following his June primary loss to another Republican.

Harris has not been known to be particularly chatty with reporters on Capitol Hill, making him an understandable successor for a group that keeps even its membership list undisclosed.

The Freedom Caucus has also long been seen as a thorn in the side of House GOP leaders, pushing them to go further in pushing conservative policies through Congress.

Harris, however, praised Speaker Mike Johnson’s leadership on government funding ahead of a Wednesday vote on a Freedom Caucus-backed plan to avoid a government shutdown.

The plan is a six-month extension of this year’s federal funds known as a continuing resolution (CR), to give lawmakers more time to hash out fiscal year 2025’s priorities, paired with a measure requiring proof of citizenship in the voter registration process.

‘The leadership he’s shown on this issue is excellent,’ Harris said. ‘I think if we had had this discussion one month ago and someone suggested that Speaker Johnson was going to bring a six-month CR to the floor, and, oh, by the way, we add the [Safeguarding American Voter Eligibility (SAVE) Act] into it – most people wouldn’t believe it.’

But the Democrat-controlled Senate and White House have called the legislation a nonstarter.

Harris would not say how conservatives could force Johnson to stick by the plan, even as several Republicans have publicly opposed the measure over concerns the speaker would not fight for the SAVE Act if it was rejected by the Senate. 

‘If it fails, we’ll cross that bridge when we come to it,’ he said.

Harris did, however, urge those GOP critics to take a ‘second look’ at the bill ahead of Wednesday’s vote.

‘I hope they take a second look before tomorrow and realize that the important signal would send to the American people,’ Harris said. ‘I’d love to hear the argument Chuck Schumer is going to make to say, ‘Yeah, you know, we’re going to reject that because we want illegal aliens to vote.’’

The Maryland Republican similarly would not go into detail about what changes he would want to see to the House GOP Conference rules – though the issue is expected to take center stage in the end-of-year leadership elections.

Ex-Speaker Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., agreed to changing certain conference rules to win over his critics after House Republicans won the majority in the 2022 midterm elections.

That notably included lowering the threshold for triggering a vote on the speaker’s ouster – called the motion to vacate the chair – from a simple majority to just one vote.

‘I hope that in its wisdom, that the Republican majority next year – because I believe there will be a Republican majority – not only adopts and endorses all those changes we made this term, but maybe make some further changes. Those will be discussed more obviously in the next two months.’

When pressed for details, Harris noted there were other members of the group besides himself.

‘That’s going to be up to what the Freedom Caucus says,’ Harris said. ‘I’m the chairman, but I’m not all the members.’

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Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., is forging ahead with a vote on his plan to avert a government shutdown and force tighter U.S. election measures through Congress on Wednesday.

Johnson was forced to cancel a vote on the measure last week after it hemorrhaged GOP support for days after being unveiled.

Multiple sources who spoke with Fox News Digital on Tuesday said the House GOP leadership’s efforts to persuade Republican opponents of the bill were largely unsuccessful over the weekend.

At least a dozen Republican lawmakers are expected to vote against the bill. With just a four-seat majority and widespread Democrat opposition anticipated, expectations within the GOP are low.

‘I mean. It buys us a week of arguing over illegal immigrants,’ one House Republican told Fox News Digital via text message. Asked if it was worth the news cycle if it failed, they replied, ‘At this point… I suppose.’

Another GOP lawmaker said, ‘They’re basically at the point where they need to say they ran the play – call folks RINOs, let the Freedom Caucus folks say ‘shut it all down’ and then just wait for Senate to jam us.’

‘Didn’t have the votes last week and can’t imagine that changing this week,’ they said.

Johnson himself said in a statement, ‘Congress has an immediate obligation to do two things: responsibly fund the federal government, and ensure the security of our elections. Because we owe this to our constituents, we will move forward on Wednesday with a vote on the 6-month CR with the SAVE Act attached.’

The speaker does, however, have a wide cross-section of support from within the conference. 

House Freedom Caucus policy chair Rep. Chip Roy, R-Texas, led the Safeguarding American Voter Eligibility (SAVE) Act, which is being attached to the spending bill. 

He wrote on X on Tuesday that ‘some Republican nihilists would rather set up the failure they then get to complain about’ than pass an imperfect bill with conservative policies.

Meanwhile, Rep. Andy Barr, R-Ky., a top leadership ally, told Fox Business host Maria Bartiromo, ‘I support Speaker Johnson. He’s absolutely right, and the American people are with us on this.’

Congress is faced with a Sept. 30 deadline to fund the government for fiscal 2025 or see a partial government shutdown weeks before Election Day. The House has passed less than half of the 12 required appropriations bills while the Senate has not passed any.

Both Democrats and Republicans agree that a short-term extension of this year’s funding, known as a continuing resolution (CR), is needed to give negotiators more time.

But the SAVE Act, which would impose a proof of citizenship requirement on the voter registration process, has been called a nonstarter in the Democrat-controlled Senate and White House. President Biden has already threatened to veto Johnson’s plan.

Meanwhile, national security hawks and senior lawmakers within the GOP have called for a shorter CR through December, citing potential strains on military readiness if funding levels are consistent through March.

Another issue for House GOP leaders is that a large swath of Republicans, including the bill’s opponents, are against CRs on principle, arguing they are an extension of bloated federal spending levels.

Others have expressed frustration at being made to vote on a ‘messaging’ bill that would not pass the Democrat-controlled Senate.

‘Speaker Johnson is fake fighting by attaching a bright shiny object (that he will later abandon) to a bill that continues our path of destructive spending. I won’t be any part of this insulting charade,’ Rep. Thomas Massie, R-Ky., wrote on X.

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., wrote, ‘The only way to make the SAVE Act a law would be to refuse to pass a CR until the Senate agrees to pass the SAVE Act and Biden agrees to sign it into law.’

‘This would force a Gov shutdown on Oct 1… Johnson will NOT commit to standing up against the Democrats in a shutdown fight and will allow passage of a clean CR in order to fund the government because he believes a gov shutdown will be blamed on Republicans and will hurt their elections.’

Making matters more difficult for Johnson is former President Trump, with whom he met  over the weekend after an assassination attempt on the ex-president.

Trump has publicly endorsed the SAVE Act on his Truth Social platform but urged congressional Republicans to push for a government shutdown if they did not get ‘absolute assurances on election security.’

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Promising as the video evidence backing Jordan Chiles’ claim to her bronze medal is, it never should have come to this.

And nothing can ever undo the damage that’s been done or the heartache she’s suffered.

Her bronze medal on floor exercise at the Paris Games should be the crowning personal achievement of Chiles’ career, her first individual medal in two Olympic appearances. Instead, it’s been tainted by legal wranglings and online abuse, her joy and pride now forever colored by disappointment and hurt.

All because other people, people whose jobs it is to know better, screwed up in almost every way imaginable.

The International Gymnastics Federation. The Court of Arbitration for Sport. Even Romanian officials, who trampled over Chiles in their zeal to get for their athletes something they did not deserve.

Chiles and her coach followed the rules, as the video submitted with her appeal filed Monday so clearly shows. Yet Chiles is the one who’s been punished, stripped of her medal — for now — not because of anything she did but because of the incompetence and ineptitude of others.

“Jordan Chiles’ appeals present the international community with an easy legal question — will everyone stand by while an Olympic athlete who has done only the right thing is stripped of her medal because of fundamental unfairness in an ad-hoc arbitration process? The answer to that question should be no,” Maurice M. Suh, counsel for Chiles, said in the statement Monday announcing her appeal to the Swiss Federal Tribunal.

“Every part of the Olympics, including the arbitration process, should stand for fair play.”

And nothing about this process has been fair.

Chiles initially finished fifth in the floor exercise, her score of 13.666 putting her behind Romanians Ana Barbosu and Sabrina Maneca-Voineau. (The Romanians had identical scores of 13.7, but Barbosu placed higher because of a better execution score.) But Cecile Landi, who is Chiles’ personal coach in addition to being the U.S. coach in Paris, appealed her difficulty score, arguing Chiles had not been given full credit for a tour jete, a leap.

A review panel agreed, and the additional 0.100 elevated the American ahead of both Romanians into third place.

That’s when things went sideways.

Romania appealed, submitting several different arguments before settling on the claim that Chiles’ inquiry was filed too late. The Court of Arbitration for Sport sided with the Romanians, ruling that the official timing system showed Chiles’ inquiry had been made four seconds past the 60-second deadline.

But the rules are a gymnast has 60 seconds after a score is posted to make a verbal inquiry, not that the inquiry must show up in the system within 60 seconds. That might seem like splitting hairs, but it’s not. Common sense tells you making a verbal inquiry and registering it are not simultaneous, yet the CAS ruling made the assumption they were.

We know now they were not. The video shows Landi saying, “Inquiry for Jordan!” twice within the 60-second deadline. If there was a delay in registering it, that isn’t Chiles’ fault and can’t be held against her.

As for why CAS didn’t have that video during its hearing, add that to the list of the tribunal’s failings.

Chiles, USA Gymnastics and the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee didn’t know for three days that they were parties to the Romanians’ appeal because CAS was using either wrong or outdated emails. How this was possible, given the USOPC and CAS had been in frequent communication throughout the Games about a medals ceremony in Paris for U.S. figure skaters and the wrong emails were generating bounce-back messages, begs belief. You almost have to try to be that incompetent.

When the Americans finally were informed, it was less than 24 hours before the CAS hearing. There is no way to read the many documents in the case, analyze the arguments, craft a response and prepare for a hearing in that amount of time.

There also was no need to. Contrary to Romania’s claim about the need for a quick decision so the medals table would be accurate before the end of the Games, nothing demanded urgency in this case. The floor exercise medals had already been awarded. The gymnastics competition was over. No one’s ability to participate was at stake. There would have been no material difference in a decision made on Oct. 10 from one made on Aug. 10.

Except that maybe it would have given the CAS arbitrators time to have gotten it right. And Chiles wouldn’t have been put through an emotional wringer.

“My heart was broken,” she said last week during an appearance at the Forbes Power Women’s Summit.

This all could have been avoided. And even if Chiles does get the title of bronze medalist back, as she should, it can never make up for everything else she lost.

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

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