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North Korea is promising to refine its weapons development and strengthen its nuclear capabilities. 

Supreme leader Kim Jong Un made the comments Monday at a state event celebrating the country’s 76th anniversary.

‘The obvious conclusion is that the nuclear force of the DPRK and the posture capable of properly using it for ensuring the state’s right to security in any time should be more thoroughly perfected,’ the dictator said.

‘DPRK’ is an abbreviation for North Korea’s official name, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea.

Kim Jong Un warned that the United States’ increased involvement in the region has forced the regime to pursue more powerful weapons as a deterrence mechanism.

‘The DPRK will steadily strengthen its nuclear force capable of fully coping with any threatening acts imposed by its nuclear-armed rival states and redouble its measures and efforts to make all the armed forces of the state, including the nuclear force, fully ready for combat,’ the supreme leader said.

North Korea has sought to both augment its self-defense capabilities and strengthen its regional alliances against the United States.

The 14th Supreme People’s Assembly, the unicameral legislative body of the country, amended the national constitution last year to enshrine nuclear weaponization as a core principle.

Kim Jong Un met with Russian President Vladimir Putin in June, affirming the two nations’ shared history and commitment to mutual defensive support.

Li Hongzhong, a high-ranking official within the Chinese Communist Party, traveled to North Korea in July for a similar goodwill visit.

The Russia-China-North Korea triad’s increasing cooperation against Western interests has made their alliance a significant consideration for U.S. and NATO officials.

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Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., was forced to delay a House-wide vote on his plan to avert a partial government shutdown on Wednesday after a slew of GOP defections put the bill on life support within days of its rollout.

Johnson told reporters there would be ‘no vote today’ on the measure, a short-term extension of this year’s government funding called a continuing resolution (CR), combined with a measure to mandate a proof of citizenship requirement in the voter registration process.

House leaders originally planned to hold the vote late on Wednesday afternoon, though as of earlier in the morning, at least eight Republican lawmakers signaled opposition.

Conservative opponents on Johnson’s right flank who were largely against CRs in general – believing them to be an extension of overbroad ‘omnibus’ spending bills which they oppose – accused House GOP leaders of trying to appease them with a messaging bill that would not ultimately be signed into law.

Some GOP national security hawks were also wary of the bill’s six-month spending extension over its impact on military and other defense funding, pushing instead for a shorter spending patch into December.

House and Senate leaders must reach an agreement on government funding by Sept. 30 to avert a partial government shutdown.

One source familiar with discussions told Fox News Digital that they anticipate Johnson holding the vote next week, something the speaker also alluded to in his comments.

The American people demand and deserve that we do everything possible to secure the elections. That’s what we’ve been saying consistently,’ Johnson said. ‘We’re going to continue to work on this. The whip is going to do the hard work and build consensus. We’re going to work through the weekend on that.’

In a shot at the bill’s opponents on both sides, Johnson said, ‘I want any member of Congress in either party to explain to the American people why we should not ensure that only U.S. citizens are voting in U.S. elections.’

Trump had advocated for the six-month CR attached to the Safeguarding American Voter Eligibility (SAVE) Act last month, urging House Republicans to leverage a shutdown weeks before Election Day to get it passed.

He appeared to change his tune somewhat this week, urging GOP lawmakers to vote against a CR unless they were ensured of a noncitizen voting crackdown.

‘If Republicans in the House, and Senate, don’t get absolute assurances on Election Security, THEY SHOULD, IN NO WAY, SHAPE, OR FORM, GO FORWARD WITH A CONTINUING RESOLUTION ON THE BUDGET. THE DEMOCRATS ARE TRYING TO ‘STUFF’ VOTER REGISTRATIONS WITH ILLEGAL ALIENS. DON’T LET IT HAPPEN – CLOSE IT DOWN!!!’ Trump wrote on his Truth Social app.

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., a Johnson critic and a top ally of Trump’s, told reporters of his post, ‘What he’s talking about is, it’s about Speaker Johnson. You see, all of us can go into battle voting for a CR plus the SAVE act, but none of it matters if the speaker of the House is unwilling to fight for it. And, so I think that Truth Social was pointed at one man, and that’s where the pressure is.’

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A focus group reacting live to the presidential debate appeared to have strong opinions about the controversial conservative plan, Project 2025.

Project 2025 was launched by the Heritage Foundation as part of their Presidential Transition Project for the 2024 cycle. The project has become a talking point for Democrats, who have attempted to smear it as radical and tie it to former President Donald Trump.

During the presidential debate on Tuesday, Democrats and independent support for Vice President Kamala Harris shot up as she railed against Project 2025. 

‘On this debate tonight, you’re gonna hear from the same old tied playbook. A bunch of lies, grievances, and name-calling. What you’re gonna hear tonight is a detailed and dangerous plan called Project 2025 that the former president intends on implementing if he were elected again,’ Harris said. ‘I believe very strongly that the American people want a president who understands the importance of bringing us together.’

Trump, however, denied any involvement with the group.

‘As you know, and as she knows better than anyone, I have nothing to do with Project 2025. That’s out there. I haven’t read it. I don’t want to read it purposely. I’m not going to read it,’ Trump said during Tuesday’s debate. 

As he spoke about the controversial group, he gained support among Republicans but saw a dramatic shift downward from both independents and Democrats. 

‘This was a group of people that got together. They came up with some ideas, I guess some good, some bad. But it makes no difference,’ he added. ‘Everybody knows I’m an open book. Everybody knows what I’m going to do.’

All three voting blocs, however, shot up in support for Trump when he said he was going to ‘cut taxes very substantially and create a great economy like I did before.’

Independents showed dissatisfaction with Trump while he talked about the coronavirus pandemic, but both Democrats and Republicans were consistently more supportive of the former president as he discussed the pandemic and the economy.

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Three years since the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan and 23 years since the 9/11 terror attacks that led to the U.S. invasion, Afghanistan finds itself in a worse position now than it was on that fateful day.

‘This country has become once again a safe haven for terrorism. It will become a battlefield once again,’ Afghan National Resistance Front (NRF) leader Ahmad Massoud told Fox News Digital in a rare interview.

According to Massoud, the threat emanating from Afghanistan is much greater today than it was on 9/11, and the U.S. failed to achieve its number one objective of rooting out terrorists when it hastily pulled out of Afghanistan in August 2021.

The threat of terrorism from Afghanistan has spread from the U.S. to Europe and recently to Russia. It is just a matter of time, Massoud fears, for it to reach America’s shores again.

‘I know for a fact the time will come,’ Massoud said.

Massoud is not giving up on his vision of a free and democratic Afghanistan despite the odds, and he believes that Americans and Afghans hold intimate bonds over shared values of fighting for freedom against terrorists.

‘I feel very much the same feeling with all those victims of 9/11 and the people of the United States and Afghanistan are very much connected to each other because those attacks were carried out by the same team, those who attacked Americans on 9/11 killed my father,’ Massoud said.

Twenty-three years later and four U.S. presidential administrations since, Afghans live under the same threat of Islamic extremism and with the same pain and oppression as they did on 9/11.

Almost immediately after the Taliban regained power, anti-Taliban forces quickly fled to Afghanistan’s northern Panjshir Valley and announced their opposition to the new regime. 

Massoud, the leader of the NRF, vowed to continue the fight against the Taliban.

‘I didn’t want to leave my people alone in the hands of evil,’ Massoud told Fox News Digital.

Massoud is the son of Afghan resistance hero Ahmad Shah Massoud. The younger Massoud was only 12 years old when his father was assassinated by al Qaeda two days before the 9/11 terror attacks. Shah Massoud was integral to the rebels who fought against the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan in the 1980s and became a leading figure in the anti-Taliban Northern Alliance that resisted the Taliban’s reign from 1996 to 2001.

As a young boy growing up in war-ravaged Afghanistan, it was not clear at the time that he would follow in the same footsteps as his legendary rebel father.

‘My father never wanted me to walk in the same path,’ Massoud recounted.

His father did not want him becoming a rebel leader because of the pain that it causes, Massoud remembered, and the enormous pressure and the high expectations it has is unbearable.

Massoud is not doing this for his late father or because he is his son.

‘I’m just doing it because I’m madly in love with my people, and I cannot see them in this situation.’

As the years and memories of that sunny, cloudless and traumatic Tuesday morning in September fade away, Massoud is trying to remind America and the world not to forget about the threat from terrorism in Afghanistan.

‘Today, al Qaeda is much stronger and entrenched in Afghanistan than it has ever been,’ the resistance leader said.

The 2020 Doha Agreement negotiated under former President Donald Trump laid the groundwork for the withdrawal of all U.S. forces in exchange for a pledge from the Taliban to prevent any terrorist organization from using Afghan soil to threaten or attack the United States or its allies.

Taliban spokespersons made assurances that they would not allow any terror group to plan an attack from Afghan territory. Although it is true that al Qaeda and other terrorist groups have yet to stage any attacks on the U.S. or its allies, groups like al Qaeda still operate within Afghanistan and have deeply rooted ties with the Taliban.

Numerous United Nations reports note that since their return to power, relations with al Qaeda remain close, and the group that carried out the 9/11 terror attacks is ‘strategically patient, cooperating with other terrorist groups in Afghanistan and prioritizing its ongoing relationship with the Taliban.’

Al Qaeda operates at least eight training camps across Afghanistan but does so covertly in order to create the image that the Taliban is adhering to the Doha Agreement, according to U.N. monitoring.

While the U.S. was negotiating with the Taliban, Massoud knew all along they were not negotiating in good faith.

‘It is going to fail, and it will also show the world the true face of the Taliban,’ Massoud said.

The leader of the NRF said the international community believed the lies of the Taliban that they had fundamentally changed from the group that previously ruled Afghanistan prior to 9/11. 

‘Women have been degraded to nothing but property of men and education has been completely destroyed by the Taliban,’ Massoud said angrily. 

The elder Massoud, according to his son, warned against an international presence in Afghanistan, saying that the U.S. came to him and proposed operating military bases in the country and to help jointly fight against terrorism.

Shah Massoud was very clear in his vision.

‘My father said boots on the ground in Afghanistan will never work,’ Massoud recounts his father saying. ‘We fought against the invasion of the Russians. And really, he did not want the presence of another foreign force in Afghanistan,’ he added.

The U.S. did not heed these warnings when they went into Afghanistan.

Massoud wants to continue his father’s policy of no foreign troops on Afghan soil and wants to fight terrorism with his own forces based in the country. What he is looking for is the logistical and financial support to carry on the fight.

‘We indeed need help and support from the world,’ Massoud said, but he also understands the frustration in the United States over ‘forever wars’ and respects U.S. policy opposing further wars. The U.S.-Afghan relationship should continue its efforts to fight terrorism, Massoud believes, and that Afghans should not feel betrayed while the same group that killed Americans and Afghans is in power.

Three years later, and with the Taliban cementing their power, the U.S.-Afghan partnership that emerged after 9/11 remains nonexistent.

‘We are on our own and there is no external support.’

Massoud believes if the U.S. and international community throw their support behind the NRF, it could make a huge difference.

‘Even the slightest of external support, you would see the liberation of a big chunk of Afghanistan. Because the people are very much against the Taliban, the slightest bit of hope and the slightest of opportunities for the people of Afghanistan, and we would see a crack in the armor of the Taliban,’ he explained.

Massoud did not mince words when talking about U.S. policy and was critical of the period immediately after 9/11 and the invasion of Afghanistan when the War on Terror expanded to Iraq and Saddam Hussein’s regime.

‘The expansion of this war to Iraq completely diverted attention from Afghanistan and Afghanistan for a while [was] the second priority.’ Massoud argued that more attention was needed to help build Afghan institutions and make the new government more stable and therefore harder to overthrow.  

Massoud was also critical of early U.S. strategy, including the endeavor to create an Afghan army in the image of the U.S. armed forces.

‘We did not have American resources or American technology. It was a recipe for disaster.’

Massoud also said that the U.S.’ conflicting strategies of counterterrorism and counterinsurgency over the years failed to fully defeat the Taliban and create a stable Afghan government.

‘It means that, unfortunately, the Afghans could not make the Americans understand that these strategies don’t work in Afghanistan, and they failed to come up with a proper strategy.’

However critical Massoud is of American and international leadership and strategy in Afghanistan, he still placed 70% to 80% of the blame on the Afghan leadership and their flawed thinking that the U.S. and coalition partners would remain in Afghanistan forever like on the Korean Peninsula. The false sense of security did not allow Afghan leaders to focus on national trust, and corruption and criminality ran rampant.

‘Unfortunately, the inside political game and personal agendas and not having the capability to see that this situation could never last very long, or that it was not a forever perk,’ hurt Afghanistan’s ability to fight terrorism threats it faced or build a stable democracy.

‘They missed all of those opportunities,’ Massoud said.

The resistance leader is not unaware of the complicated nature of international politics and realizes that many conflicts are currently raging on, which require U.S. attention and resources.

‘There’s a fatigue in the U.S. and the West, and they have been stretched from Ukraine to Taiwan to Gaza. So that stress is also another factor for them not to actually pay attention to Afghanistan,’ Massoud lamented. 

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Colorado football coach Deion Sanders had to get something off his chest Tuesday when addressing the news media in Boulder.

He wanted to address a report that had been circulating on social media that said he had ordered the Colorado band to stop playing the school fight song after touchdowns by his quarterback son Shedeur and instead play his son’s rap song called “Perfect Timing.”

“That’s idiotic,” Deion Sanders said. “Y’all know that. When you saw that, you know that was a lie.”

He then discussed the problem involving online content these days – how much of it is not fact-checked or confirmed by experienced, principled journalists. In another case, online critics made a mistaken assumption about Shedeur after his team lost at Nebraska last week, 28-10.

Some criticized how Shedeur left the field for the locker room before the game ended, wrongly assuming he was selfishly bailing on his teammates. That also was not true. Shedeur left the field to get treatment for an injury along with another player.  

Deion Sanders flexes power he said he won’t use

Deion Sanders brought this up before his Buffaloes (1-1) play at rival Colorado State (1-1) Saturday in a 7:30 p.m. ET game on CBS.

“We gotta to start having some kind of accountability to this,” Sanders said. “I understand that this is a free and open world, that everybody is not a journalist. Everybody is not an analyst. Everybody really hasn’t put in a lot of work to do what you all do. I’m thankful for many of y’all that take your job and your craft serious, and consequently you get facts before you run with false narratives. But please know that stuff affects people. Me. You’ve been attacking me my whole life, so I’m good, but other people that’s involved, band members, Buffs faithful and alumni and all that, sometimes they don’t know what to believe, and often times in life we believe the first thing we hear, in which we shouldn’t.

“I would just challenge you to be more responsible with your reporting. And I never wanted it to get personal, so when it gets personal you’ve got to really think about that.”

Sanders then flexed some power he said he won’t use.

“You gotta understand I have a huge platform,” Deion Sanders said. “I could really get personal if I wanted to, but I chose not to do that because that’s not right. Some things in life is just not right, and I don’t want to go there and I won’t go there, But think about it, just my family alone, the platform is enormous. If we really wanted to go there, we could go there. But we would never do that. We weren’t raised like that.”

Shilo Sanders out 2-3 weeks

Sanders and the Buffs could be without several top players when they play at Colorado State. He said Tuesday that his son Shilo is out two to three weeks after having forearm surgery recently. Shilo Sanders, a safety, was Colorado’s leading tackler last season but came out of last week’s loss at Nebraska with the injury in the first quarter.

Deion Sanders also said running back Dallan Hayden, the team’s leading rusher this year with 52 yards on 14 carries, is out with an unspecified injury after transferring in from Ohio State.

Starting defensive lineman Chidozie Nwanko, a transfer from Houston, also is questionable to play, Sanders said.

‘I’ve been on the cross for a long time’

This will be the second straight rivalry game on the road for Colorado, which struggled last week to run the ball and block for the quarterback – two issues that plagued the Buffs last season when they finished 4-8.

“The benefit is you’ve gotta get up,” Sanders said. “Prayerfullly, you learn your lesson from a week ago, and you gotta get up.”

At the same time, the pressure and the criticism have intensified after the loss to Nebraska.

“When you lose, you’re going to be ridiculed, you’re gonna be prosecuted and persecuted,” Sanders said. “And I’m good. I’ve been on the cross for a long time, and I’m still hanging.”

Deion Sanders talks about Jay Norvell’s wife

Last year’s game against Colorado State received intense pregame hype after Colorado State head coach Jay Norvell took a verbal shot at Sanders’ habit of wearing hats and sunglasses indoors. It’s quieter this week so far. On Tuesday, Sanders was asked about Norvell and his wife Kim after Kim Norvell made critical comments about Shedeur on social media in December after the controversy was detailed again on an episode of the “Coach Prime” documentary series.

Sanders said Tuesday he recently met Kim Norvell at an offseason meeting.

“I’m not looking for an apology” Sanders said when asked if he was. “I just met her. She was delightful.”

Sanders added that “I don’t judge people based off what they say when they’re emotional.”

“I can’t do that man,” he said. “My heart ain’t built like that. I just met his wife, and she was delightful.”

Colorado beat Colorado State last year in Boulder, 43-35.

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

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Coming into the final week of the WNBA regular season, seven of the eight playoff spots have been clinched, and the final seed comes down to three teams.

The season has been historic in terms of viewership and social engagement and looks to ride that momentum in the playoffs.

The Chicago Sky (13-22), Atlanta Dream (12-23), and Washington Mystics (11-24) are fighting for the right to play the top seed, while the Dallas Wings, who were a playoff team in 2023, and the Los Angeles Sparks, who has missed the playoffs in each of the past four seasons, have already been eliminated.

The WNBA playoffs start Sept. 22, with the last regular-season games being played on Sept. 19. October 20 is the last possible Finals date.

Current standings

WNBA playoff format

In the WNBA playoff format, the top eight teams with the best record qualify for the postseason, regardless of conference. The No. 1 seed takes on the No. 8 seed, the No. 2 seed plays the No. 7 seed, the No. 3 seed battles the No. 6 seed, and seeds 4 and 5 will play each other.

The first round is a best-of-three series, with the semifinals having a best-of-five format.

In each round, the higher-seeded team has home-court advantage and hosts Games 1 and 2. If game 3 is necessary in the first round, that game will be played on the lower-seed team’s home court.

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Former President Trump is not surprised by pop superstar Taylor Swift’s endorsement of Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris.

Trump claimed the singer was always going to endorse the Democratic Party during a call-in to ‘Fox & Friends’ on Wednesday morning.

‘It was just a question of time. She couldn’t […] possibly endorse Biden. You look at Biden, you couldn’t possibly endorse him,’ Trump said, clarifying that he is ‘not a Taylor Swift fan.’

‘But she’s a very liberal person. She seems to always endorse a Democrat. And she’ll probably pay a price for it […] in the marketplace.’

Swift endorsed Kamala Harris for president just minutes after the Democratic nominee’s presidential debate against her Republican opponent, Donald Trump. 

Writing on Instagram, the pop star said she will be voting for Harris because, ‘she fights for the rights and causes I believe need a warrior to champion them.’

Trump quipped during his ‘Fox & Friends’ call-in that he ‘actually like[s] Mrs. Mahomes much better,’ referring to Brittany Mahomes, the wife of Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes.

‘She’s a big Trump fan,’ Trump said.

Mahomes first indicated her support for Trump on Aug. 13, when she liked Trump’s Instagram post that outlined the ‘2024 GOP platform.’ The swimsuit model then appeared to respond to criticism on her Instagram Stories.

‘I mean honestly, To be a hater as an adult, you have to have some deep-rooted issues you refuse to heal from childhood,’ she wrote on Instagram Stories after receiving criticism for her support. ‘There’s no reason your brain is fully developed and you hate to see others doing well.’

Swift was with Travis Kelce and the Mahomes family at Flushing Meadows to watch the U.S. Open. Swift and Brittany Mahomes were snapped embracing each other lovingly.

Fox News Digital’s Ryan Gaydos and Bradford Betz contributed to this report.

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Former Minnesota Vikings star running back Adrian Peterson earned more than $100 million in his NFL career from 2007 to 2021. But he still is in massive debt estimated at more than $12 million. And now a judge in Houston has issued an order for him to turn over numerous assets to help pay it back.

The same judge on Monday ordered that constables in Fort Bend County, Texas, accompany the court-appointed receiver to Peterson’s home when he shows up to seize the assets, according to the order obtained by USA TODAY Sports.

The receiver, Robert Berleth, requested this order in July and said Peterson is “is known to have numerous assets” stored at his home in Missouri City, Texas.

“The receiver requests constable accompaniment when receiver levies the numerous assets known to be stored at (the property) to keep the peace and prevent interference with the Receiver’s duties,” the receiver said in his request.

On Monday, the judge heard the receiver’s arguments and granted the request.

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

“It is, therefore, ordered that a writ of turnover with receiver’s levy be issued and Ft. Bend County constables are to accompany the receiver in execution of his duties,” the order stated.

What is Adrian Peterson’s debt from?

The order is the latest in a long legal battle to get Peterson to pay back a $5.2 million loan he took out from a Pennsylvania lending company in 2016 that was supposed to pay back other lenders, according to court records. That debt since has led to a $8.3 million judgment against him in 2021, plus $15,000 in attorney’s fees with 9% per annum on all amounts, according to the receiver’s court filing. The approximate collection total is $12.5 million, Berleth stated in a February court filing.

“No offsets have been made against this judgment to date,” the receiver stated in the July court filing.

Berleth, the court-appointed receiver, also has accused Peterson of playing a shell game with his assets to avoid payment. In February, a sports memorabilia auction in Texas got caught in the middle of it when it attempted to sell off Peterson’s personal items, including several NFL trophies and jerseys.

A judge halted the sale after Peterson objected and went on social media to say, ‘I want to emphasize that I’m financially stable and would never sell off my hard-earned trophies.’ That auction is still apparently on hold.

Berleth gave his version of events in court documents.

‘The Receiver intercepted an auction the debtor (Peterson) initiated and seized items at Storage Facilities leased and secured with lock by the Debtor (Peterson),’ Berleth said in court documents. ‘The assets belong to the Debtor. The leases at the Storage Facilities were delinquent. The debtor contested the sale of trophies.”

Why did Peterson take out this loan?

Peterson took out the loan in October 2016 and promised to pay it back with interest in March 2017, five months later. According to the agreement, he sought the money so he could pay back other loans. But Peterson was coming off a knee injury in 2016, and the Vikings declined to pick up the $18 million option on his contract in early 2017, turning Peterson into a free agent. Peterson’s earnings fell dramatically after that, never exceeding $3.5 million a year. He hasn’t played in the NFL since 2021.

On Tuesday, after this story first published, Peterson issued a statement through his publicist Denise White that cast blame on his former financial advisor, who could not be immediately reached by USA TODAY Sports.

The statement said this was not a personal loan but a business loan that Peterson’s financial advisor guaranteed would be repaid from a business he co-owned with the financial advisor and another partner. The statement says Peterson was made the guarantor of the loan as the business’s majority owner and that loan was to buy equipment for the business.

However, the promissory note with the lending company lists only Peterson as the borrower with a 12% interest rate, according to court records.

An attachment to the promissory note says he was seeking an advance on a $18 million contract between Peterson and the Vikings (which never materialized). It also says the purpose of the loan he sought was to consolidate, reduce the rate and defer payments on existing unsecured debt.

Peterson’s statement said he unsuccessfully has tried to settle with the lending company, DeAngelo Vehicle Sales.

“Legal representatives have informally referred to the situation as `loan sharking’ due to the high interest rate and the predatory nature of the loan, but all attempts at an amicable settlement have been rebuffed,” Peterson’s statement said. “Peterson feels it is important to speak out, hoping that others can avoid similar financial predicaments. Trusting his financial advisor, as many do, Peterson relied on assurances—under now-missing recordings—that no personal funds would be required to settle the loan. Unfortunately, he has been left solely responsible for the financial fallout. He looks forward to resolving this matter quickly so he can move forward with his life. His ultimate goal is to help others avoid falling into similar financial traps in the future.”

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

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U.S. Soccer is hoping this coach with Chelsea ties works out as well as the other one.

‘The decision to join U.S. Soccer wasn’t just about football for me; it’s about the journey that this team and this country are on,’ Pochettino said in the statement announcing his hiring. ‘The energy, the passion, and the hunger to achieve something truly historic here — those are the things that inspired me.

‘I see a group of players full of talent and potential, and together we’re going to build something special that the whole nation can be proud of.’ 

The announcement came hours before the USMNT played New Zealand in a friendly, with Mikey Varas serving as interim coach. Pochettino’s first game in charge of the USMNT is expected to be Oct. 12 in Austin, Texas. The Americans also have a game Oct. 15 against Mexico outside Guadalajara during that international window.

While this is Pochettino’s first international job, he’s been one of the most successful European club coaches in recent years. He took Tottenham to the Champions League final in 2019 and won a French league title with Paris Saint-Germain in 2022.

His most recent stint was at Chelsea, where he led the Blues to a 19-point and six-place improvement his first season. Despite the Blues’ turnaround — they also were runners-up in England’s League Cup — Pochettino left Chelsea in May over clashes with management.

The team might have second thoughts on the move, given Chelsea is currently 11th in the standings with one win in its first three games.

‘Mauricio is a serial winner with a deep passion for player development and a proven ability to build cohesive and competitive teams,” U.S. Soccer sporting director Matt Crocker, who worked with Pochettino at Southampton. “His track record speaks for itself, and I am confident that he is the right choice to harness the immense potential within our talented squad.’

Pochettino won’t come cheap. His contract at Chelsea reportedly paid him more than $13 million a year, well above the $2.3 million Gregg Berhalter made in 2023, the most recent figure available.

Crocker previously said money wouldn’t be an obstacle in getting the right coach, and U.S. Soccer said Pochettino’s hiring was ‘supported in significant part by a philanthropic leadership gift’ by Ken Griffin, founder and CEO of Citadel. Scott Goodwin, co-founder of the Diameter hedge fund, and other sponsors also provided support.

But the right coach is worth it, as Emma Hayes proved this summer.

U.S. Soccer made Hayes the highest-paid coach in the women’s game after her incredible success at Chelsea, where she won seven Super League titles before taking over the USWNT in May. Hayes also inherited a U.S. team that wasn’t living up to its potential but, after just three months, she led the Americans to the gold medal at the Paris Olympics.

Pochettino’s reclamation project will be tougher, however. Though the Americans have some superbly talented players — notably Christian Pulisic, Weston McKennie, Tim Weah and Yunus Musah — and several others playing in Europe, there is a significant gap between them and the world’s elite.

They crashed out of this year’s Copa America in the group stage, losing to both Uruguay (ranked 14th in the world at the time, three spots behind the USMNT) and Panama (No. 43) and beating No. 84 Bolivia 2-0. They have not advanced past the round of 16 at the World Cup since 2002, when they reached the quarterfinals, and didn’t even qualify for the 2018 tournament.

On Saturday, the USMNT lost to Canada on home soil for the first time in 67 years.

The USMNT never had a defined style of play under Berhalter, who was fired after the Copa America flameout. Pochettino also will have to shore up a back line that’s in constant need of repair and, shockingly for a team that has had Tim Howard, Kasey Keller, Brad Friedl and Tony Meola, find a top-caliber goalkeeper.

But similar to Hayes, one thing working in Pochettino’s favor is his resume. The Argentine is arguably the most acclaimed coach the USMNT has ever had. In addition to being at the helm of some of Europe’s top clubs, he’s coached some of the biggest names in the game, including Harry Kane at Tottenham and Lionel Messi and Kylian Mbappé at PSG, and is known for being able to both develop and motivate players.

Pochettino also played professionally in Argentina, Spain and France. The central defender began his European career at Espanyol, where he also got his start as a manager.

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The NHL will start gearing up for the 2024-25 regular season with the Florida Panthers trying to defend their first championship after making two consecutive trips to the Stanley Cup Final.

That follows a busy offseason in which nine coaches were hired or had their interim tags removed, prominent goalies were traded and free agents found new homes.

NHL rookie tournaments open on Friday and Saturday, followed by training camps, and preseason games will start on Sept. 21. The regular season will start in Europe on Oct. 4 and in North America on Oct. 8.

Here are the key dates for the NHL’s 2024-25 regular season:

When is the first day of the NHL season?

The 2024-25 NHL regular season will start in Europe on Oct. 4-5 when the New Jersey Devils and Buffalo Sabres play on back-to-back nights in Prague, Czechia.

When is the first day of the NHL season in North America?

The 2024-25 NHL regular season will start in North America with three games on Oct. 8.

When do the Florida Panthers raise their Stanley Cup banner?

The defending champions’ home opener is Oct. 8 against the Boston Bruins (7 p.m. ET), the team they knocked out in the playoffs the past two seasons.

When is the Utah Hockey Club’s home opener?

The Salt Lake City-based team, which acquired the assets of the Arizona Coyotes, also is playing on Oct. 8 (10 p.m. ET), hosting rookie of the year Connor Bedard and the Chicago Blackhawks.

The St. Louis Blues visit the Seattle Kraken in the early game on Oct. 8 (4:30 p.m. ET). All games will be broadcast on ESPN.

What day will all NHL teams be in action?

All 32 teams are playing on Oct. 22. Just as with last season, the start times of this year’s 16 games will be staggered every 15 to 30 minutes between 6 p.m. ET and 11 p.m. ET.

When is the NHL’s second set of games in Europe?

The Dallas Stars and Panthers will play in Tampere, Finland, on Nov. 1-2.

When is the Stanley Cup Final rematch?

The runner-up Edmonton Oilers will host the champion Panthers on Dec. 16. The teams also will play on Feb. 27 in Sunrise, Florida.

When is the Winter Classic?

The Winter Classic will be held on Dec. 31 (5 p.m. ET) at Chicago’s Wrigley Field between the Blackhawks and Blues. The Winter Classic was also played at the Chicago Cubs’ stadium in 2009.

When is the NHL All-Star Game?

There is no All-Star Game this season. It will be replaced by the 4 Nations Face-Off, which will serve as an appetizer for NHL players’ return to the Olympics at the 2026 Winter Games in Milan and Cortina d’Ampezzo, Italy.

When is the 4 Nations Face-Off?

It will be held from Feb. 12-20 in Boston and Montreal and will feature NHL players from the United States, Canada, Sweden and Finland. Each country has named its first six players and the rest will be announced from Nov. 29 to Dec. 2.

When is the NHL’s second outdoor game?

The Columbus Blue Jackets will host the Detroit Red Wings at Ohio Stadium, home of Ohio State’s football team, on March 1.

When is the NHL trade deadline?

That hasn’t been settled yet, but it’s expected to be in early March.

When does the NHL regular season end?

The regular season is scheduled to end on April 17 with six games.

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