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Friday’s WNBA clash in Indianapolis will be a battle to try and stop two unstoppable forces in Caitlin Clark and Napheesa Collier in what could be a preview of the first round of the postseason.

Clark and the Indiana Fever (18-16) will take on the Minnesota Lynx (24-9) on Friday evening in Indy. The Fever are in the midst of a red-hot five-game winning streak and have won nine of their past 11 games to transform their season. 

A favorite for the Rookie of the Year honor, Clark recorded her second career triple-double Wednesday to help her team to a 93-86 win against the Los Angeles Sparks. Clark was already the first WNBA rookie in history to record a triple-double with her first in July, but she now joins the likes of Alyssa Thomas, Courtney Williams, Sabrina Ionescu and Candace Parker as just the fifth WNBA player to record multiple in a season. Clark also shot 4 from 10 beyond the arc to set the WNBA record for the fastest player to reach 100 3-pointers in a season.

The Lynx also enter Friday’s matchup with winning momentum on their side. They have won eight of their past nine games, including a narrow victory over the Chicago Sky on Sept. 1. The Lynx’s only blemish in that stretch was an upset loss to the Dallas Wings on Aug. 30.

The last time these two teams met on Aug. 24, the Lynx dealt the Fever their most recent loss, powered by Collier’s dominant 31-point performance. With both teams on top of their game, Friday’s outcome may hinge on which side can better contain the star power of Clark or Collier on the court. 

Both teams have already clinched playoff spots, with Minnesota currently holding the No. 3 seed and Indiana sitting at No. 6. If the league standings remain unchanged, the Fever and Lynx will face each other in a best-of-three first-round playoff series, marking Indiana’s first postseason appearance since 2016.

Here’s everything you need to know about Clark and the Fever playing the Lynx:

When is Indiana Fever vs. Minnesota Lynx?

Date: Friday, Sept. 6
Time: 7:30 p.m. ET
Location: Gainbridge Fieldhouse, Indianapolis

How to watch Caitlin Clark and Fever vs. Lynx

TV: ION Television

The Fever-Lynx game will also be available on demand upon its conclusion on WNBA League Pass. Fans can get the WNBA League Pass by downloading the WNBA app.

Caitlin Clark stats last game

With 40 minutes on the floor, Clark recorded 24 points, 10 rebounds and 10 assists against the Sparks on Wednesday, earning her second triple-double this season. The Rookie of the Year favorite also shot 4 from 10 from beyond the arc, becoming the fastest player in WNBA history to reach 100 3-pointers in a season.

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Game on.

The 2024 NFL season is finally upon us, the Kansas City Chiefs aiming at history as they attempt to become the first team to pull off a Super Bowl three-peat if they capture another Lombardi Trophy in New Orleans on Feb. 9. The reigning champs’ stated quest begins with Thursday night’s AFC championship game rematch with the Baltimore Ravens, though the matchup will obviously be staged at Arrowhead Stadium this time around as K.C. again celebrates its NFL royalty.

If not a mere appetizer, that sizzler is but the first of several main courses.

The league will stage the rare Friday night affair, too, with its first regular-season foray into Brazil, where the Green Bay Packers and Philadelphia Eagles, both presumed playoff contenders, will meet at Corinthians Arena in bustling São Paulo.

Sunday’s 13-game lineup includes the regular-season debuts of rookie QBs Caleb Williams (Chicago Bears) and Jayden Daniels (Washington Commanders), Tom Brady’s unveiling as a Fox broadcaster as the Cleveland Browns welcome the Dallas Cowboys, and Matthew Stafford’s first regular-season game in Detroit – he took the L at Ford Field in January’s playoffs – as the Los Angeles Rams visit the Lions.

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Matters conclude Monday night when the reigning NFC champion San Francisco 49ers, intact once again with the returns of WR Brandon Aiyuk and LT Trent Williams, host the New York Jets, who take off with high hopes that QB Aaron Rodgers will play a full season and pilot a loaded roster to the franchise’s first championship in 56 years.

And our expert panelists are back with their forecasts.

USA TODAY Sports 2024 NFL season predictions: Our picks to win Super Bowl 59, MVP, rookies of the year, Nate Davis’ updated win projections and more

(Odds provided by BetMGM.)

Baltimore Ravens at Kansas City Chiefs
Green Bay Packers vs. Philadelphia Eagles
Jacksonville Jaguars at Miami Dolphins
Pittsburgh Steelers at Atlanta Falcons
Minnesota Vikings at New York Giants
Carolina Panthers at New Orleans Saints
New England Patriots at Cincinnati Bengals
Tennessee Titans at Chicago Bears
Arizona Cardinals at Buffalo Bills
Houston Texans at Indianapolis Colts
Las Vegas Raiders at Los Angeles Chargers
Denver Broncos at Seattle Seahawks
Washington Commanders at Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Dallas Cowboys at Cleveland Browns
Los Angeles Rams at Detroit Lions
New York Jets at San Francisco 49ers

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ST. JOSEPH, Mo. — During the dog days of one of the NFL’s toughest training camps, Travis Kelce might have embodied the perfect barometer of the Kansas City Chiefs’ mindset. 

And why not him? The star tight end was the life of the party – “Viva, Las Vegas!” he screamed – during the postgame celebration in the aftermath of Super Bowl 58 at Allegiant Stadium. With the back-to-back crowns secured, Kelce roared about chasing a three-peat, igniting hype.  

Fast-forward to August. The Chiefs, who will host the Baltimore Ravens and hang another championship banner at Arrowhead Stadium when the NFL kicks off its 105th season on Thursday night, have been knee-deep in the grunt work needed to try becoming the first team to win three consecutive Super Bowls. 

And Kelce, while undoubtedly burning inside for the possibility, has reeled himself in significantly. 

“I don’t even think about three-peats,” Kelce told USA TODAY Sports after a typically grueling camp practice. “I think about making this team ready for the Baltimore Ravens, baby.” 

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He smiled, refusing to go much deeper before being whisked away on a golf cart. 

“You don’t get there by thinking about it,” Kelce said. 

After the Chiefs, led by iconic quarterback Patrick Mahomes, stung the San Francisco 49ers in an overtime thriller in February, Kelce maintained, “The goal has always been to get three.” Yet such boisterous declarations are now apparently filed away for later use. 

Andy Reid, the venerable coach, understands. Despite a turbulent offseason that included a deadly shooting at the championship celebration; a high-speed crash involving starting receiver Rashee Rice; and intense backlash aimed at controversial kicker Harrison Butker, his team remains equipped to make another legitimate championship run.  

“That’s what’s real,” Reid said of the three-peat chase during an interview with USA TODAY Sports. “It’s out there. But guys know you don’t stand a chance unless you take it day by day. You’ve got the Ravens the first game, and that’s real. And so on, as you go forward. That’s where our focus is at. And going through the process here (in camp), which isn’t easy. 

“The old saying, ‘You’ve got to pay the fiddler to get the music’? That’s what you have to do here.”  

While the Chiefs may be best-served with the one-game-at-a-time approach, the entire season will be judged within the context of history. They are the ninth team to win back-to-back Super Bowls – and first since the New England Patriots in 2005 – and most of the others haven’t come close to a three–peat. 

The best chance yet at such history: the 1990 San Francisco 49ers. After compiling an NFL-best 14-2 regular season record, the 49ers lost the NFC title game, 15-13, to the New York Giants on their own Candlestick Park turf. Although Joe Montana was knocked out of the game by a vicious Leonard Marshall hit, the 49ers still had the chance for a game-winning drive late in the fourth quarter. But a Roger Craig fumble, recovered by Lawrence Taylor, doused the 49ers’ hope for a three-peat. 

This still sickens Jerry Rice, the Hall of Fame receiver and Super Bowl 23 MVP for the 49ers. 

“I was just thinking about it the other day,” Rice told USA TODAY Sports in early August. “Roger didn’t normally put the ball on the ground. It was just not meant to be.” 

Rice can relate to the Chiefs’ plight, with the prospect of a three-peat potentially taking on a life of its own. In San Francisco’s case, the grind began in the immediate aftermath of a blowout win against the Denver Broncos in Super Bowl 24. 

“For some reason, someone said something about three-peating, on the sideline, after we won the game against the Broncos,” Rice said. “Then it became a situation where there was a pressure put on for getting it done.” 

Can the Chiefs do it? Count Rice in the camp of believers. 

“I think they can because they actually weren’t the best team last year,” Rice said. “But because of Patrick Mahomes – he’s like Montana, who would just will his players to win – as long as he’s on the field, they have a legitimate chance.”

Of course, so much can happen during the NFL’s marathon season, the landscape altered by factors such as injuries, momentum and rising stars. Better clues will come later. Yet the Chiefs (with 11 of their 16 newcomers for the original 53-man roster coming on offense) will likely have a better chance than past contenders to win a third straight crown. 

After all, pillars such as Mahomes, Kelce and defensive tackle Chris Jones remain intact.  

The biggest change comes with the receivers. While Rashee Rice’s status is in limbo as he faces eight felony charges and a likely NFL suspension at some point, the Chiefs were already in the process of overhauling the receiver room when the crash occurred. Before the team used a first-round pick to select Xavier Worthy (who notched the fastest 40-yard dash ever recorded at the combine), veteran Marquise “Hollywood” Brown was signed as a free agent to bolster visions of re-establishing a lethal deep passing game. Although Brown will miss the opener as he heals from a sternoclavicular dislocation suffered in the preseason opener, he’s expected to return in the coming weeks. And Worthy had an inspiring summer, impressing Reid with his crisp route-running. 

“We’ve got the speed,” Mahomes told USA TODAY Sports. “And more than speed, we’ve got the guysthat can go up and track the ball and make the plays at the high point of the catch. That’s something we wanted to get back to, not only for us to have that threat and hit people deep, but it also opens up the guys underneath.” 

No, the Chiefs didn’t look like the best team in the NFL for much of the 2023 season. Although they possessed the game’s best quarterback, the defense carried the Chiefs for much of the season. And the offense sputtered, undone by too many dropped passes and other miscues. Mahomes passed for 4,183 yards, but that was nearly 1,100 yards fewer than in 2022. And his 14 interceptions marked a career high. Kelce, meanwhile, didn’t dominate as he had in previous years. Mahomes game-managed with a short passing game while the deep attack begged for the reconfiguration that is occurring. 

Still, even with the woes, the Chiefs won the AFC West title for the eighth consecutive season with an 11-6 record and played their best down the stretch. In finally hitting the road in the playoffs for the first time since Mahomes became the starter in 2018, they won at Buffalo and at Baltimore in the AFC championship game. Mahomes, for one, realized they had something to draw on while ultimately earning a fourth Super Bowl berth (and third ring) in five seasons. Call it championship resilience.  

“There were some times last year when the adversity had really gotten to us,” Mahomes said. “The guys put their heads down and kept trying to work, tried to continue with the process. I think knowing that we had used that process before and had success, it kept us in the mentality that even if we weren’t doing it that day, it was going to happen in the end.” 

Now there’s this. Mahomes sees no shame in extracting fuel from the prospect of making history. The Chiefs will already be challenged enough due to their pedigree, which typically brings out the best in opponents eager to measure themselves against the champs.  

If there’s added pressure for chasing a three-peat, Mahomes seemingly senses that as a good thing. Especially if what the prospect of what might happen in February helped in getting through the dog days of camp. 

“It keeps you motivated,” he said. “That’s the biggest thing. You could relax with the success that we’ve had. But wanting to do something that’s never been done before in the Super Bowl era, it just gives you that mindset of giving everything you have.  

“It’s a long goal ahead, and you have to start it step by step, day by day. But it gives you something to go for every time you can to practice.” 

As important as he is to the program, Kelce wasn’t the only measure of the Chiefs mindset during training camp. Jones, the premier D-tackle, came to camp embracing the idea of chasing history – and leaving footprints. 

“When a lot of players retire, they always say they want to leave the game better than when they started,” he said. “And if we can get this three-peat and just continue adding to the legacy of the Kansas City Chiefs, that’ll be a huge accomplishment not only for us, but for the NFL.” 

Or just the stuff from which dynasties are made. 

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Oh here we go again, Taylor Swift is back at Arrowhead Stadium to support her boyfriend Travis Kelce as the Kansas City Chiefs take on the Baltimore Ravens.

The ‘Tortured Poets’ singer appeared at the first game of the regular season just before 6 p.m. Thursday evening, a little over an hour before kickoff. Twitter videos showed the star walking through the back halls of the stadium before heading up the elevator to her suite. She was wearing a blue jean corset and shorts with shiny maroon thigh-high boots. Her blue top, designed by Versace, is worth $1,325.

In a video posted by Rob Collins, the sports director for Kansas City FOX4, Swift walked by and said, ‘Hello, how are you guys?’

The singer-songwriter is on a two-month break from her massive Eras Tour, which has five cities left. The superstar may be able to attend the first five games of the regular season before returning to the stage in Miami, New Orleans and Indianapolis for nine nights in late October and early November. She may be able to attend the Monday night matchup between the Chiefs and Tampa Bay Buccaneers on Nov. 4 and support the red-and-gold for five more games. Her final show in Toronto, Canada, on Dec. 8 falls on the same day as the Los Angeles Chargers game, but she may be able to make the final four games of the regular season.

Is Swift a Chiefs good luck charm?

In October, amid controversy after Swift was shown for a little over 20 seconds during an NFL broadcast, head coach Andy Reid admitted during a news conference that the singer may be a good luck charm.

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‘Kelce is getting better with time. Taylor can stay around all she wants,’ he said.

Last year, the Chiefs’ record with Swift in the audience was 10-3:

Sept. 24: Chiefs beat the Bears 41-10
Oct. 1: Chiefs beat the Jets 23-20
Oct. 12: Chiefs beat the Broncos 19-8
Oct. 22: Chiefs beat the Chargers 31-17
Dec. 3: Packers beat the Chiefs 27-19
Dec. 10: Bills beat the Chiefs 20-17
Dec. 17: Chiefs beat the Patriots 27-17
Dec. 25: Raiders beat the Chiefs 20-14
Dec. 31: Chiefs beat the Bengals 25-17
Jan. 13: Chiefs beat the Dolphins 26-7
Jan. 21: Chiefs beat the Bills 27-24
Jan. 28: Chiefs beat the Ravens 17-10
Feb. 11 Super Bowl: Chiefs beat the 49ers 25-22

“I think what makes her so good in her profession is that she’s so detailed in every aspect of it, from the words to the music to even the releases and the music videos and everything,’ Kelce said during an interview with ‘The Rich Eisen Show.’ ‘She’s so detailed and a part of it that I think she was just curious about the profession. I know none of the plays have gotten to Coach (Andy) Reid yet, but if they ever do, I’ll make sure everyone knows it was her creation.’

Where to watch the Chiefs vs. Ravens game?

Kickoff is at 8:15 p.m. ET. Fans can watch on NBC and Peacock.

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JERUSALEM – Israeli leaders and British Jews have slammed a U.K. government decision announced on Monday to suspend 30 arms export licenses to Israel over concerns the Jewish state has violated international humanitarian law during its 11-month war against Hamas in Gaza. 

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called the move ‘shameful’ in a post on X and said that it would not ‘change Israel’s determination to defeat Hamas, a genocidal terrorist organization that savagely murder 1,200 people on Oct. 7, including 14 British citizens.’ 

The Israeli leader also noted that Hamas was still holding some five British citizens as hostages and expressed disappointment that ‘instead of standing with Israel, a fellow democracy defending itself against barbarism, Britain’s misguided decision will only embolden Hamas.’

‘Israel is pursuing a just war with just means, taking unprecedented measures to keep civilians out of harm’s way and comporting fully with international law,’ he wrote.

Also posting on X, Britain’s Chief Rabbi Sir Ephraim Mirvis said that the announcement ‘feeds the falsehood that Israel is in breach of International Humanitarian Law, when in fact it is going to extraordinary lengths to uphold it,’ and that it ‘will serve to encourage our shared enemies.’

Coming from such a close ally of Israel, the move has sparked fears that other countries, including the U.S., might follow suit. While others point out that the decision seems symbolic – and even hypocritical – as the British government, which reported overall defense orders totaling nearly $16 billion (12 billion pounds) in 2022, has made no similar move to halt exports to countries with greater human rights violations. 

Rather, the Middle East, with states such as Egypt, Turkey, Qatar as well as Saudi Arabia, which is still engaged in fighting Iranian-backed rebels in Yemen, being among its top arms recipients. 

‘Firstly, it’s hypocritical and its simply inconsistent,’ Major (Ret.) Andrew Fox, a Research Fellow at the Henry Jackson Society, told Fox News Digital. ‘But more, it’s dangerous, because Hamas is so evil, Hamas is so psychotic, and we’re sending a message of weakness.’

The U.K. sells a relatively small number of weapons to Israel compared to the U.S. and other countries, such as Germany, and withdrawing only 30 of 350 existing export licenses for equipment such as parts for military planes, helicopters and drones is unlikely to impact its ability to fight the war in the Gaza. 

Fox said he believed that the decision was purely ‘performative,’ with the newly elected government responding to pressure from the more left-wing elements in its support base – those who have held weekly anti-Israel protests around the country. 

‘Israel is a very small recipient of British arms, buying just one percent of its arsenal from the U.K.’ Jake Wallace Simons, editor of Britain’s Jewish Chronicle, told Fox News Digital. 

‘Countries like Qatar, which sponsors Hamas, Saudi Arabia, which has been fighting a brutal campaign in Yemen, Turkey, which has been massacring the Kurds, and the corrupt Egyptian police state all buy many more British weapons than the Middle East’s sole democracy, Israel,’ he said, adding, ‘with no evidence that the Jewish state has been breaking international law, this move seems intended to win points with Muslim voters and is harming international alliances at the same time.’

Amnesty International, as well as the U.S. State Department’s Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor, have published in-depth reports on the human rights violations by countries that buy the majority of U.K. arms.

The U.K.’s decision this week also marks a departure from the Biden administration’s approach to the Israel-Hamas war, which started on Oct. 7, when more than 3,000 Hamas-led terrorists infiltrated Israel from Gaza, attacking army bases, residential communities, towns and a massive music festival taking place in the area.  

A veteran of the British army, Fox noted that taking this new stance will weaken the U.K.’s ability to have any influence on the course of the war in Gaza and leave it in a difficult position with other close allies. 

‘We will now have no influence in Jerusalem at all,’ he said. ‘I think this is embarrassing for the U.K. on a national stage and our other allies will see this behavior and think there’s a risk that domestic pressure might affect the U.K. It will also encourage those people who are actively trying to subvert us domestically, like Iran and Russia, because they’ve seen that it works.’ 

A request for a comment from British Foreign Secretary David Lammy’s special advisor went unanswered.

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Vice President Kamala Harris raked in a staggering $361 million in fundraising in August, her campaign announced on Friday morning, in what it touted was ‘the largest haul of the 2024 cycle.’

The fundraising by the Democratic Party’s presidential nominee was nearly triple the $130 million that the Donald Trump campaign announced on Wednesday that the former president brought in last month.

Harris has enjoyed a fundraising surge in the nearly seven weeks since she replaced President Biden at the top of the Democratic Party’s 2024 ticket.

The vice president’s campaign highlighted that Harris has brought in over $615 million in fundraising since July 21, when Biden, in a blockbuster announcement, ended his re-election campaign and endorsed his running mate.

The Harris campaign also touted August’s haul was ‘the best grassroots fundraising month in presidential history.’

The vice president’s team also showcased what it called ‘a massive war chest,’ reporting $404 million cash-on-hand as of the end of last month. That’s over $100 million more than the $295 million the Trump campaign said it had in its coffers.

Harris’ August haul was up from the $310 million the Democratic ticket brought in during July, while Trump’s fundraising last month was slightly down from the $138.7 it raised in July.

‘In just a short time, Vice President Harris’ candidacy has galvanized a history-making, broad, and diverse coalition – with the type of enthusiasm, energy, and grit that wins close elections,’ Harris campaign manager Julie Chavez Rodriguez said in a statement.’As we enter the final stretch of this election, we’re making sure every hard-earned dollar goes to winning over the voters who will decide this election.’

The former president’s team on Wednesday, in a statement revealing its fundraising figures, said that it’s cash-on-hand ensured that it had ‘the resources needed to propel President Trump’s campaign to victory.’

The Biden campaign and the Democratic National Committee enjoyed a fundraising lead over Trump and the Republican National Committee earlier this year. But Trump and the RNC topped Biden and the DNC by $331 million to $264 million during the April-June second quarter of 2024 fundraising.

Biden enjoyed a brief fundraising surge after his disastrous performance in his late June debate with Trump, as donors briefly shelled out big bucks in a sign of support for the 81-year-old president.

But Biden’s halting and shaky debate delivery also instantly fueled questions about his physical and mental abilities to serve another four years in the White House – and spurred a rising chorus of calls from within his own party for the president to end his bid for a second term. The brief surge in fundraising didn’t last and, by early July, began to significantly slow down. 

Fundraising, along with polling, is a key metric in campaign politics and a measure of a candidate’s popularity and their campaign’s strength. The money raised can be used – among other things – to hire staff, expand grassroots outreach and get-out-the-vote efforts, pay to produce and run ads on TV, radio, digital and mailers, and for candidate travel.

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It’s time for the Kansas City Chiefs to start another Super Bowl-title defense, and that means another season of following the romance between tight end Travis Kelce and Taylor Swift.

The football star and pop icon took over the world last year when Swift showed up at Arrowhead Stadium in Week 3 of the 2023 season. From that point on, fans of sports and music watched their love story grow as Swift embarked on her Eras Tour while Kelce and the Chiefs attempted to win their second-straight Super Bowl. It all culminated in Las Vegas in February when Kansas City won another title and the lovers got to celebrate the repeat championship together.

Expect Swift to be around again, and if that’s the case, it could be good karma for Kelce and company since the team was quite successful when she was in attendance. With the 2024 season ready to kick off, here’s what to know about the Chiefs’ performance with Swift in the house.

Travis Kelce stats with Taylor Swift in attendance this season

Swift was in Kansas City for the Thursday night opener and although it resulted in a season-opening victory for the Chiefs, it was a relatively quiet night for her beau.

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Kelce finished the contest with three catches for 34 yards, tying the lowest amount of receptions he’s had since Swift started going to games.

Kansas City is now 11-3 and has won six-straight games with Swift in the crowd. Including last season, Kelce has 92 catches for 1,073 yards (76.6 yards per game) and five touchdowns in those contests.

Travis Kelce stats with Taylor Swift in attendance during 2023 season

‘The guy on the Chiefs’ was on fire when Swift was in attendance. Kansas City was 10-3 last season when Swift was at the game, including Super Bowl 58. 

Not only did the Chiefs win a lot, but Kelce put up his best games of the season in front of Swift. Kelce ended up with 89 catches for 1,039 yards (79.9 yards per game) and five touchdowns with Swift watching him. During those games, Kelce averaged 11.7 yards per reception.

Here are Kelce’s stats for the games Swift was in attendance for, along with the result

Week 3 vs. Chicago Bears: Seven catches for 69 yards and one touchdown; win, 41-10
Week 4 at New York Jets: Six catches for 60 yards; win, 23-20
Week 6 vs. Denver Broncos: Nine catches for 124 yards; win, 19-8
Week 7 vs. Los Angeles Chargers: 12 catches (season-high) for 179 yards (season-high) and a touchdown; win, 31-17
Week 13 at Green Bay Packers: Four catches for 81 yards; loss, 27-19
Week 14 vs. Buffalo Bills: Six catches for 83 yards; loss, 20-17
Week 15 at New England Patriots: Five catches for 28 yards; win, 27-17
Week 16 vs. Las Vegas Raiders: Five catches for 44 yards; loss, 20-14
Week 17 vs. Cincinnati Bengals: Three catches for 16 yards; win, 25-17
Wild-card round vs. Miami Dolphins: Seven catches for 71 yards; win 26-7
Divisional round vs. Buffalo Bills: Five catches, 75 yards, two touchdowns; win 27-24
AFC championship game vs. Baltimore Ravens: 11 catches, 116 yards, touchdown; win 17-10
Super Bowl 58 vs. San Francisco 49ers: Nine catches, 93 yards; win 25-22

Travis Kelce stats without Taylor Swift in attendance during 2023 season

The Chiefs were still good without Swift, but Kelce certainly had a blank space in his stat line. When Swift didn’t attend – and Kelce played – Kansas City was 4-2. Kelce also had some of his statistically worst games without Swift there.

In those six games, Kelce had 36 catches for 300 yards (50 yards per game) and three touchdowns. That adds up to 8.2 yards per reception. Included is a game when Kelce had a season-low three catches for 14 yards against the Miami Dolphins in Germany and another when he had a drop and his lone fumble of the season against the Philadelphia Eagles.

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Some House Republicans are already privately worrying about how a partial government shutdown would affect their electoral chances in November.

‘If we shut down, we lose,’ one lawmaker told Fox News Digital.

Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., unveiled his plan to avoid a partial shutdown in a private call with House GOP lawmakers on Wednesday morning, four sources told Fox News Digital.

It involves a six-month extension of fiscal 2024’s federal funding levels known as a ‘continuing resolution’ (CR) – to buy House and Senate negotiators more time to hash out next year’s spending priorities – and would be linked to a bill adding a proof of citizenship requirement to the voter registration process.

But with both Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and the White House publicly opposing the Safeguard American Voter Eligibility (SAVE) Act, it’s highly likely Johnson’s plan would be dead on arrival if it passed the House.

‘My problem isn’t with the policy, which I support. My problem isn’t with the messaging, which I think is strong. My problem is that I just don’t think Chuck Schumer is going to agree to it,’ a second House Republican said of their concerns about the plan.

If the Senate and House don’t agree on a way forward by Oct. 1, the country could be wracked by a partial government shutdown roughly a month before Election Day.

Past government shutdowns like those seen under the Obama and Trump administrations in 2013 and 2019, respectively, have traditionally seen Americans blame the GOP. 

‘In general, the voters seem to have a strong bias for blaming Republicans for shutdowns, which is understandable,’ the second Republican continued.

‘We often have the more combative rhetoric leading up to a shutdown. We often are the ones who are most quick to claim that a shutdown isn’t a real problem. And so I think we kind of telegraph to voters that we’re OK with that. I think that makes it a little easier for the Democrats to try to stick us with [it].’

They added at the end of their explanation, ‘But it takes two to tango, and I don’t think what we’re asking for is too much.’

Meanwhile, two sources familiar with the Tuesday House GOP call said questions were raised about what Johnson’s next step would be if the Senate sent back a ‘clean’ CR with no attachments, and concerns were aired about how a possible shutdown would affect vulnerable Republicans.

‘The Republicans have the majority today because we won seats in California and [other blue states]. Those seem to be members who’d be most disadvantaged by a shutdown in the four weeks before an election,’ the second GOP lawmaker said.

Veteran GOP strategist Doug Heye said a possible shutdown could have less of an impact given it’s a presidential election year, but he conceded ‘that’s a real risk to take.’

‘Republicans usually get blamed for shutdowns, and that could play into Harris’ ‘Trump-as-chaos’ argument,’ Heye said.

He added, however, ‘that’s not a bet I’d make. Especially when the speaker has offered a path to avoid this.’

Other Republicans dismissed fears of political blowback in the event of a government shutdown.

Rep. Tim Burchett, R-Tenn., who is not committed or opposed to Johnson’s plan, told Fox News Digital this week, ‘The legacy media makes these shutdowns worse than they are. … Nobody loses their house, nobody loses a dime. They all get made whole.’

A partial government shutdown would see some non-emergency federal services halted and potentially thousands of government employees furloughed.

Any federal payments paused during a shutdown are retroactively made to their recipients, however. 

Rep. Chip Roy, R-Texas, one of the architects of the SAVE Act, would not say whether he’d want a shutdown if the Johnson plan failed to pass.

‘I’m not going to play the shutdown game … the press wants to make it about a shutdown. Democrats want to make this about a shutdown,’ Roy said. ‘We’re offering to fund the government – all manners of sin, by the way, in that government…we’re willing to do that, but these guys need to make sure our elections are secure.’

‘If [Democrats] want to shut the government down, that’s on them.’

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Tuesday, Nov. 5, is Election Day – but if Americans vote like they did in the last two election cycles, most of them will have already cast a ballot before the big day.

Early voting may start as soon as Sept. 6 for eligible voters, with seven battleground states sending out ballots to at least some voters the same month, making September and October less a countdown to Election Day, and more the beginning of ‘election season.’

States have long allowed at least some Americans to vote early, like members of the military or people with illnesses. 

In some states, almost every voter casts a ballot by mail.

Many states expanded eligibility in 2020, when the COVID-19 pandemic made it riskier to vote in-person.

That year, the Fox News Voter Analysis found that 71% of voters cast their ballots before Election Day, with 30% voting early in-person and 41% voting by mail.

Early voting remained popular in the midterms, with 57% of voters casting a ballot before Election Day.

Elections officials stress that voting early is safe and secure. Recounts, investigations and lawsuits filed after the 2020 election did not reveal evidence of widespread fraud or corruption. 

The difference between ‘early in-person’ and ‘mail’ or ‘absentee’ voting.

There are a few ways to vote before Election Day.

The first is , where a voter casts a regular ballot in-person at a voting center before Election Day.

The second is , where the process and eligibility varies by state.

Eight states vote mostly by mail, including California, Colorado, Nevada and Utah. Registered voters receive ballots and send them back.

Most states allow any registered voter to request a mail ballot and send it back. This is also called mail voting, or sometimes absentee voting. Depending on the state, voters can return their ballot by mail, at a drop box, and/or at an office or facility that accepts mail ballots.

In 14 states, voters must have an excuse to vote by mail, ranging from illness, age, work hours or if a voter is out of their home county on Election Day.

States process and tabulate ballots at different times. Some states don’t begin counting ballots until election night, which delays the release of results.

Voting begins on Sept. 6 in North Carolina, with six more battleground states starting that month

This list of early voting deadlines is for guidance only. In some areas, early voting may begin before the dates listed. For comprehensive and up-to-date information on voter eligibility, processes, and deadlines, go to Vote.gov and your state’s elections website.

The first voters to be sent absentee ballots are expected to be in North Carolina, which had planned to begin mailing out ballots for eligible voters on Sept. 6.

Six more battleground states begin early voting the same month, including Pennsylvania, Georgia, Wisconsin, Michigan and Nevada.

September deadlines

Subject to change. In-person early voting in bold.

Sept. 6

North Carolina – Absentee ballots sent to voters

Sept. 16

Pennsylvania – Mail-in ballots sent to voters

Sept. 17

Georgia – Absentee ballots sent to military & overseas

Sept. 19

Wisconsin – Absentee ballots sent

Sept. 20

Virginia – In-person early voting begins
Minnesota, South Dakota – In-person absentee voting begins
Idaho, Kentucky, West Virginia – Absentee ballots sent
Arkansas, Montana, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, Utah, Wyoming – Absentee ballots sent to military & overseas

Sept. 21

Maryland, New Jersey – Mail-in ballots sent
Indiana, New Mexico – Absentee ballots sent
Alabama, Alaska, Colorado, Connecticut, Florida, Kansas, Kentucky, Massachusetts, Michigan, New Hampshire, New York, Oregon, South Carolina, Washington – Absentee ballots sent to military & overseas

Sept. 23

Mississippi – In-person absentee voting begins & absentee ballots sent
Oregon – Absentee ballots sent
Vermont – Mail-in ballots sent

Sept. 26

Illinois – In-person early voting begins & mail-in ballots sent
Michigan – Absentee ballots sent
Florida – Mail-in ballots sent
North Dakota – Absentee & mail-in ballots sent
Nevada – Mail-in ballots sent to voters outside the state

Sept. 30

Nebraska – Mail-in ballots sent

October deadlines

Oct. 4

Connecticut – Absentee ballots sent

Oct. 6

Maine – In-person absentee voting begins & mail ballots sent

Oct. 7

California – In-person absentee voting begins & mail ballots sent
Nebraska – In-person early voting begins 
Georgia – Absentee ballots sent
Massachusetts – Mail-in ballots sent
Montana – In-person absentee voting begins

Oct. 8

California – Ballot drop-offs open
New Mexico, Ohio – In-person absentee voting begins
Indiana – In-person early voting begins
Wyoming – In-person absentee voting begins & absentee ballots sent

Oct. 9

Arizona – In-person early voting begins & mail ballots sent

Oct. 11

Colorado – Mail-in ballots sent
Arkansas, Alaska – Absentee ballots sent

Oct. 15

Georgia – In-person early voting begins
Utah – Mail-in ballots sent

Oct. 16

Rhode Island, Kansas, Tennessee – In-person early voting begins
Iowa – In-person absentee voting begins
Oregon, Nevada – Mail-in ballots sent

Oct. 17

North Carolina – In-person early voting begins 

Oct. 18

Louisiana – In-person early voting begins
Washington – Mail-in ballots sent
Hawaii – Mail-in ballots sent

Oct. 19

Nevada, Massachusetts – In-person early voting begins 

Oct. 21

Alaska, Arkansas, Connecticut, Idaho, North Dakota, South Carolina, Texas – In-person early voting begins 
Colorado – Ballot drop-offs open

Oct. 22

Hawaii, Utah – In-person early voting begins 
Missouri, Wisconsin – In-person absentee voting begins

Oct. 23

West Virginia – In-person early voting begins

Oct. 24

Maryland – In-person early voting begins

Oct. 25

Delaware – In-person early voting begins

Oct. 26

Michigan, Florida, New Jersey, New York – In-person early voting begins 

Oct. 30

Oklahoma – In-person early voting begins 

Oct. 31

Kentucky – In-person absentee voting begins

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

One year after losing a U.S. Open final that she thought should have gone her way, Aryna Sabalenka will get another chance to take home the title Saturday. 

Sabalenka, who has won the past two Australian Open titles, earned her shot to add a third hard court major with a routine 6-3, 7-6 (7-2) victory over American Emma Navarro in Thursday’s semifinals. She will play Jessica Pegula for the crown.

The No. 2-seeded Sabalenka, known for her power off the ground but also for unraveling under pressure on occasion, was rock solid against Navarro with 29 winners and seven aces. The overall cleanliness of Sabalenka’s game, combined with the aggressiveness she always brings to the table, gave Navarro almost no opening to make an impact in her first Grand Slam semifinal.

Sabalenka had just one wobble. Serving for the match at 5-4, Sabalenka tightened up slightly and Navarro managed to punish a couple returns to break and even the set. But the tiebreaker was all Sabalenka, as she won it 7-2 and shoved aside any thoughts of another U.S. Open disappointment. 

Sabalenka’s history at the U.S. Open has been filled with heartbreak, but this might be the year to make amends. 

In 2021, Sabalenka was heavily favored in the semifinals but lost in three tight sets to Leylah Fernandez, admitting after the match that the pressure of trying to win her first Grand Slam title got to her. 

In 2022, she lost the semifinal again in three sets to eventual champion Iga Swiatek.

Then last year, Sabalenka cruised to a 6-2 first set over Coco Gauff in the final before things fell apart on her and Gauff surged to the title. 

Sabalenka, a 26-year-old from Belarus, came into the U.S. Open with a 39-11 record this year including the title in Cincinnati in her most recent tournament. She has continued to roll in New York, dropping just one set. 

Sabalenka will be considered the favorite over Pegula in Saturday’s final. 

Follow Dan Wolken on social media @DanWolken

This post appeared first on USA TODAY