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The Denver Broncos and cornerback Patrick Surtain agreed on a four-year, $96 million contract extension on Wednesday, making him the highest-paid defensive back in league history, a person close to the situation informed USA TODAY Sports’ Tyler Dragon. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because they aren’t authorized to discuss the deal.

The contract includes a guaranteed of $77.5 million for the 24-year-old Surtain, who is tied to his new contract through the 2029 season.

Surtain had two years and $23.3 million remaining on his original deal.

Surtain has established himself as a top cornerback in the league since the Broncos selected him in the first round of the 2021 NFL draft.

He has made two Pro Bowls and was a first-team All-Pro selection in 2022, and last season, Surtain recorded 69 tackles with 12 passes defensed and one interception.

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The state of Florida schools and their college football fortunes are going different directions after the opening weekend of the season. Miami went into the Swamp and routed Florida, adding more pressure to the hot seat of Gators coach Billy Napier. Two days later, Florida State suffered its second ACC loss of the season in a humbling defeat at home to Boston College. The Seminoles started the season ranked No. 10 and are now out of the US LBM Coaches poll.

In other Week 1 action, Georgia showed it is still Georgia by beating Clemson. For the Tigers, it was another sign how far they have fallen from the top of college football. Southern California had one of the best results of the weekend, winning their first game as a member of the Big Ten in Las Vegas against LSU.

Looking ahead to Week 2, the standout game features No. 9 Michigan hosting No. 3 Texas. Both sides could use an early non-conference victory to their profile as they chase berths in the College Football Playoff. Another game that will attract attention is Colorado’s visit to Nebraska with Deion Sanders looking to move the Buffaloes to 2-0. It’s also an important game for Cornhuskers coach Matt Rhule, who saw freshman quarterback Dylan Raiola have a promising debut.

Dan Wolken and Paul Myerberg of USA TODAY Sports discuss these topics and more in this week’s version of the College Football Fix.

BOWL PROJECTIONS: Big changes to College Football Playoff after Week 1

MISERY INDEX: Florida leads the list of schools already in turmoil

COACHES POLL: Southern California surges after big win against LSU

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Golf’s long-simmering civil war is about to become prime-time entertainment.

Rory McIlroy and Scottie Scheffler will face Bryson DeChambeau and Brooks Koepka in a made-for-TV match later this year, Golfweek has learned.

The contest pits the two biggest stars on the PGA Tour against the most high-profile figures on LIV Golf, and will be widely interpreted as indicating a potential thaw in relations between the once warring camps.

The event will be held mid-December in Las Vegas and will air on TNT, which is owned by Warner Brothers Discovery. TNT previously broadcast nine editions of The Match, the series of exhibitions that launched in 2018 with Tiger Woods vs. Phil Mickelson. McIlroy, Koepka and DeChambeau have all appeared in versions of The Match, but it’s unclear if this latest battle will be a continuation of that series. Four previous Matches were held in Las Vegas, three at Wynn Golf Club and one at Shadow Creek.

McIlroy confirmed his participation after an inquiry from Golfweek.

‘I’m thrilled to partner with Scottie in what promises to be an exciting duel against Bryson and Brooks in Vegas this December,” he wrote in a text message. ‘This isn’t just a contest between some of golf’s major champions; it’s an event designed to energize the fans. We’re all here to put on a great show and contribute to a goodwill event that brings the best together again.’

Representatives of the other three players also confirmed their involvement to Golfweek.

‘Brooks and Scottie are very excited to be a part of this unique event and look forward to sharing more soon,’ said Blake Smith, who represents both Koepka and Scheffler.

Brett Falkoff, the agent for DeChambeau, said: ‘Bryson looks forward to competing in Las Vegas this December in an event that is sure to provide great entertainment for the fans.’

The prime-time special is being produced by Bryan Zuriff’s BZ Entertainment – which developed The Match series – and EverWonder Studio, which was founded last year by Ian Orefice and funded by RedBird IMI and former CNN chief Jeff Zucker. Two sources say the players will receive an appearance fee but will not compete for prize money.

The PGA Tour declined to comment on the event. The Tour has been engaged in negotiations with the Saudi Arabian Public Investment Fund — which bankrolls LIV — since signing the controversial Framework Agreement 15 months ago. Earlier this summer, the Tour appointed a committee to handle those talks directly. McIlroy is among a number of players who sit on that committee.

In a press conference at last week’s Tour Championship in Atlanta, commissioner Jay Monahan said PIF negotiations are ongoing but refused to offer specifics, saying he would not conduct talks in public. But Monahan’s comments also included a veiled reference to imminent changes for fans.

“At the same time, we’re moving forward at speed and focused on what we can control, because that’s what we owe to our fans,” he said.

More: Lynch: The Match proves golf can be a fun product, without trading virtues for vulgarity

In response to a later question about how the Tour and PIF have prioritized talks, Monahan said the sides were “really starting to talk about the future, future product vision and where we can take our sport.”

The Vegas match features a lineup of stars who share layered rivalries. McIlroy and Koepka were tied at four major victories each until Koepka won a fifth at the 2023 PGA Championship, while DeChambeau narrowly edged McIlroy in a heartbreaking finish to the U.S. Open at Pinehurst in June.

Meanwhile, Scheffler has established himself as the undisputed world No. 1, with seven PGA Tour wins this season, culminating in the FedEx Cup title last weekend, which came with a bonus of $25 million.

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INDIANAPOLIS — It’s official: the Indiana Fever’s playoff drought will stop at seven seasons.

The Fever officially clinched a playoff spot as Chicago lost to Las Vegas and Atlanta lost to Phoenix late on Tuesday night. Now, even if Indiana were to lose each of its last seven games, it would still be in the playoffs.

This is the first time since 2016 the Fever clinched a playoff spot, and their seven seasons out of the playoffs was the longest active drought in the WNBA and tied for the longest drought all-time (the Chicago Sky missed the playoffs for seven straight seasons from 2006-13).

The Fever have clinched a spot with seven games still remaining in the season — a stark contrast from some past seasons, when they were eliminated with this many (or more) games to go. Indiana got close to the playoffs last year, but they were eliminated from contention with five games left in the season.

This will be Indiana’s first playoff berth since Tamika Catchings, Indiana’s franchise player from 2002-16, retired. And it’s fitting that it comes in the first season the Fever potentially have a new franchise player in rookie Caitlin Clark.

Clark, who was drafted No. 1 by the Fever in April after back-to-back National Player of the Year awards, joined forces with 2023 No. 1 pick Aliyah Boston, 2022 No. 2 pick NaLyssa Smith, and 2018 No. 2 pick Kelsey Mitchell on the Fever. Indiana went through some growing pains, which is typical for a young team with a new point guard. The grueling schedule didn’t help, as the Fever had 11 games in 19 days to start the season; they started 2-9.

The Fever have gone 15-7 since that opening stretch and have tallied at least one win over the 10 of their 11 league opponents, including the New York Liberty, Connecticut Sun, and Minnesota Lynx. The only team the Fever have not beaten yet this season is the Las Vegas Aces; they come to Indianapolis for a back-to-back on Sept. 11 and 13.

Clark has been putting up unprecedented numbers for her rookie season, averaging 18.7 points, 8.4 assists, and 5.9 rebounds per game. She tallied the first rookie triple-double in WNBA history earlier this season and currently leads the league in assists per game. She has already broken the rookie assist record, and she is on track to beat the single-season assist record that was set just last season by the Connecticut Sun’s Alyssa Thomas.

Clark is unique in her ability to combine her playmaking and scoring ability — her 18.7 points per game are second on the Fever (behind Mitchell) and ninth in the league. She has the most single-season double-doubles by a guard in WNBA history, and all of them have been with points and assists.

Mitchell, a seven-year veteran, has also been playing some of the best basketball of her career this season. She is on an active streak of seven straight games with 20+ points, demolishing a Fever franchise record. Her quickness on the court has paired well with Clark’s intricate passes, making them a nearly unstoppable backcourt duo.

Led by Mitchell and Clark, the Fever have gone 6-1 since the Olympic break. Indiana currently sits at 17-16 — the first time it has been over .500 since 2019.

The Fever are at No. 6 in the WNBA standings, so if the season ended today, the Fever would match up with the Minnesota Lynx, the No. 3 seed, for a best-of-3 series.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The Biden administration is accusing Russia on Wednesday of trying to influence the 2024 U.S. presidential election by targeting American voters through state-run media and other online platforms as part of a campaign referred to as ‘doppelganger.’

Attorney General Merrick Garland, speaking alongside FBI Director Christopher Wray and Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco, said prosecutors today have unsealed an indictment in the Southern District of New York of ‘two Russian-based employees of RT, a Russian state-controlled media outlet’ that charges them with ‘conspiring to commit money laundering and to violate the Foreign Agents Registration Act.’

Garland told reporters that in the wake of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, the editor-in-chief of the RT TV network ‘said the company had built ‘an entire empire of covert projects designed to shape public opinion in Western audiences.”

‘We allege that as part of that effort, RT and its employees, including the defendants, implemented a nearly $10 million scheme to fund and direct a Tennessee-based company to publish and disseminate content deemed favorable to the Russian government,’ Garland said. ‘To implement this scheme, the defendants directed the company to contract with U.S.-based social media influencers to share this content and their platforms. The subject matter and content of many of the videos published by the company were often consistent with Russia’s interest in amplifying U.S. domestic divisions in order to weaken U.S. opposition to core Russian interests, particularly its ongoing war in Ukraine. 

‘In a separate enforcement action, the Justice Department is seizing 32 internet domains that the Russian government and the Russian-sponsored actors have used to engage in a covert campaign to interfere and influence the outcome of our country’s elections,’ Garland continued.

‘As alleged in our court filings, President Vladimir Putin’s inner circle, including Sergei Kiriyenko, directed Russian public relations companies to promote disinformation and state-sponsored narratives as part of a campaign to influence the 2024 U.S. presidential election,’ he said.

‘These websites were designed to appear to American readers as if they were major U.S. news sites, like the Washington Post or Fox News, but in fact they were fake sites. They were filled with Russian government propaganda that had been created by the Kremlin to reduce international support for Ukraine, bolster pro-Russian policies and interests, and influence voters in the United States and in other countries. Internal documents of the Kremlin described the content as, ‘bogus stories disguised as newsworthy events.’ This malign influence campaign has been referred to as ‘doppelganger.’’

When asked by Fox News Digital about its reaction to the allegations, RT said, ‘We certainly have a reaction. Actually, we had several, but we couldn’t decide on one (we even thought of running an office poll), so here they are.’ 

‘2016 called and it wants its clichés back,’ was among them, as were: ‘Three things are certain in life: death, taxes and RT’s interference in the U.S. elections,’ ‘We gotta earn our Kremlin paycheck somehow,’ and ‘Somewhere Secretary Clinton is sad that it’s not because of her.’ 

In July, Wray told the House Judiciary Committee that ‘We assess that the Russian government continues to want to influence, and in various ways interfere with our democracy, with our electoral process.

‘We’ve seen that in election cycle after election cycle,’ Wray said.

The court actions on Wednesday also come after the Justice Department made RT register as a ‘foreign agent’ in 2017. 

The agency said at the time that ‘T&R Productions, LLC (T&R), a Washington, D.C., corporation, registered… with the Department of Justice under the Foreign Agents Registration Act as an agent for ANO TV-Novosti, the Russian government entity responsible for the worldwide broadcasts of the RT Network (RT).   

‘Since August 2014, T&R has operated studios for RT, hired and paid all U.S.-based RT employees, and produced English-language programming for RT, which is both shown on cable networks across the United States and available on RT’s website,’ it also said. 

Former Defense Intelligence Agency officer Rebekah Koffler previously told Fox News Digital that RT and other propaganda abroad were part of the permanent cyberwarfare Russia wages on the West. 

‘They don’t just wage propaganda in a time of war, during a conflict,’ she said in 2022. ‘They wage it during peacetime. They constantly malign the United States and misrepresent foreign policy objectives … I’m just saying that tilts the level playing field towards Russia when we allow their propaganda channels to broadcast in an unfettered [way].’ 

‘RT is 100% a Russia government-controlled channel and its sole intent is to predispose the American population and wherever they are broadcasting towards the Russian point of view and to present the events on the ground as the Russians want the rest of the world to see them, so if the United States did not want that to happen then it would be appropriate to shut down the channel,’ Koffler added. 

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House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., unveiled a plan to avoid a partial government shutdown at the end of this month during a lawmaker-only phone call Wednesday morning.

Johnson is aiming to hold a vote on the measure as soon as possible, likely next week, two sources familiar with the call told Fox News Digital.

House GOP leaders hope to link a short-term extension of this fiscal year’s federal funding levels, known as a continuing resolution (CR), to a Republican-backed bill known as the Safeguarding American Voter Eligibility (SAVE) Act. That measure would require proof of citizenship in the voter registration process in a bid to crack down on GOP concerns about noncitizens participating in U.S. elections. 

The bill would punt the federal funding fight to March, when a new administration and a new congressional term will dictate how the next shutdown showdown will play out.

Five Democrats voted for the SAVE Act when it passed the House in July, but their leaders are largely opposed to the measure and have panned it as unnecessary since it is already illegal to vote in federal elections as a noncitizen.

Meanwhile, senior Republican lawmakers had called for a short-term funding extension into December rather than risking a traffic jam of legislative deadlines in the new year. 

Johnson said on the call, however, that his plan has ‘a lot of merit’ and reasoned a December CR would likely necessitate another one into the new year anyway, one source familiar with the call said.

Other Republicans also raised concerns during the 30-minute call, multiple sources said.

Rep. Nicole Malliotakis, R-N.Y., confirmed to Fox News Digital that she took issue with the lack of measures addressing the border crisis, and she told her colleagues so on the call Wednesday. 

She specifically called for a CR to include the Laken Riley Act, named after a college student allegedly killed by an illegal immigrant, which would detain and deport migrants who commit illegal acts. 

‘We should offer a menu of options, but Democrats should do something to help stop the chaos,’ she said, pointing to New York Post reports that suggest illegal immigrants are overwhelming New York City’s judicial system. 

When asked if she would support the plan Johnson offered without those measures, she said, ‘Let’s see.’

Meanwhile, two sources said Rep. Nick LaLota, R-N.Y., questioned what Johnson’s answer would be if the Senate sent back a ‘clean’ short-term spending patch with no attachments.

He said a partial government shutdown would threaten the House’s 10 most vulnerable Republican incumbents, per the sources. One of the two sources said Johnson responded that their plan was worth having the fight and said the GOP could not blink.

Another GOP lawmaker who spoke with Fox News Digital after the call said, ‘If we shut down, we lose.’

The bill is expected to need a simple majority to pass, a tough task given Johnson’s razor-thin House majority. 

Rep. Matt Rosendale, R-Mont., who is retiring at the end of this year, said outright on Tuesday that he would oppose the plan. 

It does have a significant backer in former President Donald Trump, who urged House Republicans to leverage a shutdown to get a March CR plus SAVE Act passed during an appearance on Monica Crowley’s podcast earlier this week.

If it passes the House, the plan is highly unlikely to be taken up by Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, however.

Schumer, D-N.Y., told Fox News Digital of the plan, ‘As we have said each time we’ve had a CR, the only way to get things done is in a bipartisan way and that is what has happened every time.’

A spokesperson for Rep. Chip Roy, R-Texas, who is spearheading the CR plus SAVE Act plan, responded, ‘The majority leader’s comment is encouraging, given that the SAVE Act passed with bipartisan support in the House.’

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The series finale of ‘Hard Knocks: Training Camp with the Chicago Bears’ aired Tuesday night as the new-look team puts training camp and the preseason in the rearview and goes full speed ahead toward the 2024 NFL season.

As expected Caleb Williams, the No. 1 overall selection in the 2024 NFL draft, was one of the key figures in the series.

The series also featured Bears safety Jonathan Owens on FaceTime with Olympic champion gymnast Simone Biles while she was in Paris (Episode 1) and then visiting Caitlin Clark and the Indiana Fever (Episode 5).

Here are the highlights of this season’s docuseries featuring the Bears on HBO:

Caleb Williams looks the part as QB1

Chicagoland’s pro football hopes and dreams ride on the prolific skills of Caleb Williams, who looked the part of a franchise quarterback on ‘Hard Knocks.’ And, maybe, he will be the guy to break through the franchise’s poor history at the position.

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Bears fans don’t need to be reminded of the fact that Chicago is the only NFL team to never have a quarterback throw for 4,000 or more yards in a single season or for 30 or more touchdowns (Erik Kramer came the closest at 3,838 yards and 29 TDs, and that was nearly three decades ago during the 1995 season). Bears fans also don’t need to be reminded that their ancient rivals to the north, the Green Bay Packers, have had a total of 18 4,000-yard passing seasons produced by five different quarterbacks.

After the first ‘Hard Knocks’ episode showed some training camp ups and downs for the rookie quarterback, it was nothing but good vibes once Williams started playing in preseason games.

Williams left his best for last, an electric eight-play, 90-yard touchdown drive that featured a spectacular 45-yard completion to fellow rookie Rome Odunze and later a touchdown scramble.

In the spotlight for much of this edition of ‘Hard Knocks,’ Williams will be under an even more intense microscope when the Bears open Week 1 against the Tennessee Titans at Soldier Field on Sunday.

Ryan Poles building a winner

As a general manager, the draft picks you make and trades you pull off define your tenure with a team.

Given the draft and free-agent capital invested into the 2024 edition of the Bears, both team and general manager Ryan Poles are entering a crucial season after an ambitious roster overhaul.

Poles scored what might go down as one of the most lopsided trades in league history when he shipped the No. 1 pick in the 2023 draft to the Carolina Panthers in exchange for a 2024 first-rounder and wide receiver D.J. Moore. While Moore had a career year for the Bears, the Panthers were securing the No. 1 pick for Chicago.

Poles kicked the tires on another big trade during training camp, with NFL Films and HBO being able to capture the efforts to acquire pass rusher Matthew Judon from the New England Patriots. Judon wound up getting traded to the Atlanta Falcons, as the Bears wanted a contract extension with the player before making the deal.

While that trade didn’t materialize, Poles has built a Bears team that could contend for a playoff spot (two of seven USA TODAY Sports experts predict Chicago to be a wild-card team).

Poles’ candor and vulnerability (more on that later) made for a compelling character on this season’s ‘Hard Knocks.’

Bears now in an unfamiliar position

Poles, head coach Matt Eberflus and the rest of Bears’ braintrust now appear to be in the enviable position of having a franchise quarterback in place for years to come.

In Tuesday’s ‘Hard Knocks’ finale, Poles was shown on hand to scout players at Saturday’s big Georgia-Clemson game. He ran into a familiar face: Giants general manager Joe Schoen, of ‘Hard Knocks: Offseason with the New York Giants’ fame. Schoen’s quarterback situation is shaky at best with starter Daniel Jones returning from a major knee surgery, and the offseason ‘Hard Knocks’ showed how the Giants had discussed possibly trading up the draft for one of this year’s highly touted passers.

‘Gotta be nice,’ Schoen told Poles, ‘not to be looking at the, uh …’

‘Quarterbacks?’ Poles answered. ‘Hopefully it stays that way for a long time.’

Where were the F-bombs?

Last year’s ‘Hard Knocks’ with the New York Jets was littered with f-bombs, with the primary culprit being head coach Robert Saleh.

If you noticed something was missing from this year’s ‘Hard Knocks’ with the Bears, you weren’t alone.

Episodes since the last f-bomb on ‘Hard Knocks’: 5.

With the Bears, there were no fiery f-bomb laden tirades from head coaches of years past like Saleh, Jon Gruden, Jeff Fisher and Rex Ryan (who can forget the famous ‘Let’s go eat a (expletive) snack’ rant?).

Jarvis Landry’s unforgettable 1,080-word tirade in a receivers meeting with the Cleveland Browns in 2018 contained 23 f-bombs.

That’s a lot of f-bombs in less than two minutes.

And 23 more f-bombs than were heard from the Bears. Why was that?

Turns out, HBO didn’t air any profanity out of respect for the McCaskey family, which owns the Bears. Also, apparently the Bears don’t use a lot of swears in general.

‘I’ll be honest, this team curses much less than any other team I’ve been around, but it is out of respect for the McCaskey family,’ ‘Hard Knocks’ director Shannon Furman said on the CHGO podcast. ‘It’s something that they don’t do and wouldn’t want to see it. So it’s kind of a decision that was made out of respect for the (McCaskey family) letting us in their house and wanting to be respectful to them.’

NFL’s cutdown day takes an emotional toll

Last year, the Jets hamstrung NFL Films and HBO by not allowing access to the head coach and general manager as they made personnel decisions and cut players.

This year, the Bears dove head-first into the inner-workings of the NFL’s annual mass sacrifice, with that poignant drama playing out in the season’s final episode, airing one week after the Aug. 27 cutdown deadline day.

Bears general manager Ryan Poles was himself a training camp cut back in 2008 after joining Chicago as an undrafted offensive lineman out of Boston College, and finds the cutdown day process to be grueling – ‘To me, it’s one of the worst days of this job. It’s hard to tell that many people that their dream is ending.’

‘I’ve been there. It’s a place where I try to have a lot of empathy in the way that we communicate it, because these guys have put a lot of time and effort into making a football team,’ Poles said. ‘What I try to do is doing a really good job giving feedback, so they at least they know the ‘why’ behind it and they can continue to work on their craft and hopefully have an opportunity at some point to make a football team.’

The Bears gave a few familiar names a cutdown day sendoff.

One by one players met with the Bears’ braintrust – wide receiver and Hall of Fame Game star Collin Johnson, the ‘Canadian Eagle’ Theo Benedet, quarterbacks Brett Rypien and Austin Reed, introspective defensive back Adrian Colbert.

It was Colbert’s release – and the emotional toll it took on Poles – that played at the heart of ‘Hard Knocks’ viewers. After Colbert takes a seat in the general manager’s office, a tearful Poles excuses himself for a moment to collect himself. There’s silence as Colbert patiently waits, knowing full well what’s to come.

‘I appreciate you, man. There’s something about you that’s different,’ Poles tells Colbert, whose harrowing childhood story was told on last week’s ‘Hard Knocks.’ ‘I hate that we got to do this. There’s some guys you just root for, and you’re one of them. You’re a good dude, a great teammate. It’s part of this job that I hate. Thankful for our time together.

‘There’s certain people who have something about them that’s special. And you do. Wherever your career takes you from here, I hope you do big things.’

Colbert expresses how much he appreciated the opportunity with the Bears, the 10th NFL team he’s been with. The two embrace and Colbert leaves the office and into the pro football unknown.

It was one of the most heart-wrenching scenes in ‘Hard Knocks’ history.

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Finally, the NFL is back.

Week 1 of the regular season has arrived, satisfying the desire of every football fan in the country with some juicy matchups to kick it off.

The defending champion Kansas City Chiefs will host the Baltimore Ravens to start the season, the Green Bay Packers face the Philadelphia Eagles in Brazil and Aaron Rodgers will make his return to the football field when the New York Jets visit the San Francisco 49ers on ‘Monday Night Football.’ Get ready to enjoy what should be another wild and unpredictable NFL season.

New to sports betting? USA TODAY readers can claim exclusive promos and bonus codes with the best online sportsbooks and sports betting sites. Here are the NFL betting odds for Week 1, according to the BetMGM NFL odds.

Here are the NFL betting odds for Week 1, according to theBetMGM NFL odds.

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PROP TALK: These are the best prop bets for NFL games this week 

NFL Week 1 picks/predictions

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

NFL Week 1 point spreads

Baltimore Ravens (+3) at Kansas City Chiefs
Green Bay Packers (+2.5) vs. Philadelphia Eagles
Jacksonville Jaguars (+3.5) at Miami Dolphins
Pittsburgh Steelers (+3) at Atlanta Falcons
Minnesota Vikings (-1.5) at New York Giants
Carolina Panthers (+4) at New Orleans Saints
New England Patriots (+8.5) at Cincinnati Bengals
Tennessee Titans (+4) at Chicago Bears
Arizona Cardinals (+6.5) at Buffalo Bills
Houston Texans (-3) at Indianapolis Colts
Las Vegas Raiders (+3) at Los Angeles Chargers
Denver Broncos (+6) at Seattle Seahawks
Washington Commanders (+3) at Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Dallas Cowboys (+2.5) at Cleveland Browns
Los Angeles Rams (+3.5) at Detroit Lions
New York Jets (+4) at San Francisco 49ers

NFL Week 1 moneylines

Baltimore Ravens (+125) at Kansas City Chiefs (-150)
Green Bay Packers (+115) vs. Philadelphia Eagles (-140)
Jacksonville Jaguars (+145) at Miami Dolphins (-175)
Pittsburgh Steelers (+135) at Atlanta Falcons (-160)
Minnesota Vikings (-120) at New York Giants (+100)
Carolina Panthers (+180) at New Orleans Saints (-225)
New England Patriots (+325) at Cincinnati Bengals (-400)
Tennessee Titans (+165) at Chicago Bears (-200)
Arizona Cardinals (+240) at Buffalo Bills (-300)
Houston Texans (-160) at Indianapolis Colts (+130)
Las Vegas Raiders (+135) at Los Angeles Chargers (-160)
Denver Broncos (+200) at Seattle Seahawks (-250)
Washington Commanders (+140) at Tampa Bay Buccaneers (-165)
Dallas Cowboys (+115) at Cleveland Browns (-140)
Los Angeles Rams (+145) at Detroit Lions (-175)
New York Jets (+165) at San Francisco 49ers (-200)

NFL Week 1 over/under

Baltimore Ravens at Kansas City Chiefs: 46
Green Bay Packers vs. Philadelphia Eagles: 48.5
Jacksonville Jaguars at Miami Dolphins: 49
Pittsburgh Steelers at Atlanta Falcons: 42
Minnesota Vikings at New York Giants: 41
Carolina Panthers at New Orleans Saints: 42
New England Patriots at Cincinnati Bengals: 40.5
Tennessee Titans at Chicago Bears: 45
Arizona Cardinals at Buffalo Bills: 48
Houston Texans at Indianapolis Colts: 49
Las Vegas Raiders at Los Angeles Chargers: 40.5
Denver Broncos at Seattle Seahawks: 42
Washington Commanders at Tampa Bay Buccaneers: 43.5
Dallas Cowboys at Cleveland Browns: 41.5
Los Angeles Rams at Detroit Lions: 51
New York Jets at San Francisco 49ers: 44

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

ESPN’s ‘College GameDay’ returns Sept. 7 for a highly-anticipated SEC/Big Ten showdown that highlights Week 2 of college football. 

The broadcasters announced during last week’s broadcast from College Station, Texas, that the popular pre-game show will move to Ferry Field in Ann Arbor, Michigan, for one of the most consequential non-conference games this season between Michigan and Texas at Michigan Stadium. 

The defending national champions are currently ranked No. 9 in the US LBM Coaches Poll, while Texas sits at No. 3. Both teams won their season openers, but the Longhorns looked like a stronger team in their decisive 52-0 rout of Colorado State on Aug. 31. 

The show last aired from Ann Arbor ahead of the Wolverines’ defeat of Ohio State last season. 

Here’s what to know for the third ‘College GameDay’ of the season.

Where is ESPN College GameDay this week?

‘College GameDay’ will be held at Ferry Field in Ann Arbor, Michigan, for the Week 2 game between the No. 3 Texas Longhorns and the No. 9 Michigan Wolverines at Michigan Stadium.

Who is the College GameDay celebrity guest picker this week?

ESPN has not yet announced the guest picker for Week 2. Former Heisman Trophy winner and Texas A&M quarterback Johnny Manziel appeared as the guest picker last week.

When is ESPN College GameDay?

‘College GameDay’ will air from 9 a.m. to noon ET on Saturday, Sept. 7. 

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

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The Biden administration is expected to accuse Russia of orchestrating a sustained effort to influence the 2024 U.S. presidential election by targeting American voters through state-run media and other online platforms.

Fox News confirmed that Russia-linked entities will be targeted by the Justice Department. A CNN report stated that Kremlin-backed RT TV network is expected to be named by the Justice Department as one of the key players in the covert campaign.

When asked by Fox News Digital for its reaction to the allegations, RT said, ‘We certainly have a reaction. Actually, we had several, but we couldn’t decide on one (we even thought of running an office poll), so here they are.’ 

‘2016 called and it wants its clichés back,’ was among them, as were: ‘Three things are certain in life: death, taxes and RT’s interference in the U.S. elections,’ ‘We gotta earn our Kremlin paycheck somehow,’ and ‘Somewhere Secretary Clinton is sad that it’s not because of her.’ 

The move comes after the Justice Department made RT register as a ‘foreign agent’ in 2017. 

The agency said at the time that ‘T&R Productions, LLC (T&R), a Washington, D.C., corporation, registered… with the Department of Justice under the Foreign Agents Registration Act as an agent for ANO TV-Novosti, the Russian government entity responsible for the worldwide broadcasts of the RT Network (RT).   

‘Since August 2014, T&R has operated studios for RT, hired and paid all U.S.-based RT employees, and produced English-language programming for RT, which is both shown on cable networks across the United States and available on RT’s website,’ it also said. 

Former Defense Intelligence Agency officer Rebekah Koffler previously told Fox News Digital that RT and other propaganda abroad were part of the permanent cyber warfare Russia wages on the West. 

‘They don’t just wage propaganda in a time of war, during a conflict,’ she said in 2022. ‘They wage it during peacetime. They constantly malign the United States and misrepresent foreign policy objectives … I’m just saying that tilts the level playing field towards Russia when we allow their propaganda channels to broadcast in an unfettered [way].’ 

‘RT is 100% a Russia government-controlled channel and its sole intent is to predispose the American population and wherever they are broadcasting towards the Russian point of view and to present the events on the ground as the Russians want the rest of the world to see them, so if the United States did not want that to happen then it would be appropriate to shut down the channel,’ Koffler added. 

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