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After suffering yet another painful season-opening loss, LSU coach Brian Kelly couldn’t contain his frustration.

In his postgame press conference following Sunday’s 27-20 defeat against USC in the Vegas Kickoff Classic, Kelly emphasized his point by pounding his fist down on the table so hard it nearly knocked over his water bottle.

‘We’re sitting here again … we’re sitting here again,’ Kelly said with an emphatic slam, ‘talking about the same things, about not finishing when you have an opponent in a position to put ’em away.’

LSU, ranked No. 12 in the preseason US LBM Coaches Poll, led by four points with less than six minutes to play, but couldn’t stop the No. 23 Trojans from driving the length of the field in the final two minutes for the game-winning touchdown.

Kelly admitted it was the first time in his three years as LSU head coach that he’s been this displeased with his team.

‘I’m so angry about it that I’ve got to do something about it. I’m not doing a good enough job as a coach,’ Kelly said. ‘I’ve got to coach ’em better because it’s unacceptable for us not to have found a way to win this football game. It’s ridiculous.’

The loss extended a dubious streak for the Tigers, who have lost their opening game each of the past five seasons.

Particularly frustrating for Kelly and LSU was that the game-winning score was set up by a 15-yard targeting penalty on Tigers safety Jardin Gilbert that moved the ball to the Tigers’ 13-yard line. On the next play, USC’s Woody Marks scampered 13 yards into the end zone to snap a 20-20 tie and seal the Trojans’ victory.

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Two years after setting the American League record with 62 home runs, New York Yankees slugger Aaron Judge has a chance to break his own mark.

The outfielder has been on a historic tear in recent months, batting .383 with 45 home runs and 104 RBI in 96 games from May 3-Aug. 25. He became the first player in Major League Baseball history with 50 homers, 120 RBI and 100 walks before September.

Judge has 51 home runs entering play on Sept. 3, already the third 50-homer season of the 32-year-old’s career.

Only two players in baseball history have multiple recorded 60-homer seasons: Mark McGwire (1998 and 1999) and Sammy Sosa (1998, 1999 and 2001).

Here’s what to know about Aaron Judge’s 2024 season:

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

Aaron Judge home run pace

With 51 home runs through Sept. 2, Aaron Judge is on pace for 60 homers – which would fall short of the American League record 61 he hit in 2022.

Aaron Judge home run tracker 2024

April 3 @ Diamondbacks – Merrill Kelly
April 6 vs. Blue Jays – Kevin Gausman
April 14 @ Guardians – Logan Allen
April 24 vs. Athletics – Joe Boyle
April 27 @ Brewers – Thyago Vieira
April 28 @ Brewers – Tobias Myers
May 5 vs. Tigers – Tarik Skubal
May 8 vs. Astros – Spencer Arrighetti
May 9 vs. Astros – Ryan Pressly
May 12 @ Rays – Tyler Alexander
May 15 @ Twins – Pablo Lopez
May 17 vs. White Sox – Mike Clevinger
May 19 vs. White Sox – Chris Flexen
May 22 vs. Mariners – Bryce Miller
May 23 vs. Mariners – Luis Castillo
May 24 @ Padres – Yu Darvish
May 25 @ Padres – Dylan Cease
May 30 @ Angels – Patrick Sandoval
May 31 @ Giants – Jordan Hicks
May 31 @ Giants – Jordan Hicks
June 1 @ Giants – Logan Webb
June 8 vs. Dodgers – Gavin Stone
June 8 vs. Dodgers – Ryan Yarbrough
June 9 vs. Dodgers – Yohan Ramirez
June 11 @ Royals – Nick Anderson
June 16 @ Red Sox – Kutter Crawford
June 20 vs. Orioles – Cole Irvin
June 22 vs. Braves – Charlie Morton
June 25 @ Mets – Reed Garrett
June 26 @ Mets – Danny Young
June 30 @ Blue Jays – Kevin Gausman
July 2 vs. Reds – Sam Moll
July 12 @ Orioles – Cade Povich
July 13 @ Orioles – Grayson Rodriguez
July 21 vs. Rays – Jason Adam
July 26 @ Red Sox – Zack Kelly
July 27 @ Red Sox – Kutter Crawford
July 29 @ Phillies – Zack Wheeler
July 29 @ Phillies – Yunior Marte
Aug. 2 vs. Blue Jays – Kevin Gausman
Aug. 3 vs. Blue Jays – Jose Berrios
Aug. 11 vs. Rangers – Andrew Chafin
Aug. 14 @ White Sox – Chad Kuhl
Aug. 16 @ Tigers – Brant Hurter
Aug. 20 vs. Guardians – Matthew Boyd
Aug. 21 vs. Guardians – Joey Cantillo
Aug. 21 vs. Guardians – Eli Morgan
Aug. 22 vs. Guardians – Gavin Williams
Aug. 23 vs. Rockies – Kyle Freeland
Aug. 25 vs. Rockies – Austin Gomber
Aug 25 vs. Rockies – Jeff Criswell

MLB single-season home run leaders

73 – Barry Bonds, Giants, 2001
70 – Mark McGwire, Cardinals, 1998
66 – Sammy Sosa, Cubs, 1998
65 – Mark McGwire, Cardinals, 1999
64 – Sammy Sosa, Cubs, 2001
63 – Sammy Sosa, Cubs, 1999
62 – Aaron Judge, Yankees, 2022 (AL record)
61 – Roger Maris, Yankees, 1961
60 – Babe Ruth, Yankees, 1927
59 – Babe Ruth, Yankees (1921); Giancarlo Stanton, Marlins (2017)

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For those who like to wait until right before the season to conduct their fantasy football drafts, Labor Day Weekend is the gift that keeps giving.

The preseason is over, which means NFL kickoff is about to hit us like a cold beer on a hot day. It also means it’s your last chance to draft championship-winning fantasy teams.

USA TODAY Sports has you covered with everything you need to dominate your draft. Breakout candidates? Check. League-winning sleepers? Check. Bold predictions? Check. Cheat sheet for every position with auction values? Check. We even compiled 160 of the best team names for your fantasy squad so you can remember us every time you check out your first-place team.

In this article, you’ll find rankings for quarterbacks, running backs, wide receivers, tight ends, kickers, and defenses. You can sort by your league’s format, whether it’s standard scoring, PPR (point per reception), or half-PPR. You’ll see where the players are ranked compared to the Expert Consensus Rankings (ECR) and Average Draft Position (ADP).

Are you missing out on the likes of Christian McCaffrey, Bijan Robinson, CeeDee Lamb, Tyreek Hill, and Breece Hall? Don’t sweat it. Among others, players like De’Von Achane, Jonathan Taylor, Garrett Wilson, and Jahmyr Gibbs who could find themselves in that top tier when the season is over.

PLAY TO WIN $5K: USA TODAY’s Pro Football Survivor Pool is free to enter. Sign up now!

Without further ado, here are complete 2024 fantasy football rankings to arm you for your draft.

2024 fantasy football draft rankings

Last updated: Monday, Sept. 2

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Former Yankees star Derek Jeter will be Michigan’s honorary captain for its upcoming game against Texas on Saturday, Head Coach Sherrone Moore told WXYZ Detroit’s Brad Galli. 

The No. 8 Michigan Wolverines will take on the No. 4 Texas Longhorns in what is slated to be one of the most consequential non-conference games this college football season. 

Jeter grew up in Kalamazoo, Michigan and is a well-documented fan of the Wolverines. The 14-time All-Star received a scholarship to play baseball for Michigan after finishing high school, but opted to go pro after he was drafted by the Yankees in 1992, with whom he’d spend his entire career.

Jeter would be inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 2020, a near-unanimous selection.

Kickoff is scheduled for noon ET in Ann Arbor, Michigan. 

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Venezuelan authorities on Monday sought an arrest warrant for the opposition’s former presidential candidate Edmundo González, just over a month after election officials declared President Nicolás Maduro the winner of the disputed election that his opponents say he lost.

The prosecutor seeking the warrant in its request to a judge focused on terrorism-related crimes cites various charges against González, a former diplomat, including conspiracy, falsifying documents and usurpation of powers.

Ruling party-loyal electoral authorities declared Maduro the victor of the July 28 presidential elections hours after polls closed. They did not show any detailed results to back up their claim as they had offered in previous presidential elections. The lack of transparency has drawn international condemnation.

The opposition, however, managed to obtain more than 80% of vote tally sheets, which are printed by every electronic voting machine, and said they show Maduro lost by a wide margin against González.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

It’s time for our weekly fantasy football stock watch, where we identify which players are sizzling and which ones are fizzling on the fantasy football Value Meter.

Week 1 is always the most difficult to project because most NFL teams are reluctant to show anything but the most basic concepts in preseason. Heck, some of the best players in the league haven’t even seen any game action yet.

But this is our opportunity to point fantasy football managers in the right direction so they can stay ahead of developing trends and make smart decisions on the road to a fantasy league title.

WANNA BET? Here are the best mobile sports betting apps in 2024 

Rising fantasy football values

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WR Keon Coleman, Buffalo Bills: The Bills parted ways with starters Gabe Davis and Stefon Diggs in the offseason, opening the door for a new group of receivers. Coleman was drafted out of Michigan State, and WR Khalil Shakir figures to be his biggest competition. Coleman could emerge as a WR1 right off the bat if he gains QB Josh Allen’s trust early.

Falling fantasy football values

QB JustinHerbert, Los Angeles Chargers: There are a lot of changes for Herbert, and none are good. New coach John Harbaugh and OC Greg Roman have a history of a run-first approach. Herbert also lost dependable WR Keenan Allen via trade, and he is nursing a foot injury. It could be a slow start for the signal-caller.

RB Jerome Ford, Cleveland Browns: Ford will be tasked with RB1 duties in Cleveland to start, as Nick Chubb isn’t quite ready to return from his knee injury. Ford might stall against a Dallas Cowboys rush defense which allowed 4.2 yards per carry and only 14 rushing scores in 2023.

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One game after she put up her season-high in points, Caitlin Clark nearly matched it.

Clark, the star rookie guard of the Indiana Fever, poured it on late to secure a 100-93, come-from-behind victory over the Dallas Wings. More importantly for the Fever, they are hitting their stride; Indiana has now won four in a row and has gone over .500, with a 17-16 record.

Clark finished with 28 points, though it was teammate Kelsey Mitchell who scored a career-high 36 points.

Clark had a quiet start to the game — by her standards, at least — scoring just five points through the first quarter-and-a-half of play. In fact, Clark was outshined in the first half by Wings guard Arike Ogunbowale, who drained five 3 pointers in the first quarter and had 24 points by intermission.

Still, Clark continued to imprint her mark on Indiana Fever history; when she scored her 595th point Sunday, Clark surpassed Tamika Catchings’ franchise record for most points in a single season by a rookie.

And while Ogunbowale would tie a single-game WNBA record with nine 3s, it was Clark and the Fever who took over in the fourth quarter. Indiana outscored Dallas 30-19 in the frame and it was a pair of deep 3-pointers that Clark hit in the middle of the quarter that helped propel the Fever.

This performance comes one game after Clark scored 31 points in a victory over the Chicago Sky on Friday. The Fever scored 100 or more points in consecutive games for the first time in franchise history.

Caitlin Clark stats

In 37 minutes Sunday against the Wings, Clark finished with 28 points on 10-of-19 shooting, including going 5-of-11 from beyond the arc. Clark also added four rebounds, 12 assists and one steal. This marked Clark’s 12th double-double of the season. She also committed seven turnovers.

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Polling is a useful tool in politics, if somewhat blunt and slow, and this weekend Democrats were taking no small comfort in an ABC/Ipsos survey showing Kamala Harris leading Donald Trump by 4 points nationally.

But the important thing about this poll is not the margin. After all, Rasmussen has Trump up by 2 points. Nobody knows which is right. What’s important is that on Aug. 13, this same ABC poll also showed Harris up 4. Put another way, Harris’ momentum isn’t just gone, it’s been gone for a while.

I first clearly felt the air escaping the Harris balloon a little more than a fortnight ago, in San Francisco of all places, where one would think she’d be viewed as a hometown hero. But already, from almost everyone I met, there were creeping questions as to what she stands for, what she would do as president.

We have all seen the viral videos, even from the Democratic National Convention, of delegates asked what their favorite Harris policy is, only to stare off into the distance, looking for an answer that isn’t there as if they had been asked to conjugate some word in ancient Greek. 

I have now seen this expression more times than I can count, in red states, in blue states, in suburb, city and small town, even many of those committed to vote for the vice president admit it is kind of like buying a political scratch-off ticket. They aren’t sure what they are going to win.

Now, make no mistake, from the time that Nancy Pelosi shoved President Joe Biden, face first, off of the stage until just before the Democrats gathered in Chicago, the momentum was there, the vibes were real, and Harris’ numbers were going up.

I felt that distinctly, and palpably in the Democrats I spoke to, who had felt a kind of doom and gloom surrounding Grandpa Joe, but vibes are funny things and they tend to run out of steam. In fact, just after Trump survived his assassination attempt, it was Republicans who were convinced that the image of a bloodied and defiant Trump had already won them the election.

But not so fast.

So why did the wheels fall off of Harris’ vibe bus just as the joyride was getting started? There are a few missteps to point to, including her obstinate and bizarre refusal to answer questions or do interviews. 

This is where the slow nature of polling becomes a problem. For two weeks, I were told by the liberal media that Harris didn’t need to do any interviews. She was surging, they promised. But she wasn’t. 

And in that period, almost without fail, every voter I talked to said she needed to start answering questions. Today, it sure looks like the sponge bath she and Gov. Tim Walz received on CNN last week is too little, too late.

The bigger, related problem for Harris is that she simply does not have political chops. A candidate with political chops can do three interviews a day without breaking a sweat, they thrive on the unscripted moment that can be turned to their advantage.

Harris has none of these abilities, and she didn’t have to. Nobody without political chops and top notch instincts can win a competitive presidential primary, because they lose to better candidates, but Harris never had to face any other candidates and that lack of battle testing is showing its ugly head.

As the first orange leaves flutter groundward this week, we find ourselves where we were before Joe Biden’s inability to serve was spelled out in giant neon. This race is a toss up, the electorate is as divided as ever, and we are basically going into the fourth quarter all tied up.

For Donald Trump and JD Vance who have now blunted the short-lived Harris surge, this means more of the same, staying in the public eye as much as possible. You wouldn’t be surprised to see either of them with giant scissors at the grand opening of a Dairy Queen.

Harris and Walz, on the other hand, need a Second Act. Kamala describing how she makes collard greens and Tim eating pork chops on a stick at the state fair isn’t going to cut it. The American voters have questions, a lot of them, but do these untested Democratic candidates have any answers? We will soon find out.

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The United States seized a plane owned by Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro in the Dominican Republic, Fox News has confirmed. 

Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) flew Maduro’s personal plane back to the United States Monday morning, when it landed in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, and is now in U.S. custody, a U.S. official told Fox News following an initial report by CNN.

The plane, described by officials as Maduro’s version of ‘Air Force One,’ is used for Maduro’s state visits around the world and was seized in the Dominican Republic after it was purchased through a straw company in violation of sanctions laws and export controls, the official said. U.S. authorities cited a specific violation of U.S. executive order 13884, signed by former President Donald Trump in 2019. 

The plane, valued at $13 million, is a Dassault Falcon 900-EX. The seizure was a result of a joint investigation with HSI and the U.S. Department of Commerce.

‘This morning, the Justice Department seized an aircraft we allege was illegally purchased for $13 million through a shell company and smuggled out of the United States for use by Nicolás Maduro and his cronies,’ U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland said in a statement. ‘The Department will continue to pursue those who violate our sanctions and export controls to prevent them from using American resources to undermine the national security of the United States.’

‘Let this seizure send a clear message: aircraft illegally acquired from the United States for the benefit of sanctioned Venezuelan officials cannot just fly off into the sunset,’ Assistant Secretary for Export Enforcement Matthew Axelrod, of the Department of Commerce, added.  ‘It doesn’t matter how fancy the private jet or how powerful the officials – we will work relentlessly with our partners here and across the globe to identify and return any aircraft illegally smuggled outside of the United States.’

The seizure is expected to further frost relations between the U.S. and Venezuela.

In August 2019, Trump issued Executive Order 13884, which prohibits U.S. persons from engaging in transactions with persons who have acted or purported to act directly or indirectly for or on behalf of, the government of Venezuela, including as a member of the Maduro regime. To protect U.S. national security and foreign policy interests, the Department of Commerce has also imposed export controls for items intended, entirely or in part, for a Venezuelan military or military-intelligence end user, the Justice Department said Monday. 

In late 2022 and early 2023, persons affiliated with Maduro allegedly used a Caribbean-based shell company to conceal their involvement in the illegal purchase of the Dassault Falcon 900EX aircraft, which at the time was valued at approximately $13 million, from a company based in the Southern District of Florida, according to U.S. investigators.

Federal investigators say the aircraft was then illegally exported from the United States to Venezuela through the Caribbean in April 2023. Since May 2023, the Dassault Falcon, bearing tail number T7-ESPRT, ‘has flown almost exclusively to and from a military base in Venezuela and has been used for the benefit of Maduro and his representatives, including to transport Maduro on visits to other countries,’ the DOJ said. 

The Department of Commerce Bureau of Industry and Security Miami Field Office is investigating the case, along with the DHS, HSI El Dorado Task Force Miami. 

Fox News’ David Spunt contributed to this report.

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NEW YORK — When Coco Gauff talked about doubters and haters fueling her run to the U.S. Open title a year ago, it felt more than a little bit manufactured.

The true narrative of Gauff’s career was never about the anonymous online comments on phone apps that Gen Z’ers too often rely on for validation. In real life, Gauff was the product of a tennis ecosystem that decided she was a sure thing by the time she was 10 years old. As prestigious academies recruited her and companies threw sponsorship deals at her feet, anyone with an actual stake in the sport knew that winning a Grand Slam title was only a matter of when, not if.

But Gauff’s 6-3, 4-6, 6-3 loss to Emma Navarro on Sunday, ending her reign as U.S. Open champion in the fourth round, is a moment to bookmark in her career and ascent as America’s most recognizable tennis star.

For the first time, the doubts might be real.

“Obviously because I’m wanting to reach a different level, it is disappointing,” Gauff said Sunday. “But I’m not going to beat myself up and be like, ‘Oh this is so bad.’”

She shouldn’t be too hard on herself. Gauff is merely 20, with a long runway to accomplish great things in the sport. Her mantra coming into the U.S. Open was that nobody can take away what she’s already done and she’ll have many more chances to add Grand Slam titles before her career is over. That’s both a clever and accurate way to relieve some of the pressure she surely felt returning to the site of her greatest triumph.

But Gauff has been around long enough now and gotten to the late stages of Grand Slams enough times to have higher expectations and realistically assess what has gone wrong.

Here are the facts: Though Gauff reached the semifinals of the Australian Open and French Open, which should both be considered successful runs, she is 7-12 this season against players ranked in the top 30. Since winning the title in Auckland in her first tournament of the year, Gauff hasn’t even reached a final. Though she has three top-10 wins this season, two of them came against the spiraling Ons Jabeur, who is now down to No. 22. And Gauff herself leaves New York ranked outside the top five for the first time in quite awhile.

In other words, the entire year on balance has been a backwards step. That’s undeniable. And for someone who once aspired to put up Serena Williams-like numbers up on the scoreboard, this is not the trajectory she should be on at 20 years old.

“It’s not the summer I wanted,” Gauff said. “But there’s like 70 other players in the draw who would love to have the summer I had. So many people want to make the fourth round, so many people want make the Olympics, so it’s (about) perspective.

“I expect better, but at the end of the day it happened and I know I can turn it around.”

So what went wrong and what’s next?

A year ago, as Gauff went on her incredible run to the title, much was made of the fact that she overhauled her coaching team after Wimbledon by hiring Pere Riba and Brad Gilbert, who is a huge presence in the sport by virtue of his commentary work for ESPN. Riba departed last December to take over the head coaching duties for Zheng Qinwen, while Gauff replaced him with Felipe Ramirez.

Whether Gauff continues with this coaching setup or makes some changes, her year has largely been characterized by poor serving and losing leads while treading water with her forehand, which had been considered the biggest weak spot in her game last year.

Coming into the U.S. Open, Gauff double faulted 256 times, the fifth-most on the WTA tour this year. In her loss to Navarro, Gauff threw up 19 double faults, including several in clutch moments when the outcome was hanging in the balance. She acknowledged that a deep dive into her serving issues was warranted as she goes into 2025.

“It’s a mental hurdle I have to get over, but I definitely want to look at other things because I don’t want to lose matches like this anymore,” she said.

Gauff also had 60 unforced errors Sunday, losing a majority of the baseline rallies because her strokes eventually broke down against Navarro’s consistency and ability to redirect pace. Navarro won 34 of the 54 rallies of five shots or more.

One of the more interesting things from Gauff’s press conference is that she did not commit to a schedule for the rest of the year. Though she’ll certainly go to Asia for some of the big-money fall events and is likely to qualify for the year-end WTA championships in Saudi Arabia, Gauff made it clear that she needs to be on the practice court addressing some of these issues.

Maybe it’s time for a bit of a reset.

“I feel like I want to spend a good training block,” she said. “I haven’t had that since maybe before the clay season started. I think for me in the long term I want to get a good training block and we’ll see how many tournaments I play for the rest of the year.”

Even at 20 years old, Gauff has reached a point in her career where she only needs to be judged by her own standards. The reality is that she’s fallen short, at least momentarily. For the first time in her career, there may actually be some real doubters and haters wondering whether the way she played a year ago en route to the U.S. Open title was an exception rather than the norm.

Gauff isn’t going anywhere as a major factor in women’s tennis, and she’s still got a few years before she hits her projected physical peak. For someone who came onto the tour with some technical flaws in her serve and forehand and hasn’t fully corrected them, these ups and downs may just be part of the package.

But with this chapter of her career closed, Gauff no longer has to worry about being the defending champion of anything. She will go into 2025 with a clean slate and fewer expectations. Hopefully she can make the most of that opportunity.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY