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The popular Buffalo Bills star was voted the most overrated NFL quarterback and the biggest trash-talker among QBs in a recent poll.  

Josh Allen ranked most overrated quarterback  

1. Allen (11)* 
T2. Hurts (10) 
T2. Tagovailoa (10)

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*(number of votes)

Other top vote-getters: Los Angeles Chargers’ Justin Herbert (9), Jacksonville Jaguars’ Trevor Lawrence (8), Cleveland Browns’ Deshaun Watson (7), Arizona Cardinals’ Kyler Murray (6) and San Francisco 49ers’ Brock Purdy (6).

Josh Allen voted the biggest trash-talking QB 

1. Allen (26)* 
2. Mayfield (17) 
3. Rodgers (15)

*(number of votes)

Other top vote-getters: Patrick Mahomes (11), Joe Burrow (4) and Houston Texans’ C.J. Stroud (4).

Sports Illustrated lists Josh Allen accomplishments 

We get that people outside Western New York are skeptical. So, we turned to experts outside our area to judge Allen.  

Back in July, long before ESPN published its poll, Sports Illustrated said Allen has accomplished feats that no other NFL quarterback has accomplished. 

Among Allen’s accomplishments: 

With his 2023 season, Allen became the only player in NFL history with four-straight 40+ touchdown seasons, totaling over 40 touchdowns in each of the past four seasons. 
Also in 2023, Allen set an NFL record by recording at least one passing and one rushing touchdown in 11 games. The previous record was held by Kyler Murray, who scored both in nine games in 2020. 
Through six seasons, Allen has passed for 22,703 yards while being accurate with a completion percentage of 63%. He has passed for 167 touchdowns and rushed for 53 more. 

Josh Allen, Buffalo Bills react to poll 

In a post on X, formerly known as Twitter, Allen said, ‘So you’re telling me, I was voted as the #1 … best trash talker??? Let’s goooooo!!!’

Allen hasn’t reacted to the most-overrated vote, yet.

The Buffalo Bills chimed in too with a pair of posts.

Josh Allen’s ranking in poll causes big reaction on social media

Josh Allen does have his detractors

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

PHOENIX − Mark Vientos sits on the bench at Chase Field, tilts his head back, closes his eyes and slowly lets his mind drift, soaking in the irony.

Five months ago, in the final days of spring training, the man standing nearby cost Vientos his job as the New York Mets full-time designated hitter and relegated him to the minors.

The same man, J.D. Martinez, also happens to be the same one who has played an integral role in Vientos’ breakout season, emerging into one of the finest young third basemen in the game.

“It was tough when I got sent down,’’ Vientos quietly says, “real tough. But honestly, when I think about it, it turned out to be the best thing to happen to my career.

“J.D. has meant so much to me. He’s helped a lot. I wouldn’t be having this season without him, and some of the veterans on our team.’’

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Vientos leads all National League third basemen with 21 home runs, hitting .276 with 56 RBI and an .873 OPS, 48% higher than the league average. He’s averaging a home run every 14.86 at-bats, the sixth-best percentage in the National League, and fifth in the league with a .542 slugging percentage. In the last 57 games, he has 16 homers with 15 doubles, 40 RBI and an .879 OPS.

The Mets may have an MVP candidate in shortstop Francisco Lindor, but without Vientos, the Mets aren’t even in sniffing distance of the final wild-card spot in the National League, sitting 4 games behind Atlanta.

“He has meant everything to us,’’ Mets manager Carlos Mendoza said. “This guy has done such a good job handling adversity. He went through a lot. He went to spring training with a pretty good chance of making the ballclub, and the last week we sign J.D., and he gets the news that he’s going back to the minors.’’

Vientos was having a fabulous spring training with a .795 OPS, and projected to be the Mets DH until March 23, right up until when Martinez signed a one-year, $12 million free agent contract.

Just like that, instead of having the opportunity of being an everyday player, being in Milwaukee with the rest of his teammates for the season-opener against the Brewers, he was packing his bags for Triple-A Syracuse.

“He was in a bad mood and pouty when I signed,’’ Martinez tells USA TODAY Sports. “I told him, ‘Don’t hate me. I didn’t do nothing. If anything, I’m doing you a favor, ok? The last thing you want to be is a 24-year-old DH. You want to be in the field dude.’

“I don’t think he understood it at the time because he was frustrated. He wanted to be in the big leagues. But he does now.’’

Oh, does he ever.

“I’m proud of how much I’ve learned these past couple of months,’’ Vientos says. “Forget the results. Forget how I’m doing. I’m just so excited on all of the info that I’ve learned and I’ve gained just being up here with a great group of guys who have done it for awhile.

“I’ve progressed so much just being around them that I’m just excited to see what’s next. What else can I learn? What else could I get better with.’’

Vientos has learned the art of visualizing success, from the moment he wakes up in the morning at 10, until his head hits the pillow at night. He has gotten into a daily routine of taking a morning walk, grabbing that first cup of coffee, eating a nutritional breakfast and giving up − or, well at least reducing − his appetite for pepperoni pizza, while mixing in meditation and visualization.

“I feel like the everyday lifestyle of a professional athlete is tough,’’ Vientos says. “And I think the way to stay consistent on the field, you have to be consistent off the field. I had a good routine on the field, but never off-the field. Obviously, there’s a lot more work to do.

“But I’m telling you, he (Martinez) has helped a lot. He’ll act like he hasn’t taught me anything, but just being around him and picking his brain, he has helped me so much.’’

Martinez, 37, says he’s simply paying it forward after the way he was treated early in his career. He was drafted in 2009 by the Houston Astros and was released five years later, wondering if his career was over before it started.

He signed with the Detroit Tigers and his career instantly changed, thanks to the guidance and leadership of veteran All-Star center fielder Torii Hunter, along with Miguel Cabrera and Victor Martinez. The next thing he knew, he became a six-time All-Star, three-time Silver Slugger winner and has earned $153.9 million in his career.

“I learned more from Torii in that one year than any other veteran guy in my career,’’ Martinez says. “When I was in Houston, I didn’t have that help. They had all young guys, and the veteran guys, well they thought they were the best. They never helped the young guys.

“I remember saying that when I got older, if I ever reached that level, I would never be that guy. It bothered me so much. Here I was a young player, grinding and asking all of these questions, and they would just blow me off.

“When I went to Detroit, Torii was willing to help. You can ask those guys questions, and they’d actually help you. It was like, ‘Wow, this is how it’s supposed to be.’ Torii was so good at the intangibles in the game, picking up little things, and teach me every day. …

“Getting released was the best thing that happened to me.’’

And for Vientos, well, getting demoted to the minors may just turn out to be the best thing that ever happened to him, too.

“It was tough getting sent down, Vientos says. “But for me, I was so confident in my ability that I knew I was major-league ready to have a great season. I was like, ‘Ok, I guess I’ll wait for my opportunity. I’m ready. I know I’m ready. I’ll just play the waiting game.

“It motivated me. I use a lot of things towards my motivation, a lot of negative things and turn it into positive.’’

Vientos has had plenty of practice dealing with adversity. This is a guy who was selected in the second round of the 2017 draft, became their fourth-best prospect in 2022, but was sent down to the minors five times since his Sept. 11, 2022, major-league debut.

If it wasn’t heartbreaking enough to be sent to the minors after Martinez signed, it only got worse. Vientos was called up April 27 after producing a .923 OPS at Syracuse to replace Starling Marte, who went on the bereavement list. He went 3-for-7 with a walk-off homer against the St. Louis Cardinals in three games and was sent back down again.

“He hits that big homer, gets sent back down,’’ Mendoza said, “hey, that’s not easy you know.’’

Vientos finally caught his break two weeks later when he was called up to replace Brett Baty, who won the starting third-base job in spring training. He slashed .310/.370/.548 for the rest of May and never let it go, earning the full-time third base job, with Baty now out for the season with a broken left index finger.

No one is going to confuse Vientos with perennial Gold Glovers Nolan Arenado or Matt Chapman at third base, but he has improved dramatically. He has been steady defensively and surreal with his consistency at the plate.

“He’s spring boarding himself into becoming a superstar,’’ Mets All-Star first baseman Pete Alonso said. “He’s having a phenomenal year. If he keeps compounding good year after good year, he’s going to be one of the game’s biggest names. He’s just grown tremendously, both as a player and as a person, and totally blossomed.

“People obviously talk about the bat, but I don’t think enough people give him credit for the type of plays he’s making at third base. It’s amazing the leaps and bounds he’s taken defensively. He’s made some absolutely spectacular plays. He’s been phenomenal.’’

It’s possible, of course, that Vientos could still be the Mets’ DH in 2025, or even first base if Alonso departs as a free agent, but if it’s up to Vientos, he’s not going anywhere.

“I love third base,’’ says Vientos, “this is where I want to play the rest of my career. I don’t want to be a DH. I really don’t.’’

Martinez breaks into an expansive grin when he hears Vientos’ sentiments, knowing that he was paying attention. Martinez has been preaching to him that he’s going to be making a whole lot of money one day if he can do a whole lot more than just swing the bat.

“I harp on that a lot because when I came up, they didn’t emphasize defense,’’ Martinez said. “They’d say, you hit 30 (homers) and 100 (RBI), they’ll back the truck up. I found out that quickly, well, you can do that, but they want defense. It’s just as important. If I’d been able to play defense, I’d have made twice the money.

“That’s what I’ve been preaching to him. ‘Dude, you got the hitting thing. You’re going to be fine there. But as much time as you spend on offense in the off-season, spend just as much time on defense. You’re just 24. I’m 37. DH is for the old guys.

“So, dude, this offseason, put your heart and soul into learning how to play defense. Go be the best.’’

Vientos, only the fifth player in Mets’ history to hit at least 20 homers and 20 doubles at the age of 24 or younger, is taking it all to heart.

“The hitting, the power, that was always there,’’ says Diamondbacks veteran infielder Luis Guillorme, who has known Vientos since he was in high school in Plantation, Florida. “If someone says they didn’t see that, they’re lying. But now you’re seeing the defense now, too.

“I’m telling you, he’s going to be good. Really, really good.’’

Follow Nightengale on X: @Bnightengale

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

BOULDER, Colo. − Deion Sanders has doubled down on his big bet with the Buffaloes.

Last year in his first season as Colorado’s football coach, he cleaned house to shake up the program, overhauling the roster by bringing in 68 new scholarship players, including 47 who transferred in from other four-year colleges. This year, he flipped the roster again – with 50 new scholarship players, including 39 new transfers.

But will his second team overhaul strategy work better this time after finishing with a 4-8 record last season?  

Here are three reasons the Buffaloes will be much better in Sanders’ second season in Boulder – and three reasons they might fall short.

Colorado opens the season here at Folsom Field Thursday against North Dakota State (8 p.m. ET, ESPN).

Reason for success No. 1: The defense is better. 

Sanders has been raving about his depth on defense, especially up front.  Of the 39 new scholarship transfer players, 14 are defensive linemen or linebackers, helping transform a defense that ranked 130th out of 133 major college teams last year with yards per game allowed (453.3).

“I think we’re looking at seven, eight guys on defense that will probably be pros at the conclusion of the season,” Deion Sanders told reporters this month, noting that he gets regular feedback from NFL scouts.

That new beef in the box includes Arizona State transfer defensive end BJ Green and Pittsburgh transfer defensive end Dayon Hayes. Both will be part of an aggressive new scheme under new defensive coordinator Robert Livingston, a former assistant with the Cincinnati Bengals.

“We’ve got every style of rusher here man, so it’s going to be very scary for the offenses,” Hayes said recently. “They can’t beat it. Everybody got something different to bring so I love it.”

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Reason for success No. 2: Legitimate stars

Only two Colorado players have replica jerseys on sale at the campus bookstore (for $110 each) − quarterback Shedeur Sanders and cornerback-receiver Travis Hunter. Both could be first-round NFL draft picks next April. Both also have attracted major endorsement deals, including a new deal with Nike for Shedeur, who set a school record last year with 3,230 passing yards.

This will be the last college season Deion Sanders will coach both of his sons — Shedeur and Shilo Sanders, a safety who led the team in tackles in 2023.

The two brothers see it as a simple matter of progression.

“Look at what we had last year,” Shilo Sanders said in July. “Look at how close most of the games was. And look at who we’ve got now. Big difference.”

Last year, the Buffs lost five of their eight games by seven points or fewer. This year, they’ve shored up their weak spots to bridge that gap, including the running game, which ranked as the worst in major college football in 2023 with just 68.9 yards per game. Running back Dallan Hayden since has transferred in from Ohio State with three years of eligibility remaining.

Reason for success No. 3: Better blocking

The offensive line was the biggest problem to fix after last season, when the Buffs surrendered the second-most quarterback sacks in the nation (56). The beatings took a toll on Shedeur Sanders, who took painkillers at times to prop himself up and finished the season with a fractured back.

But none of the starting linemen who finished the season last year are on the team this year. They’ve since been replaced by transfers, promising holdovers and Jordan Seaton, the No. 1 offensive line recruit in the nation.

They should be better, if only because they can’t get much worse, though questions remain about depth beyond the starting five.  Seaton also needs seasoning to build up his toughness, new offensive line coach Phil Loadholt said recently.

“I feel good about six, seven, maybe eight right now,” Loadholt said. “We’re trying to get that to 10.”

Reason for concern No. 1: Chemistry after roster flip

Deion Sanders previously has questioned the value and meaning of “culture” and “chemistry” on a football team.

But in the Buffaloes’ case last year, it’s arguable that the team could have done much better if they had more of both – a killer instinct to avoid letdowns while knowing how to push each other to get the job done.

For example, why did the Buffs blow a 29-0 halftime lead last year in a 46-43 defeat against Stanford? And why did they fail to regain their magic after starting the season last year 3-0?

Both freefalls at least partly could have been due to the fact that his team was full of so many new players with no prior experience working together. Out of a roster limit of 85 scholarship players, last year’s team only had nine players who played at Colorado in 2022.

And now Sanders has turned over the roster again. USA TODAY Sports counted at least 36 players who left the team since last year and still had college eligibility remaining.  Of those 36 departures, 31 were recruits signed by Sanders since his arrival in December 2022. Only 28 scholarship players return from last year’s team.

Reason for concern No. 2: Too much on one guy?

Shedeur Sanders is Colorado’s best quarterback since Kordell Stewart in 1994 – a generational star who also likely will be Colorado’s first quarterback selected in the NFL draft since Koy Detmer in 1997. The Buffs can’t afford to see him get knocked out of games again.  It’s also not even clear who his heir apparent is at quarterback in 2025, in part because Colorado put so many eggs in Shedeur’s basket in 2023 and 2024.

Last year, those eggs eventually fell and cracked. He played with pain last year down the stretch and sat out the final game of the season at Utah, where freshman Ryan Staub started in his place before losing, 23-17. Offensive coordinator Pat Shurmur said Monday that Staub is the “solid” No. 2 QB right now.

Reason for concern No. 3: Tough start

Last year, they started 3-0 with wins at TCU, at home against Nebraska and at home against Colorado State. This year after opening against the Bison Thursday, those two rivalry games against Nebraska and Colorado State are on the road, where the Buffs will be villainized in hostile prime-time environments on NBC and CBS.

If they start 1-2 or 0-3, they’ll have to do the opposite as last year and rally down the stretch to make a bowl game in the Big 12 Conference. Does this team have the fortitude to do that with so many new players playing together for the first time?

It likely won’t be easy Thursday against the Bison, either, even though a warm, energetic atmosphere is expected at Folsom Field after CU students started class this week . North Dakota State plays in the lower Football Championship Subdivision of college football but is usually a national contender at that level and last year finished in the semifinals at 11-4.

“We’ve got to strap it up,” Livingston said. “We’re expecting a knock-down, drag-out fight.”

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

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Josh Lively didn’t know what to think when he read a few words of an email on his way out the door.

‘This is confidential. Please don’t tell anyone,’ Lively read when he glanced at his phone one morning in March.

Lively, an assistant director of strategic communications for Tennessee athletics, ran through scenarios in his head as he drove 15 minutes from his house to campus.

When he got there and finally read the email, he was in shock. Lively had been selected to host Tennessee football legend Peyton Manning as a guest speaker in his sports promotion and branding class. Lively was only in his third semester teaching as an adjunct professor for UT’s school of advertising and public relations at that point.

‘I’m like, holy cow, how did you guys select me?’ Lively said Wednesday. ‘I’m not even full time. There’s 1,000 classes they could have picked.’

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Lively then had to keep it a secret for five months. But it was worth it to see the reaction of his 99 students when he told them on the first day of class.

He told his students to guess who their guest was, but before they could answer, Lively flashed a photo of Manning on the projector. The entire room gasped. But then he took it off immediately and said he was joking.

‘Do you legitimately think they’re going to let me have Peyton Manning in my class? Come on guys, let’s be serious,’ Lively said before telling them to guess again. ‘And then I flashed the photo back up and I was like, ‘I’m just kidding. It is, in fact, Peyton Manning. He is coming to our class.’

‘And they just lost it.’

What Peyton Manning said to Tennessee students in lecture

Part of Lively wondered if all his students understood what a big deal it was for Manning to visit the class.

But his question was answered immediately when he showed up to the classroom 35 minutes early Tuesday and there were already 10-15 students there.

‘You could just tell, they understood, OK, this is a big deal,’ Lively said. ‘I’m taking this very seriously. I’m getting there on time, I want a good seat. I want to be as close as I can to him and hear him speak.’

Manning spoke to the class for a little more than an hour and then stayed for 20 more minutes to take a photo with every student. He offered insight on his career from Tennessee to the NFL and his entertainment company Omaha Productions.

‘He’s clearly very smart, but I think it’s hard to tell how smart he really is because he gives off a kind of comedic personality at times,’ Lively said. ‘But he’s very thoughtful … He knows his stuff and he’s very intelligent about a lot of things that are happening. He could have given a lot of generic answers, but he did not. He dove in on some stuff.’

Lively had never met Manning before, despite working for UT athletics for six years as a student intern and graduate assistant and the last three years as a professional.

As he sat mere feet from Manning, Lively felt like he was having an out-of-body experience.

‘I’m talking to him and I can physically see the emotions in his face as he’s answering,’ Lively said. ‘I was like, man, this is for real. This is literally insane.’

Lively’s students shared his excitement, acting giddy as they lined up for photos at the end. CCI Dean Joe Mazer told Lively it will be the most memorable class the students will ever have.

‘There’s nothing that can touch this, because, I mean, the dude’s an icon,’ Lively said. ‘Just the pure joy was awesome.’

Cora Hall covers University of Tennessee women’s athletics. Email her at cora.hall@knoxnews.com and follow her on Twitter @corahalll.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Then-Senator and Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris did not rule out potentially packing the Supreme Court in 2019 when she sought the party’s nod to face then-President Donald Trump in the 2020 election. 

The now-vice president and Democratic nominee for president in 2024 reiterated several times during her previous campaign that she wasn’t opposed to a Supreme Court expansion, which would theoretically allow liberal justices to take on a majority role through new appointments. 

‘I’m open to this conversation about increasing the number of people on the United States Supreme Court,’ Harris told voters in Nashua, New Hampshire, after a question was posed to her about adding up to four seats to the high court, Bloomberg reported at the time.

Her interest in court-packing was not limited to a one-off remark. Harris made it clear, reiterating during her primary campaign in 2019 to both the New York Times and Politico that she was open-minded when it came to adding more seats to the court. 

Harris claimed to Politico at the time that ‘everything is on the table’ to restore confidence in the Supreme Court, including court-packing. 

She was asked by The New York Times whether she wished to elaborate on being ‘open’ to court-packing, to which she declined. 

‘I’m just open to it,’ she said. 

Harris’ campaign did not provide comment to Fox News Digital in time for publication. It was asked whether Harris was still open to court-packing. 

Last month, Biden and Harris’ administration rolled out a slate of policies to overhaul the Supreme Court. In their proposal, they called for term limits for Supreme Court justices, who currently serve lifetime appointments, an enforceable ethics code for justices, and an amendment to the Constitution to overturn the high court’s ruling that former presidents have substantial immunity from prosecution for official acts while in office. 

The overhaul also included a form of packing the court, according to the analysis of former Trump administration lawyer Mark Paoletta. Stealthily included under the term limit proposal, Biden and Harris’ plan outlines a system in which the president appoints a new Supreme Court justice ‘every two years to spend eighteen years in active service on the Supreme Court.’

‘Even though Joe Biden caved to radicals and recently endorsed court packing, Harris is even further to the left of him on this thoroughly discredited idea,’ Paoletta said in a statement to Fox News Digital. He notably worked on the confirmation efforts for Justices Clarence Thomas, Brett Kavanaugh and Neil Gorsuch. 

The White House did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment. 

Harris’ past statements and refusal to comment further on the subject suggest that her administration could undertake not only the Supreme Court expansion apparently outlined in the administration’s desired overhaul, but an even more drastic version. 

Paoletta pointed to a recent claim from Democratic Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse of Rhode Island, who said Harris’ campaign told him his Supreme Court legislation is ‘precisely aligned with what we are talking about,’ the Dispatch reported.

‘According to Senator Sheldon Whitehouse—who is the single most malignant figure in America trying to undermine the independence of the Supreme Court—Harris supports his court-packing legislation that would disqualify the senior-most Justices from active service, which just so happen to be Justice Thomas, Chief Justice Roberts, and Justice Alito,’ Paoletta explained. 

He claimed Whitehouse’s plans, which Harris has purportedly expressed agreement with, are ‘far more nefarious’ than the ‘court packing scheme’ under former President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. 

As Paoletta noted, legislation authored by Whitehouse laid out a similar structure to Biden and Harris’ latest proposal, outlining appointments of justices every two years. Under the bill, only the most recently appointed nine justices would oversee appellate jurisdiction cases. It further states that ‘all’ justices are to preside over original jurisdiction cases, without specifying a number. 

Prior to the latest overhaul proposal, Biden had held off supporting packing the court, despite calls from other Democrats. He once warned that Democrats would ‘live to rue’ taking such action. 

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz has been a longtime vocal supporter of a medical research institute in his home state with a long track record of collaborating with a firm labeled by the Pentagon as a ‘Chinese military company’ and with Chinese officials with controversial ties to the CCP.

Walz, Democratic presidential nominee Vice President Kamala Harris’ running mate, has long been aligned with the Hormel Institute, a biomedical research center in Austin, Minnesota, within the University of Minnesota’s Research and Innovation Office. As recently as April, a press release from the institute highlighted how Walz went to ‘meet with local leaders and learn of the Institute’s recent progress in groundbreaking biomedical and agricultural research and its expanding education and outreach initiatives.’

‘[The Hormel Institute] is no longer a secret, and we don’t want it to be a secret – it’s very un-Minnesotan of us because we’re bragging all the time,’ Walz said in the press release. ‘I think it [the vision of MBiC] fits with where we see ourselves as a state [in the future]… a future around… green energy, sustainable agriculture, and the ability to feed a very hungry world… and the ability to be one of the nation’s designated biotech hubs.’

The Hormel Institute has done extensive work with the Beijing Genomics Institute, a group labeled by the Pentagon as a ‘Chinese military company,’ some of which involved research on BGI machines and studies conducted with BGI laboratories in Shenzhen, China, for analysis.

‘BGI may be serving, wittingly or unwittingly, as a global collection mechanism for Chinese government gene databases, providing China with greater raw numbers and diversity of human genome samples as well as access to sensitive personal information about key individuals around the world,’ The National Security Commission on AI said in 2022.

Concerns about BGI are so prevalent that Congress has weighed legislation to ban government contracts with the Chinese military subsidiary, Fox News Digital previously reported.

Beyond the extensive ties to BGI, the former executive director of the Hormel Institute, and the timing of his 2019 resignation, has drawn controversy in its own right.

Dr. Zigang Dong abruptly stepped down from his post leading the institute in 2019 after 18 years in the position. Around the same time, it was revealed Dong was involved in an FBI probe where the bureau was investigating his ‘possible failure to report foreign backing when applying for grants,’ Austin Daily Herald reported.

In addition to serving as the executive director of the Hormel Institute, Dong established the China-US (Henan) Hormel Cancer Institute (CUHCI), a multimillion-dollar international partnership with a research facility in China, during his time with Hormel, and Walz was present to celebrate the announcement. 

‘The collaboration brings more resources, it brings more collaboration in terms of what that scientific data is showing,’ Walz, then a congressman representing Minnesota’s 1st Congressional District, said about the partnership.

‘A sum of money is budgeted by the Henan Provincial Government to the institute annually to maintain its regular operation,’ the partnership explained.

In 2014, Walz welcomed a delegation from China to the institute that included Wang Yanling, the vice governor of Henan Province and a Communist Party doctor. Yanling is listed as holding several positions in the Chinese Communist Party over the course of many decades.

Several members of the Chinese Communist Party have sat on the board of directors at the Henan Cancer Institute, according to an archived version of the organization’s website.

Despite stepping down from the executive director role, Dong’s ties to the China‐US (Henan) Hormel Cancer Institute in Zhengzhou have continued since he stepped down in 2019. In 2022, the Henan institute published a study with Dong and several other individuals that involved genetic sequencing provided by BGI. 

In January 2024, Professor Ann M. Bode from the Hormel Institute in Minnesota collaborated with several scientists based in China to conduct research that included experiments carried out using BGI machines.

A review of the Minnesota Hormel Institute’s faculty list shows five professors who were educated in China, including genetics experts who specialize in ‘gene regulation.’

FEC filings show that Dong has been a longtime and almost exclusive donor to Walz’s political career, including five donations of over $200 to Walz’s congressional campaigns dating back to 2005.

As a member of Congress, Walz backed Hormel’s expansion and helped them secure ‘over $2M for technology acquisitions,’ according to a press release.

In 2008, when Walz was touring the Hormel Institute, the Rochester Post Bulletin reported he ‘will keep pushing for the institute to receive a $5 million federal earmark in 2009 to help pay for equipment and instruments in its new International Center of Research Technology. The center could cost as much as $10 million, with additional costs of staff, other instruments and possibly more space.’

Dong praised Walz’s efforts to secure funding for the group, including his push to send over $300,000 to the institute in 2009.

‘We are deeply indebted to Congressman Walz and the diligent, dedicated effort he makes to secure funding support for the Hormel Institute,’ Dong said, according to the Post Bulletin.

‘The growth we have achieved – and the future growth we will continue to strive for – depends on the important partnerships we share with our community and the support we receive from our leaders, such as Congressman Walz.’

In addition to Walz, two of his top congressional aides visited the Hormel Institute in 2016 to ‘discuss areas where congressional support could be helpful, such as increasing the National Institutes of Health (NIH) budget to increase cancer grant funding.’

Tim Bertocci, who served as Walz’s legislative director, among other roles, started working at the Department of Defense Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Special Operations and Low Intensity Conflict earlier this year, according to his Linkedin profile. Sara Severs, who was Walz’s deputy chief of staff at the time, works for the Minnesota Department of Transportation.

‘They toured the expansion and learned about the CryoElectron microscope and lab newly added to the International Center of Research Technology,’ the Facebook post continued. ‘Rep. Walz’s efforts secured nearly $2 million in technology grants for items such as a supercomputer and mass spectrometry for cancer research.’

Michael Sobolik, a senior fellow in Indo-Pacific Studies at the American Foreign Policy Council, warned in his recent book ‘Countering China’s Great Game: A Strategy for American Dominance,’ that the CCP is actively involved in subverting U.S. foreign policy through cancer research centers.

‘America, by virtue of its power and ideology, stands athwart authoritarianism and imperialism, oftentimes without Americans realizing it,’ Sobolik wrote. 

‘Whether we know it or not, we are once again living in a cold war. I still remember the day this reality mugged me in 2018, when the president of an internationally recognized cancer research center visited the Senate and warned me that the CCP was stealing advanced radiology research from their institution. Beijing’s intent was not to cure cancer but to examine the possibility of immunizing their population against radiation poisoning in a nuclear war.’

Sobolik told Fox News Digital that while Americans ‘want to use science to cure cancer,’ the ‘Chinese Community Party wants to leverage that research to win a nuclear war.’

‘That’s terrifying – and it’s been an open secret in medical research centers throughout America for over five years. Even if Tim Walz didn’t know that, he should have noted the FBI’s investigation into Dong. It has the hallmarks of the CCP’s Thousand Talents Program, which Beijing leverages to steal and repurpose dual-use research for military purposes. Walz’s continued support for the Hormel Institute raises questions about his judgment on critical national security issues.’

Dong appears to be linked with the CCP’s ‘Talents Plan’ or ‘Thousand Talents Plan,’ which it describes as an effort by China to ‘incentivize its members to steal foreign technologies needed to advance China’s national, military, and economic goals.’

In 2018, a company known as ThermoFisher, which Human Rights Watch accused of supplying the Chinese government with surveillance tech to crack down on the Uyghur population, sponsored a conference in Beijing titled ‘Transforming lives through pioneering Precision Medicine.’

One of the panels at that conference, called ‘Looking Toward a World Without Cancer,’ was hosted by Professor Liu Yuanli, who is openly associated with the ‘Thousand Talents’ program.

Also sitting on that panel was Dong.

Dong was selected by ‘100 Top Talents Projects’ in China, according to a 2014 press release.

‘Someday when they write the history of how humanity solved cancer, it will be written through Henan Province and through Austin, Minnesota,’ Walz is quoted as saying. 

The ties to the Hormel Institute exist under the backdrop of increased scrutiny in recent weeks of Walz’s affinity toward China and past associations with its communist regime.

Walz worked briefly in China as a teacher, traveling to Guangdong in 1989 for a teach abroad program to teach English and American history. Walz has made dozens of trips to China and The Wall Street Journal, citing local media reports, reported that one trip to China doubled as his honeymoon in 1994, and he planned his wedding date to coincide with the fifth anniversary of the Tiananmen Square crackdown.

‘I’ve lived in China and, as I’ve said, I’ve been there about 30 times…. I don’t fall into the category that China necessarily needs to be an adversarial relationship. I totally disagree, and I think we need to stand firm on what they’re doing in the South China Sea, but there’s many areas of cooperation we can work on,’ Walz said in an interview with Agri-Pulse Communications.

He was also quoted by a local outlet in 1990 reflecting on his visits to China, saying, ‘No matter how long I live, I will never be treated that well again.’

‘They gave me more gifts than I could bring home. It was an excellent experience,’ Walz said, adding that he was ‘treated exceptionally well.’

The remark came in the wake of the Tiananmen Square massacre in 1989 and amid continued and still ongoing mass human rights abuses in the communist regime.

‘Tim Walz owes the American people an explanation about his unusual, 35-year relationship with Communist China,’ Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., posted on X in early August.

Fox News Digital reported earlier this month that the House Oversight Committee was probing Walz’s ties to China, including his alleged ‘longstanding connections’ to China and CCP-linked entities.

In a statement to Fox News Digital, a spokesperson for the Hormel Institute in Minnesota said the Hormel Cancer institute in China and the Hormel Institute in Minnesota are no longer affiliated.

‘The University of Minnesota and the Hormel Institute in Minnesota have no affiliation with China-US (Henan) Hormel Cancer Institute in China,’ the statement said. ‘Cease and desist letters have been sent to the institute in China requesting it to stop using the Hormel name.’

‘The Hormel Institute and the University are committed to compliance with federal disclosure, security, export controls and sanctions rules.’

The spokesperson added, ‘Many of our elected leaders, Republicans and Democrats, have supported and continue to support the Hormel Institute and its mission. State and federal leaders from both parties visit Austin regularly to meet with our researchers and learn more about our life-saving biomedical and cancer research.’

The spokesperson did not respond to questions about when the disassociation took place or about Hormel’s connections to BGI. 

Fox News Digital reached out to the Harris-Walz campaign for comment but did not receive a response.

Fox News Digital’s Adam Shaw contributed to this report.

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Aug 26 (Reuters) — Care.com, a platform for providing in-home care services to children, older adults and pets, agreed to pay $8.5 million to settle U.S. Federal Trade Commission charges it grossly inflated the number of available jobs and made it difficult to cancel memberships.

The settlement with the unit of IAC Inc (IAC.O) was filed on Monday in the federal court in Austin, Texas, and requires a judge’s approval.

It followed tens of thousands of complaints from Care.com customers, including many who thought they canceled memberships but were billed again. The $8.5 million will go toward refunds. Care.com did not admit or deny wrongdoing in agreeing to settle.

The FTC said Care.com enticed customers to buy auto-renewing memberships by overstating the number of jobs, or “gigs,” on its platform and how much people could earn from them.

It said Care.com knew or should have known a significant number of the jobs were unlikely to result in employment.

The FTC said Care.com then “frustrates” customers seeking to cancel by using deceptive website designs, including a “Submit” button that misleads them into believing they canceled, and a “Cancel” button that actually stops the cancellation process.

About 2.9 million U.S. consumers bought Care.com auto-renewing memberships between January 2019 and March 2022.

The settlement requires the Austin-based company to provide a “simple mechanism” for avoiding unwanted renewals, and back up employment claims on its website.

“Care.com used inflated job numbers and baseless earnings claims to lure caregivers onto its platform, and used deceptive design practices to trap consumers in subscriptions,” FTC consumer protection chief Samuel Levine said. “The order announced today puts a stop to these unlawful practices.”

In a statement, Care.com said it settled to keep its focus on helping families and caregivers.

It also said that as child and healthcare costs rise, “it is disappointing that the FTC has chosen to attack trusted businesses who are part of the solution.”

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Week 1 in college football is at hand, and that means your humble correspondents here at USA TODAY Sports will once again attempt to pick the weekly winners among the teams in the US LBM Coaches Poll. And what could be better than starting Week 1 of the college football season with games with early playoff implications?

Two of the three biggest games come at neutral sites. The Saturday showdown in Atlanta between No. 1 Georgia and No. 14 Clemson is the headliner. The Bulldogs will want to start their season off with a key non-conference win, while the Tigers are hoping to regain a measure of respect after missing the playoff the past three seasons.

The other game on equal footing comes Sunday in Las Vegas with No. 13 LSU facing off with No. 22 Southern California. The Tigers (Jayden Daniels) and Trojans (Caleb Williams) had the last two Heisman winners at quarterback last season. The team that transitions to its new era the quickest could be best positioned to emerge victorious.

Saturday evening sees No. 20 Texas A&M host No. 7 Notre Dame to start the tenure of new Aggies coach Mike Elko, who coincidentally was previously defensive coordinator for the Fighting Irish. It’s a crucial game for Notre Dame, which has limited opportunities for quality wins in its bid to reach the playoff.

Here’s how our staffers see those and the rest of the Top 25 games unfolding.

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Mayo made the announcement during a team meeting, and the 31-year-old Brissett will take the reins in the season opener against the Cincinnati Bengals on Sept. 8.

Brissett beat out first-round draft pick Drake Maye, even though Mayo said earlier this week that Maye outplayed Brissett during the preseason and had closed the gap for the job.

Maye, the No. 3 overall pick in the 2024 draft, threw for 192 yards and one touchdown in the preseason.

The Patriots will mark fourth team that Brissett has played for in the past four seasons after seeing action with the Miami Dolphins, Cleveland Browns, and Washington Commanders.

All things Patriots: Latest New England Patriots news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

It is also his second stint with the Patriots. He played the 2016 season with New England after they drafted him in the third round of that year’s draft and also spent four seasons with the Indianapolis Colts.

Entering his ninth NFL season, Brissett has an 18-30 record as a starter, completing 61% of his passes for 10,574 yards, with 51 touchdowns and 23 interceptions.

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WASHINGTON — The two greatest hitters on the planet occupy the heart of the same lineup, and that may never happen again.

The man who has punished more baseballs harder than any since that sort of thing became measurable is healthy, upright and productive, and the conditions required to maintain those factors is delicate.

What we are witnessing with these New York Yankees is not the dawn of a glorious era, or the emergence of an indomitable force. Instead, it is simply a moment in time in which Juan Soto, Aaron Judge and Giancarlo Stanton align as the Nos. 2-3-4 hitters in the Yankees lineup, a trio offering a statistical smorgasbord on which to gorge, yet something much rarer in a sport that is more grind than glitz.

Spectacle.

It was striking enough when Judge, the 6-foot-7 center fielder, and Stanton, the 6-6 slugger, shared outfield space and consecutive spots in the lineup. If the Yankees are arguably the biggest brand in North American sports, you oughta know when they come to town. Those guys checked that box ever since Stanton joined Judge in 2018.

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

The winter trade for Soto checked another. If Judge and Stanton are publicly low key and now on the wrong side of 30, Soto – a mere 6-2 and 225 pounds – makes up for his mortal stature with Hall of Fame-level production that began when he was 19 and has reached a newer level at the still-precocious age of 25.

Together, they represent both the Yankees’ best shot at a championship since 2009 and a crucible for opposing pitchers.

“Those are three incredibly dangerous men,” says manager Aaron Boone.

An uncertain winter, when Soto likely cracks the $500 million mark as a free agent, awaits. For now, a historic season will continue unfolding.

Take it up a notch

Make no mistake: These Yankees are as vulnerable as any flawed ballclub in this season of no likely 100-game winners.

At 78-56, they are nursing a one-game lead in the AL East over the Baltimore Orioles, a pitched battle that’s seen the lead change hands four times in the last two months, and likely won’t be decided until the season’s penultimate series, at Yankee Stadium in September. They’re prone to dropping series to inferior teams, such as the two games they lost at Washington, when their power trio went a combined 4 for 34.

Yet as Boone noted after Wednesday’s 5-2 loss, he will take the odds his club will produce more nights than not.

That’s largely because Judge, aided by Soto, has produced one of the greatest offensive seasons in baseball history.

The rampage began after a brief, sluggish start: Starting April 27, Judge went on a 102-game heater in which he batted .375 and hit 47 home runs, an unprecedented stretch in major league history.

He’s hit 51 home runs through 134 games, putting him on pace to equal his AL-record 62 home runs set in 2022. Yet this is Judge’s most complete season: He once again leads the majors in OPS (1.198), on-base (.467) and slugging (.731) percentage, RBI (123) and is second in batting average (.333, 22 points above his career high in ’22).

Judge has already joined Babe Ruth as the lone players with three 50-homer seasons who aren’t significantly tied to performance-enhancing drug use.

Similarly, with an adjusted OPS of 229 to pair with his 210 mark in 2022, he’d be the first player to post multiple seasons that far above league average production since Barry Bonds produced four consecutive years with an adjusted OPS between 231 and 268 from 2001-2004.

“Seeing it from his side is great,” says Soto, acquired from the San Diego Padres in a December blockbuster as, essentially, a hired gun for this season. “I’m lucky to see him every time, hitting behind me.

“It’s different to see it from the other side but when you’re with him, you really enjoy it.”

Oh, but Soto has found another level, as well.

He’s on Judge’s tail in almost all major categories, the current silver medalist in both OPS (1.011) and OBP (.421). His 37 home runs are already a career high – he hit 35 in San Diego last year – and his .291 average would be his best since hitting .313 in 2021.

“Just watching Juan hit every single day is amazing,” says Yankees reliever Tim Hill, who was Soto’s teammate for two seasons in San Diego. “I feel lucky to be able to just watch him every day.”

And the fringe benefits of hitting before Judge are painfully clear.

Soto’s six multi-homer games lead the majors. He homered in four consecutive at-bats from Aug. 13-14. He also leads the majors in walks for the fourth time, with 109.

Is Soto seeing better pitches to hit in his first season batting in front of Judge?

“One hundred percent,” he says.

You’d think Soto might just have baseball’s greatest gig. And with the Yankees – current estimated franchise value north of $7.5 billion – able to pay him almost anything they want, signing for good would seem to make sense for all parties.

Yet Soto has walked an almost unprecedented path to free agent riches.

He was a World Series champion by his 21st birthday, when the 2019 Washington Nationals rode his 34 homers, .949 OPS and .927 postseason mark to a stirring upset of the Houston Astros. He was gone less than three years later, stunned by a trade to San Diego after prudently declining the Nationals’ 15-year, $440 million offer.

And now, he’s playing mercenary, dealt from the Padres to the Yankees for a one-year run at a championship – all at the tender age of 25.

It’s a platform year far different than the only other players in this decade to hit free agency at such a prime age. Bryce Harper and Manny Machado knew only of Washington and Baltimore, save for Machado’s two months as a Dodger, before cracking the $300 million barrier at age 26, for Philadelphia and San Diego, respectively.

Soto’s experience has taught him the value of controlling his future. With super agent Scott Boras primed to field offers and clubs like the crosstown Mets readying for a big play, the buzz from whatever happens in October will be replaced by a sober and very lucrative reality.

“Right now, I play for the Yankees, I’m happy where I’m at,” Soto said this week.

“And we’ll see what happens in free agency.”

If it is just one year in the Bronx, that outcome could very well be determined by the third giant among them.

Nothing but a G thing

Asked what allows Judge to be the slugger he is, Soto deadpans: “He’s 6-7.”

And it’s true: The game’s titans of exit velocity are all giants, led by Judge’s 95.9 mph average on 331 batted balls. Shohei Ohtani (6-4, 95.2) and Oneil Cruz (6-7, 95.1) are second and third, while Stanton and Soto are fourth and fifth.

Yep, the Yankees boast three of the top five hardest hitters in the game, batting consecutively. But sometimes, more size brings more problems.

Judge might be amid an historic three-year run had he not torn a ligament in his right big toe making a catch against – and breaking – the right field bullpen gate at Dodger Stadium in June 2023. He’d hit 19 homers in 49 games but missed the next 42 with the toe injury. He “settled” for 37 homers and a 1.031 OPS in 131 games.

Stanton, meanwhile, has battled injury much of his career, that muscular 6-6 frame prone to the occasional soft tissue malady. He hasn’t played more than 139 games since 2018, his first year in New York, and in 2023 struggled to a .191 average and .695 OPS, managing 24 home runs in 101 games.

This year, a left hamstring strain in June sent him to the injured list for the eighth time in six seasons and sidelined him for 30 games. Yet unlike past years, the ailment will not define Stanton’s season.

He’s hit 23 homers in 90 games and his .776 OPS – 116 adjusted – are both his best since 2021, when he clubbed 35 homers. Stanton leads active players with 425 career home runs, and should post the eighth 30-homer season of his career.

Most important: When he’s available, the Yankees are the best team in baseball this year.

New York is 58-33 when Stanton’s in the lineup – a .637 winning percentage and a 103-win pace – and 20-23 when he’s not. Yes, it’s about production – but also presence.

“He’s been a threat. Every day he’s been in there,” says Boone. “I feel like he’s been very consistent this year, just with the quality of at-bat. Whether you get him out a couple times, he’s really good at going to school on pitchers.

“They may make him look bad at a certain time. But he’s really good at turning the page. All season long, that real threat in the middle of the lineup behind the two big guys.”

For now, it’s a big three. Judge is a forever Yankee, the captain serving the second year of a nine-year, $360 million contract. After this season, Stanton has three years and $96 million remaining on his $325 million deal, with the Miami Marlins paying $20 million of that.

Throw in ace Gerrit Cole’s $324 million deal and lefty Carlos Rodon’s $162 million pact, and there’s four guys already lugging nine-figure contracts around.

Soto? He is a lock to vault way past Judge’s then-record $360 million free agent deal, and almost certainly the estimated $460 million present-day value of Ohtani’s extremely-deferred $700 million deal.

The Yankees certainly have the wherewithal to retain him, so long as they can stomach at least a couple more years of luxury tax pain. Yet October, judgment month for any Yankee, has a funny way of affecting mutual vibes.

A championship may bring a sense of finality, or maybe slake the thirst for more. Falling short might create the feeling of unfinished business, or maybe a cleave in the relationship.

Those are problems for another month. For now, the planets are aligned. Soto is in place. Stanton is healthy. Judge remains generational.

The Yankees are figuratively larger than life. Whether they can live up to that stature will make the next two months a wild ride.

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