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World Cup champion Lionel Messi returned to Inter Miami practice Wednesday for the first time since injuring his ankle during the Copa America final last month. 

The 37-year-old star completed individual drills before joining his Miami teammates on the field for his first public practice since he sustained a right ankle ligament injury during the July 14 showdown that Argentina won against Colombia.

While Messi had already resumed individual work last week, Wednesday marked his first appearance practicing with his teammates, a significant step in his recovery process.

Latest on Messi ankle injury

Messi has missed the last seven of Miami’s games due to the injury, but has not played with his MLS side since June 1 because of his international duty with Argentina. Despite the absence of its star player, Inter Miami has had a stellar season. The team currently leads the MLS Eastern Conference, six points ahead of second-place Cincinnati, and has already clinched a playoff spot after defeating Cincinnati 2-0 Saturday.  

When will Messi return for Miami?

Miami Head Coach Tata Martino said last week that Messi will return before the end of the MLS season, but the exact date of his return was still up in the air. The MLS season lasts through the middle of October. 

Inter Miami’s next game is an away matchup against Chicago Fire FC on Saturday, which may still be too soon for Messi’s long-awaited return to the pitch. If that’s the case, Messi’s next possible return date would be Miami’s Sept. 14 home game against Philadelphia. Argentina did not select Messi for its upcoming World Cup qualifying matches Sept. 5 and 10, allowing the star player more time to recover. 

USA TODAY Sports reporter Safid Deen contributed to this report.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

There are few injuries in sports as grueling and frightening as a torn Achilles tendon. It’s the strongest tendon in the body and vital in the ability to walk, run and jump. Tearing it is not only a devastating, season-ending injury, it typically takes a full calendar year to recover. Some athletes are never the same as they were before.

So when then-Oregon tight end Cam McCormick tore his right Achilles tendon in 2021 during a game at Ohio State, one can imagine the disappointment and uncertainty he faced. But while those emotions appeared immediately following injury, he wasn’t so worried when he found out it was his Achilles.

“When I figured out what it was, it was the best-case scenario for that injury,” McCormick told USA TODAY Sports. “That injury was one of the easiest ones I’ve had to kind of go through because it was so simple.”

It sounds insane to think an athlete didn’t stress about a torn Achilles tendon and that his mother, Debra McCormick, said “it was a piece of cake’ to handle recovery.

However, McCormick isn’t your ordinary football player. Now a member of the Miami Hurricanes, McCormick is entering his ninth season of college football in 2024, which is believed to be a first in NCAA history.

That number is attention-grabbing. Nine seasons. It can make people crack jokes or tell him to give it up, stop dragging out his eligibility. But that’s not McCormick’s story. His is filled with years of agony, uncertainty, suffering and perseverance.

“It is wild to think about everything that I’ve had to overcome,” McCormick said.

The start of a long road

A three-star tight end in the 2016 recruiting class from Bend, Oregon, McCormick had his dream come true when he committed to play for the Oregon Ducks. According to his mother, he’d hoped to play for the program since he was a child.

Then, McCormick tore his ACL his senior year of high school — his first of many roadblocks. He was still recovering when he enrolled at Oregon and there were experienced tight ends already on the roster for coach Mark Helfrich’s final year in Eugene, so McCormick opted to sit out and redshirt the 2016 season.

After fully healing with a year of watching and learning under his belt, McCormick felt ready for the 2017 season under first-year head coach Willie Taggart. But in January of that year, McCormick was one of three players hospitalized after a series of intense workouts. He was diagnosed with rhabdomyolysis, a rare injury where a person’s muscles break down, typically a result of excessive physical activity with limited rest. The injury could have several complications, such as kidney or liver failure, according to the Cleveland Clinic. The team’s strength and conditioning coach, Irele Oderinde, was suspended and one of the players filed a lawsuit.

McCormick remembered he lost a good amount of his strength from rhabdomyolysis, but it didn’t stop him from playing all 13 games in 2017. He made two starts that season and recorded six catches for 89 yards and one touchdown.

Now that he had a taste of college football, he was ready to make another leap in 2018. That was until in the season opener against Bowling Green. In the second quarter of that game, a defender fell on the back of McCormick’s legs. When he tried to stand up, he knew something felt off. He was carted to the locker room, and later found out his left fibula was broken and he had a torn ligament in his left ankle.

Just like that, another season derailed by injury.

McCormick still kept his hopes up. He thought it just meant another year of rehab and he’d be ready to go. Little did he know, it was the start of a more than two-year battle to play another meaningful snap.

‘In pain 24 hours a day, seven days a week’

The pain started right before fall camp of the 2019 season. It was the same ankle that underwent surgery in 2018 and McCormick couldn’t do many football activities. After weeks trying to figure out what was going on, doctors discovered another fracture caused by a screw placed in his ankle to allow healing with a suture through the bone.

Another surgery and another lost season.

As tough as it was to deal with, McCormick remained positive and leaned on his support system, spearheaded by his mother. It helped that Debra McCormick was in the same state so she could see him often and help him through recovery.

McCormick felt great during the offseason and was back training in Eugene for the shortened 2020 season when, again, the same foot began causing him pain. He was told the pain was likely tendonitis, a complication from surgery, but he felt it was something bigger.

“Every single day I would wake up, I’d have pain in my foot,” McCormick said. “There was never a time where I was just comfortable and not in pain. It was like, every single day, every moment, wherever I was. It was awful.”

That’s when things got really grim, Debra said, recalling a phone call from her son one day after practice. 

“He was just bawling. He was crying, and he just felt like he couldn’t go on anymore with football,” she said. “He was really contemplating quitting because he just didn’t want to be in pain anymore. He was in pain 24 hours a day, seven days a week.”

The pain was too much and McCormick decided not to play the 2020 season. Debra felt helpless, running out of things to say to motivate her son and keep him positive.

There had been times before when she tried to tell her son maybe it was time to pay attention to the signs and stop playing, which had just lead to an argument. But this time was different. She was determined to not let her son give up his dream.

“I just didn’t accept that as a mom. I was like, ‘No, no, no. There has to be something we can do,’” she said.

McCormick later learned what was nagging him: two screws put in to fix the previous fracture were rubbing on his posterior tibial tendon, and it resulted in a complete tear of the tendon. 

He was trying to find ways to fix what was wrong when he stumbled upon a social media video of former NFL receiver Plaxico Burress praising Dr. Robert Anderson, currently the team physician for the Green Bay Packers, for helping him with his ankle during his career. McCormick found his information and told his mom he wanted to see him. 

Thanks to one of Oregon’s team doctors being a mentee under Anderson, McCormick landed a consultation. He flew wit his mom to Wisconsin before Christmas and got an early gift: Anderson not only knew how to fix the injury, but he could get McCormick back on the field in time for the 2021 season.

Suddenly, he had a real shot of playing again and the spark inside of him was reignited. 

“Cameron and I started crying,” Debra McCormick said. “We got tears of joy in our eyes.”

The surgery was a success and the duo flew back home on Christmas. He was indeed ready for the 2021 season and after years of pain and doubt, he played in the season opener against Fresno State, his first game in 1,099 days.

The next week was the game at Ohio State and he made a critical first down catch before tearing his Achilles. But at this point, a season-ending injury was nothing new for McCormick. He healed the tendon and was on track to play in the 2022 campaign, but that July, he endured a different kind of suffering.

His teammate Spencer Webb died at the age of 22 in a diving accident. They were friends, having been in the tight end room together, and McCormick said he holds him close to his heart. It was the first time McCormick lost someone so close to him and it was extremely painful, his mother said.

Inspired to honor his friend, McCormick played all 13 games for the Ducks in 2022, his first full season of action since 2017. It was a good one, too. He had a career-high 10 receptions and three touchdowns.

After playing a full season, McCormick said he felt he had done all he wanted at Oregon and needed a fresh start. There was nothing wrong with the program, but after everything he went through there, he wanted to continue his career elsewhere.

McCormick entered the transfer portal and one of the people to reach out was Miami head coach Mario Cristobal, who was his coach at Oregon from 2018-21. Even though times were rough at Oregon, McCormick said Cristobal helped him keep that drive to play alive. He stayed loyal to him, so McCormick wanted to return the favor and committed to play for the Hurricanes.

“He believed in me when I didn’t believe in myself, when I felt like I couldn’t do it anymore,” McCormick said. “It’s easy to say, ‘Hey, we don’t want you on the team anymore. Maybe you need to medically retire.’ But he kept saying, ‘You’re going to be back better than ever. You got this.’”

There were no issues for McCormick in his first season with Miami, appearing in all 13 games last season with starts in 11 of them. 

‘Everyone’s journey is different’

McCormick has so many years of eligibility through medical redshirts, plus an extra year all college athletes got following the COVID-19 pandemic.

When he announced his decision to play this upcoming season, he was the subject of several jokes online, with social media users telling him it’s preposterous to play a ninth season and to ‘go out and get a job.’

He hears it, and so does his mother.

“Most people, they say negative things about him, and he’s like the butt of every joke. As a parent, that’s really hard to read a lot of that,” Debra said. “People slide into our DMs and they say the most horrible things at times.”

While yes, on the surface it may sound ridiculous for someone to play nine seasons of college football, the deeper you dive the more it makes complete sense. And McCormick hasn’t played even half of his entire college career because of his injuries. McCormick pointed out the 2024 season will only be the fourth season playing. His mom joked, “we have our entire lives to work a real job, right?” Besides, McCormick said he has greatly benefited from Name, Image and Likeness deals.

“People want to knock someone’s journey or not even understand the full journey,” McCormick said. “They’re gonna do what they do. They got to live with that, not me. I’m the one living stress-free over here, enjoying my life as it is. And if you feel like you got to bring that negativity into somebody’s world, that’s a shame on you.”

McCormick is focused on playing the 2024 season – and continuing to honor the legacy of Webb – before considering his future, with the main goal of playing every game this year. The Hurricanes not only have ACC title aspirations, but have a realistic shot of qualifying in the expanded College Football Playoff. After that, Debra hopes that her son’s resilience will prove to NFL scouts he is not a quitter and can play at the next level.

“Cameron has overcome so many obstacles, not only on the football field, but just in life in general. He hasn’t been dealt an easy deck of cards, but he’s made the best of the deck that he was given,” Debra said. “I’m in awe of my son. I admire him. 

“Yeah, he’s been knocked down. But you know what? He got up every single time.’

For all the hate messages directed at him, she said he’s also been an inspiration, receiving messages from people that have gone through their own challenges, and he offers them encouragement.

So yes, Cam McCormick will play a ninth season of college football. And despite all the setbacks, he’s grateful for what it took to get here.

“My journey might be a lot different than some others, but I’m still here. I’m still doing it, and I can’t complain,” McCormick said. “I’m very blessed and fortunate, and I’m glad that what I’ve went through is what I’ve went through, because I’m standing 10 toes down, still smiling and grateful.”

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce invested in a racehorse aptly named Swift Delivery, presumably as a nod to his girlfriend and 14-time Grammy winner Taylor Swift. 

Kelce and the Zoldan family, owners of Phantom Fireworks, recently bought a significant share of the 3-year-old gelding Swift Delivery, Team Valor International founder and CEO Barry Irwin announced Tuesday.

Kelce and Swift have been dating for approximately one year. Kelce has joined Swift for some shows of her worldwide Eras Tour and Swift has regularly appeared at Kansas City’s games, including Kelce’s third-career Super Bowl win last season. 

Irwin told the Associated Press that the horse was not intentionally named after Swift, describing the link as ‘a total coincidence.’ 

However, Kelce’s brother, retired Eagles center Jason Kelce, quickly connected the names with a joke on X.

All things Chiefs: Latest Kansas City Chiefs news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

‘But does it have an enlarged heart…. Can this horse do it with a broken heart!’, Jason Kelce wrote, referencing Swift’s song ‘I Can Do It With a Broken Heart’ from her new album, The Tortured Poets Department. 

The tweet was especially quick-witted in light of the controversy he faced in May for suggesting another racehorse had an enlarged heart due to steroids.

The Zoldan family has a long-standing history in horse racing investments and Travis Kelce is known to be close friends with Alex Zoldan, the son of Phantom Fireworks CEO Bruce Zoldan. Kelce attended the Kentucky Derby in May with the family. 

The announcement of the investment comes the day after the Kelce brothers’ new $100 million distribution deal for their popular ‘New Heights’ podcast.

Swift Delivery, ridden by jockey Patrick Husbands, will next race at the Toronto Cup at Woodbine after winning his first race of the season July 19 on the same track.

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Let me take you to a more realistic time, when hoity-toity Michigan football was beside itself over a coach steering the spotless football program deep into NCAA violation waters.

By practicing too much.

Now here we are, some 15 years and what seems like a lifetime of mediocre football later, and Michigan is protecting its long-awaited national championship of 2023 ― and how it was questionably built over the last four years ― at all cost. Reputation be damned.

The days of standing on that shining hill and proclaiming we’re better than you are long gone. Michigan is no different than any other run-of-the-mill cheat.

Back and forth the shell game goes, with no pea in sight. The short con, everyone, is paying off.

Keep your hands and feet inside the car. It’s a bumpy ride explaining this sordid mess.

In the last 11 months alone, Michigan suspended its football coach for three games, suspended him again for three more, picked fights with the NCAA and the Big Ten about the process of investigations into multiple rules violations from two separate cases, lost its head coach to the NFL, elevated an assistant to head coach despite his one-game suspension in 2023 for his part in the first NCAA investigation ― and hired him knowing he was an integral player in the second (yet to be resolved) NCAA investigation.

If you think that’s a mouthful, we haven’t even begun to peel back the layers of shameless defiance.

The second NCAA investigation of alleged advanced scouting of future opponents and the public carnival playing out with it ― complete with a Netflix documentary, no less ― brings us full circle to staring directly in the face of the last time Michigan dealt with NCAA violations from coach Rich Rodriguez. When then-Michigan president Mary Sue Coleman solemnly admitted humiliation and embarrassment, and athletics director Dave Brandon regretfully said, ‘nobody wants to be found guilty of these types of activities.’

Again, for practicing too much.

Meanwhile, back in today’s fantasy land, current Michigan president Santa Ono defended former coach Jim Harbaugh every chance he could get. He took to social media to back his coach, the same man the NCAA says ‘misled investigators’ in the first NCAA investigation of illegal contact with players during the 2020 Covid season.

Then there’s athletics director Warde Manuel, whose defense of all things Harbaugh during the homestretch of the national championship season was utterly comical. It’s one thing to pick a fight with the NCAA over its inane rules and structure, it’s quite something else to throw down with your own conference and new commissioner over a staffer who allegedly concocted a scheme to advance scout opponents ― giving Michigan an undeniable competitive advantage.

The same Manuel hired current coach Sherrone Moore knowing full well that Moore had been suspended once already for running afoul of the NCAA for his part in the first investigation. Manuel also knew that Moore had, according to the NCAA, 52 text messages between he and former staffer Connor Stalions the day after Stalions’ alleged advanced scouting scheme was exposed.

And while we’re on the subject of Stalions and his alleged scheme, let me make one thing unquestionably clear: there’s not a coach in college football who doesn’t know what every staff member contributes on a gameday sideline.

If you think the obsessively controlling Harbaugh would allow some random, low-level staffer to infiltrate his program and be trusted with in-game decisions without knowing everything about said low-level staffer, you the same person who believes there was a vast conspiracy that kept Florida State from the playoff.

This is what happens when a program sells its soul for a championship, when desperation leads to deception, and worse, outright cheating and flouting of rules. When chasing (and eventually catching and passing) bitter rival Ohio State is more important than the foundational moral flex of a ‘Michigan Man.’

There’s no better explanation and confirmation to the level of deceit than the first NCAA investigation of Michigan. Earlier this spring, the NCAA placed Michigan on probation for three years and Harbaugh was given a four-year show cause order in response to illegal contact with players ― and more damning, Harbaugh’s ‘misleading’ NCAA investigators.

In June of that same year, months before the Big Ten returned to play in October of 2020, Harbaugh and Big Ten coaches were on a conference call discussing the unique circumstances of the pandemic. It was then that Harbaugh accused Ohio State coach Ryan Day ― the same Day whose teams had beaten Michigan every season since Harbaugh returned to his alma mater in 2015 ― of illegal contact with players.

The very thing Harbaugh and his staff were doing at the same time, and later sanctioned for by the NCAA.

And wouldn’t you know it, in his first public comment on the NCAA cases since leaving Michigan, Harbaugh stood tall earlier this month and puffed out his chest. Just like a Michigan Man.

‘Never lie, never cheat, never steal,’ Harbaugh said during a Los Angeles Chargers weekly press conference. ‘I was raised on that lesson.’

Says the coach who lied, cheated and, yes, stole signals.

The short con paid off, everyone. Reputation be damned.

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House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, is issuing a subpoena for information on the political work conducted by the daughter of New York State Supreme Court Judge Juan Merchan.

Jordan sent a letter to Michael Nellis, the founder and CEO of Authentic Campaigns – a company that’s done political work for top Democratic clients like President Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris – accusing him of failing to comply with House investigators’ demands for any and all documents related to the prosecution of former President Trump.

The committee wrote to Loren Merchan, the company’s president and Judge Merchan’s daughter, earlier this month requesting documents in its probe into Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg’s case against Trump.

Jordan pointed out in his Wednesday letter that Nellis himself rejected that request as well as a subsequent one later in the month.

‘As such, the Committee is left with no choice but to resort to compulsory process,’ Jordan wrote. ‘Popularly elected prosecutors, such as Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg, have engaged in an unprecedented abuse of authority by prosecuting a former President of the United States and current nominee for that office. Of relevance to the Committee’s oversight is the impartiality of Judge Juan Merchan, the presiding trial judge, due to his refusal to recuse himself from the case in light of his apparent conflicts of interest and biases.’

‘One such conflict is Ms. Merchan’s—daughter of Judge Merchan and President of Authentic Campaigns—work on behalf of President Trump’s political adversaries and the possible financial benefit that Ms. Merchan and Authentic Campaigns received from the prosecution and conviction of President Trump.’

Jordan said public reports indicated to him that both Nellis and Loren Merchan were ‘closely involved in the presidential campaigns of both President Biden and Vice President Harris.’

‘During Ms. Merchan’s employment with the Harris campaign, Authentic Campaigns received over $7 million in compensation for its services. You also worked for then-presidential candidate Harris and it appears you continue to do so. Authentic Campaigns conducted work for the 2020 Biden-Harris campaign and, according to public records, was paid just over $2 million in a one-month period for its work,’ he wrote.

The subpoena is narrower in scope than Jordan’s previous request for information. His Aug. 1 letter demanded Loren Merchan hand over documents related to any work for Biden and Harris, in addition to any work that refers to Trump’s prosecution or indictment.

Jordan is giving Nellis until Sept. 13 to comply, according to the subpoena viewed by Fox News Digital.

Nellis reacted to the subpoena in a post on X on Wednesday afternoon, saying the company was ‘thoroughly reviewing the subpoena with our legal team and will provide updates as soon as we have more information.’

‘Let us be clear: these allegations against our company are completely false and purely politically motivated,’ Nellis wrote. ‘This is a blatant attempt to intimidate us and divert attention from Donald Trump’s conviction. We refuse to be bullied, and we will not allow House Republicans or MAGA extremists to spread lies about our work. We remain steadfast in our mission and are deeply grateful for the unwavering support of our friends and family during this time.’

Republicans have accused Judge Merchan of political bias over his daughter’s political work. Trump’s legal team asked Merchan to recuse himself before the trial began, which he did not.

A New York state ethics panel backed Merchan’s decision in a June 2023 decision.

Jordan argued in his letter, however, ‘Judge Merchan’s conflicts of interest and biases in the case against President Trump, the Republican nominee in the upcoming 2024 presidential election, implicate serious federal interests.’

‘Congress has a specific and manifestly important interest in preventing politically motivated prosecutions of current and former presidents, especially in venues in which real or perceived biases exist. Among other things, if state or local prosecutors are able to engage in politically motivated prosecutions of Presidents of the United States (current or former) for personal acts, this could have a profound effect on how presidents choose to exercise their powers while in office,’ the letter said.

Trump was convicted on 34 counts of falsifying business records in relation to claims he paid an adult film actress to keep quiet about their affair – which the ex-president has denied. His lawyers are appealing that ruling in light of the Supreme Court’s July decision fleshing out presidential immunity. 

His sentencing hearing is currently scheduled for Sept. 18.

Fox News Digital reached out to Authentic Campaigns for comment.

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FIRST ON FOX – Heritage Foundation President Dr. Kevin Roberts on Wednesday unveiled a new website created by the conservative think tank that aims to inform Americans about Vice President Kamala Harris’ ‘dangerously liberal’ policy record, as well as a six-figure text campaign targeting independent voters in key swing states. 

The website, dangerouslyliberal.com, summarizes the Biden-Harris administration’s history of what the organization calls ‘failed liberal policies’ on the border, the economy and inflation, energy, diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI), education and parental rights, ‘government weaponization,’ health care and crime. As Roberts explained to Fox News Digital, the website serves as a resource to fill the gap as the Harris-Walz campaign still has yet to roll out a policy website of their own.

‘It tells us everything we need to know about the policy record of the vice president, when her campaign is running away from posting any policy prescriptions on their campaign website,’ Roberts told Fox News Digital. ‘And the reason that the vice president is running away from that policy record is because it’s awful. I thought that I would never live through another presidency as disastrous to Americans as Jimmy Carter’s. But the Biden-Harris administration has been even worse, particularly on the economy, on inflation, on energy, on the border, on foreign policy. Our website calls the balls and strikes. It gives Americans sort of the report card on the vice president’s policy record. And the reason she doesn’t want to talk about it is because that policy record is why Americans are suffering.’ 

‘The best description, just speaking philosophically, of Vice President Harris’s policy record is dangerously liberal. I actually can’t think of a better phrase to describe it,’ he added. 

The Harris-Walz campaign, meanwhile, is reportedly planning to roll out an ad blitz Wednesday that will run until Election Day in an attempt to tie former President Donald Trump to the Heritage Foundation’s Project 2025. The project has been billed by the conservative think tank as a blueprint for a future Republican administration to restructure many parts of the U.S. government. The Trump campaign has stressed that it is not affiliated with the project, and Trump himself has gone on record saying he does not agree with all of their positions.

Roberts rejected ‘mischaracterizations’ by the Harris-Walz campaign, which he says has been lacking ‘a real focus on policy, substance.’ The Harris campaign website, which includes pages to buy merchandise, donate and get to know the candidate’s background, remains devoid of any policy plans more than a month after she became the Democratic presidential nominee. 

‘Taking a step back from our own ideological perspective, we know that Americans on the political left want to have that conversation, too. And even though we might disagree, in fact we do disagree with many Americans on some of these issues, I think what the American republic needs right now is a real policy conversation,’ Roberts told Fox News Digital. ‘So we were sitting back this summer thinking about all the mischaracterizations by the Harris campaign, by the radical left on our policy projects. And while we welcome an intellectually honest conversation, we also know that that hasn’t been happening.’

‘So we decided to launch this website, dangerouslyliberal.com, to focus on the vice president’s policy record. And I think that Americans will really welcome that conversation, because they trust the credibility of the Heritage Foundation and calling balls and strikes about what the vice president has done in her position the last few years, and also what people down ballot might do and for U.S. Senate and U.S. House races.’ 

The website, which Fox News Digital accessed before its public roll-out, opens on a message, ‘The Biden-Harris Administration’s policies have resulted in a wide-open southern border, increased illegal immigration, skyrocketing inflation, higher taxes, lower wages, aggressively woke ‘DEI,’ and much more.’ 

The Heritage Foundation said the million-dollar effort aims to provide ‘fact-based, concise, and informational content to educate millions of Americans to shape policy and share ideas.’ 

It outlines the president and vice president’s ‘extreme policy positions related to the unsecured border, mass amnesty and sanctuary policies for illegals, the Green New Deal energy agenda, disastrous economic stances, Medicare For All, and the desire to advance the left’s DEI and CRT schemes,’ the think tank said. 

The Heritage Foundation said it will also run two six-figure text message and advertising campaigns across multiple platforms to drive website engagement and ‘further educate the public on the impact of the Biden-Harris Administration’s radical policy and societal viewpoint for America.’ The push to appeal to independent votes comes also as independent presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr, once a dynastic Democrat, announced Friday he was discontinuing his White House bid and endorsing Trump. Kennedy is unable to remove himself from the ballot, however, in the key swing states of Michigan and Wisconsin. 

‘It’s fascinating to me that in the span of about 48 hours, the radical left went from trying to keep Mr. Kennedy off the ballot to now fighting to keep him on the ballot and act because of that, and because he does have a real draw, across the spectrum from the center left to the center right. We’ve seen that at Heritage,’ Roberts told Fox News Digital. ‘Heritage really exists to plug that kind of gap, the gap that exists between what DC elites in power tell you that they’re going to do versus what the American people surmise they have done.’ 

‘And I think the credibility that we have just in terms of being the policy umpire, which we’re often called in DC and pairing that with this dissemination of this website in the swing states will have a real effect on the knowledge base that voters have to make their decision,’ he added. ‘They will make their decision. Ultimately, they’re the ones. The American voters are the ones who will influence the outcome of the election, to state the obvious. This website can be, I think, a very helpful tool as they sit down and look at all of the resources, all of the information at their disposal, to make an informed decision.’

The website includes an explanation and key statistics about Harris’ record on key issues, including how inflation ‘has grown by 20% since the Biden-Harris administration took office in 2021.’ Heritage assesses that Americans have lost an average of $10,000 per household due to high energy costs since the Biden-Harris administration took office. On the border security and illegal immigration, the website states, ‘Under Border Czar Harris, there have been over 10.3 million total inadmissible alien encounters recorded by the U.S. Border Patrol, and over 85% of these illegal aliens have been released into the United States.’ 

It also provides examples of Harris’ past statements supporting the think tank’s claim that Harris ‘has been a long-time supporter of letting biological men compete in female sports’ and highlights how the Biden-Harris administration’s changes to Title IX added ‘gender identity’ to the list of sex-based protections in federal law, ‘consequently allowing men into women’s private spaces, athletics, and educational opportunities.’ 

‘We have to stay woke,’ Harris once said, as the site notes. ‘Like everybody needs to be woke. And you can talk about if you’re the wokest or woker, but just stay more woke than less woke.’

When Project 2025’s leader, Paul Dans, stepped down in June, the Trump campaign released a statement saying, ‘reports of Project 2025’s demise would be greatly welcomed,’ as the then-Biden campaign tried to use the 900-page conservative plan to steer voters away from another Trump administration. Despite this, Democrats at their national convention in Chicago this month further tried to tie Trump to Project 2025. 

‘His explicit intent to jail journalists, political opponents and anyone he sees as the enemy,’ Harris told the DNC of Trump. ‘His explicit intent to deploy our active duty military against our own citizens. Consider, consider the power he will have, especially after the U.S. Supreme Court just ruled that he would be immune from criminal prosecution. Just imagine Donald Trump with no guardrails, and how he would use the immense powers of the presidency of the United States. Not to improve your life, not to strengthen our national security, but to serve the only client he has ever had: himself.

‘We know what a second Trump term would look like. It’s all laid out in Project 2025, written by his closest advisers,’ she said. ‘Its sum total is to pull our country back to the past. But America, we are not going back.’ 

Fox News’ Alec Schemmel and Brianna Herlihy contributed to this report. 

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The official start of the college football season is here with Week 1 kicking off on Thursday and running through Labor Day weekend.

But before we talk about those games, we have to talk about Florida State’s disastrous trip to Ireland that saw the 10th-ranked Seminoles falls to ACC rival Georgia Tech. What does that loss mean for the Seminoles as they try to reach the College Football Playoff after missing out last season?

Week 1 one some have some significant fallout, too, starting with No. 1 Georgia and No. 14 Clemson meeting in Atlanta in the showcase game on the schedule. But there are also other matchups to keep an eye on. No. 7 Notre Dame heads to No. 20 Texas A&M, and No. 12 LSU meets No. 23 Southern California in Las Vegas on Sunday.

Dan Wolken and Paul Myerberg of USA TODAY Sports make their picks for these games and discuss other issues in college football entering the season in this week’s version of the College Football Fix.

BOWL PROJECTIONS: Preseason forecast for the 12-team playoff

TOUGH ROADS: Ranking the 10 toughest college football schedules

HIGHS AND LOWS: Florida State leads Week 0 winners and losers

CRYSTAL BALL: Record projections for all 134 teams this season

HOT SEATS: The 10 coaches that start season facing the most pressure

LOOKING AHEAD: The 10 leading contenders for the Heisman Trophy

RE-RANK: Georgia leads the preseason breakdown of the NCAA 1-134

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After a disappointing and error-filled 2023 campaign, Kadarius Toney’s time with the Kansas City Chiefs is over.

The team waived the wide receiver on Tuesday.

After catching a touchdown and reeling off a 65-yard punt return in Super Bowl 57, Toney was expected to play a leading role in the Chiefs’ title repeat bid as part of a new-look receiving corps. But he played a central and infamous role in two of the team’s most prominent losses, as he earned ridicule for a series of drops in the opener against the Detroit Lions and then lined up offsides on a play that negated what would have been the go-ahead touchdown against the Buffalo Bills.

Toney was inactive for the team’s final seven games last season.

Though the Chiefs completed their Super Bowl repeat push, the team still pursued a significant shake-up at receiver this offseason.

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Marquise ‘Hollywood’ Brown was signed in free agency, while speedster Xavier Worthy was selected in the first round. The team also on Monday brought back JuJu Smith-Schuster, who spent one year with the New England Patriots after recording 78 catches and 933 receiving yards for Kansas City in 2022.

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The Boston Red Sox are activating 44-year-old left-hander Rich Hill, multiple outlets reported Tuesday.

He signed a minor league deal on Aug. 15 and made one scoreless, two-inning appearance at Triple-A Worcester.

Hill has played for 13 franchises since making his MLB debut in 2005, including three previous stints with his hometown Red Sox.

Once activated, Hill will surpass 41-year-old Justin Verlander as the oldest player in the majors.

Hill last played in the big leagues in 2023 with the Pittsburgh Pirates and San Diego Padres, going 8-14 with a 5.41 ERA in 32 games (27 starts).

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He is 90-73 with a 4.01 ERA in 382 games (248 starts) with the Chicago Cubs (2005-08), Baltimore Orioles (2009), Red Sox (2010-12, 2015, 2022), Cleveland (2013), Los Angeles Angels (2014), New York Yankees (2014), Oakland Athletics (2016), Los Angeles Dodgers (2016-19), Minnesota Twins (2020), Tampa Bay Rays (2021), New York Mets (2021), Pirates (2023) and Padres (2023).

The Red Sox optioned right-hander Josh Winckowski to Worcester on Tuesday morning. Winckowski, 26, is 4-1 with a 4.37 ERA in 30 games (six starts) this season for Boston.

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Experts researching advancements in artificial intelligence are now warning that AI models could create the next ‘enhanced pathogens capable of causing major epidemics or even pandemics.’ 

The declaration was made in a paper published in the journal Science by co-authors from Johns Hopkins University, Stanford University and Fordham University, who say that AI models are being ‘trained on or [are] capable of meaningfully manipulating substantial quantities of biological data, from speeding up drug and vaccine design to improving crop yields.’ 

‘But as with any powerful new technology, such biological models will also pose considerable risks. Because of their general-purpose nature, the same biological model able to design a benign viral vector to deliver gene therapy could be used to design a more pathogenic virus capable of evading vaccine-induced immunity,’ researchers wrote in their abstract. 

‘Voluntary commitments among developers to evaluate biological models’ potential dangerous capabilities are meaningful and important but cannot stand alone,’ the paper continued. ‘We propose that national governments, including the United States, pass legislation and set mandatory rules that will prevent advanced biological models from substantially contributing to large-scale dangers, such as the creation of novel or enhanced pathogens capable of causing major epidemics or even pandemics.’ 

Although today’s AI models likely do not ‘substantially contribute’ to biological risks, the ‘essential ingredients to create highly concerning advanced biological models may already exist or soon will,’ Time quoted the paper’s authors as saying. 

They reportedly recommend that governments create a ‘battery of tests’ that biological AI models must undertake before being released to the public – and then from there officials can determine how restricted access to the models should be. 

‘We need to plan now,’ Anita Cicero, the deputy director at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security and one of the co-authors of the paper, said according to Time. ‘Some structured government oversight and requirements will be necessary in order to reduce risks of especially powerful tools in the future.’ 

Cicero reportedly added that biological risks from AI models could become a reality ‘within the next 20 years, and maybe even much less’ without the proper oversight. 

‘If the question is can AI be used to engineer pandemics, 100% percent. And as far as how far down the road we should be concerned about it, I think that AI is advancing at a rate that most people are not prepared for,’ Paul Powers, an AI expert and CEO of Physna – a company that helps computers analyze 3D models and geometric objects – told Fox News Digital. 

‘The thing is that it’s not just governments and large businesses that have access to these increasingly powerful capabilities, it’s individuals and small businesses as well,’ he continued, but noted that ‘the problem with regulation here is that one, as much as everyone wants a global set of rules for this, the reality is that it is enforced nationally. Secondly is that regulation doesn’t move at the speed of AI. Regulation can’t even keep up with technology as it has been, with traditional speed.’ 

‘What they are proposing that you do is have the government approve certain AI training models and certain AI applications. But the reality is how do you police that?’ Powers said. 

‘There are certain nucleic acids that are essentially the building blocks for any potential real pathogen or virus,’ Powers added, saying, ‘I would start there… I would start on really trying to crack down on who can access the building blocks first.’ 

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