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From the moment it was announced that college athletes would be able to earn money off their name, image, and likeness, everyone knew that the collegiate athletics landscape would change forever. However, it’s hard to imagine anyone predicting that a university’s football program would start wearing QR codes on their helmets leading fans to a donation page to the team’s general fund.

With college football’s stars earning exponentially more in NIL than offensive and defensive linemen, Oklahoma State’s general fund could be very beneficial for helping recruit players at less star-studded positions. Even at Alabama or Georgia, an offensive lineman isn’t very likely to secure many brand deals, so a team fund that gets distributed to the lesser-known players could be very enticing.

That said, Oklahoma State head coach Mike Gundy insists that this will be more impactful for the fans than anyone else.

In an official statement from Oklahoma State football, Gundy said, ‘This is a revolutionary step forward to help keep Oklahoma State football ahead of the game.’ He continued, ‘It gives a chance for everyday fans across the world to have a real impact when it comes to supporting the NIL efforts for Cowboy football.’

How can fans donate?

There are obviously going to be tons of college football fans willing to donate to their alma maters in order to take their football program to the next level. However, Oklahoma State might be hoping for big generosity. When going to the fund online, the cheapest donation option given to fans is $100, and goes as high as $5,000 for a one-time payment. The site does enable fans to input their own figure to donate, but that is the last option that the site offers.

Some fans have joked that certain donations will enable them to have a more direct impact on the program.

How will this help Oklahoma State?

As stated earlier, the money from this fund would likely go to helping non-skill position players earn money that they wouldn’t be able to get from NIL deals. This should entice more players at these positions to pick Oklahoma State in the future, but that likely won’t be for a few years, and only if this general fund winds up earning those players serious compensation.

Didn’t Mike Gundy just tell players not to take NIL money?

Earlier this week, Gundy told the media that, with his team’s season opener less than two weeks away, he wants his players to stop negotiating for more money and NIL deals and start focusing on the season.

Gundy does not seem to be telling players to stop trying to earn money, but that the time for negotiating deals is behind them. ‘Tell your agent to quit calling us and asking for more money,’ he said. ‘It’s non-negotiable now. Start again in December.’

Perhaps that is what sparked the decision to start advertising their team fund. It could be a compromise where players no longer have to ask for money but can instead earn from the fund. The biggest issue, of course, is the uncertainty of just how much each player will earn.

Is the fund only reachable through the QR codes?

No. According to the team’s statement, links to the fund will also be available on the team’s social media channels (X, Instagram, Facebook). The QR codes on the helmets are simply meant to intrigue fans who are unaware of the fund and willing to tip the team after big plays.

When does the college football season start?

The college football season starts this weekend, Saturday, August 24 with Florida State taking on Georgia Tech at 12 p.m. ET. Oklahoma State starts their season with a home matchup against South Dakota State on Saturday, August 31 at 1 p.m. ET. That game will air on ESPN. It will also be available for streaming on ESPN+.

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The road to 2024 Leagues Cup glory goes through Columbus’ Lower.com Field.

The reigning MLS Cup champion Columbus Crew are well-positioned to collect another major prize but first must get past a Philadelphia Union team that has once again reached the Leagues Cup semifinals.

The Union entered this Leagues Cup as a hot team, having won its previous two MLS matches over the New England Revolution and Nashville SC by a combined score of 8-1 to climb back into the Eastern Conference playoff race. Philadelphia toppled last year’s Supporters’ Shield winners, FC Cincinnati, in the Round of 16 before edging Liga MX’s Mazatlán in a penalty shootout in the quarterfinals. The Union won the third-place game in last year’s Leagues Cup.

Mazatlán, along with Club America, represented the remaining hopes for Liga MX in Leagues Cup, but both were eliminated in the quarterfinals, leaving an all-MLS semifinal field — Los Angeles FC will host the Colorado Rapids in the other semifinal.

The Crew eliminated a Lionel Messi-less Inter Miami in an exhilarating Round of 16 showdown before defeating New York City FC in a penalty shootout in the quarterfinals. The Crew already has come tantalizingly close to collecting a trophy this season, reaching the final of the Concacaf Champions Cup, only to be defeated by Pachuca.

The winner of the Columbus Crew-Philadelphia Union semifinal faces the winner of the Los Angeles FC-Colorado Rapids game in the final. The losers will play in the third-place game. Both matches are slated for Sunday, Aug. 25, with the winner of the Columbus-Philadelphia game hosting the final. Both finalists, as well as the third-place game winner, qualify for next year’s Concacaf Champions Cup.

When is Columbus Crew vs. Philadelphia Union in Leagues Cup?

Date: Wednesday, Aug. 21

Start time: 7:30 p.m. ET

Venue: Lower.com Field, Columbus, Ohio

How to watch Columbus Crew vs. Philadelphia Union in Leagues Cup

The semifinal match will be streamed live on MLS Season Pass on Apple TV.

Leagues Cup bracket: Remaining knockout schedule

(Game times and locations for third-place game and final will be announced once the matchups are known.)

Semifinals – Aug. 21

Columbus Crew vs. Philadelphia Union, 7:30 p.m. ET
Los Angeles FC vs. Colorado Rapids, 10 p.m. ET

Third place game – Aug. 25

Semifinal losers

Championship game – Aug. 25

Semifinal winners

What is Leagues Cup?

North America’s top two professional soccer leagues halt their respective regular-season competitions for a month to compete in a World Cup-style tournament.

What formerly was an eight-team tournament, the Leagues Cup evolved in 2023 into a 47-team competition featuring every Major League Soccer and Liga MX club. Inter Miami CF, led by Lionel Messi, won the first edition of the expanded competition.

Before last year’s inaugural 47-team tournament included every MLS and Liga MX club, the Leagues Cup was held twice before (2019 and 2021) with limited participation.

The 29 MLS and 18 Liga MX clubs are divided up into 15 groups in two regions: East and West. The group stage starts on July 26 and continues until Aug. 6. The top two finishing teams from each group will advance to the single-elimination knockout rounds, which start on Aug. 7. The championship match will be held Aug. 25.

Previous League Cup finals

2023: Inter Miami CF over Nashville SC, 1-1 (Inter Miami won penalty shootout, 10-9)
2021: Club León over Seattle Sounders FC, 3-2
2019: Cruz Azul over UANL Tigres, 2-1

When does the 2024 MLS regular season resume?

Most of the 29 MLS teams will return to regular-season play on Saturday, Aug. 24, when there will be 12 matches played (streaming live on MLS Season Pass).

Minnesota United vs. Seattle Sounders FC, 6:30 p.m. ET (FOX)
Charlotte FC vs. New York Red Bulls, 7:30 p.m. ET
D.C. United vs. FC Dallas, 7:30 p.m. ET
Inter Miami CF vs. FC Cincinnati, 7:30 p.m. ET
CF Montréal vs. New England Revolution, 7:30 p.m. ET
New York City FC vs. Chicago Fire FC, 7:30 p.m. ET
Houston Dynamo FC vs. Toronto FC, 8:30 p.m. ET
Sporting Kansas City vs. Orlando City SC, 8:30 p.m. ET
Nashville SC vs. Austin FC, 8:30 p.m. ET
Real Salt Lake vs. San Jose Earthquakes, 9:30 p.m. ET
LA Galaxy vs. Atlanta United, 10:30 p.m. ET
Portland Timbers vs. St. Louis City SC, 10:30 p.m. ET

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Before the 2024 Leagues Cup competition kicked off, Los Angeles FC was on the short list of expected tournament contenders from Major League Soccer.

Nobody expected a semifinal run from the Colorado Rapids. Colorado entered the 47-team Leagues Cup as the 46th-seeded team. The Rapids eliminated the tournament’s top seed and North America’s most decorated soccer team — Club America — to get to this point. Club America’s stunning elimination also meant that no Liga MX club would reach the Leagues Cup semifinals.

The Rapids’ reward? A visit to Los Angeles, where their opponent just welcomed France’s all-time leading goal scorer, Olivier Giroud, to the squad.

The Rapids defeated four consecutive Liga MX opponents on their amazing Leagues Cup run. After beating 2023 Concacaf Champions League winner Club León in the final group stage game in a penalty shootout, the Rapids defeated Juárez, Toluca and Club America in the knockout rounds.

LAFC has won its three knockout round games by a combined score of 9-1, clobbering the Seattle Sounders 3-0 in Saturday’s quarterfinal to secure a home semifinal game. Giroud has appeared in the previous two matches, but LAFC coach Steve Cherundolo has so far only utilized the French soccer icon as a late-game substitute.

The winner of the LAFC-Colorado Rapids semifinal faces the winner of the Columbus Crew-Philadelphia Union game in the final. The losers will play in the third-place game. Both matches are slated for Sunday, Aug. 25, with the winner of the Columbus-Philadelphia game hosting the final. Both finalists, as well as the third-place game winner, qualify for next year’s Concacaf Champions Cup.

When is LAFC vs. Colorado Rapids in Leagues Cup?

Date: Wednesday, Aug. 21

Start time: 10 p.m. ET

Venue: BMO Stadium, Los Angeles

How to watch LAFC vs. Colorado Rapids in Leagues Cup

The semifinal match will be streamed live on MLS Season Pass on Apple TV.

Leagues Cup bracket: Remaining knockout schedule

(Game times and locations for third-place game and final will be announced once the matchups are known.)

Semifinals – Aug. 21

Columbus Crew vs. Philadelphia Union, 7:30 p.m. ET
Los Angeles FC vs. Colorado Rapids, 10 p.m. ET

Third place game – Aug. 25

Semifinal losers

Championship game – Aug. 25

Semifinal winners

What is Leagues Cup?

North America’s top two professional soccer leagues halt their respective regular-season competitions for a month to compete in a World Cup-style tournament.

What formerly was an eight-team tournament, the Leagues Cup evolved in 2023 into a 47-team competition featuring every Major League Soccer and Liga MX club. Inter Miami CF, led by Lionel Messi, won the first edition of the expanded competition.

Before last year’s inaugural 47-team tournament included every MLS and Liga MX club, the Leagues Cup was held twice before (2019 and 2021) with limited participation.

The 29 MLS and 18 Liga MX clubs are divided up into 15 groups in two regions: East and West. The group stage starts on July 26 and continues until Aug. 6. The top two finishing teams from each group will advance to the single-elimination knockout rounds, which start on Aug. 7. The championship match will be held Aug. 25.

Previous League Cup finals

2023: Inter Miami CF over Nashville SC, 1-1 (Inter Miami won penalty shootout, 10-9)
2021: Club León over Seattle Sounders FC, 3-2
2019: Cruz Azul over UANL Tigres, 2-1

When does the 2024 MLS regular season resume?

Most of the 29 MLS teams will return to regular-season play on Saturday, Aug. 24, when there will be 12 matches played (streaming live on MLS Season Pass).

Minnesota United vs. Seattle Sounders FC, 6:30 p.m. ET (FOX)
Charlotte FC vs. New York Red Bulls, 7:30 p.m. ET
D.C. United vs. FC Dallas, 7:30 p.m. ET
Inter Miami CF vs. FC Cincinnati, 7:30 p.m. ET
CF Montréal vs. New England Revolution, 7:30 p.m. ET
New York City FC vs. Chicago Fire FC, 7:30 p.m. ET
Houston Dynamo FC vs. Toronto FC, 8:30 p.m. ET
Sporting Kansas City vs. Orlando City SC, 8:30 p.m. ET
Nashville SC vs. Austin FC, 8:30 p.m. ET
Real Salt Lake vs. San Jose Earthquakes, 9:30 p.m. ET
LA Galaxy vs. Atlanta United, 10:30 p.m. ET
Portland Timbers vs. St. Louis City SC, 10:30 p.m. ET

We occasionally recommend interesting products and services. If you make a purchase by clicking one of the links, we may earn an affiliate fee. USA TODAY Network newsrooms operate independently, and this doesn’t influence our coverage.

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Michelle Obama said during her speech on the second night of the Democratic National Convention in Chicago Tuesday that her parents ‘were suspicious of folks who took more than they needed.’

But critics quickly pointed out how she conveniently omitted that the Obamas have an estimated net worth of $70 million, as well as luxury real estate holdings in Chicago, Hawaii, Massachusetts and Washington, D.C. 

The former first lady began her DNC speech by saying the last time she was in her hometown of Chicago was to memorialize her mother, the woman ‘who showed me the meaning of hard work and humility and decency’ and ‘who set my moral compass high and showed me the power of my own voice.’ 

‘She and my father didn’t aspire to be wealthy. In fact, they were suspicious of folks who took more than they needed,’ Michelle Obama said. ‘They understood that it wasn’t enough for their kids to thrive if everyone else around us was drowning. So my mother volunteered at the local school.’ 

Her mother ‘always looked out for the other kids on the block’ and ‘was glad to do the thankless, unglamorous work that for generations has strengthened the fabric of this nation,’ Michelle Obama continued. ‘The belief that if you do unto others, if you love thy neighbor. If you work and scrape and sacrifice, it will pay off. If not for you, then maybe for your children or your grandchildren.’ 

‘You see, those values have been passed on through family farms and factory towns, through tree-lined streets and crowded tenements, through prayer groups and National Guard units and social studies classroom. Those were the values my mother poured into me until her very last breath,’ she said. ‘Kamala Harris and I built our lives on those same foundational values. Even though our mothers grew up an ocean apart, they shared the same belief in the promise of this country.’ 

One X user, who goes by ProudArmyBrat, decried the perceived hypocrisy to her more than 463,600 followers. 

‘The Obama’s have a net worth of $70 million. They own 4 luxurious properties: – Washington DC home bought for $8.1M – Martha’s Vineyard home bought for $11.75M – Beachfront home in Hawaii bought for $8.7M – Chicago home bought for $1.65M,’ she wrote. ‘Getting really tired of multi-millionaires preaching about the evils of money and greed.’ 

Trump War Room, the official account of former President Trump’s 2024 presidential campaign, also shared a clip of Michelle Obama’s speech. 

‘Michelle Obama says her parents ‘were suspicious of folks who took more than they needed.’ She has a net worth of $70 million and lives in a mansion in Martha’s Vineyard,’ the account wrote to its 2 million followers.

Fox News chief political analyst Brit Hume said ‘the speech of the night was Michelle Obama,’ but also noted the disconnect from the former first lady’s message and her elite lifestyle.

‘She is an extraordinarily impressive woman, former first lady of the United States. You can see why members of the Democratic Party always kind of hoped that maybe she’d step in and run for president,’ he said. ‘It does however, I have to say this, get a little rich when she starts talking about hope.’

‘Remember she famously said when her husband was on the cusp of winning his party’s nomination it was the first time in her life that she had felt hope because of what he brought and what he was bringing,’ Hume said. ‘Here she is tonight saying it again. I can’t imagine why somebody who’s had the life she had, a product of Princeton and Harvard Law School, an elite law firm, the first lady of the United States, with a magnificent house on Martha’s Vineyard worth about $12 million and another one going up in Hawaii, why it is that she’s so hopeless all the time and has to have her hope revived by the goings-on in the Democratic Party.’ 

MIchelle Obama declared in her speech Tuesday: ‘America, hope is making a comeback.’ 

She then tore into Trump, a sharp shift from the 2016 convention speech in which she told her party, ‘When they go low, we go high.’

‘His limited and narrow view of the world made him feel threatened by the existence of two hardworking, highly educated, successful people who also happened to be Black,’ Michelle Obama said of Trump.

She was followed by her husband, Barack Obama, the first Black president in U.S. history. He insisted the nation is ready to elect Harris, who is of Jamaican and Indian heritage and would be the nation’s first female president. He also called Trump ‘a 78-year-old billionaire who hasn’t stopped whining about his problems since he rode down his golden escalator nine years ago.’

‘It’s been a constant stream of gripes and grievances that’s actually gotten worse now that he’s afraid of losing to Kamala,’ he said.

The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

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The 2024 NFL season is drawing near and it’s time to assemble your championship team.

Conventional wisdom for fantasy drafters mostly stems from what 2023 served up. The previous season is consistently reflected in how players are valued within their position and how positions stack up against each other in your fantasy draft. You can take advantage of last year to assemble your draft plan.

If there are no other predraft considerations, you should at least enter your draft with a plan for your quarterback and tight end. No surprise – running backs and wide receivers are always popular and consume a major chunk of the first half of your draft. You’ll likely start at least two or three of each.

But those “single starters” of quarterbacks and tight ends need to be strategically seeded onto your roster. They are where you can get an advantage, or not, from the only player in that position that you’ll start. Improve your chances of building the optimal team by knowing what to expect.

FANTASY FOOTBALL 2024: Overall player rankings for this year’s fantasy drafts

NFL STATS CENTRAL: The latest NFL scores, schedules, odds, stats and more.

Drafting your fantasy football quarterback

This year, there are two elite quarterbacks: Josh Allen, who has been a top quarterback for four years, and Jalen Hurts. Allen goes too early, Hurts shows up in the third round in most drafts, and then the next four spread out between the fourth and sixth rounds. Patrick Mahomes, Lamar Jackson, Anthony Richardson and C.J. Stroud are difference-makers; they will all be gone and usually in that order.

The next half-dozen QBs show up by mid draft and they are nearly interchangeable in risk and reward. Mahomes drops from recent years after a “down” season but it always pays to have an advantage at quarterback as it is usually the highest-scoring position among your starters.

Recent years have promoted the “late round quarterback” theory, where drafters wait to get their starting quarterback or assume two good quarterbacks can be mixed for great results. Don’t fall for it. Get a top-scoring quarterback who is an automatic weekly starter and reap the benefits.

Fantasy football running back draft strategy

The position no longer commands the importance of recent years, but you will start two or three, and top backs are the most consistent players on your roster. Christian McCaffrey is the slam-dunk 1.01 pick in every draft after a monster 2023 season. Breece Hall and Bijan Robinson will be gone by the middle of the first round and then two to four more will be taken after all teams have picked.

Start-worthy running backs extend into the seventh round or beyond. The fantasy value declines quickly in running backs, and beyond the middle of your draft, the only remaining options are the rookies, committee players, or handcuffs for starting backs. Every year, there are at least a few backfields that slowly transition from one starter to another or experience injuries that make immediate changes to the depth chart. Consider picking Trey Benson (Cardinals), Blake Corum (Rams), Marshawn Lloyd (Packers), Bucky Irving (Buccaneers) or Ray Davis (Bills) as rookies who may be one play away from starting.

You should have two running backs by Round 7. Three is even better. Realize that the 30th running back will score about 50 fewer points than the 30th wideout, and that difference persists. Start-worthy running backs are the first position to disappear in fantasy football.

How to value wide receivers in fantasy football drafts

There’s no change from last year. Wideouts are the most popular picks in the first four rounds with between 25 and 30 selected. That means by Round 5, if you haven’t already taken two, you’ll need to get lucky. All of the WR1 and WR2 value receivers will already be gone.

With reception points, that’s a liability. Expect at least six per round and know that some teams draft three wideouts over their first four picks. The bad news is that if you want your WR1 to be an advantage, you need to pick no later than No. 8 in the first round. The good news is that wideout is the most stocked position by virtue of NFL teams relying on two or three per game.

By the sixth round, you’re looking at someone like Calvin Ridley, Christian Watson, Chris Godwin or Keenan Allen, who all have upside but also risk. Even by the 12th round, you’ll still find Brandin Cooks, Tyler Lockett, Josh Palmer or Romeo Doubs.

This year witnessed a wideout-rich NFL draft, and at least eight rookie receivers will be taken in your fantasy league. But only Marvin Harrison Jr. (Cardinals), Keon Coleman (Bills) and Malik Nabers (Giants) have a clear path to being the No. 1 wideout for their team. The rest will see less volume in their first season.

Don’t overvalue tight ends in fantasy football

Previous years saw the position serve up about three elite fantasy tight ends, while the rest of them provided minimal difference or advantage. It was either take a top-3 or accept that your tight end won’t matter. But that’s no longer true. A rookie (Sam LaPorta) topped the position in 2023, but barely over Evan Engram and Travis Kelce (who tailed off badly). The difference between the highest scorer and the No. 8 (Cole Kmet) was only 55 points, or three points per game.

That’s because of a growing influx of talented tight ends who are primarily receivers, and offenses evolving with a higher usage. The difference between the No. 1 and No. 8 in 2022 was 169 points. In 2021, it was 133. In 2020, it was 163. You do not need to grab a top-3 tight end to find a difference-maker anymore. Tight ends start later (Round 3) and the eighth one can last until Round 7. There are better ways to spend your draft capital in the earlier rounds than by using that pick on a tight end.

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Minnesota Vikings defensive coordinator Brain Flores says he has grown as a coach and wishes quarterback Tua Tagovailoa success one day after the Dolphins quarterback called out Flores’ coaching style.

‘I’m happy, genuinely happy for the success that Tua has had and I really wish him nothing but the best,’ Flores told reporters on Tuesday.

Flores’ comments come after Tagovailoa spoke about the contrast in coaching styles between his former coach and current coach Mike McDaniel during an appearance on ‘The Dan Le Batard Show’. Flores was the head coach of the Dolphins from 2019 through 2021 and was fired in January 2022, despite an 8-1 finish to the 2021 season.

‘If you woke up every morning and I told you that you suck at what you did, that you don’t belong doing what you do, that you shouldn’t be here, that this other guy should be here, that you haven’t earned this,’ Tagovailoa said. ‘And then someone comes and tells you, ‘Dude, you are the best fit for this. You are accurate. You are the best whatever, the best this or that’ — like, how would it make you feel listening to one or the other?’

Flores said he’s done a lot of reflecting since hearing the comments and admitted he had some faults in Miami. He didn’t say anything Tagovailoa said was untrue or misinterpreted, and part of being a coach is correcting things about themselves.

NFL STATS CENTRAL: The latest NFL scores, schedules, odds, stats and more.

‘There’s things that I could do better, for sure, and I’ve grown in that way, and I’ve tried to apply the things that I could do better and the things that I’ve learned, over the last two-three years,’ he said.

‘Look I’m human. That hit me in a way that I wouldn’t say was positive for me. But at the same time, I’ve got to use that and say ‘how can I grow from that? How can I be better?”

The defensive coordinator added he’d be open to having a conversation with Tagovailoa if the possibility ever arises, but he’s focused on the Vikings and the 2024 season for now.

‘I’m at a point now where I’m really trying to move forward. I’m really trying to focus on the guys here,’ he said. ‘I think at some point you got to turn the page, and I’m going to do that.’

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It’s that time of the year again. Before every football season, administrators and fans alike start sweating for different reasons. Administrators’ headaches come from a delicate balancing act of maintaining the athletic budget and hoping the football coach doesn’t fall flat on his face so that when the holiday season rolls around, said coach will be celebrating with a buyout. As demanding and skeptical as they are, fans will have many people to blame if their team doesn’t make the 12-team playoff.

Last year’s list featured five coaches being dismissed for various reasons, including the two biggest salary bandits, Jimbo Fisher of Texas A&M and Michigan State’s Mel Tucker. Those that survived the purge include Neal Brown, Butch Jones, and Eli Drinkwitz, but the pink slips brigade waits for no one.

There is no advocation for anyone losing their jobs, but this is college athletics where the margin for success is thin, and fans’ patience for losing is thinner.

Here are the college football coaches whose seats are en fuego entering the 2024 season.

Billy Napier, Florida

With the financial resources, the tradition, and the rich recruiting soil of the Sunshine State, this should be one of the nation’s premier programs. Instead, Napier, with an 11-14 record in his first two campaigns, has quickly turned Gator Nation into an afterthought. And with the schedule backloaded with national title-contending teams (Georgia, Texas, LSU, Ole Miss and Florida State), the powers that be at Florida might be cranking up the buyout machine in no time to thus begin another cycle in desperately trying to get back to the top of the sport.

Ryan Day, Ohio State

Losing to Michigan three years in a row is unacceptable to some. The placement here has to do with what Ohio State thinks it deserves and what the football team actually is. This is a top-tier program and one of the nation’s most talented, and their nemesis up North felt the same way until Jim Harbaugh got them over the hump, promptly departed from the yearly lunacy, and took off to the NFL and the Los Angeles Chargers. Any other program would be thrilled with what Ryan Day has accomplished in his six years in Columbus. Not the Buckeyes fans, who want national championships or to get rid of the person not delivering the goods.

Butch Jones, Arkansas State

Jones hasn’t done much in his tenure at Arkansas State, and how he was brought back for a fourth season is anyone’s guess. Winning a total of 11 games in the previous three seasons doesn’t instill much confidence in the faithful thousands that show up to watch the Red Wolves play. By any measure, 2023 was a success with competent play down the stretch and a bowl appearance, and there is no doubt at least a repeat performance in 2024 is needed to save his job.

Sonny Cumbie, Louisiana Tech

A third consecutive non-winning season will spell doom for Cumbie, who is trying to get Tech back to its winning ways, which hasn’t happened since the end of the last decade. The Bulldogs enter 2024 having lost six consecutive games. Fortunately for Cumbie, Conference USA is winnable, and no matter the offensive genius he has known to display in previous stops, if the defense plays like it doesn’t want to stop anyone, the inevitable will happen.

Clark Lea, Vanderbilt

It’s tough to win at Vanderbilt. Maybe they are in the wrong conference, but when coaches take this job, they are fully aware their time on the sideline, at least at this school, could be short. The Commodores lost their last 10 games in 2023, giving up at least 31 points in each game. Not only could they not stop anyone, but they also couldn’t move the ball, making that the exact recipe to get you fired sooner rather than later with another coach enjoying the upgraded stadium and facilities.

Sam Pittman, Arkansas

Hiring former motorcycle-riding head coach Bobby Petrino as offensive coordinator seems to be a step in the right direction, if anything, to breathe some life and attention into the program. Still, Arkansas has the unfortunate task of being in the SEC, and navigating that schedule is almost impossible. Quarterback KJ Jefferson and running back Raheim Sanders headed to the transfer portal, leaving ex-Boise State quarterback Taylen Green to take the reins. It’s bowl game or bust for the Razorbacks, and even that might not be enough to save Pittman’s job. 

Lincoln Riley, Southern California

The thought was that Riley left Tornado Alley and the oppressive humidity of Oklahoma for the beaches of Southern California because he wanted to avoid the SEC. That rumor continues to rear its ugly head, depending on the day and who you believe. Well, the Trojans are headed off to another moneymaking conference where you actually have to play some semblance of defense to compete for titles. Riley’s leash may be longer than the rest of the coaches on this list, and if he isn’t producing a Heisman finalist this year or in Indianapolis in December at the very least, the couch (or the NFL) might be his next destination.

Scott Satterfield, Cincinnati

Moving forward, Cincinnati should be listed as one of the betting favorites in a Big 12 Conference whose two most powerful schools, Texas and Oklahoma, took their egos and brands for the greener pastures of the SEC. This conference is ripe for the picking, but it is tough to win when you aren’t good in any aspect of the game. Then again, the school could be patient and wait until Jan. 1, 2026, to fire Satterfield so that the buyout wouldn’t be as bad.

Joe Moorhead, Akron

Maybe Moorhead is best suited for an offensive coordinator job, and there is absolutely nothing wrong with that. Moorhead is quickly trending in the wrong direction, just like his last stop at Mississippi State, where once the fanbase turns its back on you, it’s over. There is no such worry at Akron, but a 4-20 record over the past two seasons won’t instill confidence in the administration. The Zips will find out how much they have improved when visiting Ohio State in a season-opening tone-setter.

Dave Aranda, Baylor

It seems like a lifetime ago since Baylor won the Sugar Bowl over Ole Miss (it was 2022), and any goodwill gleaned from the victory has slowly gone by the wayside. The Bears had the worst offense and defense in the Big 12, so Aranda has taken the reigns back and is calling the defense. Bringing in Jake Spavital to retool the offense was a smart move. The truth is there is no reason why the Bears can’t win this conference and win it consistently for years to come.

Honorable mentions: Stan Drayton, Temple; Mario Cristobal, Miami (Fla.); Kalani Sitake, Brigham Young; Pat Narduzzi, Pittsburgh.

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A national poll finds that the 2024 vice presidential nominees are both still fighting to make themselves known to the U.S. voting public. 

The poll, conducted by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research, shows 4 out of 10 Americans don’t know enough about Democratic vice presidential nominee Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz to form an opinion. 

The same goes for about 3 out of 10 Americans regarding Sen. J.D. Vance of Ohio, the Republican vice presidential nominee.

Walz is currently enjoying a higher level of support among U.S. adults, maintaining a 36% favorability rating compared to Vance’s 27%. 

This is compounded by Vance’s higher unfavorability rating among those polled, with 44% holding an unfavorable view compared to Walz’s 25%.

Vance’s popularity within the Republican Party is on the rise. In mid-July, only 3 out of 10 Republicans reported favorable feelings towards the Ohio senator as former President Donald Trump’s running mate — 6 out of 10 didn’t know enough about him.

The current polling finds that Vance’s support within the Republican Party has doubled to 6 out of 10 among Republicans — mostly attributable to a rise in awareness about him and his policies.

Similarly, the AP-NORC poll found Walz maintains favorable opinions with 6 out of 10 Democrats, with approximately 3 out of 10 not knowing enough about him to form an opinion. 

The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research poll was conducted from Aug. 8 to Aug. 12. 

It surveyed 1,164 adults via the NORC ‘probability-based AmeriSpeak Panel,’ which it describes as ‘designed to be representative of the U.S. population.’ Its margin of error for all respondents is plus or minus 3.8 percentage points.

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There are 76 days until Election Day on Tuesday, Nov. 5.

But if Americans vote like they did in the last two election cycles, most of them will have already cast a ballot before the big day.

Early voting starts as soon as Sept. 6 for eligible voters, with seven battleground states sending out ballots to at least some voters the same month.

It makes the next few months less a countdown to Election Day, and more the beginning of ‘election season.’

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

There are a few ways to vote before Election Day.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

The first voters to be sent absentee ballots will be in North Carolina, which begins mailing out ballots for eligible voters on Sept. 6.

Seven more battleground states open up early voting the same month, including Pennsylvania, Georgia, Wisconsin, Michigan and Nevada.

September deadlines

In-person early voting in bold.

Sept. 6

North Carolina – Absentee ballots sent to voters

Sept. 16

Pennsylvania – Mail-in ballots sent to voters

Sept. 17

Georgia – Absentee ballots sent to military & overseas

Sept. 19

Wisconsin – Absentee ballots sent

Sept. 20

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

Sept. 21

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

Sept. 23

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

Sept. 26

Illinois – In-person early voting begins 
Michigan – Absentee ballots sent
Florida, Nevada – Mail-in ballots sent
North Dakota – Absentee & mail-in ballots sent

Sept. 30

Nebraska – Mail-in ballots sent

Oct. 4

Connecticut – Absentee ballots sent

Oct. 6

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

Oct. 8

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

Oct. 9

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

Oct. 11

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

Oct. 15

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

Oct. 16

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

Oct. 17

North Carolina – In-person early voting begins 

Oct. 18

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

Oct. 19

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

Oct. 22

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

Oct. 23

West Virginia – In-person early voting begins

Oct. 24

Maryland – In-person early voting begins

Oct. 25

Delaware – In-person early voting begins

Oct. 26

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

Oct. 30

Oklahoma – In-person early voting begins 

Oct. 31

Kentucky – In-person absentee voting begins

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Randall Terry is a lifelong pro-life activist who founded the Operation Rescue group, which he headed until 1991. He and the group were known for their controversial tactics targeting abortion clinics, blocking entrances and staging raucous protests as Terry and associates racked up dozens of arrests and enormous sums in civil judgments along the way.

In 2024, Terry won the Constitution Party nomination for president and is running to make the sanctity of human life the focal point of his campaign, with an advertising strategy explicitly designed to boost the Trump campaign and hurt the Democrats.

‘My mission is still the same, and that is to make it a criminal act to kill a human being from conception until birth. For that to happen, you have to be in the political realm. You have to be a lawmaker,’ he said. ‘I am not going to win the presidency. I’m not running to win. I’m running to be the margin of defeat … in the swing states. Because I’m a federal candidate, I can run television ads 60 days from the election, and the TV stations are required by law to take them, so I can target Catholic and African-American voters in Wisconsin, in Michigan, in Pennsylvania.’

He dismisses the argument that he is likely to serve as a spoiler, taking disproportionately more votes from Trump in the election.

‘My candidacy is based around the three Ds: defend children, defeat the Democrat nominee, destroy the Democrat[ic] Party. That’s the mission. And for every one voter that leaves voting for Trump, for me, there’s going to be 20 that leave the Democrats because of the way our ads are targeted, because of our messaging. So, Tom DeLay, the former House majority leader, he has thrown in with us. He’s raising money for us. And he has said every Republican in America should be giving you money. You’re the secret weapon, because we can torpedo the Democrats with this message, which ultimately is going to end up helping Trump.’

Terry’s economic policies focus on reducing regulation and taxation and boosting energy production and independence.

‘The Constitution Party’s economic policy is simple: less regulation, lower taxes,’ he said. ‘Stop putting a gun to people’s head to pay for your favorite giveaway. America had averaged a 1% tax on the entire populace up until 1913, with the exception of the Civil War when they were retiring war debt. When we had incredibly low taxes, low government regulations, we became the economic wonder of the world,’ he said. ‘And now, with so much government regulation and so much taxes, we are driving business to foreign shores, or we’re bankrupting it. You want to have a great and free and prosperous country? Drill, baby, drill, open up the pipeline. Bring fuel here. … Make us energy independent. Become an exporter of oil and tell Saudi Arabia and Venezuela bye-bye.’

Terry said he is concerned that the Ukraine conflict is serving as a distraction from the machinations of China, which he views as a far greater threat.

‘I think that Putin’s obsession with the ancestral territorial parts of Russia is what is driving him. And the question is, how much American treasure, how much American blood … are we prepared to be shed in these conflicts? And that, to me, is where we have real and honorable disagreements. We’re sitting by while China is ready to become literally the dominant force in the world. China is poising themselves to be the dominant force militarily and economically. … We’re sitting by while China is preparing to take over Taiwan and to become the military and economic powerhouse of the world, but we’re obsessing over Russia and Ukraine. I smell a rat.’

Terry believes that the emerging Moscow-Beijing axis will enable the export of tyranny and continues to pose a significant threat to the West. He also argues that failed American policies have driven the two powerhouses together.

‘Historically, the Russian communists and the Chinese communists have not gotten along,’ he said. ‘We are driving Russia into the arms of China. We have far more in common with the Russians historically with our connection to Christianity, Russian Orthodoxy,’ he said, ‘but they are discussing, now openly, breaking the stronghold of the American dollar over oil. Once oil is no longer forced by law, by international treaties to be traded in dollars, all bets are off.’

‘We don’t even know what’s going to happen at that point. And if they come up with some kind of a new triumvirate or any coalition between Russia, which has massive oil fields that are untapped, China, which is a massive economic powerhouse, and then maybe Iran or some other heavy oil producing [country] … they’re going to be able to tell the West, ‘Go to hell, we’ll do whatever we want.’ And they will be exporting their political tyranny, and they will be not just in control of Hollywood but in control of small governments.’

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