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The Federal Reserve is gearing up to cut interest rates as soon as next month, which could bring relief to people with mortgages, credit cards and car loans. But it could be a bumpy ride until then.

A weaker-than-expected jobs report Friday triggered a sell-off on Wall Street this week from which markets are struggling to recover. And there’s still uncertainty around how deeply the central bank might slash rates, if it does so as expected when it meets in mid-September. Many consumers are looking for some financial stability in the short term while planning to benefit from lower borrowing costs in the medium to long terms.

That balancing act isn’t easy, Bankrate senior economic analyst Mark Hamrick acknowledged. “We should hope for the best,” he said, but “prepare for some possible outcomes that are less than optimal.”

Here are some financial do’s and don’ts experts suggest in the meantime.

Now’s still a good time to stash money in accounts paying generous interest.

“Circumstances can occur that are damaging to our personal finances, outside of recessions” or stock market turbulence, said Hamrick, who noted that nearly 60% of U.S. adults are uncomfortable with their current emergency savings. “How we prepare for those things, including how much savings we’re either inclined to or able to put away, are ultimately what helps us to manage through those difficulties.”

Most analysts don’t expect the Fed to cut its benchmark rate more than 0.5 percentage points initially. That means high-yield savings accounts — for which some of the best rates top out at 5.35% — are likely to remain appealing.

Certificates of deposit — fixed-rate bank accounts with term limits — are a go-to when interest rates are high. Some are paying interest at levels that rival those of high-yield savings accounts, and it may seem smart to lock in a 5% yield for many months after the Fed starts lowering rates. But several experts cautioned against over-relying on high-yield CDs.

If you’re close to retirement or have a fixed income, a short-term CD of a year or two might be an “attractive option” to take advantage of interest rates, said Rodney Lake, director of the GW Investment Institute at the George Washington University School of Business.

But “you really have to factor in your time horizon,” he said, because much longer than that could mean lost opportunities to reinvest those funds elsewhere with higher returns.

In addition, cashing out a CD early usually entails a penalty. So “if there’s any chance you might need it, buyer beware,” said Laura Veldkamp, a finance professor at Columbia University’s Graduate School of Business.

Now’s the time to pay down card balances, experts said. Chipping away at your debt and improving your credit score can position you to take advantage of better borrowing conditions.

With interest rates coming down, the idea is just pay and save as much as you can right now.

Laura Veldkamp, Columbia Business School

“With interest rates coming down, the idea is just pay and save as much as you can right now and have that consumption party” later, Veldkamp said. “That’s the sort of timing play here.”

Credit card balances are typically most consumers’ highest-rate debt. While the ratio between U.S. households’ average debt and income remains historically low, credit card delinquency rates have been rising, and those behind on payments face larger balances, Philadelphia Fed researchers said last month.

“Make all your payments on time” if you’re able to, Veldkamp advised. “Be really diligent about it, so that when it comes time to borrow, one looks like a good candidate and can get a good rate.”

Simply asking about discounts and special promotions — from utility bills to prescription costs — can yield surprising results, and credit card rates are no different, Hamrick said: Pick up the phone and see what your card issuer can do.

There’s no bad time to do that, but when the central bank lowers interest rates, it can be even more valuable. That’s especially true if your credit card has a variable APR, because not all lenders will quickly or automatically lower it after a Fed cut.

“Not to say they do it on purpose, but maybe they forget to reset your rate down,” Lake said. “Make sure that you hold those people accountable.”

It might seem counterintuitive to buy stock in the wake of this week’s rout, but many financial advisers live by the “buy low, sell high” mantra. If your experience as an investor is nonexistent or limited to your employer’s 401(k), consider opening an investment account and start small, Veldkamp suggested.

“You don’t have to be a millionaire to have a stock portfolio. Find a simple platform with low fees and buy some things,” she said. For an inexperienced investor without plans to retire any time soon, the key is patience. Over the long term, “if the market crashes, it will rebound,” she said.

Fluctuations often motivate investors to take matters into their own hands, but Veldkamp said few tend to outsmart the market.

“It’s tempting to say, ‘Well, when interest rates go down, stocks are going to do well, because people are switching from low-return to higher-return assets,’” she said. “That all may be true, but the fact is that there’s somebody whose job it is to trade on that idea immediately. The second a word exits the mouth of a Federal Reserve official, they are there ready to execute that trade in milliseconds.”

Instead, experts advise keeping a steady, long-haul approach.

“If you’re investing in your retirement, for example, you should be really focused on what the next five, 10 and 20 years look like. You’re investing for those periods,” Lake said.

With 30-year fixed-rate mortgage rates plunging this week to an average of 6.55%, refinancing demand has surged 16%, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association.

If you’re buying a house and getting into a mortgage, check to see if rates fall can you adjust that mortgage rate.

Jude Boudreaux, Financial Planner, New Orleans

While a Fed interest rate cut would drive mortgage rates lower still, now’s a great time for existing homeowners and prospective ones to scope out their refinancing options, Veldkamp said: “Dig up those details, do your homework, read the fine print and figure out what’s that refinancing cost.”

Jude Boudreaux, a New Orleans-based financial planner, pointed out that most closings take 30 to 60 days, so it’s worth looking ahead even if you’re still in the middle of a sale process.

“If you’re buying a house and getting into a mortgage, check to see if rates fall can you adjust that mortgage rate,” Boudreaux said. “As you’re shopping for a loan, that becomes something to consider.”

However, Lake warned against looking only at interest rates to time a home purchase, particularly because homebuying demand could jump after a rate cut.

“People should really focus on their individual needs and desires and what they can afford,” he said. “As soon as rates go down, people have more borrowing capacity, so they get pretty quickly reflected in the real estate prices.”

The bad news: “It is doubtful that auto rates will rapidly decline as soon as the Fed starts cutting,” Jonathan Smoke, Cox Automotive’s chief economist, wrote following the Fed’s decision last month to hold rates steady.

The average rate for new vehicles in July was 9.72%, up more than 0.5% year over year but down from 10% in June, Cox said. And the average monthly auto loan payment was $727, said J.D. Power, $5 more than in July 2023.

The good news: Consumers should find plenty of deals in the discounting that typically picks up in August and September as dealers clear lots for new models, Boudreaux said.

Hybrid sales are finally slowing after a springtime surge, according to the auto data firm Edmunds, which means better prices are also likely to be around the corner. And in the secondhand market, one- and two-year-old used car values are down nearly $4,000 from last year.

“If you’re shopping for a new car deal, it might actually be on the other side of the lot,” said Ivan Drury, director of insights at Edmunds.

Delaying that trip to the dealership can be costly, Hamrick said, especially when it means spending more on Uber rides or missing work because of a lack of wheels. So focus on what you can afford and “bulletproof” your budget for maintenance, repairs and fuel. Chances are that auto purchase will still be net-positive on your wallet.

Hamrick also suggested considering leasing options, even if that means signing a contract before a rate cut. “Maybe you need to trade down on the price point,” he said.

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SAINT-QUENTIN-EN-YVELINES, France – New Zealand’s Lydia Ko completed her Olympic trifecta on Saturday, adding a gold medal to her silver from Rio and bronze from Tokyo.

At 10 under par for the event, Ko shot a 1 under 71 on Saturday to hold on and win the Paris Olympics golf tournament at Le Golf National by two strokes over silver medalist Esther Henseleit of Germany (8 under) and bronze medalist Xiyu Lin of China (7 under).

It was a disappointing finish for a trio of American players. World No. 1 Nelly Korda, Rose Zhang and Lilia Vu each shot over-par rounds Saturday, with Zhang (5 under) and Tokyo gold medalist Korda (1 under) each stumbling to miss the medals after starting the final day in contention.

Korda’s final round came undone with a triple bogey on the par-4 15th hole. Along with the 7 she carded in Thursday’s second round on the par-4 16th, her Olympics largely went astray on two holes.

2024 Olympic medals: Who is leading the medal count? Follow along as we track the medals for every sport.

‘I played pretty solid until the last couple of holes – again,’ Korda said. ‘I feel like that was just kind of like the story of my week. … Recently, what’s been happening to me is I make a mistake and then I make another mistake on top of it.’

As challengers faltered one after another Saturday, Ko led the field by as many as five strokes at one point. But her own double bogey on the 13th hole helped make things interesting down the stretch, as did Henseleit turning in a 6 under 66.

Under pressure, Ko made four consecutive pars before arriving on the par-5 18th hole with a one shot lead. Her third shot there was a beauty, resting within six feet of the hole. She made the birdie putt to secure the gold.

Zhang finished tied for eighth in her first Olympics. Korda finished tied for 22nd, and the third U.S. player in the field, Lilia Vu (5 over), closed with rounds of 76 and 74 to finish tied for 36th.

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PARIS − After the Paris Olympics conclude Sunday, the Paralympics will run Aug. 28 to Sept. 8, then the squash racket, lacrosse stick and cricket ball − all sporting additions to the 2028 Games − will be in Los Angeles’ court.

Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass and and LA28 Olympic Games chair Casey Wasserman, who are in Paris as part of a U.S. presidential delegation to the Olympics that was led by First Lady Jill Biden, provided a few details Saturday to reporters about what sports fans − and Angelenos − can expect to see four years from now.

‘We don’t have an Eiffel Tower. We do have a Hollywood sign,’ said Wasserman. He said that while the Paris Games have been ‘authentically French’ the 2028 Games will be ‘authentically Los Angeles.’

Wasserman said that more details about what is being planned for LA28 will be revealed during Sunday’s closing ceremony. But he said that Los Angeles is ‘one of three or four great cities around the world that drive culture,’ including food, fashion, music and entertainment and the Games would reflect that.

Here’s some of the issues that could define the Los Angeles Olympics.

2024 Olympic medals: Who is leading the medal count? Follow along as we track the medals for every sport.

Most Games have a legacy: What will LA’s strive for?

Wasserman said most Games ‘wait until they are over before delivering a legacy.’ He said the city of Los Angeles and the International Olympic Committee are already investing $160 million in a youth sports program to enable any child in Los Angeles to participate for $5. Wasserman described it as the ‘largest single investment in youth sports in the history of America in one city.’ A zip code, he said, will ‘no longer be a barrier to entry’ to youth sports.

Bass said ‘the vision is to have a Games that lifts up all the city.’

Los Angeles, the Olympics and the homelessness issue

Olympic organizers in Paris have come under fire for forcibly moving asylum seekers, the homeless and other vulnerable populations out of central Paris to make way for tourists and various Olympic developments. Los Angeles has one of the worst homeless problems in the U.S., with more than 75,000 people experiencing some form of homelessness, according to the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority.

Bass said the city has been working with all levels of government and the private sector to address the issue. ‘We are going to get people housed. That’s what we’ve been doing and what we’ll continue to do,’ she said. However, Bass also appeared to suggest that homeless people in LA, like in Paris, could be physically moved out of the city.

‘Los Angeles County has 88 cities, and across all of the cities, we’re working together,’ she said.

‘We will get people housed. We will get them off the street.’

How will organizers keep Los Angeles safe

Wasserman said that in January Los Angeles was granted a ‘national security exemption designation,’ meaning the U.S. federal government is ‘activated and engaged’ to help secure and deliver the Games.

He said this exemption was given three years earlier than is typical of such exemptions, giving extra lead time.

He said LA28’s ‘mantra’ is that ‘we need to be the safest place but also the greatest experience as well. We are not going to sacrifice one for the other.’ He said that the U.S. delegation in Paris has been observing and scrutinizing the security operation, which he described as impressive, as well as previous ones at other Games.

He cited as an example the London Games in 2012, when organizers undertook security dry runs by ‘enacting’ or practicing on large-scale sporting events such as the Wimbledon Tennis championships. ‘We can take a Dodger game on a Thursday night in 2027 and tell people we’re going to ‘enact’ for security today,’ he said.

Wasserman said that because Los Angeles has a lot of sports stadiums already it can do such enactments with relative ease. ‘Not every city has the opportunity to do that,’ he said.

There will be a Games. There’s won’t be any cars to get there

The LA28 organizing committee is targeting a no-car Games, a big ambition for a city known for its traffic.

Plans to build new rail lines that would crisscross the city were abandoned because of the expense.

‘The no-car Games means you will need to take public transportation to get to all of the venues,’ Bass said Saturday. She said the city is currently ‘building up aspects of our public transportation system. But that’s not going to be enough. We’re going to need over 3,000 buses that we will borrow from all around the country.’

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PARIS — In the parlance of the NCAA, the term ‘Olympic Sports’ carries a dismissive connotation.

These are the sports that don’t make money.

At any major university, the list of non-revenue sports programs is a lot longer than the revenue sports. Dig into the numbers for most NCAA Division I athletics departments, especially in major conferences, and they’ll typically look like this: Football pays for everything. Men’s basketball might pay for itself. That’s about it.

Such reality reflects how lopsided the rooting interest tends to be from alumni, boosters and the general public. Most of the time, Americans don’t pay much mind to the ‘Olympic Sports.’

Until, that is, those sports actually are Olympic sports.

2024 Olympic medals: Who is leading the medal count? Follow along as we track the medals for every sport.

For about two weeks every four years, Americans tend to care an awful lot about swimming and diving and gymnastics and track and field and volleyball and rowing and, really, any U.S. athlete who is poised to add to our medal total.

That makes this special. It’s a moment to celebrate and notice those who don’t usually get attention. All the American families in Paris who made the trip for these Olympics, as well as the many youngsters watching at home, they’ve been exposed to something rare and unique. They’ve been enthralled by sports they wouldn’t normally watch and endeared to the pride of rooting for a nation and a flag, rather than a pro or college team.

That creates impactful memories and examples, carrying beyond one chosen sport.

‘Something that I watched as a kid was swimming and gymnastics,’ said Team USA’s Nelly Korda, the world’s No. 1 women’s golfer and an Olympic gold medalist in Tokyo. ‘… As a kid, I watched so many athletes and all their raw emotions on that podium when their flag goes up and the national anthem. And when I finally got to do it myself, there was a massive rush of emotions. I had a couple tears roll down my face.’

Korda didn’t play college golf. She turned pro at 18. But her two USA teammates this week at Le Golf National are Lilia Vu, who was an All-American at UCLA, and 21-year-old rising star Rose Zhang, who won the 2022 and 2023 NCAA individual championships at Stanford.

The USA TODAY app gets you to the heart of the news — fast. Download for award-winning coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, the eNewspaper and more.

There are so many other examples at these Paris Games of athletes from ‘Olympic sports’ in American colleges. So many great stories.

Stories like Team USA’s Lauren Scruggs, 21, who won a gold and a silver in fencing at these Olympics, becoming the first Black American woman to medal individually in the sport. Scruggs won a national championship as a part of the fencing team at Harvard.

‘Fencing is largely, certainly has been, a non-Black sport,’ she told reporters at these Olympics, ‘so I hope to inspire young Black girls to get into fencing and to think that they can have a place in the sport.’

According to the NCAA, more than 1,200 current, former or future athletes were down to compete in these Olympics for 125 countries, representing 251 universities. Of those, only 385 athletes were on Team USA. College programs are a global feeder system for the Olympics.

That’s what is at stake as NCAA athletics enters a phase in which no one seems to know what happens next.

A massive problem on the horizon: Most of the ‘Olympic Sports’ programs are on the wrong side of the economics, and belts are going to have to get tighter on many campuses.

In addition to conference realignment that disregards geography, there has been the emergence of NIL compensation and no-strings transfers. It’s all combining to make college sports much more expensive for schools.

Big-time athletics departments have money, of course. But they’ll need more and more to keep sustaining competitive programs and travel them all over the continent for conference play.

When it’s football and basketball? Sure, no problem.

But other sports? We’ll see. It’s easy to fear the direction this is headed.

‘This is unique what we provide in the NCAA. It’s been said a lot: It’s the envy of the world,’ said USA men’s volleyball coach John Speraw, who also coaches the program at UCLA. ‘ … I think there’s a lot of questions about this right now. I think there’s a lot of concern. I think the concern is justifiable.’

In January, California’s Loyola Marymount announced it would drop six of its 20 athletics programs at the end of the school year: men’s and women’s track and field, men’s and women’s rowing, women’s swimming and men’s cross country.

‘The NCAA landscape is changing rapidly,’ LMU athletics director Craig Pintens said in a news release announcing the cuts, ‘and schools of all sizes must adapt to provide the best student–athlete experience while becoming even more competitive.’

Fewer sports programs would mean fewer scholarships. Fewer scholarships would mean fewer athletes who are being trained by fewer quality coaches and with less resources and competition. And fewer athletes would ultimately impact the Olympics, providing less opportunity for those out there watching them to aspire to the same greatness in a sport that isn’t being played at his or her high school.

A lot of budding dreams are in the hands of the colleges’ ability to navigate this period?

Gee, what could go wrong?

In a time where you can’t count on anything from the NCAA, count on this: The leadership of member institutions and conferences is going to do what’s best for them and not anyone’s Olympic aspirations. This is about self-interest and the bottom line. That’s why the volleyball team at Zhang’s Stanford will log more frequent flier miles from the Bay Area this fall than a business traveler while playing in the ‘Atlantic Coast’ Conference.

How long will athletics departments be willing to send all sports programs back and forth across the country like that? (Katie Ledecky, I’ll remind you, was a swimmer at Stanford.)

If there’s less money to go around, which major college sports teams are going to feel the sting?

Hint: It won’t be the ones feeding the NFL.

It’ll more likely be the ones feeding all these Olympians and the dreams of those who’d be next.

Reach Gentry Estes at gestes@gannett.com and on the X platform (formerly known as Twitter) @Gentry_Estes.

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PARIS — A’ja Wilson feeds off greed. 

The best women’s basketball player in the world, the athlete widely considered at the top of her game because of her ability to dominate both ends of the floor, Wilson is on a quest to cement her Olympic legacy Sunday when the U.S. women go for their eighth consecutive gold medal. It would be her second in a row.

Earlier in the Paris Olympics, when Wilson was asked what was left on her bucket list. The MVP favorite this WNBA season – it would be her third in five years – Wilson already has two WNBA championships, two WNBA defensive player of the year awards, an NCAA title and college player of the year trophy and a statute of her likeness outside her college arena in Columbia, South Carolina. 

What else could she possibly want to do? 

The greed comment was Wilson’s way of saying there is no limit on what she thinks she can accomplish in basketball. 

2024 Olympic medals: Who is leading the medal count? Follow along as we track the medals for every sport.

Before Paris, Wilson told USA TODAY Sports she takes a special pride in excelling on the world stage. 

Shining for Team USA, Wilson said ‘makes me happy because anybody can go and be top dog on a team and be the No. 1 option. But can you go do that on a team where you’re full of No. 1 options?’

Wilson became a star for Team USA at the 2022 World Cup in Sydney, Australia, where she won MVP honors after leading the team in points (17.2) and rebounds (7.5). That tournament, on the heels of the Las Vegas Aces’ first WNBA title, was when Wilson realized how good she could be on the world stage, too. 

‘That was a great test for me,’ she said. ‘Anyone can be great at one thing, but can you be great in different spaces?’ 

Just 28 − she celebrated her birthday at the Games − Wilson is only now entering her prime. Given the evolving sports science that’s helping athletes compete into their 40s, coupled with the fact that Wilson has never gone overseas in the winter which has lessened the wear and tear on her body, it’s intriguing to think how long she could play at a high level.

In Paris, Wilson has averaged a team-leading 18.2 points, 9.6 rebounds and 2.4 blocks in the Americans’ five wins. The tandem of her and New York Liberty forward Breanna Stewart (18.0 points and 1.6 blocks), a two-time MVP herself, has proved to be lethal. 

Six-time Olympian Diana Taurasi has called them ‘the best two players in the world.’ Coach Cheryl Reeve said she’s regularly ‘wowed’ by them. And they’ve enjoyed continuing to build chemistry with each other, evidenced by the number of times they’re helping each other score. One assisting the other has become a common occurrence this tournament, often grabbing a rebound. 

‘We like to give each other space to work,’ Stewart said, ‘whether it’s in transition or high-low to each other, and it’s the same defensively.” 

Wilson thinks a lot about how her game can continue to evolve, specifically as she adds more perimeter skills, including defensively. 

‘I want to be able to guard every position, one through five, really well,’ Wilson said. ‘Right now I feel like I’ve got four and five somewhat down pat. But on the defensive side, I never want teams to feel like they can put me in certain actions because I’m a liability. I really want to be able to say, I can guard one through five and good luck getting past me.’ 

Bottom line, Wilson might have an impressive résumé already, but she wants more.

Like she said, she’s greedy. 

Email Lindsay Schnell at lschnell@usatoday.com and follow her on social media @Lindsay_Schnell.

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VAIRES-SUR-MARNE, France – Nevin Harrison came one agonizing 100th of a second away from winning her second gold medal in the women’s 200-meter canoe sprint Sunday, but in some ways the Paris Olympics experience was more fulfilling than her last.

‘I think this one was even more special because I got to go hug my family right after,’ Harrison said. ‘I wouldn’t trade that for the world. So I definitely got yelled at by security just now cause I went through the gate, but giving my mom, my dad, my boyfriend, all them hugs was so worth it. I think I would take this Olympics a million times over the last one because I was able to share it with the people that I love.’

Harrison took silver in the most tightly-contested 200-meter sprint in Olympic history, finishing in 44.13 seconds but losing to Canada’s Katie Vincent (44.12) in a photo finish.

Both racers shattered the previous world record of 44.5 seconds set by Canada’s Laurence Vincent-LaPointe in 2018.

2024 Olympic medals: Who is leading the medal count? Follow along as we track the medals for every sport.

Yarisleidis Cirilo Duboys, the first Cuban to reach an Olympic final in canoeing, took bronze in 44.36 seconds.

‘Going, I think I heard 44.1 is unbelievable and unheard of, and I knew that I could go that fast and I’m sure she did, too,’ Harrison said. ‘So finally putting those times down and breaking that world record that happened so long ago, definitely I’m sure felt good for her and I’m incredibly happy for her. That’s got to be the best accomplishment ever. But I’m also proud of myself. I put that time down, too, and hers might have been a hundredth of a second faster, but it’s still a world record in my heart.’

Beyond Saturday’s race, Harrison said she was proud of how she navigated a difficult road to get back to the Olympics after winning gold as an 18-year-old in Tokyo, when spectators were largely absent from the games because of COVID.

She battled back injuries and mental strain in recent years, and last week tore ligaments in her neck while training that hurt so bad she said she was in tears after a practice run on Tuesday.

On Saturday, Harrison wore a lidocaine patch on her neck to numb the pain. She said she plans to get imaging when she returns to the U.S. to determine the extent of the injury.

‘I think a year ago I didn’t really know if I was going to be able to get here at all, so I think being here in the first place was a blessing in and of itself and any medal that I would bring home would be even just a cherry on top, really,’ she said. ‘You always wonder, what if I didn’t hurt myself last week? What would I have been able to do? But ultimately you can’t change what’s happened and you really just have to take it day by day and that’s what I’ve done and I couldn’t be more proud.’

Vincent, who took a bronze earlier in the games as part of Canada’s 500-meter canoe doubles team, called Saturday’s race ‘one of the most incredible C1 (canoe single) finals that has probably ever happened for our sport.’

Harrison acknowledged she was ‘a little disappointed’ with her finish, but said she won’t spend too much time obsessing over what she could have done different.

‘It is less than a blink of an eye for sure, but that’s what racing sports are,’ she said. ‘That’s what sprints are. It’s always going to be by measures that you can’t even see. And is it fair? Not always, but it is what it is. And I think ultimately we can’t really fault ourselves for that. We all went out there and gave it one hell of a go, and I’m proud of everyone that lined up.’

Contact Dave Birkett at dbirkett@freepress.com. Follow him on X and Instagram at @davebirkett.

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On the day he turned 57 years old, Deion Sanders apparently had some scores to settle about the past.

One was with the media company CBS, though it’s not clear what his beef is with them.

To top it off, the Colorado football coach also got personal with a writer for the Denver Post.

He made these remarks at a preseason news conference Friday in Boulder. It was his birthday. And his daughter just gave birth to a baby boy. But Sanders had reason to quibble and gloat a bit.

What is Deion Sanders’ issue with CBS?

When a local reporter from a CBS television affiliate in Denver asked a question, “Coach Prime” shot him down.

“CBS, I’m not doing nothing with CBS. Next question,” said Sanders, who turned 57 Friday. “It ain’t got nothing to do with you. This is above that. It ain’t got nothing to do with you. I’ve got love for you. I appreciate you. I respect you.  It ain’t got nothing to do with you. They know what they did.”

“I’m here in Denver, not national,” the reporter said.

“You are who you are,” Sanders said. “CBS is CBS.”

Sanders then told the reporter he respects him but has an issue with the larger CBS organization.

“I got love for you, but what they did was foul,” Sanders said.

It’s not clear why Sanders has an issue with CBS. Was it because CBS Sports recently ranked him as the second-worst coach in the Big 12 Conference?

Or was he mixing up CBS with another news media outlet that published a story he disputed?

A university spokesman said he didn’t know what Sanders’ issue with CBS is. The Denver CBS affiliate and CBS Sports also didn’t immediately return messages seeking comment.

But CBS otherwise has been good to Sanders. He appeared on “60 Minutes” twice in recent years, including last year at Colorado. He appeared on CBS Mornings in March to promote his new book. Last season, CBS Colorado also hosted one of his weekly coach’s shows.

What is Deion Sanders’ issue with Pitt?

Last year, Pittsburgh coach Pat Narduzzi criticized how Sanders overhauled his roster. Dozens of players from Colorado’s previous team left the program after Sanders said he was bringing in his own “luggage.” Some perceived Sanders to be ‘cutting’ players like he was running an NFL team, though he has noted many left voluntarily.

“We’ll see how it works out but that, to me, looks bad on college football coaches across the country,” Narduzzi told 247Sports last year. “The reflection is on one guy right now but when you look at it overall — those kids that have moms and dads and brothers and sisters and goals in life.’

This year, Sanders then took in two transfer players from Pittsburgh – defensive linemen Dayon Hayes and Samuel Okunlola. Sanders made sure to let everybody know where they came from.

“First of all I want to digress a bit and thank the head coach of Pittsburgh for really preparing those young men for us,” Sanders said. “He did a great job. I love those two young men. They’re really great players and they’re gonna be pros… Thank you Pittsburgh. I appreciate everything. God bless you.”

Sanders could have been expressing genuine gratitude to Pitt. But Narduzzi has had his own issues with players leaving, and Sanders’ comments could be interpreted as making Pitt seem like a farm team for Colorado.

Another beef with Deion Sanders

When a columnist for the Denver Post wished Sanders a happy summer, Sanders also got personal.

“You don’t like us, man,” Sanders said. “Why do you do this to yourself?”

“C’mon,” said the columnist, Sean Keeler.

Keeler sometimes has written critical commentaries about Sanders and his program.

Sanders hasn’t liked it, apparently.

“Why do you – you always on the attack,” Sanders said. “What did we do?”

Sanders then asked him, “What happened to get you like this?”

“That’s a good question,” Keeler replied.

“No, I’m serious, because I want to help, because it’s not normal,” Sanders said.

“We can talk about that,” Keeler said.

Keeler tried to steer the conversation away from him and back to football – to no avail.

“Can I ask you a football question, seriously?” Keeler asked.

“No,” Sanders said. “We can talk about that when we talk about that  I talk about that with you. “

Colorado finished 4-8 in Sanders’ first season in Boulder last year, improving a program that finished with a 1-11 record the year before. His second season at Colorado begins Aug. 29 at home against North Dakota State.

Follow reporter Brent Schrotenboer @Schrotenboer. E-mail: bschrotenb@usatoday.com

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The Little League World Series, the worldwide baseball tournament for 12-year-old athletes, is about to begin in Williamsport, Pennsylvania.

Players from all sections of the United States and also from several other countries will compete for the 2024 Little League Baseball World Series (LLBWS) title from Aug. 14-25.

Teams from the United States Regions have won the last five Little League World Series titles while the last international champion was Japan in 2017.

Here’s everything to know about the Little League World Series teams, schedule, scores and bracket.

Where to watch the 2024 Little League World Series?

The best place is visiting Williamsport and South Williamsport, Pennsylvania during the tournament to watch the games live at Lamade Stadium and Volunteer Stadium. If you can’t make the trip, then you can watch the games on the ESPN family of networks (ESPN, ESPN2, ABC), stream the games on ESPN+ and on the ESPN App.  

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2024 Little League World Series Regionals

The 10 U.S. regions are Great Lakes, Metro, Mid-Atlantic, Midwest, Mountain Region, New England, Northwest, Southeast, Southwest and West. The 10 International regions are Asia-Pacific, Australia, Canada, Caribbean, Cuba, Europe-Africa, Japan, Latin America, Mexico and Puerto Rico.

The 2024 U.S. Regional Champions

Great Lakes – Hinsdale Little League – Hinsdale, Illinois

Metro – South Shore Little League – Staten Island, New York

Mid-Atlantic – Council Rock Newtown Little League – Newtown, Pennsylvania

Midwest – Sioux Falls Little League – Sioux Falls, South Dakota

Mountain – Paseo Verde Little League – Henderson, Nevada

New England – Salem Little League – Salem, New Hampshire

Northwest – South Hill Little League – Puyallup, Washington

Southeast – Lake Mary Little League – Lake Mary, Florida

Southwest – Boerne Little League – Boerne, Texas

West – Central East Maui Little League – Wailuku, Hawaii

The 2024 International Regional Champions

Asia-Pacific – Kuei-Shan Little League – Taoyuan City, Chinese Taipei

Australia – Hills Little League – Sydney, New South Wales

Canada – Whalley Little League – Surrey, British Columbia

Caribbean – Aruba Center Little League – Santa Cruz, Aruba

Cuba – Santa Clara Little League – Villa Clara, Cuba

Europe-Africa – South Czech Republic Little League – Brno, Czech Republic

Japan – Johoku Little League – Tokyo, Japan

Latin America – Cardenales Little League – Barquisimeto, Venezuela

Mexico – Matamoros Little League – Tamaulipas, Mexico

Puerto Rico – Radames Lopez Little League – Guayama, Puerto Rico

2024 Little League World Series Brackets

The LLBWS has two brackets, one for the 10 United States regional champions, and one for the 10 International Regional champions.

2024 MLB Little League Classic

According to Little League, the seventh annual MLB Little League Classic will feature Major League Baseball clubs playing at Historic Bowman Field in Williamsport on Sunday, Aug. 18 in front of Little League Baseball World Series players and their families.

Who: New York Yankees and Detroit Tigers

When: Sunday, Aug 18, 2024

Time: 7 p.m. ET

TV: ESPN

2024 Little League World Series TV Schedule

All game times are ET

Wednesday, Aug. 14

Game 1 International: Caribbean vs. Mexico, 1 p.m. ESPN

Game 2 United States: New England vs. West, 3 p.m. ESPN

Game 3 International: Asia-Pacific vs. Canada, 5 p.m. ESPN

Game 4 United States: Southeast vs. Midwest, 7 p.m. ESPN

Thursday, Aug. 15

Game 5 International: Japan vs. Puerto Rico, 1 p.m. ESPN

Game 6 United States: Metro vs. Mountain, 3 p.m. ESPN

Game 7 International: Cuba vs. Europe-Africa, 5 p.m. ESPN

Game 8 United States: Southwest vs. Mid-Atlantic, 7 p.m. ESPN

Friday, Aug. 16

Game 9 International: Winner of Game 1 vs. Latin America, 1 p.m. ESPN

Game 10 United States: Winner of Game 2 vs. Great Lakes, 3 p.m. ESPN

Game 11 International: Winner of Game 3 vs. Australia, 5 p.m. ESPN

Game 12 United States: Winner of Game 4 vs. Northwest, 7 p.m. ESPN

Saturday, Aug. 17

Game 13 International: Loser of Game 3 vs Loser of Game 5, 1 p.m. ESPN

Game 14 United States: Loser of Game 4 vs. Loser of Game 6, 3 p.m. ESPN

Game 15 International: Loser of Game 1 vs. Loser of Game 7, 5 p.m. ESPN

Game 16 United States: Loser of Game 2 vs. Loser of Game 8, 7 p.m. ESPN2

Sunday, Aug. 18

Game 17 United States: Loser of Game 10 vs. Winner of Game 14, 9 a.m. ESPN

Game 18 International: Loser of Game 9 vs. Winner of Game 13, 11 a.m. ESPN

Game 19 United States: Loser of Game 12 vs. Winner of Game 16, 1 p.m. ABC

Game 20 International: Loser of Game 11 vs. Winner of Game 15, 2 p.m. ESPN

Monday, Aug. 19

Game 21 International: Winner of Game 5 vs. Winner of Game 9, 1 p.m. ESPN

Game 22 United States: Winner of Game 6 vs. Winner of Game 10, 3 p.m. ESPN

Game 23 International: Winner of Game 7 vs. Winner of Game 11, 5 p.m. ESPN

Game 24 United States: Winner of Game 8 vs Winner of Game 12, 7 p.m. ESPN

Tuesday, Aug. 20

Game 25 International: Winner of Game 20 vs Loser of Game 21, 1 p.m. ESPN

Game 26 United States: Winner of Game 19 vs Loser of Game 22, 3 p.m. ESPN

Game 27 International: Winner of Game 18 vs Loser of Game 23, 5 p.m. ESPN

Game 28 United States: Winner of Game 17 vs Loser of Game 24, 7 p.m. ESPN

Wednesday, August 21

Game 29 International: Winner of Game 21 vs Winner of Game 23, 1 p.m. ESPN

Game 30 United States: Winner of Game 22 vs Winner of Game 24, 3 p.m. ESPN

Game 31 International: Winner of Game 25 vs Winner of Game 27, 5 p.m. ESPN

Game 32 United States: Winner of Game 26 vs Winner of Game 28, 7 p.m. ESPN

Thursday, August 22

Game 33 International: Loser of Game 29 vs Winner of Game 31, 3 p.m. ESPN

Game 34 United States: Loser of Game 30 vs Winner of Game 32, 7 p.m. ESPN

Saturday, August 24

International Championship Game

Game 35 International: Winner of Game 29 vs Winner of Game 33, 12:30 p.m. ABC

United States Championship Game

Game 36 United States: Winner of Game 30 vs Winner of Game 34, 3:30 p.m. ABC

Sunday, August 25

Little League World Series Third Place

Game 37: Loser of Game 35 vs Loser of Game 36, 10 a.m. ESPN2

Little League World Series Championship

Game 38: Winner of Game 35 vs Winner of Game 36, 3 p.m. ABC

Previous Little League World Series champions: year-by-year

2023 – El Segundo (California)

2022 – Honolulu (Hawaii)

2021 – Taylor North (Michigan)

2020 – *No event due to COVID-19*

2019 – Eastbank (Louisiana)

2018 – Honolulu (Hawaii)

2017 – Tokyo Kitasuna (Japan)

2016 – Maine-Endwell (New York)

2015 – Tokyo-Kitasuna (Japan)

2014 – Seoul (South Korea)

2013 – Musashi-Fuchu (Japan)

2012 – Tokyo-Kitasuna (Japan)

2011 – Huntington Beach (California)

2010 – Edogawa Minami (Japan)

2009 – Park View (California)

2008 – Waipio (Hawaii)

2007 – Warner Robins (Georgia)

2006 – Northern (Georgia)

2005 – West Oahu (Hawaii)

2004 – Pabao (Curacao)

2003 – Musashi-Fuchu (Japan)

2002 – Valley Sports (Kentucky)

2001 – The Kitasuna (Japan)

2000 – The Sierra Maestra (Venezuela)

Sherlon Christie is a social media editor for USA TODAY Sports. You can reach him at schristie@usatoday.com and on X and Instagram at @sherlonchristie

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The Los Angeles Dodgers announced Friday that they plan to have Mookie Betts play right field when he returns from the injured list on Monday.

Betts has spent most of this season at shortstop and second base, and Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said Tuesday that the 2018 American League Most Valuable Player would continue to be in the infield once he heals from a broken left hand.

But all that changed Friday.

‘I know that I said we want to start with Mookie out there at short, to then give the potential to pivot out there,’ Roberts said. ‘I had a good conversation with him last night. And, I think right now – and again, things always seem to change – but right now, we’re gonna kick Mookie out to right field.

‘It’s something that … we all feel that’s what’s best for our ballclub now, going forward. And could it change? Potentially. But I think that we all feel comfortable that Mookie needs to get acclimated back out there to right field and giving (Miguel Rojas) the opportunity to play short, within reason, as far as giving him certain off-days to keep him fresh. That’s kind of where we’re at right now.’

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Before this season, Betts spent the majority of the previous eight seasons in right field, earning six gold gloves at the position. But Gavin Lux struggled at shortstop in spring training and the Dodgers opted to move Betts to short, a position he hadn’t played regularly since high school.

Betts was batting .304 with 10 homers and 40 RBI in 72 games before being hit by a pitch June 16 against the Kansas City Royals.

When he returns, Betts will not be back in his familiar leadoff role. The Dodgers said Shohei Ohtani will continue to bat first, where the slugger was hitting .307 with 15 homers, 35 RBI and 33 runs (entering Friday’s game) since Betts suffered his injury. Betts is slated to bat second, followed by Freddie Freeman.

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Michigan football will have a very familiar face back on the sidelines at Michigan Stadium as the honorary captain for the 2024 season opener against Fresno State on Aug. 31.

Former coach Jim Harbaugh accepted an invitation as the team’s honorary captain Week 1, athletic director Warde Manuel said in an interview on the ‘1 star recruits’ podcast when explaining his new relationship with Harbaugh.

‘I’m looking forward to seeing him in September,’ Manuel said in the wide-ranging interview about his job running Michigan’s athletic department. ‘He’s going to be an honorary captain for our first game and I look forward to having him back in Ann Arbor for that game.’

The NCAA hit Harbaugh this week with a four-year show-cause penalty and one-year coaching ban should he return to college coaching that stems from a Level I violation for failing to cooperate with an NCAA investigation into recruiting violations during the COVID-19 dead period.

Harbaugh left Michigan to become the head coach of the NFL’s Los Angeles Chargers to pursue a lifelong goal of winning a Super Bowl, two weeks after leading the Wolverines to the national championship. No specific plans have been announced of how Michigan will honor the 2023 national champions in Week 1 (7:30 p.m., NBC), but Harbaugh and unspecified former players will be in attendance.

‘I don’t have a list of former players coming back yet,’ Michigan spokesperson Dave Ablauf told the Free Press on Friday. ‘We won’t get a list until they find out their NFL practice schedule and confirm they are off … but many of the former players have indicated they are planning to come back. Coach Harbaugh was invited and accepted.” 

Michigan kicks off its national title defense against Fresno State, followed by four more home games before the first road game at Washington – the title game rematch – at the beginning of October. The homestand to start the season includes a matchup with Texas, ranked No. 4 in the US LBM Coaches Poll, and a trophy game against Minnesota.

Free Press writer Tony Garcia contributed to this story.

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