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PARIS − Slovakia swimmer Tamara Potocka was under medical assessment after collapsing following her women’s 200-meter individual medley heat at the Paris Olympics on Friday, a venue official said.

Medical staff rushed to assist Potocka and carried her away from the pool-side on a stretcher with an oxygen mask on her face after she finished seventh in the third heat of the event in the morning session at La Defense Arena.

The venue’s media manager confirmed Potocka was conscious and under medical assessment.

The 21-year-old’s time of two minutes 14.20 seconds ruled her out of advancing to the semi-finals and was 4.3 seconds slower than the fastest swimmer, Canada’s gold medal hope Summer McIntosh.

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

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Katie Ledecky will be looking for an unprecedented fourth consecutive gold medal in the 800-meter freestyle when she competes in her final event at the 2024 Paris Olympics.

Ledecky first won gold as a 15-year-old at the 2012 London Games. She then set a world record in the event while repeating in Rio in 2016. Ledecky made it three in a row three years ago in Tokyo, setting the stage for her to do something no other female Olympic swimmer has ever accomplished. (Only Michael Phelps, in the 200-meter individual medley, has ever won the same event four consecutive times.)

In addition, one more gold medal for Ledecky would be her ninth, breaking a tie with Jenny Thompson and giving her the most by any American woman in Olympic history.

How did Katie Ledecky do in her 800 freestyle heat?

Ledecky cruised to a comfortable victory in her qualifying heat, one which included fellow American Paige Madden and 400 free gold medalist Ariarne Titmus of Australia.

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

Ledecky owns the fastest 16 times in history in this event, though this (8:16:62) was not one of them.

When does Katie Ledecky swim in 800 freestyle final?

Katie Ledecky will swim her final event of the 2024 Paris Olympics when she competes in the 800-meter freestyle final. The event is scheduled to start at 3:09 p.m. ET (9:09 p.m. in Paris) on Saturday, August 3.

Katie Ledecky 800 freestyle Olympic results

2012 London: Gold
2016 Rio de Janeiro: Gold (world record)
2020 Tokyo: Gold
2024 Paris: Final on Saturday, Aug. 3

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A pair of Black female activists, who have met with Vice President Harris several times and previously vowed to get ‘real serious’ about helping her become the next president, could alienate some of the ‘White women for Kamala’ supporters with their past rhetoric as they mobilize ahead of November’s election.

Cora Masters Barry, an appointee of Democrat D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser and longtime civil rights activist, and Melanie Campbell, who leads the National Coalition on Black Civic Participation, have visited the White House more than 50 times combined during the Biden administration, including nearly a dozen visits with Harris or her staff, a Fox News Digital review found.

Weeks before President Biden and Harris were sworn into office in 2021, Barry and Campbell participated in a public Zoom call in which they made controversial statements about Trump supporters and attacked White voters, specifically White women, which could cause some internal clashes as different coalitions mobilize to try to get Harris into the White House.

Approximately 164,000 White women hopped on a Zoom call last week, which was organized by Moms Demand Action founder Shannon Watts and other female celebrities. The call, titled ‘White Women: Answer the Call,’ reportedly raised millions of dollars for Harris’ campaign and could be a major fundraising force over the next few months. 

However, the unearthed comments from the two activists could cause some internal tension for the Harris campaign as they look to mobilize different voting blocs and have called for ‘Unity.’

‘If you claim to stand for unity, you need to do more than just use the word,’ Harris recently said.

‘We have to change our strategy. We got to get our people. We have to get our – they got their people. They got all the trailer parks all covered,’ Barry said during the Zoom. ‘All them people up in West Virginia and the hills, they’re covered. They got them all the way there to Wall Street.’

‘[Trump] did that, and we’re sitting here talking about the White women. F— the white women– excuse me – forget the White women. They’re going to do what the White men tell them to do,’ Barry continued, eliciting laughter and clapping from Campbell.

‘What they tell themselves,’ Campbell interjected.

‘They be smiling in their faces, they want to stay in charge,’ Barry continued, with Campbell reacting affirmatively in the background. ‘I don’t care nothing about them, we got to do what we got to do.’

Barry went on to say that the Black community has to ‘get real serious about organizing to elect Kamala Harris as the next President of the United States’ and that she doesn’t ‘want no women’s parade.’

‘If they have another Women’s March – I’ll go over there and blow it up,’ Barry said.

Barry also attacked supporters of then-President Trump, comparing them to the Ku Klux Klan by saying, ‘I’m not saying everyone who voted for Trump is wearing a white sheet, but they got one in their closet, and it comes out when we start messing with the economic value or the balance of power.’

Barry went on to say at the time that, should Biden win the 2020 election, her group has ‘got to start organizing to make sure that the next president of the United States is a Black woman.’

‘And that’s not going to happen if we don’t reach all of our Black people, because they’re the ones who are going to put her in there,’ Barry added. ‘Those White folks ain’t going to put her in there.’

During the same Zoom call, Campbell was also critical of White women who have cast their votes for Trump, saying ‘race’ and ‘White privilege’ were driving factors and that she didn’t understand how they could support someone who ‘disrespects you as a woman.’

‘Am I surprised? No. Am I frustrated? Yeah – determined that we have to still find a way to get up and deal with it,’ Campbell said. ‘What I’m not interested in doing is what I did, Cora, in 2016 is have these fruitless conversations with my White girlfriends who want to tell me we need to sit down and have a conversation. No we don’t. You need to go talk to your sister. You need to go talk to your cousin.’

‘I have no interest in understanding why White folks do what they do. They do what they do because they doing what they do if I was them. They’re fighting to stay in charge and in control. That’s what they’re doing. I ain’t mad at them. What I am is mad at us,’ Barry added, referring to the Black community.

Near the end of the Zoom call, Barry said it is a ‘perfect time’ to mobilize Black voters and push their agenda ‘because there’s a lot of White guilt money out there.’

‘I’m gonna take it- put it in my community and radicalize my people so they can come for your job. I’m saying it’s time to act,’ she continued.

In addition to Barry’s comments about White women, Fox News Digital previously reported on Barry lavishly praising notorious antisemite Louis Farrakhan in 2022 at a private event honoring her late husband, former D.C. Mayor Marion Barry.

During Barry’s remarks at the private ceremony, she praised Farrakhan, who has espoused antisemitic rhetoric for decades, including calling Jews ‘wicked’ and comparing them to termites. Barry referred to Farrakhan as a ‘friend’ and ‘member of the family’ while also telling him ‘I love you more than words will ever say.’

‘Minister Farrakhan, we love you more than you love us. You just don’t know it,’ she added.

Farrakhan in turn praised Barry, saying, ‘Praise God for this woman. She is a treasure. A real treasure.’

A spokesperson for both Barry and Campbell defended the comment about White women, previously telling Fox News Digital that the comment was in reference to how White women are not as reliable Democrat voters and that the vice president was not part of the conversation.

Barry, Campbell and the Harris campaign did not respond to Fox News Digital’s requests for comment.

Fox News’ Houston Keene contributed to this report.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

The American health care system is broken. Conflicts of interest dominate the structure, killing any chance we have for a healthier nation. Patients pay more and stay sick. Politicians argue and nothing changes.

But this problem presents a unique opportunity for our fractured society: as ‘Fox and Friends Weekend’ co-host Rachel Campos-Duffy said last week, better health outcomes may be the most unifying issue of our time.

In 2019, to no great fanfare, the Trump administration made vital adjustments to set the stage for transforming today’s chronic disease system that keeps patients sick to a true health system that makes people well. 

Under the leadership of Seema Verma, then director of our nation’s Medicaid and Medicare systems, we developed crucial infrastructure to demonstrate the transformative potential of integrated health care systems. Simply put, four new Medicare billing codes were added to fund chronic care management and continuous remote disease monitoring.

With this, we set a course to address more than 75% of the nation’s $4 trillion in annual health care costs: chronic disease management. Before we could implement this simple bipartisan reform, the coronavirus pandemic seized the world. Priorities changed quickly.

These codes, and the work that went into establishing them, are still the foundation of fundamental reform. The next administration, Republican or Democrat, must follow through on that work to transform structural health care problems. This will cut costs while improving the health of our nation.

Our problems are driven by the conflict of interest between health care providers and insurers. Providers are incentivized to maximize patient visits and treatments; insurers strive to minimize payouts. This misalignment plagues our nation with fragmented care, higher costs and poor patient outcomes. 

Indeed, this conflict kills. 

To address this, we must integrate health care services with insurance functions under a unified model. Integrated and aligned, health care providers and insurers work together to improve patient health outcomes.

By also leveraging advanced technologies like artificial intelligence (AI), machine learning and ‘internet of things’ (IoT), we will create continuous and proactive engagement with patients, particularly those with chronic conditions. This model provides personalized care and early interventions, reducing the need for costly emergency treatments and hospitalizations.

The primary focus of this model is patient well-being and improved outcomes. AI monitoring helps predict health issues and enables timely interventions which prevent complications and greatly enhance patient outcomes. Importantly, effective chronic disease management also reduces overall costs to the health care system.

Continuous monitoring and data analytics allow for better risk assessment and management. Insurers can dynamically adjust premiums based on real-time health data, rewarding patients for healthy behaviors and adherence to treatment plans. This incentivizes patients to take better care of their health and reduces the financial risk for insurers by minimizing high-cost claims.

The integration also leads to significant cost savings by reducing administrative overhead and eliminating redundant processes. With a unified system, there is a seamless flow of information between patients, health care providers and insurers. This brings better resource utilization and operational efficiency while improving workflows that highlight prevention. 

The savings can be reinvested into patient care and technology advancements. This will further improve the system and our nation’s health. 

For health care providers already integrated, like University of Pittsburgh Medical Center and Kaiser Permanente, the model improves crucial metrics for success: more consistent patient engagement and better health outcomes. 

Providers will be able to prioritize their time to those who will benefit the most while doctors supervise AI-driven routine interactions. Meanwhile, much healthier patients will enjoy personalized care and lower insurance premiums.

Technology advancements are key to addressing ongoing health care structural problems. AI and IoT devices monitor patient health in real-time, detecting potential health issues early and facilitating timely interventions. For instance, AI can help assess and identify patients at high risk of developing chronic conditions, prompting preventive measures to avert serious health problems. 

By understanding and engaging patient behaviors, we can encourage adherence to treatment plans and healthy lifestyle choices. To reduce the frequency and severity of claims, chronic disease patients can be urged toward more healthy behavior – ‘no more sweets today’ texts can save lives.

The integrated model has far-reaching implications for both the health care and insurance sectors. It challenges the traditional silos and fosters a collaborative approach to health care delivery and insurance management. By aligning the goals of both sectors, the model ensures financial incentives are directed toward maintaining and improving patient health, not just managing illness.

This shift toward a proactive, patient-centered approach is particularly transformative for managing chronic diseases, which are major cost drivers in the health care system. With the continuous engagement and personalized care Director Verma envisioned in 2019, patients with chronic conditions can achieve better health outcomes. This saves money and lives.

The future of health care is clear and bipartisan: an integrated system focused on improved health outcomes. Building on the infrastructure we established in 2019, this model leverages advanced technologies and a unified approach to healthcare and insurance, promising sustainable and scalable improvements – and better care for all.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

The broad market and the group are big drivers for stock performance. Recently, the Nasdaq 100 ETF (QQQ) led the market lower with sizable declines over the last five weeks. Weakness in QQQ weighed on tech stocks and tech-related industry groups, such as semis, software and cybersecurity. The PerfChart below shows QQQ down 4.62% since July 1st, SPY down a fraction and the Russell 2000 ETF (IWM) up 7.67%.

QQQ is in the midst of a pullback within a long-term uptrend. Chartists looking for opportunities in tech stocks and tech-related groups should wait for an oversold condition in the Nasdaq 100, which we are doing at TrendInvestorPro. We can identify oversold conditions using price oscillators and breadth indicators. I prefer breadth indicators because they aggregate performance for the average stock within the index.

The chart below shows QQQ with the Nasdaq 100 %Above 50-day SMA indicator in the lower window. First and foremost, QQQ hit a new high in July and remains well above the rising 200-day SMA. Thus, the long-term trend is up. This means the current pullback is a correction within this bigger uptrend.

NDX %Above 20-day SMA is a breadth oscillator that becomes oversold with a move below 10% (green shading). This means more than 90% of Nasdaq 100 stocks are below their 20-day SMAs. This is an oversold extreme that can pave the way for a bounce or breakout. It is important to wait for some sort of upside catalyst because stocks can become oversold and remain oversold. The blue arrow-lines show when this indicator surges above 70% (after becoming oversold). This shows a big increase in upside participation and acts as a bullish signal.

NDX %Above 20-day SMA has yet to become oversold and this means the correction in QQQ and tech stocks could continue. We are monitoring Nasdaq 100 breadth using an indicator that aggregates signals in seven short-term breadth indicators. The last oversold reading was in mid April and it has yet to become oversold. Click here to learn more.

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Call Don Draper, Venu Sports may have a marketing problem

The Disney, Fox and Warner Bros. Discovery jointly-owned streaming service said Thursday it will launch this fall at $42.99 per month. That’s much more expensive than Netflix, Max, Peacock or any other major subscription streaming service. It’s a lot less than the $73-per-month YouTube TV or a standard cable bundle — but those offerings include a wide variety of entertainment content beyond sports.

Venu will give consumers access to a bundle of networks: ESPN, ESPN2, ESPNU, SECN, ACCN, ESPNEWS, ABC, Fox, FS1, FS2, BTN, TNT, TBS, and truTV. Subscribers will also get ESPN+. The plan is to debut in time for the football season. It doesn’t include CBS and NBC, two networks that have the rights to many sports, including college football and NFL games.

Venu’s theoretical user is someone willing to pay a hefty monthly subscription for a narrow segment of media — live sports, but not all live sports. The service is marketing itself as a product for so-called “cord nevers” — a set of younger consumers who haven’t wanted to pay for cable because it’s too expensive but have been yearning for access to ESPN and other live sports.

It’s entirely unclear this user base will materialize.

There are two major obstacles for Venu to succeed. First, the total addressable market of users who are OK with paying $43 per month for some sports but not OK with paying for cable may not be that high. Many non-cable subscribers are content to watch highlights on YouTube and their favorite influencers for commentary. According to a survey by Kantar, cited by YouTube at its 2024 upfront, 54% of people would rather watch creators break down a major live event than actually watch the event.

On the other end of the spectrum, NFL-crazed younger people will have to buy Peacock and Paramount+ — the streaming services attached to NBC and CBS — to get a full slate of NFL games. They could also get a digital antenna to pair with Venu, but antenna uptake among younger viewers may be a tad oxymoronic.

Other major sporting events — such as the ongoing Olympics — simply won’t be available on Venu, because Olympic broadcaster Comcast’s NBCUniversal isn’t a part of the service.

The second problem is potentially bigger: A product like Venu already exists — and it may already be a better deal than Venu.

For $60 per month, Echostar’s Sling TV offers the popular networks that come with Venu — ESPN, TNT, TBS, Fox and ABC — but it also includes NBC. Moreover, it also comes with CNN, Fox News, MSNBC, Bravo, USA, HLN, Discovery NFL Network, and a slew of other networks — 46 in all, to Venu’s 14. Plus, it comes with an introductory offer where consumers can pay just $30 for the first month.

As of the end of March, Sling TV had 1.92 million subscribers, and it’s not growing. It lost 135,000 customers in the first quarter, which was actually a narrower loss than the 234,000 subscribers it lost in the first quarter a year ago.

At the end of 2021, Sling TV had 2.5 million customers, down from the 2.7 million subscribers it topped out at in 2019.

The company blamed the existence of other streaming services for its decline last quarter.

“We continue to experience increased competition, including competition from other subscription video-on-demand and live-linear OTT service providers, many of which are providers of our content and offer football and other seasonal sports programming direct to subscribers on an a la carte basis,” Echostar said in a filing.

To sum up, Sling TV — a more robust offering than Venu for about $17 more per month — has been losing subscribers for five years and never got more than 2.7 million as its peak.

That’s quite the marketing challenge for Venu, which will need to convince consumers that it’s worth signing up for on the strength of branding and technology.

Or, it will hope that its $43 per month offer lasts long enough that it can take advantage of the $17 delta. The typical pattern for bundles of live networks is they start with an introductory offer only to raise prices. Venu hinted at this in its press release, telling consumers they could lock in the $43 per-month price for 12 months from time of sign-up — suggesting a price increase may be coming.

Venu wants to add more sports to the serve in time, but that will likely cause the price to increase, making the value proposition an even tougher sell for cord-nevers.

Further undercutting Venu, Disney is already planning an ESPN Flagship streaming service in the fall of 2025, which will include ESPN for a lower price than Venu.

Disney, Warner Bros. Discovery and Fox will argue that it’s going for maximum coverage here — kind of like the Apple iPad mini did in slotting into the tech company’s existing product line-up between its phones and larger tablets. Maybe there’s an audience for Venu, and if there is, the companies want to serve it. Fox CEO Lachlan Murdoch has already predicted the service can get 5 million subscribers in the next five years.

But even 5 million seems ambitious given Sling TV’s struggles. Getting there will require a lot of money spent on marketing.

And that effort may be so costly that it defeats the purpose.

Disclosure: CNBC parent NBCUniversal owns NBC Sports and NBC Olympics. NBC Olympics is the U.S. broadcast rights holder to all Summer and Winter Games through 2032. NBC Sports broadcasts NFL games.

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

WOODLAND PARK, N.J. — Kohl’s is thinking small to rev up its sales.

The retailer is opening Babies R Us shops in its existing stores across the country starting this week, and plans to have 200 by the end of September. The shops will carry a variety of baby merchandise that the company hasn’t offered before, including shampoo, strollers and car seats. Kohl’s previously sold only baby clothing.

With the move, the Wisconsin-based retailer aims to cater more to young families, whether they’re decorating their homes, getting ready for back-to-school or preparing for a new addition. Most of the retailer’s approximately 1,170 stores are in strip malls in the suburbs, a short drive for busy parents who are running errands or shopping for groceries.

Along with the baby category, Kohl’s is also bulking up its assortment of home decor, gifting and impulse items. CEO Tom Kingsbury estimated in late May that those expanded categories, including Babies R Us, are “a $2 billion-plus sales opportunity” in the coming years.

Yet U.S. demographics aren’t tipped in Kohl’s favor. Births in the U.S. totaled 3.59 million last year, according to provisional data from the U.S. National Center for Health Statistics. That’s the lowest number of births in more than 40 years.

On a store tour in New Jersey on Wednesday, Chief Merchandising Officer Nick Jones showed off the first Babies R Us shop. Customers who walk through the location can see and feel many pricier items, such as strollers, cribs, and high chairs, outside of the cardboard box. The shops include many prominent baby brands, including Hatch, Frida, Graco and Baby Bjorn.

Kohl’s will put Babies R Us shops next to its existing baby apparel. It is also adding related merchandise, such as baby clothing from Nike and maternity clothes from Motherhood.Courtesy Kohls

Over the past few weeks, online shoppers have also seen Babies R Us on Kohl’s website. Its website has twice as much merchandise as the approximately 800 to 1,000 items available in most shops, the company said. Kohl’s will also launch a baby registry in the fall.

Each shop will range in size, but will be set up next to the baby and kid’s clothing that’s currently in all stores. Jones said more merchandise is on the way for expecting families, too, including baby apparel from Nike. It is introducing maternity clothing from Motherhood, a direct-to-consumer brand, which will be exclusive to Kohl’s stores.

The retailer is rolling out Babies R Us shops at a time when it needs growth drivers. Kohl’s net sales totaled $16.6 billion in the most recent fiscal year, which ended in early February. That’s a nearly 14% drop from five years ago.

Kohl’s expects current full-year net sales to decline between 2% and 4%. It posted a surprise net loss of $27 million for the fiscal first quarter and lowered its full-year forecast in late May.

Kohl’s shares are down 24% this year, trailing the S&P 500′s nearly 16% gains during the same period.

Like other retailers, Kohl’s has contended with shoppers who are putting off discretionary purchases while spending more on everyday expenses like groceries and housing. Yet Kohl’s challenges go beyond that, according to Dana Telsey, CEO and chief research officer of Telsey Advisory Group. She said it needs to sharpen its merchandise to grab the attention of new and existing customers.

“There’s been so much competition from others out there,” she said. “A brand has to stand for something and matter.”

Inside of Kohl’s Babies R Us shops, customers can touch and feel some of the pricier items that may be on their shopping list or registry.

Kohl’s is betting on the baby category as innovative products and higher-end items like fancy strollers drive spending.

Baby gear sales totaled $7.5 billion for the 12-month period that ended in May, up 4% from the same time period in 2020, according to Circana, a market research firm that tracks the space. It includes a wide range of items like car seats, strollers, bottles, bassinets, high chairs, cribs and breast feeding systems.

Stephen Hinz, an industry advisor at Circana who tracks sales of baby products, said customers’ willingness to pay for premium baby gear has fueled spending.

He noted the U.S. Census Bureau has found that the median age of U.S. women giving birth is 30 years old.

“People are in a much different life stage at that point,” he said. “They’re older. They’re more established in their careers. They’re more likely to own a home. They have more disposable income. And those have greater influence on the things that they might choose to bring into those homes.”

Hinz said the market has remained stable, despite the lower birth rate, as parents spring for fancier items like natural wood cribs and car seats that rotate to make it easier to get a baby in and out. And families will stretch their budgets to support a child’s health and safety even during tougher economic times, he said.

Inside of Kohl’s Babies R Us shops, customers can touch and feel some of the pricier items that may be on their shopping list or registry.Courtesy Kohls

Plus, new parents have more retailers and brands to choose from and new ways of registering for baby items. Big-box chains Target and Walmart have expanded their baby departments. Macy’s launched its own baby registry in late April. And universal registries, such as Zola and Babylist, have gained popularity by allowing customers to choose items across retailers’ and brands’ websites.

In an interview with CNBC in March, Kingsbury said there’s market share up for grabs in the category. He referred to the bankruptcy and store closures of Bed Bath and Beyond, the parent of Buy Buy Baby.

And, he said, customers who shop at Babies R Us will also buy items in other departments.

Kohl’s is making a similar move to what it’s done with Sephora beauty shops, which it is opening in all of its stores. On earnings calls, Kohl’s leaders have said the shops are drawing younger and more diverse customers.

Jones said Kohl’s will decide whether to open Babies R Us in more stores after learning from the first 200 shops.

Kohl’s will put Babies R Us shops next to its existing baby apparel. It is also adding related merchandise, such as baby clothing from Nike and maternity clothes from Motherhood.

As it relaunches Babies R Us, Kohl’s will test whether the brand has remained relevant or grown stale.

The brands of Babies R Us and its former parent Toys R Us are now owned by WHP Global, a New York City-based brand management company. The firm has bought and tried to rebuild other brands including Bonobos, Rag & Bone and Isaac Mizrahi. Toys R Us shuttered its stores after filing for bankruptcy in 2017.

Kohl’s and WHP Global, which announced the deal in March, have not disclosed the financial terms of the agreement.

Along with the Kohl’s deal, WHP Holdings also struck an agreement with Macy’s, which has opened Toys R Us shops in many of its department stores.

Kohl’s move is risky since tastes have changed since the brand’s heyday in the ’80s and ’90s, said Natalie Gordon, founder and CEO of Babylist.

She said many retailers have fallen short on their customer experience with little chance to test products hands-on. And she recalled her frustrations with retailers when she got ready to have her first child about 13 years ago, which sparked the idea for Babylist.

“I felt infantilized by the brands that were out there,” she said. “Things were pink and blue with little cartoon characters. And I’m a woman having a baby. It really didn’t resonate at all.”

The latest version of Babies R Us at Kohl’s features the familiar brand font, but Kohl’s and WHP gave the brand a more contemporary look, said Christie Raymond, Kohl’s chief marketing officer.

“There’s a lot of credibility,” she said. “But we did need to modernize.”

The shops are decorated with sleek baby photos rather than pastels or cartoon mascots, such as Toys R Us’ Geoffrey the giraffe.

And Kohl’s will use a marketing tool that didn’t exist during Babies R Us’ peak: it plans to partner with influencers who can spread the word about the shops on Instagram and TikTok.

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

It’s been a season of streaks for the New York Yankees.

The team won its first five games of the year and resided in first place for 93 days of the first half.

Then came July, when the Bombers began the month dropping six of their first seven, and in the process fell behind the Baltimore Orioles in the American League East.

Like his team, Gold Glove shortstop Anthony Volpe has also had a roller coaster campaign.

The New Jersey native started hot (.382 average in first 15 games), went cold for a while, and has re-discovered his stroke lately, posting a .903 OPS in his last 13 games.

All things Yankees: Latest New York Yankees news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

“Through the good, the bad, the ugly, I’m very fortunate to have felt like I’ve learned a lot,” Volpe told USA TODAY Sports. “I made some adjustments and it’s helped me put myself in better positions.”

Now, the local kid and fan favorite is excited about the stretch run, hopefully ending with the club’s 28th title.

“That’s our goal,” said Volpe. “When you look into our clubhouse – you look to the left and the right, we got some really, really good players. I think we showed it and we are going to work to keep proving that we are a team capable of doing special things. That’s why we play for the New York Yankees.”

That enthusiasm is shared by one of the organization’s icons, Mariano Rivera, who recently told USA TODAY Sports he thinks the Yankees “have everything to be a contender for the World Series. My hope is that they do because they have the players.”

One of those talented players is free agent-to-be Juan Soto, who Volpe and his teammates are hoping will stay with the Yankees for the long term.

Asked if he and his teammates will be lobbying Soto, Volpe laughed and said, “Yeah, definitely. We’re going to get it all in and we’ll do our best pitch.”

While the future will be brighter with Soto signed up for the long term, the focus remains on chasing a title this season. That goal has recently gotten a huge jolt from the addition of Jazz Chisholm Jr., who was acquired from the Marlins before the deadline.

“I think Jazz just injected so much energy into the clubhouse,” said Volpe. “I think he could be one of the best third basemen in MLB.”

The Yankees now confront the final two months of the season with the same mission they seem to be on – winning it all.

“We’re working every day, we’re staying in the moment, and we’re trying to play every game like it’s our last,” said Volpe. “I think we have the utmost confidence.”

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

When it comes to the start of an NFL season, nearly six months after the completion and incomparable excitement of the Super Bowl – especially one that goes into overtime – it doesn’t get much more … underwhelming than the Pro Football Hall of Fame Game, the annual launch point of preseason.

Still, for all of its typical drawbacks, it is a reminder that football is (almost) back, the Chicago Bears and Houston Texans suiting up Thursday night in Canton, Ohio, to do this year’s honors – the Bears coming away with a 21-17 “victory” in a game that was called midway through the third quarter due to inclement weather.

Yet despite the fact it doesn’t count in the standings or mean much to anyone, aside from the platform it provides to bottom-of-the-roster players, there’s still enough to sift through here to find some material winners and losers:

WINNERS

New NFL kickoff rule

With a game lacking star power – at least active star power – perhaps witnessing the league’s new kickoff architecture held more anticipation than anything else ahead of Thursday’s kickoff. In a bid to put the play back into the game in a meaningful way – and in a safe manner – after touchbacks became overly commonplace in 2023, the NFL borrowed from the XFL, basically eliminating the collisions that occur with kicking team players sprinting down the field in favor of set-up and landing zones that create something more akin to a running play once the kickoff is fielded.

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

“Really, the bottom line was to try to simulate, to the extent possible, more of a scrimmage-type play to incentivize that return and hopefully reduce the injury rate as well,” said longtime league referee Walt Anderson, now NFL Media’s officiating and rules analyst.

There were no field-flipping runbacks Thursday, but there were seven aggregate returns averaging a modest 22.7 yards. There were also a pair of illegal formation flags thrown for players who moved before the ball was fielded. Stay tuned as teams and players continue to adjust here, but the potential for a consequential new play is patently obvious.

Brett Rypien and the backup quarterbacks

Texans QB1 C.J. Stroud and Bears rookie QB1 Caleb Williams predictably sat this one out. But their understudies were collectively sharp, combining to complete 34 of 47 passes for 382 yards, five TDs and nary a turnover in fewer than three full quarters of play. But Rypien, a journeyman hoping to stick with Chicago – Williams and second-year man Tyson Bagent appear to have the top two spots on the QB depth chart locked – had a heck of a rehearsal, whether for his current team or another one. Sure, it’s August football, but connecting on 11 of 15 precisely powered throws for 166 yards and three TDs will get you noticed.

Collin Johnson

Among the other Bears who got the night off were top WRs DJ Moore, Keenan Allen and first-rounder Rome Odunze. That means an opportunity for a fourth-year player like 6-6, 222-pound Johnson, who also understands he better impress at nearly every turn given the already limited spots still available on Chicago’s wideout depth chart. But Johnson definitely shone Thursday, showing a nice chemistry with Rypien while catching a pair of TD passes from the backup passer as part of a three-catch, 56-yard night. Johnson doesn’t have a regular-season scoring grab since he was a Jacksonville Jaguars rookie in 2020 … but maybe he’s ready to emerge now, whether in the Windy City or elsewhere.

Jonathan Owens

A core special teamer and backup safety during his career, he wasn’t with the Bears on Thursday … but rather in Paris, watching wife Simone Biles add another golden chapter to her GOAT legacy at the Olympics by winning the gymnastics all-around competition. Granted leave by the team to support Biles – and the Bears have also been squarely behind Team USA’s superstar – Owens is scheduled to return to Chicago on Saturday. You didn’t miss much stateside, buddy.

Cam Akers

A veteran running back trying to earn a spot in Houston’s loaded backfield, he finished with 31 yards from scrimmage on seven touches, including a 4-yard TD reception. Not a bad start for a guy trying to stick in the league despite multiple Achilles injuries. ‘Most people wouldn’t even be on the field again,’ he told NFL Network following the game.

Jason Kelce

Now retired from the NFL, the former Philadelphia Eagles superstar – can a center be a superstar? – and Travis’ big brother had a solid debut as an analyst for ESPN’s pre-game and halftime studio productions. But his commitment to the beret, following his own trip to Paris to follow the Olympics, truly distinguished Kelce.

LOSERS

Canton, Ohio

Hall of Fame induction weekend, which occurs in this NFL cradle an hour’s drive from Cleveland, is a first-class event. Yet given the stakes of the Pro Football Hall of Fame Game and its typically anonymous players, many who will never make a regular-season roster, the league made a wise move in 2017 by moving the exhibition to Thursday night as a precursor to the main event – the weekend enshrinement of the new class of football legends. But yet again – before Dwight Freeney, Randy Gradishar, Devin Hester, Andre Johnson, Steve McMichael, Julius Peppers and Patrick Willis see their new busts and don their gold jackets – the game itself was marred by circumstances, a huge Midwest storm descending on Tom Benson Hall of Fame Stadium this time around. Over the past 13 years, the game has now been canceled three times due to a work stoppage (2011), unplayable field conditions (2016) and the COVID-19 pandemic (2020) before the towel was thrown in late Thursday evening due to the weather.

Value of preseason

Exhibition football will (probably) always have a minor place in the league’s ever-creeping calendar. However this game, in particular, has always felt a bit extraneous and is often treated as the bonus affair it is by the teams tasked to play it, an opportunity to take a longer look at fringe prospects. And considering the ever-advancing inevitability of an 18-game regular season, doesn’t it kinda feel like it’s time to let the HOF Game and even more of the preseason go? Given the growing emphasis on joint practices – forums where it makes more sense to give established veterans reps in controlled environs – and the probability that players will ask for more time off in the offseason, including the earlier training camp reporting date this contest annually permits to its teams, might be time to make Hall of Fame weekend entirely about the immortals and leave the football transients out of it.

Lost battle of NFL’s young guns

Not that it was even a remote surprise, but woulda been nice to start the season – sorry, preseason – with just an appetizer of snaps for Stroud and Williams. Alas, wouldn’t be a shock if Stroud, the 2023 Offensive Rookie of the Year, sits out August’s games entirely while the debut of Williams, the No. 1 pick of the 2024 draft, will have to wait despite his admission he’d like the on-field work as he onboards into the pros. Chicago GM Ryan Poles did indicate during an NFL Network interview that Williams will likely play in the Bears’ next three preseason outings.

Defense

Neither team’s backup defenders did much to inspire confidence, perhaps a bit worrisome given defenses tend to be ahead of offenses at this time of year. But the Bears and Texans combined to surrender 38 points and 6.2 yards per play … in a game that didn’t reach the fourth quarter. Sure, no one’s running much beyond basic schemes in August, but still plenty to work on in the coming days and weeks for a pair of teams with playoff aspirations – especially since both are led by head coaches (Chicago’s Matt Eberflus and Houston’s DeMeco Ryans) who made their bones as defensive coordinators.

Houston’s new uniforms

They’ll take a bit of getting used to. For the first 22 seasons of their existence, the Texans’ primary home and road uniforms didn’t deviate from their classic, conservative look. However both were updated in the offseason, and the team will also have two alternate uniforms – each featuring a unique helmet. Houston wore its road whites Thursday … and they just don’t look familiar yet, the bull horns wrapping around the shoulders and thick striping on the pants some of the several fashion departures for a team that was stylistically staid for so long.

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Follow USA TODAY Sports’ Nate Davis on X, formerly Twitter, @ByNateDavis.

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At the Paris Olympics, Chase Budinger will be compete against the best beach volleyball players in the world — but not necessarily the most famous.

During his seven-year NBA career, Budinger said, in the offseason he played beach volleyball against NBA stars such Steve Nash, an eight-time All-Star, and Blake Griffin, a six-time All-Star.

But the NBA player Budinger credits for his success in beach volleyball did not join the others on the sand courts in Manhattan Beach, California.

“Remember that movie ‘Side Out,’?” Shane Battier said, referring to the low-budget movie about beach volleyball that came out in 1990. “I would’ve been that chump that was out there that had no business being out in the sand if I was to step out on the court with those guys.’’

But Budinger said Battier helped shape his preparation skills and deepen his work ethic starting in 2009 with the Houston Rockets, when Budinger was a rookie and Battier was a nine-year veteran.

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

“He kind of took me under his wing and just showed me the ropes of how a professional should be,’ Budinger said.

In turn, Budinger said, he brought what he learned to the pro beach volleyball tour. Initially with mixed success.

“Some of these players that I played with were so set in their ways that it was kind of too late for them to change.’’

What Shane Battier saw in Chase Budinger

In June, when Budinger qualified for the Olympics, he got a text message from Battier.

“Chase and I were very close and I thought he was a heck of a basketball player,’’ Battier said. “I’m not surprised at all he is representing our country’s at the Olympics because he is that kind of athlete. But more importantly, he has that kind of mind just to be a champion.’’

Battier pointed out that they played for the Rockets when the general manager was Daryl Morey, who leaned heavily on analytics.

“I couldn’t jump very high, but one thing I could do is I could out-prepare everybody,’’ Battier said. “And that was one of the things I tried to teach Chase is, look, there’s so much you can do that’s just beyond making a jump shot or working hard in the weight room or getting extra shots up that can improve your play.

“And looking at every single advantage that’s available to you only makes your game better when the popcorn’s popping. And Chase really took to that and was really voracious about.’’

Just as Battier imparted his wisdom, Budinger has tried to do the same in beach volleyball. Budinger, who during his seven-year NBA career averaged 7.9 points and 3.0 rebounds, retired from pro basketball in 2017 and in 2018 joined the Association of Volleyball Professionals (AVP), the pro beach volleyball circuit.

“Make sure your body is rested and you’re getting enough nutrients,’’ Budinger said, ‘you’re watching and studying film, you’re seeing the trainers regularly, you’re getting in the weight room, you’re doing all these extra things that nobody really notices to be the best professional you can be.’’

So much for that scouting report

Budinger no longer has to coerce or coax partners to adopt his approach. His current partner, Miles Evans, has embraced it wholeheartedly.

In fact, during a practice session in June, Evans stayed calm when Budinger dropped F-bombs in an apparent attempt to motivate Evans.

“I think a lot of players who have played with me could say I could be hard on them,’ Budinger said.

Battier sounded amused upon hearing about Budinger’s reputation for his intensity in light of what people said when Budinger declared for the 2009 NBA draft after three years at Arizona.

“It’s funny because the knock on him was that he did not have an intense fire,’’ Battier said. “I think that was a false rep and he proved that wrong …

‘He has that kind of mind just to be a champion.”

No, it didn’t happen in the NBA. But Budinger has a shot to make it happen at the Olympics by winning a gold medal.

“That’s the only thing Chase wants,’’ Battier said, ‘is to go over there, compete hard and bring that hardware home to the USA.’’

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