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The San Francisco 49ers plan to part ways with linebacker De’Vondre Campbell.

Head coach Kyle Shanahan said during a conference call on Friday that the 49ers are making preparations to move on from the veteran linebacker.

“We’re working the semantics of exactly how to deal with it. But I mean, you guys heard from me last night. You guys heard from our players. His actions from the game is not something you can do to your team or your teammates and still expect to be a part of our team,” Shanahan said. “We’re working through exactly the semantics of it right now. But we’ll handle the situation appropriately.”

Later, Shanahan added that he doesn’t expect Campbell to be a member of the 49ers since Campbell’s abrupt exit during the 49ers’ 12-6 loss to the Los Angeles Rams on Thursday night.

According to Shanahan, the ninth-year linebacker refused to enter the game in the third quarter when asked to check in to replace linebacker Dre Greenlaw.

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

The Prime Video cameras captured footage of Campbell, helmet in hand, walking off the field and heading to the locker room.

Campbell started 12 games for the 49ers this season. He was replaced Thursday in the starting lineup by Greenlaw, who made his season debut. Greenlaw was playing his first game since suffering a torn Achilles in Super Bowl 58.

After Greenlaw experienced what Shanahan described as “tightness” in the second half, Campbell apparently refused to replace him at linebacker.

“That is one person who decided not to play for his teammates,” 49ers tight end George Kittle said after the game Thursday night. “It’s one person making a selfish decision…I’ve never been around anybody that’s ever done that. And I hope I’m never around anybody that does that again.”

Campbell was originally drafted by the Atlanta Falcons in the 2016 NFL draft. The 31-year-old linebacker has played for the Falcons, Arizona Cardinals and Green Bay Packers before joining the 49ers this year on a one-year deal.

Unfortunately for Campbell, his mid-game exit will be the lasting memory of his 49ers tenure.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The New York Jets enter Week 15 of the NFL with a road game against the Jacksonville Jaguars. The two teams entered the year with playoff aspirations but are now both 3-10 and playing a game that could have major ramifications for the top 10 picks in the 2025 NFL draft.

As the Jets look to end their four-game losing streak, quarterback Aaron Rodgers made his weekly appearance on ‘The Pat McAfee Show’ on ESPN Tuesday afternoon. The four-time NFL MVP took aim at the network during his segment and criticized how sports media has changed during his career.

‘The ‘SportsCenter’ of my youth, those guys made highlights so much fun and that’s what they showed,’ Rodgers said. ‘Now it’s all talk shows and people whose opinions are so important now and they believe they’re the celebrities now.’

He went on to say those people, who no one remembers from their playing careers, have sports opinions that are ‘unfounded or asinine.’

Since that segment, multiple people at ESPN have responded, including NFL analyst Mina Kimes and commentator Stephen A. Smith. But longtime Pittsburgh Steelers safety Ryan Clark made the most assertive response to what Rodgers said during ESPN’s ‘First Take’ program on Friday.

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

Here’s what Rodgers said and Clark’s response.

Aaron Rodgers’ ESPN criticism

Rodgers frequently appears on ‘The Pat McAfee Show’ on Tuesdays and this week was no different. During the segment, his former Green Bay Packers teammate-turned-analyst A.J. Hawk asked how the NFL has changed during Rodgers’ 20-year career.

Rodgers argued the biggest change is about how the sport is covered by the media.

“There’s a lot of people talking about the game now, both non-former players and former players who are trying to stay relevant fame-wise,’ Rodgers said. ‘So the takes and the criticism I think are a lot different than they were maybe in the mid-2000s.’

Rodgers clarified he wasn’t talking about the show’s host, Pat McAfee, who spent eight years in the NFL as a punter before launching his show. McAfee made the Pro Bowl in 2014 and 2016 and was a first-team All-Pro in 2014.

“I’m talking about these experts on TV who nobody remembers what they did in their career,” Rodgers said. “So in order for them to stay relevant, they have to make comments that keep them in the conversation. That wasn’t going on in 2008, 2009, that was nonexistent.

‘Now it’s all talk shows and people whose opinions are so important now and they believe they’re the celebrities now. They’re the stars for just being able to talk about sports or give a take about sports, many of which are unfounded or asinine, as we all know.’

He acknowledged that those shows, gambling and fantasy football have driven interest in the sport and that’s led to higher salaries for players. He also argued the league has ‘better athletes with a less violent game’ but with a lower overall football IQ due to less practice time during the offseason.

McAfee didn’t press Rodgers to name any specific people on talk shows who warrant his criticism. Instead, he continued on about Rodgers’ point about lower football IQ, citing longtime NFL quarterback Tom Brady’s argument that coaches ‘dumb the game down’ for rookie quarterbacks to play as soon as possible.

Ryan Clark’s response to Aaron Rodgers

Rodgers’ criticism of sports media was a segment for the next few days on ‘First Take,’ culminating in Clark’s response Friday morning.

“I find it extremely funny that he’s saying this on a show with a man, who as great as he was as a punter, is far more famous as a pundit in Pat McAfee,” Clark said. “A.J. Hawk, who I felt like was a good player, is now on TV, and he gets to give his thoughts as well.’

Clark went on to say that Rodgers is one of the best quarterbacks to ever play in the NFL but isn’t at that level any more and people are willing to say it on national broadcasts. Clark argued that Rodgers is now doing exactly what he’s criticizing other players for, noting that Rodgers is now being paid for his appearances on McAfee’s show.

‘My issue with him is you’re doing the exact same thing,’ Clark said. ‘And the reason you’re getting this opportunity to say these asinine things is because someone is paying you who is exactly the same thing that you’re now speaking out against.”

McAfee has confirmed Rodgers has made more than $1 million for his segments.

“This dude is once again tone-deaf,” Clark continued. ‘This dude is once again unaware. This dude is once again arrogant to a point that’s almost sickening because he says these things, and he talks tough, and he behaves in his way, but he ain’t.

‘This dude is a fraud. He’s been a fraud. He can throw a football and that’s where it stops. Once that talent ends … so does he. And to sit up there, man, and to be just blatantly hypocritical is funny and sickening at the same time.”

Cam Newton, the 2015 NFL MVP who’s now a commentator on ‘First Take,’ agreed with Clark’s criticism and added that Rodgers is not used to being a position where his team’s record and individual statistics don’t make him one of the best quarterbacks in the league.

‘It’s awkward for him,’ Newton said. ‘Hypocritical is the best analogy for it.’

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

As President-elect Trump gets ready to return to the White House, a leading Democratic pollster and strategist highlights that her party needs a new game plan to confront the former and soon-to-be future president.

‘The 2025 playbook cannot be the 2017 playbook,’ Molly Murphy, a top pollster on Vice President Kamala Harris’ campaign, emphasized as she gave a presentation at the first meeting of the Democratic National Committee’s executive committee since last month’s election.

Trump’s convincing win over Harris — he captured the popular vote and swept all seven key battleground states — as well as the GOP flipping the Senate and holding on to their fragile majority in the House, has Democrats searching for answers as they now try to emerge from the political wilderness.

Murphy, pointing to post-election polls, said most Americans give the president-elect a thumbs up on how he’s handling his transition, and that Trump will return to the White House next month more popular compared to eight years ago, when he first won the presidency. 

And she noted that voters ‘give him a pass on the outrageous’ comments he continuously makes because they approve of his handling of the economy. 

Murphy, in her comments Friday as DNC leaders huddled at a hotel near the U.S. Capitol, said the Democrats’ mission going forward is to change that perception.

‘We want to focus on this term … and tell the story about how this term is worse and things are not going to be good for the American people,’ Murphy said.

The Democrats’ message should be ‘Donald Trump does not care about you. He is going to screw you,’ Murphy argued. ‘As a north star, I think we need to stay focused on … the economy and costs.’

‘A lot of people are expecting the price of milk to go back where it was,’ Murphy noted. 

She said Democrats need to borrow a page from the GOP’s 2024 campaign playbook: ‘We can do what they did to us … even if the economy is stronger, costs are still going to be too high for people.’

And she added that Democrats need to spotlight what she called unpopular parts of the Trump agenda, including ‘tax breaks for the wealthy’ and ‘letting corporations drive up prices and making you pay for it.’ 

And she said the party needs to frame Trump’s proposed tariffs on key American trading partners ‘a sales tax on the American people that will drive up prices,’ which was a line that Harris used on the campaign trail.

Murphy also spotlighted that Trump and Republicans made gains with key parts of the Democratic Party’s base – younger voters, Latinos, and Black voters because of the economy, but also because of the Democrats’ ‘wonky’ messaging.

‘A lot of times we’re talking about polices,’ Murphy said, while Republicans have ‘culture conversations that create a connection between the party and the people that go beyond polices.’

Murphy argued that ‘these culture conversations that conservatives have been able to have in an organic way have been able to draw a connection that we know is not supported by policy … and we know that we have a lot of shared values with these working Americans and we need to find ways to have more authentic connection points there.’

DNC chair Jaime Harrison complimented Murphy’s presentation. 

But, Harrison, who is not running for a second four-year term steering the national party committee, pointed to the next White House race and offered that the party should also target Vice President-elect Sen. JD Vance.

‘I think it will be a big error on our part if we focus all of our attention on Donald Trump and not JD Vance, particularly as we start to look at the 2028 race,’ Harrison highlighted.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

The markets had a wide-ranging week once again; however, they ended near its high point this time. The Nifty had ranged sessions for four out of five days; the last trading day of the week saw the Nifty swinging wildly before closing near its high point. The trading range also remained wider; the Index oscillated 611 points over the past sessions. The volatility, though, took a back seat. The India VIX came off by 7.69% to 13.05 on a weekly basis. The Nifty closed a notch above its immediate resistance points; the headline index finished the week with a net weekly gain of 90.50 points (+0.37%).

The week was set to end on a negative note had the markets not surged higher on Friday. From a technical perspective, Nifty has resisted the 100-DMA placed at 24709 over the past several days. Following a massive rebound that the Nifty witnessed from lower levels, the Index has closed a notch above this important resistance level. For this upmove to extend itself, Nifty will have to stay above the 24700 level. Any slippage below this point will again send the Nifty back inside the wide 24400-24700 trading range. Failure to sustain above the 24700 mark will mean an extended period of consolidation for the markets. However, the longer the Nifty stays above 24700, the greater the possibility of this upmove extending itself.

The coming week is expected to start quietly, with the levels of 24790 and 25000 acting as resistance points. The supports come in at 24590 and 24400 levels. The trading range will continue to stay wider than usual.

The weekly RSI is 56.37. It is neutral and does not show any divergence against the price. The weekly MACD is bearish and stays below its signal line.

The pattern analysis of the weekly charts shows that the Nifty suffered a brutal mean reversion process. The Index was 16% higher than its 50-week MA at one point in time. During the recent sharp corrective move, the Nifty tested this level again. It subsequently found support and staged a strong technical pullback. The market’s finding support at the 50-week MA has reinforced the credibility of this level as one of the important pattern supports for the market. On the daily timeframe, the Nifty has attempted to cross above the 100-DMA level after resisting it for a couple of days.

The markets may attempt to resume the technical pullback that it started by rebounding off the 50-week MA level. For this to happen, it would be crucial for Nifty to keep its head above the 24700 mark. It is also important to note that any slip below the 27400 level would drag the markets back inside the consolidation zone. The volatility is once again towards the lower end of its range; there is a possibility that we may see a surge in volatility in the coming week. It is recommended that investors stay invested in relatively stronger stocks and sectors. Rather than blindly chasing the rising stocks, investments must be appropriately rotated into the sectors showing stronger or improving relative strength. While mindfully protecting profits at higher levels, a cautious outlook is advised for the coming week.

Sector Analysis for the coming week

In our look at Relative Rotation Graphs®, we compared various sectors against CNX500 (NIFTY 500 Index), which represents over 95% of the free float market cap of all the stocks listed.

Relative Rotation Graphs (RRG) show no major change in the sectoral setup. The Nifty Bank, Financial Services, Private Banks, and IT indices are inside the leading quadrant. These groups are likely to outperform the broader markets relatively.

The Pharma and Midcap 100 indices are inside the weakening quadrant. These sectors are likely to see a continued slowdown in their relative performance.

The FMCG, Energy, Media, Auto, Energy, and Infrastructure indices are inside the leading quadrant. These groups may exhibit relative underperformance against the broader Nifty 500 index.

The PSU Bank index continues to rotate firmly inside the improving quadrant. The Realty and Metal indices are also inside the improving quadrant, and these groups are likely to improve their relative performance against the broader markets.

Important Note: RRG™ charts show the relative strength and momentum of a group of stocks. In the above Chart, they show relative performance against NIFTY500 Index (Broader Markets) and should not be used directly as buy or sell signals.  

Milan Vaishnav, CMT, MSTA

Consulting Technical Analyst

www.EquityResearch.asia | www.ChartWizard.ae

Christian, Jewish and Muslim faith leaders are cautiously optimistic heading into the new year with a second Trump administration.

This week, Fox News Digital spoke to leaders from various faith communities, many of whom expressed hope the incoming administration would lead in the right direction but wary that President-elect Trump would still prove himself.

‘There are some [Jewish] communities that feel positive and optimistic, and there are some communities that feel extremely concerned,’ said New York City Rabbi Jo David, who has a private rabbinic practice.

‘I think there’s a mixed reaction, but there’s a skeptical optimism,’ said Haris Tarin, vice president of policy and programming at the Muslim Public Affairs Council.

Lorenzo Sewell, senior pastor at 180 Church in Detroit, said Trump has the opportunity to go down as ‘the greatest president in history’ if he plays his cards right. ‘Only thing he needs to do is righteously regulate [the appropriate] resources.’

Samuel Rodriguez is lead pastor at New Season, a prominent U.S. megachurch, and president of the National Hispanic Christian Leadership Conference. He echoed the sense of hope that some faith leaders are feeling looking toward Inauguration Day. 

‘I believe we’ll see a stronger emphasis on protecting religious freedom and ensuring that faith communities are empowered to thrive,’ Rodriguez said. ‘Policies that respect the role of faith-based organizations in society — whether they’re feeding the hungry, educating children or advocating for life — will likely take center stage. I also anticipate an administration that values the contributions of people of faith, not as something to tolerate but as an essential cornerstone of our nation.’

With respect to the Jewish community, Rabbi Abraham Cooper, the former chair of the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom and director of Global Social Action at the Simon Wiesenthal Center, said antisemitism, particularly on social media and on college campuses, and the ’embrace of the Hamas narrative,’ are a top priority. 

‘We expect and hope for a completely different approach on the part of the incoming administration,’ Cooper said. ‘We expect that the billions and billions of sanction relief that President Biden and Secretary of State Blinken have given to the terrorist-sponsoring regime in Iran, that’s going to come to an end.’

Cooper also said building on and advancing the Abraham Accords, a series of bilateral agreements on Arab–Israeli normalization between Israel and the United Arab Emirates, will be important.

For Tarin, the biggest hope among the Muslim community, he says, is that there is not a repeat of the 2020 order by Trump that prevented people from certain Muslim countries from coming to the U.S.

‘No. 2, the hope is that all Americans, including American Muslims, their civil rights and civil liberties and the issues that they’ve been advocating for are protected. No. 3, the hope is for a cease-fire and the end to the conflict in the Middle East and specifically in Gaza,’ Tarin said. 

He added that it would be beneficial if Trump embraced parts of the Biden administration’s national strategy on Islamophobia. 

Fox News Digital reached out to the Trump-Vance transition team for comment but did not receive a response.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

President-elect Trump won’t be on the ballot in the 2026 midterms, but Republican National Committee chair Michael Whatley says that Trump will play a ‘significant’ role in supporting GOP candidates.

Republicans enjoyed major victories in last month’s elections, with Trump defeating Vice President Kamala Harris to win the White House, the GOP flipping control of the Senate from the Democrats, and holding on to their razor-thin majority in the House.

Whatley argued that ‘as we go forward into this next election cycle, the fundamentals are going to remain the same’ during an exclusive interview with Fox News Digital.

‘We need to make sure that we are building our state parties, that we’re building our ground game, we’re building our election integrity apparatus to be in place to make sure that when we get those candidates through those primaries in ‘26, that we’re going to be in a position to take them all the way to the finish line,’ he emphasized.

But the party in power traditionally suffers setbacks in the following midterm elections. And Trump, who was a magnate for voter turnout, won’t be on the ballot in 2026.

Whatley said that even though he won’t be a candidate, ‘President Trump is going to be a very significant part of this because at the end of the day, what we need to do is hold on to the House, hold on to the Senate so that we can finish his term and his agenda.’

And Whatley predicted that ‘Donald Trump will be very active on the campaign trail for Republicans. And his agenda is the agenda that we’re going to be running on.’

The Harris campaign and the Democratic National Committee outraised the Trump campaign and the RNC this past cycle, but Whatley is confident that with the party soon to control the White House, Republicans will be even more competitive in the campaign cash race in the midterms.

‘We’re pretty excited about where we are in terms of the fundraising that we did throughout the course of this cycle and what we’re going to do going forward,’ he said.

Whatley said that his message to donors will be ‘we were successful in putting Donald Trump into the White House, and we need to carry forward with his agenda by keeping these House majorities and Senate majorities.’

He also pushed back on the persistent questioning of the RNC and Trump campaign’s ground game efforts during the general election.

‘We focused very hard on low propensity voters. This was an entirely new system that we put in place over the course of this election cycle. It worked very, very well,’ he touted. 

And looking ahead, he said ‘in a midterm election cycle, low propensity voters are going to, again, be very, very important for us. So, we’re going to continue to focus on building that type of a program.’

Whatley spotlighted that ‘we also focused on outreach to communities that the Republican Party has traditionally not reached out to – Black voters, Hispanic voters, Asian American voters. That’s why we were able to see such seismic shifts towards Donald Trump versus where those blocks had been in 2016 and 2020. We also saw seismic shifts among young voters and women voters because we were talking to every single American voter. Our ground game was very significant.’

Whatley was interviewed a week after Trump asked him to continue as RNC chair moving forward.

In March, as he clinched the 2024 GOP presidential nomination, Trump named Whatley to succeed Ronna McDaniel as RNC chair. Whatley, a longtime ally of the former president and a major supporter of Trump’s election integrity efforts, had served as RNC general counsel and chair of the North Carolina Republican Party. 

Trump is term-limited and won’t be able to seek election again in 2028. Vice President-elect Sen. JD Vance will likely be considered the front-runner for the 2028 GOP nomination.

But asked if the RNC will hold to its traditional role of staying neutral in an open and contested presidential primary, Whatley said ‘we will.’

And he added that ‘I’m very excited about the bench that we have in the Republican Party right now. You think about all the Republican governors, you think about all the Republican senators, the members of the House that we have, the leaders across the country that have been engaged in this campaign are going to be part of the president’s cabinet.’

Whatley argued that the president-elect’s ‘America First movement is bigger than Donald Trump. He is the tip of the spear. He is the vanguard of this movement. But. It is a very big movement right now.’

The chairman also emphasized that ‘Donald Trump has completely remade the Republican Party. We’re now the working-class party. We’re now a party that is communicating and working with every single voter, speaking to every single voter about the issues that they care about. So, as we go into 2028, we are in a great position to be able to continue the momentum of this agenda and this movement.’

Unlike the DNC, which in the 2024 cycle upended the traditional presidential nominating calendar, the RNC made no major changes to their primary lineup, and kept the Iowa caucuses and the New Hampshire primary as their first two contests.

Asked about the 2028 calendar, Whatley said ‘I’ve not had any conversations with anybody who wants to change the calendar on our side. I know the Democrats did during the course of this election cycle, not sure that it really helped them all that much.’

‘We’re very comfortable with the calendar as it is. But as we move towards 2028, we’ll have those conversations,’ he added.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

While the four finalists have yet to learn their Heisman Trophy placement, college football’s most prestigious award announced the fifth-through10th-place finishers on Friday night.

Colorado receiver/cornerback Travis Hunter, Boise State running back Ashton Jeanty, Oregon quarterback Dillon Gabriel and Miami quarterback Cam Ward will finish in the top four for the award as finalists who will attend the award ceremony in New York City on Saturday night.

The rest of the top 10 placers, who also had impressive seasons, had their finish revealed on Friday. One interesting tidbit about the top 10 Heisman finishers this season was that there wasn’t a single SEC player included, despite the conference being one of the strongest in the sport.

The rest of the non-finalist placers included Colorado quarterback Shedeur Sanders, Arizona State running back Cam Skattebo and Indiana quarterback Kurtis Rourke, to name a few.

Here’s the full list of fifth through 10th-place finishers in the Heisman Trophy voting:

Heisman Trophy voting

Note: Travis Hunter, Ashton Jeanty, Dillon Gabriel and Cam Ward will finish in the top four, with the winner announced Saturday night

Here are the top 10 Heisman Trophy finishers in 2024, as fifth through 10th place was announced Friday:

5th place: RB Cam Skattebo, Arizona State
6th place: QB Bryson Daily, Army
7th place: TE Tyler Warren, Penn State
8th place: QB Shedeur Sanders, Colorado
9th place: QB Kurtis Rourke, Indiana
10th place: QB Kyle McCord, Syracuse

Skattebo, who espoused his own Heisman candidacy after leading Arizona State to the College Football Playoff, came in at fifth place after rushing for 1,568 yards and 19 touchdowns on 263 carries. He also caught 37 passes for 506 yards with three touchdowns.

Sanders was also a notable addition, as the expected first-round pick in the 2025 NFL draft threw for 3,926 yards with 35 touchdowns to eight interceptions this season. Hunter, his teammate, is the favorite to win the Heisman, however.

Army quarterback Bryson Daily came in at sixth place after having the best season rushing by any quarterback in college football, as he ran 264 times for 1,480 yards with a whopping 29 touchdowns in the Black Knights’ triple-option offense.

Penn State tight end Tyler Warren and Rourke finished seventh and ninth, respectively, with both competing for a national championship as their teams made the CFP. Tenth place went to Syracuse quarterback Kyle McCord, who threw for 4,326 yards with 29 touchdowns to 12 interceptions in his first season after transferring from Ohio State.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Phoenix Suns minority owner Justin Ishbia is interested in buying the Minnesota Twins, according to multiple reports.

The Twins finished the 2024 season with an 82-80 record and missed the playoffs. Minnesota has made the playoffs four times in the last eight seasons, including in 2023 when it won the AL Central title and ended its lengthy playoff losing streak.

Here’s what you need to know about Ishbia and the Twins:

Who is Justin Ishbia?

Ishbia is a minority owner of the Suns and the Phoenix Mercury and also the founder and managing partner of Shore Capital Partners, which is a private equity firm based in Chicago.

All things Twins: Latest Minnesota Twins news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

Justin’s brother, Mat, is the Suns’ majority owner. The team was purchased on Feb. 7, 2023 for $4 billion from Robert Sarver.

How much is Justin Ishbia worth?

Justin Ishbia is worth $4.9 billion, according to Forbes.

Who owns the Minnesota Twins?

The Pohlad family, which expressed its intent to sell the team earlier this fall.

“For the past 40 seasons, the Minnesota Twins have been part of our family’s heart and soul,” Twins executive chairman Joe Pohlad said in an October statement. “This team is woven into the fabric of our lives, and the Twins community has become an extension of our family. … We’ve never taken lightly the privilege of being stewards of this franchise.”

Joe’s grandfather, Carl, led the initial purchase of the team in 1984 from the Griffith family for more than $35 million.

The franchise relocated from Washington, D.C. to Minnesota and changed its name to the Twins in 1961 under the Griffiths’ watch.

How much are the Minnesota Twins worth?

The Twins are estimated to be worth between $1.5 billion and $2 billion, according to ESPN.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Lindsey Vonn is ready to race.

A month after announcing she was coming out of retirement, Vonn said Friday that she’ll return to the World Cup circuit next week in St. Moritz, Switzerland. The super-G races will be her first since February 2019, when the toll of several injuries forced her to retire.

But Vonn had a partial knee replacement last April and felt so good afterward that it got her thinking about returning to ski racing.

‘The last years of my career were a lot more challenging than I let on, than anyone really understood. But I feel stronger now than I did in my mid- to late-20s,’ Vonn, who turned 40 in October, said in a news conference ahead of the first women’s World Cup race at Birds of Prey in Beaver Creek, Colorado.

‘The passion for skiing has never gone away, I just wasn’t physically able to do it anymore,’ Vonn added. ‘Now that I have the chance to do what I love, why would I not try? Life is short. You’ve got to live every day to the maximum, and that’s all I’m doing.’

Here’s what you need to know about Vonn’s return to elite ski racing:

When will Vonn return to the World Cup circuit?

Next weekend!

Vonn will ski the super-G races in St. Moritz, a place where she’s won five times and finished on the podium another five times. Her last win there was in a super-G in 2015.

‘It’s a perfect place to start because I know that hill very well. I love it,’ Vonn said. ‘And it’s nice to start with super-G, as well, just to kind of dip my foot in, see how it goes.’

The first race is Saturday, followed by a second super-G on Sunday.

Is Vonn racing at Birds of Prey?

She’d hoped to, but no.

Even Vonn, who has won more World Cup races than anyone besides Mikaela Shiffrin and Ingemar Stenmark, can’t just show up at the starting gate. She had to get enough points to qualify for World Cup races, which she did last week with four races at Copper Mountain. She also had to re-enter the anti-doping pool.

By the time she got all that done, it was just too quick of a turnaround to be ready to race this weekend.

‘I couldn’t physically make it possible,’ Vonn said.

Instead, Vonn will serve as a forerunner, a person who skis the course before a race so the first skiers don’t have an advantage over the rest of the field.

Why is Vonn coming back?

Because she can. And because she loves ski racing.

Vonn is one of the greatest ski racers ever. In addition to her 82 World Cup victories, she won four overall World Cup titles and the downhill at the Vancouver Olympics in 2010. While the speed events were her specialty, she also won World Cup races in slalom, giant slalom and combined.

But Vonn badly injured her right knee in a crash in February 2013 — she tore her ACL and MCL and also had a tibial plateau fracture — and missed the Sochi Olympics in 2014 after re-injuring it in December of that year. She was injured ‘pretty much’ every season after that until she retired.

‘I kept going through all the injuries because I love ski racing. And no injury ever held me back until it finally broke me,’ Vonn said.

Vonn said she thought long and hard before having knee replacement surgery, and did extensive research before deciding to go ahead with it. Simply being pain-free was the goal, but when she was able to do things she hadn’t in years, she naturally wondered if racing was possible.

Vonn said she wasn’t concerned about her age, and took inspiration from Simone Biles’ comeback. Biles won her second Olympic all-around title in Paris at 27, an age once considered ancient for a gymnast.

‘I’m not the first person to do it. I’m just maybe the first woman to do it in ski racing,’ Vonn said. ‘I think Simone Biles is a perfect example of what can be done at an older age. And she’s not even old! It’s just — it’s outside the confines of what we believe is the right age for the sport.

‘I don’t think I’m reinventing the wheel,’ Vonn added. ‘I’m just doing what I feel is right for me but, at the same time, continuing on what other women have done before me.’

What does Vonn want from her comeback?

What do you think?

Vonn is, again, one of the greatest ski racers ever. If she’s coming back, she’s coming back to win.

‘Success is not just participating,’ she said. ‘While I am very excited to be participating, I definitely have goals and expectations and I’m trying to be as patient as possible with myself on this journey and take it step by step and not skip any steps.

‘I know my way back to a competitive level might take a race or two, but I certainly intend on getting back to where I was before.’

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Travis Hunter has magnificently proven a point. Go ahead, keep telling the best player in college football what he can’t do. He wasn’t supposed to survive, let alone thrive, in the face of excruciating demands while playing full-time at two positions.

Or so said the conventional wisdom. 

And look at him now: The throwback Colorado Buffaloes star wide receiver and, er, cornerback, is the favorite to collect the Heisman Trophy on Saturday night. 

Surely, as the NFL looms, Hunter can’t expect to excel at both positions on the next level. 

Can he? 

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

“I don’t want to say what the man can’t do,” Charles Woodson, the Pro Football Hall of Famer, told USA TODAY Sports. “We just watched him do it in college. 

“I would prefer that he didn’t. If I was an NFL team, having a guy as talented as him, I would play him on defense. But I would have some packages for him on offense. He’s too talented of a player not to use at all on offense. But I wouldn’t put him out there full-time on offense and defense. The NFL is, just in terms of the physical nature of the game, guys’ body styles are much more mature, there’s a different speed of the game, just because guys are much better at every level of the game. 

“So, I wouldn’t try to play him every snap, but I would put him out there; I’d play him some snaps on offense.” 

Woodson, who played 18 seasons in the NFL as a defensive back and now serves as a studio analyst for Fox Sports, is as credible as anyone in reflecting on Hunter’s achievements and assessing the enormous prospects for his NFL future. 

On his path to winning the Heisman Trophy in 1997, Woodson was the supreme cornerback who dabbled as a wide receiver at Michigan. During his final two seasons with the Wolverines, Woodson caught 24 passes and logged 6 rushing attempts. 

The comparison stops when considering that as incredible of an athlete as Woodson was, he was merely a part-timer on offense. That’s one reason why he’s so impressed with Hunter, who averaged 113 snaps per game – with essentially a 50-50 split between offense and defense – to help ignite Colorado (9-3) to a berth in the upcoming Alamo Bowl. 

As a big-play receiver, Hunter caught 92 passes for 1,152 yards and 14 touchdowns this season.  

As shutdown corner, he snagged four interceptions, tallied 11 pass break-ups and had a key, game-sealing forced fumble.  

“You watch a game and they get off the field on defense and everybody from the defense goes over to the sideline, and he’s in the offensive huddle, getting ready to line up and play offense,” Woodson said. “So, very impressed with what he’s done. Travis has taken care of himself and makes sure that each and every week, he’s prepared to play.” 

Still, this sort of double duty would be a bit much to expect in the NFL. Even for Hunter, 21, considered the most gifted athlete poised for the NFL draft in April and projected as a top five pick. Yet after convincing his college coach, Deion Sanders, to allow him to play both ways – first at Jackson State, then the past two seasons at Colorado – Hunter (6-1, 185) has been adamant that he wants to continue playing both ways in the NFL. 

It’s going to be a tough sell – at least in envisioning full-time roles at both positions. 

Two high-level talent evaluators for NFL teams told USA TODAY Sports, under the condition of anonymity, that they project Hunter as a cornerback who could be used to a lesser extent as a wide receiver – essentially echoing Woodson’s sentiments. The team executives did not want to be identified because of the proprietary elements associated with personnel evaluations. 

“I see him as a cornerback that can give you some wide receiver snaps,” said the personnel director for an NFL team. “I think he could play wide receiver as his primary position, but he is more valuable to me as a corner because of the impact he could have there.” 

In other words, there’s a supply-and-demand equation working here. It is much more difficult for NFL teams to land an elite cornerback than to secure an elite receiver. 

“He has a big upside as a cornerback,” said an NFL general manager. “And you can find wide receivers almost anywhere now, if that makes sense.” 

Then there’s just the thought of the demands that it would take for Hunter to excel at two positions. This season, Hunter has logged 688 snaps on defense and 672 plays on offense. 

Let it be noted: The line in the sand is drawn for Hunter and those visions of going both ways as a full-time player at the next level.  

As the GM put it, “I cannot see how he holds up playing 100-plus snaps per game for 17 weeks in the NFL.” 

The personnel director concurs: “I think playing both ways in the NFL would be too much in terms of the playbook, coverages, adjustments, situationally, all of those things.” 

Woodson, drafted fourth overall by the Oakland Raiders in 1998, chuckled when asked if he could have envisioned playing both ways in the NFL. Even just a little bit. 

“I wish I could have played more snaps on offense in the NFL,” he said. 

During the early years of his NFL career, Woodson got a handful of snaps on offense. It’s not even a footnote on his illustrious NFL resume, which includes a Super Bowl championship with the Green Bay Packers, eight All-Pro selections, a Defensive Player of the Year award and a share of the league’s record with 13 career defensive touchdown returns. During the 1999 and 2000 seasons, Woodson caught two passes for 27 yards and rushed once for minus-3 yards. 

“I used to beg Jon Gruden, man, to put me in the game more on offense,” Woodson recalled, referring to his Raiders coach. “I don’t know if it was him and he just didn’t want to do it. I don’t know if it was Al (Davis). I would have been more than welcome to play more on offense.” 

When he starred at Michigan, Woodson had a much more receptive ear to that suggestion from coach Lloyd Carr after starting receivers Amani Toomer and Mercury Hayes completed their college eligibility with the 1995 season. 

“We lost those big-time guys after my freshman year with Mercury and Amani,” Woodson reflected. “I went up to Lloyd, like, ‘Hey, man, I can play a little offense, too.’ That’s kind of how it started. Even with that being said, I only played a handful of plays on offense. 

“But for Travis, he just continued that high school mentality over to college.” 

As Woodson pointed out, it’s typical for many elite high school players – in Hunter’s case at Collins Hill High School in Suwanee, GA; for Woodson at Ross High School in Fremont, Ohio – to play both ways before declaring one position in moving to the college level. 

When Hunter, however, made it clear as one of the nation’s top recruits that he intended to play both ways in college, only Sanders, aka “Coach Prime,” among the many college coaches he encountered during the process, agreed to the possibility. 

Sanders, who once played simultaneously as the NFL’s best cornerback and kick returner, while playing as a Major League Baseball outfielder, undoubtedly has a different perspective than most of his coaching colleagues. And he’s the Hall of Famer who played some wide receiver during his 14-year NFL career – most notably in 1996 with the Dallas Cowboys, when he caught 36 passes for 475 yards and hauled in a 47-yard reception during the Super Bowl 30 victory against the Pittsburgh Steelers. 

“For Coach Prime to see that talent in him and say, ‘You know what? I’m going to let you do this thing. I’m going to let you go out here and play the game each and every snap. As long as you can get out there and play the game,” Woodson said. “I think it’s had a tremendous impact on his life.” 

The moral of the story for Hunter: Never say never when telling him what he can’t do. 

Follow USA TODAY Sports’ Jarrett Bell on X @JarrettBell.

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