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Milwaukee Bucks forward Khris Middleton had arthroscopic surgeries on his left and right ankles in the offseason, the Journal Sentinel confirmed Wednesday. Bucks head coach Doc Rivers announced on a broadcast of the team’s summer league game Tuesday that the three-time All-Star had surgery this summer.

“He was injured, you know, through the playoffs,” Rivers said. “And just played because, you know, no one else was playing. He played terrific. He had surgery in the summer, but he’ll be fine by the beginning of camp, which is good for us.”

The left ankle was addressed shortly after the season and the right ankle was operated on in June. Middleton is already back on the court and ‘doing great,’ per a person familiar with the situation.

The Athletic initially reported the details of the procedures.

Middleton suffered what he called the worst ankle sprain of his Bucks career on Feb. 6 when Phoenix’s Kevin Durant committed a flagrant foul by sliding his foot into Middleton’s landing area on a jump shot. Middleton turned his left ankle on the play and missed 16 games.

All things Bucks: Latest Milwaukee Bucks news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

Then during the Bucks’ first-round playoff loss to Indiana, Middleton sprained his right ankle in Game 2 on April 23. He remained in the game and finished the series.

Middleton has dealt with a bevy of injuries the last few years, beginning with a knee sprain in the 2022 playoffs that ended his season in the first round. He then had an offseason left wrist surgery in 2022 and then had right knee surgery in the summer of 2023.

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Trailblazers are rarely forgotten, but sometimes they’re overshadowed. Lost among Mary Lou Retton, Greg Louganis, Carl Lewis and Michael Jordan at the 1984 Olympics were the stars of the first gold medal-winning U.S. women’s basketball team.

“Everybody on that team was a star in their own right,” said forward Janice Lawrence Braxton.  “We had a team full of stars.”

Legendary Tennessee coach Pat Summitt, who died in 2016 at 64, five years after being diagnosed with early onset dementia in the form of Alzheimer’s, constructed a roster of phenoms, including USC’s Cheryl Miller and Pamela McGee, Louisiana Tech’s Kim Mulkey and Lawrence Braxton, Tennessee’s Lea Henry and Georgia’s Teresa Edwards.

Barred from contention because of her involvement in professional basketball was former Olympian Nancy Lieberman, who also missed the 1980 Olympics because of the U.S. boycott. But Summitt shifted her sights overseas, bringing in recently graduated talent such as Anne Donovan, Cathy Boswell, Carol Menken-Schaudt, Denise Curry, Cindy Noble and Lynette Woodard, who were competing internationally for U.S. national teams. 

Summitt, just 31 at the time, was establishing herself as a successful coach at Tennessee. What was yet to come was a legendary coaching career, during which she amassed eight NCAA national titles, 16 SEC tournament and conference championships, 18 Final Four appearances and a 1,098-208 record. She is now widely regarded as one of the best basketball coaches of all time and was responsible for molding the U.S. team into a dominant force at the 1984 Games. 

Miller was a marquee talent on a team brimming with legendary standouts and starred as the primary scoring option. Completing her sophomore season at USC before the Olympic trials, she already was a two-time NCAA Tournament champion and Naismith Player of the Year. She would go on to win two more Naismith Awards before beginning her career in coaching. 

Miller and Summitt were heated rivals in the collegiate game, regularly competing on the biggest stages before joining forces. One was the face of a new generation of basketball players, the other an old-school coach. Together, after putting their differences aside, they led the loaded national team to its first Olympic gold medal.

The final roster dominated the field at the Olympics. Summitt instilled a relentless mentality that prevented any moment of weakness. Her coaching, along with the otherworldly talent she assembled, combined to form an unstoppable force. The team led the tournament in every statistical category, and its smallest margin of victory was a 28-point opening-game demolition of Yugoslavia. The Americans crushed South Korea in the gold-medal game, 85-55.

These are the stories from the players, who 40 years later are shining a light on their journey to immortality:

“Passionate Pat”: The hard-driving style of Summitt, and how her players bought in

How do you turn a collection of talented individuals into a team? Pat Summitt did it through intensity, exhaustion and a touch of nausea. 

Summitt’s practices were highly competitive. Perfection was a requirement, and the team had to be overprepared to deliver gold in Los Angeles. Sprints were the coach’s favorite tool to accentuate a point.

“All we did was run,” Teresa Edwards said. “Almost the whole team threw up. Trash cans were at the corners. I don’t know why we were running, and I can’t figure it out for the life of me.” 

Summitt’s coaching style was new to some players, and there was an adjustment period. Janice Lawrence Braxton, who played at Louisiana Tech under coach Leon Barmore, recalls getting a steal in practice and running the court to make an easy layup. Summitt blew the play dead and screamed at Braxton. 

“ ‘Janice Lawrence, I know Leon Barmore didn’t let you play defense like that,’ ” Braxton recalls Summitt yelling at her. 

There was a reason for Summitt’s coaching style, however. Through shared pain and countless sprints, a group of rivals became a team.

“Because coach was so hard on us, we had to forge a bond with each other,” Cheryl Miller said. “It had to be us against them, the coaching staff. That united us.”  

The passion, the intensity, the cardio, the pain — it all worked.

But as they put the finishing touches on the historic moment, the players couldn’t help but spend their crowning achievement recalling the unremitting practices that helped get them there.

“I remember getting our gold medals, and we were able to raise our hands that we had finished,” Braxton said. “That summer was the most grueling summer. Pat gave us T-shirts that said, ‘We Survived the Summitt.’ When she said that, she was not lying.”

“The anchor”: The once-in-a-generation talent of Cheryl Miller

Summitt tried to bring the intensity out of her players. But with Cheryl Miller, she tried to rein it in.

“My enthusiasm for the game, she thought, was showboating,” Miller said. “The animation just irked her. It bugged her.”

During a meeting after one of their pre-Olympic practices, Summitt asked Miller why she was always being so dramatic on the court.

“Because the game is dramatic,” Miller replied. “I’m just the exclamation point in the sentence.”

Summitt would learn to accept Miller’s personality, mainly because she didn’t have much choice as Miller was inarguably the best all-around player on the team.

The 6-foot-2 inch forward from USC, who had just come off a national championship run in which she was named the NCAA Tournament’s Most Outstanding Player, led the Olympic team in points, assists, rebounds and steals.

“She was so far ahead of her time,” said Debbie Antonelli, a women’s basketball commentator who played for North Carolina State in 1984. “She was long and athletic. She could handle [the ball] and she was strong. She could dunk, she could play at the rim, she could guard anybody. Until Caitlin [Clark] came along, I thought Cheryl Miller was the best college player ever.”

It’s impossible not to wonder what Miller would have looked like in today’s game. But according to Hall of Fame player Ann Meyers-Drysdale, who played on the 1976 silver medal-winning U.S. Olympic team and called the 1984 team’s games for ABC, we don’t need to think too hard.

“Could Bill Russell, Oscar Robertson and Jerry West play today? You’re a great player no matter the generation,” Meyers-Drysdale said. “Absolutely Cheryl Miller would have been great in today’s game.”

Miller doesn’t lack confidence in how she would perform in the modern era.

“It’s not being braggadocious,” Miller said. “But there’s no one in the game [today] where I’m like, ‘She would have been a challenge.’ ”

Fighting for their spot: The Olympic trials in Colorado Springs

Braxton, a senior forward from Louisiana Tech, vividly remembers watching Georgeann Wells at the 1984 Olympic trials. A 6-foot-7 inch sophomore from West Virginia who would become the first woman to dunk in a college game, Wells was one of the most talented players Braxton had seen.

“This girl had arms and legs for days,” Braxton said. “She was blocking everybody’s shot in the trials.”

But Wells’ defensive dominance throughout tryouts wasn’t enough to earn her a spot on the Olympic roster. In Braxton’s eyes, Wells’ failure to make the cut represented how difficult it was to gain one of the 12 spots. 

“When you play in a certain [college] conference, you don’t really get to see some of the other teams around the country play,” Braxton said. “When we went to the Olympic trials, then you had these people coming from everywhere. And you’d be like, ‘Oh man, dang.’ ”

Collegiate and professional players competing overseas combined to form a more competitive tryout than in 1980, said Curry, who made the Olympic roster in ’80 but was denied the chance to compete in Moscow because of the U.S. boycott.

“They were really intense,” Curry said. “The number of quality players had increased significantly between the 1980 trials and 1984 trials.”

Making the 1984 roster is a moment Curry said she will never forget.

“I remember pure elation, just like in 1980,” Curry said. “In 1980, they posted the team on the wall in the dorms at the Olympic Training Center in Colorado Springs, whereas this time, Pat [Summitt] had us come into a room and she told us individually. In 1984, it obviously was before cell phones and things like that, so then you’re hustling to try to find one of those dorm phones down the hall to call your family and let them know what happened. To some extent, there was some relief, but mostly just proud and excited.”

“Dominance”: How good was this U.S. team?

After months of training under Summitt as if they were entering as underdogs, the team dominated like the favorites they were.

With a high-pressure defense and an up-tempo offense, the Americans overwhelmed every team they played in the group stage, cruising to a 33-point average margin of victory.

“I know we had the expectations that we were going to go out and pressure the heck out of people, make it miserable for them, not allow them to get comfortable, not allow them, ideally, to even get into their offense so that they’re taking any kind of high-percentage shot,” said forward Curry. 

“We did that in every game.”

The U.S. concluded its Olympic run with the gold-medal game against South Korea, where players entered ready to crush their final opponent.

“Five of us were dunking in warm-ups, and you could hear the ‘clack ’ [of the rim],” guard Boswell said. “The [South Korean] players were looking out of the corner of their eyes. And we were all looking at each other like, ‘Hey, we’re playing at home in front of our crowd, so let’s get this.’ ”

The U.S. cruised to a 30-point win to secure the first Olympic gold medal in U.S. women’s basketball history. Three players, including Miller, scored in double figures, while every other player on the team contributed at least one basket. The performance was emblematic of the collection of individual stars that had melded to become a historic team.

“Being able to come together, knowing that any of us could take over a game at any time but sacrificing whatever it took,” said Edwards, “that’s one thing that made us special. We all wanted to win. Period.”

The six games to gold

Game 1: The U.S. began its road to gold on July 30 with a matchup against Yugoslavia. The 9 a.m. tipoff initially had the Americans sluggish, trailing 25-23 at one point in the first half. Miller and McGee eventually provided the jolt their team needed. Miller ended the game as the leading scorer with 23 points, eight rebounds and five assists, while McGee added 13 points, four rebounds and one assist. The U.S. led 43-29 at halftime and coasted to an 83-55 victory.  

Game 2: The U.S. faced Australia on July 31, and this time the Americans were ready for the 9 a.m. tipoff. They led by 20 points after 15 minutes and were up 51-28 at halftime. Noble had her best game of the tournament, posting 13 points and three rebounds while shooting 6-for-6 from the field. Curry chipped in with 12 points, two rebounds and three assists. The U.S. improved to 2-0 in round-robin play with an 81-47 win.

Game 3: After a day off, the U.S. met South Korea on Aug. 2. The Americans once again dominated from the opening tip and led 40-20 at the half. Braxton stuffed the stat sheet with 13 points and seven rebounds while shooting a team-high nine free throws. Boswell turned in her best performance with 10 points, three rebounds and three assists. The U.S.  continued its demolition of the field with an 84-47 win.

Game 4: The U.S. faced China on Aug. 3 and continued proving itself as the tournament favorite. The team led 38-26 after the first half and widened its margin of victory in the second, outscoring China 53-29 to complete a 91-55 victory. Woodard was the leading scorer with 16 points, four assists, three rebounds and two steals. Braxton followed with 14 points, seven rebounds, two steals and one block. Two Chinese players registered 10 or more points, while four Americans reached the 10-point threshold.

Game 5: The U.S. met Canada on Aug. 5 and forced its will upon yet another opponent. Donovan played her best game of the tournament, recording 14 points, six rebounds, one assist, one steal and one block. The American team outrebounded Canada 42-29 en route to a 92-61 final. The U.S. led by 10 at the half and outscored Canada 51-30 in the second half.

Game 6: In the tournament’s biggest game – the gold medal final – the U.S. leaned upon its superstar, who shined against South Korea. Miller recorded 16 points and had 11 rebounds, five assists and two steals to lead the Americans to an 85-55 victory. The team ended the tournament the way it started it – with suffocating defense. Four players on the South Korean team recorded a single point.

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NHL general managers had money to spend this offseason with the salary cap rising from $83.5 million to $88 million.

That led to a busy free agency season in which USA TODAY Sports’ top 25 players moved within three days.

Though things are calming down, there are more transactions to come.

Stars Leon Draisaitl, Sidney Crosby, Mitch Marner and Igor Shesterkin are eligible to receive contract extensions. Jeremy Swayman, Lucas Raymond, Seth Jarvis and Moritz Seider are among restricted free agents needing new contracts. The Columbus Blue Jackets are still looking for a coach.

Here are the top NHL transactions that have occurred during the 2024 offseason:

July 17: Hurricanes, Evgeny Kuznetsov agree to terminate contract

The Carolina Hurricanes placed forward Evgeny Kuznetsov on unconditional waivers for the purpose of terminating his contract. That will allow Kuznetsov to play in Russia. He had one year, at a $7.8 million cap hit, left on his contract. The Washington Capitals, who traded him to the Hurricanes last season, retained half of that, and both teams will be free of that cap hit.

The mutual decision brings another offseason change to the Hurricanes roster. They weren’t able to re-sign trade deadline acquisition, Jake Guentzel and traded his rights to the Tampa Bay Lightning, where he signed. Defensemen Brady Skjei and Brett Pesce and forwards Teuvo Teravainen and Stefan Noesen left in free agency. Defensemen Shayne Gostisbehere and Matt Walker and forwards Jack Roslovic and William Carrier are among the offseason additions.

Kuznetsov spent time last season in the NHL/NHL Players’ Association assistance program and finished with only 24 points in 63 games. He scored a league-best 32 points during the Capitals’ 2018 Stanley Cup run. He also was known for his goal celebration of flapping his arms like a bird.

The Hurricanes announced later in the day that they had re-signed forward Jack Drury to a two-year contract with a $1.725 million cap hit.

July 16: Joe Pavelski announces retirement

Joe Pavelski, who said in June he would take next season off, officially announced his retirement. Pavelski, 40, finishes with 476 goals and 1,068 points in 1,332 career regular-season games between the San Jose Sharks and Dallas Stars. He’s the NHL’s leading U.S.-born playoff goal scorer with 74 and helped lead the Stars to back-to-back trips to the Western Conference final. Pavelski never won a Stanley Cup but he went to the Final in 2016 with the Sharks, scoring a playoff-leading 14 goals and four game-winners, and in 2020 with the Stars. He had been captain of the Sharks.

July 16: Kings re-sign Quinton Byfield

The No. 2 overall pick in the 2020 draft will get five years at a $6.25 million average. The Los Angeles Kings forward was a restricted free agent. The deal follows a breakthrough last season with a jump from three goals and 22 points to 20 goals and 55 points while being moved into a top six role. If he continues that progress, the deal will look good years from now.

Also: The St. Louis Blues said defenseman Torey Krug has been diagnosed with pre-arthritic changes in his left ankle and will be evaluated in six to eight weeks. If he needs surgery, he will miss the 2024-25 season. The team said the injury is a cumulative result of a bone fracture from earlier in his career. … Vancouver Canucks goalie Arturs Silovs signed a two-year contract. He was pressed into action in the playoffs after an injury to Thatcher Demko.

July 13: Rangers, Blue Jackets sign players

The New York Rangers re-signed defenseman Braden Schneider to a two-year contract with a reported $2.2 million cap hit. The Columbus Blue Jackets and goalie Jet Greaves settled on a two-year deal and avoided arbitration. It’s a two-way deal the first year that pays him less in the American Hockey League, but the second year is a one-way deal.

July 11: Utah’s Tij Iginla signs entry-level contract

Igina, the son of Hall of Famer Jarome Iginla, was the Utah Hockey Club’s first draft pick, taken sixth overall in June. He had 84 points in 64 games last season with Kelowna of the Western Hockey League. Iginla and Detroit Red Wings selection are the 13th and 14th of June’s 32 first-round picks to sign a three-year, entry-level contract.

Also: The Lightning and defenseman J.J. Moser reached a two-year, $6.75 million contract, avoiding arbitration. He was acquired from Utah in the Mikhail Sergachev trade.

July 10: Ryan Suter signs with Blues

Defenseman Ryan Suter, 39, who was bought out for the second time in his career, signed a one-year, $775,000 contract. He can earn another $2.225 million in performance bonuses. The Dallas Stars bought out the final year of his three-year contract. He was bought out by the Minnesota Wild in 2021.

July 8: Capitals name Chris Patrick general manager

Chris Patrick becomes the seventh general manager in Capitals history after being promoted from associate GM. Brian MacLellan was promoted to president of hockey operations. Patrick is the son of Capitals chairman Dick Patrick.

The Capitals were one of the busier teams this offseason, trading for Pierre-Luc Dubois, Andrew Mangiapane, Jakob Chychrun and Logan Thompson and signing Matt Roy, Brandon Duhaime and Taylor Raddysh.

July 6: Top two NHL draft picks sign

No. 1 pick Macklin Celebrini (Sharks) and No. 2 pick Artyom Levshunov (Blackhawks) signed three-year, entry-level deals rather than return for another season at college. They could end up at different levels. Celebrini, who was the clear-cut No. 1 pick, is expected to open the season with the Sharks. Levshunov, depending on what happens in training camp, could start in the American Hockey League.

July 5: 14 players file for salary arbitration

Fourteen restricted free agents have filed for salary arbitration, the NHL Players’ Association announced.

They are (in alphabetical order): Jake Christiansen (Blue Jackets), Connor Dewar (Maple Leafs), Jack Drury (Hurricanes), Ty Emberson (Sharks), Jet Greaves (Blue Jackets), Ryan Lindgren (Rangers), Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen (Sabres), Beck Malenstyn (Sabres), Kirill Marchenko (Blue Jackets), J.J. Moser (Lightning), Martin Necas (Hurricanes), Spencer Stastney (Predators), Joe Veleno (Red Wings) and Oliver Wahlstrom (Islanders).

The key one is Necas, who has been linked to trade rumors. Moser and Malenstyn were acquired in offseason trades.

Hearings will be held from July 20 to Aug. 4, though nearly all players reach a settlement beforehand.

July 3: Kraken hires Jessica Campbell as assistant coach

Jessica Campbell made history when she was hired to join Dan Bylsma’s coaching staff on the Seattle Kraken.

She becomes the first female full-time assistant coach in NHL history to work behind the bench

Campbell, 32, made similar history in the American Hockey League when Bylsma hired her as an assistant coach with the Coachella Valley Firebirds in 2022. Bylsma, a former Stanley Cup winner, is bringing Campbell with him to the NHL after being named Kraken coach in May.

‘I just know that if the team has success and my impact is a good one, it could potentially open the doors for others,’ she said.

July 1-4: Early days of free agency

The Nashville Predators were among the winners by signing Steven Stamkos, Jonathan Marchessault and Brady Skjei. The Carolina Hurricanes and Vegas Golden Knights lost key players early but have added back. On Day 3, the Detroit Red Wings signed two-time Stanley Cup winner Vladimir Tarasenko.

A look at the opening days of 2024 NHL free agency

June 24-July 1: Who was traded before free agency?

The Tampa Bay Lightning and Washington Capitals were busy on the trade front. The Lightning moved out Mikhail Sergachev and Tanner Jeannot, then acquired the rights to Jake Guentzel and signed him to a seven-year, $63 million contract. The Capitals traded for forwards Dubois and Mangiapane, defenseman Chychrun and goalie Thompson, moving out goalie Darcy Kuemper and Beck Malenstyn.

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House Republican leaders are calling for accountability after the failed assassination attempt against former President Trump on Saturday.

‘I think there are so many questions that need to be answered, and I don’t know who is to blame. I don’t know what the breakdowns are, I clearly know there were breakdowns. But let’s find out who’s responsible and then people need to be held accountable,’ House Majority Whip Tom Emmer, R-Minn., told Fox News Digital.

National Republican Congressional Committee (NRCC) Chair Richard Hudson, R-N.C., said the shooting was likely the result of a ‘major security breakdown.’

‘One of my initial reactions as I was watching this unfold on television was anger – how could this happen? How can a person with a gun get to a rooftop that overlooks the stage that close to the former president?’ Hudson told Fox News Digital.

‘I’m no security expert…but I do have some familiarity with rifles and scopes. And that was a very close distance. And the fact that rooftop was available for that shooter, I just can’t understand. So you know, I want to hear what happened.’

A 20-year-old gunman opened fire on Trump’s rally in Butler, Pennsylvania from a nearby roof over the weekend, killing one attendee and critically injuring two others. Trump was shot in the ear before he ducked behind the podium and pulled off the stage by his Secret Service detail.

But the situation has led to lawmakers questioning how the gunman could get so close to a heavily secured area, despite people seeing him climb up onto the building he fired from. There were also heavily armed police inside that building, according to reports.

Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., and House Majority Leader Steve Scalise, R-La., both called on Secret Service Director Kimberly Cheatle to resign.

Emmer and Hudson would not go that far, telling Fox News Digital on the sidelines of the Republican National Convention (RNC) that they wanted to see what details could be uncovered before making their judgment.

FBI Director Christopher Wray held member-wide briefings with both the House and Senate on Wednesday to discuss lawmakers’ questions and concerns.

A source familiar with the House’s call said it lasted roughly 45 minutes, and that lawmakers found Wray and Cheatle’s answers unsatisfying. 

The source said Johnson would set up a classified briefing for lawmakers next week when the House is back in session.

Fox News Digital reached out to the FBI and Secret Service for comment but not hear back by time of publication.

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Republican vice presidential nominee JD Vance’s ‘America First’ foreign policy positions are taking the spotlight as he prepares to deliver his first major prime time speech at the Republican National Convention on Wednesday night.

Vance was announced as former President Trump’s running mate on Monday, and since, numerous politicians and media outlets, especially foreign ones, have begun sounding the alarm over what they describe as his ‘isolationist’ policies, warning a Trump-Vance presidency might go so far as to abandon Ukraine amid its war with Russia.

‘Trump’s choice of running mate raises fears in Ukraine and EU,’ one BBC headline read, with the piece going on to cite a German politician saying Vance is ‘more isolationist’ and ‘unpredictable’ than Trump.

The Washington Post wrote that Trump picked ‘a like-minded isolationist on foreign policy,’ and Politico wrote that Vance ‘spells ‘disaster’ for Europe and Ukraine.’

CNN’s Van Jones described Vance as ‘a horror on the world stage,’ warning ‘Ukrainians are now in deep trouble.’

When Vance talks about his ‘America First’ foreign policy beliefs, the focus often involves Ukraine as well as Israel and China.

He has been a vocal critic of the various foreign aid packages, which included assistance for Ukraine: ‘The problem in Ukraine … is that there’s no clear end point,’ he remarked on one occasion.

‘The United States has sent tens of billions worth of military aid to Ukraine with shockingly little accountability for where those resources have gone,’ he said in another instance.

Vance has largely made support for Israel amid its war with Hamas an exception to his opposition to foreign aid, and he has argued against ‘micromanaging’ their military operations. He’s also called for rooting out Hamas as a military organization and that the world should ’empower’ Israel to do it.

Vance’s opposition to foreign aid is driven largely by his view that it’s a distraction from China, which he describes as the ‘biggest threat’ currently facing the U.S.

The first-term Ohio senator’s speech is expected to fall fully in line with the night’s ‘Make America Strong Once Again’ theme, and it will, according to one source in his political orbit, be focused ‘heavily on his bio and incredible life story and how that ties into the America First agenda.’

His speech will also ‘connect his life experiences to the Trump policies, folding in his firsthand experience of a tough upbringing that shaped his views on a lot of the biggest issues he is passionate about,’ which include ‘trade, immigration, ending endless wars, fentanyl and drugs, and how inflation hurts the poor the most,’ another source told Fox.

Fox News’ Julia Johnson contributed to this report.

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Top Senate Democrat Chuck Schumer reportedly told President Biden in a ‘blunt one-on-one conversation’ Saturday it would be best if he ‘bowed out of the race,’ according to an ABC report on X.

‘Chuck Schumer had a blunt one-on-one conversation with Biden Saturday afternoon in Rehoboth. Schumer forcefully made the case that it would be best if Biden bowed out of the race,’  ABC News chief Washington correspondent Jonathan Karl wrote. ‘Schumer’s office wouldn’t comment on the specifics of the conversation, telling me only, ‘Leader Schumer conveyed the views of his caucus.’’

The Senate majority leader’s office issued a similar response obtained by Fox News Digital on Wednesday, but waved off ABC’s report.

‘Unless ABC’s source is Senator Chuck Schumer or President Joe Biden the reporting is idle speculation,’ a spokesperson for Sen. Schumer said. ‘Leader Schumer conveyed the views of his caucus directly to President Biden on Saturday.’

The news comes as the New York Democrat pushed for the Democratic National Convention’s delay as questions persist about President Biden’s 2024 candidacy due to concerns over his mental acuity, according to multiple sources.

Schumer spoke with House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., and both men agreed to urge the DNC to delay a virtual roll call planned for this month to officially nominate Biden, three sources told Fox News Digital.

It was revealed Wednesday that the DNC was delaying its nomination plans to August after significant pushback from party members toward an initial plan to nominate Biden later this month.

‘We have confirmed with the Democratic National Committee and the Democratic National Convention that no virtual voting will begin before August 1,’ wrote DNC Rules Committee co-chairs Gov. Tim Walz, D-Minn., and veteran Democratic Party official Leah Daughtry in a letter obtained by Fox News Digital. 

Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., became the 20th congressional Democrat to call on Biden to step aside on Wednesday. ‘I believe it is time for him to pass the torch,’ Schiff said in a statement to Fox News Digital. 

His call came one day after a report claimed he told donors ‘I think if he is our nominee, I think we lose.’

Meanwhile, White House spokesperson Karine Jean-Pierre confirmed Wednesday evening that Biden had contracted COVID-19. The COVID diagnosis follows remarks from a day earlier in which Biden said a medical condition could lead to him dropping out of the race.

‘If I had some medical condition that emerged, if somebody, the doctors came and said you’ve got this problem, that problem,’ Biden told BET’s Ed Gordon . ‘But I made a serious mistake in the whole debate and, look, when I originally ran, you might remember it, I said I was gonna be a transitional candidate. I thought that I would be able to move from this, to pass it on to somebody else. But I didn’t anticipate things getting so, so, so divided.’

Fox News Digital’s Paul Steinhauser, Adam Shaw and Julia Johnson contributed to this report.

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SARASOTA, Fla. – Cancer once again has put a full-court press on Dick Vitale.

The 85-year-old ESPN college basketball analyst recently underwent surgery to remove a cancerous lymph node from his neck. Doctors also removed 26 surrounding lymph nodes. Once Vitale recovers from the surgery, he will undergo six weeks of radiation. In June 2023, Vitale finished 35 radiation treatments for vocal cord cancer.

His voice still weak, Vitale texted his responses in a brief Q&A with Sarasota Herald-Tribune sportswriter Doug Fernandes.

Question: What was the procedure you underwent?

Vitale: I am currently recovering from surgery on July 1 to remove a cancerous lymph node in my neck, and also the removal of 26 surrounding lymph nodes. The pathology report was  that one of the 26 had cancer potential, thus Dr. Peter Vosler, the surgeon, and Dr. Rick Brown, the oncologist, feel I need six weeks of radiation treatments daily to wipe out any potential cancerous lymph nodes to avoid any spreading. I must totally heal from the recent surgery before radiation can start. The feeling is I should be cleared to start in the middle of August. I am trying to stay active as it really helps me emotionally and mentally.

Can your doctors make any projections or predictions after you finish your radiation? Should you be in the clear?

Vitale: My oncologist and surgeon feel that if I have a successful six weeks of radiation that we would be very optimistic that we would be moving in a positive direction. Before I can start the radiation, I must be healed from the recent surgery. At the moment I am in recovery and I am dealing with some numbness and no feeling on the right side of my neck, which was expected. Hoping that the recovery in time gets me to where we can get started with the radiation.

You have had quite a few medical issues the last two or three years. How tough has it been maintaining a positive outlook?

Vitale: It really has been an emotional and mental challenge as I am now going through my fourth cancer battle. It started with melanoma followed by lymphoma, then vocal cord cancer and now the lymph node cancer surgery. However, through it all, I have stayed active and been so inspired and motivated by all the prayers and messages I have received from so many. I always try to reflect and think about all the courageous youngsters who have been at my Galas and what they have gone through. They have been so helpful in sharing their feelings with me. My family support has been vital in my various cancer battles and that is a major plus.

Question: Are you concerned that you’ll never be able to resume your broadcasting career? What have doctors told you about your voice returning?

Vitale: Obviously, I would love to be able to sit at courtside and do what I love: talk about what is happening in college basketball. At this moment, I am simply focusing on what I am currently dealing with and that is to follow the advice of my medical team and become cancer-free at the conclusion of my six weeks of radiation treatments. I went through the radiation on my vocal cords and it was successful in wiping the cancer out. I was able to deal with the side effects at that time and I hope I can again.

You like to top the money raised at each successive Dick Vitale Gala, which raises awareness and proceeds in the fight against cancer. How will it be possible to exceed the $24 million raised at the last one?

Vitale: My biggest goal is to raise dollars for kids battling that vicious disease more than ever after going through my own battles. I have lived a fantastic blessed life with a great wife Lorraine and family. Plus, for more than four decades doing what I love and that’s talking basketball on ESPN, which is my second family. I can’t stress enough how caring Jimmy Pitaro, the CEO of ESPN, and my many colleagues have constantly shared inspirational messages. I am lucky and I think of all the young people I have gotten to know over the years and I just think it is totally unfair for young kids to have to deal with the scans, bloodwork, chemotherapy, and radiation that you must deal with.  I am hoping that our 2025 Gala on May 2 will be successful in raising the necessary dollars that will get us to exceed $100 million for pediatric cancer research through the V Foundation since starting our Gala. My team, headed by Mary Kenealy and Janet Allen, are dedicated to making our 20th Annual Gala on May 2nd  a big-time success. Please join our team, and if you are financially able, please make a donation at dickvitale.com as every dollar will help young people fighting this brutal disease. I want to close by saying thank you to all of you who have been so generous and kind over the years.

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All signs are pointing toward Phoenix Mercury guard Diana Taurasi making her sixth Olympic appearance later this month after an injury scare sidelined her for three games with a lower left leg ailment.

Taurasi came back against the Connecticut Sun on July 14, scoring six points and grabbing six rebounds in 25 minutes in a 96-69 road defeat.

Closing out the season’s first half before the All-Star Game and the Olympic break, Taurasi had 18 points and five assists in 28 minutes in a 96-87 win over the Washington Mystics on Tuesday.

The 42-year-old Taurasi is averaging 16.1 points, 4.8 rebounds and 2.5 assists in 20 games this season.

Taurasi and her Olympic teammates start their journey to a possible eighth consecutive gold medal when the group play starts July 29 against Japan. Team USA will then take on Belgium on Aug. 1 and Germany on Aug. 4.

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The USA Basketball Showcase continued Wednesday with its second and final game in Abu Dhabi.

The United States entered the game having won each of its first two games. It was coming off of a close, 98-92 win over Australia on Monday.

Wednesday’s game also served as a preview for the group stage at the 2024 Paris Olympic Games basketball tournament. The U.S. and Serbia are both in Group C and will open group play against each other again at the Olympics.

See how the U.S. defeated Serbia in each team’s second game in Abu Dhabi.

Team USA vs. Serbia highlights

When does Team USA basketball play next?

The United States takes on fellow Group C member South Sudan in London for its fourth and penultimate USA Basketball Showcase exhibition game on Saturday, July 20. The game starts at 3 p.m. ET and will be aired on FOX.

United States defeats Serbia, 105-79

On the back of strong performances from Steph Curry, LeBron James and Anthony Davis, Team USA moves to 3-0 in its pre-Olympics showcase after the win over Serbia.

Team USA leads by 30

With three minutes left in the game, the U.S. has built a 99-69 lead over Serbia.

Curry putting on a show in Abu Dhabi

The 36-year-old point guard is 6/9 from 3-point range and has 24 points against Serbia. The latest one gave the U.S. a 95-66 lead.

Anthony Davis dominating the rim

The Lakers’ star is up to six blocks in the game with seven minutes remaining. He also has seven points and six rebounds off of the bench.

Team USA leads Serbia through three quarters

After a second consecutive strong quarter, the U.S. leads Serbia, 83-58, with 10 minutes left in the game.

Anthony Edwards handles a scoop and score

The young guard snagged the ball from Serbia at the wing on the defensive side and ran down the court for an easy slam. Everything has clicked for the U.S. so far in the second half.

Bam Adebayo sinks 3-pointer

The 26-year-old center from the Miami Heat was the benefactor of good ball movement from the U.S. offense. As the shot clock wound down, Adebayo drilled a late shot from the top of the key.

Serbia cut their deficit to 18

Before the first media timeout of the second half, Serbia’s shooting heated up. The team went on a 10-2 scoring run to cut into the U.S. lead and bring the score to 73-55 with four minutes remaining in the third quarter.

Team USA dominating early second half

Missed shots and strong American defense have held Serbia to zero points through three and a half minutes in the third quarter. Meanwhile, the U.S. is on a 12-0 run to begin the second half and extended the lead to 71-45.

United States leads Serbia at halftime, 59-45

The U.S. battled through the second quarter after a shaky first 10 minutes. A scoring run that began about halfway through the quarter carried Team USA to a 14-point halftime lead.

Anthony Davis up to four blocks on the day

A big part of Team USA’s scoring run has been the strong defense from Lakers big man Anthony Davis, who blocked several shots at the rim during the run. The U.S. leads Serbia, 59-45.

United States extends lead with 13-2 scoring run

Curry’s four-point play ignited the Americans, who add on with a big run to build their lead to 53-42 with two minutes left in the second quarter.

Derrick White on for Team USA debut

The Celtics’ guard is on the court for his first minutes with the U.S. national team halfway through the second quarter.

Curry taking over

Team USA reclaimed the lead on a wide-open 3-pointer from Steph Curry, who kept the scoring going with a drive to the rim for two points and a four-point play on the next two possessions. The U.S. leads, 44-40.

Curry, James pair up to assist an easy shot for Embiid

The two multi-time NBA MVP winners team up with a couple of beautiful passes to find Joel Embiid open under the rim for a quick two points.

Serbia re-takes lead

Bad turnovers continue to plague the U.S., which has allowed Serbia to regain the lead with a couple of 3-pointers to open the third quarter. A tough drive by LeBron James ends an 8-0 run, but Serbia leads, 34-31.

U.S. – Serbia tied at 28 after first quarter

Serbia managed to get the ball down the court quickly after a couple of missed shots from Team USA. They hit a buzzer-beating layup to bring the score even as the first quarter ended.

Edwards draws U.S. even with a deep 3

After Team USA moved the ball around to begin the possession, the ball ended in the hands of the Minnesota Timberwolves star. Edwards drains a 3-pointer from the top of the key to tie the game at 24 with one minute left in the first quarter.

He followed it up with a steal and drew a foul to go to the line, where he sank both free throws. The United States regain the lead, 26-24.

Jokić nails hook shot over two defenders

With two Americans on him, the center passed out to Dobrić for an open look beyond the arc. After the missed shot, Jokić grabbed the board and sunk a tough shot over the defense. Serbia leads, 22-19.

Dobrić, Petrušev team up for lob and slam

On a breakaway possession following a steal, Serbian small forward Ognjen Dobrić lobbed a pass to center Filip Petrušev, who slammed it down over Anthony Davis to give Serbia an 18-15 lead.

Jokić hears MVP chants at the foul line

The three-time and reigning NBA MVP got ‘M-V-P’ chants from the crowd as he drained two foul shots. Serbia now leads 16-13 at the first media timeout.

Serbia takes and extends lead

Several miscommunications lead to turnovers from the United States, allowing Serbia to take and extend their lead with an 8-0 run. Serbia leads Team USA, 14-13, halfway through the first quarter.

Steph Curry opens U.S. scoring

After Team USA won the tip, Curry drained a 3-pointer from the left wing to begin the scoring for either side. He nailed another moments later to pull the Americans into a 7-4 lead two minutes into the game.

USA vs. Serbia: Time, TV, streaming and how to watch

Date: Wednesday, July 17Time: Noon ETLocation: Etihad Arena, Abu Dhabi, United Arab EmiratesTV: FS1Streaming: Fox Sports app; fuboTV; YouTube TV

Team USA roster

Bam Adebayo, Miami HeatDevin Booker, Phoenix SunsSteph Curry, Golden State WarriorsAnthony Davis, Los Angeles LakersKevin Durant, Phoenix SunsAnthony Edwards, Minnesota TimberwolvesJoel Embiid, Philadelphia 76ersTyrese Haliburton, Indiana PacersJrue Holiday, Boston CelticsLeBron James, Los Angeles LakersJayson Tatum, Boston CelticsDerrick White, Boston Celtics

Team Serbia roster

Vasilije Micić, Charlotte HornetsAleksej Pokuševski, free agentBogdan Bogdanović, Atlanta HawksNikola Jović, Miami HeatNikola Jokić, Denver NuggetsMarko Gudurić, Fenerbahçe (Turkey)Ognjen Dobrić, Virtus Bologna (Italy)Filip Petrušev, Olympiacos (Greece)Nikola Milutinov, Olympiacos (Greece)Dušan Ristić, Pablo Burgos (Spain)Vanja Marinković, Partizan (Serbia)Aleksa Avramović, Partizan (Serbia)Ognjen Jaramaz, Partizan (Serbia)Dejan Davidovac, Crvena zvezda (Serbia)Uroš Plavšić, Crvena zvezda (Serbia)Aleksa Radanov, Runa Basket Moscow (Russia)

Team USA highlights

Team Serbia players to know

Current NBA players:

Vasilije Micić, Charlotte HornetsBogdan Bogdanović, Atlanta HawksNikola Jović, Miami HeatNikola Jokić, Denver Nuggets

Other:

Filip Petrušev, Olympiacos (Greece)2020 WCC Player of the Year and third-team All-American with GonzagaPlayed one game with Philadelphia 76ers as second-round pick in 2021Sent to Los Angeles Clippers as part of James Harden tradeClippers traded him to Sacramento Kings for draft rights of fellow Serbian Luka MitrovićPlayed two games for Sacramento

USA men’s basketball Olympic schedule: Time, TV and streaming

All Team USA men’s basketball games will be available to stream on Peacock.

July 28

USA vs. Serbia, NBC, 11:15 a.m. ET

July 31

USA vs. South Sudan, NBC, 3 p.m. ET

Aug. 3

USA vs. Puerto Rico, NBC, 11:15 a.m. ET

When are the Paris 2024 Olympics?

The 2024 Paris Olympics start on July 24 and run through August 11.

How can I watch the 2024 Paris Olympics?

TV: Games broadcast across NBC, USA Network, E!, Telemundo, CNBC, NBCSN

Streaming: Peacock, NBCOlympics.com 

Remaining USA Basketball Showcase schedule

July 20: USA vs. South Sudan, 3 p.m. ET, Fox, LondonJuly 22: USA vs. Germany, 3 p.m. ET, Fox, London

USA Basketball Showcase locations

Team USA played one game in Las Vegas to start the showcase. It will have played two games in Abu Dhabi after Wednesday before playing two more in London ahead of the Olympics.

Team USA lineup

Team Serbia lineup

Aleksa AvramovićMarko GudurićOgnjen DobrićFilip PetruševNikola Jokić

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