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After the weekend’s college football bowl game extravaganza, the Monday schedule might seem a little light. There is in fact just one contest on the docket for New Year’s Eve eve, but one is always better than none, right?

As we inch closer to 2025 the lone Monday matinee probably won’t have anything resembling a playoff vibe, but it does feature a potentially interesting matchup of SEC vs. Big Ten, providing another datapoint in the seemingly endless debate among conference advocates. It’s in an SEC city, but we’ll see if that really means more.

Here’s a quick look at the showdown.

Music City Bowl – No. 20 Missouri vs. Iowa

Time/TV/location: 2:30 p.m. ET, ESPN, Nashville, Tenn.

Why watch: A pair of flagship institutions from bordering states should make for a compelling viewing experience with both programs wanting to put their best foot forward. Regrettably, a significant number of key contributors will be absent from both squads, including Missouri WR Luther Burden III and Iowa RB Kaleb Johnson who will be in draft preparation. The good news for the Tigers is QB Brady Cook should be available after being banged up for much of the season. He should also have top RB Nate Noel and WR Theo Wease Jr. in his arsenal. Iowa QB Brendan Sullivan looks set to start, but he must count on freshman RB Kamari Moulton to do the heavy lifting on the ground.

Why it could disappoint: If you like defense, well, you’re probably an Iowa fan so this game might appeal to you. But the fact is the Hawkeyes probably need to make this a slog in order to keep it close. That’s just the team’s identity, and such games often feature plenty of fourth-quarter drama. Getting there could be a tough watch, but we’ve already witnessed unusual events in these bowls, so embrace the chaos and enjoy the ride.

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The returning head of the House Republican campaign committee says that ‘the battlefield is really playing out to our advantage’ as he works to defend the GOP’s razor-thin majority in the chamber in the 2026 midterm elections.

While House Republicans held on to control of the House in November’s elections, the Democrats made gains, and the GOP will hold a fragile 220-215 majority when at full strength.

The party in power traditionally loses House seats in the ensuing midterm elections.

But thanks to President-elect Trump’s popular vote victory and sweep of all seven key battleground states as he won back the White House, National Republican Congressional Committee chair Rep. Richard Hudson looks forward to some home-field advantage on the campaign trail.

‘There are 14 Democrats who won seats also carried by Donald Trump. There are only three Republicans in seats that were carried by Kamala Harris. So that tells me we’re going to be on offense,’ Hudson emphasized in a recent Fox News Digital interview.

Eight years ago, when Trump first won the White House, and the GOP held onto their House majority, Democrats targeted roughly two-dozen Republicans in the 2018 midterms in districts that Trump lost in the 2016 election.

The Democrats, in a blue-wave election, were successful in flipping the House majority. 

Fast-forward eight years, and it’s a different story, as this time Republicans will be defending seats on friendly turf in districts that the president-elect carried. And Hudson argues that home-field advantage will help the GOP cut through the traditional midterm headwinds.

‘There’s a whole lot more opportunity for us to go on offense,’ Hudson, who’s represented a congressional district in central North Carolina for a dozen years, touted.

Hudson also made the case that House Republicans who will once again be targeted by the Democrats in the upcoming election cycle are ‘really battle-tested. I mean, they’re folks who’ve been through the fire before. They’ve gone through several cycles now with millions of dollars spent against them.’

‘They’ve been able to succeed because they work very hard in their districts. They’ve established very strong brands, as you know, people who know how to get things done and how to deliver for their community,’ he emphasized. ‘The Republicans who are in tough seats are our best candidates.’

The three House Republicans who are in districts that Harris carried last month are Reps. Don Bacon of Nebraska, Brian Fitzpatrick of Pennsylvania and Mike Lawler of New York.

But there will be a big difference in 2026: Trump, who helped drive low-propensity voters to the polls this year, won’t be on the ballot in the 2026 midterms. 

‘I certainly would rather have him on the ballot, because he turns out voters that don’t come out for other candidates,’ Hudson acknowledged.

But he argued, ‘If you look at the way this race is shaping up, we campaigned on a key set of issues of things that we promised we would deliver. If we deliver those things and have Donald Trump there with us campaigning with our candidates, I believe we can drive out a higher percentage of those voters than we have in midterms in the past.’

Hudson said that Trump ‘was a great partner’ with House Republicans this year and will be again in the upcoming election cycle.

‘[Trump] cares deeply about having a House majority, because he understands that a Democrat House majority means his agenda comes to a grinding halt. And so he’s been very engaged, was a very good partner for us this last election, and I anticipate that continuing.’

Rep. Suzan DelBene of Washington State, chair of the rival Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, says she wants ‘to build on’ the ‘things we did right’ as she aims to win back the House majority Democrats lost in the 2022 midterms.

‘We won in tough districts, outperformed across the country,’ DelBene emphasized in a recent Fox News Digital interview.

DelBene, who is also sticking around for a second straight tour of duty steering her party’s House campaign committee, said that the 2024 successes are ‘a good example of what we need to continue to follow, heading into 2026.’

‘Number one, have great candidates who are independent-minded, focused on the needs of their communities,’ DelBene said as she listed her to-do list. ‘Those candidates and their voices were critically important in this election.’

DelBene said that ‘making sure that they [the candidates] have the resources they need to get information out to voters and to continue to address, head-on, the issues that are most important to their communities, lowering costs, making sure there’s economic opportunity’ are also top priorities.

With Trump returning to the White House and the GOP in control of both chambers of Congress, DelBene said Republicans are ‘going to be accountable for what they do in this country and the impact that has on working families.’

‘We’re going to hold them accountable for their votes and the actions they take, especially if they aren’t supporting working families,’ she emphasized. ‘I think people want to see governance work. So, if Republicans aren’t willing to work in a bipartisan way to get things done, that’s going to be a key part of the 2026 election as well.’

Looking to the 2026 map, DelBene touted that Democrats will have ‘opportunities across the country.’

And she said it’s the DCCC’s job to ‘reach voters where they are and make sure they’re getting accurate information about where our candidates stand.’

Fox News’ Emma Woodhead contributed to this report.

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As Democrats aim to rebound following stunning setbacks in the 2024 elections, the race for Democratic National Committee chair is very publicly heating up.

Getting less attention, but also starting to quietly commence, are moves by Democratic politicians who may have national ambitions in the next White House race.

And while 2028 may seem like a long way away, recent history shows that the early moves in the next White House race start, well, very early.

The unofficial starting gun for the 2024 race was fired by then-former President Donald Trump less than two months after leaving the White House, with a CPAC speech that teased his eventual 2024 presidential campaign.

A few weeks later, the first visits to the key early voting states of Iowa and New Hampshire by potential GOP presidential contenders were also underway.

Fast-forward four years, and expect similar actions by Democratic politicians who may harbor national ambitions. With the soon-to-be 82-year-old President Biden exiting the national stage, and Vice President Kamala Harris, in the wake of her defeat by Trump, in no immediate rush to decide her political future, the road to the 2028 nomination may be wide open.

‘The jockeying for 2028 took a brief pause when Harris became the nominee and looked to be in a strong position, which would have meant shutting out potential candidates for the next four to eight years. Now, though, it’s wide open, and it won’t be long before we see clear maneuvering from a litany of candidates,’ seasoned Democratic political strategist Chris Moyer told Fox News.

Moyer, a veteran of a handful of presidential campaigns, noted that ‘this will include travel to states like New Hampshire and South Carolina and Nevada, presumably under the auspices of helping candidates in the midterms. Democratic voters in the early states will soon want to find someone they can get excited about and a future to look forward to in the midst of the misery of another four years of Trump in the White House. These potential candidates will be more than happy to oblige.’

The results of the 2026 midterm elections will have a major impact on the shape of the next White House race.

For now, however, here is an initial look at Democratic Party politicians considered to be potential 2028 presidential contenders.

As the 60-year-old Harris finishes up her final weeks as the nation’s vice president, early polling in the 2028 Democratic nomination race indicates that she would be a front-runner, thanks in part to her name recognition within her party.

While any decisions on her next political steps are months away, sources in the vice president’s orbit confirm to Fox News that top aides are divided on whether Harris should run again for the White House in 2028, or instead launch a 2026 gubernatorial campaign in her home state of California, which would likely prevent her from seeking the presidency two years later.

While there are plenty of voices within the party who would like to move on from the Biden/Harris era following Trump’s sweeping victory, and there is little history of Democrats yearning for past defeated presidential nominees, Trump has re-written the rules when it comes to defeated White House contenders making another run. 

And potential buyers’ remorse of a second Trump administration could boost Harris in the years to come.

California Gov. Gavin Newsom was a top surrogate for President Biden during the president’s re-election bid. With the blessing of the White House, the two-term California governor debated then-Republican presidential candidate and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis last year on Fox News. 

Newsom’s travels on behalf of Biden brought him to New Hampshire and South Carolina, two crucial early voting states on the Democratic Party’s nominating calendar.

After the vice president, his friend and fellow Californian, replaced Biden atop the Democrats’ 2024 ticket, the governor continued — after a pause — his efforts to keep Trump from returning to the White House.

With Trump’s election victory last week, Newsom became one of the Democratic Party leaders getting ready to lead the opposition. The governor announced that California state lawmakers would meet to quickly take legislative action to counter Trump’s likely upcoming agenda.

The 57-year-old Newsom’s second term in Sacramento will finish at the end of next year, right around the time the 2028 presidential election will start to heat up.

Illinois Gov JB Pritzker, similar to Newsom, is already taking steps to Trump-proof his state.

‘You come for my people, you come through me,’ Pritzker told reporters of his efforts to protect Illinois.

Pritzker was also a high-profile surrogate on behalf of Biden and then Harris during the 2024 cycle. Those efforts brought Pritzker to Nevada, a general election battleground state and an early-voting Democratic presidential primary state, and New Hampshire.

However, before he makes any decision about 2028, the 59-year-old governor must decide whether he will run in 2026 for a third term steering Illinois.

Two-term Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer grabbed plenty of attention and became a Democratic Party rising star in 2020 when she feuded with then-President Trump over COVID pandemic federal assistance and survived a foiled kidnapping attempt.

Trump, at the time, called her ‘that woman from Michigan.’

Along with Newsom and Pritzker, Whitmer’s name was floated as a possible replacement for Biden following his disastrous debate performance against Trump in late June, before the president endorsed Harris and the party instantly coalesced around the vice president.

Whitmer was a leading surrogate for Biden and then for Harris and made a big impression on Democratic activists during a stop this summer in New Hampshire on behalf of Harris.

The governor is term-limited and will leave office after the end of next year.

Gov. Josh Shapiro, the 51-year-old first-term governor of Pennsylvania, was on Harris’ short-list for vice presidential nominee.

Even though the vice president named Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz as her running mate, Shapiro remained a top surrogate on behalf of his party’s 2024 national ticket. 

However, his two-day swing in New Hampshire during the final full week ahead of Election Day did raise some eyebrows and 2028 speculation.

After Harris lost battleground Pennsylvania to Trump, there was plenty of talk within the party that Harris had made the wrong choice for her running mate.

Shapiro, who has a track record of taking on the first Trump administration as Pennsylvania attorney general, is expected to play a similar role with the former president returning to the White House.

The governor will be up for re-election in 2026.

Maryland Gov. Wes Moore is considered by many to be another Democratic Party rising star.

The 46-year-old Army veteran, Rhodes Scholar and CEO of the charitable organization the Robin Hood Foundation during the coronavirus pandemic was elected two years ago.

Moore will be up for re-election in 2026.

Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg, who surpassed expectations during his 2020 Democratic presidential nomination run, was a very active surrogate on behalf of Biden and later Harris, during the 2024 cycle.

He helped raise a lot of money for the Democratic Party ticket, including heading a top-dollar fundraiser in New Hampshire.

The 42-year-old former South Bend, Indiana, mayor and former naval officer who served in the war in Afghanistan, is considered one of the party’s biggest and brightest stars. He was known as a top communicator for the administration, including making frequent appearances on Fox News.

The 46-year-old Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear, who was elected governor in 2019 and then re-elected in 2023 in red-state Kentucky, was also on Harris’ larger list for running mate.

Beshear made plenty of new friends and contacts as he ventured to New Hampshire last month to headline the state Democratic Party’s annual fall fundraising gala.

Beshear served as Kentucky’s attorney general before running for governor.

Georgia Sen. Raphael Warnock, 55, will likely be a major player in Washington as the Democratic minority in the Senate fights back against the second Trump administration.

Warnock, who won Senate elections in 2020 and 2022 in battleground Georgia, served as senior pastor at the famed Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta, where Martin Luther King Jr. once preached.

He is up for re-election in the Senate in 2028.

New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker, who ran for the 2020 Democratic presidential nomination, is considered one of the party’s most talented orators.

Thanks to his 2020 run, Booker made plenty of friends and allies in such early states as New Hampshire and South Carolina.

The senator is up for re-election in 2026.

Since the November election, Sen. Chris Murphy of Connecticut has been very vocal about the steps Democrats need to make to win back working-class voters.

First elected to the House in 2006 and to the Senate in 2012, Murphy cruised to re-election this year by nearly 20 points, which means he won’t have to decide between a re-election bid and a White House run in 2028.

Rep. Ro Khanna, 48, was a tireless surrogate on behalf of Biden and then Harris. 

He has been a regular visitor to New Hampshire in the past couple of years, including a high-profile debate last year against then-GOP presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy.

The progressive rock star and best-known lawmaker among the so-called Squad of diverse House Democrats in October turned 35, the minimum age to run for president.

Some Democrats argue that a riveting messenger with star power is needed as the party’s next nominee, and Ocasio-Cortez is guaranteed to grab plenty of attention if she ultimately decides to run.

Another potential contender with plenty of star power is Mark Cuban.

The billionaire business mogul and part-owner of the NBA’s Dallas Mavericks’ was a high-profile surrogate for Harris during her presidential election campaign.

North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper, 67, who is finishing up his eighth and final year as governor, took his name out of the Harris running mate speculation early in the process this summer.

Cooper served 16 years as North Carolina’s attorney general before winning election as governor.

New Mexico Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham, 65, is halfway through her second term steering New Mexico.

The governor, a former member of Congress, was a high-profile and busy surrogate on behalf of Harris during the final weeks of the 2024 campaign.

The 60-year-old Minnesota governor, who served as Harris’ running mate, has two years remaining in his second term in office.

While the vice presidential nominee’s energy and enthusiasm on the campaign trail this year impressed plenty of Democratic strategists, the final results of the election will make any potential future national run for Walz difficult.

Two other names keep coming up — and former Chicago mayor, former congressman, former White House chief of staff and current

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While history has softened the harsh view of Jimmy Carter’s presidency, there is one part of his legacy that looks worse as the years pass.

Carter, who died Sunday in Plains, Georgia, at the age of 100, called to boycott the 1980 Olympics because of the Soviet Union’s invasion of Afghanistan, and the pressure he exerted on the U.S. Olympic Committee to comply, was wrong and naïve. It accomplished nothing other than to further entrench the antagonism between the United States and the Soviet Union, and inserted politics where it didn’t belong.  

Worse, it punished hundreds of athletes, robbing them of the moment and opportunity for which they had trained and sacrificed. Not just American athletes, either. Other countries joined the United States in boycotting the Summer Games in Moscow, including Canada and Japan, and the Soviet Union and much of the Eastern bloc retaliated four years later in Los Angeles.

Carter, raised the possibility of a boycott in January 1980, a month after the Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan, hoping the embarrassment of the world staying home from the Summer Games would convince the communist powerhouse to leave Afghanistan. After the Soviets ignored a February deadline, Carter officially announced the boycott March 21, 1980.  

But it is the USOC, not the White House, that sends teams to the Olympics.  

In an April speech to USOC leaders, Vice President Walter Mondale painted the boycott as a moral imperative, saying ‘no less than the future security of the civilized world’ was at stake in Afghanistan. He likened the Soviet invasion to Hitler’s Nazi Germany, and said the United States could not make the same mistake it had in 1936, when Jesse Owens led an American team to the Berlin Games.  

‘As Joseph Goebbels boasted on the eve of the Olympics, the Reich expected the Games ‘to turn the trick and create a friendly world attitude toward Nazi political, economic, and racial aims.’ It worked,’ Mondale told the USOC. ‘… Neither Jesse’s achievements in Berlin nor any words spoken at the Games prevented the Reich from exploiting the Olympics toward their own brutal ends.’

A few hours after Mondale’s speech, the USOC agreed to Carter’s demand and said it would not send a team to Moscow.  

While athletes were hailed as patriots and praised for their sacrifice, that was little consolation for the harsh reality of Olympic sports.  

With the Games held once every four years, most athletes get only one shot when they’re in their prime. Four years earlier and they’re probably too young. Four years later and they’re probably too old.  

The boycott meant hundreds of athletes missed out on the opportunity to be recognized by the entire world as the best in the sports to which they’d devoted their entire lives. Given this was still in the days before professionals could compete in the Olympics, those athletes who would have won medals lost out on post-Games economic opportunities, including lucrative speaking engagements for which they’d still be in demand long after their days as an athlete had ended.  

Take Bill Rodgers, arguably one of the greatest distance runners ever.  

Rodgers was 40th in the marathon at the 1976 Olympics in Montreal. But beginning with the New York Marathon later that year, he won 15 of his next 19 races at the 26.2-mile distance, including Boston in 1978, 1979 and 1980.  

He set an American record at Boston in 1979, and Track & Field News ranked him No. 1 in the marathon for a third time that year. Had the United States gone to Moscow, he would have been a favorite to join Frank Shorter (1972), John Hayes (1908) and Thomas Hicks (1904) as the only U.S. men to win the Olympic marathon, a feat that would have made him a commercial superstar.  

But the United States didn’t go to Moscow. And by the time the Los Angeles Games arrived, Rodgers’ career was in decline. He finished eighth at the 1984 Olympic trials and didn’t even make the U.S. team for L.A. 

‘We’re simply a tool, an implement,’ Rodgers told the Washington Post at the time. ‘No one cares at all, until we can be used for their purposes. Then they can use it.’

At least Rodgers could still call himself an Olympian, having competed in Montreal. But there were other athletes for whom Moscow was their only chance. They remain in a weird sort of athletic purgatory, Olympians without an Olympics.  

‘I feel like a doctor who knows the specialty, but I don’t have that M.D.,’ wrestler Lee Kemp, who would have been the heavy favorite for gold at 74 kilograms in Moscow after winning the world title in 1978 and 1979, told the New Orleans Times-Picayune in 2010.

Kemp retired after finishing second at the 1984 Olympic trials. 

Had the boycott accomplished what Carter hoped, maybe athletes could have taken some comfort in knowing their sacrifice had brought about change. But many of the United States’ closest allies – Britain and France among them – refused to join the boycott. The politics Carter hoped to keep out of the Olympics are now endemic to the Games.  

And not until February 1989, almost a decade later, would the Soviet Union leave Afghanistan. 

‘There was not one positive,’ Kemp told the Times-Picayune. ‘Not one.’

Forty-four years later, it’s even more apparent Carter made the wrong decision.

Follow Nancy Armour on Twitter @nrarmour

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World leaders from across the globe are expressing their sincere condolences as the U.S. mourns the death of former President Jimmy Carter, who passed away at the age of 100 on Sunday.

Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel took to X to give his commiserations in the wake of Carter’s death, writing, ‘Condolences to the people and government of the United States, especially to the family and loved ones of President James Carter. Our people will remember with gratitude his efforts to improve relations, his visits to Cuba and his statement in favor of the freedom of the (Cuban) Five.’

In his one term in the White House, Carter struck the Camp David Accords between Israel and Egypt, helped take the world further from nuclear proliferation with the second Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty (SALT), signed the Panama Canal Treaties, which ended a century of direct American control over the crucial canal, and deregulated the nation’s airline industry.

Carter was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2002 for his efforts to find peaceful solutions when dealing with international conflicts, leaving many world leaders to applaud his work promoting economic and social development as well as human rights.

‘We express our heartfelt condolences to the American people and to the family of former US President Jimmy Carter on his passing. He was a leader who served during a time when Ukraine was not yet independent, yet his heart stood firmly with us in our ongoing fight for freedom. We deeply appreciate his steadfast commitment to Christian faith and democratic values, as well as his unwavering support for Ukraine in the face of Russia’s unprovoked aggression. He devoted his life to promoting peace in the world and defending human rights. Today, let us remember: peace matters, and the world must remain united in standing against those who threaten these values. May his memory be eternal,’ said Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky.

Long-time allies of the U.S. the Royal Family’s King Charles also took to social media to express his sorrow. 

‘It was with great sadness that I learned of the death of former President Carter. He was a committed public servant, and devoted his life to promoting peace and human rights. His dedication and humility served as an inspiration to many, and I remember with great fondness his visit to the United Kingdom in 1977. My thoughts and prayers are with President Carter’s family and the American people at this time.’

Carter died at his home in Georgia surrounded by his family.

‘My father was a hero, not only to me but to everyone who believes in peace, human rights, and unselfish love,’ said Chip Carter, the former president’s son. ‘My brothers, sister, and I shared him with the rest of the world through these common beliefs. The world is our family because of the way he brought people together, and we thank you for honoring his memory by continuing to live these shared beliefs.’

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We’re down to the final two weeks of the 2024 NFL season and the postseason picture continues to get clearer. Half the NFL divisions and 10 of 14 playoff spots have been clinched heading into ‘Sunday Night Football’ in Week 17.

There’s still plenty to sort out, especially with specifics on seeding positions. Here’s the latest on who’s in the playoffs, seeding positions, and current matchups as Week 17 results come in:

NFL playoff picture: Who is in so far?

Twelve teams have clinched a playoff spot after ‘Sunday Night Football’ in Week 17. Here’s who they are, grouped by conference:

AFC

Kansas City Chiefs (15-1)
Buffalo Bills (13-3)
Baltimore Ravens (11-5)
Houston Texans (9-7)
Pittsburgh Steelers (10-6)
Los Angeles Chargers (10-6)

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

NFC

Detroit Lions (13-2)
Philadelphia Eagles (13-3)
Minnesota Vikings (14-2)
Green Bay Packers (11-5)
Los Angeles Rams (10-6)
Washington Commanders (11-5)

NFL division winners 2024

Five of the eight divisions in the NFL have been clinched. Here’s the status for each one as Sunday’s action continues:

AFC

AFC East: Buffalo Bills (13-3)
AFC North: TBD
AFC South: Houston Texans (9-7)
AFC West: Kansas City Chiefs (15-1)*

NFC

NFC East: Philadelphia Eagles (13-3)
NFC North: TBD
NFC South: TBD
NFC West: Los Angeles Rams (10-6)

(*): The Chiefs have clinched home-field advantage throughout the AFC playoffs.

NFL playoff bracket update: Wild card matchups

AFC

No. 1 Kansas City Chiefs (15-1, AFC West winners): BYE

With their win over the Pittsburgh Steelers, the Chiefs have clinched the top seed in the AFC playoffs and a bye in the wild card round. They’ll have the top seed in the AFC bracket for the third time in the Patrick Mahomes era.

No. 2 Buffalo Bills (13-3, AFC East winners) vs. No. 7 Denver Broncos (9-7, wild card No. 3)

Buffalo’s Week 17 win over the New York Jets clinched the No. 2 seed in the conference. They’ll finish at least one game ahead of the AFC North winner and have home-field advantage until they potentially face the Chiefs in the conference championship.

As of Week 17, the No. 7 seed in the bracket is not set. The Broncos hold the final playoff spot, but the Bengals and Dolphins are still in the hunt. Cincinnati’s Week 17 win over Denver is a crucial tiebreaker if they finish with the same record.

No. 3 Baltimore Ravens (11-5, AFC North leaders) vs. No. 6 seed Los Angeles Chargers (10-6, wild card No. 2)

The AFC North winner is locked into the No. 3 seed. Thanks to its Christmas win over Houston and the Steelers’ loss to the Chiefs, Baltimore holds that spot. If Baltimore wins in Week 18 over the Browns or the Steelers lose to the Bengals, it will win the division for the second year in a row.

Los Angeles’ win over New England on Saturday clinched a playoff spot, but the team is not locked into the No. 6 seed. If the Steelers lose next week to the Bengals and the Chargers beat the Raiders, Los Angeles would take the No. 5 seed.

But as things stand, there will be another Harbaugh Bowl this season. These two teams faced off in November, with Baltimore winning 30-23.

No. 4 Houston Texans (9-7, AFC South winner) vs. No. 5 Pittsburgh Steelers (10-6, wild card No. 1)

Houston clinched the AFC South in Week 15 and is locked into the No. 4 seed. The Steelers’ loss to the Chiefs drops them to the No. 5 seed and hold the tiebreaker over the Chargers thanks to their win over Los Angeles in Week 3.

If the Steelers finish with the same record as the Chargers or better, they’ll be the No. 5 seed. If they lose and the Chargers win in Week 18, they’ll be the No. 6 seed at worst.

NFC

No. 1 seed Minnesota Vikings (14-2, NFC North leaders): BYE

The NFC North is the best division in football by record, which means the No. 1 seed is up in the air. Minnesota’s win over Green Bay keeps their chances at home-field advantage throughout the playoffs alive.

If Detroit wins on ‘Monday Night Football’ against the 49ers, the teams meet in Week 18 to decide the division champion and No. 1 seed in the NFC.

No. 2 Philadelphia Eagles (13-3, NFC East winners) vs. No. 7 Green Bay Packers (11-5, wild card No. 3)

Philadelphia’s loss to Washington in Week 16 means they need help to get the No. 1 seed. Their win over the Cowboys in Week 17 won them the division title, though, and the No. 2 seed at worst. To get the No. 1 seed, they need to beat the Giants in Week 18, the Lions to lose out, and the Vikings to lose at least one of their final two games.

With a loss and a Commanders win in Week 17, the Packers are bumped down to the final wild card spot entering the final week of the regular season.

These two teams faced off in Week 1 in Brazil with the Eagles winning 34-29.

No. 3 Los Angeles Rams (10-6, NFC West winners) vs. No. 6 Washington Commanders (11-5, wild card No. 2)

Washington’s win on ‘Sunday Night Football’ both sealed their spot in the playoffs and the Rams’ first NFC West title since 2021. The Commanders’ victory ensured Los Angeles will be the No. 3 seed in the playoffs regardless of what happens in Week 18 in the Rams’ game against the Seahawks.

No. 4 Tampa Bay Buccaneers (9-7, NFC South leaders) vs. No. 5 Detroit Lions (13-2, wild card No. 1)

Tampa Bay’s dominant win over Carolina has them in the NFC South lead over the Atlanta Falcons. However, the Buccaneers must finish a game ahead of the Falcons to win the division title, as Atlanta has two head-to-head wins over Tampa Bay.

So far, so good. Atlanta’s loss to Washington on ‘Sunday Night Football’ puts them one game back. If Tampa Bay holds on against New Orleans next week, the division crown is theirs for the second year in a row.

With the Vikings’ win over the Packers, the Lions temporarily drop down to the No. 5 seed. If Detroit wins ‘Monday Night Football’ against San Francisco, they’re back in the No. 1 seed spot.

NFL playoff picture

AFC

Kansas City Chiefs (15-1, AFC West winners)*
Buffalo Bills (13-3, AFC East winners)*
Baltimore Ravens (11-5, AFC North leaders)*
Houston Texans (9-7, AFC South winners)*
Pittsburgh Steelers (10-6, wild card No. 1)*
Los Angeles Chargers (10-6, wild card No. 2)*
Denver Broncos (9-7, wild card No. 3)

In the hunt: Miami Dolphins (8-8), Cincinnati Bengals (8-8).

NFC

Minnesota Vikings (14-2, NFC North leaders)*
Philadelphia Eagles (13-3, NFC East winners)*
Los Angeles Rams (10-6, NFC West winners)*
Tampa Bay Buccaneers (9-7, NFC South leaders)
Detroit Lions (13-2, wild card No. 1)*
Washington Commanders (11-5, wild card No. 2)*
Green Bay Packers (11-5, wild card No. 3)*

In the hunt: Atlanta Falcons (8-8).

An asterisk (*) denotes teams that have clinched a playoff spot. Teams that have clinched division titles are noted accordingly.

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For the first time in head coach Brian Daboll’s three years at the helm, the New York Giants eclipsed the 40-point mark Sunday as they defeated the Indianapolis Colts, 45-33.

It was their first home victory of the 2024 season and snapped a 10-game losing streak, while also eliminating the Colts from the AFC wild-card race. The win had another ripple effect: dropping the Giants from the top spot in the first-round order for the 2025 NFL draft.

After Sunday’s late-afternoon games, the Giants are now slotted with the third pick in the draft. The New England Patriots are in line for the No. 1 pick, while the Tennessee Titans would pick second and the Cleveland Browns third. All four teams will enter the final week of the regular season with 3-13 records, with strength of schedule serving as a tiebreaker.

The most consequential changes that took place Sunday afternoon – the Titans fell to the Jacksonville Jaguars in a battle of 3-12 squads and the Giants won (New England lost Saturday to the Los Angeles Chargers) – led to a rise in draft order interest that temporarily slowed down Tankathon.com, a website that tracks the draft order in real time.

Asked after the game what he would tell fans who wanted the Giants’ ‘tank’ to roll on with another loss, rookie wide receiver Malik Nabers said ‘the draft is going to be the draft.’

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‘I don’t got nothing to really say about that,’ he said.

Fellow wide receiver Wan’Dale Robinson added that players weren’t interested in hearing about the effect the win would have on the team’s draft positioning.

‘Not one bit,’ Robinson said, according to ESPN. ‘That’s not talked about with us. … Guys are out here playing for their livelihoods. This is their job. A lot of guys, they might not be on this team next year.’

The Giants scored the most points since a 41-point effort (an overtime victory against Washington) in 2019. Quarterback Drew Lock, making his fourth start of the season, threw for 309 yards and completed 17 of 23 passes.

‘The fans deserved it, the locker room deserved it, everyone that is a part of this organization deserved it,’ Lock said. ‘We knew we had it in us.’

Two of Lock’s four touchdowns went to Nabers, who had seven catches for 171 yards and reached the 1,000-yard mark on the season.

‘That’s how the offense needs to play,’ Daboll said.

The game had a paid attendance of 73,164, although the actual crowd size was a fraction of that number. The Giants wanted to give those on hand their money’s worth.

‘It felt good to go out there with my brothers and get a win for all the fans that came out,’ said Nabers, the No. 6 overall pick in April’s draft.

Defensively, the Giants intercepted Joe Flacco – starting for the injured Anthony Richardson – twice. They also received a special teams contribution with Ihmir Smith-Marsette returning the opening kickoff of the second half 100 yards for a touchdown.

‘It’s a tough season,’ Daboll said. ‘But we got a lot of good people, a lot of good-character people on our football team. They work every day. It’s good to see results. It’s good to see smiles on their faces. I’m happy for the players and the coaches that put a lot into it.’

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The Philadelphia Eagles were without starting quarterback Jalen Hurts for their NFC East showdown against the Dallas Cowboys on Sunday.

Despite Hurts’ absence, the Eagles managed to get quality play at quarterback from their two backups Kenny Pickett and Tanner McKee.

McKee entered the game in the second half and threw a pair of touchdown passes, the firsts of his career. A player’s first career touchdown is usually a time for celebration, and those players are often awarded the football to remember the occasion. When it came to McKee, though, wide receiver A.J. Brown missed the memo.

Here’s what happened.

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What did A.J. Brown do with Tanner McKee’s football?

Brown was on the receiving end of McKee’s 20-yard touchdown pass and celebrated the score by launching the ball into the crowd in the third quarter.

It was quickly brought to his attention why he shouldn’t have done that.

As a result, Brown had help tracking down the fan who caught the ball and promised to give him his game-worn jersey in return for McKee’s football.

Did A.J. Brown give his game-worn jersey to an Eagles fan?

Brown lived up to his promise, walking over toward the end zone where he scored the touchdown and found the fan.

Brown was seen taking off the jersey and signing it for the fan before throwing the jersey up to him.

How did Tanner McKee do in relief of Kenny Pickett?

McKee entered the game after Pickett left with a rib injury in the third quarter.

McKee finished out the Eagles 41-7 rout of the Cowboys completing three of four passes for 54 yards and two touchdowns. He threw the first one to Brown in the third quarter to take a 34-7 lead after the PAT. He also threw a 25-yard touchdown pass to receiver DeVonta Smith in the fourth quarter.

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Washington Capitals star Alex Ovechkin is back from his fractured left fibula and resuming his pursuit of Wayne Gretzky’s NHL career goal record.

Ovechkin, 39, had missed 16 games after absorbing a leg-on-leg collision during a Nov. 18 game against the Utah Hockey Club. He returned on Dec. 28 and has goals in his first two games back.

Ovechkin entered this season needing 42 goals to break Gretzky’s record of 894 career goals, which has stood since 1999. The Capitals captain has 17 goals this season, with 46 games left.

If he doesn’t reach the record this season, he has one more season left on his contract.

Here’s where Ovechkin stands in his chase of Gretzky’s goal record:

How many goals does Alex Ovechkin have?

Ovechkin has 870 career goals.

How close is Alex Ovechkin to Wayne Gretzky’s goal record?

Ovechkin needs 25 goals to break Gretzky’s record.

How many goals does Alex Ovechkin have this season?

Ovechkin has 17 goals and 10 assists in 20 games. Factoring in the 16 games he missed, that is a 56-goal pace.

What did Alex Ovechkin do in his last game?

He had one goal on eight shots in a 4-2 loss to the Detroit Red Wings on Dec. 29. He one-timed a shot from the left face-off circle after a great pass from Jakob Chychrun.

When is Alex Ovechkin’s next game?

The Capitals play Tuesday, Dec. 31 at home against the Boston Bruins. Ovechkin has 29 goals in 67 career games vs. the Bruins.

Alex Ovechkin career goal breakdown

Even strength: 549, third overall

Power play: 316, a record

Short-handed: 5

Empty net: 60, a record

Game winners: 132, second overall

Multi-goal games: 177, second overall

Goalies scored against: 178, tied for record

Hat tricks: 31, sixth overall

Who are the NHL’s top all-time goal scorers?

The top 21 NHL all-time goal scorers all have 600 or more goals. All of the players are in the Hockey Hall of Fame, except Ovechkin, Sidney Crosby and Jaromir Jagr, who are still playing.

1. Wayne Gretzky,  894 goals in 1,487 games

2. Alex Ovechkin, 870 goals in 1,446 games

3. Gordie Howe, 801 goals in 1,767 games

4. Jaromir Jagr, 766 goals in 1,733 games

5. Brett Hull, 741 goals in 1,269 games

6. Marcel Dionne, 731 in 1,348 games

7. Phil Esposito, 717 goals in 1,282 games

8. Mike Gartner, 708 goals in 1,432 games

9. Mark Messier, 694 goals in 1,756 games

10. Steve Yzerman, 692 goals in 1,514 games

11. Mario Lemieux, 690 goals in 915 games

12. Teemu Selanne, 684 goals in 1,451 games

13. Luc Robitaille, 668 goals in 1,431 games

14. Brendan Shanahan, 656 goals in 1,524 games

15. Dave Andreychuk, 640 goals in 1,639 games

16. Jarome Iginla, 625 goals in 1,554 games

17. Joe Sakic, 625 goals in 1,378 games

18. Bobby Hull, 610 goals in 1,063 games

19. Dino Ciccarelli, 608 goals in 1,232 games

20. Sidney Crosby, 602 goals in 1,310 games

21. Jari Kurri, 601 goals in 1,251 games

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Even with backups in the game, as the Philadelphia Eagles throttled the Dallas Cowboys 41-7 on Sunday to win the NFC East, the animosity of a division rivalry was real as ever.

Two Dallas Cowboys – cornerback Troy Pride Jr. and wideout Jalen Brooks – and Eagles safety Sydney Brown were ejected for fighting in the fourth quarter. As the trio ran down the field on an Eagles punt with less than three minutes remaining, they became tangled and also took an official to the ground as the melee started. Brooks appeared to yank the Brown to the ground, and Pride pushed Brown while the two got up.

Brown then flung Pride into the nearby tunnel, igniting a larger skirmish as more players arrived to separate the warring parties.

It was the second consecutive week in which a member of the Eagles’ defense has been ejected; safety C.J. Gardner-Johnson received two unsportsmanlike conduct penalties during last week’s loss to the Washington Commanders, the second of which triggered an automatic disqualification.

Eagles fans applauded Brown as he was escorted from the field while doing the ‘calm down’ celebration the team has adopted in recent weeks.

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