Archive

2024

Browsing

Disney and Pixar’s “Inside Out 2” is the newest member of the billion-dollar club.

The animated feature has tallied $1.014 billion worldwide as of Sunday, making it the highest-grossing film of 2024 and the first film since Warner Bros.′ “Barbie” to top $1 billion at the global box office.

“On behalf of movie theatre owners across the country and around the world, we want to congratulate Disney’s ‘Inside Out 2’ for grossing $1 billion faster than any animated movie in history,” said Michael O’Leary, president and CEO of the National Association of Theatre Owners. “The film’s stunning global success once again illustrates that audiences the world over will respond to compelling, entertaining movies, and that they want to enjoy them on the big screen.”

The billion-dollar benchmark is a much-needed win for Disney’s Pixar animation hub. A once prolifically successful studio, Pixar has suffered at the box office in the wake of the pandemic. Much of its difficulties have come, in part, because Disney opted to debut a handful of animated features directly on streaming service Disney+ during theatrical closures and even once cinemas had reopened.

As a result, before “Inside Out 2,” no Disney animated feature from Pixar or its Walt Disney Animation studio had generated more than $480 million at the global box office since 2019.

“Inside Out 2” has also showcased how vital the family audience is to the box office. This underserved crowd accounted for more than 70% of those in attendance during the film’s domestic debut, according to data from EntTelligence.

While this audience came out in droves for Universal’s “The Super Mario Bros. Movie,” which generated more than $1.36 billion at the global box office, there was little for them to feast on until the recent releases of Sony’s “The Garfield Movie” and  Paramount’s  “IF.”

“Inside Out 2” also drove the coveted teen demographic to cinemas, with 14% of foot traffic coming from those aged 13 to 17. This younger generation has been largely absent from the market in recent years.

As the future of moviegoing, this group is particularly important to the industry. Getting them back to the big screen has become a top priority for studios and movie theater operators.

Next up for family and teens is Universal and Illumination’s “Despicable Me 4,” due out in theaters during the July Fourth holiday weekend.

Disclosure: Comcast is the parent company of NBCUniversal and CNBC.

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

A bitcoin exchange that collapsed 10 years ago after being hacked is set to return billions of dollars’ worth of the token to users — and it has investors worried.

In a few days, bankrupt Tokyo-based bitcoin exchange Mt. Gox will begin paying back thousands of users almost $9 billion worth of tokens. The platform went under in 2014 following a series of heists that cost it in the range of 650,000 to 950,000 bitcoin, or upward of $58 billion, at current prices.

The payout follows a protracted bankruptcy process that’s involved multiple delays and legal challenges.

On Monday, the court-appointed trustee overseeing the exchange’s bankruptcy proceedings said distributions to the firm’s roughly 20,000 creditors would begin in early July. Disbursements will be in a mix of bitcoin and bitcoin cash, an early offshoot of the original cryptocurrency.

While this is good news for victims of the hack who have spent years waiting to be made whole, the price of bitcoin slid to $59,000 last week, in the crypto market’s second-worst weekly decline of the year.

CNBC spoke to half a dozen analysts to get their take on what to expect when roughly 141,000 bitcoin — or roughly 0.7% of the total 19.7 million bitcoins outstanding — are returned to Mt. Gox victims this week.

Mt. Gox — short for “Magic: The Gathering Online Exchange” — was once the largest spot bitcoin exchange globally, claiming to handle around 80% of all global dollar trades for bitcoin.

When it shuttered in February 2014, bitcoin was worth around $600.

Today, the world’s largest cryptocurrency is trading at about $61,000 per coin. That means users opting to be reimbursed in-kind — that is, in the cryptocurrency itself, rather than the cash equivalent — have seen the value of their coins surge over 10,000% in the last decade.

John Glover, chief investment officer of crypto lending firm Ledn, told CNBC the windfall for Mt. Gox users would likely translate to huge sales in bitcoin as investors look to lock in gains.

“Many will clearly cash out and enjoy the fact that having their assets stuck in the Mt. Gox bankruptcy was the best investment they ever made,” said Glover, who was previously a managing director at Barclays. “Some will clearly choose to take the money and run,” added Glover.

James Butterfill, head of research at CoinShares told CNBC the overhang of the nearly $9 billion of bitcoin set to be released has “long been a concern for those with bullish views on bitcoin.”

Consequently, the market is highly sensitive to any related news. With the announcement that the Trust will begin selling in July, investors are understandably worried,” said Butterfill.

It wouldn’t be the first time bitcoin’s moved in reaction to big redemptions of funds locked up in centralized trading platforms.

Last month, crypto exchange Gemini returned more than $2 billion worth of bitcoin to users with funds that had been trapped in its Earn lending program, marking a 230% recovery after bitcoin prices more than tripled since Gemini suspended Earn withdrawals on Nov. 16.

JPMorgan analysts linked this to negative price action, saying in a research note last week that it’s “fair to assume that some of Gemini creditors, which are mostly retail customers, have taken at least partial profits in recent weeks.”

Similarly, JPMorgan analysts expect Mt. Gox customers to be similarly inclined to sell some of their bitcoin to profit from seismic gains for the cryptocurrency.

“Assuming most of the liquidations by Mt. Gox creditors take place in July, [this] creates a trajectory where crypto prices come under further pressure in July, but start rebounding from August onwards,” they wrote.

Separately last month, the German government sold 5,000 — worth approximately $305.8 million as of Thursday’s prices — of a 50,000-bitcoin pile seized in connection with the movie piracy operation Movi2k.

The funds were sent to various crypto exchanges, including Coinbase, Kraken, and Bitstamp, according to blockchain intelligence firm Arkham Intelligence.

Analysts say these crypto liquidations, too, have placed pressure on bitcoin’s price.

Most analysts agree losses in bitcoin are likely to be contained and short-lived.

“I think that sell-off concerns relating to Mt. Gox will likely be short-term,” said Lennix Lai, chief commercial officer of crypto exchange OKX.

“Many of Mt. Gox’s early users as well as creditors are long-term bitcoin enthusiasts who are less likely to sell all of their bitcoin immediately,” he said, adding previous sell-offs by law enforcement, including the Silk Road case, did not result in a sustained catastrophic price drop.

Butterfill suggested there’s enough market liquidity to cushion the blow of any possible mass market sell action.

“Bitcoin has maintained a daily trading volume of $8.74 billion on trusted exchanges this year, suggesting that liquidity is sufficient to absorb these sales over the summer months,” said Butterfill.

According to CCData research analyst, Jacob Joseph, the markets are more than capable of absorbing the selling pressure.

“Moreover, a healthy part of the creditors are likely to take a 10% haircut on their holdings to receive the repayment early, and not all holdings are set to be liquidated on the open market, reducing the overall selling pressure,” he said.

Recent price moves suggest the temporary impact of the Mt. Gox repayments may already be priced in, Joseph added.

Galaxy Digital’s head of research, Alex Thorn, believes fewer coins will be distributed than people think, meaning there will be less sell pressure than the market expects.

However, he also wrote in May that, even if only 10% of the bitcoin distributed is sold, “it will have a market impact.” 

“Most of the individual creditors will have their coins deposited directly into a trading account at an exchange, making it extremely easy to sell,” Thorn said.

Vijay Ayyar, head of consumer growth for Asia-Pacific at crypto exchange Gemini, said that the overall impact of the Mt. Gox disbursement is likely to be “dissipated,” given the recipients of the funds are varied.

On the one hand, there are individual holders who will get their bitcoin straight away. Then there’s the “significant amount” of bitcoin that will be disbursed out to claims funds, Ayyar said.

“Those funds would then need to distribute these out to their LPs [limited partners], hence the whole process could take a while adding a time element to the impact on price,” he told CNBC.

It’s worth noting there are plenty of other reasons behind bitcoin’s recent declines.

The cryptocurrency had a stunning rally earlier this year, climbing past $70,000 on the heels of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission’s approval of the first spot bitcoin ETF.

But investors have remained anxious amid outflows from bitcoin ETFs and sizable market liquidations. The broader macro environment, too, has investors worried.

Earlier this month, the Federal Reserve suggested it plans to cut rates just once this year, down from the multiple cuts it had indicated previously.

Cryptocurrencies, which are inherently volatile, are particularly sensitive to changes in the interest rate environment.

CoinShares’ Butterfill said the Fed’s new rate forecast was among “the likely culprits for the recent price decline” in bitcoin.

This, along with other issues, is “likely to weigh on prices in the lower volume summer months,” Butterfill said. However, “the fundamental investment case remains very much intact,” he added.

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

When Natasha Craft first got a Yotta banking account in 2021, she loved using it so much she told her friends to sign up.

The app made saving money fun and easy, and Craft, a now 25-year-old FedEx driver from Mishawaka, Indiana, was busy getting her financial life in order and planning a wedding. Craft had her wages deposited directly into a Yotta account and used the startup’s debit card to pay for all her expenses.

The app — which gamifies personal finance with weekly sweepstakes and other flashy features — even occasionally covered some of her transactions.

“There were times I would go buy something and get that purchase for free,” Craft told CNBC.

Today, her entire life savings — $7,006 — is locked up in a complicated dispute playing out in bankruptcy court, online forums like Reddit and regulatory channels. And Yotta, an array of other startups and their banks have been caught in a moment of reckoning for the fintech industry.

For customers, fintech promised the best of both worlds: The innovation, ease of use and fun of the newest apps combined with the safety of government-backed accounts held at real banks.

The startups prominently displayed protections afforded by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, lending credibility to their novel offerings. After all, since its 1934 inception, no depositor “has ever lost a penny of FDIC-insured deposits,” according to the agency’s website.

But the widening fallout over the collapse of a fintech middleman called Synapse has revealed that promise of safety as a mirage.

Starting May 11, more than 100,000 Americans with $265 million in deposits were locked out of their accounts. Roughly 85,000 of those customers were at Yotta alone, according to the startup’s co-founder Adam Moelis.

CNBC reached out to fintech customers whose lives have been upended by the Synapse debacle.

They come from all walks and stages of life, from Craft, the Indiana FedEx driver; to the owner of a chain of preschools in Oakland; a talent analyst for Disney living in New York City; and a computer engineer in Santa Barbara. A high school teacher in Maryland. A parent in Bristol, Connecticut, who opened an account for his daughter. A social worker in Seattle saving up for dental work after Adderall abuse ruined her teeth.

Since Yotta, like most popular fintech apps, wasn’t itself a bank, it relied on partner institutions including Tennessee-based Evolve Bank & Trust to offer checking accounts and debit cards. In between Yotta and Evolve was a crucial middleman, Synapse, keeping track of balances and monitoring fraud.

Founded in 2014 by a first-time entrepreneur named Sankaet Pathak, Synapse was a player in the “banking as a service” segment alongside companies like Unit and Modern Treasury. Synapse helped customer-facing startups like Yotta quickly access the rails of the regulated banking industry.

It had contracts with 100 fintech companies and 10 million end users, according to an April court filing.

Until recently, the BAAS model was a growth engine that seemed to benefit everybody. Instead of spending years and millions of dollars trying to acquire or become banks, startups got quick access to essential services they needed to offer. The small banks that catered to them got a source of deposits in a time dominated by giants like JPMorgan Chase.

But in May, Synapse, in the throes of bankruptcy, turned off a critical system that Yotta’s bank used to process transactions. In doing so, it threw thousands of Americans into financial limbo, and a growing segment of the fintech industry into turmoil.

“There is a reckoning underway that involves questions about the banking-as-a-service model,” said Michele Alt, a former lawyer for the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and current partner at consulting firm Klaros Group. She believes the Synapse failure will prove to be an “aberration,” she added.

The most popular finance apps in the country, including Block’s Cash App, PayPal and Chime partner with banks instead of owning them. They account for 60% of all new fintech account openings, according to data provider Curinos. Block and PayPal are publicly traded; Chime is expected to launch an IPO next year.

Block, PayPal and Chime didn’t provide comment for this article.

While industry experts say that those firms have far more robust ledgering and daily reconciliation abilities than Synapse, they may still be riskier than direct bank relationships, especially for those relying on them as a primary account.

“If it’s your spending money, you need to be dealing directly with a bank,” Scott Sanborn, CEO of LendingClub, told CNBC. “Otherwise, how do you, as a consumer, know if the conditions are met to get FDIC coverage?”

Sanborn knows both sides of the fintech divide: LendingClub started as a fintech lender that partnered with banks until it bought Boston-based Radius in early 2020 for $185 million, eventually becoming a fully regulated bank.

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

DETROIT — General Motors reported its best quarterly sales in more than three years, including notable increases in full-size pickup trucks and all-electric vehicles.

The Detroit automaker on Tuesday reported sales of 696,086 for the second quarter, up 0.6% from a year earlier and its highest quarterly units sold since the fourth quarter of 2020.

Its EVs deliveries increased 40% compared to a year earlier to 21,930 units. Still, EVs made up only 3.2% of its total second quarter sales.

Auto industry forecasters such as Cox Automotive and Edmunds expect second-quarter sales industrywide, which included July 1, to be roughly level from a year earlier amid slowing retail demand.

An unknown outlier in the second quarter is how much of an impact cyberattacks on dealer software provider CDK Global will have on sales. The June 19 ransomware attack forced CDK, a market leader, to shut down its dealer management system, impacting close to half of all dealerships in North America.

“The CDK cyberattacks have thrown a monkey wrench into sales during the second half of June, affecting what is arguably one of the most lucrative and busiest times of the month and quarter for dealerships,” said Jessica Caldwell, Edmunds’ head of insights.

Dealers, including the industry’s largest publicly traded ones, were forced to delay sales or figure out workarounds to sell vehicles since the attacks occurred.

All six of the major publicly traded franchised dealership groups have disclosed their exposure to the CDK issue. Five of the six — Asbury Automotive Group, AutoNation Inc., Group 1 Automotive Inc., Lithia Motors Inc. and Sonic Automotive Inc. — use CDK as their primary dealership management system provider, according to Automotive News. 

“The good news is — unlike other black swan events that the industry has contended with in the past — sales shouldn’t be lost or severely deferred, but rather pushed into the third quarter,” Caldwell said.

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

Although the unemployment rate has spent 30 months at or below below 4% — a near record — not everyone who wants a job has one. And not everyone even wants a job at all.

Some, referred to as “NEETs,” which stands for “not in employment, education, or training,” are opting out of the labor force largely because they are discouraged by their economic standing.

Others, alternatively, are well-qualified but often younger candidates who are struggling to find positions, comprising a contingent of “new unemployables,” according to a recent report by Korn Ferry. 

Among 16- to 24-year-olds, the unemployment rate rose to 9% in May, which is “typical,” according to Alí Bustamante, a labor economist and director of the Worker Power and Economic Security program at the Roosevelt Institute, a liberal think tank based in New York City.

Although the youth unemployment rate fell below 7% in 2023, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, such lows were “emblematic of how hot the labor market was at that point,” Bustamante said.

“9% is basically what we should be expecting during relatively good economic times for younger workers,” he added.

Still, some young adults in the U.S. are neither working nor learning new skills.

In 2023, about 11.2% of young adults ages 15 to 24 in the U.S. were considered as NEETs, according to the International Labour Organization.

In other words, roughly one in 10 young people are “being left out and left behind in many ways,” Bustamante said.

Even though “that’s typically the norm,” he said, “we should be expecting these rates to be lower.”

Young men, especially, are increasingly disengaged, according to Julia Pollak, a labor economist at ZipRecruiter.

“The NEET trend is mostly a male phenomenon,” she said.

Pollak explained that’s in part due to declining opportunities in traditionally male occupations, such as construction and manufacturing, while “women’s enrollment in schooling, education outcomes, and employment outcomes have mostly trended upwards.”

According to Korn Ferry’s report, a “perfect storm” has also created a glut of “new unemployables,” or highly trained workers who struggle to find job opportunities.

“Employers are holding on to the talent they have and increasingly focusing on talent mobility,” said David Ellis, senior vice president for global talent acquisition transformation at Korn Ferry.

This “talent hoarding” has led to fewer available job openings even for well-qualified candidates, he said.

At the same time, firms are scaling back on new hires, limiting the opportunities at the entry level, as well.

While the teen employment rate is the highest it has been in over a decade, early 20-somethings are struggling to find jobs, Pollak said. “It’s the 20- to 24-year-olds that saw a massive drop off in the labor force participation during the pandemic, and who have lagged behind ever since.”

Overall, hiring projections for the class of 2024 fell 5.8% from last year, according to a report from the National Association of Colleges and Employers, or NACE.

As more candidates compete for fewer positions, stretches of unemployment are also lengthening. Now, the number of people unemployed for longer than six months is up 21%, Korn Ferry found.

Despite those trends in the job market, “all is not lost,” Ellis said.

“Don’t wait to reach out,” he advised. Get back in touch with former employers or colleagues through LinkedIn or email and set up informational interviews. After that initial approach, ask for any job leads or contacts.

In the meantime, make yourself more visible by writing about noteworthy topics in the industry and updating your resume to include keywords and so-called “title tags,” which highlight important elements at the top.

Finally, don’t limit yourself to roles that include a promotion or a raise, Ellis also advised. Rather, aim for a “career lattice,” which could entail taking lower position to gain skills that will pay dividends later.

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

Jayson Tatum will sign a five-year, $313.9 million extension with the Boston Celtics, a person with knowledge of the deal tells USA TODAY Sports. The person requested anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly until the deal is official.

This was an expected move as the Celtics had no intention of letting Tatum get to free agency. It is the largest contract in NBA history, and Tatum is expected to make $71 million in 2029-30, which will make him the first $70 million player in league history.

The Celtics and guard Derrick White just reached an agreement on a four-year, $125.9 million, and guard Jrue Holiday signed a four-year, $134.4 million extension in April. In the 2025-26 season, the Celtics are projected to pay nearly $200 million in salary to a starting five of Tatum, White, Holiday, Jaylen Brown and Kristaps Porzingis.

Tatum’s annual salary breakdown is based on a salary cap projection of approximately $154 million for the 2025-26 season. Here is what Tatum’s annual salary looks like, according to ESPN front office insider Bobby Marks:

2025-26: $54.1 million
2026-27: $58.4 million
2027-28 $62.7 million
2028-29: $67.1 million
2029-30: $71.4 million

All things Celtics: Latest Boston Celtics news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

The Celtics have $600 million plus committed in salary to Tatum and Brown, have paid more than $110 in luxury taxes the past two seasons and will pay at least $50 million in 2024-25. The amount will be even larger when Tatum’s deal kicks in in 2025-26.

The major financial commitments come at the same time the Celtics ownership group is looking into putting the team up for sale.

‘Boston Basketball Partners L.L.C., the ownership group of the Boston Celtics, announced today its intention to sell all the shares of the team,’ the team said in the statement. ‘The controlling family of the ownership group, after considerable thought and internal discussion, has decided to sell the team for estate and family planning considerations.’

The team said it expects to sell a majority interest in 2024 or early 2025, ‘with the balance closing in 2028.’

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

It wasn’t long ago Pato O’Ward was seen as Arrow McLaren’s young, up-and-coming IndyCar driver talent. In a matter of just a couple weeks, the 25-year-old Mexican driver has been positioned as the three-car team’s seasoned veteran, with Arrow McLaren officials making yet another surprise driver signing.

Zak Brown, Gavin Ward, Tony Kanaan and company have signed Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing’s Christian Lundgaard to a multi-year deal, the team announced Tuesday, signaling the end to Alexander Rossi’s tenure with the team at the end of this season after just two years.

‘Christian has had proven success in his few seasons racing in the series, and he checks the boxes for what we’re looking for in speed and potential alongside Pato and Nolan (Siegel),’ Arrow McLaren team principal Gavin Ward said in a release Tuesday regarding the team’s latest signing. ‘The three make up the youngest trio (in IndyCar), and we know that direction has been paying off for our F1 counterparts with Lando (Norris) and Oscar (Piastri).

‘We’re looking toward our long-term goal of sustained high performance, and I believe with these three drivers and the ongoing support of Arrow and all our amazing partners, we’re taking a good step in that direction for 2025.”

In recent months, Rossi and his father, Pieter, who negotiates on his behalf, have been in talks regarding an extension, with both sides noting two weeks ago they were far down the road on a potential contract that would give both sides much-needed stability. In the end, though, Rossi and Arrow McLaren couldn’t come to terms on the length of the deal — leading them to agree to look elsewhere for the future. For Arrow McLaren, who less than a month ago had not spoken with Lundgaard according to a source close the negotiations, the 22-year-old one-time IndyCar race-winner was the obvious choice.

In the midst of his third full-time season with RLL, Lundgaard sits 11th in points with a single podium (IMS road course) and just two top-10s so far in 2024. Having accrued three total podiums in his IndyCar career, including a single win at Toronto in 2023, he finished 8th in the championship a year ago — 15 points ahead of Rossi in 9th.

“I’m excited to have my plans set for 2025 and beyond, and I’m thrilled it’s with Arrow McLaren,’ Lundgaard said in a release Tuesday. ‘I have a lot of respect for Zak, Gavin, Tony and the team, and I think Pato, Nolan and I will work well together.

‘I’m focused 100% on finishing this season strong with Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing. We have a lot of the season left, but this is a huge weight off my shoulders that will hopefully let me compete at my best the next nine races.”

RLL co-owner Bobby Rahal has long claimed Lundgaard didn’t need to leave the team that gave him his IndyCar debut in 2021, then signed him to a one-year deal for 2022 and months into the season renegotiated a new multi-year deal, believing that his driver, who beat all of Andretti Global’s drivers a year ago, along with two of Arrow McLaren’s, was in a position where he could grow into a title contender as RLL upped its game.

Lundgaard, too, at the beginning of the year, said he was eager to see this project through with RLL, and that staying was his priority, though he noted in March he was allowed to speak with outside teams about a deal for 2025 and beyond as he entered a contract year. Rahal and longtime partner Mike Lanigan hinting in May that talks between the two sides were icy pointed to the potential of a split at the end of the year, though until Rossi’s talks with Arrow McLaren brass reached a standstill, it was unclear where Lundgaard could land.

‘Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing is looking forward to closing out our working relationship with Christian Lundgaard as successfully as possible and thank him for his past efforts on behalf of the team,’ the team said in a brief statement Tuesday. ‘We are proud to have brought him into (IndyCar) and wish him well in the future.’

For Rossi, the future is somewhat unclear, though his father urged that the camp was well down the road on talks for the 2016 Indy 500-winner’s future in the series starting in 2025. After a somewhat bumpy introductory year with Arrow McLaren, just his second home in the series after seven-year tenure with Andretti Global that included eight wins, 28 podiums and two serious title fights, Rossi seemed to have been rounding into form in recent weeks.

Outside a mechanical failure at Road America that left him 18th instead of a likely top-5 finish, as well as a 25th-place result at Barber derailed by a wheel not properly attached during a stop, Rossi has delivered top-10s in 2024. Excluding those two results outside of his control, Rossi holds a 4-2 edge on O’Ward, with O’Ward’s better finishes coming at the 500 (2nd place) and St. Pete (win). Including the full season’s worth of results in 2024 at what is essentially the halfway point, Rossi (7th) sits just 10 points back of O’Ward (6th) and has arguably given Arrow McLaren a level of consistency and pace only matched by the series three true title contenders this year: Alex Palou, Will Power and Scott Dixon.

“My time at Arrow McLaren, while it’s been only short two seasons, has been rewarding in many ways. I’m grateful to have been part of the team’s internal growth,’ Rossi said Tuesday in a release. ‘The No. 7 crew is fantastic, and I’ve built a lot of long-lasting friendships with the team.

‘Zak, Gavin, Tony and I had many conversations over the last several months on my future with the team. We were not able to come to terms on a new deal, so the mutual decision to part ways is amicable. I’m very confident with current discussions in the paddock to land a new spot. I’ll have good news to follow soon, and meanwhile I’m focused on a top-five finish in the 2024 championship and a strong conclusion to my time in papaya.”

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Love him or hate him (for some reason, plenty do), Alexi Lalas may have delivered the best soccer analysis of his career following the U.S. men’s national team’s elimination from Copa América. 

USMNT coach Gregg Berhalter’s days might be numbered after the Americans squandered their Copa América chances, falling 1-0 to Uruguay on Monday night in a must-win group stage game and were eliminated from the tournament. 

It’s a step back for USMNT after its round-of-16 loss to the Netherlands at the Qatar World Cup, and surely not the momentum crash it needed before the 2026 World Cup, jointly hosted by the U.S., Mexico and Canada. 

“This team is not able to do anything better than it has in the past. And that hurts. That hurts to say because that’s not what was promised and not, for many, what we believed was going to happen,” Lalas said. “If this is as good as it gets, it’s not good enough. And there’s plenty of excuses, but they don’t matter.” 

Lalas, a former USMNT member, said “the knives” would be out for Berhalter’s firing. He also called out the USMNT players, too. 

“With 2026 coming barreling down the pike — it’s going to come real quick — we can’t afford to waste it. We cannot afford to be embarrassed. And we can’t afford to arrive in 2026 with a team that is not progressed, that is not evolved, and that is not improved,” Lalas said.  

“I see a U.S. men’s national team that’s better than before and we haven’t seen that. That’s a problem going forward,” he added before twisting the knife. “I think they are better soccer players, but ultimately I don’t think they are better U.S. men’s national team players.”

While Lalas’ points are valid and some marked improvement would have been ideal, let’s put this USMNT Copa América run into perspective: The Americans were outscored 9-5 with a win, a draw and three losses in a five-match sample this past month. 

USMNT lost 1-0 to Uruguay to wrap group play, on a goal that was borderline offside. Mind you, Uruguay – which handed Argentina its first loss since winning the 2022 World Cup last November – already advanced to the quarterfinal, and the match was inconsequential for them. 

The U.S. made a splash with a 2-0 win over Bolivia, but a 2-1 loss to Panama put them in the inevitable predicament. And Panama is a team the U.S. should beat, fellow analyst and former USMNT standout Clint Dempsey said.

USMNT tied Brazil 1-1 June 12 in a friendly before the tournament, a nice bounce back from a friendly 5-1 punch to the face from Colombia. The matches were Copa América warmups, before Vinícius Júnior found his stride in Brazil’s second Copa America match, while the Colombia match foreshadowed the gap between USMNT and the world.  

Simply put, the Americans had no chance to compete with tournament favorites like Lionel Messi’s Argentina, Uruguay or Brazil. They were Copa América long shots, just like they’ll be long shots for the next World Cup — although, a trip to the semifinal would surely boost morale for the sport domestically. 

As USMNT licks its wounds and regroups before the next World Cup, get ready for some more Lalas. 

Some may feel FOX (and his previous employer ESPN) have force-fed him into American soccer coverage since his start in 2008, but his analysis is the reason he’s the most recognizable voice of soccer commentary in the U.S., taking fans both old and new into this historic moment for the sport in this country. 

I spoke to Lalas, shortly after the Euros begun and before Copa América began, 30 years to the day he suited up for the USMNT’s first group play match at the Silverdome in Detroit (Rest in peace, the Silverdome, he said). 

“I am incredibly fortunate and I remind myself on a consistent basis how lucky I am and they can pry it from my cold, dead, redheaded American hands,” Lalas told USA TODAY Sports. “I love what I do. I take what I do seriously, but I don’t take myself too seriously and to be able to talk about soccer. We’re 30 years out from the World Cup [in 1994]. I haven’t kicked the ball in 20 years or whatever. And I still work in the game that I love. So, I’m incredibly fortunate to do it.”

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

One champ has been banned. The other champ has been hailed.

Miki Sudo, the nine-time champion on the women’s side of the Nathan’s Hot Dog Eating Contest, will be the featured competitor on the Fourth of July.

Regarding the status of Joey Chestnut, there’s been no relenting from Major League Eating, which runs the contest and barred the 16-time champion after he signed a marketing agreement with Impossible Foods.

But Sudo, 38, remains in good standing – and presumably at the top of her game heading into the contest Thursday on Coney Island in Brooklyn, N.Y.

Sudo holds the record in the women’s competition with 48.5 hot dogs and buns, consumed during the 2020 contest, and has won more titles than any competitor other than Chestnut.

The only time she’s failed to win since 2014 was when she took the year off in 2021 because she was pregnant.

Other top contenders on the women’s side are Mayoi ‘Ebimayo’ Ebihara, who was six hot dogs behind Sudo’s winning total of 39.5 last year, and Michelle Lesco, who won the 2021 contest with 30.75 when Sudo was out.

With Chestnut out, Sudo’s husband, Nick Wehry, could break through as the champ.

Last year he finished fourth with 45 hot dogs. That left him 17 hot dogs shy of Chestnut, but within striking distance of second-place finisher Geoffrey Esper, who ate 49, and third-place finisher James Webb, who ate 47.

Patrick Bertoletti, who ate 49 hot dogs at the 2007 competition, also will contend for the Mustard Belt.

The men’s and women’s competition each will feature 14 eaters.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

LONDON — Defending champion Marketa Vondrousova was knocked out in the first round of Wimbledon on Tuesday, the first female holder to fall at the opening hurdle since Steffi Graf 30 years ago.

The Czech Republic player, who became the first unseeded woman to lift the title last year, earned a far less welcome accolade after a 6-4 6-2 defeat by Spain’s Jessica Bouzas Maneiro.

‘Yeah, it just didn’t go as planned today,’ a downcast Vondrousova said, adding that despite her best efforts the pressure of defending the title had got to her. ‘I feel like even if you don’t want to think about it, you just think about it … all the time here, I see posters here and everything, my name everywhere.

‘Today I was really nervous since the start. I couldn’t shake it off. Also she was playing good. I didn’t have many chances to come back into the match or she didn’t give me many free points. Yeah, credit to her. I’m going to come back stronger, I hope.’

‘It was an amazing feeling to go back on Centre Court. Now it’s like mixed feelings,’ Vondrousova continued. ‘I love to be here. I would love to stay longer also. Yeah, today was really tough.’

Ranked world number 83, Bouzas Maneiro had won only one tour-level match all year heading into Wimbledon, but secured her first win across all Grand Slams when she slapped a backhand down the line.

‘It is one of the most important moments of my life,’ the Spaniard smiled as she soaked up the cheers. ‘I’m just … I’m surprised with myself to be honest.

‘I was just thinking about enjoying the moment and try to play Marketa. She’s one of the best players in the world. She won last year here. I had no pressure, enjoy the moment, enjoy the tournament and just trying to be free-playing and I did it.

‘The atmosphere was so nice, so … elegant … it feels like I was at home, I don’t know why,’ she added, explaining her lack of nerves on one of the sport’s greatest stages.

The 21-year-old from Galicia hit the ball cleanly throughout an unremarkable Centre Court clash, but only really needed to keep it in play as errors flew from Vondrousova’s racket with alarming regularity.

Struggling with a hip injury which derailed her preparation, sixth-seeded Vondrousova now heads for the exit while Bouzas Maneiro will next face compatriot Cristina Bucsa or Romanian Ana Bogdan in the second round.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY