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BOSTON – By saying he didn’t give a (expletive) about being left off the All-NBA teams that were announced Wednesday, it was an indication that perhaps Jaylen Brown cared a slight bit about the snub.

Yes, Brown is concerned about getting back to the NBA Finals, and yes, he made All-NBA last season, which made him eligible for a five-year, $300 million contract.

But still, professional athletes are high-level competitors.

“I watched guys get praised and anointed that I feel are half as talented as me on either side of the ball,” Brown said. “At this point in my life, I just embrace it. It comes with being who I am and what I stand for and I ain’t really changing that. So I just come out, and I’m grateful to step out on the floor each and every night, put my best foot forward and I get better every single year.

“And whether people appreciate it or not, it is what it is.”

The best of Jaylen Brown is on display in the Eastern Conference finals.

His performance came on a night when his All-NBA teammate, Jayson Tatum, didn’t have his offense going in the first half.

“Just being aggressive, wanted to get out and transition and run,” Brown explained. “Wanted to attack their smaller guards, put pressure on them, get to the basket, get to the free throw line.”

Brown did all of that.

The Celtics not only needed that from him in Game 2, his Game 1 heroics with a game-tying, overtime-forcing corner 3-pointer with 6.1 seconds left in the fourth quarter Tuesday helped Boston take a 1-0 series lead.

Brown was fantastic during the regular season (23 points, 5.5 rebounds, 3.6 assists, 1.2 steals per game and 49.9% shooting from the field and 35.4% on 3s), and he has been even better during the playoffs (24.8 points per game on 54.4% shooting from the field).

Brown scored seven of Boston’s first nine points, had 17 points in the second quarter, and in the third, he had a sequence of 3-pointer, assist, steal, layup that pushed Boston’s lead from 77-71 to 84-71, dousing the Pacers’ dim comeback chances.

Celtics coach Joe Mazzulla said he had no reason to address the All-NBA snub with Brown.

“He’s a very mature guy, so I don’t have to do that,” Mazzulla said. “But he has a great outlook on life. He knows what’s important and what’s not, and he works really hard and he knows who he is as a person and a player. So that’s the most important thing.”

Tatum didn’t mention it either.

“We all felt like internally that he should have made (one of the) All-NBA teams, so it was a shame to see that he didn’t,” Tatum said.

Brown just missed getting one of the 15 All-NBA spots, finishing 16th in voting. It’s not like he wasn’t considered. Whether he wanted to send a message or the timing was coincidental, Brown delivered.

The Celtics need that production from him. The addition of Jrue Holiday and Kristaps Porzingis, who may return from a calf injury within the week, made Boston one of the best teams and better positioned it to win a championship. But the Celtics aren’t winning the title without Brown and Tatum leading the way.

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Chicago Sky rookie forward Angel Reese deleted a social media post, which referenced the league’s new policy on charter flights, as well as attendance. Many viewed Reese’s post as a veiled shot at Caitlin Clark.

After the Sky’s 90–81 victory over the New York Liberty at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, Reese, who had 13 points and nine rebounds in the win, took to social media.

‘And that’s one getting a WIN in a packed area, not just cause of one player on our charter flight,’ Reese said in a now-deleted post on X.

When Clark visited Barclays Center to take on the Liberty last weekend, 17,735 fans showed up. Last night’s attendance, with Reese in town against the Liberty, was listed at 12,049.

It is unknown if Reese was directing her comment at Clark of the Indiana Fever or Hall of Famer Charles Barkley, who said that WNBA veterans should be glad people are watching because of Clark. The league’s players, for years, had complained about flying commercial to get to road destinations.

LeBron James, Barkley, and ESPN’s Elle Duncan, among others, have had their points on Clark entering the league.

Television ratings for each of Clark’s games have been strong, with her debut against the Connecticut Sun setting a new ESPN viewership record for a WNBA broadcast. The Fever’s game against the Liberty peaked at nearly two million viewers and was the most-viewed WNBA game ever on ABC.

Reese and Clark history

The two college rivals got the nation’s attention in the 2023 national championship game between LSU and Iowa when Reese mocked Clark’s ‘You Can’t See Me’ gesture made popular by former WWE star John Cena. Reese also flashed and pointed to her ring finger as the Tigers celebrated their first national title with the 102-85 victory.

Reese said the taunts after the game were because Clark ‘disrespected’ her LSU teammate Alexis Morris.

‘But I don’t take disrespect lightly. She disrespected Alexis (Moore) and my girls, South Carolina, they’re still my SEC girls too, and y’all not gonna disrespect them either,’ Reese said.

Clark later said that Reese shouldn’t receive backlash for the taunts.

In a March NCAA Tournament rematch, Iowa beat LSU 94-86 in the Elite Eight behind Clark’s 41 points, denying the Tigers a chance at back-to-back titles.

‘Me and Caitlin Clark don’t hate each other. I want everybody to understand that. It’s just a super competitive game,’ Reese told reporters ahead of the 2024 showdown.

‘Once I get between those lines, there’s no friends. I have plenty of friends on the court that I talk to outside of the game, but like when I get between those lines, we’re not friends,’ Reese said. ‘We’re not buddies. I’m going to talk trash to you. I’m going to do whatever it takes to get in your head the whole entire game, but after the game we can kick it. I don’t think people really realize that.

‘That’s fine. I’ll take the villain role. I’ll take the hit for it. But I know we’re growing women’s basketball. If this is the way we’re going to do it, then this is the way we’re going to do it. You either like it or you don’t.’

After the loss, Reese said she had been receiving death threats over the past. Clark’s Iowa squad went on to lose in the national title game to South Carolina.

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The second round is over, the conference finals are underway and the first-round order of the 2024 NHL draft is mostly set.

The Chicago Blackhawks and New York Islanders changed it up a little Friday by swapping first-round picks. The Blackhawks will move up two spots to 18th and the Islanders get the 20th pick and two second-rounders. Chicago also gets a second-round pick.

The first 16 slots were set after the draft lottery, with the San Jose Sharks winning and retaining the top pick. None of the non-playoff teams moved up or down. The next 12 picks went to the teams eliminated in the first two rounds.

The remaining slots will be determined by the next two rounds. Picks Nos. 29 and 30 will go to the conference final losers, No. 31 will go to the Stanley Cup Final loser and No. 32 will go to the NHL champion.

The Florida Panthers (to Philadelphia Flyers) and Edmonton Oilers (to Anaheim Ducks) have traded their first-round picks while the Dallas Stars and New York Rangers still have theirs.

A look at the 2024 NHL draft:

What is the first round order for the 2024 NHL draft?

San Jose Sharks
Chicago Blackhawks
Anaheim Ducks
Columbus Blue Jackets
Montreal Canadiens
Utah
Ottawa Senators
Seattle Kraken
Calgary Flames
New Jersey Devils
Buffalo Sabres
Philadelphia Flyers
Minnesota Wild
San Jose Sharks (from Pittsburgh Penguins in the Erik Karlsson deal)
Detroit Red Wings
St. Louis Blues
Washington Capitals
Chicago Blackhawks (from New York Islanders in a swap of picks on Friday. Chicago gave up the 20th pick and two second-rounders for the 18th pick and a second-rounder)
Vegas Golden Knights
New York Islanders (from Tampa Bay Lightning via Chicago Blackhawks in the 2022 Brandon Hagel deal)
Los Angeles Kings
Nashville Predators
Toronto Maple Leafs
Colorado Avalanche
Ottawa Senators (from Boston Bruins via Detroit Red Wings. The Red Wings got the Bruins’ first-rounder in 2023’s Tyler Bertuzzi deal. Detroit traded it to Ottawa in the Alex DeBrincat deal)
Montreal Canadiens (from Winnipeg Jets in the Sean Monahan deal)
Carolina Hurricanes
Calgary Flames (from Vancouver Canucks in the Elias Lindholm deal)

When and where is the 2024 NHL draft?

The 2024 NHL draft will be held June 28-29 at the Sphere in Las Vegas. The first round will be on the 28th and the second through seventh rounds will be on the 29th.

Who will be taken No. 1 overall in the 2024 NHL draft?

Presumably Macklin Celebrini, 17, a 6-foot, 190-pound freshman center at Boston University, who had 32 goals and 32 assists in 38 games to lead the Terriers to the Frozen Four, where they lost to eventual champion Denver in the semifinals. He won the Hobey Baker Award as college hockey’s top men’s player, plus was voted Hockey East’s top player and rookie.

Who are the top NHL draft prospects?

Celebrini is the consensus No. 1 pick in mock drafts and has been all season.

“He possesses that rare, elite ability to thrive with his skills and smarts while competing with a consistent passion to face every challenge head-on and generate results, all the while making himself a better player,” said Dan Marr, vice president of NHL Central Scouting.

There is no consensus No. 2 pick. The draft is deep in defensemen.

Here is how NHL Central Scouting ranks the top 10 North American prospects and top five international prospects.

North American prospects: Celebrini, Michigan State defenseman Artyom Levshunov, Medicine Hat center Cayden Lindstrom, Denver defenseman Zeev Buium, Saginaw defenseman Zayne Parekh, Tri-City winger Trevor Connelly, London defenseman Sam Dickinson, Spokane center Berkly Catton, Kelowna center Tij Iginla (son of Hall of Famer Jarome Iginla) and Chicago center Michael Hage.

International prospects: Russian 6-7 defenseman Anton Silayev, Russian winger Ivan Demidov, Finnish center Konsta Helenius, Czech defenseman Adam Jiricek and Swedish winger Michael Brandsegg-Nygard.

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We almost missed it amid Arizona State’s official announcement of the hiring of Graham Rossini as athletic director on Thursday.

When talking about why the hiring of Rossini took so long (especially when the university didn’t formally interview any other candidates), Arizona State President Michael Crow talked about waiting until the NCAA investigation around the school’s football program had been resolved.

He also discussed restructuring the model under which the athletic department worked, citing the debt that the athletic program carried.

Crow didn’t specify the amount of debt, but it was valued at $312,890,623 dollars in 2023-23, according to Sportico.com, the second-highest outstanding debt in the nation behind California ($439,363,996).

That debt has evidently been ‘eliminated’ with the ASU athletic department restructuring, according to Crow.

‘A lot of athletic programs around the country nowadays borrow money from the universities and then they carry debt with the university so we have eliminated all of that,’ Crow said Thursday. ‘We have built a structure now for finances which can weather any hurricane going forward, any tumult we might encounter. We’ve built the athletic facilities district as a legal entity which generates the revenue to build things like this stadium. We’ve created all types of other financial structures that are going to allow ASU athletics to be able to advance. We came through the pandemic with no debt. We came through the pandemic with no layoffs in the university, no reductions in salary or furloughs. So we’ve built a financial structure, what has happened in the past is that athletics was considered a separate thing, an auxiliary enterprise. It’s not an auxiliary enterprise now. It’s in the core of the enterprise of ASU, so we’ve changed the model that’s going to allow us to have our athletic department focus on victory, and success of our student-athletes academically and athletically. The rest of the enterprise is going to worry about the bigger financial issues.’

How did ASU athletics eliminate more than $300 million in debt? That still remains unclear.

Reach Jeremy Cluff at jeremy.cluff@arizonarepublic.com. Follow him on X, formerly Twitter @Jeremy_Cluff.

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OWINGS MILLS, Md. – Forgive but don’t forget, John Harbaugh said about his team’s loss to the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC championship game four months ago.

Well, maybe don’t forgive either, the Baltimore Ravens head coach clarified while smiling. But definitely don’t forget the 17-10 defeat that sent the Chiefs to the Super Bowl and the Ravens home.

‘We don’t forget for sure – and try to improve,’ Harbaugh said Wednesday. ‘It’s always going to be part of (us).’

The Ravens drew the Chiefs in the NFL’s opening game of the 2024 regular season. For Baltimore quarterback Lamar Jackson, the 2023 league MVP who was 20-for-37 with a touchdown, interception and fumble against the Chiefs, it didn’t matter who the Ravens had on the schedule. He knows that true revenge is only possible in the postseason.

‘Us beating them in the regular season doesn’t really do anything,’ Jackson said. ‘It just helps us keep stacking up wins to hopefully make it to the playoffs – if anything to try to get in that same position again and hopefully be successful.

All things Ravens: Latest Baltimore Ravens news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

‘It really doesn’t matter who we play (in the) first game. Obviously it’s the Chiefs, but I really didn’t care.’

The Ravens scored their lone touchdown of the championship game in the first quarter and managed a fourth-quarter field goal the rest of the way. Baltimore’s defense kept Patrick Mahomes and the Chiefs off the board in the second half.

‘We just have to finish,’ Jackson said. ‘We have to find a way to move the ball in the right direction and put points on the board because our defense did their thing the whole night.’

Asked how long it took him to move on from the title-game loss, Jackson replied ‘now.’ The players still discuss the loss among themselves.

‘I believe it hurts more losing before the Super Bowl than actually being a part of it, because we worked so hard, 17 weeks, plus the (postseason), and we get to a game away and lose,’ Jackson said.

On Thursday, offensive coordinator Todd Monken said the Ravens’ ground game wasn’t good enough against the Chiefs. They moved the ball into the red zone in the second half, but turnovers felled Baltimore.

‘We got to attack them the way we plan to attack them and I got to do a better job. That’s the way it is,’ Monken told reporters. ‘That’s what I’m paid to do. And that is to do it against the best.”

Wide receiver Zay Flowers still thinks about the game.

‘Honestly, I still haven’t gotten over it,’ he said.

Harbaugh, Jackson and the rest of the locker room took a similar view a few months ago when questions came about the Ravens avoiding an upset at home in the divisional round following a wild-card bye. The disappointment that came with their loss to the Tennessee Titans in the 2019 playoffs was a motivating factor, and they throttled the Houston Texans in the 2023 divisional a week before falling to the Chiefs.

For Harbaugh, his players internalizing that loss to this extent is not a problem.

‘What we’re talking about is confronting everything that has to do with us being the very best we can be as a football team and as an individual player,’ Harbaugh said. ‘So, if that’s part of the confrontation, ‘Let’s go, man. Let’s talk about it, and let’s get better, and let’s find a way to beat those guys.’ ‘

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As the final seconds expired in Minnesota’s Game 7 victory against the Denver Nuggets in the Western Conference semifinals, Karl-Anthony Towns processed an onslaught of emotions.

The Timberwolves’ first conference finals appearance in two decades; the responsibility Towns felt for getting the team into this position; his commitment to the franchise and the Twin Cities; the blame he absorbed in season’s when the Timberwolves didn’t reach expectations; the loss of his mom, Jacqueline, from COVID-19 in 2020, and the all-important role he played in Game 7.

It was a fitting conclusion to the series for Towns, who had 22 points and 12 rebounds and played outstanding defense on NBA MVP Nikola Jokic.

After a 36-46 season in 2018-19, Towns posted on social media, “Minny deserves better. I plan to give it to them.” Five years later, through sorrow, joy, recovery and rediscovery, Towns delivered.

“It’s a feeling that I’ve been waiting for a long time just to have that moment,” Towns told USA TODAY Sports. “When those closing seconds came and you really could sense the game was ours, the feeling of jubilation was something special. It was just a culmination of a lot of hard work, dedication and perseverance finally materializing to something great.”

Dallas took Game 1 of the conference finals and Game 2 is Friday (8:30 p.m. ET, TNT).

‘We’re going to have to find a way to even play more Timberwolves basketball for a longer set of time,’ Towns said. ‘Our discipline has to go up a level. Our execution has to go up a level. Our composure has to be at an all-time high. We have to have a championship mettle to us.’

Towns was fantastic against Denver, averaging 18.6 points, 9.1 rebounds, 3.0 assists and shooting 51% from the field and 39.4% on 3-pointers. His defense proved effective on Jokic. When Towns was the primary defender, Jokic shot 43.6% from the field and 19% on 3-pointers in the seven games compared to his regular-season averages of 58.3% and 35.9%.

The Timberwolves don’t win Game 7 without Towns’ performance.

“When you have a three-time MVP, it’s going to be a team effort,” Towns said. “You do your best to contain and do your best to utilize your God-given talents and intangibles to guard him.

“When you know that you have the support behind you that I do – Rudy Gobert is four-time Defensive Player of the Year and Jaden McDaniels is a future (DPoY) – you feel comfortable being really aggressive in your defense knowing your teammates got your back.”

‘That special thing that special teams have’

Listening to Towns and seeing the results, his growth as a leader is obvious and necessary. When he talks about 2023-24 being the best season of his career, it’s not just because he averaged 21.8 points, 8.3 rebounds and shot 50.4% from the field and 41.6% on 3-pointers. Those aren’t career highs. But the Timberwolves are in the conference finals for the first time since 2004.

“I’ve been able to impact this team’s success in winning in a much higher way than I have in years before,” said Towns, who was an All-Star for the fourth time this season. “So it’s about winning. For me to find the best way I can utilize myself for team success is what makes this my best year.”

He throws praise in all directions and wants everyone associated with the franchise to feel a part of the success – from Anthony Edwards to the ticket salesperson to the gameday usher. The feeling of “team” is something that took hold in his one college season at Kentucky in 2014-15.

Then-Wildcats coach John Calipari recruited talented players who could’ve starred elsewhere and averaged more points to sacrifice.

“I see that a lot in our team now, that unity, that cohesiveness, that togetherness, that special thing that special teams have,” Towns said. “It’s a selflessness that you need to be willing to win a championship. And I think that’s what makes this team so special this year is that there’s such a selflessness.”

Re-discovering the love of the game

Towns’ perspective is shaped by life experiences. The loss of his mother in the early days of the pandemic, shattered Towns. She was just 59 years old.

“In a world that was putting so much weight on my shoulders, she allowed me to take that backpack off with the rocks in it and be weightless and that was gone,” Towns said.

Dark days followed. The light had trouble finding its way in, the joy seemed far away and he drifted from his connection to basketball – all understandable in grief.

Towns prioritized his mental health through self-care, and with time, he rediscovered his love of basketball. He wasn’t afraid to express his feelings and invested time in people and projects meaningful to him.

“I had to learn how to take care of myself mentally at the highest level when the things that had brought me peace and had brought me mental stability weren’t there anymore,” he said.

On the day of this interview nearly 24 hours before the Timberwolves opened the Western Conference finals against the Mavericks, Towns was home and celebrating an anniversary with his girlfriend Jordyn Woods. They planned to eat dinner at home and then decide what to watch – a movie or TV show.

“This is where my experience kicks in,” Towns explained. “Basketball’s what I love, it’s what I do, but it’s not who I am. And I understand that.”

KAT’s voice for change

Last week, Towns was given the NBA’s 2023-24 Kareem Abdul-Jabbar Social Justice Champion Award for “for his dedication to pursuing social justice and upholding Abdul-Jabbar and the league’s decades-long values of equality, respect and inclusion.”

He pushed for a bill that restores voting rights to formerly incarcerated individuals, was a producer on the documentary ‘Forgiving Johnny,’ which explores how technology and diversion programs can help developmentally challenged defendants. He is also a board member on the National Basketball Social Justice Coalition which aims to “promote policy, build strategic partnerships, and empower action in NBA markets across the nation,” and his fundraising effort for the Boys and Girls Clubs of the Twin Cities is helping young people get access to mental wellness support.

Towns said he was speechless when he watched a video of Abdul-Jabbar informing him he was the recipient of the award.

“Being able to share my mother’s love with the world is something I always want to do, and it’s the gift that I’m blessed to say has kept giving and it’s been something that’s helped a lot of kids and families’ lives.” Towns said. “And I’m forever thankful for the teachings and lessons she gave me and teaching me the meaning of the word love.”

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Inter Miami stars Lionel Messi and Luis Suárez, who did not travel for Saturday’s MLS match in Vancouver, made use of their free time watching their sons play in a youth game at Chase Stadium on Friday night.

Messi’s son, Thiago, and Suárez’s son, Benjamin, took center stage on their fathers’ home pitch for Inter Miami’s under-12 team against Orlando City U-12 following an opening ceremony to begin the inaugural Inter Miami CF Youth International Cup this weekend.

Messi, Suárez and midfielder Sergio Busquets did not travel for Saturday’s game in Vancouver because the club will play games on Wednesday and Saturday the following week, Inter Miami coach Tata Martino said Friday.

The jam-packed schedule – Inter Miami will play three games in a week, and in a stretch of six in 21 days – along with making the longest MLS round trip from South Florida to Vancouver, played into the club’s reasoning to leave the trio behind when they traveled on Thursday night.

The Vancouver Whitecaps FC released a statement to fans, with at least 50,000 people expected to attend Saturday’s game at BC Place.

Sadly, they won’t get to see two of the greatest goal scorers in soccer history in Suárez, who is second in MLS with 11 goals this season, and the dynamic Messi, who is third with 10 goals but first with 12 assists for Inter Miami.

“What the league usually does when there are games where a team has to travel a long distance is either not have a three-week game or to have two games in the same place or in nearby areas. In this case this has not happened, but it is not a complaint,” Martino said during a Zoom press conference.

“We knew this from the beginning of the season. We knew the calendar perfectly well, and at this point we had to take this decision. Obviously, we understand that the players who will not be here are players who have revolutionized, especially Leo, the MLS. But well, we also have an obligation to take care of the health of the team, right?”

How to watch Vancouver vs. Inter Miami live stream Saturday?

The match begins at 10:30 p.m. ET and will be streamed via MLS Season Pass on Apple TV.

TICKETS: Experience Inter Miami in person at Vancouver against the Whitecaps

SHOP: Get the latest Messi and Inter Miami team gear from the MLS Store

When will Messi play again? Here’s his next Inter Miami game

The trio should return to action when Inter Miami hosts Atlanta United on Wednesday, and St. Louis City on Saturday at Chase Stadium – the club’s last two matches before Messi, 36, joins Argentina for Copa America 2024 next month.

Messi could use the time off. He played the entire home match against D.C. United last Saturday, after missing a mid-week game at Orlando City on May 15 to rest a left leg injury sustained in a Saturday match at CF Montreal on May 11.

Suárez, who has a history of knee injuries, has remained healthy and key part of Inter Miami’s first-place standing in the MLS Eastern Conference. And Busquets, one of the best midfielders in the sport’s history, has played the most minutes of any Inter Miami player since their 2024 began with a lengthy preseason tour in Dallas, El Salvador, Saudi Arabia, Hong Kong and Tokyo.

“We understand people’s frustration, especially because of their desire to see the players. Sometimes we, as a coaching staff, have to make these uncomfortable decisions that obviously frustrate the people,” Martino said. “But we have to look after the institution, the team and our players. So, we took this decision because we believe it is the right one at this moment.”

While Inter Miami did not confirm the absences of Messi, Suarez and Busquets until Martino’s press conference, the Whitecaps’ statement included a consolidation for fans: All in-stadium food and beverages will be discounted 50%, and all kids will be provided one free kids meal combo.

“While we haven’t received an official update on the availability of Lionel Messi, Luis Suárez and Sergio Busquets for this weekend, we understand they will not make this trip. Unfortunately, we have no control over who plays for our opponent, and it was important for us to communicate to our fans as soon as possible,” Whitecaps FC CEO Axel Schuster said. 

“We always want our best players going up against our opponent’s best players, and facing players of the highest pedigree was especially exciting for our team. We know that there will also be a lot of disappointed fans. We remain committed to making this a special experience for everyone. It is still going to be an incredible atmosphere and celebration of soccer for our city. We have amazing fans, we have a good team, and Saturday’s match is a very important home game for us.”

Saturday’s game will be the 20th match Inter Miami has played across all competitions this season, but the seventh match Messi will miss (five for injury, and this will be the second for rest purposes).

Messi has played in 27 of 41 total matches overall since joining Inter Miami last July as various leg injuries have limited him in action.

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Blackstone CEO and co-founder Stephen Schwarzman revealed on Friday that he will be supporting former President Donald Trump in 2024 after previously distancing himself from Trump leading into the GOP primary.

‘I share the concern of most Americans that our economic, immigration and foreign policies are taking the country in the wrong direction,’ Schwarzman told Fox News Digital in a statement that was first reported by Axios on Friday.

‘For these reasons, I am planning to vote for change and support Donald Trump for President. In addition, I will be supporting Republican Senate candidates and other Republicans up and down the ticket.’

Schwarzman, who briefly served as chairman of Trump’s Strategic and Policy Forum, added that the ‘dramatic rise of antisemitism has led me to focus on the consequences of upcoming elections with greater urgency.’

President Biden has been heavily criticized by Republicans, including Trump, for not doing enough to combat antisemitism, particularly with his response to anti-Israel protests that have erupted on college campuses nationwide over the past few months.

Schwarzman, who co-founded the Blackstone private equity firm in 1985 and is worth an estimated $39 billion, came out against the idea of Trump running for president again when he said in 2022 that it was time for the GOP to look in a new direction.

‘America does better when its leaders are rooted in today and tomorrow, not today and yesterday,’ Schwarzman said. ‘It is time for the Republican Party to turn to a new generation of leaders and I intend to support one of them in the presidential primaries.’

Fox News Digital reached out to the Trump and Biden campaigns for comment but did not receive a response.

Big money GOP donors have been coalescing around Trump in recent months as the former president attempts to close the cash on hand gap with the Biden campaign.

Biden had regularly been outpacing Trump in monthly fundraising until April when he was topped by Trump for the first time this cycle.

Trump’s April haul was boosted by a record-setting $50.5 million that the former president’s campaign raked in at a single event early in the month with top dollar GOP donors that was hosted at the Palm Beach, Florida home of billionaire investor John Paulson.

Fox News Digital’s Paul Steinhauser contributed to this report

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With closing arguments in former President Trump’s criminal trial scheduled for early in the week ahead, a pending verdict in the historic case could have serious consequences in the 2024 election between the former president and President Biden.

Trump holds the slight edge right now both in national polling and in public opinion surveys in most of the crucial battleground states that will likely decide their election rematch.

However, Trump could potentially be convicted on some or all of the nearly three-dozen state felony charges he faces in his trial in New York City, which is the first in the nation’s history for a former or current president.

Veteran Democratic pollster Chris Anderson told Fox News that he did not think ‘a guilty verdict would fundamentally change the landscape of the race.’ Longtime Republican pollster Neil Newhouse went even further, arguing that a Trump conviction ‘is unlikely to make any difference.’

Both pointed to the fact that ‘attitudes are so set in concrete’ regarding both the Republican former president and his Democratic successor in the White House.

Trump is charged with falsifying business records in relation to payments during the 2016 election that he made to Stormy Daniels to keep quiet about his alleged affair with the adult film actress. Trump’s former attorney, Michael Cohen, paid Daniels, whose real name is Stephanie Clifford, $130,000 in return for her silence about allegations of an affair with Trump in 2006.

Both Cohen and Daniels testified for the prosecution and were grilled by Trump’s attorneys during cross-examination in a case that has grabbed tons of attention on the cable news networks, online and on social media.

The former president has repeatedly denied falsifying business records as well as the alleged sexual encounter with Daniels, and he has repeatedly claimed, without providing evidence, that the case is a ‘SHAM TRIAL instigated and prosecuted directly from the inner halls of the White House and DOJ.’

Trump has also been fined a couple of times, and threatened with jail, by the judge in the case for violating a gag order aimed at protecting witnesses and jurors from the former president’s verbal attacks.

According to a Fox News national poll conducted earlier this month, nearly half of registered voters questioned said Trump had done something illegal when it comes to violations of campaign finance laws, with another quarter saying he had done something unethical. 

Only 27% said the former president had done nothing seriously wrong. However, that number jumped to 54% among Trump supporters.

That same survey indicated that voters were roughly divided on whether Trump’s legal treatment was fair (51%) or unfair (47%). There was an expected extremely wide partisan divide, with nine out of 10 Democrats saying the former president’s treatment was fair and 85% of Republicans disagreeing.

Would a Trump guilty verdict dramatically alter the current state of play in the presidential showdown?

A handful of recent national polls suggest the answer is not really.

Among them, 62% of registered voters questioned in a Quinnipiac University survey said a guilty verdict would make no difference to their vote for president. Fifteen percent said it would make them more likely to cast a ballot for Trump, and 21% said it would make them less likely to vote for the former president.

Additionally, eight out of 10 Trump supporters surveyed in an ABC News/Ipsos national poll said they would still back the presumptive GOP presidential nominee if he was found guilty in court. Sixteen percent said they would reconsider their support, and 4% said they would no longer back Trump.

Anderson, a member of the Fox News Election Decision Team and the Democratic partner on the Fox News Poll, compared a potential guilty verdict to the infamous video that briefly damaged Trump’s chances of winning the 2016 presidential election. 

‘We might see an ‘Access Hollywood’ type slump in Trump’s poll numbers, where some of his less devoted supporters sour on him temporarily, but then by November it will seem forgivable,’ Anderson said. ‘ So I don’t think a guilty verdict would fundamentally change the landscape of the race, but it will certainly be a new contour that could be meaningful in a close race.’

Newhouse, who served as a pollster on four Republican presidential campaigns and is a co-founder of the political survey and polling firm Public Opinion Strategies, highlighted that ‘attitudes are so set in concrete regarding both President Biden and former President Trump that a guilty verdict in the hush money is unlikely to make any difference at all on the presidential ballot.’ 

‘Those who back Trump believe this is nothing more than a political witch hunt, while those who oppose him came to a guilty verdict before the trial ever began,’ he emphasized.

However, Anderson spotlighted that the history-making trial would have an impact.

‘Regardless of the verdict, this trial clearly isn’t what Trump wants to be dealing with right now and has not helped him,’ Anderson said. ‘What might help him is a not guilty verdict that will allow him to claim vindication. But even then, it’s a real stretch to imagine it becomes a net positive for him.’

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An exiled Iranian resistance group has uncovered damning evidence showing top regime officials’ direct involvement in supporting the Houthis in their attacks against ships in the Red Sea.

Fox News Digital reviewed evidence provided by The People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI/MEK) that claims to show how the Iranian-backed terror proxy based in northern Yemen is supplied by Tehran. The Houthis have conducted more than 50 attacks targeting ships traversing the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden since Oct. 7.

The MEK noted several methods and locations that the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps-Qods Force (IRGC-QF) uses to ship a variety of weaponry, including drones, cruise missiles, ballistic missiles, anti-ship mines, radar equipment and communication systems, to the Houthis. They noted that some of the missiles in the Houthis’ possession are manufactured by the Aerospace Industries Organization, which has been sanctioned by the U.S. Treasury Department.

Adding fuel to the group’s claims, a February 2024 Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) report demonstrates Iranian support to Houthi proxies through side-by-side comparisons of Houthi and Iranian unmanned aerial vehicles and missile systems. Among the ballistic missiles in both countries’ arsenals is the Iranian Shahab-3, which the Houthis call the ‘Toofan.’ 

Also included in the Houthis’ weapons inventory are Iranian missiles that have been used to target Israel. The DIA report also shows the remains of what they believe was a Paveh land-attack cruise missile, designated the ‘Quds-4’ by the Houthis. The DIA says the device was ‘fired by the Houthis toward Israel in late October 2023.’ 

Following Hamas’ Oct. 7 terror attacks, the Houthis’ first attempted to target Israel directly on Oct. 19, according to the Combating Terrorism Center at West Point. On March 18, reports noted that the Israel Defense Forces confirmed a Houthi cruise missile had infiltrated Israel, landing near Eilat. 

The Israel Defense Forces did not respond to a request for comment about how many times the Houthis have attempted to attack Israel since Oct. 7, or whether they have used Iranian weaponry to do so.

Behnam Ben Taleblu, a senior fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, told Fox News Digital that despite being ‘the newest member of the ‘Axis of Resistance,’’ the Houthis ‘actually have to date the most advanced long-range capabilities’ of the Islamic Republic of Iran’s proxy groups. ‘Putting capabilities like medium-range ballistic missiles or anti-ship ballistic missiles in the hands of an actor like the Houthis tells you something about the future operations that Iran envisions for this force,’ Taleblu added. 

The Houthis’ recent escalations have caused the U.S. Treasury Department to once more list the entity as a Specially Designated Terror Group in February 2024. This designation had been revoked in February 2021.

In its report to Fox News Digital, the MEK provided broad descriptions of the methods the IRGC-QF uses to deliver military material to Yemen. The MEK said the IRGC has ‘exerted pressure on some local barge owners’ to ferry weapons to Houthi boats ’10 miles off the coast of Yemen.’ On other occasions, the MEK reports that Iran may ship materials to Yemen after making ‘stopovers in African countries.’

The report states that Iran sometimes hides weaponry inside fenders, the ‘large shock absorbers that prevent ships from colliding with piers and other obstacles.’ On some occasions, the MEK reported that fenders were anchored below the water surface at a predetermined location, ‘and picked up by a secondary ship using built-in GPS.’ 

Other times, the fenders were attached to Iranian barges. On Aug. 13, 2019, the MEK said fenders ‘up to six meters long were attached to a ship at Bushehr wharf two days before departure’ to Lavan Island in the Persian Gulf. ‘Military weapons and equipment were concealed inside these fenders,’ the MEK said, but the group had no information about the cargo’s final destination.

On May 27, 2020, the MEK said Yemenis crewed a barge ‘loaded with light weapons’ from a location two miles from the port city of Jask. They also noted that the Bahman Piers, a set of ‘about 80 or 90’ secretive ports constructed along the Persian Gulf and the coast of the Sea of Oman on the 1982 orders of Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Khomeini, remain ‘outside the monitoring of international organizations.’ The MEK say the Bahman Piers are utilized as a means to smuggle oil and petrochemicals and ship out weapons to proxies, including the Houthis.

In addition to providing weapons to the Houthis, the MEK explained that Iran trains the Houthis to utilize high-tech weaponry, and has ‘helped the Houthis to develop from a ragtag force into a conventional military force’ by training Houthi military personnel. 

In a February interview with CBS, CENTCOM’s deputy commander, Vice Adm. Brad Cooper, confirmed that IRGC personnel are ‘serving side by side’ with the Houthis inside Yemen, ‘advising them and providing target information.’

In addition to training, Taleblu also sees signs that Yemen ‘has been a testing ground for Iranian weapons.’ Taleblu cited one case in which the Houthis showcased a medium-range ballistic missile with a unitary conical warhead in Yemen months before the Iranians ‘brought it into their arsenal.’

The difficulty of hindering support to the Houthis is underscored by the echelons of Iranian leadership involved in maintaining Iranian-Houthi relations. According to the MEK, the senior IRGC-QF commander, Brig. Gen. Abdul Reza Shahlai, also known as ‘Haj Yusuf,’ is charged with overseeing coordination with the Houthis. He is assisted by Brig. Gen. Ismail Qaani, Brig. Gen. Mohammad Reza Fallahzadeh, also known as ‘Abu Baqer,’ and Abu Fatemeh. 

The MEK also states that a headquarters within the Iranian Foreign Ministry ‘reviews and analyzes the effects of Houthi attacks,’ while IRGC Maj. Gen. Gholam Ali Rashid, commander of the Khatam al-Anbiya command headquarters, is ‘primarily responsible for military affairs in Yemen.’ The MEK also alleges that Iran’s National Security Council sets the guidelines for Yemeni intervention and escalation, and that Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei is ultimately in charge of finalizing and approving decisions regarding political and military affairs in Yemen.

Khamenei, Shahlai, Qaani, Fallahzadeh and Rashid have been sanctioned by the U.S. Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control. The Department of Justice has offered a $15 million reward for information about Shahlai for his role in plotting the assassination of the Saudi ambassador in Washington, D.C., and his role in planning an attack in Iraq in which five U.S. soldiers were killed and three wounded.

The U.S. Treasury Department’s sanctions against Iran have grown in passing years in recognition of Iran’s role in funding terror in the Middle East. In April, Secretary of the Treasury Janet Yellen explained that the department had ‘targeted over 600 individuals and entities connected to Iran’s terrorist activity, its human rights abuses, and its financing of Hamas, the Houthis, Hizballah, and Iraqi militia groups.’ 

No matter how necessary, thwarting Iranian fundraising will prove a difficult endeavor. According to Taleblu, the Islamic Republic of Iran has a well-established system capable of ‘scaling up material support over time.’ Through a combination of direct financial transfers, money laundering schemes, illicit revenue, and a nontraditional system of sending remittances that uses front companies and exchange houses across multiple countries, ‘Iran has the ability to fund terrorism and engage in illicit financial trade across the region while under sanctions.’ 

Ali Safavi, of the Paris-based NCRI’s Foreign Affairs Committee, urged the international community to ‘hold the IRGC-QF accountable for leveraging the Houthis to destabilize the region.’ Safavi told Fox News Digital that designating the IRGC as a terrorist entity, as the U.S. did in 2019, would ‘not only significantly impede the IRGC’s ability to use front companies to evade sanctions and fund its malign activities and proxies but also seriously hinder the operations of its agents in the West.’ Most importantly, Safavi said ‘it would convey a powerful message to the Iranian people: the main force responsible for suppressing their uprisings is recognized globally as a terrorist entity, thereby legitimizing their resistance against it.’

Iran’s relationship with the Houthis is key in its strategy to cause harm to Israel, Taleblu says. The proxy has ‘created another vector of pressure against Israel, forcing Israel to have to expand more of its layered air and missile defense assets to protect its country.’ Ultimately, the ensuing financial and military pressure ‘would also reduce the political space for Israel to be able to accomplish freely, cheaply, or easily the military goal and the destruction of Hamas.’ Taleblu also said this would ultimately ‘create the political conditions for distance to grow between America and Israel.’

Iran can see that ‘the strategy is working,’ Taleblu says, and the world is ‘likely going to see more weapons proliferation across the region, not less.’ 

THE Associated Press contributed to this report.

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