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Playoff pressure exists.

How a player, team or coach deals with it helps determine how that pressure manifests itself and impacts performance.

And if there’s not internal pressure, there’s external pressure based on expectations, which determine success and failure. Even in the most basic terms, the competitive nature of players to excel creates pressure. They don’t want to lose.

The first round of the NBA playoffs begin Saturday with four games, and as usual, the pressure is not distributed evenly. Some absorb the burden more than others.

Let’s look at five players (plus a bonus) who are under pressure this NBA playoff season:

Milwaukee Bucks guard Damian Lillard

Damian Lillard wanted out of Portland. Didn’t want to be part of that rebuild. Wanted to play for a contender. Nothing wrong with that. He got his wish. But the Bucks – for a team that won 49 games – have had a tumultuous season, firing then-head coach Adrian Griffin with a 30-13 record. Milwaukee went 19-20 the rest of the season, and while Giannis Antetokounmpo and Lillard produced as a tandem, the wins weren’t there, something seemed off and now the Bucks start their first-round series against Indiana with both players injured and the possibility of Antetokounmpo missing at least Game 1. The Bucks acquired Lillard for moments like this.

Boston Celtics forward Jayson Tatum and guard Jaylen Brown

Jaylen Brown has played in five conference finals, Jayson Tatum four conference finals and both played in the 2022 NBA Finals. They have been on the doorstep of bringing the storied Boston franchise its 18th title. This season, the Celtics won an NBA-best 64 games and ran away with the Eastern Conference. Tatum will make an All-NBA team, and Brown, who made All-NBA last season, was an All-Star for the third time this season. This is the best team the Celtics have had in the Brown-Tatum era, with the addition of Kristaps Porzingis and Jrue Holiday, and anything short of winning the East and advancing to the Finals will be a disappointment. Tatum and Brown are the foundational players.

Minnesota Timberwolves center Rudy Gobert

The Timberwolves traded for Rudy Gobert before the start of the 2022-23 season and the success they had sought was not immediate. The Timberwolves were 42-40 and not a cohesive group last season, losing to Denver in the first round. It came together for the Timberwolves this season, going 56-26 with the third-best record in the West – just a game behind Oklahoma City and Denver. Gobert anchored the league’s top defense and now he needs to be at his best for the Timberwolves to make a deep playoffs run, starting with their first-round series against the offensively gifted Phoenix Suns.

New York Knicks guard Jalen Brunson

Philadelphia 76ers center Joel Embiid

The 76ers were headed for the second or third seed in the East and Joel Embiid was on track for his second consecutive MVP in late January. Then, Embiid injured his knee, missed games, became ineligible to win MVP and the Sixers tumbled in the standings, ending up the No. 7 seed. Embiid is back and the Sixers look formidable again. But remember, the Sixers have not advanced beyond the second round of the playoffs during the Embiid era. Exits before the conference finals year after year become part of a star player’s legacy.

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University of Memphis athletics, presented by FedEx.

It sure does have a nice ring to it, and it begs the question: Is the rest of the college sports world paying attention to what’s happening at Memphis? It should be.

After years of being the athletic department’s biggest corporate sponsor, and a few months after FedEx founder Fred Smith and his family helped jumpstart Simmons Bank Liberty Stadium renovations with a $50 million donation, FedEx is now ensuring its local university is on the cutting edge in the new (and wild) frontier of name, image and likeness. 

It’s hard to overstate how meaningful Friday’s announcement that FedEx is committing $5 million annually for the next five years to NIL deals for Memphis athletes might be. This is what we all fantasized about when NIL came to be – the big corporations of Memphis working in conjunction with the athletic department’s recruiting efforts. This is, in many ways, the dream come true – an arrangement that could only be done here. 

“I don’t think there’s another deal that we’re aware of that is this size or the scope across multiple programs and across multiple years,” athletic director Laird Veatch said in an interview with The Commercial Appeal. “It signals that Memphis is ready to compete at the highest level. It is a massive step forward for us.”

If you’re keeping score at home, Memphis is set to have a newly renovated football stadium that it now owns, an NBA arena that’s likely going to receive renovations worth more than $500 million soon and an NIL war chest that’s probably bigger than any non-power school in the country.

Now that SMU bought its way into the ACC, there’s nobody operating like Memphis outside the power structure anymore. Maybe South Florida is in the vicinity considering it’s in the midst of building its own football stadium. But it doesn’t appear to have the NIL capabilities that Memphis will have moving forward. Just look at how USF’s men’s basketball roster got pilfered in recent weeks after winning the AAC regular-season title this past season. 

Memphis, meanwhile, has just about everything it could want for sustained success – except the right league.

Getting on the right side of conference realignment is easier said than done, based on recent history. FedEx’s potential sponsorship opportunities weren’t enough to secure a Big 12 bid for Memphis over the past decade. But this latest infusion of help from FedEx will make it harder than ever to deny the Tigers belong. 

Memphis may not be one of the haves yet, but it suddenly has a corporate donor willing to jump into the NIL pool in ways no other big company is at the moment. That’s a carrot nobody else can dangle.

“We do believe this puts us in a highly competitive position in our overall landscape,” Veatch said. “We believe it establishes a sustainable NIL model for us.”

That part is important, by the way. The current NIL model, which was created haphazardly because of the NCAA’s years-long refusal to accept that its amateurism model had become outdated, was essentially asking individual donors to fund recruiting efforts, in addition to buying tickets and funding scholarships and facilities projects. NIL quickly morphed into pay-for-play. 

What FedEx is pledging to do is more in line with what NIL was intended to be, with Memphis athletes earning money by promoting the FedEx brand. This will also take the majority of the burden off Memphis fans, although Veatch said this will also involve the university raising $2.5 million in additional NIL money each year to go alongside FedEx’s $5 million contribution. 

‘We believe that taking an athletic program and making it prominent and investing in the students will help us create a real draw for the hometown, said FedEx executive vice president and chief marketing officer Brian Philips, ‘and the more people that want to live in Memphis, the bigger the labor pool we have to draw from. We know it’s good for the school, and good for the city … so it really is a chain reaction that’s a win-win for everyone.”

The timing is in conjunction with the end of FedEx’s naming rights deal at FedEx Field in Landover, Maryland, Philips noted, with the thought of recalibrating some of the company’s marketing efforts to a younger generation.

It’s unclear still exactly how the money will be doled out. Veatch said it will be FedEx’s decision as to what athletes it wants to invest the $5 million in each year. He also stressed that the women’s sports part of this shouldn’t be overlooked, especially with the momentum being generated in that space through Caitlin Clark and this year’s NCAA women’s basketball tournament. But it’s safe to assume millions of dollars in additional NIL money is about to be infused into Memphis football and men’s basketball. 

So just think about how this could work.

Memphis women’s soccer or basketball want to take their recruiting efforts to another level? FedEx can help. 

Penny Hardaway needs a bunch of money to make sure David Jones plays one more year with Memphis basketball. FedEx can take care of that. 

For Memphis, it always delivers.

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New Michigan basketball coach Dusty May has landed his first recruit since taking over the job in Ann Arbor, and it’s a name that comes with some firepower.

Justin Pippen, son of NBA legend Scottie Pippen, committed to the Wolverines program Friday afternoon. The 6-foot-3 combo guard is a four-star prospect according to 247Sports Composite rankings, rated the No. 101 player in the Class of 2024 and the No. 13 combo guard in the nation.

Justin Pippen, whose brother, Scotty Jr., averaged 12.9 points in 21 games for the Memphis Grizzlies this season, was teammates with LeBron James’ son, Bryce. Bronny James also attended the school before he enrolled at USC last year.

Justin Pippen has been listed as a late bloomer on his profile, much like his father, and has reportedly grown more than 2 inches in the past eight months. Pippen held offers from schools like Stanford, Texas A&M and Georgia Tech, but Michigan offered him earlier this week.

It’s been a busy few weeks for the Michigan basketball program: Earlier this week, the Wolverines announced what the Free Press reported earlier in the week: May’s finalized his six-man staff consists of assistants Mike Boynton Jr, Akeem Miskdeen and Justin Joyner; general manager Kyle Church; director of player development Drew Williamson and special assistant to the head coach Brandon Gilbert.

That follows the announcement that both Will Tschetter and George Washington III had removed their name from the transfer portal and officially decided to stay in Ann Arbor. Last season’s leading scorer, Dug McDaniel, landed at Kansas State and former Michigan big man Tarris Reed Jr. announced on Wednesday that he is joining the two-time defending champion UConn.

Michigan also has incoming three-star point guard Durral ‘Phat Phat’ Brooks committed to the program and more guard help could be on the way. On Friday, former Auburn point guard Tre Donaldson, currently in the transfer portal, went on Instagram live wearing a Michigan jersey in what appeared to be Ann Arbor.

Donaldson played 35 games last year for the Tigers, where he averaged 6.7 points and 3.4 assists as he shot 41.2% from long range and had better than a 2-to-1 assist-to-turnover ratio in 19.2 minutes per game.

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After months of anticipation, the Ryan Garcia vs. Devin Haney fight is nearly here.

Haney is the WBC super lightweight champion with a record of 31-0 and 15 KO’s. He’ll take on Garcia (24-1, 20 KO’s) Saturday night at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn – though the boxing match will not be a title fight after Garcia failed to make weight.

Talk around the fight focused on Garcia’s behavior and whether the fight would take place as scheduled. The 25-year-old boxer made outlandish claims, including that he conjured up demons and was at risk of being crucified, on social media.

In April 2022, Garcia lost to Gervonta Davis in a seventh-round KO. In his next fight, he beat Oscar Duarte Jurado by KO in December 2023.

Haney, also 25, is coming off a win over Regis Prograis, in a fight held in December 2023 in San Francisco.

Did Ryan Garcia make weight?

At the weigh-in Friday, Ryan Garcia missed the contracted 140-pound weight by more than three pounds. But the fight still is on, though Haney’s WBC super lightweight title belt will not be up for grabs.

What time is the Ryan Garcia vs. Devin Haney fight?

The main card starts at 8 p.m. ET. Ring walks for Ryan Garcia and Devin Haney are estimated to start at 11 p.m. ET.

How to watch Ryan Garcia vs. Devin Haney fight

The boxing match can be viewed on DAZN ($69.99 with a subscription) and PPV.com ($79.99 (no subscription required).

Who’s going to win the Ryan Garcia-Devin Haney fight?

Robert Segal, Boxing News 24: “Even if Haney is planning to fight in a toe-to-toe fight, once he tastes Ryan’s power, he’ll change his mind about that and revert to the safety-first style we saw him use in his last four fights.’’

Prediction: Haney by a one-sided decision or late knockout

Lucky Ngamwajasat, Bleacher Report: “One punch can turn any fight and ‘King Ry’ definitely has the arsenal to catch Haney if he isn’t careful. However, the smart money here says Haney keeps Garcia at arm’s length and cruises to victory.

Prediction: Haney by unanimous decision

Daniel Yanofsky, The Sporting News: ‘The distractions Garcia has brought to this fight are concerning. It may be an act or a cry for help. However, if we are talking about pure skills, that is where Haney is king.’’ 

Prediction: Haney by unanimous decision

Matt Verri, Evening Standard: “Garcia’s route to victory is surely a knockout, with it hard to imagine him winning on points, but we’re going for Haney to control the bout in his typically composed fashion, out-boxing his rival throughout the 12 rounds.”

Prediction: Haney to win by unanimous decision

Josh Peter, USA TODAY: ‘With Ryan Garcia’s erratic behavior, I’m hoping for the best but expecting the worst.’

Prediction: Haney wins after Garcia is DQ’d in the 8th round.

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At least 14 Colorado football players since early March have announced they are leaving the team to enter the transfer portal. But Buffaloes coach Deion Sanders has a message for anybody who thinks that means his team is suffering in any way because of it.

“We’re good,” he said Thursday. “Quit making a big deal out of nothing.”

He’s seen this movie before. Last year, USA TODAY Sports counted at least 39 Colorado players who announced they were leaving last spring as Sanders engineered an unprecedented overhaul of his roster prior to his first season, including the addition of 47 scholarship transfer players to his team.

This year, there haven’t been nearly as many departures. And few of those who are leaving had established themselves as impact players or full-time starters last season, when the Buffaloes finished 4-8.

On Thursday, Sanders wanted to make that clear in his second news conference of the spring practice season.

“I wish you guys would do a little more homework when you start talking about the portal and understand what we’re losing,” Sanders told reporters in Boulder. “What are we losing? I got time today. What are we losing?”

Who did Colorado football lose exactly?

The Buffaloes are losing mostly backup players. Since November, at least 27 players have left the team. One of the recent departures was offensive tackle Savion Washington, who transferred to Colorado last year from Kent State and started nine games last year for the Buffaloes. But Washington was part of an offensive line that gave up the second-most quarterback sacks in the nation last year with 56. He faced new competition with several incoming and transfers.

“I trust the recruiting team, I trust our coaches, and please have some faith in me,” said Sanders, whose team finishes spring practice with its annual spring game April 27. “We’re good. We all right. We all right. What happens with the portal man, and you guys need to know: A lot of people are fighting for backups. When a guy’s a starter and he transfers, you’ve got to really think about that. Is he really that? I don’t know how many starters have really transferred around the country. I think we’ve got some coming in for visits, pretty soon, maybe even this weekend.”

Sanders noted his team isn’t losing starter-quality players.

“And if we do, we’re good,” Sanders said.

Shedeur and Shilo Sanders are helping recruit

The transfer portal is more volatile this year because players are no longer limited to just one transfer without penalty, unlike last year. The difference this time is that a recent federal court injunction paved the way for academically eligible players to transfer more than once without penalty.

But the door still swings both ways – going out and in. At least 24 new transfers committed to Colorado or are already enrolled for spring practice.

This spring, the transfer window opened Tuesday and remains open until the end of the month. Sanders is looking for more depth at several positions and is getting help recruiting transfer prospects from his two sons on the team, quarterback Shedeur Sanders and safety Shilo Sanders.

Earlier this week, Shilo Sanders made waves on social media when he posted a message on Instagram that called on transfer prospects to send direct-messages to him and his brother.

“I just want to make it easier for other guys to really just feel like, `All right, if I want to go to Colorado, it’s not hard,’” Shilo Sanders said at the news conference Thursday.

He said he got more than 50 messages that he forwarded to the coaching staff.

“It’s a player-to-player thing,” Shedeur Sanders said. “You don’t want to get in the portal and have nowhere to go.”

What else did Deion Sanders say?

Deion Sanders ripped unfounded internet reports that claimed his sons would only play for six certain NFL teams next year after they turn pro. He previously did say, “It’s certain cities that ain’t gonna happen” for his sons in the NFL, but didn’t say which teams he was referencing.

He also didn’t say they only would play for six certain teams.

“I don’t know who reported that I said there were several teams that my kids wasn’t going to,” Sanders said. “Whoever did that is a liar, and that’s stupid, I’d like to track that stuff down and hold people accountable in the media man. Like they should not be able to tweet or text or something when they put something  stupid out like that.”

Deion Sanders also was asked if he was bummed that McClain is leaving.

“I want the best for him, man,” he said. “I really do. I want that kid to soar. I want him to man up. I want him to be the best possible athlete and human being and person he can possibly be…

“Sometimes you need to disconnect from something to reconnect to something else to restart you and re-energize you and stabilize you.”

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Former WWE Champion Jinder Mahal announced his departure from WWE Friday night as he other stars were released from the company.

‘I Quit. Maharaja Out,’ Mahal posted on social media.

Mahal also changed his bio on X, formerly known as Twitter, to ‘free agent.’ Shortly after his announcement, Fightful confirmed his release from WWE.

It was a surprising announcement as ‘Friday Night Smackdown’ was aired live. Mahal was one of the longest-tenured stars on the roster. He returned to the company in 2016 after spending five years with WWE from 2010-14.

In his return, Mahal ascended to the top of the ladder when he shockingly won the WWE Championship in 2016 in one of the most unexpected title wins in recent memory. His reign lasted 170 days.

Mahal found success in the years following, including winning the United States Championship at WrestleMania 34 in 2018. Recently, Mahal had made various appearances on WWE programming, and he was the person taken out by The Rock when he returned on Jan. 1. He challenged Seth Rollins for the World Heavyweight Championship on Jan. 15, which he lost, and that wound up being his final match with WWE.

Xia Li released by WWE

Xia Li was also released by WWE, and she thanked the company on social media for the seven years she spent there.

‘As the first female Chinese superstar, I feel proud!’ she said. ‘I am sincerely grateful to WWE and (Paul Levesque) for welcoming me into this big family.

‘This journey with WWE has been wonderful, and I sincerely thank everyone who has been a part of it. This is not the end but a new beginning!’

Li started in NXT in 2017, and she made the main roster in 2021. This year, she competed at the Royal Rumble, and her last match was on Feb. 19 in a battle royal match.

Xyon Quinn released by WWE

Xyon Quinn was also released by WWE, Fightful reported.

Quinn made his debut with the company in 2020 and spent most of his time in NXT. His last appearance was on March 1 when he lost to Bron Breakker in a six-second match.

There is expected to be shakeups on the WWE roster in the coming weeks with the WWE Draft beginning on April 26.

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X plus three years is generally accepted as the appropriate time span to fairly evaluate a given NFL draft.

And while the 2021 ‘Player Selection Meeting’ had already come into fairly clear focus, its near-rampant disappointment from a quarterback perspective continues to crystallize. Top pick Trevor Lawrence of the Jacksonville Jaguars has been far closer to average than the generational prospect he was labeled to be. Yet he seems Canton-caliber compared to draftmates Zach Wilson, Trey Lance, Justin Fields and Mac Jones, who will all be on teams different from the ones that drafted them next season if, as expected, the Jets soon part ways with Wilson.

And while the indictment of the 2021 NFL draft’s arms may smack of recency bias, some of its members have truly earned a spot on this list of the 50 hugest busts of the past 50 years.

Some words about the methodology: This ranking and analysis are certainly interspersed with opinion. But I tried not to view these wayward picks in a vacuum – taking into account what teams sacrificed to take a player, either in terms of trade currency or whom they opted not to select, when evaluating each bust. Some deals themselves are included since many prevented teams from choosing superior options. Naturally, extra weight was given to quarterback gaffes.

Lastly, I tried to have some fun and creativity in select spots to keep you (and me) engaged, so try not to get too bent out of shape if that guard or defensive back your team took in the top 10 before he petered out didn’t warrant a mention.

NFL DRAFT HUB: Latest NFL Draft mock drafts, news, live picks, grades and analysis.

Here we go – and you’ll note I managed to shoehorn more than *50* players in here:

1. QB Ryan Leaf, 2nd overall 1998, Chargers

It seems patently obvious who was superior more than a quarter-century after the fact, but he was very much in the conversation to be this draft’s No. 1 pick. Of course, the Colts wisely chose eventual five-time league MVP Peyton Manning. Meanwhile, the Bolts set themselves back years by taking Leaf (4-14 in 18 starts for the club with a 48.8 passer rating), whose gross immaturity and inability to solve pro defenses trumped his vast physical talent. What cements his infamy is the price San Diego paid to simply swap its initial No. 3 pick to get Arizona’s spot at No. 2 (more on that later). But the freight the Cardinals commanded, aside from the switch, was a second-rounder, an additional first-rounder in 1999 and two veterans (WR Eric Metcalf and LB Patrick Sapp). Oof.

2. OT Tony Mandarich, 2nd overall 1989, Packers

The Sports Illustrated cover boy deemed ‘The Incredible Bulk’ prior to the draft – he had uncommon athleticism and size for the position at the time – was labeled ‘The NFL’s Incredible Bust’ by SI only three years later. Mandarich’s steroid-fueled body and poor work ethic didn’t hold up against professional competition, and he later descended into drug and alcohol abuse. Any value he later provided at guard might have helped the Colts but obviously didn’t do the Pack any good. But this context truly frames his failure: Mandarich was the only player selected in the top five that year who didn’t wind up in the Hall of Fame. Troy Aikman went No. 1, but Green Bay passed on Barry Sanders, Derrick Thomas and Deion Sanders.

3. QB JaMarcus Russell, 1st overall 2007, Raiders

It turned out to be a miserable year for passers, the likes of Brady Quinn, Kevin Kolb, John Beck and Drew Stanton also taken way too early. But Russell, who began his career with a lengthy holdout, never fulfilled the hype generated by his howitzer arm and legendary pro day. He lasted just three seasons, losing 18 of 25 starts and compiling an abysmal 65.2 passer rating, before laziness and weight gain washed him out of the league. Who could Oakland have taken instead? Calvin Johnson, Joe Thomas, Adrian Peterson, Patrick Willis, Marshawn Lynch and Darrelle Revis all came off the board in the first half of Round 1.

4. QB Jeff George, 1st overall 1990, Colts

He looked like Uncle Rico, threw like him, too … and basically played like the “Napoleon Dynamite” folk hero. Navigating into the top spot for George forced Indianapolis to surrender Pro Bowl OT Chris Hinton, future Pro Bowl WR Andre Rison and a first-round pick in 1991 to Atlanta – where George wound up himself in 1994 after wearing out his welcome with a bad attitude and 14-35 record for the Colts, who passed on three eventual Hall of Famers in the first round (more on them later). Never particularly popular in the locker room, George played for five different teams – and did post better numbers, if not many more wins, later in his career.

5. QB Trey Lance, 3rd overall 2021, 49ers

San Francisco surrendered four picks, three of them first-rounders, to get into position for a guy who was basically a one-year starter at North Dakota State. In fairness to Lance, incumbent QB Jimmy Garoppolo, subsequent injuries and a shoddy development plan that HC Kyle Shanahan largely blamed himself for derailed Lance before he had a legitimate chance to prove himself in Silicon Valley. But the Niners saw enough to pull the plug after two years, opting to give the reins to 2022 seventh-rounder Brock Purdy and sending Lance to Dallas for a Round 4 pick. And just imagine if the 49ers had taken WR Ja’Marr Chase, OT Penei Sewell, CB Patrick Surtain II or LB Micah Parsons instead of Lance … who maybe eventually blossoms for the Cowboys, little good as that will do San Fran.

5a. QB Zach Wilson, 2nd overall 2021, Jets

Now queue up the unfortunate 2021 QB corollaries – and brace yourself, Jets fans, as this is merely the first of many mentions. The NYJ effectively threw in the towel on Wilson in 2023 after trading for four-time league MVP Aaron Rodgers … then were quickly forced to turn back to the BYU product, who again miserably failed in his third attempt to produce at a level commensurate with his draft billing. Now it seems only a matter of time until Wilson is an ex-Jet, his NFL completion rate (57%) and passer rating (73.2) married to 23 TD passes and 34 turnovers. The mistake is magnified by the fact the Jets could have augmented the roster in 2021 around then-QB Sam Darnold with Chase, Sewell, Surtain or Parsons, among others, all available.  

5b. QB Justin Fields, 11th overall, Bears

Recently traded to Pittsburgh, maybe a passer with titillating ability resurrects his career with the Steelers. But not before the Bears sent four draft selections (two first-rounders) to the Giants to get Fields three years ago … then almost completely failed to put a legitimate supporting cast around him for two seasons. Many of Fields’ frequent failures must be laid at the doorstep of the organization, one that’s been so bad in recent years that it quickly finds itself in position to replace him this year – with a much better group of players present to help presumed 2024 top pick Caleb Williams.

5c. QB Mac Jones, 15th overall, Patriots

With the help of former New England OC Josh McDaniels, he looked like a legitimate NFL starter … for a year. Then it all fell apart for Jones, also largely undermined by an organization that didn’t give him sufficient positional coaching or playmakers. It got so bad last year, the decision was made to send Jones home in a trade with Jacksonville, where he’ll back up Lawrence as a second- or third-stringer in 2024.

6. RB Lawrence Phillips, 6th overall 1996, Rams

Bad player. Bad dude. And St. Louis should have known better. The Rams parted with DT Sean Gilbert to acquire the Phillips pick – Eddie George was still available – and they exported Jerome Bettis to Pittsburgh in a separate deal to clear the way for Nebraska’s fallen star. Phillips averaged 3.4 yards per carry and didn’t make it through his second season with the Rams, cut amid excessive in-season drinking.

7. Jets’ decisions to trade down in 1997

After going 1-15 in 1996, Gang Green most definitely earned the No. 1 pick of the ’97 draft – which they surely would have used for Manning … had he opted not to return to the University of Tennessee for his senior year. (And you can argue that newly acquired coach Bill Parcells could have done more to entice Manning to go pro, but that’s neither here nor there.) However after Manning was off the table, Parcells dealt down from No. 1 to No. 6 in a bid to restock this roster, passing on the opportunity to snatch future Hall of Fame LT Orlando Pace. Then Parcells dropped from No. 6 to No. 8, passing on the opportunity to get future Hall of Fame LT Walter Jones. (Ugh and ugh.) LB James Farrior, who was much better in Pittsburgh later in his career than during his Gotham stint, ‘headlined’ New York’s forgettable haul, which could have also included Hall of Fame TE Tony Gonzalez, who went 13th.

8. Colts’ decision to draft John Elway No. 1 in 1983

His talent obviously justified the selection, but team brass should have taken Elway seriously when he threatened to play baseball rather than for Baltimore. In the end, he launched his Hall of Fame career in Denver while the Colts were left with Hinton, backup QB Mark Herrmann, a first-round pick in 1984 (spent on G Ron Solt) and, in a year’s time, a one-way, franchise-wide ticket to Indianapolis.

9. QB Robert Griffin III, 2nd overall 2012, Washington

The team shipped three first-round picks and one in Round 2 to the Rams for the chance to take RG3. Initially, it seemed a reasonable gambit as the 2011 Heisman Trophy winner won Offensive Rookie of the Year honors while leading a charge to the NFC East title. The rest is unfortunate history, both for Griffin personally and the organization at large. Washington is still trying to pick up the pieces.

9a. Rams’ haul for Robert Griffin III

On the opposite end of the RG3 coin? St. Louis parlayed its bounty into Michael Brockers, Janoris Jenkins, Isaiah Pead, Rokevious Watkins, Alec Ogletree, Stedman Bailey, Zac Stacy and Greg Robinson. Some decent (and not-so-decent) players there, but obviously not a group that came anywhere close to salvaging the NFL in The Gateway City, much less providing the bedrock for a perennial powerhouse.

9b. DE Chase Young, 2nd overall 2020, Washington

He’s basically become the defensive version of RG3 – winning Defensive Rookie of the Year, suffering a serious knee injury and ultimately falling out of favor with the organization. A player who entered the league with astronomical expectations – reference the frequent (and unfair) Lawrence Taylor comparisons – Young had 7½ sacks in 2020 … and 6½ total over his next three seasons with Washington before being unceremoniously traded for a third-rounder last October. Justin Jefferson, Justin Herbert, CeeDee Lamb and Tristan Wirfs were among the players taken later in Round 1 that year.

10. OLB Aundray Bruce, 1st overall 1988, Falcons

Atlanta also thought it was getting the next Taylor. Nope. Bruce was no better than a sub package guy, including spot duty at tight end. There were five Hall of Famers picked elsewhere in Bruce’s draft and a pretty good pass rusher (Neil Smith) directly after him.

11. RB Bo Jackson, 1st overall 1986, Buccaneers

Don’t get it twisted – this isn’t a dig at a guy who might truly be a ‘once-in-a-lifetime’ athlete. Instead, interpret it as a dig at a long-feckless franchise that chose to squander its pick even though Jackson had vowed never to play in Tampa, believing the team deliberately cost him his baseball eligibility at Auburn while trying to strong-arm him into a football-only career. The Bucs took Jackson anyway, and he was soon stroking towering taters for the Kansas City Royals … before joining the Raiders in 1987.

12. OT Robert Gallery, 2nd overall 2004, Raiders

He never approached his pre-draft hype and only became serviceable after moving to guard. Who could Oakland have had instead? Larry Fitzgerald, Philip Rivers, Sean Taylor and Ben Roethlisberger heard their names called shortly after Gallery’s selection.

13. RB Blair Thomas, 2nd overall 1990, Jets

To think future Hall of Famers Cortez Kennedy and Junior Seau were sitting there. Or, if New York really had to have a tailback, eventual all-time leading rusher Emmitt Smith was around until No. 17.

14. Bills’ decision to draft Tom Cousineau No. 1 in 1979

Buffalo owned the choice after dealing O.J. Simpson to the 49ers. But Cousineau took the Canadian Football League’s money and bolted, never playing a down for the Bills. Hall of Famers Dan Hampton and Kellen Winslow went later in that first round.

15. QB Sam Darnold, 3rd overall 2018, Jets

In the former USC star’s defense, New York did next to nothing to help him succeed, Darnold’s development further hampered by foot and shoulder injuries, mono and HC Adam Gase. But given then-GM Mike Maccagnan surrendered the No. 6 overall pick (used by the Colts on future All-Pro G Quenton Nelson) and three high second-rounders to advance three slots in order to get into position for Darnold – and he seemed like a slam-dunk acquisition at the time – it’s hard to view this gamble as anything other than a failure given his inability to overcome his circumstances … especially as QBs drafted later (2019 and 2023 MVP Lamar Jackson, 2020 MVP runner-up Josh Allen) figured out how to thrive.

16. Seahawks’ decision to trade down in 1977

They were induced to deal out of No. 2 after Tony Dorsett threatened not to play in Seattle, so the Cowboys moved up for the future Hall of Fame back. The Seahawks were left with Steve August, Tom Lynch, Terry Beeson and Glenn Carano. Who? Exactly. Guess who won the Super Bowl the following season …

17. QB Art Schlichter, 4th overall 1982, Colts

On the field, he was horrendous (42.6 passer rating). Off the field, he was worse, his gambling problems leading to his suspension for the 1983 season and, later, prison. Schlichter’s issues also forced Baltimore into its ill-advised Elway pick the next year.

18. QB Jack Thompson, 3rd overall 1979, Bengals

The ‘Throwin’ Samoan’ never threw very effectively in six seasons. Furthermore, Cincinnati was just fine behind center with Ken Anderson, who would lead the Bengals to their first Super Bowl two years later. Also, Phil Simms was chosen four slots after Thompson – or, if Cincy needed, like, a developmental quarterback, they could have had, uh, Joe Montana in Round 3 …

19. DE Dion Jordan, 3rd overall 2013, Dolphins

The slender pass rusher was repeatedly suspended and only rewarded Miami with three sacks in two seasons. The Dolphins paid a first- and second-round pick to Oakland to get the Oregon prospect. Philadelphia took future All-Pro OT Lane Johnson with the next selection.

20. WR Johnny ‘Lam’ Jones, 2nd overall 1980, Jets

New York hoped his Olympic speed would translate into stardom. Not so much. Jones never looked natural as a receiver, often leaving his feet while trying to catch easy passes. The next player taken was Hall of Famer Anthony Munoz, arguably the best left tackle of all time. The next receiver selected was Hall of Famer Art Monk.

21. DT Steve Niehaus, 2nd overall 1976, Seahawks

Seattle’s maiden draft selection didn’t turn out nearly as well as fellow expansion franchise Tampa Bay’s after the Bucs landed future Hall of Famer Lee Roy Selmon at No. 1. (The Seahawks recovered by acquiring HOFer Steve Largent, who was taken by the Oilers in Round 4.)

22. Buccaneers’ decision to trade down in 1978

Confident in RB Ricky Bell, the No. 1 pick in 1977, Tampa Bay sent the top pick of ’78 to Houston for TE Jimmie Giles and four selections, including a first- and second-rounder. The Oilers? Hello, Earl Campbell.

23. QB Josh Rosen, 10th overall 2018, Cardinals

Arizona traded a first-, third- and fifth-round pick to move up five spots to snatch him 10th overall in 2018. He flopped as a rookie and was replaced by Kyler Murray atop the 2019 draft … when Rosen also burned the Dolphins, who gave up a Round 2 pick to rescue him from the desert before he failed in Miami. Like Darnold, Rosen was a victim of circumstances, but the Cards wouldn’t have reset had they picked Jackson in 2018 instead.

24. CB Jeff Okudah, 3rd overall 2020, Lions

No corner has ever been picked higher. But heading into his fifth season – when many first-rounders are collecting during lucrative option years – Okudah is resetting with his third team (Houston). He’s missed 29 games in his career to date. Worse, quarterbacks have a 103.6 passer rating when targeting the former Ohio State star. Oh, and just to repeat, Justin Jefferson, Justin Herbert, CeeDee Lamb and Tristan Wirfs were among the players taken later in Round 1 that year.

25. P Russell Erxleben, 11th overall 1979, Saints

Groan. Known for his record 67-yard field goal in college with Texas, he proved neither the kicker nor punter New Orleans envisioned. Erxleben is the highest-drafted special teamer of the common draft era (since 1967), going two spots ahead of Hall of Famer Winslow. Erxleben landed in prison later in life for securities fraud.

25a. K Steve Little, 15th overall 1978, Cardinals

Taking a kicker in Round 1, especially in an era when the position was far less reliable, could be forgiven. But not if your guy misses 14 of 27 field goal attempts in three seasons … and when you could’ve had Ozzie Newsome or Doug Williams.

26. OLB Vernon Gholston, 6th overall 2008, Jets

He played 45 games for New York. He registered nary a sack.

27. QB Kelly Stouffer, 6th overall 1987, Cardinals

He held out his rookie season and got traded to Seattle. Lucky for the Cards, given Stouffer (7 TD passes, 19 interceptions in five seasons) would make subsequent Seahawks franchise QB Rick Mirer – continue reading – look like an All-Pro.

28. WR Troy Williamson, 7th overall 2005, Vikings

Minnesota basically traded Randy Moss to Oakland in order to get this guy … who finished with 153 fewer TDs than Moss.

29. TE Kyle Brady, 9th overall 1995, Jets

New York could have had Warren Sapp. Or Ty Law. Or Derrick Brooks. But in typical J-E-T-S fashion, they screwed it up royally. (And the availability of Law and Brooks didn’t deter the Jets from taking DE Hugh Douglas 16th overall, either.)

30. QB Sam Bradford, 1st overall 2010, Rams

He certainly wasn’t a bad player, and many forget he was Offensive Rookie of the Year. But his injury history at Oklahoma was predictive. The six players selected after Bradford? Ndamukong Suh, Gerald McCoy, Trent Williams, Eric Berry, Russell Okung and Joe Haden, with Earl Thomas off the board at No. 14. Bradford later cost Minnesota a first- and fourth-rounder in 2016 to replace Teddy Bridgewater but didn’t get the Vikings to the postseason and lost his job to Case Keenum the next year. Bradford never appeared in a playoff game.

31. Browns’ haul for Julio Jones

Cleveland dealt the sixth pick in 2011 to Atlanta – Falcons GM Thomas Dimitroff was widely panned for paying so much to get Jones – and ultimately wound up with NT Phil Taylor, WR Greg Little, FB Owen Marecic and QB Brandon Weeden.

32. Browns’ 2012 draft

As bad as Weeden (22nd overall) was, RB Trent Richardson, the No. 3 pick, was worse based on relative value. Cleveland sent Minnesota four picks to swap from fourth to third overall. Even when the Browns flipped Richardson to the Colts for a first-round pick in 2013, they eventually wound up with Johnny Manziel.

32a. Browns’ 2014 draft

Manziel (22nd overall) was dreadful. CB Justin Gilbert, the No. 8 pick, was a bigger blunder given his slot.

33. QB Brady Quinn, 22nd overall 2007, Browns

Not only did he add to Cleveland’s litany of quarterback washouts, he cost the Browns a first- and second-round pick in order to trade up for him. (In case you hadn’t noticed, it’s a QB death knell to get drafted by Cleveland at No. 22.)

34. QB Akili Smith, 3rd overall 1999, Bengals

Just abject in four seasons (3-14 record, 5 TD passes, 13 INTs). The next four players taken were Edgerrin James, Ricky Williams, Torry Holt and Champ Bailey. No. 12 selection Cade McNown, Chicago’s QB failure that year, looked all-world relative to Smith.

35. WR Charles Rogers, 2nd overall 2003, Lions

Sadly, he couldn’t evade drugs or injuries. Also, future Hall of Famer Andre Johnson went to the Texans with the next pick.

36. QB Heath Shuler, 3rd overall 1994, Washington

He was a better congressman than quarterback – and wasn’t even the best passer Washington picked in 1994, seventh-rounder Gus Frerotte proving superior.

37. DE Andre Wadsworth, 3rd overall 1998, Cardinals

Often forgotten in the aftermath of the Manning-Leaf debate atop that year’s draft, but some scouts considered Wadsworth a better prospect than both quarterbacks. Knee injuries sapped his vast potential after just three seasons. Hall of Famer Charles Woodson was chosen next.

38. QB Rick Mirer, 2nd overall 1993, Seahawks

That year’s Drew Bledsoe consolation prize, Mirer was wretched in four years with Seattle (20-31 record, 65.2 passer rating). Oh, and Hall of Famers Willie Roaf and Bettis were available in the top 10.

38a. Bears’ 1997 trade for QB Rick Mirer

Forgot about this, didn’t you? Seattle stole Chicago’s first-round pick in exchange for Mirer, who was even worse in one season in the Windy City. Meanwhile, the Seahawks recovered to draft stud CB Shawn Springs.

39. QB Mitchell Trubisky, 2nd overall 2017, Bears

Another botched move by Chicago atop a draft in an ill-considered bid to fix the century-old organization’s ongoing quarterback conundrum. To simply swap the No. 2 and No. 3 overall selections, the Bears had to give the 49ers a third- and fourth-rounder plus a future third-rounder (used on eventual All-Pro LB Fred Warner in 2018). GM Ryan Pace then picked Trubisky, who was middling at best while starting for two Bears playoff teams – the 2018 edition was Super Bowl-caliber otherwise – when he could have had Patrick Mahomes or Deshaun Watson.

39a. DL Solomon Thomas, 3rd overall 2017, 49ers

For all the capital the Niners inhaled in the Trubisky deal, they flubbed much of it by taking the disappointing Stanford star before trading the 2017 third-round pick … which the Saints used on perennial Pro Bowl RB Alvin Kamara.

40. Raiders’ 2020 draft

As much trouble as former GM Mike Mayock ran into in early rounds, this was the class that ultimately might have gotten him fired. First-rounders Henry Ruggs and Damon Arnette (the latter obtained as part of the Khalil Mack trade years before) were both released in 2021 amid serious off-field incidents, an inebriated Ruggs involved in an auto accident that killed a woman and her dog. Third-rounder Lynn Bowden Jr. was traded to Miami before his rookie season and has never amounted to much in the NFL. Fellow third-rounder Tanner Muse never played for the Raiders, either, while WR Bryan Edwards lasted just two seasons in Las Vegas. The best of the bunch is Round 4 G John Simpson, who blossomed with the Ravens.

40a. Raiders’ 2019 draft

With three first-rounders, this was supposed to be the year that Mayock set the Silver and Black up for years of success. But the immediate criticism of DE Clelin Ferrell, taken fourth overall, proved justified. S Johnathan Abram didn’t make it through his fourth season with the franchise. RB Josh Jacobs was a productive player, but not one the team deemed worthy of a multi-year contract extension. Round 2 CB Trayvon Mullen was also an ex-Raider after three seasons. (Qualifying note: Mayock found DE Maxx Crosby and WR Hunter Renfrow on Day 3, not they were able to save his job in the final analysis.)

40b. OL Alex Leatherwood, 17th overall 2021, Raiders

Mayock did get one more crack at the draft … and took the Alabama lineman much earlier than most observers had him projected. Unable to handle right tackle in the NFL, Leatherwood moved to guard but was waived prior to the 2022 season – by the regime that succeeded Mayock.

41. Raiders’ 2011 trade for QB Carson Palmer

Can’t blame this on Mayock. Oakland gave up a first- and second-rounder to pry the former No. 1 pick out of Cincinnati and quasi-retirement. A three-time Pro Bowler, Palmer was 8-16 in 1½ seasons with the Silver and Black and was shipped to Arizona – where he reverted to star form – for the net gain of a Round 6 choice in 2013.

42. DE Mike Mamula, 7th overall 1995, Eagles

It’s bad enough that Philly got duped into taking the original scouting combine superstar. Adding to the ignominy, the Eagles traded the 12th pick to Tampa Bay (the Bucs used it on Warren Sapp) plus two second-rounders to elevate into this mistake.

43. Colts’ 1992 draft

Indianapolis owned the top two picks and selected DE Steve Emtman and LB Quentin Coryatt. Emtman was beset by injuries, and Coryatt was a pedestrian performer. This would rank higher, but the ’92 draft was short on talent and hasn’t produced one Hall of Famer – despite running 12 rounds – though Dallas’ Darren Woodson might eventually reach Canton.

44. RB Ki-Jana Carter, 1st overall 1995, Bengals

In fairness, he ripped up his knee in his first preseason game and was never the same. Of note, it could have been much worse for Cincinnati. Expansion Carolina only charged the Bengals the fifth and 36th overall picks to move up for Carter, sweetheart terms by today’s standards. Yet it worked out OK for the Panthers, who took QB Kerry Collins.

44a. DT Dan ‘Big Daddy’ Wilkinson, 1st overall 1994, Bengals

He was average at best for Cincinnati, which could have avoided the Carter gaffe in 1995 by taking Marshall Faulk No. 1 in 1994.

45. Todd Blackledge, Tony Eason, Ken O’Brien

If you drafted a quarterback in the first round of the 1983 draft, you had a 50% shot at getting a Hall of Famer – Elway, Jim Kelly or Dan Marino. Otherwise, you got one of these guys, all taken with Marino (27th overall) still available.

45a. DT Gabe Rivera, 21st overall 1983, Steelers

For whatever reason, Pittsburgh bypassed hometown hero Marino, who would have made a mighty fine acquisition with Terry Bradshaw heading into his final season. Driving drunk, Rivera was paralyzed in a car accident midway through his rookie season.

46. Bears’ post-Walter Payton first-round RBs

Brad Muster (23rd overall pick, 1994), Rashaan Salaam (21st in 1995), Curtis Enis (5th in 1998) and Cedric Benson (4th in 2005) all bombed in the years following Sweetness’ retirement after the 1987 campaign.

47. Cowboys’ 2000 trade for WR Joey Galloway

In one of owner Jerry Jones’ most notorious moves, Dallas sent two first-rounders to Seattle for the speedy receiver. Galloway averaged fewer than 50 yards per game in four years in Big D, while the Seahawks snagged future MVP Shaun Alexander.

48. WR Treylon Burks, 18th overall 2022, Titans

Rather than pay WR A.J. Brown, now a perennial Pro Bowler and legitimate 1,500-yard receiver, Tennessee traded him to Philadelphia for a pair of picks, including this first-rounder used on Burks. It’s still early, but the Arkansas product has produced just 49 catches for 665 yards and one TD in two seasons – a period when the Titans felt the need to acquire WRs DeAndre Hopkins and Calvin Ridley, the latter getting a huge contract this year.

48a. WR Jalen Reagor, 21st overall 2020, Eagles

Philadelphia was compelled to trade for Brown on the first night of the 2022 draft after the disastrous selection of Reagor, who was Burks-esque through two seasons with 64 receptions for 695 yards and three TDs before being shipped to Minnesota for a cheesesteak. However the real cardinal sin associated with Reagor was that the Vikings drafted Jefferson with the next selection.

49. QB J.P. Losman, 22nd overall 2004, Bills

He followed Eli Manning, Rivers and Roethlisberger as the fourth Round 1 passer in 2004. Oops. Oh yeah, Buffalo also gave up a first-, second- and fifth-rounder to get Losman when it could have simply waited to grab future Pro Bowler Matt Schaub in Round 3.

50. QB Blaine Gabbert, 10th overall 2011, Jaguars

Aside from quarterbacks not named Cam Newton, this was an epic draft. Jacksonville didn’t get a crack at Newton, Von Miller, A.J. Green, Patrick Peterson, Julio Jones or Tyron Smith but could’ve taken J.J. Watt, Robert Quinn, Mike Pouncey, Ryan Kerrigan, Cam Jordan or Mark Ingram (among others – even Andy Dalton) instead of Gabbert. The Jags also gave up a second-rounder to move up six spots for Gabbert. Oy.

50a. QB Jake Locker, 8th overall 2011, Titans

Aside from quarterbacks not named Cam Newton, this was an epic draft. Tennessee didn’t get a crack at Newton, Von Miller, A.J. Green, Patrick Peterson or Julio Jones but could’ve taken Tyron Smith, J.J. Watt, Robert Quinn, Mike Pouncey, Ryan Kerrigan, Cam Jordan or Mark Ingram (among others – even Andy Dalton) instead of Locker. Oy.

50b. QB Christian Ponder, 12th overall 2011, Vikings

Aside from quarterbacks not named Cam Newton, this was an epic draft. Minnesota didn’t get a crack at Newton, Von Miller, A.J. Green, Patrick Peterson, Julio Jones, Tyron Smith or J.J. Watt but could’ve taken Robert Quinn, Mike Pouncey, Ryan Kerrigan, Cam Jordan or Mark Ingram (among others – even Andy Dalton) instead of Ponder. Oy.

***

Follow USA TODAY Sports’ Nate Davis on X, formerly Twitter @ByNateDavis.

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LOS ANGELES — As if there needed to be any more evidence of how women’s sports continue to grow, it was a raucous crowd full of children and teenagers when Sabrina Ionescu stepped foot inside the Los Angeles Boys and Girls Club gym.

The gym was renovated in partnership with 2K Foundations, SLAM and her SI20 Foundation to bring an entirely new court, scoreboard, lighting and roof to the Boys and Girls Club. Ionescu was in attendance for the unveiling. 

It was her appearance that set all of the youths into a frenzy. A pickup game was set to take place after Ionescu spoke to the crowd, but it was delayed after the players – mostly teenage boys – all huddled around the WNBA star in hopes of getting her autograph. Whenever she signed something, all the teens surrounding her screamed and cheered as they got a coveted signature.

Just another day in the life of a basketball megastar.

“It’s always kind of a humbling experience,” Ionescu told USA TODAY Sports. “I was once that kid not too long ago, and now being able to understand what it means to build relationships and to just show up, and how important that is to just show a lot of these young boys and girls that we’re all human, can put a smile on my face.”

Ionescu has had quite the early professional career as she enters her fifth season with the New York Liberty. She’s part of a stacked team that is expected to again challenge for a WNBA championship, competed in a 3-point contest against Stephen Curry at the 2024 NBA All-Star Weekend and released her first signature shoe that has become one of the most popular kicks in all of basketball. It’s hard to argue she hasn’t lived up to the hype she had out of Oregon. 

In that time, Ionescu has gone from the next big thing in basketball to one of the biggest faces of the sport. The way she sees it, partnering to help with underserved communities is a way of helping the possible next face of basketball.

“(It’s) wanting to give back to the next generation of athletes that are going to end up breaking your records and being better than you are, and kind of welcoming them with open arms and showing them the way,” she said.

Welcoming the next generation of basketball players has certainly been a hot topic in women’s basketball, particularly as superstar Caitlin Clark, the the NCAA’s all-time leading scorer, and a rookie class that has entered the mainstream begin thier pro careers.

Ionescu didn’t address Clark directly, but noted how eager she is to see how a “really good” 2024 rookie class does in the WNBA. She believes the rookies will take the massive fan bases they had in college and bring them to the WNBA, which will continue to push the league toward new heights.

“I’m excited to see how teams do and how attendance and viewership and records just continue to get broken for us,” Ionescu said.

Of course, it won’t be easy for all of the rookies to transition to the pro game. Ionescu personally knows how tough it is to go from a prized No. 1 pick to being in a league full of veterans who won’t just put her on a pedestal. She remembers what she had to adjust to when she joined the WNBA and said the biggest change was not having the same support system as a college player would get. 

“When you get to the pro level, everyone’s just kind of at a different stage in life,” Ionescu said. “There’s veterans, there’s rookies, and sometimes it’s really hard to relate to being a pro for the first time. Just figuring out what it’s like to be an adult and have to figure everything out on your own and not have that supportive university.”

The struggle of limited WNBA rosters

Ionescu has never had to worry about making a WNBA roster, but she knows she’s an exception. 

For all the talk about this year’s draft class, not every one of them is guaranteed to make the roster due to the small size of the league; there are just 144 spots across 12 teams. Because of the limited opportunities, expansion has been a key topic of discussion, something WNBA commissioner Cathy Engelbert said the league is expecting to do in the coming years.

Ionescu agrees the WNBA needs to add more teams and needs to do it sooner rather than later. An expansion team in the San Francisco Bay area, owned by the NBA’s Golden State Warriors, is set to begin play in 2025.

“144 isn’t enough for the talent that we’re having. Players are going to have to continue to get cut because there’s just not enough roster spots,” she said.

Ionescu offered her thoughts on why it’s so tough to make a WNBA roster as an young pro, and she believes it has to do with the longevity of veterans. She added players are able to play much longer than before because there’s a stronger emphasis on taking care of the body. 

“That in turn sometimes takes roster spots away from younger players who definitely deserve to play, but there’s no room,” Ionescu said. “A lot of that is why players go overseas.”

That’s why the talk of expanding the league excites Ionescu. She wants to go up against more players and see the talent pool widen, and believes it would help grow the college and even high school games, too.

What to expect for 2024 WNBA season

The WNBA is set to experience a season like no other in 2024. Interest has skyrocketed, but it’s been a long time coming for a league that continues to get stronger.

“It’s about time,” she said. “We haven’t just come about in the last year. It’s been so many individuals that have come before us that have laid down the foundation to allow us to use our platforms now.”

The league has already gotten a taste of the attention it can expect to get this season. The 2024 WNBA Draft shattered the league’s TV ratings record when 2.45 million viewers tuned in Monday night when Clark was taken with the No. 1 overall pick. The previous record was 600K viewers in 2004 when Diana Taurasi, the Phoenix Mercury veteran and the WNBA’s all-time leading scorer, went first overall.

Whether someone is a longtime fan or watching the WNBA for the first time in 2024, Ionescu says people can expect “really good basketball,” and it’s “the best it’s ever been in terms of talent and the way the game is executed and played.”

Because of the anticipation, players see where the game is headed and want to be part of it, according to Ionescu, which will lead to fans falling in love with certain players or teams. 

All of these reasons are why Ionescu says “the time is now” to invest in women’s basketball and get on the hype train because it’s going to continue to ride. She notes it’s been a long time coming for the sport, which is now deservingly getting the spotlight.

“It’s exciting to see where we’re at now and how much room there is left to grow,” Ionescu said. “We haven’t reached the top. We know that.”

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Giancarlo Esposito was struggling financially before he landed the role of a lifetime on ‘Breaking Bad.’

Esposito, who portrayed Gus Fring on the hit AMC drama, reached such a low point in life in 2008 he considered arranging his own murder so his family could benefit from a life insurance policy. 

‘My way out in my brain was, ‘Hey, do you get life insurance if someone commits suicide? Do they get the bread?’’ he said during an appearance on SiriusXM’s Jim & Sam show. ‘My wife said, ‘Well that’s kind of tricky’ … She had no idea why I was asking her this stuff.

‘I just started scheming. If I got somebody to knock me off, death through misadventure, they would get the insurance. 

‘I had four kids. I wanted them to have a life. Like, it was a hard moment in time. I literally thought of self-annihilation so that they could survive. That’s how low I was.’

Despite facing bankruptcy and enduring mental anguish, the idea of hurting his family was too much to bear.

‘That was the first inkling that there was a way out, but I wouldn’t be here to be available to it or to be a part of it or to be there for my kids,’ Esposito said. 

‘Then I started to think that’s not viable because the pain I would cause them would be lifelong, and lifelong trauma that would just extend the generational trauma with which I’m trying to move away from. The light at the end of the tunnel was ‘Breaking Bad.’’

Esposito’s role as the corrupt drug kingpin earned him an Emmy nomination for outstanding supporting actor in 2012 and opened doors to new career opportunities.

‘Breaking Bad’ premiered in 2008, starring Bryan Cranston, Aaron Paul and Anna Gunn. The drug drama was regularly nominated for awards and earned 16 Emmys before it ended its run in 2013. 

Esposito went on to star in ‘The Mandalorian,’ ‘The Boys,’ ‘Revolution’ and ‘Once Upon A Time.’ He earned two Emmy nominations for his performance in the ‘Breaking Bad’ spinoff, ‘Better Call Saul.’

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Roughly 40 minutes after it lapsed, the Senate voted to pass a renewal of Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), which serves as a critical tool used by the government to gather intelligence on foreign subjects using the compelled assistance of electronic communication service providers. 

The upper chamber voted 60-34 to pass the re-authorization. The provision lapsed for less than an hour at midnight on Friday, and if the renewal hadn’t passed soon after, the expiration would have meant companies would not be forced to comply with the government’s requests for surveillance aid under the bill. 

Without the FISA section’s re-authorization, the government would be required to seek a warrant to compel any such assistance, which is a process that can span extended periods of time. 

The measure now heads to President Biden’s desk for his signature. 

‘The stakes of such an outcome are grave,’ Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., warned his colleagues in floor remarks Friday afternoon prior to any votes on amendments or the final bill.

‘The authorities in question today have, quite literally, been the only defense against would-be national security disasters,’ he added. 

On Thursday, Senate Majority Whip Dick Durbin, D-Ill., claimed the program would not ‘go dark,’ as others had suggested, if it was not renewed on time. Instead, Durbin pointed to recent certifications granted by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISC) that the Justice Department had informed Congress would ‘ordinarily remain in effect for one year, expiring in April 2025.’ 

However, the DOJ cautioned Congress against allowing this knowledge to slow down the Section 702 renewal process in a letter earlier this month, as companies ‘are likely to stop or reduce cooperation with the legal process they receive.’

The DOJ further noted that this occurred during a previous surveillance measure lapse. 

This warning was reiterated by McConnell on Friday, who said, ‘It will be up to the government to play a slow and painstaking game of whack-a-mole in court against an army of the most sophisticated lawyers in the country.’

‘And in the meantime, actionable intelligence will pass us right by,’ he predicted. 

By around 6:00 p.m. on Friday, it seemed unlikely that the Section 702 FISA re-authorization would be voted on until next week, as several senators were unwilling to yield their debate time and sought votes on their various amendments to the measure. 

However, around 8:00 p.m., senators appeared to come to an agreement on amendment votes and debate time, clearing the way for an expedited voting process. 

Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., revealed the compromise made my senators on the floor, announcing several roll call votes would take place. ‘All day long, we persisted and persisted and persisted in hopes of reaching a breakthrough, and I am glad we got it done,’ he said, noting that there had been ‘great doubt’ it would be accomplished. 

‘We finally got the Senate to agree to take votes to address serious problems with the FISA expansion and 702 reauthorization passed by the House,’ Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, wrote on X. 

Bipartisan coalitions had grown on both sides of Section 702 renewal, with some arguing that the provision is a vital national security necessity, and others sounding the alarm about what they believe to be violations of constitutional protections. 

Amendments from Sens. Rand Paul, R-Ky., Roger Marshall, R-Kan., Ron Wyden, D-Ore., Josh Hawley, R-Mo., Lee and Durbin were voted on ahead of the final bill’s consideration. ‘We cannot continue sacrificing our freedoms in the name of security. Rather than reining in FISA overreach, RISAA expands it dramatically,’ Paul said prior to votes on his amendments, which required 60 supporters to pass. ‘I urge my colleagues to support meaningful reforms that protect both national security and civil liberties.’

Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va., spoke against the consideration of amendments to the bill, citing the fast approaching deadline. If any amendments to the measure were passed in the Senate, the bill would be sent back to the House, where they would once again need to approve it. 

All of the amendments failed to garner enough votes for passage, and thus were not added to the bill. 

‘Allowing FISA to expire would have been dangerous,’ Schumer remarked prior to the votes. 

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