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JERUSALEM – The new Palestinian Authority (PA) government sworn into office this week by PA President Mahmoud Abbas – and warmly welcomed by the White House and the State Department – includes at least two ministers who hold extreme and racist views toward Israel and Jews, Palestinian Media Watch (PMW), an Israeli organization that draws attention to Palestinian extremism, has revealed. 

Citing articles in the Palestinian media and video clips from recent public events, PMW revealed how the new minister of religious affairs, Muhammad Mustafa Najem, has openly incited violence against Israelis as a religious imperative, characterizing Jews as evil and treacherous, and quoted a verse from the Quran that refers to Jews as ‘apes and pigs.’ 

Another member of the new government, Minister of Women’s Affairs Muna Al-Khalili, is shown to have praised Palestinian terror and, as recently as last month at a conference in Egypt, claimed that the brutal Hamas terror attacks on Oct. 7 – the worst atrocity committed against Jews since the Holocaust in World War II – was an act of legitimate resistance. 

Since Hamas’ attacks and the subsequent war with Israel that has ravaged much of the Gaza Strip, the U.S. administration has been urging Abbas to reform and revitalize his governing authority, which has long been accused of corruption and extremism, so that it might be part of a solution for governing Gaza – in addition to the West Bank – after the war. 

The changes made this week, which Abbas said would include plans for institutional reform, restructuring and unifying institutions, as well as fighting corruption, raising the level of services and a digital transformation, are being viewed by the U.S. as part of its desired reformation.

However, many Palestinians have said no real change can take place as long as Abbas remains at the helm; and Israeli leaders, including Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, remain steadfast in rejecting the idea that the authority will be part of any post-war solution for Gaza, pointing out that it is just as problematic as Hamas, a U.S.-designated terror group. 

‘The assumption that a ‘revitalized’ Palestinian Authority will bring moderate and pragmatic figures, or soften the Palestinian position toward Israel, is totally false,’ Khaled Abu Toameh, a Palestinian affairs analyst based in Jerusalem, told Fox News Digital. 

He said it was totally unrealistic to expect the new cabinet ministers to ‘endorse a pragmatic approach toward Israel,’ especially with the war in Gaza raging, and pointed out that even ‘many Palestinians do not understand the difference between the new Palestinian government and the previous one.’

‘In his first speech at the cabinet meeting, the new prime minister, Mohammed Mustafa, also employed hardline rhetoric against Israel because of the war in Gaza, while completely ignoring Hamas’ responsibility,’ Abu Toameh said, adding, ‘in this regard, he sounded exactly like his predecessor, Mohammed Shtayyeh.’

He said that Shtayyeh, who quit as prime minister in February, also spoke about refoming the authority but ‘not much happened.’

Change will not happen ‘as long as President Mahmoud Abbas and his inner circle are the real and sole decision-makers,’ Abu Toameh said. ‘At the end of the day, the cabinet reshuffle came to appease the U.S. administration, and not out of a sincere desire to introduce financial and administrative reforms or engage in a peace process with Israel.’

Kobi Michael, a senior researcher at the Institute for National Security Studies in Tel Aviv who closely follows events in Palestinian society, also said the new Palestinian Authority leadership was unlikely to bring about any significant changes if Abbas was still in charge.

‘The appointment of Mohammed Mustafa is really just replacing one Mohammed with another Mohammed,’ he said. ‘He is part of the same production line.’ 

Michael said Mustafa, who previously served as the deputy prime minister and minister of the economy, was a close ally and adviser of Abbas and ‘he will do whatever Abbas tells him to do.’ 

‘He is there in order to preserve the interests of Abbas and the last interest of Abbas is reform,’ Michael said, calling the current Palestinian Authority ‘a lost cause.’

Responding to the announcement of the new Palestinian government, however, State Department spokesperson Mathew Miller said in a statement that ‘the United States looks forward to working with the new cabinet to promote peace, security, and prosperity and will be engaging this new government to deliver on credible reforms.’ 

‘A revitalized PA is essential to delivering results for the Palestinian people in both the West Bank and Gaza and establishing the conditions for stability in the broader region,’ he said. 

Responding to a Fox News Digital request for a comment about the racist and inciting public statements attributed to newly appointed Palestinian ministers, a State Department Spokesman said ‘We are aware of reports that certain P.A. cabinet members have used unacceptable language. We have been absolutely clear on this score: Inflammatory, hateful, or dehumanizing speech by any party does not advance peace.’ 

A Palestinian Authority spokesman contacted by Fox News Digital did not comment on the claims by publication time.

Jonathan Schanzer, the senior vice president for research at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies in Washington, told Fox News Digital that the U.S. was ‘perpetuating the fiction of a reformed Palestinian government’ and was ignoring its problematic nature in order to achieve its own objectives. 

‘Mohammed Mustafa is not a reformer, he is a longtime crony of Mahmoud Abbas who has benefited from the corrupt system that Abbas has presided over now for nearly two decades,’ he said. ‘I think it’s important to note that if Abbas remains president of this government – and he is now 19 years into a four-year term – this is not reform.’ 

‘When we see the rhetoric of some of these individuals, we can see that not only are they not reformers, but they are also in fact radicals, and this should undermine the entire process that is underway,’ said Schanzer, adding that the administration was so focused on its objective of having the Palestinian Authority ‘inherit the Gaza Strip,’ that it was ‘willing to turn a blind eye to a wide range of problems in order to try to achieve this objective.’ 

‘I believe that ignoring these problems will ultimately lead us down the same path we have been on for years and years and years,’ he said. 

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A top House Republican wants to raise the retirement age for social security benefits to save the program from a projected 2033 insolvency deadline.

Republican Study Committee (RSC) Chairman Kevin Hern, R-Okla., released a budget last month that included conservative proposals to cut federal spending and extend the life of social security. If nothing is done, the critical program will face a roughly 20% cut in 2034.

One option Hern argued for is raising the full retirement benefits eligibility age from 67 to 69 – a politically fraught idea that mainstream leaders in both parties have been hesitant to touch.

‘If you look at it, there’s only three options you can do to fix Social Security… one is you adjust the age, the second thing is you adjust what gets paid out of the program, and the third thing is… there’s more people working that pay into the program,’ Hern said.

On the subject of age specifically, Hern pointed out that the average life expectancy in the U.S. was in the early 60s when Social Security began. Today, the average life expectancy is in the late 70s.

‘So you’re living [more] years on a program that was never designed to… be that way,’ Hern said.

The RSC is a large bloc of conservative House Republicans, accounting for roughly 80% of the conference.

The White House seized on the group’s budget proposal as a political cudgel, accusing Republicans of wanting to gut Social Security.

‘This is just another failed attempt by Joe Biden to push aside an issue that’s very important to retirees out there,’ Hern told Fox News Digital of the backlash. ‘Our budget doesn’t touch anyone that’s in retirement, or near retirement.’

He added: ‘If I told you today, at your age, just as it affected me when I was 21 years old, you’re going to move my retirement age two years, I’d think – so what, it’s not going to be there anyway. All we can look at is the budget window up to 10 years. So our path forward is what’s going to make it solid for the next 10 years. Joe Biden has no plan.’

Biden’s own fiscal year 2025 budget proposal called for extending Social Security solvency by raising taxes on the highest-income earners. But Hern argued that the ‘best estimates are, that would extend it by one year.’

Publicly, the president has largely shied away from discussing solutions for how to prevent Social Security from reaching insolvency. Former President Trump, Biden’s likely GOP challenger in the 2024 presidential election, also has been unclear about his stance on the program.

Conversations around reforming retirement benefits are usually politically dangerous, particularly in an election year.

Hern insisted that any change would likely need to be bipartisan – and he said he’s been having discussions with Trump about what to do if he wins back the White House.

‘The reality is, is President Trump’s no different than us,’ Hern said. ‘We’ve talked about this, he and I and his team. We have no desire, no desire to cut back on any benefits [for anybody who is] in retirement or near retirement, but he understands, his team understands, that we have to make sure it’s solid.’

When asked for comment, Trump campaign spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt told Fox News Digital: ‘As President Trump has repeatedly stated, he does not support cuts to Social Security nor does he support raising the retirement age. President Trump delivered on his promise to protect Social Security and Medicare in his first term, and President Trump will continue to strongly protect Social Security and Medicare in his second term.’

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Beijing warned that World War III could break out in the South China Sea as it increasingly shifts its attention to the Philippines, with territorial disputes driving tensions ever higher. 

‘Although we have a mutual defense treaty with the Philippines, China is not respecting it,’ Gordon Chang, a China expert and fellow at the Gatestone Institute, told Fox News Digital. 

‘It was twice last month, on the 5th and the 29th, that the State Department issued written warnings to China that we were prepared to use force to discharge our obligations pursuant to article four of the U.S. Philippines Mutual Defense Treaty,’ Chang explained. ‘That’s a warning that we are prepared to go to war.’

First reported by MEMRI’s China Media Studies Project, the state-owned and -operated news outlet China Daily earlier this week published an op-ed titled ‘Manila must be warned against horrors of war’ by Yang Xiao, deputy director of the Institute of Maritime Strategy Studies at the China Institutes of Contemporary International Relations.

Yang, a frequently featured expert in a range of China Daily articles, drew connections between the current tensions between China and the Philippines and tensions in Pre-World War I Europe.

The article notes at the bottom that ‘the views don’t necessarily reflect those of China Daily,’ but Yang engages in an inflammatory discussion of history and current tensions, referring to the ‘Sarajevo gunshot’ after warning against Philippine politicians’ ‘flirtation with the U.S. in the hope of gaining the upper hand in the maritime dispute with China.’ 

‘The lessons of World War I should be heeded, especially by small states, because triggering a conflict will serve no country’s interest,’ Yang wrote. 

Later in the piece, Yang wrote that American ‘decision-makers’ should realize that ‘the U.S.’s military intervention on behalf of the Philippines would also be disastrous for neighboring countries. The South China Sea has been a sea of peace and cooperation.’

‘Only a handful of leaders in the Philippines, ignoring the increasing challenges, such as rising prices, at home, are stirring up the extreme sentiments of the people by feeding them anti-China rhetoric,’ Yang wrote. ‘What they don’t realize is that once the ‘Sarajevo gunshot’ is fired in Asia, the innocent people in East and Southeast Asian countries will become the biggest victims of war.’

China has most recently hassled the Philippines over disputed fishing shoals, with Chinese coast guards trying to chase Filipino fishermen away and leading to tense standoffs between the two.

Last year saw a series of near-clashes between the two coast guards near the Second Thomas Shoal. The Philippine authorities protested China’s use of a water cannon and military-grade lasers.

China established a claim to the Scarborough Shoal in 2012, after which the Philippines formally launched a protest that went before a United Nations-backed tribunal. A 2016 ruling went against China, rejecting Beijing’s claims on ‘historical grounds,’ but Beijing rejected the arbitration and its outcome. 

The U.S., Japan, Australia and the Philippines on Apr. 7 will conduct the first full-scale joint naval exercise between the nations in the disputed territories to demonstrate fleet interoperability and provide a show of strength for China. The nations will then hold a summit in which they are expected to announce plans for joint patrols in the area later this year, according to Politico. 

Chang argued that this kind of scattershot approach to stirring up tensions with neighboring countries is unsurprising as China ‘is probing its neighbors, especially Japan, Taiwan and the Philippines, and it shifts its attention, all the time.’

‘China ramped up pressure on the Philippines and then pressure … sort of died down in the last couple of days, and now they’re ramping up pressure on Taiwan,’ Chang said. ‘And while all of this is going on, we’ve now had more than 100 continuous days of Chinese vessels intruding into Japan’s waters in the East China Sea around the senkakus.’

‘So, really what they’re doing is they are pressuring, and then they’ll let up, and they’ll go someplace else and pressure at that place,’ he explained. 

Chang stressed, though, that the Philippines remain ‘the weakest militarily’ of those three targets, despite the agreement of mutual defense with the United States. 

‘Biden himself, on October 25th issued a warning from the steps of the White House when the Australian prime minister was visiting him that the United States was prepared to use force, so the Chinese just don’t believe Biden at all,’ Chang argued. 

‘There are a lot of people out there who say we will be fighting China this year or next year,’ Chang added. ‘I’m not saying we will, but I’m saying if we will, it’s more likely that the fight starts over the Philippines than it starts over Taiwan or Japan.’ 

‘If you look at the situation involving the Philippines, it’s easier to construct an argument or a scenario that we’re going to go to war with [China] over the Philippines … because you got all the elements in place,’ he concluded. ‘You’ve got all the elements in place for a great power war that starts in the Philippines.’

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President Biden’s re-election campaign announced Saturday that it raised more than $187 million in the first quarter of 2024.

In March, the campaign raked in over $90 million, up from $53 million the month before.

Additionally, his campaign announced it had $192 million in cash on hand, which it touted as ‘the highest total amassed by any Democratic candidate in history at this point in the cycle.’

In the first quarter, 96% of donations were under $200, with more than 1.1 million donors making over 1.9 million contributions, according to the campaign.

The campaign said it now has more than 212,000 sustaining donors — more than double the amount at this point in the 2020 cycle — who have pledged more than $5.2 million in monthly contributions.

The totals provided Saturday by the campaign came through all fundraising streams, which, in the past, have included Biden’s campaign, the Democratic National Committee and joint fundraising committees.

In March alone, the campaign said it received 864,000 contributions from 704,000 unique donors.

‘The money we are raising is historic, and it’s going to the critical work of building a winning operation, focused solely on the voters who will decide this election – offices across the country, staff in our battleground states, and a paid media program meeting voters where they are,’ Julie Chavez Rodriguez, the Biden-Harris 2024 campaign manager, said in a statement.

‘It’s a stark contrast to Trump’s cash-strapped operation that is funneling the limited and billionaire-reliant funds it has to pay off his various legal fees,’ she added.

The total haul for the Biden campaign in March is roughly $25 million more than that raised by former President Donald Trump’s campaign in the same month.

Earlier this week, Fox News Digital confirmed Trump and the RNC brought in $65.6 million in March and ended the month with $93.1 million in cash on hand. The figures include money raised by a number of fundraising committees.

The Trump campaign’s March fundraising figure, which was first reported by Politico, is significantly more than the $62 million that Trump raised in March 2020 when he was running for re-election.

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CLEVELAND — Caitlin Clark almost made Raven Johnson quit basketball.

The South Carolina guard spent weeks alone in her room, crying as she re-watched last year’s Final Four loss to Iowa. Over and over and over again.

“More than 100 times probably,” Johnson said Saturday.

It wasn’t only that Clark had waved off the unguarded Johnson, deeming her to be a non-threat offensively. It was that the clip of Clark doing it had gone viral, Johnson’s humiliation taking on epic proportions.

“Caitlin’s competitive, so I don’t blame her for what she did. But it did hurt me,” Johnson said. “I’m just glad I had the resources that I had, the coaches that I had, the teammates that I had to help me get over that hump. And I just feel like it helped me. It made me mentally strong.

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“I feel like if I can handle that, I can handle anything in life.’

Johnson eventually did come out of her room. So she could head to the gym to work on her shot.

Johnson’s background wasn’t as a shooting point guard. South Carolina coach Dawn Staley, the gold standard for scoring point guards, knew Johnson would eventually become one. But it’s a process, and the Gamecocks had so many other options last year they didn’t need to rush it with Johnson.

After the Final Four, however, Johnson didn’t want that hole in her game. She lived in the gym during the summer and fall, getting up shots and perfecting her shooting rhythm.

“When you’re embarrassed, when we lost, all of that, it makes you question. The game will do that to you. Anything that you love and you’re passionate about will make you question it at some point,” Staley said.

“That is what you need for your breakthrough. And if you don’t have enough just power, strength, your breakthrough will never happen,” Staley continued. “Raven is going to be a great player because she was able to break through that moment and catapult her into that next level now.”

In the Sweet 16 dogfight against Indiana, Johnson was 3-3 from 3-point range and 5 of 7 from the field. In the Elite Eight, it was her 3 that sparked the Gamecocks’ decisive run over Oregon State.

“I worked on my weakness,” Johnson said. “A lot of people probably couldn’t handle what did happen to me. I just think it made me better. It got me in the gym to work on my weakness, which is 3-point shooting, and I think I’m showing that I can shoot the ball this year.’

Clark has certainly taken notice.

‘Raven’s had a tremendous year,’ she said Saturday. ‘I really admire everything that she’s done this year. I thinkshe’s shooting over 50% in her last five games, has shot it over 40% all year. That just speaks to her work ethic. She got in the gym, and she got better, and I admire that.’

Iowa and South Carolina meet Sunday, this time in the national championship game, and Johnson acknowledges she’s relishing the opportunity. Not to show Clark up or prove anything to anyone.

This is a big game, and Johnson knows now that she’s got the game to match it.

‘I’m just going to enjoy the moment,’ Johnson said. ‘This game is really big for us and I think it’s big for women’s basketball. That’s how I look at it.’

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

PHILADELPHIA — WWE’s WrestleMania weekend got underway and the festivities began with NXT Stand and Deliver.

WWE’s developmental brand had seven matches take place inside Wells Fargo Center on Saturday afternoon in a juicy appetizer for the grand event of night one and two of WrestleMania 40.

Here’s how things went on Saturday in the NXT event:

Carmelo Hayes vs. Trick Williams

Trick Williams is shining again.

The crowd erupting in the “Whoop that Trick” chants as Williams made his entrance had the aura of a main event match.

It didn’t take long for the match to escalate outside of the ring and into the crowd, with both stars trading shots at each other. The match got back into the ring, and the intensity never waned for the rest of the match.

Williams tried to corner Hayes, but he moved the referee in his place and knocked out the official. With no referee in sight, Hayes brought out the chair. But Williams got a hold of it and landed several blows. The referee got back into the ring as Williams went for another shot and stopped it as Hayes landed a low blow.

Hayes landed a Nothing But Net, but somehow Williams kicked out. Hayes tried using the chair again, but the referee stopped it. It gave Williams enough time to land a spinning leg kick, get the pin and finish the event with the crowd chanting for him as he celebrated the victory. 

Stand and Deliver breaks NXT attendance record

It’s a new record for NXT, and the fans came to represent. The announced crowd inside of Wells Fargo Center was 16,545, the largest crowd in the brand’s history.

NXT Championship match: Ilja Dragunov (c) vs. Tony D’Angelo

D’Angelo made it an point to go after Dragunov’s injured right hand, and anytime the champion went on the offensive, the sting of his hand would kill any momentum.

A key moment was when the D’Angelo family tried to hand the challenger brass knuckles, but he declined to go for the easy knockout. Anytime they tried interference, D’Angelo would decline it, insisting it was his fight. 

The two stars would meet outside of the ring and both tried to send each other through the announcer’s table. It would be the champion that successfully land it, executing an H-Bomb on D’Angelo to destroy the table.

D’Angelo landed a few blows inside the ring, but Dragunov was unfazed. He got the challenger down and landed a second H-Bomb, this time off the top rope, to seal the victory. The two stars showed respect for each other after the bell rang and the crowd gave an ovation for each competitor. 

NXT Women’s Championship match: Lyra Valkyria (c) vs. Roxanne Perez

“The Prodigy” is back on top.

Perez quickly went after Valkyria’s injured left shoulder and she went after it often, ranging from powerful hits or attempted submissions. Any time Valkyria tried to get on offense, Perez countered with a strike to the shoulder.

Tatum Paxley tried to come to the aid of Valkyria, but it was unsuccessful and that’s when the challenger really went to finish it off. It took a few tries, but Perez was finally able to get Valkyria to submit for the win. “The Prodigy” is back to claiming the NXT Women’s Championship one year after she lost it. 

Thea Hail, Fallon Henley and Kelani Jordan vs. Jacy Jayne, Kiana James and Izzy Dame

Another match that started before the bell even rang, Jayne, James and Dame attacked their opponents before the bell rang.

The heel trio controlled much of the match, throwing shade at Hail any moment they could. The fans finally got the Jayne and Hail faceoff that’s been at the center of this feud, and the two went blow-for-blow in a much anticipated moment in the match. 

Dame tried to sneak an attack on Hail, but the Chase U member countered with a beautiful arm lock to get Dame to tap out for the win. 

NXT North American Championship match: Oba Femi (c) vs. Dijak vs. Josh Briggs

It was a true battle of the giants for the NXT North American Championship.

The challengers tried to get Femi down right off the bat, but the champion took all the hits and still brought the action outside of the ring. 

It took time, but Briggs and Dijak were able to execute one of the best moves of the day so far with Briggs throwing Dijak into Femi. There were several great spots in the match, mainly from Femi picking up all of the stars on his shoulders and throwing them down in a move that wowed the crowd.

Dijak looked like he was going to get the pin off Femi, but Briggs pulled the referee out of the ring just before the count reached three. Dijak then went for the pin on Briggs, but Femi came in and slammed Dijak on top of Briggs and secured the pin to retain the title in a very entertaining match. 

NXT Tag Team Championship match: Baron Corbin and Bron Breakker (c) vs. Axiom and Nathan Frazer

Severely undersized, Axiom and Frazer started the match before the champions even got in the ring, flying high to take out Breakker and Corbin before the bell rang.

It wasn’t long before the champs took control of the match. The challengers didn’t back down, going on impressive runs that resulted in all the stars lying on the mat. Axiom and Frazer were able to capitalize on misses from the champions, but couldn’t secure the pin. Breakker would sneak in a powerful spear on Frazer to set up Corbin for the pin and retain the tag team titles.

Joe Gacy vs. Shawn Spears

The action started before Gacy got to the ring, taking a chair shot from Ridge during his entrance. Gacy was able to get into the ring, and the intensity was instantly there with him immediately sending Spears over the top rope. 

Despite the hurt back, Gacy picked up momentum in the match, displaying both his power and aerial skills. But anytime Gacy looked close to putting the match away, Spears would counter. Eventually, Gacy was able to execute his power clothesline and pin Spears to kickoff the event. 

NXT Stand and Deliver start time

NXT Stand and Deliver will start at noon ET on Saturday, April 6.

How to watch NXT Stand and Deliver

NXT Stand and Deliver can be streamed on Peacock, but you must have its premium or premium-plus subscription to watch. Internationally, it will be available on WWE Network.

NXT Stand and Deliver match card

Matches not in order.

Carmelo Hayes vs. Trick Williams
Joe Gacy vs. Shawn Spears
Thea Hail, Fallon Henley and Kelani Jordan vs. Jacy Jayne, Kiana James and Izzy Dame
NXT Tag Team Championship match: Baron Corbin and Bron Breakker (c) vs. Axiom and Nathan Frazer
NXT North American Championship match: Oba Femi (c) vs. Dijak vs. Josh Briggs
NXT Women’s Championship match: Lyra Valkyria (c) vs. Roxanne Perez
NXT Championship match: Ilja Dragunov (c) vs. Tony D’Angelo

Where is NXT Stand and Deliver taking place?

NXT Stand and Deliver will be at Wells Fargo Center, in the Philadelphia Sports Complex near where WrestleMania will be.

NXT Stand and Deliver predictions

Trick Williams defeats Carmelo Hayes.
Shawn Spears defeats Joe Gacy
Jacy Jayne, Kiana James and Izzy Dame defeat Thea Hail, Fallon Henley and Kelani Jordan.
NXT Tag Team Championship match: Baron Corbin and Bron Breakker defeat Axiom and Nathan Frazer.
NXT North American Championship match: Dijak defeats Oba Femi and Josh Briggs.
NXT Women’s Championship match: Roxanne Perez defeats Lyra Valkyria.
NXT Championship match: Ilja Dragunov defeats Tony D’Angelo.

Shawn Michaels: NXT women’s division is best in the world

It’s not just the main roster that is loaded roster, but the same could be said about NXT. The developmental brand will have its annual Stand and Deliver premium live event on Saturday afternoon just before night one of WrestleMania, and the women’s side is spearheaded by Lyra Valkyria vs. Roxanne Perez for the NXT Women’s Championship.

A six-woman tag team match with Thea Hail, Fallon Henley and Kelani Jordan vs. Jacy Jayne, Kiana James, and Izzi Dame will be the second women’s match for NXT. While there’s only two matches, Shawn Michaels, senior vice president of talent development creative who oversees NXT, says he loves what he has on the roster.

‘Put our ladies up against anybody in the world,’ Michaels said. ‘I know that I’m biased, but a fact is a fact; we’ve got more depth in our women’s locker room than any company in the world.’

– Read more about the future of the WWE women’s divisionhere.

When is WrestleMania 40?

NXT Stand and Deliver kicks off WrestleMania weekend and the two-day event will begin Saturday night at 7 p.m. ET. Night two will be Sunday at 7 p.m. ET.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The only sure bet for this year’s Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame was that Vince Carter would make in the class of 2024.

After that, there were no guarantees. Not for Chauncey Billups. Not for Michael Cooper,

On Saturday in Phoenix, the Basketball Hall of Fame announced Carter, Billups, Cooper, Seimone Augustus, Jerry West, Herb Simon, Doug Collins, Bo Ryan, Walter Davis, Charles Smith, Dick Barnett, Harley Redin and Michele Timms will be inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame in August.

At NBA All-Star Weekend in February, it was unveiled that J.A. Adande, Debbie Antonelli, Slam magazine and NBA Inside Stuff were named the recipients of the 2024 Curt Gowdy Media Award, and JoAn Scott, a longtime basketball executive at Nike, USA Basketball and the NCAA, is the recipient of the 2024 John Bunn Lifetime Achievement Award.

Meet your 2024 Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame inductees:

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Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame class of 2024 inductees

Seimone Augustus

Augustus is a four-time WNBA champion, eight-time All-Star, 2011 Finals MVP and led LSU to three consecutive Finals Fours, averaging 19.3 points and 5.2 rebounds and shooting 54.4% from the field in four seasons. She was NCAA player of the year twice. She produced a career-high 22.6 points per game for the Minnesota Lynx in 2007, and in the 2011 WNBA Finals, she averaged 24.7 points, 5.7 rebounds and 4.7 assists and shot 58.7% from the field.

Dick Barnett

Barnett led Tennessee A&I to three consecutive NAIA national championships (1957, 1958, 1959) and played 14 seasons in the NBA. He averaged a career-high 23.1 points in 1965-66 with the New York Knicks, made one All-Star team and won two NBA titles with the Knicks in 1970 and 1973.

Chauncey Billups

Billups is a five-time All-Star, three-time All-NBA, 2004 NBA champion and Finals MVP, two-time All-Defense. He averaged 15.2 points and 5.4 assists and shot 41.5% from the field, 38.7% on 3s and 89.4% on free throws. In the 2004 Finals, he averaged 21 points, 5.2 assists and shot 50.9% from the field, 47.1% on 3s and 92.9% on free throws in a five-game series victory against Los Angeles.

Vince Carter

An eight-time NBA All-Star and two-time All-NBA selection with 25,728 career points, Carter averaged 16.7 points, 4.3 rebounds, 3.1 assists and shot 43.5% from the field and 37.1% on 3-pointers in 22 NBA seasons. He posted a career-high 27.6 points per game in 2000-01 and has an important role in reshaping and improving basketball in Canada during his six-plus seasons with Toronto. He played collegiately at North Carolina and appeared in two Finals Fours.

Doug Collins

Collins had an impact on the game as a player, coach and broadcaster. He averaged 17.9 points in eight NBA seasons and was a four-time All-Star. He coached the Chicago Bulls (and Michael Jordan), the Detroit Pistons, Washington Wizards and Philadelphia 76ers.

Michael Cooper

It took Cooper time to reach the Hall, especially when some of his Los Angeles Lakers’ teammates from the 1980s made it years ago. Cooper didn’t have great offensive stats (just 8.9 points per game in his 12-year NBA career. But he was one of the game’s great defensive players, earning All-Defense honors eight times and Defensive Player of the Year once. He won five titles (1980, 1982, 1985, 1987, 1988).

Walter Davis

Davis was a six-time All-Star, two-time All-NBA selection and 1977-78 rookie of the year who averaged 18.9 points in a 15-year NBA career mostly with the Phoenix Suns. In his rookie season, he put up a career-high 24.2 points per game and finished fifth in MVP voting.

Harley Redin

Redin was the longtime women’s basketball coach at Wayland Baptist and generated a 431-66 record in 18 seasons. He is credited with helping advance the women’s game in the 1950s and 1960s.

Bo Ryan

Ryan amassed a 747-233 record in 32 seasons at Wisconsin-Platteville, Wisconsin-Milwaukee and Wisconsin and won four Division III championships and led the Badgers to consecutive Final Fours in 2014 and 2015. He was named Big Ten coach of the year four times.

Herb Simon

Simon, who owns the Indiana Pacers and is the longest tenured NBA owner, bought the Pacers, with his brother Mel) in 1983. Simon is credited with helping keep the Pacers in Indianapolis. He has fielded a competitive team in that market, and the Pacers were Eastern Conference finalists in 2014, 2013, 2004, 2000, 1999, 1998, 1995 and 1994 and reached the NBA Finals in 2000.

Charles Smith

Smith is Louisiana’s all-time winningest high school basketball coach with eight state titles. He had two unbeaten seasons – 41-0 in 2004 and 41-0 in 2010.

Michele Timms

One of the great point guards, Timms starred for Australia, winning an Olympic silver medal in 2000 and an Olympic bronze in 1996, and she played five WNBA seasons, earning All-Star honors in 1999.

Jerry West

West is already in as a player – one of the game’s all-time great. He is going into the Hall this time as a contributor to the game for his work as an NBA executive with several teams, including the Los Angeles Lakers, Memphis Grizzlies, Golden State Warriors and Los Angeles Clippers. He was named NBA executive of the year in 1995 and 2004 and was part of NBA championship teams as an exec.

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CLEVELAND – The officials just couldn’t help themselves.

Caitlin Clark and Iowa. Paige Bueckers and UConn. The teams battling in a prize-fight worthy of a game, a spot in the national championship game on the line.

And the refs had to go and make it about them.

After a season’s worth of bad calls, inconsistency and a lack of transparency, the end of what was a spectacular game was marred by an offensive foul call with three seconds left and UConn trailing 70-69. Whether it was the right call or not – replays did seem to show Aaliyah Edwards threw her elbow at Gabbie Marshall on a screen-rescreen, and her stance was considerably wider than her shoulders, which is not allowed – is largely irrelevant.

Players play the game. They should get the chance to decide it, too.

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Instead, the refs inserted themselves, and now that’s all anyone will remember about this tremendous night of basketball. Not Hannah Stuelke’s statement performance. Not Kate Martin making one big shot after another despite probably having broken her nose yet again. Not UConn going toe-to-toe with college basketball’s all-time leading scorer and the country’s highest-scoring team despite being held together with duct tape and glue.

The call.

“Everybody can make a big deal of that one single play, but not one single play wins a basketball game or loses a basketball game,” Bueckers said. “I feel there were a lot of mistakes that I made that could have prevented that play from even being that big …

“So, you can look at one play and say, ‘Oh, that killed us or that hurt us.’ But we should have done a better job – I should have done a better job of making sure we didn’t leave the game up to chance like that and leave the game up to one bad call going our way and that deciding it.”

That’s the mature response, and kudos to Bueckers, Edwards and UConn coach Geno Auriemma for refusing to blame the call for their loss.

Not that they needed to. There were legions of people ready to take up pitchforks and torches for them.

“NAAAAAHHHHHH!!! I ain’t rolling with that call,” LeBron James said on X.

“wait was that screen not set clean?” Angel Reese asked on X.

It was Kelsey Plum, who held the Division I women’s scoring record until Clark broke it this year, who summed up the problem, though.

“To call that on a game deciding play is so wrong WOW,” Plum posted.

There are a million woulda, coulda, shouldas in every game, in every sport. There’s no guarantee that, had the foul not been called, Iowa wouldn’t still have won. Marshall, a fifth-year senior, said it was “the right call” and, when asked if she felt Edwards’ elbow, replied, “I mean, there’s video of it.”

That’s not the point. The women’s game is better than it’s ever been, its players putting on spectacular shows all year long, culminating in an NCAA Tournament that has been far more captivating than the men’s tournament.

And the officials aren’t keeping pace.

Just since the tournament began, an official had to be pulled in the middle of a game because she graduated from one of the schools playing; it took five games before someone figured out the 3-point lines at the Portland regional were different lengths; Notre Dame’s All-America point guard, Hannah Hidalgo, sat for close to four minutes because an official told her she had to remove her nose ring, even though another official had told her it was fine.

Something tells me no one’s going to be bragging about these three weeks at the annual officials’ meeting.

The officials were roundly criticized – rightly so – after getting whistle-happy in last year’s title game. Clark and Reese both spent long stretches on the bench in foul trouble. Iowa center Monika Czinano fouled out of the game.

“At this point they’re not going to call a lot, especially after last year when Caitlin and Angel were on the bench,” Iowa coach Lisa Bluder said. “I think you’re just not going to see a lot of calls happening right now.”

But that’s exactly what happened. And, just like last year, there’s at least the perception that the referees affected the outcome of the game.

That’s not good for the refs. That’s not good for the players. And it is the opposite of what’s good for the game.

Follow USA TODAY Sports columnist Nancy Armour on social media @nrarmour

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CLEVELAND — Caitlin Clark tried to tell you. All year, she told you exactly what to watch for with Iowa.

No, not her.

Hannah Stuelke.

Clark suggested earlier this year that the soft-spoken sophomore might break all her records one day and, after a night like this, it’s easy to believe it. Clark and Iowa are in the national championship game for a second consecutive year, and it’s Stuelke who got them there.

‘I think Hannah’s tremendous. I think it’s just the confidence and belief,’ Clark said after Iowa held on for the 71-69 win. ‘She played with an energy about herself of she really could go in there and dominate. She goes toe to toe with Aaliyah Edwards, who in my mind is one of the best players in the country.

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‘I’m just super happy for Hannah. She’s worked so hard to be in this moment.’

Stuelke scored a team-high 23 on 9-of-12 shooting, and carried Iowa until Clark and the rest of the Hawkeyes found their groove in the second half. She didn’t just come up big on the offensive end, either. After Clark missed a free throw, Stuelke got her fingers on the ball and tipped it Sydney Affolter, giving Iowa possession with three seconds left.

Now Iowa plays undefeated and overall No. 1 seed South Carolina on Sunday.

And everyone at the NCAA and ESPN is rejoicing.

This wasn’t the most impressive game Clark and Iowa have played, and the Hawkeyes barely resembled the juggernaut that beat LSU on Monday night. Clark had 21 points, but it was on 7 of 18 shooting and she was 3 of 11 from 3-point range.

In fact, for much of the night, it looked as if Paige Bueckers and UConn were going to end Clark’s final season the way they ended her first: With a loss in the NCAA Tournament.

Which would have been quite something, given the Huskies are pretty much being held together by duct tape and glue. A rash of injuries left them with eight available players and one of them played less than three minutes through the first four tournament games.

For those who need help with the math, that’s a two-person bench. Against the greatest shooter the college game has ever seen. The Huskies were in foul trouble, too, with KK Arnold and Ice Brady playing much of the fourth with four fouls and Nika Muhl having three.

But the Huskies gave Iowa everything and then some, harassing Clark into bad shots and not letting her do her typical Caitlin Clark things. She didn’t even make a 3-pointer until there was 8:10 left in the third quarter.

Clark and the Hawkeyes have been saying all season, though, that Iowa is more than Clark and she has gone out of her way to praise Stuelke’s game.

‘The confidence is everything. Especially hearing Caitlin Clark talk about me like that, it gives me a confidence boost,’ Stuelke said, smiling. ‘I think anyone would say that.’

Stuelke barely played against LSU, in foul trouble early trying to guard Angel Reese. But she held her ground against Edwards and Clark and Iowa quickly realized that getting the ball inside to Stuelke was their best offense. Time and again she took a pass from Clark down low and muscled the ball in for a layup.

UConn knew what was coming, and the Huskies couldn’t do much to stop it.

‘We just kept telling her how good she was. Honestly, the only thing that stopped her from being great was her own self. It was her own doubt. She is a beautiful athlete, an explosive athlete, and she just held herself back,’ Iowa coach Lisa Bluder said.

‘I’m just so pleased with her growth tonight,’ Bluder added. ‘She just took, as a sophomore — a young sophomore — she took another big leap tonight.’

Caitlin Clark is still Iowa’s best player, it’s first, second and third option. But the Hawkeyes aren’t a one-woman team, and Stuelke picked the perfect time to prove it.

Follow USA TODAY Sports columnist Nancy Armour on social media @nrarmour

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Major League Baseball’s uniform problem faces yet another hurdle: Availability.

The Texas Rangers and Milwaukee Brewers typically wear the popular City Connect uniforms for Friday night games, per their end-of-week customs. There was just one hang-up: Fanatics, the company responsible for producing the Nike-designed uniforms, has not delivered them.

So the Rangers wore their standard whites for a nationally-televised clash against the Houston Astros while the Brewers shelved their “Brew Crew” ode to beer, brats and Lake Michigan as they took the field against Seattle.

Officials from the Rangers and Brewers intimated to reporters that missing deliveries accounted for the jersey scrambling. Friday marked the ninth day of MLB’s regular season.

Yet the missing jerseys should not have come as a surprise, according to Fanatics.

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The company, which has produced MLB jerseys since 2017, measures players for uniforms during spring training and then asks teams to prioritize which uniforms they’d like delivered first, with the first of six windows coming March 18 and the last on May 27.

‘In early December, each MLB Club was given shipping windows and asked to prioritize their on-field uniform needs to be delivered on specific dates between March 18 and mid-May,’ Fanatics said in a statement to USA TODAY Sports. ‘The different delivery dates are intentional given that each player has parts of their uniform customized during Spring Training. Once those measurements are taken and sent back to the facility, there are different lead times to make the jerseys and pants, which inform how teams prioritize their uniform deliveries. This is the normal process each season.

‘Uniforms prioritized in the first two ship windows this season — March 18 and April 1 — have already been delivered on-time or early. The remaining jerseys that are due to teams in the final prioritized shipping windows, between now and mid-May, are on track to be delivered early and ahead of schedule, by April 23. This is aligned with when teams receive the bulk of their jerseys each season based on the manufacturing process after Spring Training.’

With scrutiny of the new Nike-designed jerseys at a high level, players, fans and media have identified at least five teams who have not yet worn City Connect or other alternate jerseys on their traditional days of use. The Mariners did not wear their cream Sunday uniforms and the Minnesota Twins reportedly did not have the pants to round out their Twin Cities alternate fits. The Mariners reached out to fans to explain the Sunday switch, saying the jerseys hadn’t been delivered yet. Additionally, the St. Louis Cardinals reportedly will not have their alternate blue tops until June, although Fanatics said all jerseys and pants will be delivered by no later than May 7.

And teams have prioritized which kits arrive first, and wear them as they’re available. The Rangers, according to a spokesman, received five uniform sets before the season – three home and two road. As defending World Series champions, they wore the now-customary gold-trimmed uniforms for their opening series, prioritizing that delivery over the City Connect jerseys.

Both the Rangers and Fanatics anticipate the City Connects will arrive by Texas’ next Friday home date of April 26.

The 2024 jerseys have been under fire virtually from the moment they appeared in spring training, due to the reduced point size of lettering, to players sweating through their jerseys once the season has begun, along with a general bargain-basement feel from the products. The uniforms are designed by Nike, which opted for a new fabric this year, and produced by Fanatics, which contracts to produce uniforms for virtually every major sports league and the NCAA.

MLB introduced the Nike-designed City Connect line in 2021 to great fanfare and immediate popularity. The most recent releases have, objectively, lacked the creativity and panache of the earlier releases, evidenced by the Philadelphia Phillies’ City Connect release earlier Friday. Those jerseys retail for up to $175.

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