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WASHINGTON − Kiki Iriafen celebrated her graduation from the USC Marshall School of Business for a few happy moments after the Washington Mystics practice Thursday, just a day away from the team’s season opener.

Iriafen donned a black graduation cap and got some video for social media along with fellow rookie Lucy Olsen, who is graduating from Iowa.

Iriafen, 22, has earned her master’s degree in entrepreneurship and innovation from USC after getting an undergraduate degree at Stanford in product design and mechanical engineering. Last month USC announced Iriafen was the Academic All-America Team Member of the Year for Division I.

Despite her academic accolades, she isn’t disappointed that she won’t get to walk in the traditional ceremony. “I graduated early last year so I was able to get my big graduation so I’m not super sad about it this year,” she said. “I’m more excited I get to play basketball instead. I can’t believe it’s actually here. We’ve had two preseason games, but tomorrow feels like the real deal. I’m excited to finally be able to compete and get the season rolling. My journey here has been kind of a roller coaster; I’ve had some highs, some lows. But I wouldn’t change a single thing because it’s made me who I am and brought me here.”

The Mystics open the season May 16 at home against the Atlanta Dream with a sense of excitement under first-year head coach Sydney Johnson and with a rookie class whom Johnson said plays with a veteran presence.

“I’m just hopeful that we can stay healthy because I think that’s such a big thing in terms of building momentum,” Johnson said. Last season the Mystics started on a 12-game losing streak after injury problems.

Last month Washington drafted Sonia Citron with the No. 3 pick, Iriafen at No. 4 and Georgia Amoore at No. 6. Olsen was the Mystics’ No. 23 pick in the second round, and Zaay Green was drafted 31st overall in the third round. (Green was waived May 14.)

Iriafen said she’s soaking up the moment on the eve of her first pro game.

“I’ve had great coaches who have really prepared me to play at this level. I think for me, what’s going to help me be successful is just being a sponge, understanding there’s a lot I can still learn,” she said.

The young team has already dealt with the disappointment of losing Amoore after she suffered a right ACL injury during practice April 30.

Iriafen was excited to come to Washington because of the number of draft picks the team had this year.

“You feel like you have a sister in it, going through the newness with you,’ Iriafen said. ‘Sonia, Georgia, Lucy, even Zaay, we were all really close. Everyone brought something different to the table, and I know now that things are solidified, we’re going to get closer and closer. It’s so funny because it’s only been a month, but I feel like I’ve known these women for years.”

Aaliyah Edwards won’t play against Atlanta due to a back injury and Shakira Austin is out with a leg injury. That could mean more minutes for Iriafen, Citron and Olsen to soak up their WNBA debut.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The 2025 PGA Championship, the second major tournament of the season in men’s golf, got underway at Quail Hollow Golf Club in Charlotte, North Carolina, with the top players in the world setting their sights on hoisting the Wanamaker Trophy. 

But so far, the household names we’ve come to know and love are nowhere to be found at the top of the leaderboard. There isn’t a single golfer ranked top-15 in the World Golf Rankings sitting in the top 15 of the tournament after Thursday’s play.

Jhonattan Vegas sits alone at the top, surging late to finish two shots clear of the field at 7 under.

Follow along as USA TODAY Sports hits the highlights of Thursday’s opening round: 

PGA Championship 2025 leaderboard

*-started round on hole No. 10

1. Jhonattan Vegas -7 F*
T2. Cam Davis -5 F
T2. Ryan Gerard -5 F
T4. Stephan Jaeger -4 F
T4. Luke Donald -4 F
T4. Alex Smalley -4 F*
T4. Ryan Fox -4 F*
T4. Aaron Rai -4 F*

You can get the latest leaderboard updates and tee times here.

Jhonattan Vegas pulls ahead

The final three holes of the round have been difficult for other golfers today. Even Gerard and Davis were over par for their final stretch. Vegas is a different animal, though. He’s birdied each of his last two holes with just one to play. That’s enough to push him to 6-under, in sole possession of first place.

He added a birdie on No. 9, ending his day with three straight birdies. He had nine birdies on the day and leads after shooting a 7-under 64.

Jhonattan Vegas pulls even with Davis, Gerard

It might be late but the scoreboard is still getting shaken up. Jhonattan Vegas now has three birdies in his last four holes to pull even with Cam Davis and Ryan Gerard at 5-under. Vegas had a chance to take sole possession of the lead with a long eagle putt, but it fell far right, making the birdie putt somewhat difficult. Vegas didn’t feel the pressure though, drilling the birdie putt, giving him two holes for another birdie if he wants sole possession of first heading into Friday.

Justin Thomas from the water

Play it as it lies. That’s the rule, right? Well, Justin Thomas found himself in a very poor predicament on 18, with his ball just barely in play next to a creek. Thomas didn’t hesitate to start removing his socks and shoes. He took the shot with his khakis rolled up to his upper shins and somehow delivered a beautiful approach giving him an opportunity for par from within 12 feet.

Unfortunately for Thomas, he could not drain the par putt, overjudging the left-to-right break and leaving the ball left of the hole. Thomas may have had three straight birdies in the back nine, but he ended his round with a bogey.

Cam Davis falls back to -5

Davis had an opportunity to finish his round in sole possession of the lead. However, two bogeys in his last three holes put him back in a tie for first with Ryan Gerard. Both golfers struggled in the last stretch although Davis played the front nine to end his day, while Gerard played the back nine. Each player had their own issues, with Gerard struggling to find fairways on Holes 16-18, and Davis struggling near the green on Holes 7-9.

Justin Thomas three straight birdies

Justin Thomas has won the PGA Championship at Quail Hollow before. He did so in 2017, and he’s showing us how he did it right now with three straight birdies in the back-nine, two of which came from off the green.

Thomas got off to a very slow start, scoring three over through three holes. However, he’s slowly climbed back to respectability and now sits just 1-over par with two holes left to play.

Davis takes lead

A terrific tee shot on 6 gave Cam Davis an opportunity for a birdie, which he took full advantage of. Just two holes later, Davis had another opportunity to extend his lead to two strokes. It was a long putt, but the line looked good on hit. However, it died before the hole, sliding to the right of the cup. He heads into the final hole of the round with a 1-shot lead.

Cam Davis tied for the lead

Cam Davis’ sixth birdie of the day on Hole 13 has tied him for the tournament lead with Ryan Gerard. Davis has six birdies, six pars, and only one bogey, and with the hardest part of the course behind him, Davis could have a tremendous chance to create an enormous lead heading into Round 2.

Justin Rose, Brian Harman with back-to-back long birdie putts

A long putt from the fringe of the green is enough to get a group of golfers going crazy. But two back-to-back? That’s unheard of, yet Justin Rose and Brian Harman did just that. The two pair golfers each recorded birdies on the fifth hole with incredibly long putts from the edge of the green, Harman from the front and Rose from the fringe. Neither golfer has done particularly well thus far, with each entering the fifth hole over par, but perhaps those are the putts they needed to get back on track.

Ryan Gerard finished day with two bogies

Holes 16-18 have been devastating for golfers all day. Even leader Ryan Gerard had trouble with them. After a par on 16, Gerard bogeyed 17 and then hit his tee shot on 18 into a right-side bunker. No big deal, right? Well, Gerard then lipped his bunker shot, removing nearly all the power he had in his swing. He was off the beach, but was still off the green.

Gerard did well to save bogey, but in just two holes, he’d gone from three up on the field to just a single stroke lead. Regardless, a lead is a lead, and Gerard has been the best underdog story of Round 1 thus far.

Cameron Young opens round with 63-foot birdie putt

Cameron Young has struggled this year, but if his first hole is any indicator, he could be in for a great day at Quail Hollow. The New York native started his round on the Par 5 10th hole and reached the fringe of the green in three strokes. However, he would need a miracle to sink the birdie putt. Lo and behold, that’s exactly what he got.

And if that wasn’t enough, Young backed up the 63-footer on Hole 10 with a 27-footer for birdie on Hole 11. He’s now 2-under through two holes, en route to a fantastic afternoon.

Ryan Gerard provides fresh face atop PGA Championship leaderboard

25-year-old Ryan Gerard entered the first round of the PGA Championship as a longshot to win the event, but after Round 1, he’s turning heads. The 2023 temporary PGA Tour member earned his full card for the 2025 season after winning the 2024 BMW Charity Pro-Am on the Korn Ferry Tour. Now, he’s playing out of his mind at one of golf’s major tournaments.

Through 14 holes, Gerard sat at -5, then on 15, Gerard gave the crowd a chip-in that had a lot of speed, but the tournament leader lucked out, hitting the pin and knocking his shot into the cup for an eagle to move to 7-under. He’s now three shots up on the rest of the field with three holes to play.

Holes 16-18 have been the toughest part of the course today though. We’ll see if Gerard can maintain his lead.

Co-leader Stephan Jaeger struggles on 18

It had been a tremendous opening round for German golfer Stephan Jaeger, posting a score 5-under par through 17 holes, good enough for the co-lead. However, that string of greatness came to an end on the final hole of the round.

Jaeger opened 18 by hooking his tee shot into the creek in the right rough. After the drop, he landed his approach shot short of the green and into the left-side bunker. Jaeger was already lying 4 on the Par 4 18 and had yet to reach the green.

Jaeger’s bunker shot was fantastic, giving him an opportunity to save bogey, but the damage was already done.

Quail Hollow’s No. 16 is going to be a bear

Before Rory McIlroy, Scottie Scheffler and Xander Schauffele arrived at the 16th hole, no one had made a birdie on the 535-yard par 4.

McIlroy blew his tee shot into the penalty area on the left, and then his right foot slipped as he tried to play from the steep slope. His shot went halfway up the slope, leaving him 206 yards away from the hole for his third shot. But, amazingly, that was the best playing in the group because from the fairway, both Scheffler and Schauffele hit their second shots into the lake on the left and behind the green. 

After dropping, both Scheffler and Schauffele hit high pitch shots to the green that sailed well past the cup, while McIlroy, whose third shot landed short and right of the green in the rough, pitched his fourth shot to 12 feet and then missed the putt for bogey. 

Triple double.

— Golfweek

Luke Donald a surprising presence atop leaderboard

Luke Donald, the 2025 European Ryder Cup captain, is clearly not satisfied being a passive observer at this year’s PGA Championship. While he missed his 20-foot birdie putt on the 15th hole Thursday morning, he tapped in for par to remain a co-leader at 4 under. 

Coming into the event, the 47-year-old from England had played in three PGA Tour events – the Cognizant Classic in The Palm Beaches, the Valspar Championship and the Zurich Classic of New Orleans – and not made the cut at any of them. Donald lacks the distance and power of most players in their field, averaging just over 280 yards off the tee, but his short game is as tidy as ever and through 15 holes he leads the field in Strokes Gained: Putting with an eye-popping +4.4.  

— Golfweek

Wolken: After career Grand Slam, what’s left for Rory McIlroy?

As exhausting and frustrating and ultimately validating as the last decade was for Rory McIlroy, the next and final phase of his career might turn out to be the most interesting.

Above all else, when McIlroy dropped to his knees and unloaded years of emotion onto the 18th green at Augusta National last month, what he earned was a lifetime of mental freedom. For the first time since he was a teenager first coming out on the PGA Tour, there is no longer a single result or tournament that will dramatically change his place in history or, more importantly, his day-to-day happiness and well-being.

For a career Grand Slam champion, and now definitively the best player of the post-Tiger Woods generation, the compiler phase of his career is going to ask a question that none of us – McIlroy included – can yet answer.

What happens when someone like McIlroy has this much of his prime remaining with no white whale left to chase?

Read Dan Wolken’s full column on McIlroy’s future

Marquee group features top 3 players in world

The PGA Championship is known for its creative pairings, with an obvious (or not-so-obvious) theme running through several of the groups.

What will almost certainly be the most-watched threesome over the first two rounds this year at Quail Hollow also has a theme. Excellence.

The 8:22 a.m. group off the 10th tee on Thursday consists of the top three players in the world right now: No. 1 Scottie Scheffler, No. 2 Rory McIlroy and No. 3 Xander Schauffele. Expect them to raise each other’s games to new heights heading into the weekend.

Then again … after completing their first nine holes, Scheffler was at even par, McIlroy was 1-over and Schauffele was 2-over.

Where to watch the PGA Championship: TV Channel, streaming Thursday

The 2025 PGA Championship will be broadcast by ESPN during the first two rounds on Thursday and Friday, with ESPN and CBS slated to televise the final two rounds on Saturday and Sunday. ESPN+ and Fubo will have streaming coverage of all four rounds at the PGA Championship, while viewers can stream the action on Paramount+ during the weekend coverage.

TV channel: ESPN (starting at 11 a.m. ET)
Live stream: ESPN+ (6 a.m. – 11 a.m.) and Fubo (Fubo offers a free trial subscription)

Watch the 2025 PGA Championship with Fubo

PGA Championship tee times today

Notable tee times. For a full list of tee times, you can find Thursday’s starts here.

*All times listed are Eastern

Thursday (Hole 1)/Friday (Hole 10) pairings

7:00 a.m./12:25 p.m.: Luke Donald, Padraig Harrington, Martin Kaymer
7:11 a.m./12:36 p.m.: John Somers, Taylor Moore, David Puig
7:22 a.m./12:47 p.m.: Kurt Kitayama, Nic Ishee, Alex Noren
7:33 a.m./12:58 p.m.: J.T. Poston, Ryo Hisatsune, Tom Johnson
7:44 a.m./1:09 p.m.: Davis Thompson, Bud Cauley, Nico Echavarria
7:55 a.m./1:20 p.m.: Harris English, Michael Kim, Thomas Detry
8:06 a.m./1:31 p.m.: Stephan Jaeger, Chris Kirk, Robert MacIntyre
8:17 a.m./1:42 p.m.: Thorbjørn Olesen, Karl Vilips, Laurie Canter
8:28 a.m./1:53 p.m.: Si Woo Kim, Sam Stevens, Rico Hoey
8:39 a.m./2:04 p.m.: Bobby Gates, Lee Hodges, Ben Griffin
8:50 a.m./2:15 p.m.: Thriston Lawrence, Nick Dunlap, Harry Hall
9:01 a.m./2:26 p.m.: Greg Koch, Marco Penge, Ryan Gerard
9:12 a.m./2:37 p.m.: Dylan Newman, Daniel van Tonder, Victor Perez
12:30 p.m./7:00 a.m.: Michael Kartrude, Sami Valimaki, Jake Knapp
12:41 p.m./7:11 a.m.: Erik van Rooyen, Michael Block, Mackenzie Hughes
12:52 p.m./7:22 a.m.: Lucas Glover, Max Homa, Joaquin Niemann
1:03 p.m./7:33 a.m.: Tyrrell Hatton, Will Zalatoris, Adam Scott
1:14 p.m./7:44 a.m.: Justin Thomas, Dustin Johnson, Collin Morikawa
1:25 p.m./7:55 a.m.: Jordan Spieth, Patrick Reed, Ludvig Åberg
1:36 p.m./8:06 a.m.: Hideki Matsuyama, Wyndham Clark, Tom Kim
1:47 p.m./8:17 a.m.: Bryson DeChambeau, Viktor Hovland, Gary Woodland
1:58 p.m./8:28 a.m.: Sergio Garcia, Daniel Berger, Russell Henley
2:09 p.m./8:39 a.m.: Justin Rose, Cameron Smith, Brian Harman
2:20 p.m./8:50 a.m.: Brandon Bingaman, Davis Riley, Sungjae Im
2:31 p.m./9:01 a.m.: Takumi Kanaya, Christiaan Bezuidenhout, Tom McKibbin
2:42 p.m./9:12 a.m.: Keita Nakajima, Timothy Wiseman, Beau Hossler

Thursday (Hole 10)/Friday (Hole 1) pairings

7:05 a.m./12:30 p.m.: John Parry, Justin Hicks, Ryan Fox
7:16 a.m./12:41 p.m.: Andre Chi, Patrick Fishburn, Seamus Power
7:27 a.m./12:52 p.m.: Max McGreevy, Sahith Theegala, Sepp Straka
7:38 a.m./1:03 p.m.: Brooks Koepka, Rickie Fowler, Shane Lowry
7:49 a.m./1:14 p.m.: Phil Mickelson, Tommy Fleetwood, Jason Day
8:00 a.m./1:25 p.m.: Jon Rahm, Patrick Cantlay, Matt Fitzpatrick
8:11 a.m./1:36 p.m.: Corey Conners, Min Woo Lee, Rasmus Højgaard
8:22 a.m./1:47 p.m.: Rory McIlroy, Xander Schauffele, Scottie Scheffler
8:33 a.m./1:58 p.m.: Tony Finau, Nicolai Højgaard, Max Greyserman
8:44 a.m./2:09 p.m.: Andrew Novak, Keegan Bradley, Maverick McNealy
8:55 a.m./2:20 p.m.: Akshay Bhatia, Denny McCarthy, Sam Burns
9:06 a.m./2:31 p.m.: John Catlin, Garrick Higgo, Jesse Droemer
9:17 a.m./2:42 p.m.: Eugenio Chacarra, Rupe Taylor, Justin Lower
12:25 p.m./7:05 a.m.: Keith Mitchell, Bob Sowards, Adam Hadwin
12:36 p.m./7:16 a.m.: Eric Cole, Eric Steger, Cam Davis
12:47 p.m./7:27 a.m.: Austin Eckroat, Brian Bergstol, Jacob Bridgeman
12:58 p.m./7:38 a.m.: Niklas Norgaard, Byeong Hun An, J.J. Spaun
1:09 p.m./7:49 a.m.: Patrick Rodgers, Nick Taylor, Dean Burmester
1:20 p.m./8:00 a.m.: Joe Highsmith, Cameron Young, Aaron Rai
1:31 p.m./8:11 a.m.: Tom Hoge, Matthieu Pavon, Taylor Pendrith
1:42 p.m./8:22 a.m.: Rasmus Neergaard-Petersen, Patton Kizzire, Matt McCarty
1:53 p.m./8:33 a.m.: Tyler Collet, Jimmy Walker, Richard Bland
2:04 p.m./8:44 a.m.: Jason Dufner, Michael Thorbjornsen, Shaun Micheel
2:15 p.m./8:55 a.m.: Rafael Campos, Ryan Lenahan, Matt Wallace
2:26 p.m./9:06 a.m.: Jhonattan Vegas, Elvis Smylie, Brian Campbell
2:37 p.m./9:17 a.m.: Kevin Yu, Larkin Gross, John Keefer

PGA Championship odds: Favorites at Quail Hollow

All odds via BetMGM on Thursday, May 15.

T1. Scottie Scheffler (+500)
T1. Rory McIlroy (+500)
3. Bryson DeChambeau (+800)
4. Justin Thomas (+1800)
T5. Jon Rahm (+2000)
T5. Xander Schauffele (+2000)
7. Collin Morikawa (+2200)
8. Ludvig Åberg (+2500)
T9. Joaquin Niemann (+3300)
T9. Patrick Cantlay (+3300)
T9. Tommy Fleetwood (+3300)

PGA Championship weather forecast: Latest updates for Thursday

The weather should be good on Thursday, according to AccuWeather. Charlotte, North Carolina, will experience a high of 86 degrees Fahrenheit with an 8% of precipitation on Thursday.

PGA Championship predictions and picks

NBC Sports: Bryson DeChambeau

Ryan Lavner writes, ‘Bryson DeChambeau. There’s no one on the planet – not Rory, not Scottie – who is driving the ball as well as DeChambeau is at the moment. And it’s difficult to conjure up a more perfect venue for him, a 7,600-yard behemoth that will play even longer after the heavy rain and place a premium on finding the fairways and avoiding the wet, dense rough. DeChambeau’s iron play continues to be a question mark – it’s the only reason he didn’t win the Masters last month – but his short game and putting remains tidy enough to give him a significant advantage. If he continues to drive the ball like he has for the past year-plus, this is a great opportunity for him to knock off major No. 3.’

BetMGM: Bryson DeChambeau

‘Including a near miss at Augusta National … DeChambeau has now recorded four top-10s in his last five major championships. Over his last nine major championships, DeChambeau owns five top-10s and four top-5s. One such success came last year at Valhalla, the most correlative course to Quail Hollow, per datagolf.com.’

Gambling Nerd: Scottie Scheffler

‘Despite never winning the event, Scheffler has finished in the top 10 in four of his five PGA Championship appearances … Scheffler will solidify his standing at the top of the world rankings with a win at Quail Hollow Club this year.’

Newsweek: Rory McIlroy

‘Scheffler may lead the odds to win, but McIlroy’s track record at Quail Hollow can’t be overlooked. The Northern Irishman has won four of his 12 appearances in the Wells Fargo Championship (now the Truist Championship) there, to go with five other top 10s. Add to that the level of play he has displayed this season (three wins, one major).’

PGA Championship predictions: Sleeper picks at Quail Hollow

Odds from BetMGM as of May 15

CBS Sports: Tyrrell Hatton (+4000)

‘Hatton missed the cut at the 2017 PGA Championship but he’s since experienced success at Quail Hollow, finishing T-3rd at the 2023 Wells Fargo Championship there. The 33-year-old Englishman was T-14th at the Masters last month and also scored a win at the Hero Dubai Desert Classic in January on the DP World Tour. He’s been top 25 in eight of his nine starts around the world this season and he ranks second on his tour this season by hitting 73.81% of greens in regulation.’

talkSPORT: Jordan Spieth (+6000)

‘Spieth won the Masters, US Open and Open Championship in quick succession but has now gone eight years without a major win. He was runner-up at the 2015 PGA Championship and tied for third four years later. But since then, he has struggled to make an impact at the event as the Grand Slam has eluded him. He was brilliant at the (CJ Cup) Byron Nelson recently and has shown good form all season, so maybe this could be his year.’

Sportsbook Wire: Patrick Reed (+6000)

‘Reed was the runner-up at the 2017 PGA Championship at Quail Hollow, finishing 2 shots behind Justin Thomas. He came in eighth at the 2018 Wells Fargo Championship here and sixth in 2021, so that makes three top-10 finishes in his last four starts at this course.’

BetSperts: Max Homa (+12500)

‘Quail Hollow is where he got his first PGA Tour win back in 2019, and he’s finished T-8 here in each of the past two seasons despite entering with less-than-stellar form. He’s flashed more consistency with his irons as well, gaining nearly a full stroke per round in back-to-back starts in April at Augusta National and Harbour Town.’

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Eight years ago, during the first few days of President Donald Trump’s first term, I joined his other senior advisers in the White House Situation Room to discuss our approach to Saudia Arabia, which was then in the midst of an internal power struggle. Should we work with the older generation of Saudi leaders, with whom the U.S. has done business with for decades? Or would we take a chance on the younger generation, who were untested, but are committed to massive social and economic change.  

Jared Kushner made the case for the new leaders, especially Mohammed bin Salman (MBS). Kushner argued they would take Saudi Arabia in a different direction — away from the religiously and socially conservative, insular, extremist-tolerant older generation of their grandparents – and build a modern, tolerant and open society, with rights for women.  

They wanted to diversify the Saudi economy beyond its reliance on oil and create a modern nation focused on technology, investment and infrastructure. They would stand against Islamic extremism and work with us to destroy terrorist movements. They were open to the idea of peace with Israel as the foundation of a wilder peace in the Middle East.  

The choice was Trump’s, and one of his first major foreign policy decisions. He would continue his rock-solid support of Israel, but he took a bet on the younger generation of Sunni Arab leaders. He withdrew from President Barack Obama’s flawed nuclear weapons deal with Iran, believing that the road to Middle East peace went through Riyadh and Israel, not Tehran. 

This week’s trip to Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the UAE was Trump’s victory lap. His big bet in 2017 paid off. He could say with great pride, ‘Before our eyes, a new generation of leaders is transcending the ancient conflicts and tired divisions of the past, and forging a future where the Middle East is defined by commerce, not chaos; where it exports technology, not terrorism; and where people of different nations, religions, and creeds are building cities together — not bombing each other out of existence.’ 

The Gulf Arab nations, led by Saudi Arabia, have accomplished extraordinary things in the last eight years, despite the cold shoulder given them during the Biden administration. They were crucial in destroying ISIS and other Islamist extremist movements. They played a major behind-the-scenes role in the Abraham Accords between Israel and the UAE, Bahrain, Sudan and then Morocco. While not yet a formal signatory to the Abraham Accords, Saudi Arabia is well on its way. 

The Saudis, along with the other Gulf Arab leaders, have now urged Trump to open a dialogue with the new leaders of Syria. He has taken another bet on peace during this trip, and is dropping crippling sanctions on Syria, to give them a ‘chance at greatness.’ If Trump is right, Syria will no longer be a scourge of the region it has been for decades; using chemical weapons on its own people, hosting extremist groups bent on spreading death and destruction, and welcoming in Russian influence. 

Perhaps most important of all, Trump has put a stake in the heart of American interventionist foreign policy pursued by both political parties for the last 20 years. We will no longer fight forever wars in the Middle East in a futile attempt to force them into the American mold. We will no longer give nations ‘lectures on how to live or how to govern their own affairs.’  

As Trump said in his first address to the United Nations General Assembly in 2017, ‘We do not expect diverse countries to share the same cultures, traditions, or even systems of government. But we do expect all nations to uphold these two core sovereign duties: to respect the interests of their own people and the rights of every other sovereign nation… 

‘In America, we do not seek to impose our way of life on anyone, but rather to let it shine as an example for everyone to watch.’  

Our policy is Peace through Strength – which encompasses all forms of our strength, not just our military strength.  

What better way to honor the spirit of our own founding 250 years ago, than to encourage other ‘sovereign nations let their people take ownership of the future and control their own destiny.’ 

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Snoop Dogg is ready to respond to all the ‘sellout’ comments he’s received after his Crypto Ball performance during President Donald Trump’s inauguration in January.

During a recent appearance on ‘The Breakfast Club,’ the legendary rapper addressed the criticism he’s received since his performance and announced that his new music is a direct response to the haters.

When asked if he’s bothered by the negative feedback, Snoop Dogg said he isn’t because he believes his performance was for a good cause.

‘I DJ’ed at the Crypto Ball for what, 30 minutes?’ he said.

‘Made a whole bunch of money, made a lot of relationships to help out the inner city and the community and teach financial literacy and crypto in a space that it don’t exist. 

‘Made a whole bunch of money, made a lot of relationships to help out the inner city and the community and teach financial literacy and crypto in a space that it don’t exist.’

— Snoop Dogg

‘That’s 30 minutes. [For] 30 years, Snoop Dogg been doing great things for the community, building, showing up, standing up for the people, making it happen, being all I can be,’ he continued. 

Snoop made it clear his performance was not a Trump endorsement.

‘Even if I would have done it for him and hung out with him and took a picture with him, can’t none of you motherf—ers tell me what I can and can’t do. 

‘But I’m not a politician. I don’t represent the Republican Party. I don’t represent the Democratic Party. I represent the motherf—ing Gangster Party period point blank, and G s— we don’t explain s—, so that’s why I didn’t explain. That’s why I didn’t go into detail when motherf—ers was trying to cancel me and say he a sellout,’ he said.

The rapper shared some examples of comments he received online after his inauguration performance.

Snoop Dogg said, ‘I would post s—, and I see motherf—ers like, ‘Oh he a sellout.’ You know what I would do? Jump right in their DM with a video, ‘You b—- a– … What’s happening … I’m Snoop Dogg … what you want to do?’ And guess what they would do? ‘Oh, man, I’m just a fan man. I’m sorry.’ Yeah … you got me f—ed up … I jump all off in your s— … and talk to you face to face.

‘The things that I do in real life should matter to you more, not what I do when I’m deejaying or making music or doing this and that,’ he said, before adding that people should be asking, ‘What is he like as a real person?’

Snoop Dogg’s album, ‘Iz it a Crime?’ was released May 15 and is his direct response to the criticism he’s received over the past few months, he told ‘The Breakfast Club.’

 
 
 
 
 
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Snoop Dogg’s representatives did not respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.

Shortly after Trump’s big day, the ‘Gin and Juice’ rapper shared a video of himself giving a blunt response to the backlash.

Snoop, 53, was listening to gospel music as he appeared to be smoking marijuana in a car. 

‘It’s Sunday. I got gospel in my heart,’ he said in the video clip posted on Instagram. ‘For all the hate I’m going to answer with love, I love too much.’

‘Get your life right, stop worrying about mine. I’m cool. I’m together. Still a Black man. Still 100% Black. All out ’til you ball out or ’til you fall out.’

‘The Next Episode’ rapper additionally spoke out about how he has previously dealt with negative responses after his pre-inauguration performance.

‘You ‘gon deal with hate when you get to the top, no matter who you are. … Me, personally, I answer it with success and love. That’s my answer to any hate and negativity that comes my way, ’cause it’s the strongest force that can beat it,’ he shared on the ‘R&B Money Podcast’ in January.

Snoop performed at the Crypto Ball event and played fan favorites from Journey’s ‘Don’t Stop Believin’’ to Bob Marley’s ‘Three Little Birds (Don’t Worry About a Thing).’ He also performed a few of his own hits, including, ‘Drop It Like It’s Hot.’

The ‘Young, Wild and Free’ rapper performed after he recently changed his tune about President Trump. 

Years after Snoop appeared on ‘The Apprentice‘ in 2007 and delivered laughs during a Trump roast in 2011, he called Trump a clown and mocked him in a music video. In his video for his song ‘Lavender’ in 2017, Snoop depicted Trump as a clown and shot the president in the head. 

In 2020, during an appearance on Big Boy’s radio show, Snoop argued Trump shouldn’t be in office. 

‘I ain’t never voted a day in my life, but this year I think I’m going to get out and vote because I can’t stand to see this punk in office one more year,’ the rapper said on ‘Big Boy’s Neighborhood on Real 92.3.’

Snoop explained he didn’t believe he was allowed to vote at the time due to his criminal record. Snoop was convicted of a felony in 1990 and 2007.

However, after a long history of condemning the President and his supporters, Snoop praised Trump in January 2024.

‘Donald Trump? … He ain’t done nothing wrong to me. He has done only great things for me. He pardoned Michael Harris,’ Snoop told The Sunday Times.

‘So, I have nothing but love and respect for Donald Trump.’

Michael ‘Harry-O’ Harris, an associate of Death Row Records co-founder Suge Knight and the founder of the label’s parent company, Godfather Entertainment, was pardoned in 2021 as one of Trump’s final decisions before leaving office for the first time. Snoop Dogg was famously signed by the label only to leave later in his career. Snoop acquired Death Row Records in 2022. 

Harris was imprisoned on charges of conspiracy and attempted murder for over three decades. Snoop Dogg praised Trump at the time for his commutation of Harris.

Fox News Digital’s Stephanie Giang-Paunon contributed to this report.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

The No. 1 Winnipeg Jets stayed alive in their series against the Dallas Stars with a 4-0 victory on Thursday night.

Now they must figure out how to win on the road to avoid elimination.

Jets goalie Connor Hellebuyck, a Hart and Vezina Trophy finalist, made 22 saves for his second consecutive home shutout. The Jets improved to 6-1 at Winnipeg and cut the Stars’ series lead to 3-2.

But the goalie and his team have struggled on the road this postseason, going 0-5.

Winnipeg’s Mark Scheifele opened the scoring on Thursday and was sucker-punched by Stars captain Jamie Benn during a third-period scrum. Nikolaj Ehlers scored twice, Vladislav Namestnikov added a goal and the power play connected twice after just one man-advantage goal in the first four games.

No Presidents’ Trophy winner has won the Stanley Cup since the 2013 Chicago Blackhawks. The New York Rangers reached the Eastern Conference final last season.

USA TODAY provided live updates for Game 5 of the Dallas Stars-Winnipeg Jets series. Here are highlights:

Jets vs. Stars highlights

Jets vs. Stars Game 5 recap

Jets vs. Stars final score: Jets 4, Stars 0

Connor Hellebuyck picks up his second consecutive home shutout and the Jets stay alive.

Jets-Stars score: Nikolaj Ehlers scores again

Ehlers outraces Miro Heiskanen to a loose puck and jams it into the empty net. Jets 4, Stars 0

Jamie Benn sucker punches Mark Scheifele

The Stars captain and Scheifele tussle near the bench. Brandon Tanev tries to break it up. While an official is holding Scheifele, Benn sucker punches the Jets star, knocking over him and the official. Somehow the Stars get a power play out of that. Winnipeg kills it off.

Jets-Stars score: Winnipeg strikes again on power play

Alex Iafallo sets up Vladislav Namestnikov in the slot for the Jets’ second power play goal of the game. Jets 3, Stars 0

Jets go on power play

There’s a scrum and Lian Bichsel is called for roughing.

Stars go on power play

Mason Appleton is called for hooking Roope Hintz. Stars work for shots from the right faceoff circle but Connor Hellebuyck stops both. Penalty killed.

Back to full strength

But Jets did damage with a 5-on-3 goal by Nikolaj Ehlers.

Jets-Stars score: Winnipeg connects on power play

Nikolaj Ehlers takes a pass below the faceoff circle and jams the puck past Jake Oettinger. Time remaining on the second power play. Jets 2, Stars 0

Jets go on power play

Alex Petrovic goes off, then Esa Lindell, both for tripping. Lengthy 5-on-3 for Winnipeg.

Third period underway

1-0 Jets. Connor Hellebuyck working on his second consecutive home shutout. He was to stop Jason Robertson early.

End of second period: Jets 1, Stars 0

Winnipeg continues to carry the play. The Jets finally connect on a lucky bounce when Mark Scheifele’s shot goes in off Thomas Harley. Winnipeg gets more chances on a late power play and another one by Nino Niederreiter with 14 seconds left. Jake Oettinger has 21 saves through two periods. The Stars have managed only nine shots.

Jets goal waved off

Jake Oettinger has a shot go off his back as he gets up from making a save. Later in the power play, Mark Scheifele knocks a puck in the net with his glove. It’s quickly waved off. Stars kill off the rest of the power play.

Jets go on power play

Mason Marchment is called for holding Nikolaj Ehlers.

Tyler Seguin hits the crossbar

Great chance by the Stars on a quick passing play, but Seguin’s shot hits the crossbar.

Jets-Stars score: Winnipeg takes lead

Tough break for Thomas Harley. Connor Hellebuyck makes a glove save on the Stars defenseman in tight. Later, Winnipeg’s Mark Scheifele scores on a shot that banks in off Harley’s leg at 6:17 of the second period. Jets 1, Stars 0

End of first period: Jets 0, Stars 0

The Jets, facing elimination, come out strong in the first period, outshooting the Stars 11-4.

What time is Stars vs. Jets Game 5?

Game 5 of the Stars-Jets series is at 9:30 p.m. ET at Winnipeg.

How to watch Stars vs. Jets playoff game: TV, stream

Time: 9:30 p.m. ET
Location: Canada Life Centre in Winnipeg
TV: TNT, TruTV
Stream: Sling TV, Max

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard said ex-FBI Director James Comey should be ‘put behind bars’ for a post he made on Instagram on Thursday allegedly ‘issuing a call to assassinate [President Donald Trump.]’

Earlier on Thursday, Comey shared a picture on Instagram with seashells formed in the numbers ’86 47.’ To some, the number ’86’ is a call sign for murdering or getting rid of someone or something and ’47’ is typically used to refer to the 47th President of the United States.

‘Cool shell formation on my beach walk…,’ Comey wrote in the caption of the picture, which has since been deleted.

Gabbard made the comments on ‘Jesse Watters Primetime’ Thursday night after Comey said he wasn’t aware that the number ’86’ stands for some sort of violence.

‘I posted earlier a picture of some shells I saw today on a beach walk, which I assumed were a political message,’ Comey said after deleting the initial picture. ‘I didn’t realize some folks associate those numbers with violence. It never occurred to me but I oppose violence of any kind so I took the post down.’ 

Gabbard said Comey and his people ‘need to be held to account according to the law’ regardless of why he said he posted the picture.

‘The rule of law says people like him who issue direct threats against the POTUS, essentially issuing a call to assassinate him, must be held accountable under the law,’ Gabbard said, adding that she thinks he should be in jail.

The national intelligence director said Comey’s post has her ‘very concerned for [the president’s life.]’

‘I’m very concerned for the president’s life; we’ve already seen assassination attempts. I’m very concerned for his life and James Comey, in my view, should be held accountable and put behind bars for this,’ she said.

Gabbard also said Comey has a lot of influence and that there are ‘people who take [him] very seriously.’

Shortly after Comey removed the post, Fox News Digital learned from a Secret Service source that the agency was aware of the incident and agents are being sent to investigate and interview Comey.

The White House also condemned Comey’s actions, with White House deputy chief of staff and Cabinet Secretary Taylor Budowich calling his post ‘deeply concerning.’

‘While President Trump is currently on an international trip to the Middle East, the former FBI Director puts out what can clearly be interpreted as ‘a hit’ on the sitting President of the United States — a message etched in the sand,’ Budowich wrote on X. ‘This is deeply concerning to all of us and is being taken seriously.’

Comey, who led the FBI during Trump’s first term before he was fired from the spot, had no comment when reached by Fox News Digital earlier on Thursday.

Fox News Digital’s Alec Schemmel and David Spunt contributed to this report.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Bombas founder David Heath is stepping down from his role as CEO as the socks and apparel company looks to expand beyond its direct-to-consumer roots.

Bombas President Jason LaRose, a former Under Armour and Equinox executive, will take over as the company’s next CEO effective Thursday. Heath said he realized it was necessary for a retail veteran to lead the company through its next phase of growth.

“We’ve reached a size and scale that is beyond my expertise. I didn’t come from a big apparel company before … I found myself more so over the last 18 months saying, ‘I don’t know what to do next,’” Heath, who is staying at Bombas as its executive chair, told CNBC in an interview. “So then, when I looked at someone with Jason’s background … having that tried and true experience is what will set Bombas up to succeed for the next chapter and I think I feel more comfortable having someone with Jason’s experience in the driver’s seat.” 

LaRose, who spent six years at Under Armour and oversaw its North America business, takes the helm at a critical point in Bombas’ growth story. 

Bombas’ revenue has grown 22% in its current fiscal year through April, it’s reached more than $2 billion in lifetime sales and its EBITDA is at a “super healthy, double digit” margin, LaRose told CNBC. The company’s footwear segment, such as its ultra-popular Sunday Slipper, is expanding the fastest. The company expects footwear revenue will soar more than 70% this year, but socks are still growing steadily, with sales up 17% in April compared to the prior year. 

But in order to reach its goal of growing from a “Shark Tank” startup into a multibillion dollar company over the next five-to-10 years, Bombas needs to expand its wholesale presence. Retailers that primarily sell online like Bombas tend to reach a growth ceiling and need to turn to other channels to keep scaling profitably.

Under LaRose’s direction, Bombas is looking to grow its wholesale revenue from around 7% of sales to between 10% and 20%. The company also wants to test out physical stores. 

“More than 60% of socks in this country are sold in physical locations, you know, whether that’s stores we could open, or stores that we fill with our partners … the wholesale opportunity is big for us,” said LaRose. “It’s also a billboard for us, right? It’s a chance to tell our story. When the customer walks by, we have a chance to tell them about the mission every time, why we’re here, let them touch and feel the product, which is always important when you’re introducing somebody to a new apparel brand.” 

Bombas currently sells in Nordstrom, Scheels and Dick’s Sporting Goods, and unlike some of its peers, it isn’t considering Amazon as a wholesale channel. Instead, it’s looking to expand its assortment offered by its current partners, try out its own stores and perhaps bring on some new wholesalers — if they’re the right fit. 

Digitally native brands that have long enjoyed the benefits of a direct model, such as customer data and the ability to stay close to customers, are often wary about expanding too deeply into wholesale because it’s less profitable and it’s harder for brands to tell their stories. For a company like Bombas, which spent years developing what it calls the “most comfortable socks, underwear, and T-shirts” on the market, that storytelling is extremely important — especially at a price point of around $15 per pair of socks. 

However, it’s that very attitude that has led some to criticize the direct selling model because of how it can stymie growth and lead to unsustainable business models. Many of the early direct-to-consumer darlings have seen their valuations shrivel up as they chase profitability years after they were founded. E-commerce has become harder to do profitably, and at a certain point, stores and wholesale are a more effective and profitable customer acquisition tool for some companies than marketing online. Selling goods through wholesale channels allows brands to scale and acquire customers more profitably than just selling online.

Brands like Bombas that were early to move to wholesale — Heath joked that the company “focused on profitability before it was cool” — understand the need for expansion but have looked to be strategic about who they partner with. Growth is important, but so is maintaining a brand, which is critical to staying ahead of rivals. 

“As a DTC brand, we care so much about our brand and our story, it has to be somebody who’s going to do an excellent job taking care of our brand. We’re not out there to be out there,” said LaRose. “We’re looking at some other partners. We’ll continue to always look for people who we think strategically give us access to the right customer, you know, nothing to announce yet on that front, but we’ll keep looking.” 

Disclosure: CNBC owns the exclusive off-network cable rights to “Shark Tank.”

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

The Carolina Hurricanes are heading to the Eastern Conference final for the second time in three seasons after their 3-1 victory against the Washington Capitals in Game 5 on Thursday night.

The Hurricanes also knocked off the New Jersey Devils in five games in the first round.

Carolina’s smothering defensive style limited Washington’s No. 2-ranked regular-season offense to seven goals in the series — one of them an empty-netter — and fewer than 20 shots a game.

Hurricanes goalie Frederik Andersen kept the Capitals at bay again Thursday, allowing only Anthony Beauvillier’s first-period goal. He was strong during Washington’s third-period surge before Carolina’s Andrei Svechnikov broke the tie at 18:01 of the third period. It was his eighth goal and third game-winner of the playoffs.

An apparent Capitals go-ahead goal in the second period was waved off after a challenge for offsides.

USA TODAY provided live updates of Game 5 between the Carolina Hurricanes and Washington Capitals. How the game went:

Hurricanes vs. Capitals highlights

What’s next for the Carolina Hurricanes?

They’ll face the winner of the Florida Panthers-Toronto Maple Leafs series in the conference final. Florida, up 3-2, will try to wrap up that series at home Friday night. Carolina would host Game 1 if Florida advances and start on the road if Toronto comes back. The Panthers swept the Hurricanes in the 2023 Eastern Conference final. Defenseman Jalen Chatfield will have some time to heal after missing Game 5, though Alexander Nikishin acquitted himself well in his NHL debut.

What’s next for the Washington Capitals?

Their summer starts after a spectacular regular season in which Alex Ovechkin became the NHL’s all-time leading goal scorer, and the team finished with the conference’s best record. Washington also won a playoff series for the first time since 2018. Spencer Carbery is considered a front-runner for coach of the year.

Ovechkin will enter the final year of his contract. A lot of the offseason work is already done with Jakob Chychrun, Logan Thompson, Charlie Lindgren, Nic Dowd and Dylan McIlrath signing contract extensions. Andrew Mangiapane, Lars Eller, Beauvillier and Taylor Raddysh are pending unrestricted free agents. Injured Nicklas Backstrom and T.J. Oshie are in the final year of their contracts and can officially retire. Rookie Ryan Leonard will play his first full season in 2025-26.

Hurricanes vs. Capitals Game 5 recap

Final score: Hurricanes 3, Capitals 1

The Hurricanes are heading to the conference final. They have won both their two series in five games. They held the Capitals to seven goals in the series. Andrei Svechnikov breaks the tie with his eighth goal of the playoffs, second best in the league. It’s his league-best third game-winner.

Hurricanes-Capitals score: Seth Jarvis adds empty-netter

Seth Jarvis steals the puck and slides it into the empty net with 33 seconds left. Hurricanes 3, Capitals 1

Hurricanes-Capitals score: Andrei Svechnikov breaks tie

Andrei Svechnikov breaks the tie with 1:59 left in regulation on a give-and-go with Sean Walker. That’s his eighth goal of the playoffs. Hurricanes 2, Capitals 1

Logan Thompson saves

He stops William Carrier in close then keeps out the rebound.

Five minutes left in regulation

Still 1-1. Capitals outshooting Hurricanes 9-3 in this period.

Capitals surging

They have seven shots midway through the third period after totaling nine over the first two periods. Frederik Andersen keeping the game tied.

Frederik Andersen save

Andersen stops Alex Ovechkin and dives onto the puck before the Capitals captain can get a rebound. Ovechkin goes tumbling over the goalie.

Capitals go on power play

After Pierre-Luc Dubois is stopped on a drive to the net, Jordan Martinook knocks over Tom Wilson and is called for charging. Penalty killed. Seth Jarvis gets a good chance as it ends.

Third period underway

Tied 1-1. Hurricanes on the power play for another 19 seconds. And it’s killed off.

Alexander Nikishin stats

The Hurricanes defenseman has played about eight minutes through two periods in his NHL debut. He has two shots, four shot attempts, one penalty, plus a hit, giveaway and takeaway.

End of second period: Capitals 1, Hurricanes 1

Matt Roy looked like he put the Capitals ahead, but the goal was called off because of an offside play well before the score. The Capitals catch a break when Seth Jarvis’ shot hits the crossbar and post right before time expires. Carolina outshoots Washington 8-5 in the period, most of the Hurricanes’ surge happening near the end of the period. The Capitals have only nine shots through two periods.

Hurricanes go on power play

Trevor van Riemsdyk is called for slashing Shayne Gostisbehere. Tom Wilson blocks a Gostisbehere shot. Seth Jarvis hits the crossbar and post after a Hurricanes steal right before the second period ends. Penalty will carry over into the third period.

Alexander Nikishin starts flurry

He steals the puck from Alex Ovechkin and the Hurricanes pin the Capitals in the zone. Nikishin gets off a nice shot during the flurry.

Tom Wilson crunches Seth Jarvis

Jarvis is knocked down along the boards.

Hurricanes go on power play

Anthony Beauvillier called for interference. Hurricanes get one shot as Capitals kill it off.

Capitals go on power play

Hurricanes defenseman Alexander Nikishin gets his first NHL penalty as he trips Pierre-Luc Dubois. Alex Ovechkin is spending time at the point instead of his office in the left faceoff circle. Hurricanes kill off the penalty.

Capitals goal taken away

The Capitals have come out strong in this period and Matt Roy beats Frederik Andersen with a slap shot. Hurricanes coach Rod Brind’Amour challenges for offsides and the review shows Connor McMichael entering the zone ahead of the puck earlier in the sequence. No goal. Still tied 1-1.

Second period underway

Score is 1-1.

End of first period: Capitals 1, Hurricanes 1

The Capitals, trying to stave off elimination, scored in the first period for the first time in the series as Anthony Beauvillier took advantage of a bad bounce to tie the game. Logan Thompson didn’t look good on the opening goal by Jordan Staal, but he made up for it with his save on Logan Stankoven, who had a wide-open net. Shots are 8-4 Carolina after the Hurricanes’ late flurry.

Logan Thompson makes great save

Thompson appeared to be out of position after stopping Taylor Hall but he reaches back and gets his stick on Logan Stankoven’s rebound shot.

Hurricanes-Capitals score: Washington ties it up

Hurricanes defenseman Jaccob Slavin’s attempted pass off the back boards to his defensive partner takes a bad bounce and ends up next to Frederik Andersen. Anthony Beauvillier picks up the loose puck and ties the game. Hurricanes 1, Capitals 1

Hurricanes-Capitals score: Carolina takes lead

Jordan Staal beats Logan Thompson high glove side from the right faceoff circle after Jordan Martinook wins a battle along the boards. Hurricanes 1, Capitals 0

Capitals go on power play

Dmitry Orlov is called for hooking. Capitals still without a shot in the game. They pick up their first as Alex Ovechkin sets up John Carlson for a shot from the left faceoff circle. But Frederik Andersen makes a save and penalty is killed. Carolina had some short-handed chances.

Game underway

Sebastian Aho line vs. the Aliaksei Protas line.

What time is Hurricanes vs. Capitals Game 5?

Game 5 of the Hurricanes-Capitals series will start at 7 p.m. ET at Washington.

How to watch Hurricanes vs. Capitals playoff game: TV, stream

Time: 7 p.m. ET
Location: Capital One Arena in Washington
TV: TNT, TruTV
Stream: Sling TV, Max

Washington Capitals lines

Carolina Hurricanes lines

Alexander Nikishin making NHL debut

The 6-4 Russian defenseman was taken by Carolina in the third round in the 2020 draft. The 23-year-old had been playing with St. Petersburg SKA in the Kontinental Hockey League. Jalen Chatfield had been banged up recently.

Capitals call up goaltender

The Capitals have recalled goaltender Clay Stevenson from the Hershey Bears of the American Hockey League, but coach Spencer Carbery says No. 1 goalie Logan Thompson is fine. The move was made, Carbery said, because backup Charlie Lindgren is dealing with personal stuff.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The Denver Nuggets were on the brink of elimination from the 2025 NBA playoffs, and one of their stars was dealing with an illness in their do-or-die game.

Guard Jamal Murray was added to the Nuggets’ injury report around 3:30 p.m. ET Thursday due to an illness. He was listed as questionable for Game 6 of the second-round series against the Oklahoma City Thunder, but in an update posted roughly 45 minutes before the scheduled tip-off, the Nuggets said he would be ‘available.’

Boy was he. He started and kicked off the Nuggets’ scoring with a four-point play. He finished with 25 points, grabbed eight rebounds and dished seven assists in 42 minutes of play as the Nuggets forced a Game 7 with a 119-107 win.

Murray didn’t shed much light on what illness he is dealing with, but after the game he said: ‘I was always going to play.’

Game 7 is Sunday (3:30 p.m. ET, ABC) in Oklahoma City.

Murray was the second-leading scorer for Denver in the regular season behind Nikola Jokic, and he’s been the Nuggets’ No. 2 scorer in the playoffs with 22.3 points, 5.3 assists and 4.9 rebounds per game entering Game 6. He averaged 21.4 points per game in the first five contests against Oklahoma City and was coming off a 28-point performance in Denver’s 112-105 Game 5 defeat.

The USA TODAY app gets you to the heart of the news — fastDownload for award-winning coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, the eNewspaper and more.

(This story has been updated with new information.)

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The 2025 PGA Championship, the year’s second major, is underway, as the first round kicked off on Thursday at Quail Hollow in Charlotte, North Carolina.

The field of 156 of the world’s best golfers is a battleground for the top three players in World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler, Masters winner Rory McIlroy, and defending champion Xander Schauffele, all vying for the Wanamaker Trophy.

The last time the PGA Championship graced North Carolina, Justin Thomas emerged victorious, winning the major in 2017 and aims for his third PGA title. Now, all eyes are on who will take the title this year.

Anticipation is high as the major heads into Round 2, and here are Friday’s tee times. With the field of golfers eager to make the cut and advance into the weekend.

2025 PGA Championship pairings, Friday tee times

*All times listed are Eastern

Tee No. 1

7:00 a.m. – Keith Mitchell, Bob Sowards, Adam Hadwin
7:11 a.m. – Eric Cole, Eric Steger, Cam Davis
7:22 a.m. – Austin Eckroat, Brian Bergstol, Jacob Bridgeman
7:33 a.m. – Niklas Norgaard, Byeong Hun An, J.J. Spaun
7:44 a.m. – Patrick Rodgers, Nick Taylor, Dean Burmester
7:55 a.m. – Joe Highsmith, Cameron Young, Aaron Rai
8:06 a.m. – Tom Hoge, Matthieu Pavon, Taylor Pendrith
8:17 a.m. – Rasmus Neergaard-Petersen, Patton Kizzire, Matt McCarty
8:28 a.m. – Tyler Collet, Jimmy Walker, Richard Bland
8:39 a.m. – Jason Dufner, Michael Thorbjornsen, Shaun Micheel
8:50 a.m. – Rafael Campos, Ryan Lenahan, Matt Wallace
9:01 a.m. – Jhonattan Vegas, Elvis Smylie, Brian Campbell
9:12 a.m. – Kevin Yu, Larkin Gross, John Keefer
12:30 p.m. – John Parry, Justin Hicks, Ryan Fox
12:41 p.m. – Andre Chi, Patrick Fishburn, Seamus Power
12:52 p.m. – Max McGreevy, Alex Smalley, Sepp Straka
1:03 p.m. – Brooks Koepka, Rickie Fowler, Shane Lowry
1:14 p.m. – Phil Mickelson, Tommy Fleetwood, Jason Day
1:25 p.m. – Jon Rahm, Patrick Cantlay, Matt Fitzpatrick
1:36 p.m. – Corey Conners, Min Woo Lee, Rasmus Højgaard
1:47 p.m. – Rory McIlroy, Xander Schauffele, Scottie Scheffler
1:58 p.m. – Tony Finau, Nicolai Højgaard, Max Greyserman
2:09 p.m. – Andrew Novak, Keegan Bradley, Maverick McNealy
2:20 p.m. – Akshay Bhatia, Denny McCarthy, Sam Burns
2:31 p.m. – John Catlin, Garrick Higgo, Jesse Droemer
2:42 p.m. – Eugenio Chacarra, Rupe Taylor, Justin Lower

Tee No. 10

7:05 a.m. – Michael Kartrude, Sami Valimaki, Jake Knapp
7:16 a.m. – Erik van Rooyen, Michael Block, Mackenzie Hughes
7:27 a.m. – Lucas Glover, Max Homa, Joaquin Niemann
7:38 a.m. – Tyrrell Hatton, Will Zalatoris, Adam Scott
7:49 a.m. – Justin Thomas, Dustin Johnson, Collin Morikawa
8:00 a.m. – Jordan Spieth, Patrick Reed, Ludvig Aberg
8:11 a.m. – Hideki Matsuyama, Wyndham Clark, Tom Kim
8:22 a.m. – Bryson DeChambeau, Viktor Hovland, Gary Woodland
8:33 a.m. – Sergio Garcia, Daniel Berger, Russell Henley
8:44 a.m. – Justin Rose, Cameron Smith, Brian Harman
8:55 a.m. – Brandon Bingaman, Davis Riley, Sungjae Im
9:06 a.m. – Takumi Kanaya, Christiaan Bezuidenhout, Tom McKibbin
9:17 a.m. – Keita Nakajima, Timothy Wiseman, Beau Hossler
12:25 p.m. – Luke Donald, Padraig Harrington, Martin Kaymer
12:36 p.m. – John Somers, Taylor Moore, David Puig
12:47 p.m. – Kurt Kitayama, Nic Ishee, Alex Noren
12:58 p.m. – J.T. Poston, Ryo Hisatsune, Tom Johnson
1:09 p.m. – Davis Thompson, Bud Cauley, Nico Echavarria
1:20 p.m. – Harris English, Michael Kim, Thomas Detry
1:31 p.m. – Stephan Jaeger, Chris Kirk, Robert MacIntyre
1:42 p.m. – Thorbjørn Olesen, Karl Vilips, Laurie Canter
1:53 p.m. – Si Woo Kim, Sam Stevens, Rico Hoey
2:04 p.m. – Bobby Gates, Lee Hodges, Ben Griffin
2:15 p.m. – Thriston Lawrence, Nick Dunlap, Harry Hall
2:26 p.m. – Greg Koch, Marco Penge, Ryan Gerard
2:37 p.m. – Dylan Newman, Daniel van Tonder, Victor Perez

PGA Championship 2025 leaderboard

1. Jhonattan Vegas -7
T2. Cam Davis -5
T2. Ryan Gerard -5
T4. Stephan Jaeger -4
T4. Luke Donald -4
T4. Alex Smalley -4
T4. Ryan Fox -4
T4. Aaron Rai -4

See the full leaderboard here.

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