Archive

2025

Browsing

The Cooper Flagg sweepstakes will have a lot more clarity Monday evening when the NBA conducts its annual draft lottery and determines the official order for the June 25-26 proceedings.

The Utah Jazz (17-65 this past season), Washington Wizards (18-64) and Charlotte Hornets (19-63) have the best odds to win the lottery, and could all use a player like Flagg to accelerate their rebuilding process.

However, there’s still a mathematical chance that any of 14 teams could wind up with the No. 1 pick if the ping pong balls fall just right.

Here’s everything you need to know about tonight’s draft lottery:

What time is NBA draft lottery?

The draft lottery gets underway on Monday, May 12, at 7 p.m. ET.

How to watch NBA draft lottery

TV: ESPN
Streaming: ESPN+, Fubo

How does NBA draft lottery work?

According to the NBA, ‘Fourteen ping-pong balls numbered 1 through 14 will be placed in a lottery machine. There are 1,001 possible combinations when four balls are drawn out of 14, without regard to their order of selection. Before the lottery, 1,000 of those 1,001 combinations will be assigned to the 14 participating lottery teams.

‘All 14 balls are placed in the lottery machine and they are mixed for 20 seconds, and then the first ball is removed. The remaining balls are mixed in the lottery machine for another 10 seconds, and then the second ball is drawn. There is a 10-second mix, and then the third ball is drawn. There is a 10-second mix, and then the fourth ball is drawn. The team that has been assigned that combination will receive the No. 1 pick. The same process is repeated with the same ping-pong balls and lottery machine for the second through fourth picks.’

The remaining lottery teams are slotted in order of their draft odds.

The lottery is conducted in a separate room just before ESPN’s draft lottery show. Select media, NBA officials and representatives of the participating teams and the accounting firm Ernst & Young will be in attendance in the room for the drawings.

2025 NBA draft lottery odds

Percent chance of winning the No. 1 overall pick in the 2025 NBA draft:

Utah Jazz: 14%
Washington Wizards: 14%
Charlotte Hornets: 14%
New Orleans Pelicans: 12.5%
Philadelphia 76ers: 10.5% (pick may be conveyed to Oklahoma City if it falls outside of the top six)
Brooklyn Nets: 9%
Toronto Raptors: 7.5%
San Antonio Spurs: 6%
Phoenix Suns: 3.8% (Pick to Houston via Brooklyn)
Portland Trail Blazers: 3.7%
Dallas Mavericks: 1.8%
Chicago Bulls: 1.7%
Sacramento Kings: 0.8% (pick may be conveyed to Atlanta if it’s not in the top 12)
Atlanta Hawks: 0.7% (pick to San Antonio)

The three teams with the best odds – the Jazz, Wizards and Hornets – all have a 52.1% chance of landing a top-four pick.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The panic buttons are getting pushed all across Major League Baseball.

Pittsburgh Pirates manager Derek Shelton? Fired, after a 12-26 start and six seasons where the franchise put the overmatched skipper in an untenable spot. Colorado Rockies manager Bud Black? Escorted into early retirement, after the Rockies compiled one of the worst starts in major league history and posted a casual 21-0 loss – yes, that’s 21 runs, not three touchdowns.

A few weeks ago, the Minnesota Twins might have fallen into a similar sinkhole. But after losing their first four games, 11 of their first 15 and 15 of their first 22, they are, stunningly, in the black.

An eight-game winning streak sends Minnesota roaring into this week with a 21-20 record, a seven-spot gain in USA TODAY Sports’ power rankings. The Twins are suddenly perched just five games out in a startlingly competitive American League Central. Hot streaks are in vogue there: the Kansas City Royals just completed a 16-2 heater to stay within hailing distance of the indomitable Detroit Tigers.

A look at our updated rankings:

1. Los Angeles Dodgers (-)

As if the pitching concerns weren’t already real, Rōki Sasaki has a 1.49 WHIP.

2. New York Mets (-)

The Griffin Canning Joyride continues – a 2.36 ERA in eight starts.

3. San Diego Padres (-)

Once fired Bud Black as manager, and then got him fired with a Coors Field explosion.

4. Detroit Tigers (-)

Hamstring strain sends Casey Mize to the IL.

5. San Francisco Giants (-)

Heliot Ramos on an 18-for-43 (.419) heater.

6. Chicago Cubs (-)

Pete Crow-Armstrong hits his 10th home run – matching his 2024 total.

7. New York Yankees (-)

Giancarlo Stanton taking batting practice in progression back from elbow malady.

8. Philadelphia Phillies (+1)

Bryson Stott thriving in leadoff role.

9. Seattle Mariners (-1)

Bryce Miller’s ERA balloons to 5.22.

10. Cleveland Guardians (-)

Gabriel Arias’ .735 OPS more than 100 points better than career mark entering year.

11. Kansas City Royals (+5)

Set a club record by giving up just four runs in four-game sweep of White Sox.

12. St. Louis Cardinals (+10)

Ivan Herrera returns from IL and roster has four-ish catchers on it now.

13. Boston Red Sox (-2)

Sometimes you just gotta let Raffy cook.

14. Houston Astros (-1)

Hunter Brown tied for major league lead with six wins, trails only Max Fried with 1.48 ERA.

15. Arizona Diamondbacks (-)

A four-game split with Dodgers – though they gave up 22 runs in the two Ls.

16. Toronto Blue Jays (+2)

Sweep in their Seattle home-away-from-home gets them back to .500.

17. Milwaukee Brewers (+2)

Have not been swept since ugly opening series at Yankee Stadium.

18. Minnesota Twins (+7)

Bullpen posts a 0.43 ERA during 6-0 homestand.

19. Texas Rangers (-5)

Corey Seager’s barking hamstring might put him on the IL.

20. Cincinnati Reds (-8)

Real feast-or-famine vibe to this offense.

21. Atlanta Braves (-1)

Spencer Strider almost back from hamstring injury.

22. Tampa Bay Rays (-5)

11-17 in their temporary Steinbrenner Field digs.

23. Athletics (+1)

Luis Severino has the Yolo County yips: His home ERA balloons to 6.75.

24. Washington Nationals (-3)

Worst bullpen in baseball (7.13 ERA) makes team look far less competitive than it is.

25. Baltimore Orioles (-2)

Have lost eight of 11 series, with two splits.

26. Los Angeles Angels (-)

Matthew Lugo gets first major league hit, homer over weekend.

27. Miami Marlins (-)

Sandy Alcantara loses five consecutive starts for first time in career.

28. Pittsburgh Pirates (-)

Affable Don Kelly wins first game as manager.

29. Chicago White Sox (-)

Tim Elko’s first major league hit a big one: Go-ahead three-run homer.

30. Colorado Rockies (-)

They fired their manager, but troubles have only just begun.

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 post appeared first on USA TODAY

House and Senate Republicans have been working for months on a sweeping piece of legislation addressing a litany of President Donald Trump’s agenda items.

Such a bill is possible via the budget reconciliation process, which allows the party controlling Congress and the White House to pass broad policy overhauls while totally sidelining the minority. It lowers the Senate’s threshold for passage from 60 votes to 51, lining it up with the House’s simple majority rules.

However, one of the caveats is that the measures tucked into the bill must deal with taxes, spending or the national debt. One key person gets the final say over what is relevant to that sphere – the Senate parliamentarian. 

The parliamentarian, who heads the Senate’s parliamentarian office, is a nonpartisan, unelected role appointed by the Senate majority leader. It does not have a fixed term.

The person’s role is to advise the Senate and its staff on the chamber’s rules and precedent. The normally low-profile role has been thrust into the spotlight several times in congressional history, however, particularly surrounding reconciliation.

‘At the end of the day, it really is a judgment call. And sometimes you’re making a judgment call where you’re relying on similar situations or maybe analogous situations where we dealt with reconciliation in the past, maybe other times you’re dealing with a completely novel issue, and you’re having to figure it out,’ one former senior Senate aide described to Fox News Digital.

‘Or maybe, and this happens a lot, people are trying get things through, debating or citing past provisions of previous reconciliation bills…saying ‘Hey, this provision is very similar, and this got through.’’

The Senate parliamentarian leads the ‘Byrd bath,’ a key part of the reconciliation process where the legislation is carefully examined, and any measures found not relevant to the contours of reconciliation are stripped out.

Notably, progressive Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., called for the firing of the Senate parliamentarian in 2021 when she forced Senate Democrats to scuttle their $15 per hour minimum wage effort from their reconciliation bill at the time.

That same parliamentarian, Elizabeth MacDonough, who was appointed by the late former Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., is still serving today and has largely garnered bipartisan respect for her handling of the role.

MacDonough, appointed in 2012, is the first woman in the job. She was a part of the parliamentarian’s office before that and briefly served as an attorney in the Department of Justice, according to NPR.

‘I would say that this particular parliamentarian sees herself more as, almost an administrative law judge, and I think that she has generally viewed some of the things that the Senate has been allowed to get away with in reconciliation as a departure from precedent,’ said Paul Winfree, president of the Economic Policy Innovation Center and a former Senate Budget Committee staffer himself, told Fox News Digital.

‘I think that she has more of a ‘small-c’ conservative approach to what is allowable. At the same time, a lot of what is considered to be allowable under reconciliation is dependent on estimates that are produced by the Congressional Budget Office or the joint tax committee.’

When asked if any of the current public reconciliation plans could face issues with the parliamentarian, both people who spoke with Fox News Digital floated an accounting maneuver that would largely obscure the cost of permanently extending Trump’s 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act.

That scoring method, known as current policy baseline, would zero out the cost of extending the 2017 tax cuts by measuring it as an extension of the current economic conditions, rather than factoring in how much less the government is taking in via tax revenues with the cuts in effect.

Senate Republicans have signaled they believe they have the legal basis for moving forward with that calculation, however, without the parliamentarian’s say.

‘We think the law is very clear, and ultimately the budget committee chairman makes that determination,’ Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., told reporters last month.

The Senate GOP aide who spoke with Fox News Digital said, ‘If that were to have fallen out or just, you didn’t know what was going to happen, that would just affect so many provisions in the bill.’

‘Because all of a sudden, you know, all these things start scoring [as an increase to the deficit]…and things become more problematic with your instructions,’ the former aide said.

Winfree, however, said Republicans have appeared to be mindful overall with how they have written the text so far.

‘They’ve actually been pretty conservative in how they’ve approached the language,’ he said.

He said it was ‘possible some of the immigration provisions could get a second look,’ but that even then, he believed it would ‘ultimately be okay.’

Republican leaders have said they hope to have a bill on Trump’s desk by Fourth of July.

Fox News Digital reached out to the current Senate Majority Leader’s office for comment.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

President Donald Trump declared Monday that the U.S. ‘will no longer tolerate profiteering and price gouging from Big Pharma’ as he signed an executive order implementing what his administration is calling ‘most favored nations drug pricing.’ 

‘The principle is simple – whatever the lowest price paid for a drug in other developed countries, that is the price that Americans will pay,’ Trump said at the White House. ‘Some prescription drug and pharmaceutical prices will be reduced almost immediately by 50 to 80 to 90%.’ 

Trump said that ‘starting today, the United States will no longer subsidize the healthcare of foreign countries, which is what we were doing. We’re subsidizing others’ healthcare, the countries where they paid a small fraction of what for the same drug that what we pay many, many times more for and will no longer tolerate profiteering and price gouging from Big Pharma.’ 

‘Even though the United States is home to only 4% of the world’s population, pharmaceutical companies make more than two thirds of their profits in America. So think of that with 4% of the population, the pharmaceutical companies make most of their money. Most of their profits from America. That’s not a good thing,’ Trump continued.  

‘I think, by the way, pharmaceutical – I have great respect for these companies and for the people that run them. I really do, and I think they did one of the greatest jobs in history for their company, convincing people for many years that this was a fair system. Nobody really understood why, but I figured it out. For years, pharmaceutical and drug companies have said that research and development costs were what they are, and for no reason whatsoever, they had to be borne by America alone,’ Trump said. ‘Not anymore, they don’t.’ 

The White House said that the executive order ‘directs the U.S. Trade Representative and Secretary of Commerce to take action to ensure foreign countries are not engaged in practices that purposefully and unfairly undercut market prices and drive price hikes in the United States.

‘The Order instructs the Administration to communicate price targets to pharmaceutical manufacturers to establish that America, the largest purchaser and funder of prescription drugs in the world, gets the best deal,’ the White House said.

‘The Secretary of Health and Human Services will establish a mechanism through which American patients can buy their drugs directly from manufacturers who sell to Americans at a ‘Most-Favored-Nation’ price, bypassing middlemen,’ the White House added. ‘If drug manufacturers fail to offer most-favored-nation pricing, the Order directs the Secretary of Health and Human Services to: (1) propose rules that impose most-favored-nation pricing; and (2) take other aggressive measures to significantly reduce the cost of prescription drugs to the American consumer and end anticompetitive practices.’

Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said alongside Trump, ‘I never thought that this would happen in my lifetime.’

‘I have a couple of kids who are Democrats, are big Bernie Sanders fans. And when I told them that this was going to happen, they had tears in their eyes. Because they thought, this is never going to happen,’ he said. ‘And we finally have a president who is willing to stand up for the American people.’ 

Trump said earlier this morning that drug prices would be ‘cut by 59%.’ 

The Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America trade group opposes the order, saying, ‘This Foreign First Pricing scheme is a bad deal for American patients.’ 

‘Importing foreign prices will cut billions of dollars from Medicare with no guarantee that it helps patients or improves their access to medicines,’ the group’s president, Stephen Ubl, said in a statement provided to Fox News Digital. ‘It will jeopardize the hundreds of billions our member companies are planning to invest in America, making us more reliant on China for innovative medicines.’ 

‘To lower costs for Americans, we need to address the real reasons U.S. patients are paying more for their medicines. We are the only country in the world that lets PBMs, insurers and hospitals take 50% of every dollar spent on medicines,’ Ubl also said. ‘In fact, hospital markups in 340B and the rebates and fees paid to middlemen in the U.S. often exceed the total cost of medicines oversees. Giving more of this money to patients will lower their medicine costs and reduce the gap with European prices.’ 

Fox News Digital’s Greg Wehner contributed to this report.  

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

President Donald Trump defended the U.S. preparing to accept a jumbo jet gift from Qatar’s royal family to serve as a temporary Air Force One as Boeing failed to roll out a new Air Force One fleet in a timely manner. 

‘We’re very disappointed that it’s taking Boeing so long to build a new Air Force One,’ Trump said during a press conference on drug prices Monday morning. ‘You know, we have an Air Force One that’s 40 years old. And if you take a look at that, compared to the new plane of the equivalent, you know, stature at the time, it’s not even the same ballgame.’ 

‘When I first came in, I signed an order to get (the new Air Force One fleet) built,’ he continued. ‘I took it over from the Obama administration, they had originally agreed. I got the price down much lower. And then, when the election didn’t exactly work out the way that it should have, a lot of work was not done on the plane because a lot of people didn’t know they made change orders. That was so stupid, so ridiculous. And it ended up being a total mess, a real mess.’ 

Reports spread Sunday morning that the Trump administration was expected to accept a $400 million Boeing 747-8 jumbo jet from Qatar’s royal family. ABC News reported that Trump would use the jet until the end of his term, when it would be given to his presidential library. 

Trump confirmed Sunday evening on Truth Social that the Department of Defense would receive the 747 as a gift, while railing against Democrats as ‘world class losers’ for criticizing the gift.  

‘So the fact that the Defense Department is getting a GIFT, FREE OF CHARGE, of a 747 aircraft to replace the 40 year old Air Force One, temporarily, in a very public and transparent transaction, so bothers the Crooked Democrats that they insist we pay, TOP DOLLAR, for the plane,’ Trump wrote. ‘Anybody can do that! The Dems are World Class Losers!!! MAGA.’

He continued in the press conference Monday that when he returned to office in January, his administration informed him construction on two new Air Force Ones was ‘way behind’ on the schedule for completion. 

‘If we can get a 747 as a contribution to our Defense Department to use during a couple of years while they’re building the other ones. I think that was a very nice gesture. Now, I could be a stupid person to say, ‘Oh, no, we don’t want a free plane.’ We give free things, we’ll take one, two, and it helps us out. Because again, we’re talking about we have a 40-year-old aircraft. The money we spend, the maintenance we spend on those planes to keep them tippy-top is astronomical,’ he added, calling the gift a ‘great gesture from Qatar.’ 

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt also brushed off concern over the Qatari royal family donating a Boeing jumbo jet to the U.S. Department of Defense, arguing on Monday there will be no quid pro quo arrangement and that the donation is under legal review to ensure full compliance with the law. 

‘The Qatari Government has graciously offered to donate a plane to the Department of Defense,’ Leavitt said on ‘Fox & Friends’ Monday morning. ‘The legal details of that are still being worked out. But, of course, any donation to this government is always done in full compliance with the law, and we commit ourselves to the utmost transparency, and we will continue to do that.’

When asked if the administration was worried that accepting the gift could lead to a quid pro quo situation where Qatar expects something in return, Leavitt shot down such a narrative. 

‘Absolutely not because they know President Trump, and they know he only works with the interests of the American public in mind,’ Leavitt responded. 

Rep. Ritchie Torres, D-N.Y., wrote to the Government Accountability Office on Sunday, calling for an ethics investigation into the gift, claiming it would be the single most expensive gift ever received by a U.S. president. 

‘I am writing to express alarm over reports that President Donald Trump is poised to accept a luxury aircraft — a Boeing 747-8 — from the government of Qatar,’ Torres wrote. ‘The plane, so opulent it has been described as a ‘palace in the sky,’ is set to be made available to President Trump for official use as Air Force One and then for private use once he leaves office.’ 

‘This ‘flying grift’ is merely the latest chapter in a tawdry tale of presidential profiteering unprecedented in American history,’ Torres added.

Presidents have for decades circumvented the Emoluments Clause — which prohibits federal elected officials from accepting gifts from foreign governments or monarchs — by classifying gifts they receive while in office as gifts to the office of the president. Those gifts are then cataloged and stored as part of their presidential libraries after leaving office. 

While presidents maintain some level of access to the items in their libraries, they do not own them directly and must purchase them from the federal government in order to secure private ownership.

Leavitt said in a comment to Fox Digital Monday morning that all gifts received by a foreign government would be above board and in compliance with the law. 

‘Any gift given by a foreign government is always accepted in full compliance with all applicable laws,’ Leavitt said. ‘President Trump’s Administration is committed to full transparency.’ 

Trump is headed to the Middle East and is expected to meet with leaders in Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates. A Trump administration official confirmed to Fox News Digital that the plane will not be presented to the president nor accepted by Trump during his trip abroad. 

The current Air Force One fleet includes two aging planes, both of which are more than 30 years old and have been eyed for replacement since at least the Obama administration. 

Trump railed against a government deal with Boeing to build a new fleet of Air Force Ones ahead of his first administration, posting on social media in December 2016 that the ‘costs are out of control, more than $4 billion’ to build the two aircraft.

Trump in 2018 awarded Boeing a $3.9 billion fixed-price agreement to manufacture two new jets. The construction of the jets, however, is not expected to be completed until 2029. 

‘Boeing is proud to build the next generation of Air Force One, providing American Presidents with a flying White House at outstanding value to taxpayers,’ Boeing said in 2018 after ironing out a deal with Trump for the creation of the new fleet. ‘President Trump negotiated a good deal on behalf of the American people.’ 

‘The possible transfer of an aircraft for temporary use as Air Force One is currently under consideration between Qatar’s Ministry of Defense and the U.S. Department of Defense, but the matter remains under review by the respective legal departments, and no decision has been made,’ Qatari embassy official Ali Al-Ansari told ABC News Sunday. 

When not in office as president, Trump has traveled in his private Boeing 757 jet, dubbed Trump Force One. That jet is famously emblazoned with Trump’s last name and was frequently seen in the backdrop of campaign rallies.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

China has agreed to ‘open itself up to American business’ following trade negotiations between Washington, D.C., and Beijing on Saturday, according to President Donald Trump.

The arrangement was arguably the most significant development stemming from the trade negotiations, Trump told reporters Monday at the White House. Plans have yet to be finalized and ‘papered,’ but Trump said that China is on board with the agreement. 

‘The biggest thing to me is the opening up,’ Trump told reporters Monday during an announcement regarding an executive order on drug prices in the U.S. ‘It would be, I think it would be fantastic for our businesses if we could go in and compete and compete with China. It would be a lot of jobs for China.’

‘I think it’s maybe the most important thing to happen, because if you think about it, we opened up our country to China,’ Trump said. ‘They come. We don’t. I mean, they have very few restrictions. and they didn’t open their country to us, never made sense to them. It’s not fair. And they’ve agreed to open China fully open…and I think it’s going to be fantastic.’ 

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent launched trade negotiations with China in Geneva on Saturday, resulting in a deal that would temporarily ease up on tariffs for 90 days.  

Specifically, the trade deal stipulates that the U.S. will cut down its tariffs against Chinese imports from 145% to 30%. Likewise, China will reduce its tariffs against U.S. imports from 125% to 10%. 

However, tariffs against some Chinese imports will not lighten up, according to Trump. Existing tariffs against cars, steel and aluminum will still remain in place, he said. 

Meanwhile, Bessent signaled that more talks with China would occur in the near future and that both Washington and Beijing would like to continue advancing negotiations. 

‘I would imagine that in the next few weeks, we will be meeting again to get rolling on a more fulsome agreement,’ Bessent said in an interview Monday morning with CNBC. 

Bessent previously warned that the tariffs could cost China up to 10 million jobs, and said that it was up to Beijing whether it would loosen up the tariffs or not.  

‘I think that over time we will see that the Chinese tariffs are unsustainable for China,’ Bessent told reporters at the White House on April 29. ‘I’ve seen some very large numbers over the past few days that show if these numbers stay on, Chinese could lose 10 million jobs very quickly. And even if there is a drop in the tariffs that they could lose five million jobs.’

The deal with China comes days after the U.S. and the U.K. inked a trade deal of their own, which kept existing 10% tariffs in place against U.K. goods but removed some import taxes on items like steel and cars. 

‘With this deal, the U.K. joins the United States in affirming that reciprocity and fairness is an essential and vital principle of international trade,’ Trump said Thursday. ‘The deal includes billions of dollars of increased market access for American exports, especially in agriculture, dramatically increasing access for American beef, ethanol and virtually all of the products produced by our great farmers.’ 

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

It’s the most overlooked story of the college football offseason, hidden beneath the never-ending drone of pay for play and the transfer portal and even more legal gymnastics. 

Lincoln Riley may have finally figured it out at Southern California. Or at least, he’s on the road to it. 

The same road that Pete Carroll used to build the Trojans into a 2000s monster, awakening years of underachieving with a tried and true formula. 

Recruit elite players, develop elite players. 

Win championships.

The fact that USC has the nation’s No.1 recruiting class in the 247Sports Composite heading into the critical summer months is one thing. That Riley has done it without significant success – and frankly, more underachieving – can’t be good news for coaches and general managers around the nation who know what can be when the Trojans are rolling.

Because right now, it’s not. Yet, anyway. 

Riley is 15-13 in his last 28 games at one of the top five jobs in college football. The university is still on the hook for a Jimbo Fisher-sized buyout, so he’s not going anywhere. 

But there’s something about the way last season ended, how a physical bowl win over Texas A&M gave the Trojans wins over SEC heavyweights to begin the season (LSU) and end it. 

How that statement then dovetailed into offseason recruiting momentum for 2025 and 2026. How that momentum, and building organically through high school recruiting – and the play of quarterback Jayden Maiava at the end of last season – allowed Riley to pass on low-hanging fruit.

BEST OF BEST: Our ranking of college football’s top 25 coaches

Tennessee transfer Nico Iamaleava was available last month, and USC didn’t jump. Didn’t need the headache, didn’t want it. 

The Riley of three years ago, desperate to flip the roster any way he could and find a quick fix, would’ve thrown money at Iamaleava. Now he’s doubling down on Maiava, and a group of second- and third-year players he and his staff recruited and developed — who are beginning to find it. 

“It’s a together team right now,” Riley said last month. “Let’s put things right in front of these guys because they want to be great. They want to be coached hard, they want to be pushed.”

That, more than anything, could be the defining moment of Riley’s three uneven seasons at USC. Not the empty calories of Caleb Williams’ Heisman Trophy season in 2022, but a real, tangible moment of growth.

A reason for the university to feel better about its $120 million investment in a head coach (including an estimated $15-20 million buyout of former coach Clay Helton), to see what could be after two ugly seasons of what isn’t.

To see through six losses in 2024, and understand that four were by a combined 12 points and five were one-possession games.

Nothing is easy about the USC job. Carroll and his charisma, and the way his personality and vibe fit Los Angeles like those cool summer nights at Chavez Ravine, made it hip again. Made the Trojans must-see in a city where everyone and everything fights for oxygen.

You can’t expect to plop a lifelong Texan into the job – the experience – and think there won’t be a transition. It’s a long way from the town of Muleshoe (population, 5,000) in West Texas, much less Norman, Oklahoma, to fashionably late in L.A.

Make no mistake, 15-13 in the last 28 games isn’t good. In fact, it’s dangerously close to the world of have we made a mistake?

USC isn’t paying an ungodly amount of money to Riley and his staff, and committing a ridiculous amount of NIL funds for the roster buildout, to lose to the Minnesotas and Marylands of the world.

Riley likes this team and its makeup, likes the way it practices and prepares. But to get USC back to must-see, he must win now — enough to prove the program is closer to reaching the now rare but undeniable process. 

Recruit elite players, develop elite players. Win championships. 

The 2026 recruiting class is far ahead of the field, and USC is still high on the list for six of the Top 25 players in the 247Sports composite. 

The surge of momentum is quietly building, lost in the sea of change within the sport. 

“There seems to be a genuine bond right now with these guys that’s fun to see,” Riley said.

If Riley truly has figured it out, USC will eventually be a problem for everyone.  

Matt Hayes is the senior national college football writer for USA TODAY Sports Network. Follow him on X at @MattHayesCFB.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The Colorado Rockies resisted the urge year after year, loss after loss, and failure after failure.

They knew their historically dismal start wasn’t manager Bud Black’s fault.

They also knew Sunday that with a 7-33 record that they had no choice.

Just one day after Rockies GM Bill Schmidt gave a vote of confidence to Black on Saturday afternoon, hoping to stop the noise that he was to blame, along came a 21-0 loss later that night, and the decision was made.

So, only in Rockies fashion, they have their biggest victory of the season, winning 9-3 over the San Diego Padres, and then wreck the euphoria by announcing Black was fired minutes after the game.

“I don’t think [Hall of Fame manager] Casey Stengel could change the outcome of that ballclub,’’ said Los Angeles Dodgers manager Dave Roberts, who was on Black’s coaching staff in San Diego, and one of his closest friends. “That’s not the manager’s fault. Obviously, they felt they needed a chance in voice or direction, but for me, there’s not many people that are better than Buddy Black. It’s very disappointing. It’s not his fault.’’

Indeed, in Black’s first season as Rockies manager in 2017, he took the team to the playoffs with a lineup that had Trevor Story, DJ LeMahieu, Mark Reynolds, Nolan Arenado, Carlos Gonzalez and Charlie Blackmon.

They combined to hit 150 home runs and drive in 605 runs.

This year’s team ranks last in the league in hitting (.219), second-to-wost in OPS (.646) with an MLB-worst 5.77 ERA.

They don’t have a single hitter batting above .290, only two hitting above .250 with no one hitting more than six homers despite playing in the hitter-friendly Coors Field.

“It’s tough, I don’t think it was Buddy’s fault, much,” Rockies infielder Ryan McMahon — who’s hitting .211 with six homers, 11 RBI and a .736 OPS — told the Denver Post. “We didn’t play to our capabilities, but this is the direction the organization decided to go, so we’ll roll with it. …

“Hey, it might be a kick in the ass. Like, heads up! We’re in a spot where we need to make some moves and start doing some stuff, or things like this are going to happen.”

The Rockies are one of only five teams since 1900 to lose 33 of their first 40 games, joining the 1904 Washington Senators, 1928 Philadelphia Phillies, 1932 Boston Red Sox and 1988 Baltimore Orioles. They are on pace to not only lose at least 100 games for the third consecutive season, but an MLB-record 134 games.

“Our play so far this season, especially coming off the last two seasons, has been unacceptable,’’ Rockies owner Dick Monfort said. “Our fans deserve better, and we are capable of better. While we all share responsibility in how this season has played out, these changes are necessary. We will use the remainder of 2025 to improve where we can on the field and to evaluate all areas of our operation so we can properly turn the page into the next chapter of Rockies baseball.’’

The author now will be 40-year-old third base coach Warren Schaeffer, who has been with the organization since 2015. He will be the interim manager the rest of the season. Clint Hurdle, who was just hired three weeks ago as the hitting coach to replace Hensley Meulens, is now the new bench coach, replacing Mike Redmond, who was fired.

The Rockies’ new hitting coaches will be Jordan Pacheco and Nick Wilson. Andy Martinez will be moved from the assistant hitting coach position to third base coach, replacing Schaeffer.

So that’s one manager and three coaches fired, and three positional changes on the staff, if you’re keeping score.

The new man on the hot seat is GM Bill Schmidt, who on Saturday told reporters that Black’s job was not in jeopardy.

Well, just in case it wasn’t clear, we found out that Monfort is the one calling the shots, not even letting Schmidt’s vote of confidence last 24 hours.

Black, who turns 68 next month, was in his ninth year as the Rockies’ manager. He led the Rockies to back-to-back playoff berths in 2017-2018, but they haven’t had a winning season since, with the Rockies suffering 100-loss seasons in consecutive seasons for the first time in franchise history. He was in the final year of his contract and was expected to retire after the season.

The Rockies made the early retirement decision for him, with Schaeffer becoming the eighth manager in franchise history.

“I believe that Warren is the right person to lead us forward for the remainder of this season, develop our young talent at the Major League level and get our club back to playing a better brand of baseball,” Schmidt said. “He has a great ability to connect with both veterans and young players and is an excellent communicator.’’

Well, if nothing else, Schaeffer might have some karma on his side.

When Black was fired in 2015 by the Padres, the man who replaced him for a day was Roberts, who since has won two World Series titles and is on the road to Cooperstown. Pat Murphy, who replaced Roberts one game later, was Craig Counsell’s bench coach in Milwaukee, and last season was the NL Manager of the Year.

The Rockies can only hope that history repeats itself as they dig out of the depths of the National League.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Kyle Schwarber extended his on-base streak to 46 games with a pair of home runs and Zack Wheeler worked seven dominant innings as the visiting Philadelphia Phillies beat the Cleveland Guardians 3-0 on Sunday night.

Schwarber hit a solo homer in the first and a two-run blast in the eighth, moving into a tie with the New York Yankees’ Aaron Judge for the major league lead with 14 home runs. His on-base streak is the fourth-longest in Phillies history, 10 behind Mike Schmidt’s 56-game run in 1981-82.

A native of Middletown, Ohio, Schwarber was booed each time he batted as a consequence of his heroics in the 2016 World Series, when his Chicago Cubs beat Cleveland in seven games.

Wheeler (4-1) gave up three hits, walked a pair and struck out eight in beating the Guardians for the first time in three career starts. The right-hander is 3-0 in his last five outings, and the Phillies have won 11 of 14.

Cleveland managed just three total hits against Wheeler, Jose Alvardo and closer Jordan Romano, who picked up his third save. The Guardians had four hits Saturday in a game started by Ranger Suarez of the Phillies.

Guardians right-hander Luis Ortiz (2-4) pitched six innings, giving up the first Schwarber homer and four total hits with nine strikeouts. He fell to 2-1 with a sparkling 0.95 ERA in four career appearances against Philadelphia.

Schwarber’s second homer came off Tim Herrin, who walked Bryson Stott upon entering the game in the eighth.

The teams split their first two games of the series. Cleveland won the opener 6-0 on a combined six-hitter started by Gavin Williams, and Philadelphia followed with a 7-1 victory fueled by Bryce Harper’s two-run homer and season-high three hits.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The Indiana Pacers have a commanding 3-1 lead in the Eastern Conference semifinals series against the Cleveland Cavaliers.

Myler Turner and the Pacers produced a dominant performance in the 129-109 Game 4 victory over the Cavaliers on Sunday night.

Turner had 20 points and seven rebounds for Indiana. Pascal Siakam finished with 21 points and six rebounds in the rout.

Darius Garland had 21 points and six assists in the loss for the Cavaliers. Donovan Mitchell did not play in the second half because of a reported ankle injury, and his status for Game 5 is uncertain.

The tensions ran high between the two teams as early as the first quarter, which featured an exchange between Pacers guard Bennedict Mathurin and Cavaliers forward De’Andre Hunter. Mathurin was given a Flagrant 2 foul for hitting Hunter and was ejected from the game.

USA TODAY Sports provided updates and highlights for Game 4 between the Cavaliers and Pacers:

Highlights: Pacers 129, Cavaliers 109

3Q: Pacers 109, Cavaliers 77

The Pacers had three players with 20 or more points through the first three quarters of play. Pascal Siakam had 21 points and six rebounds. Myles Turner and Obi Toppin each scored 20 points.

Darius Garland had 21 points for Cleveland.

Donovan Mitchell did not score in the third quarter and was back in the locker room during the period. Mitchell was reportedly dealing with an ankle injury and was listed as doubtful to return to the game.

Halftime: Pacers 80, Cavaliers 39

The Pacers continued to overwhelm the Cavaliers throughout the first half, finishing on a 19-2 scoring run to end the second quarter. The Cavs did not lead in the first half.

Indiana was successful from the 3-point line, finishing the first half with 60% after shooting 30-for-50.

The Cavaliers struggled from long range, shooting 5-for-19 (26.3 percent).

Myles Turner had a game-high 18 points in the first half. He shot 7-for-11 from the field, including 4-for-4 from the 3-point line.

Obi Toppin had 13 points off the bench for the Pacers. Donovan Mitchell had 12 points for the Cavaliers.

1Q: Pacers 38, Cavaliers 23

The Pacers built a solid lead in the opening period after leading by as many as 19 points in the game against the Cavaliers.

Things got chippy in the first quarter with both Pacers guard Bennedict Mathurin and Cavaliers forward De’Andre Hunter at the center of an exchange.

Mathurin was given a Flagrant 2 foul for hitting Hunter with a ‘closed fist.’ Mathurin was ejected from the game.

Hunter retaliated with a shove to Mathurin. Myles Turner also stepped in late, shoving Hunter. Both Turner and Hunter were given technicals.

What time is Cavaliers vs. Pacers Game 4?

Game 4 between the Cleveland Cavaliers and Indiana Pacers will tip at 8 p.m. ET on Sunday at Gainbridge Fieldhouse in Indianapolis.

How to watch Cavaliers vs. Pacers Game 4: TV, stream

Time: 8 p.m. ET
Location: Gainbridge Fieldhouse (Indianapolis)
TV: TNT, TruTV
Stream: Fubo, Max

Watch Cavaliers-Pacers Game 4 with Fubo

Cavaliers vs. Pacers NBA playoff schedule, results

(Pacers lead series, 2-1)

Game 1: Pacers 121, Cavaliers 112
Game 2: Pacers 120, Cavaliers 119
Game 3: Cavaliers 126, Pacers 104
Game 4: Cavaliers at Pacers | Sunday, May 11 | 8 p.m. | TNT, truTV, Max, Sling TV
Game 5: Pacers at Cavaliers | Tuesday, May 13 | TBD | TNT, truTV, Max, Sling TV*
Game 6: Cavaliers at Pacers | Thursday, May 15 | TBD | ESPN, Fubo*
Game 7: Pacers at Cavaliers | Sunday, May 18 | TBD | TBD*

This post appeared first on USA TODAY