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NFL power rankings with the 2025 draft now complete (previous rank in parentheses):

1. Philadelphia Eagles (1): Even coming off a dominant Super Bowl triumph over an active dynasty, it very much feels like this team is positioned to achieve even more – which may be especially true given EVP/GM Howie Roseman somehow winds up with a player like LB Jihaad Campbell joining the roster at the end of the draft’s first round. Rich and richer, etc., etc.

5. Buffalo Bills (2): This slightly subdued ranking is less a suggestion that they’re dropping but more an acknowledgement that the other closely packed Super Bowl aspirants have improved more significantly – not to mention the likelihood that the AFC East probably won’t be the cakewalk it’s been in recent years. But we don’t mind you passing on wide receivers in the draft, Brandon Beane.

10. Houston Texans (18): Sure seems as if they’ll need to mount an exceptional effort … to not win the AFC South in 2025. That might explain some of their willingness to make so many fundamental changes to the offense, modifications surely aimed at much bigger objectives than obtaining another divisional crown.

12. Cincinnati Bengals (13): Their draft wasn’t especially inspiring. But this club’s primary obstacles still seem to be issues that must be solved from within – giving DE Trey Hendrickson the raise he deserves and avoiding another disastrous September start, problems that threaten to become disastrously intertwined.

15. Seattle Seahawks (12): Speaking of recalibrating, they could have five new starters on offense, most notably QB Sam Darnold and Kupp. If first-year coordinator Klint Kubiak can balance the unit – meaning sustained emphasis on the run, which is what HC Mike Macdonald wants – feasible chance they don’t wind up a tiebreaker shy of the playoffs again.

16. Pittsburgh Steelers (26): Despite an ongoing offseason of uncertainty, no one should suggest switching out Russell Wilson for Aaron Rodgers – assuming he ever signs a contract – is a lateral move at quarterback. Forward lateral? Maybe. But if the Steelers truly hope to punctuate another 9-8 season with a long-awaited postseason win, the most important components could be third-round RB Kaleb Johnson and a young offensive line that needs to fully coalesce.

22. Dallas Cowboys (20): Their draft was solidly promising – and Jerry Jones and Co. definitely seemed to follow the ‘best player available’ axiom rather than drafting for need. That said, the Cowboys have more work to do on this roster heading into next season and could be a team especially focused on reeling in some of the more notable free agents who have taken their time picking new destinations.

24. Miami Dolphins (21): Gotta commend them for targeting big guys in the draft … yet unclear if they targeted the optimal ones. The secondary still looms as a problematic issue, especially with the presumption CB Jalen Ramsey is on his way out of South Florida. It adds up to the daunting prospect of QB Tua Tagovailoa having to potentially drop back 40 times per game.

25. New York Jets (25): Clearly, the expectations in 2024 were too outsized (raises hand). Maybe the expectations in 2025 are too downsized (slowly raising hand?). But a largely measured approach to free agency and the draft signal an encouraging start for a new regime that seems fixated on keeping the main thing the main thing.

26. Jacksonville Jaguars (24): The arrival – at significant cost – of 2024 Heisman Trophy winner Travis Hunter could make them a curiosity they haven’t been since joining the league 30 years ago. But rookie HC Liam Coen must do for QB Trevor Lawrence what he did for Baker Mayfield in Tampa if the Jags are to become legitimately relevant again.

29. Cleveland Browns (27): Their surprising approach to the 2025 draft suggests they’re far more focused on the 2026 draft – and consequently worth wondering how far Joe Flacco or Shedeur Sanders or Otto Graham could carry this offense as currently constructed.

31. Tennessee Titans (31): History shows that a team drafting a quarterback No. 1 overall is going to struggle, though maybe it helps that Cam Ward won’t be saddled with the same weighty expectations Caleb Williams carried last year in Chicago. Simply limiting the turnovers that so often put this defense in bad spots in 2024 would be a good start for Ward.

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In the 2025 NFL draft, the reigning AFC runners-up Buffalo Bills addressed multiple positions, notably in the secondary and defensive line. Six of the team’s nine draft picks were in those two groups.

Buffalo notably didn’t select a wide receiver until the seventh round in Kaden Prather. General manager Brandon Beane strongly defended the team not picking a wide receiver earlier when he appeared on a radio show in Buffalo.

Now, the team is bolstering the position on the veteran market.

Buffalo signed former second-round pick Elijah Moore to add another player to the wide receiver room, as first reported by Jordan Schultz of Fox Sports.

The Bills ranked third in the NFL in scoring offense last season at 30.9 points per game and quarterback Josh Allen won his first NFL MVP award. He’ll enter the 2025 season with another proven option among the pass-catching group.

Here’s what to know about the deal.

Elijah Moore contract details

Moore’s deal is for one year and up to $5 million in incentives, per Schultz. Moore’s previous team, the Cleveland Browns, had put an unrestricted free agent tender on him this offseason. That means his departure will give Cleveland a compensatory draft pick next year.

Elijah Moore career stats

Moore was a second-round pick (No. 34 overall) by the New York Jets in the 2021 NFL Draft. He was the sixth wide receiver selected in the draft behind Ja’Marr Chase, Jaylen Waddle, DeVonta Smith, Kadarius Toney and Rashod Bateman.

In four years (two with the Jets, two with the Browns), Moore has played in 61 games and tallied 200 catches for 2,162 yards and nine touchdowns. He’s also had 20 carries for 71 rushing yards and one touchdown.

2021 (11 games): 77 targets, 43 catches, 538 yards, five touchdowns; five carries, 54 rushing yards, one touchdown
2022 (16 games): 65 targets, 37 catches, 446 yards, one touchdown; five carries, five rushing yards
2023 (17 games): 104 targets, 59 catches, 640 yards, two touchdowns; nine carries, 11 rushing yards
2024 (17 games): 102 targets, 61 catches, 538 yards, one touchdown; one carry, one rushing yard

Buffalo Bills WR depth chart

Moore’s addition means the Bills have 13 wide receivers on the active roster entering offseason training. Here’s the full list:

Keon Coleman
Joshua Palmer
Khalil Shakir
Kaden Prather
Elijah Moore
Curtis Samuel
Jalen Virgil
KJ Hamler
Laviska Shenault Jr.
Hal Presley
Tyrell Shavers
Kelly Akharaiyi
Stephen Gosnell

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New York Jets quarterback Jordan Travis is retiring from the NFL at age 24, he announced Wednesday.

Travis’ decision comes after he spent his rookie season recovering from a catastrophic left leg injury he suffered during his final college game at Florida State.

‘I gave everything I had to the rehab process but despite all my efforts, my leg never responded the way we hoped,’ Travis explained in a handwritten message posted to social media. ‘After much prayer and consultation with the doctors, medical experts and my agent, I’ve been medically advised to retire from the game I love so deeply.’

Travis played six college seasons at Louisville and Florida State and was key in the Seminoles’ undefeated regular season in 2023. He completed 63.9% of his passes for 2,756 yards, 20 touchdowns and just two interceptions before he suffered what turned into a career-ending injury.

Travis finished fifth in the Heisman Trophy voting and was still viewed as a potential-packed Day 3 quarterback prospect. The Jets spent a fifth-round pick (171st overall) on the Florida State product hoping he would recover from the injury and eventually play a role in their quarterback room.

‘It is unfortunate that he was unable to get back on the field after working so hard,’ Jets general manager Darren Mougey said of Travis in a statement. ‘We support his decision and wish him only the best.’

Travis’ retirement leaves New York with four quarterbacks on its roster: Justin Fields, Tyrod Taylor, Adrian Martinez and recent undrafted rookie signing Brady Cook.

As for Travis, he is leaving the sport grateful to be given a chance to try to make his NFL dream come true.

‘As I reflect on my journey, I am overwhelmed with gratitude,’ he wrote. ‘From having the opportunity to live out my dream at Florida State University to hearing my name called in the NFL Draft. I am incredibly thankful for everyone who has poured into me throughout my life and career.’

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Suddenly it’s all about boxing again for Ryan Garcia, whose one-year suspension for a failed drug test ended April 20 when his New York boxing license was reinstated.

He’ll fight Rolando “Rolly’’ Romero on Friday, with a chance to secure a rematch against Devin Haney. But not so long ago, Garcia was playing chess and golfing while living in boxing purgatory.

“I watched about a million Tiger Woods documentaries over and over again,’’ Garcia told USA TODAY Sports. “I love that guy’s story so much. It just kind of made me maybe just fall in love with Tiger Woods for some reason.’’

Garcia, 26, might have recognized a piece of himself in Woods’ story.

A young phenom. Facing great expectations. Undermined by personal issues, then setting out to write his next chapter.

During the lead-up to Garcia’s fight against Haney on April 20, 2024, he exhibited erratic behavior and later said he was using drugs and alcohol. He knocked down Haney three times and won a majority decision, which was overturned to a no-contest after Garcia’s post-fight drug test came back positive for ostarine, an anabolic selective androgen receptor modulator (SARM) not approved by the Food and Drug Administration for human use.

In June, Garcia was arrested at the Waldorf Astoria hotel in Beverly Hills on a charge of felony vandalism. (The charge was dropped after he made restitution.) In July, Garcia was expelled from the World Boxing Council (WBC), the sanctioning body, for using racial slurs against Black people and disparaging Muslims on social media. Later that month, he drew criticism for anti-LGBTQ remarks on social media during the Opening Ceremony of the Paris Olympics.

‘I’ve previously taken responsibility for the comments I made, and I want to reiterate that they were wrong,” Garcia said in a statement provided to USA TODAY Sports. ‘I was in a dark place and said things that were out of character and do not reflect who I am. I’ve done a lot of personal work since then and my focus now is on moving forward.’

And so he will on Friday.

The fighter from California, who boasts a record of 24-1 with 20 KOs, said when he was training for the Romero fight he also was in psychotherapy.

“You got to be honest with yourself, got to be honest with the people around you,’’ Garcia said. “Noticing that the road I’m on is not going to lead me anywhere but downhill.

“Getting therapy help and ultimately getting sober and just working the hard way. Don’t take no shortcuts, and making sure that I get right back on the path that I’ve always been on, which is a man of faith and a man of dignity and hard work.’’

On fighting Rolando “Rolly’’ Romero

Question: I’ve seen you and Rolly together and I don’t see any bad blood whatsoever. In fact, it seems like you guys maybe even like each other. With that kind of dynamic, how do you tap into aggression when you get into the ring?

Answer: “I’ve been boxing since I was seven years old. I’ve just been one of those fighters that, I’m fierce about competition, but I’m rarely angry in the ring and I’m rarely angry outside the ring. I’m just looking at it like, OK, it’s a tournament. I got to beat this dude to get to Devin Haney.

“Just like in amateurs, when you’re going up for a national title, you got to beat this guy to get to the next guy. And I’m pretty sure in that ring, if (Romero) pressures me with a good shot, then the fight’s on. But as far as having to get mad about somebody, nah, I don’t need that.’’

On chess: ‘It was something that kept me sane’

Q: During your suspension, what did you do to keep yourself sane?

A: ‘I just got into golf. … But also playing chess. Chess was a great relaxing thing to do in my head. It’s fun. It’s kind of like boxing. If you make a mistake, it’s your fault. It’s not anybody else’s fault, and it was something that kept me sane in a way.”

On his erratic behavior in the past

Q: You exhibited, I think it would be fair to say, erratic behavior leading up to your fight against Devin. What was going on? What was fueling that?

A: “Just mental health issues, I guess you could say. And I was going through a lot of different events in my life. Going through divorce and just a lot of other family issues. But it is something that I had to learn from, going into a fight in that state and not caring and drinking and doing whatever you want could lead to a lot of bad mistakes. So it was a learning lesson, but with perseverance and help with my family and everybody around me, I definitely changed my whole outlook on life. And now I’m more focused, way more professional and ready to handle business like I was doing even before that.”

On a rematch with Devin Haney

Q: The trailer for the fight card in Times Square is all about you and Devin. That’s probably what 95% of the boxing community would like to see, you and Devin hopping back into the ring. If you were given a chance or a choice, would you say, let’s do it right now, let’s do the rematch?

A: ‘A part of me definitely would want to do that. But again, after going through multiple times of year layoffs, I understand that you need to have those in-between fights to be sharp. And it was something that I felt like I wanted to do. … Rolly is no slouch, but if we call ourselves the best, we should be able to beat anybody. … I hope Devin Haney wins and I’m going to be handling my business. So if stars align it’s even bigger.’’

On his failed drug test

Q: You had a dominant performance against Devin. At the same time, after the positive drug test, in some people’s minds it was tainted. What’s it been like to live with that?

A: “There was only trace amounts found, so that shows that it points to contamination and had no effect on the fight. So as far as that, I don’t feel any type of way. I’m just, I’m ready to do exactly what I did last time around. So I’m ready to win this fight, beat his ass again, and then come back and celebrate. …

“I don’t have anything to prove in my heart, my mind, because again, I didn’t take anything.”

On fear

Q: I was talking to Teddy Atlas (the former boxing trainer) about you. He said you’ve always had the talent, but thought maybe it was a struggle to kind of manage your fears. He thinks that can lead to disruptive living. He also thinks you probably crossed a threshold with your performance against Devin and you’re going to be a different fighter. What do you make of that?

A: “I would say a lot of boxers go through that. I would say Mike Tyson, he’s talked about it, how much fear can cripple you, even if you seem like the toughest dude. There’s something about stepping in that ring with millions of people and that pressure of looking good, that pressure of fighting good, that pressure of everything, some personalities is tougher on others. For me, it’s always been tough. I mean, that’s been my biggest hurdle is myself and anxiety, not only in boxing, but in a lot of other things. But obviously it’s the more experience you gain, the more things you’re able to handle.

‘Like Mike Tyson said best, fear is an illusion. It’s not really there. And that really holds true. Once you get in that ring, that bell rings, somehow that fear just disappears. I think that’s an important asset. And now every time that fear comes in, I just say, this is what it’s supposed to be. I’m supposed to feel this way. Because if you don’t feel that way, then you might run into some shots. Sometimes that fear helps you.’

On changing trainers

Q: You started getting ready for this fight with Eddie Reynoso (who trains Canelo Alvarez and is based in San Diego). Then you went back to Derrick James (who trained Garcia for the Haney fight.) Can you explain what happened?

A: ‘Pretty much just the scheduling of Canelo fighting (William Scull) a day after me, and they have to be in Saudi Arabia at a certain time. It just wasn’t going to work out. And me and Derrick, our problems were that a lot of my therapy and everything I was doing to work on myself in San Diego, his training camp is in Dallas, Texas. So me and Derrick, we worked things out. We negotiated some things and he came out to San Diego and, boom, that’s how we came back.’

On therapy

Q: Can you give me a sense of what you were doing in therapy? Obviously that seems like it was a priority, to make decisions based on that. How long did it last and how many days a week were you doing it?

A: ‘It was pretty much Monday through Friday. I think it was like three months, something like that. Two months. It was a lot, I mean every day. But it was something that I felt I needed and it helped me with tools to ultimately get me in the ring for May 2nd. So for me, it was a big step. I don’t like to be anywhere in the small space for too long, but just like in anything in life, you got to put work on yourself.’

Q: So you think it would’ve been difficult to fight without having addressed some of the stuff in therapy? I mean, was that important?

A: ‘Yeah, yeah. One hundred percent.”

Q: Can you share …

A: ‘Just everything. Pressures of boxing, pressures of my life. I’m a 26-year-old and I have a lot of responsibilities, a lot of pressure, a lot of things that are going on. And I was looking at all the wrong outlets and didn’t have the tools on how to handle it. And I felt like it was very, very, very important for me to talk to somebody about it and to break down things and to learn on how to manage all that, because you see a lot of celebrities, they don’t go to therapy and things get worse. You see that by a lot of people. So it’s something that I thought that was a priority in my life, and I’m happy I took advantage of that.”

On his children

Q: You’re more than a boxer. You’re a father of three young children. What have they taught you?

A: “They taught me, one, to be even. You got to make sure that you’re watching everything about yourself and your responsibilities as a human, as a man, and as anything you hold yourself to the highest degree. They’re looking at everything. My kids repeat everything I do, everything I say, and they’re watching their dad and they’re looking up to me. So it’s me just maturing much faster and just trying to be the best person I could be for them. So they could have integrity. They could have all the things you want in a person, and I think that’s what most things they taught me is be humble, to be smart in my decisions and really hold myself accountable.

‘It’s the best thing that’s ever happened in my life, is my kids.”

Q: Were you ever concerned they might intuitively know that you were struggling?

A: “I mean, during that time I wasn’t really around, so that’s a good thing. But they’re on my mind the whole time, and that’s one of the huge reasons why I took a whole 360 turn, just for my kids and just to be there as a dad because the road I was on, I might not be there. So for me, they were a huge part of that.”

Ryan Garcia vs. Rolando Romero

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The Senate failed Wednesday to pass a resolution rejecting President Donald Trump’s ‘Liberation Day’ tariff agenda, as several Republicans signaled beforehand they favored halting the relatively new levies, and Vice President JD Vance was called in to break an ensuing procedural tie.

The disapproval resolution failed 49-49, with three Republicans joining all Democrats present in attempting to throw a wrench in Trump’s tariff plans.

After that, Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., put forward a motion to reconsider the resolution, then moved to table – or kill – the initial motion, which procedurally would prevent Democrats from forcing such a vote again.

That vote also deadlocked, but after about 80 minutes, Vice President Vance cast a tie-breaking vote in his dual role as president of the Senate.

Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., had introduced the resolution to end Trump’s ‘national emergency’ as a ‘privileged’ one – meaning it would require a vote regardless of the upper chamber being in Republican hands. The House, however, has signaled it is not inclined to pursue the same.

Sens. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, Susan Collins, R-Maine, and Rand Paul, R-Ky., split from the rest of the GOP and sought to end the national emergency that backs the tariffs. Sens. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., and Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I., did not vote. 

Whitehouse was reportedly on a plane back from South Korea and wouldn’t make the gavel, according to Providence’s CBS affiliate.

Before the vote, there was chatter about key absences that could swing the vote one way or another, as key tallies are all about the math.

One tariff critic told reporters earlier Wednesday that the disapproval motion sent ‘the message I want to send’ that tariffs must be more ‘discriminatory.’

‘It’s not perfect, I think it’s too broad,’ Collins said, according to Politico.

In remarks on the Senate floor earlier in the day, Paul, – one of the most vocal opponents to tariffs and proponents of free trade – who suggested conservatives may want to reconsider their support for the tariffs.

‘You know, there was an old-fashioned conservative principle that believed that less taxes were better than more taxes,’ Paul said.

‘That if you tax something, you got less of it. So that if you place a new tax on trade, you’ll get less trade.’

‘There was also this idea that you didn’t do taxation without representation. That idea goes not only back to our American Revolution, it goes back to the English Civil War as well. It goes back probably to Magna Carta,’ he said of the phrase, which for some time was the District of Columbia’s official slogan, given its lack of full-vote representation in Congress.

Paul said the Constitution forbids taxation being implemented in a way that circumvents Congress and laid out why he thought that was the case today.

‘An emergency has been declared, as the Senator from Virginia remarked,’ he said. ‘Everywhere, there’s an emergency everywhere. Sounds like an emergency everywhere is really an emergency nowhere.’

Sen. Tim Kaine, D-Va., had previously balked at Trump’s tariffs on Canada, saying that while fentanyl proliferation is an emergency as the president declared, it is not one that is germane to Canada.

Reached for comment, the office of Sen. Mitch McConnell – Paul’s fellow Kentucky Republican – did not offer any further remarks after reports suggested he too is uncomfortable with Trump’s tariff agenda.

Fox News Digital also reached out to Murkowski for comment in that regard.

Schumer commented on the ultimate result, saying Republicans ‘voted to keep the Trump tariff-tax in place. They own the Trump tariffs and higher costs on America’s middle-class families.’

Fox News’ Tyler Olson contributed to this report.

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FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. — Lionel Messi already has posted his typical gameday Instagram story, previewing Inter Miami’s must-win match against the Vancouver Whitecaps in the Concacaf Champions Cup semifinal at 8 p.m. ET tonight.

Messi fans: Consider it an early sign he’ll play in the highly anticipated match. The Argentine legend never posts before games if he’s not playing.

Messi and Inter Miami face a 2-0 deficit against Vancouver, needing at least two goals to force extra time and at least three goals to win outright – and that’s only if they’re able to hold the surging Whitecaps scoreless at Chase Stadium on Wednesday night.

Can Messi and Inter Miami’s cast of former Barcelona stars (Luis Suarez, Sergio Busquets, Jordi Alba and coach Javier Mascherano) pull off an epic comeback or will they flame out of the Champions Cup tournament one match before the June 1 final?

“If there is something that we like, … it is to play with this kind of pressure. In the end, it is what gives you life. It gives the game meaning,” Mascherano said one day before the match.

Here’s everything you need to know, and stay tuned here for live updates brought to you by USA TODAY Sports from tonight’s match:

What time is Inter Miami vs. Vancouver Concacaf Champions Cup match?

The match begins at 8 p.m. ET (5 p.m. in Vancouver, 9 p.m. in Argentina).

How to watch Inter Miami vs. Vancouver Concacaf Champions Cup match?

The match is available on FS1 in English, and TUDN/ViX in Spanish.

Is Messi playing tonight?

Messi is likely to play, but his status will be confirmed when Inter Miami announces its starting lineup an hour before the match.

Inter Miami vs. Vancouver prediction

Vancouver 2, Inter Miami 2 (Vancouver advances 4-2 on aggregate scoring: Just one goal will deflate Inter Miami’s comeback hopes. Another would make it even more insurmountable. Vancouver leads the MLS Supporters’ Shield standings with 23 points for several reasons, including a league-leading plus-13 goal differential in the regular season. They’re too fast, well-organized and on a roll primed to shock Inter Miami in the semifinal. Messi may lead Inter Miami’s charge, but this will be a deficit too steep to overcome. –Safid Deen.

Inter Miami vs. Vancouver Whitecaps Champions Cup scoring scenarios

Here’s a breakdown of how many goals Inter Miami and Vancouver need to advance to the Champions Cup final:

Can Messi, Inter Miami reach Concacaf Champions Cup final?

Messi scored two goals and assisted another when he led Inter Miami past Los Angeles FC in the Champions Cup quarterfinals April 9. But Messi has been scoreless in his last four matches.

While Messi rested, Inter Miami settled for a scoreless draw at Chicago April 13; won 1-0 at Columbus April 19; lost 2-0 in Vancouver during the first leg April 24; and fell 4-3 to FC Dallas at home April 27.

Inter Miami is in contention for five possible trophies in 2025 – the Champions Cup being the first in line, but they’re in danger of falling short of the June 1 final. If they fall to Vancouver, it could indicate a limited ceiling this season with aging superstars.

Inter Miami won the Supporters’ Shield for the best regular-season record in 2024, and will contend for the title again this year. They will also pursue the MLS Cup title later this season.

Inter Miami is also set to participate in the Club World Cup and the Leagues Cup tournaments this summer.

Messi, Inter Miami upcoming schedule

May 3: Inter Miami vs. New York Red Bulls, 7:30 p.m. ET
May 10: Minnesota United vs. Inter Miami, 4:30 p.m. ET
May 14: San Jose vs. Inter Miami, 10:30 p.m. ET
May 18: Inter Miami vs. Orlando City, 7 p.m. ET
May 24: Philadelphia Union vs. Inter Miami, 7:30 p.m. ET
May 28: Inter Miami vs. CF Montreal, 7:30 p.m. ET
May 31: Inter Miami vs. Columbus Crew, 7:30 p.m. ET

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Georgia Amoore’s rookie season in the WNBA suffered a setback just days before the season opener.

The Washington Mystics announced on Wednesday that Amoore, the No. 6 overall pick in the 2025 WNBA Draft, suffered an anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury during practice on Tuesday. The team did not specifically say she tore the ligament or offer a timeline for how long she will be out.

‘Amoore and the team will examine treatment and rehabilitation options and provide an update as appropriate,’ the news release read.

If the injury turns out to be a torn ACL, she is in danger of missing her entire rookie season in 2025. According to the Cleveland Clinic, a typical recovery time for torn ACLs is 6-9 months. The 2025 WNBA season will last five months from the start of the regular season on May 16 through Oct. 17, the last possible date of the WNBA Finals.

The former Virginia Tech and Kentucky was drafted on April 14, just over a week after the 2025 women’s NCAA Tournament concluded. The Mystics are scheduled to play Caitilin Clark and the Indiana Fever in a preseason game on Saturday, with the season starting on May 16 against the Atlanta Dream.

The 5-foot-6 guard transferred to the Wildcats as a graduate transfer for the 2024-25 season and helped lead Kentucky to a 23-8 record and the program’s first NCAA Tournament berth since 2021-22. Amoore averaged 19.6 points and 6.9 assists in 36.7 minutes per game, appearing in all 31 games.

Washington finished 14-26 last season and had three of the top six picks in the WNBA draft. Amoore was the third Mystics draft pick, joining Notre Dame’s Sonia Citron (third) and USC’s Kiki Iriafen (fourth).

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Secretary of State Marco Rubio revealed in a Cabinet meeting that the Biden administration’s State Department kept dossiers on Americans accused of serving as ‘vectors of disinformation,’ including a file on an unidentified Trump administration official. 

‘We had an office in the Department of State whose job it was to censor Americans,’ Rubio said during Wednesday’s Cabinet meeting with Donald Trump. ‘And, by the way, I’m not going to say who it is. I’ll leave it up to them. There’s at least one person at this table today who had a dossier in that building of social media posts to identify them as purveyors of disinformation. We have these dossiers. We are going to be turning those over to these individuals.’ 

Vice President JD Vance interjected, asking, ‘Was it me or Elon? We can follow up when the media is gone,’ and drawing laughter from the Cabinet. 

‘But just think about that. The Department of State of the United States had set up an office to monitor the social media posts and commentary of American citizens, to identify them as vectors of disinformation,’ Rubio continued. ‘When we know that the best way to combat disinformation is freedom of speech and transparency.

‘We’re not going to have an office that does that.’ 

Rubio appeared to be referring to an office within the State Department previously known as the Global Engagement Center, which he officially shuttered earlier in April. 

When announcing a massive reorganization of the State Department, the Global Engagement Center engaged with media outlets and platforms to censor speech it disagreed with, Rubio said. The center has been accused by conservatives of censoring them. 

Journalist Matt Taibbi, for example, previously reported that the center ‘funded a secret list of subcontractors and helped pioneer an insidious — and idiotic — new form of blacklisting’ during the pandemic, Fox Digital reported in 2024. 

He added that the Global Engagement Center ‘flagged accounts as ‘Russian personas and proxies’ based on criteria like, ‘Describing the Coronavirus as an engineered bioweapon,’ blaming ‘research conducted at the Wuhan institute,’ and ‘attributing the appearance of the virus to the CIA.’’ 

Though Rubio did not identify which Trump official the Biden administration kept a dossier on, Elon Musk has previously railed against the Global Engagement Center. 

‘The worst offender in US government censorship & media manipulation is an obscure agency called GEC,’ Musk posted to X in January 2023. That was more than a year before Musk endorsed Trump in the 2024 presidential race and became a fixture of the administration in his temporary role with the Department of Government Efficiency. 

‘They are a threat to our democracy,’ Musk added.

Fox News Digital reached out to the White House for additional details on which Trump official was targeted but did not immediately receive a reply. 

Former President Barack Obama established the small office in 2016 through an executive order aimed at coordinating counterterrorism messaging to foreign nations before it expanded its scope to also include countering foreign propaganda and disinformation, State Department documents show.

In 2024, lawmakers did not approve new funding for the office in the National Defense Authorization Act, and it was scheduled to terminate Dec. 23, 2024. The Biden administration, however, shuffled staffers and rebranded the office. It became the Counter Foreign Information Manipulation and Interference Hub in the waning days before Trump’s inauguration, the New York Post reported in January. 

‘I am announcing the closure of the State Department’s Counter Foreign Information Manipulation and Interference (R/FIMI), formerly known as the Global Engagement Center (GEC),’ Rubio said in an April 16 statement announcing the office’s closure. 

‘Under the previous administration, this office, which cost taxpayers more than $50 million per year, spent millions of dollars to actively silence and censor the voices of Americans they were supposed to be serving,’ he wrote. ‘This is antithetical to the very principles we should be upholding and inconceivable it was taking place in America. That ends today.’ 

Fox News Digital’s Michael Dorgan contributed to this report.

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Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and dozens of his bicameral colleagues addressed reporters on the Capitol steps Wednesday, blasting President Donald Trump’s first 100 days.

Schumer, flanked by House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., and House Minority Whip Katherine Clark, D-Mass., and others, said Trump failed the nation predominantly via his tariff agenda and purportedly cozying up with ‘dictators.’

‘Donald Trump’s first 100 days can be defined by one big F-word: failure,’ Schumer said.

‘Failure on the economy, failure on lowering costs, failure on tariffs, failure on foreign policy, failure on preserving democracy, failure on helping middle-class families.’

‘Today’s new economic news showed that Donald Trump is running the American economy the way he ran his family business into the ground,’ claimed Schumer, who grew up in Brooklyn, where Trump’s father’s real estate empire was based.

Schumer claimed Trump turned nations against the U.S. and drove them into China’s arms, saying former economic allies now see China as a better partner in that regard.

The Democratic leader later called Trump a ‘would-be dictator’ and claimed he wants to be ‘king’ of America.

‘[W]e Democrats … around the country will fight him at every turn,’ Schumer said.

Later, Sen. Raphael Warnock, D-Ga., rose to the podium to cries of ‘preach-preach-preach’ from fellow Democrats. Warnock is the pastor at Martin Luther King Jr.’s church in Atlanta.

‘We are witnessing an all-out assault on our Constitution, an all-out assault on our norms and our values, an assault on the pocketbooks of ordinary people,’ Warnock said.

‘But, in a real sense, an assault on the spirit of the American people. They are trying to convince us that our neighbors are our enemies. We should know better than that by now, and we do.’

Clark also lambasted the GOP, claiming congressional Republicans are ‘choosing their careers … over that of their constituents.’

Fox News Digital reached out to the White House and Senate GOP leadership for comment.

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Alijah Arenas, the son of former NBA star Gilbert Arenas and a five-star basketball recruit committed to USC, was released from the hospital on Wednesday.

The news was shared in a statement to ESPN’s Shams Charania. The Arenas family in the statement said Alijah was ‘resting comfortably under close watch’ and his ‘spirit remains strong.’ The family also requested ‘privacy’ and ‘continued prayers.’

‘We are grateful to share that Alijah Arenas has been released from the hospital and is now resting comfortably under close watch,’ the statement said. ‘While his journey to full recovery is just beginning, his spirit remains strong, and he is surrounded by love and support.

Arenas, 18, was involved in a single-car accident while driving back from the gym early Thursday after he lost control of his Tesla Cybertruck in the Reseda area of the San Fernando Valley. According to the L.A. Fire Department, Arena’s car crashed into a tree and/or a fire hydrant.

Arenas was removed from the car by two individuals. Here’s the latest on Arenas’ recovery:

Alijah Arenas update

As a result of the crash and smoke inhalation, Arenas was placed in an induced coma after he was transported to a nearby hospital. His father, Gilbert Arenas, said in a statement his son did not suffer ‘major injuries’ after he was taken out of the coma.

Arenas, who reclassified from 2026 to 2025 in November 2024, led Chatsworth High School (Los Angeles) to the final of the Division II state championships this year. He became the first LA area basketball player to reach 3,000 career points.

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