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New York Yankees designated hitter Giancarlo Stanton may not be ready for opening day because of tendinitis in both elbows, manager Aaron Boone said Sunday.

The prodigious slugger was bothered by elbow soreness for much of last season, yet he still hit 27 homers and drove in 72 runs. He was especially productive in the Yankees’ march to the World Series, hitting .273 with seven home runs and 16 RBI in 14 postseason games and winning MVP honors in the American League championship series.

‘It’s tough to say,’ Boone said in terms of when Stanton might make his season debut. ‘I’m not going to put any timeline on it. We’re just going to be smart with it.’

Stanton, 35, is expected to be an important part of the Yankees lineup this season following the loss of outfielder Juan Soto to free agency.

Despite being one of the most feared power hitters in the game, the five-time All-Star been plagued by injuries throughout his 15-year career in the majors.

All things Yankees: Latest New York Yankees news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

The Yankees acquired Stanton from the Miami Marlins following his MVP-winning 2017 season, but since then he’s only played more than 140 games once during his seven years in pinstripes. He played in 114 games in 2024, missing over a month with a hamstring injury.

Stanton currently leads all active major leaguers with 429 career home runs, 51 ahead of Mike Trout.

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The acting head of the Social Security Administration (SSA) quit her job over the weekend after butting heads with the Elon Musk-led Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), over efforts to access certain sensitive government records, according to reports.

The Washington Post reported that three people familiar with Michelle King’s departure said on Monday that she stepped down from her position after the disagreement.

In response to King’s departure, President Donald Trump reportedly appointed Leland Dudek to lead the agency as the president’s nominee to serve as commissioner of the SSA, Frank Bisignano, is vetted by federal lawmakers.

Principal Deputy Press Secretary at the White House, Harrison Fields, said they expect Bisignano to be ‘swiftly confirmed in the coming weeks.’

‘In the meantime, the agency will be led by a career Social Security anti-fraud expert as the acting commissioner,’ Fields said without naming the replacement. ‘President Trump is committed to appointing the best and most qualified individuals who are dedicated to working on behalf of the American people, not to appease the bureaucracy that has failed them for far too long.’

The three individuals who spoke to the Washington Post on the condition of anonymity, reportedly told the publication that Dudek posted positive remarks about DOGE’s efforts to seek out fraud and cut costs across federal agencies.

The SSA did not respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment on the matter.

Musk is leading DOGE to aggressively slash government waste when it comes to federal spending under President Trump. The department was created via executive order and is a temporary organization within the White House that will spend 18 months carrying out its mission.

One of the department’s most recent targets is the SSA, which was created by the Social Security Act under President Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1935 and tasked with establishing a federal benefits system for older Americans.

As DOGE continues to find fraud and wasteful spending at SSA, Musk turned to X on Monday to say millions of people listed in a Social Security database are recorded as centenarians ‘with the death field set to FALSE!’

‘According to the Social Security database, these are the numbers of people in each age bucket with the death field set to FALSE! Maybe Twilight is real and there are a lot of vampires collecting Social Security,’ Musk posted, adding a couple of rolling on the floor laughing emojis.

His post features a chart indicating there are more than 20 million listed with ages 100 and higher, including more than 3.9 million in the 130-139 age range, more than 3.5 million in the 140-149 range and more than 1.3 million in the 150-159 range.

While the U.S. population count in the 2020 census was more than 331 million, the count of people ages 100 and older was more than 80,000, according to U.S. Census Bureau data.

Fox News Digital’s Alex Nitzberg contributed to this report.

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The Trump administration’s Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) discovered an identification code linking U.S. Treasury payments to a budget line item, which accounts for nearly $4.7 trillion in payments which was oftentimes left blank.

‘The Treasury Access Symbol (TAS) is an identification code linking a Treasury payment to a budget line item (standard financial process),’ DOGE wrote in a post on X. ‘In the Federal Government, the TAS field was optional for ~$4.7 Trillion in payments and was often left blank, making traceability almost impossible. As of Saturday, this is now a required field, increasing insight into where money is actually going.’

The agency thanked the U.S. Treasury for their work in identifying the optional field.

According to the Bureau of the Fiscal Service, which is under the Treasury, TAS codes are used to describe any one of the account identification codes assigned by the Treasury and is also referred to as the ‘account.’

All financial transactions made by the federal government are classified by TAS when reporting to the Treasury and the Office of Management and Budget (OMB).

The discovery was announced on the same day DOGE appeared to have populated the DOGE.gov Savings page, which, as of Monday evening, said the total estimated savings since the establishment of the department total about $55 billion.

The savings are a combination of ‘fraud detection/deletion, contract/lease cancellations, contract/lease renegotiations, asset sales, grant cancellations, workforce reductions, programmatic changes, and regulatory savings.’

‘We are working to upload all of this data in a digestible and fully transparent manner with clear assumptions, consistent with applicable rules and regulations,’ DOGE wrote on the site, adding that the data will be updated twice per week until eventually becoming real-time.

Musk is leading DOGE to aggressively slash government waste when it comes to federal spending under President Donald Trump.

The department was created via executive order and is a temporary organization within the White House that will spend 18 months carrying out its mission.

The group has faced criticism over its access to federal systems, including the Treasury Department’s payment system, as well as moves to cancel federal contracts and make cuts at various agencies.

Attorneys general from 14 states are suing to block DOGE from accessing federal data, arguing Musk and Trump’s administration have engaged in illegal executive overreach.

The newly formed cost-cutting agency scored a win on Friday when a federal judge in Washington declined a request to temporarily block it from accessing sensitive data from the Departments of Labor, Health and Human Services and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.

Fox News Digital’s Hillary Vaugh and Stephen Sorace contributed to this report.

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Kyle Busch had plenty of criticism to go around after his car was part of a major pileup at Sunday’s Daytona 500.

Busch was caught up in a crash right at the beginning of Stage 2, one that he blamed on Joey Logano.

‘Looked like the fastest car got in a hurry to get to the wreck,’ Busch said of Logano, whose bump with Ricky Stenhouse Jr. triggered the chain reaction. ‘We still got 20 laps to go and he’s trying to go through the middle and make a hole that isn’t there and just created chaos …

‘You gotta know how wide your race car is to find a hole that it will fit in. And he obviously doesn’t know that.’

But Busch, who has never won in his 20 starts at the Daytona 500, saved his harshest words for NASCAR, after race officials denied his attempt to return to the track.

Busch’s No. 8 Chevrolet seemed to avoid major damage from the wreck, though it did need to be towed back to the garage area. After replacing all four tires, the car returned to the race under caution. But once Busch pitted under the yellow for more repairs, NASCAR ruled him out of the race.

Busch complained afterwards he wasn’t given a chance to get back on the track and up to speed. He took to social media after not getting what he felt was a satisfactory explanation.

‘The race never went back to green yet,’ he wrote. ‘I don’t think they know their own rules or procedures.’

NASCAR’s new Damaged Vehicle Policy is designed to give teams a chance to make repairs and keep racing. However, officials stated Busch needed to reach minimum speed immediately after the repairs in the garage were completed. Under the rules, his visit to the pits for anything other than fuel resulted in him being parked for the rest of the race.

The ruling was perhaps even more frustrating for Busch at Daytona.

Despite 63 NASCAR Cup Series wins (ninth all-time) and two season championships, Busch has never won the Daytona 500 in 20 attempts.

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The Daytona 500 is in the books, setting up what is sure to be an exciting season of NASCAR Cup Series racing.

Byron’s win likely already secures him a berth in the playoffs this fall – presuming there aren’t more than 16 different winners in the 26-race regular season. His performance Sunday at Daytona International Speedway also increased his odds to win his first championship, after Byron finished third in the final standings the past two years.

Here are the latest odds to win the 2025 championship, according to BetMGM as of Monday afternoon:

Odds to win 2025 NASCAR Cup Series championship

(As of Monday, Feb. 17)

Kyle Larson (+550)
Christopher Bell (+550)
William Byron (+600)
Ryan Blaney (+700)
Tyler Reddick (+800)
Denny Hamlin (+800)
Joey Logano (+900)
Chase Elliott (+1200)
Ty Gibbs (+1800)
Chase Briscoe (+2000)
Ross Chastain (+2000)
Brad Keselowski (+2500)
Alex Bowman (+3000)
Chris Buescher (+3000)
Kyle Busch (+3500)
Bubba Wallace (+8000)

Next NASCAR Cup Series race

Drivers will now head to Atlanta Motor Speedway in Hampton, Georgia, for Sunday’s Ambetter Health 400. Here’s how to watch:

Date: Sunday, Feb. 23
Time: 3 p.m. ET
TV: Fox
Streaming: FoxSports.com, Fox Sports app and Fubo
Location: Atlanta Motor Speedway
Race length: 260 laps, 400.4 miles

Watch NASCAR races on Fubo (free trial)

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The first game began with a Montreal crowd booing ‘The Star-Spangled Banner’ and three fights in succession just as soon as the puck was dropped. The best hockey players from USA and Canada played against one another in international competition for the first time in almost a decade on Saturday as part of the 4 Nations Face-Off. The action during the Americans’ 3-1 win left fans wanting more from this event taking place during the NHL’s All-Star break this year.

Canada made sure there will be a rematch later this week. It advanced to the 4 Nations Face-Off championship final against the United States on Thursday in Boston after beating Finland, 5-3, in Monday’s round robin finale.

There are storylines aplenty, starting with whether American fans at Boston’s TD Garden elect to boo ‘O, Canada.’ Tension between Americans and Canadians have been inflamed by President Donald Trump’s recent threats of implementing tariffs against Canadian imports and his desire to make Canada the 51st state of the United States.

But the on-ice narratives are just as juicy after Saturday’s first game drew so much positive attention to the entire sport, with some of the biggest NHL stars playing together in an intense environment that felt more like a Stanley Cup playoff game or the Olympics than the all-star break. The betting markets have already made the Americans an early favorite to pull off a repeat:

Here’s a look at the early odds ahead of Thursday’s rematch between USA and Canada at the 4 Nations Face-Off championship final in Boston:

4 Nations Face-Off finals odds: USA vs. Canada rematch

USA has opened as an early favorite over Canada in the 4 Nations Face-Off championship final, according to BetMGM.

Odds as of Monday afternoon

Spread: USA (-1.5)
Moneylines: USA (-120); Canada (+100)
Over/under: 5.5

How to watch United States vs. Canada 4 Nations Face-Off final

Date: Feb. 20
Time: 8 p.m. ET
TV: ESPN
Streaming: ESPN+

 The final will be available to watch on Sling, Fubo and ESPN+.

Watch the 4 Nations Face-Off finals with Fubo

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We all saw the in-state battle between No. 1 and No. 2. Top-ranked Auburn went into a raucous Coleman Coliseum and convincingly took down Alabama.

It’s almost become a routine; the Tigers face a strong opponent and have another impressive outing. They continue to stack up high-profile wins week after week. Which begs the question: Has one No. 1 seed been locked up, four weeks from Selection Sunday?

Auburn was the top overall seed in the selection committee’s top 16 reveal on Saturday, and it further proved it’s place by leaving no doubt against the Crimson Tide. It’s now a staggering 23-2 and first place in the SEC at 11-2, somehow separating itself from an already strong league.

That’s not all; the Tigers are already inching toward some history. Since the NET rankings were introduced in 2018, the record for most Quad 1 wins in a regular season is 15, done by Kansas in 2022-23.

Auburn is already at 14, and has plenty of more opportunities to add left.

With such an impressive resume, Auburn may as well be a lock for a No. 1 seed come tournament time. No one comes close to the body of work it has done, so the Tigers can afford to lose some more, if teams can somehow conquer them.

There’s still plenty of time for the bracket to change from now to March 16, but believe with complete certainty Auburn will be a top seed, and after winning the potential game of the season, it leads the top storylines from the past weekend of college basketball.

Houston, St. John’s take control of conferences

A conference title is a sweet bonus to getting a favorable draw in the NCAA tournament, and Houston and St. John’s inched closer toward having regular-season championships with victories over other contenders.

Houston went into a tough environment in Arizona on Saturday and after the Wildcats led for the majority of the game, the Cougars stepped it up defensively to hold Arizona to just 10 points in the final nine minutes. The win pushed Houston to 17-1 in its last 18 games and a two-game lead in the Big 12. In the Big East, St. John’s bounced back from a loss to Villanova by beating Creighton. RJ Luis Jr. had another big day to give the Red Storm a two-game lead over the Bluejays in the conference standings, continuing a magical season at Madison Square Garden.

Both Houston and St. John’s were in the top 16 and do have some challenges awaiting them in the next week, but getting some breathing room in their respective conferences against quality opponents are some big resume notches that could be useful in a few weeks.

Kansas blows generous offering from selection committee

A surprise in the top 16 reveal was Kansas, a team that’s been very inconsistent recently, being ranked a No. 4 seed. The Jayhawks haven’t looked like a No. 4 seed, but it was a gracious ranking given by the committee, showing that as long as Kansas rights the ship, it’ll be just fine.

So what did it do with the kind gesture? Blow it.

Kansas visited lowly Utah and looked nothing like a top-caliber team against the Utes. The Jayhawks never led during the game and despite Utah shooting 36.5% from the field, the Utes got hot at the end to pull off the signature victory.

Now it looks like Kansas is again going to fall short of preseason expectations with a 3-4 record in its last seven games. It’s now in a three-way tie for the fifth spot in the Big 12, which gets a bye in the conference tournament, and it still has a tough stretch with Texas Tech, Houston and Arizona waiting at the end of the regular season. Kansas was given a blessing, and it only took a few hours for it to ruin it.

Now what, Dan Hurley?

For some reason, Dan Hurley had a really good time taunting Creighton fans after finally winning at the Bluejays’ home court. What’s the celebration after losing to the worst team in the conference?

Connecticut continued it’s unpredictable trend by losing to Seton Hall in remarkable fashion. After allowing a 3-pointer in the final seconds of regulation off a turnover to send it to overtime, the Huskies saw their late lead disappear after a costly turnover led to an incredible bucket for the Pirates to pull off the shocker. It ended Seton Hall’s nine-game losing streak.

Of course, Hurley spent the time right after the game complaining to the referees, something we’ve seen a lot of and should serve as a reminder that maybe he should spend less time trying to chirp at some fans. UConn is now 17-8 and had its second Quad 3 loss of the season. It continues to fall down the seed line of the tournament, making the chances of a three-peat more difficult as the days go.

A bad weekend on the bubble

It’s starting to become that time of the year where if you’re on the bubble, the wins feel better and the losses hurt worse. For those on the bubble, it was a painful weekend with many of them falling in defeat.

The first four teams out of the latest USA TODAY Sports Bracketology — Georgia, Southern Methodist, Kansas State and Villanova — all lost. The Bulldogs fell to Missouri at home, the Mustangs dropping to another bubble candidate in Wake Forest, Kansas State’s hot streak was finally halted against Brigham Young and Villanova couldn’t keep it going after the win against St. John’s with a bad loss to Providence. Arkansas, the last team projected in the field, also lost, but could be lucky it happened when so many others also had the same fate.

Time is starting to dwindle on making a case for the tournament, and the winning streaks are going to have to start soon for those trying to bounce back from the weekend.

New Mexico

Rick Pitino has been the talk of the Big East for leading St. John’s back into the national spotlight, but look at what his son Richard is doing in Albuquerque.

New Mexico is now solely at the top of the Mountain West after taking down Utah State in a Sunday thriller. The Lobos were down by 10 points early in the second half and flipped a switch to send The Pit crowd home happy. It was the second win of the season over the Aggies, and the Lobos are now 22-4, coincidentally the same record as the Red Storm.

Richard Pitino has elevated New Mexico each season he’s been there, and this is the team’s best ever start to Mountain West play. It likely won’t be a top seed come tournament time, but the Lobos are a team to watch out for in March.

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The final of the 4 Nations Face-Off is set.

The United States will face Canada in the championship match after Canada punched its ticket with a victory over Finland on Monday. Canada advanced thanks to accumulating five points in the round-robin and owning the tiebreaker against the other participating team, Sweden.

It’ll be a rematch of the highly intense match that took place on Saturday between the two nations. Tensions were high heading into the game at the Bell Centre in Montreal, and it notably had three fights take place in the first nine seconds of play. The U.S. won 3-1 to advance to the final, regardless of the final round robin match against Sweden.

Now, the two rivals will meet again for the 4 Nations Face-Off title, this time on American soil. Here’s what to know for the big-time matchup:

When is United States vs. Canada 4 Nations Face-Off final?

The final will take place Thursday, Feb. 20 at 8 p.m. ET. It will take place at the TD Garden in Boston, Massachusetts.

How to watch United States vs. Canada 4 Nations Face-Off final

Date: Feb. 20
Time: 8 p.m. ET
TV: ESPN
Streaming: ESPN+

 The final will be available to watch on Sling, Fubo and ESPN+.

Catch the 4 Nations Final with Fubo

When does United States play in 4 Nations Face-Off?

The U.S. has one more game before the final against Canada. The Americans will play against Sweden on Monday at 8 p.m. ET. The game will be played at Boston.

Sweden vs. U.S. will be available to watch on TNT and streaming on MAX. It is also available to watch on Sling.

United States 4 Nations Face-Off schedule, results

Feb. 13: Win vs. Finland, 6-1
Feb. 15: Win vs. Canada, 3-1
Feb. 17: Vs. Sweden
Feb. 20: Vs. Canada, final

We occasionally recommend interesting products and services. If you make a purchase by clicking one of the links, we may earn an affiliate fee. USA TODAY Network newsrooms operate independently, and this doesn’t influence our coverage.

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Lionel Messi is set to play in the coldest game he’s ever encountered with Inter Miami in the Concacaf Champions Cup opener at Sporting Kansas City. But he’ll have to wait until Wednesday to play it.

Concacaf, Inter Miami and Sporting Kansas City announced Monday they will postpone their match initially scheduled for Tuesday due to severe weather, prioritizing player and fan safety, in coordination with local authorities. All tickets sold will be honored for the Wednesday match at 8 p.m. ET inside Children’s Mercy Park in Kansas City, Kansas.

The National Weather Service in the Kansas City area has issued a winter storm warning and cold weather advisory, meteorologist Brad Temeyer told USA TODAY Sports on Monday. About 5 to 7 inches of snow, single-digit temperatures, and a wind chill 15-25 degrees below zero are expected Tuesday. The wind chill will be even lower on Wednesday night, approaching 15 to 30 degrees below zero.  

“What we would suggest is that if you’re going to be outside for a prolonged period of time, make sure you dress appropriately for the conditions. And so that would include dressing in multiple layers because frostbite can set in as little as 30 minutes with prolonged exposure,” Temeyer said. “We’re looking at even colder temperatures later this week that could lead to hypothermia. That would be closer to Wednesday and Thursday.”

Frostbite and hypothermia? It might be football weather to some, but certainly not fútbol weather.

Wednesday’s game is the first of two between Inter Miami and Sporting Kansas City in the first round of the Champions Cup, one of five possible trophies Messi’s club will contend for in 2025. The second leg will be played next Tuesday at Inter Miami’s Chase Stadium in Fort Lauderdale, Florida.

Both teams will also play their MLS season openers Saturday: Inter Miami hosts New York City FC, while Sporting Kansas City will visit Austin FC in Texas. An MLS spokesperson told USA TODAY Sports both games will go on as scheduled.

“I think what we have to think about is that it’s not just about the game. If the snow that they say is going to fall falls, we would believe that the city is going to be completely collapsed. So, people won’t be able to go out and the access roads are going to be closed. That’s the thing,” Inter Miami coach Javier Masherano said before the postponement.

“Often, people only think about the game itself and not everything that surrounds it. I think you have to look at the forest a little more than the tree, and in that sense it’s a bit, I think, that what the game calls into question.”

With the game postponed, longtime Sporting Kansas City coach Peter Vermes can return his focus to facing the likes of Inter Miami’s former Barcelona stars in Messi, Luis Suarez, Sergio Busquets and Jordi Alba. Mascherano said Monday Messi is 100% healthy and will play, despite a report he would not play in the cold.

“We have to go all in. We know who we’re playing,” Vermes said. “I wish there was a lot different we can do, but we’re playing still some of the best players to play the game. They’re always a difficult group, and there’s one guy that can change the outcome of any game he ever plays in.”

From a player perspective, Sporting Kansas City’s Erik Thommy and Inter Miami’s Robert Taylor know both teams will be affected by the conditions when they meet.

“We were training the entire week. No one was asking us if it’s warm enough for us,” Thommy said. “We have to move and then you will forget the weather, because it’s all about the game. And we’re totally happy to welcome our fans.”

“I don’t think anyone likes those conditions. Playing in snow is always a little bit different,” Taylor said. “It’s all about preparation. And when you’re mentally ready for the game, it really doesn’t matter what the weather is because at the end of the day, it’s the same for both teams. There’s no excuses.”

Still, the weather is a concern for all parties involved, including fans in attendance.

At least 10 people were hospitalized and treated for frostbite and hypothermia, following an NFL playoff game between the Kansas City Chiefs and Miami Dolphins on Jan. 13, 2024. The game was played at negative 4 degrees with a wind chill of negative 27, marking the third-coldest kickoff wind chill ever, the Chiefs communications team said at the time. The Chiefs won 26-7.

Sporting Kansas City hopes to use the weather to its advantage against Messi and Inter Miami this time around.

Messi scored a goal and had an assist when Inter Miami beat Sporting Kansas City 3-2 on April 13, 2024. The game was played at the Chiefs’ Arrowhead Stadium in front of a reported crowd of 72,610 – the most-attended soccer match in state of Missouri and the third-most attended MLS game in history.

‘It’s always hard to get ready to play in games in this,’ Vermes said. ‘I would assume it will be a little bit of a shock to them.’

(This story was updated with additional news and details.)

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Three’s a crowd, but four’s a party. Who’s going to become the fourth active coach to win a national championship? Texas’ Steve Sarkisian tops the list.
Transfer hauls give Oregon’s Dan Lanning and LSU’s Brian Kelly a shot at national title next season.
Penn State’s James Franklin boasts another strong team, but can he win the big games?

Ryan Day joined Kirby Smart and Dabo Swinney as college football’s only active coaches to win a national championship. The number was as high as five before Nick Saban’s retirement, Jim Harbaugh’s bolt for the NFL and Mack Brown’s ouster.

So, who stands in the on-deck circle? Let’s peek at six candidates likeliest to turn three into four.

6. James Franklin (Penn State)

Penn State should be ranked in the preseason top five. It returns quarterback Drew Allar and its top two running backs from last season’s team that reached the College Football Playoff semifinals. So, Franklin’s a prime candidate, right? Well, there’s one problem: Franklin almost never wins his biggest games, and he’d need to win a big game or two or three to capture a crown.  

The Nittany Lions lost each of their three toughest games last season. Also, Penn State must replace defensive standout Abdul Carter and offensive standout Tyler Warren. Making the playoff seems probable, but a national championship? ‘Big Game James’ would need to stop being a sarcastic dig at Franklin.

5. Marcus Freeman (Notre Dame)

Notre Dame’s got good bones. Good culture. Its independent scheduling positions the Irish to perennially win 10 or more games, making them playoff regulars. Consider Notre Dame’s 2025 schedule. Tell me the game in which the Irish will be the underdog. I don’t see one.

Winning a national championship in this era, though, comes a lot easier with a standout quarterback and star wide receiver or two. Those two positions became the obvious difference in Notre Dame’s national championship loss to Ohio State. For Freeman to be the next coach to win it all, he’ll need a quarterback to emerge. Redshirt freshman CJ Carr, let’s see what you got in that mended elbow.

4. Kalen DeBoer (Alabama)

DeBoer misfired in his first season replacing Saban. No sugar coating it. He certainly hasn’t, acknowledging he failed to meet expectations. But, look here, Alabama signed the nation’s No. 3-ranked recruiting class, and Miami transfer Isaiah Horton will upgrade the receiving corps. Experienced players fill the defense.

Alabama’s national title bona fides hinge on its quarterback. Is Ty Simpson ready to be a starter after three years as a backup? How quickly will five-star signee Keelon Russell develop? DeBoer reunited with Ryan Grubb, his longtime consigliere. I don’t doubt Grubb will be a coordinator upgrade, but he can’t change the quarterback personnel. Either Simpson or Russell must be ready to shine by September.

3. Brian Kelly (LSU)

Did you get your digs in at Kelly, when LSU failed to make the playoff while Freeman rallied Notre Dame to the national championship game? Hope you enjoyed it, because Kelly loaded up for a chance at the last laugh. Kelly signed the nation’s best transfer class. That haul includes top-rung defensive line and secondary additions, necessary personnel tasked with jumpstarting a defense that’s been too feeble for too long.

The Tigers return the SEC’s most proven quarterback, Garrett Nussmeier. They’re set at receiver. A retooled offensive line must perform, but this is Kelly’s best shot at a title since coming to LSU. The national title window slowly closes on Kelly, 63. It’s not closed yet.

2. Dan Lanning (Oregon)

The combination of Lanning plus NIL at “Nike U.” have been quite good for Oregon. The Ducks went 25-3 the past two seasons. Much like Day, this feels like a matter of when, not if, the 38-year-old Lanning will win a national championship.

No coach of a playoff-qualifying team signed a better transfer class than Lanning. He paired those additions with a top-five recruiting class. Oregon looks like a near lock for the playoff. Its national championship pursuit hinges on whether UCLA transfer Dante Moore, Oregon’s backup quarterback last season, replicates the production of predecessors Dillon Gabriel and Bo Nix.

1. Steve Sarkisian (Texas)

Nobody better positioned himself to join the list of national champions than Sarkisian. Texas is back, folks. No more sarcasm in that statement after the Longhorns reached the College Football Playoff semifinals in consecutive seasons.

Like Day, Sarkisian magnetizes talent. Coaches who consistently build elite rosters – see Nick Saban, Kirby Smart – give themselves the most opportunities for a national championship. That brings us to Sarkisian. A recruiting maestro, he signed the nation’s No. 1-ranked class to pair with an enviable roster led by quarterback Arch Manning.

Sarkisian proved himself an excellent quarterback developer. Add in Texas’ NIL war chest, and Sarkisian positioned the Longhorns to be an annual contender. The possibility of an NFL return rests in the backdrop of Sarkisian’s tenure, but, even if that happens, Sarkisian might deliver a national championship before he departs. Ohio State, Texas, Oregon and Georgia rank among the favorites to win this next national championship.

So, who will turn three into four? Sarkisian, Lanning, or … maybe no one, for a while.

Between Day, Smart and Swinney, they’ve got a chance to crowd out the contenders vying to join their exclusive club.

Blake Toppmeyer is the USA TODAY Network’s national college football columnist. Email him at BToppmeyer@gannett.com and follow him on X @btoppmeyer. Subscribe to read all of his columns.

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