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Malinin is the only skater to land a quadruple axel in competition and could attempt up to seven quadruple jumps in his long program.
Malinin’s technical skills and artistry have made him a dominant force in figure skating, with an undefeated streak since November 2023.
Malinin won last year’s world championships by a whopping 24-point margin over Japan’s Yuma Kagiyama.

BOSTON — It was a little after 10 p.m. on Tuesday night when Ilia Malinin finally took the ice for his designated practice session at TD Garden. The defending world champion drew the last slot of the 27 practice sessions that had been running at the arena since 6 a.m., but hundreds of fans stayed late to watch him anyways. They cheered after he ran through his short program even though he didn’t attempt any of his signature jumps.

‘I was a little bit surprised, yeah, seeing a crowd there,’ Malinin said afterwards.

As the 2025 world figure skating championships take place in Boston this week, it’s clear that Malinin is the main attraction. The 20-year-old from Reston, Virginia is not just the defending world champion, the only person in history to land a quadruple axel in competition, the self-proclaimed ‘Quad God.’ With the 2026 Winter Olympics in Milan-Cortina quickly approaching, he is arguably the face of his entire sport − and seemingly destined to be one of the headliners for Team USA.

Malinin knows his status in figure skating comes with some pressure. Competing at a world championships on home soil, as the defending champ, in a pre-Olympic year − all of that adds to it. But he said he welcomes the attention, and the opportunity to push the boundaries in his sport.

‘Of course I do really feel that pressure,’ Malinin said in a news conference last week. ‘Since (I’m) one of the bigger names in skating, (I know) that I have a bigger audience. And that a lot of people are looking to what I’m doing and the kind of things that I’m trying to do on the ice. So I really try to create new things on the ice, play around with styles and different things on the ice to really just make me stand out and just push the sport.’

Malinin adopted the ‘quadg0d’ moniker on Instagram more than four years ago, and he’s since blossomed into one of the most prolific jumpers in the history of figure skating. Not only is he the first man to land a quadruple axel − which, despite its name, actually features four-and-a-half rotations − but he is also the first to land six quads in the same program.

Malinin could actually attempt as many as seven quadruple jumps, including the famed quad axel, in his long program Saturday night. He is also the only man to even attempt that many. Malinin said he is going to wait until his warmup to decide whether to go for all seven or scale back his program.

‘It’s just so crazy,’ Mexican skater Donovan Carrillo said of Malinin’s jumping skills. ‘But I also feel he is pushing the sport to a different level. I’m very excited to see how the sport is going to evolve after Ilia Malinin.”

For Malinin, the goal is not just to execute jumps but introduce new elements and combinations to the sport. In addition to his history-making quads, he also added the recently-legalized backflip to his programs, as well as a dramatic aerial move that he’s dubbed the ‘raspberry twist.’ (‘Malin’ translates to raspberry in Russian.)

The combination of technical ability and artistry in his programs has vaulted him to the top of the sport. He has not lost a competition since November 2023, and he hasn’t missed a podium since the 2022 world championships, where he finished ninth.

‘I would consider myself to be my biggest rival,’ Malinin said. ‘For me, that’s my whole motto. I always like to compete against myself and to really just push my own limit. … It’s kind of just really a competition between myself that I like to set goals and slowly work my way up to them.’

Malinin, who is coached by his parents, won last year’s world championships by a whopping 24-point margin over Japan’s Yuma Kagiyama, who finished second and is also expected to be Malinin’s closest rival this week. Malinin also won the most recent national championships in January by 44 points. And he said he feels ‘like a whole different version of me’ since then.

‘I feel like I’ve worked on a lot of things, improved a lot of skating skills, technique, just everything,’ he said.

‘I think I have a different mental approach to this. I feel more confident, and I really have more confidence in the skills that I have developed.’

For Malinin, the performances are now becoming so dominant that the questions surrounding him are starting to grow, both in timeframe and scope. What music will he pick for his programs at the 2026 Olympics? How will he handle the pressure and media attention of an Olympic cycle? Is a quintuple jump, maybe at some point, in the cards?

Malinin’s fellow competitors and teammates have their own questions, too. Primarily: How? How does he do it? And how does he make it look so easy?

‘Even skaters cannot comprehend what he’s capable of doing. It is just remarkable to watch and witness,’ U.S. teammate Jason Brown said.

‘I think everyone’s jaw is on the floor – not just because of what he’s doing, which is already crazy hard, but the way that he makes it so effortless. And he keeps pushing his own boundaries. Every event, he’s topping himself. It’s incredible to watch, and he does it his own way.’

Contact Tom Schad at tschad@usatoday.com or on social media @tomschad.bsky.social.

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Reporters are claiming to have found private contact information online for top Trump administration officials at the center of a Signal text chain leak disclosing U.S. plans to attack Yemen’s Houthi rebels. 

Germany’s Der Spiegel said national security advisor Mike Waltz, Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard and Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth are among those affected.  

The outlet reported that phone numbers, email addresses and even some passwords belonging to the officials were found on the internet by its staff after they ‘used commercial people search engines along with hacked customer data that has been published on the web.’ 

‘Most of these numbers and email addresses are apparently still in use, with some of them linked to profiles on social media platforms like Instagram and LinkedIn. They were used to create Dropbox accounts and profiles in apps that track running data,’ Der Spiegel reported. ‘There are also WhatsApp profiles for the respective phone numbers and even Signal accounts in some cases.’ 

The outlet, citing publicly available information, claimed an email address linked to Hegseth was in use just a few days ago. 

It said WhatsApp and Signal accounts purportedly belonging to Waltz appear to have been deactivated after it reached out to both accounts for comment. 

Der Spiegel reported that its staff also found private Google accounts linked to Gabbard in use as recently as two weeks ago.

A spokesperson for the Office of the Director of National Intelligence told Fox News Digital Thursday that ‘this occurred almost 10 years ago, and the platforms mentioned haven’t been used in years and the passwords have changed multiple times.’

White House Deputy Press Secretary Anna Kelly also told Fox News Digital ‘Passwords and accounts associated with the reported leaks are nearly a decade old, and passwords have long been changed.’

The Department of Defense did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment on Thursday.

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Liran Berman calls his brothers, Gali and Ziv, ‘the light of every room [they] walk into.’ 

Twins Gali and Ziv were taken hostage from their home in Kibbutz Kfar Aza during Hamas’ Oct. 7 attacks. He told Fox News Digital that it was fitting that they brought light into every room, as the two brothers were lighting technicians. 

While most Israelis in their 20s move to the center of the country to live in cities like Tel Aviv and Jerusalem, Gali and Ziv opted to stay in their family’s home in southern Israel. They wanted to help their mother care for their father, who is suffering from dementia and Parkinson’s disease.

Liran told Fox News Digital that his brothers were ripped from their beds while sleeping late on a Saturday during a holiday weekend.

The Berman brothers were kidnapped together from the kibbutz, but their family has since learned from released hostages that they were separated shortly after arriving in Gaza. They are not the only brothers who were separated. Iair Horn was freed from Hamas captivity in February 2025 but had to leave his brother, Eitan, behind in Gaza.

‘This is the longest they’ve been separated in their whole lives,’ Liran told Fox News Digital. Gali and Ziv were kidnapped along with Emily Damari, who was freed during the most recent ceasefire deal. When he spoke with Fox News Digital, Liran said he had not had a chance to talk to Emily since her release.

‘Gali and Ziv have done nothing wrong to anyone. They are victims of a conflict,’ Liran told Fox News Digital.

The Berman family received signs of life after Gali and Ziv had spent more than a year in Gaza. Prior to the confirmation, which has come from freed hostages, Liran said his family ‘fought with the belief that my brothers were alive.’ 

‘It was a breath of fresh air, really it’s, it’s — For more than a year, we fought with a belief that they are still alive, nothing more. Because for more than a year we had information from November ‘23 and until late January ’25 we didn’t know anything,’ Liran told Fox News Digital. ‘It gave us strength. We have the knowledge now that they are alive, not just a belief.’

Liran believes that President Donald Trump has the power to secure his brothers’ release. He told Fox News Digital that Trump’s election brought a ‘different atmosphere’ to the negotiations.

‘We are in awe of what President Trump has done in his short term this far, and we are still hopeful that with the current administration we will see the remaining hostages, until the last one. Because that’s what they promised us. Until the last one will be home. It gives us a lot of strength,’ Liran told Fox News Digital. He also described himself as a ‘firm believer in the Trump effect.’

When asked about the renewed anti-Israel unrest on U.S. college campuses, Liran told Fox News Digital that he wants those students to realize that they are not so different from Gali and Ziv. They are around the same age and likely share the same interests.

‘I want them to know that Gali and Ziv have their whole lives ahead of them,’ Liran told Fox News Digital. ‘And I want them to know that Gali and Ziv are missed by so many people.’

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

President Donald Trump appeared to place the blame for the Signal chat scandal on national security advisor Mike Waltz. The president was asked who was responsible for the scandal while signing an executive order on Wednesday evening.

‘It was Mike, I guess. I don’t know, I always thought it was Mike,’ Trump told reporters before calling the media’s reaction to the scandal a ‘witch hunt.’ 

This marks a significant change of tune for the president, who blamed someone else for the scandal when speaking to NBC. During the Tuesday phone interview, Trump told NBC that he believed that ‘it was one of Michael’s people on the phone. A staffer had his number in there.’

A reporter then asked if Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth should be worried about his position amid the scandal, and Trump rushed to his Cabinet member’s defense. 

‘Hegseth, he was doing a great job… How do you bring Hegseth into it? He had nothing to do with this,’ Trump said in response. He also told reporters that he believes Signal, an encrypted messaging app, ‘could be defective’ in light of the scandal.

While speaking to reporters, Trump dismissed the significance of the scandal and instead touted the ‘unbelievably successful’ attack, saying that the media should be focusing on the outcome rather than the chat group.

The Atlantic’s Editor-in-Chief Jeffrey Goldberg sent the Trump White House reeling after he broke the bombshell story on Monday. Goldberg was inadvertently included in a Signal chat group with senior Trump administration officials who were discussing a planned attack on the Houthis in Yemen.

Goldberg said he ‘had very strong doubts’ about the chat’s authenticity. However, once he verified that the actions discussed in the group were occurring, he knew it was real. 

The Atlantic editor-in-chief said he had ‘never seen a breach quite like this.’ While Goldberg acknowledged that it’s not uncommon for U.S. officials to use Signal, he said it was primarily used as a logistics tool and not a place to discuss ‘imminent war plans.’

The Trump administration has worked to downplay the report for days, and even claimed victory when The Atlantic published a follow-up describing what was discussed as ‘attack plans,’ rather than ‘war plans.’ 

‘This entire story was another hoax written by a Trump-hater who is well-known for his sensationalist spin,’ White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt wrote in a post on X.

Leavitt confirmed to reporters on Wednesday that Elon Musk was helping lead an investigation of the Signal chat leak. However, it is unclear what will happen to those found responsible, as Trump has already said that he would not fire Waltz over the scandal.

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President Donald Trump reiterated his argument for the U.S. taking over Greenland on Wednesday, just before Vice President JD Vance is set to visit the island.

Trump said his administration must ‘let them know that we need Greenland for international safety and security. We need it. We have to have it.’ Vance and his wife, second lady Usha Vance, will visit a U.S. space facility based on the island.

‘It’s [an] island from a defensive posture and even offensive posture is something we need. … When you look at the ships going up their shore by the hundreds, it’s a busy place,’ he added, speaking in an interview with radio host Vince Coglianese.

Trump went on to say that he is unsure whether the people of Greenland want to become U.S. citizens, but he argued it is important to ‘convince them.’

‘We have to have the land because it’s not possible to properly defend a large section of this Earth — not just the U.S. — without it. So we have to have it, and I think we will have it,’ he said.

The vice president says he will visit Space Force guardians at the Pituffik Space Base on Friday and ‘check out what’s goin’ on with the security there of Greenland.’

A press release from Vance’s office stated that the base is the Defense Department’s ‘northernmost installation.’

‘The Vice President and Second Lady’s visit to Pituffik Space Base will take place in lieu of the Second Lady’s previously announced visit to the Avannaata Qimussersu dogsled race in Sisimiut,’ the press release stated.

‘The strategic partnership between the United States and Greenland has long played a vital role in our national and economic security. During World War Two, the United States established over a dozen military bases in Greenland to defend the North Atlantic from Nazi incursion. During the Cold War, the United States committed additional resources to Greenland to defend against Soviet missile attacks,’ the release declared.

‘In the decades since, neglect and inaction from Danish leaders and past U.S. administrations have presented our adversaries with the opportunity to advance their own priorities in Greenland and the Arctic. President Trump is rightly changing course.’

Fox News’ Sarah Tobianski and Alex Nitzberg contributed to this report

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No opposing player in this NCAA men’s tournament has known Duke quite like Arizona guard Caleb Love.

Before joining the Wildcats as a transfer before last season, Love spent three years as a high-value stater at North Carolina, playing against the Blue Devils twice every regular season and again in one of the most marquee matchups in tournament history.

“I think it’s definitely been a journey. My journey has been a lot of adversity, a lot of ups and downs, and everything in between,” Love said. “But I think it’s made me who I am as a person and a player. I’ve grown so much over the course of my college career, not only on the court but off the court. I’ve learned so much, and I wouldn’t trade it for anything.”

Former UNC forward Tyler Hansbrough is one of the most revered players in program history not only for some prolific production, including a school-record 2,872 points and 1,219 rebounds, but for his performance against the Tar Heels’ do-or-die rival: Hansbrough went 6-2 overall against Duke, including 4-0 in games played at Cameron Indoor Stadium.

In terms of total appearances, at least, Love has already done Hansbrough one better. The senior will be in the starting lineup for his 10th career meeting against the Blue Devils when No. 4 Arizona meets No. 1 Duke on Thursday night in the Sweet 16 of the East region. Across these nine previous meetings, including two since joining the Wildcats, Love has averaged 15.9 points, 3.3 rebounds and 4.2 assists per game, with three 20-point performances.

“It’s a big matchup because it’s the next game. It’s the only game that matters,” he said after the Wildcats’ 87-83 win against No. 5 Oregon in the second round. “Obviously, our mind was focused on Oregon and we got it done and now we’re going to get in the film room and lock in on Duke and what they do. Obviously, they’re a great team, they’re well coached, and we’ll be ready for them when the time comes.”

NCAA FORECAST: How our experts predict the Sweet 16 and beyond

SWEET 16 RESEED: Ranking the remaining tournament teams from 1 to 16

Love is 5-4 in games against the Blue Devils, including a 1-1 mark at Arizona. The two teams met at the McKale Memorial Center this past November, with Love scoring 8 points on 3 of 13 shooting in a 69-55 loss.

“Obviously, we’re a different team than when we played them, and we didn’t play good that game,” said Arizona coach Tommy Lloyd. “I’m sure they would say they’re a different team, and I don’t think Duke played that great that game. It’s going to be interesting to see how it looks when we get out there (Thursday).”

As a freshman, he scored 25 points in a 98-87 win against Duke on Feb. 6, 2021, and then had another 18 points in a 91-73 win exactly one month later. As a junior, he scored a combined 23 points with seven rebounds and seven assists in 63-57 and 62-57 losses on Feb. 4 and Mar. 4, 2023. But it was as a sophomore that Love etched his place in the rivalry’s history.

After being held to just eight points in an 87-67 loss on Feb. 5, 2022, Love dropped 22 points, 5 rebounds and 5 assists in a 94-81 win the following month. Then, on Apr. 2, Love was the shining star of the one and only tournament meeting between the Tar Heels and Blue Devils — an 81-77 win by UNC in the Final Four that served as the final game of coach Mike Krzyzewski’s career.

After missing his first four attempts, he finished with a game-high 28 points on 11 of 20 shooting, including a key 3-pointer to push the lead to 78-74 with 25 seconds to play, and then made three free throws down the stretch to ice the win.

“I just think that me not being afraid of the moment and me trying to impose my will, kind of like St. Louis swagger to the game,” he said. “Me being from St. Louis, I’m not afraid of anything, anybody. I think that’s just me channeling that, my inner St. Louis in me.”

Asked what he remembers about that key make from deep three years ago, Love said, “I made the shot,” and smiled.

“I mean, it really has no relevance to this game coming up. I just want to focus on the game plan that we have set. I want my focus to be with this group.”

Win or lose on Thursday, Love has already secured an unforgettable place in one of the great rivalries in college sports. And as he said, what he achieved against the Blue Devils across three years with the Tar Heels has no real bearing on what happens in the regional semifinals. But this experience could also be one of the factors that lifts the Wildcats to the upset.

“I think just his game has grown,” Duke coach Jon Scheyer said. “He’s the same player in terms of how he scores and all that. He’s just better at everything. I think that’s a credit to his growth and the job that him and his teammates, coaching staff, everybody that’s helped him.”

The names on the backs of the jerseys are different: Cooper Flagg and Kon Knueppel were in high school when Love last faced off against Duke, and rotational contributors Maliq Brown, Mason Gillis and Sion James had yet to join the program. The only Duke player with any hands-on experience with Love’s game is junior guard Tyrese Proctor.

Matchups against Love carry an “intensity,” said Proctor. “It’s always a high-level matchup. It’s always a great game, and that’s really it.”

And while the Blue Devils’ roster has been flipped and flipped again since Love left for Arizona, his institutional knowledge of Duke’s system is an obvious asset heading into Thursday night.

“They’re physical,” Love said. “They’re long. They’re athletic and things like that. We’ve got to play kind of mind games and things like that to create advantages for ourselves on both ends of the floor.”

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The highest-scoring game in NCAA men’s tournament history came in 1990, when Loyola Marymount beat Michigan 149-115 in the second round. A week later, the Lions lost 131-101 to eventual national champion UNLV in the regional finals for the third-highest total in tournament history. Sandwiched between this pair in second place is LMU’s 119-115 win against Wyoming in the opening round of the 1988 tournament.

In fact, all five of the highest-scoring games since expansion to the 64-team field in 1985 belong to Loyola Marymount which operated at a breakneck speed still unmatched by any team in the past three decades and earned a place in March Madness history.

Sixteen tournament games since that 1990 season have cracked the combined 200-point mark, several with the benefit of overtime, but only two games have done so since 2008. One of those involved Alabama, which beat College of Charleston 109-96 in last year’s opening round on the way to the Final Four, where the Crimson Tide lost to eventual national champion Connecticut.

In the regular season or the postseason, Alabama’s high-pace style of play is designed to overwhelm competition and bury teams behind a scoring barrage. The No. 2 Crimson Tide may meet their foil — or at least see a mirror image of their playing style of choice — in a Sweet 16 matchup in the East region against No. 6 Brigham Young, an opponent that has been more than happy to run and gun in reaching the tournament’s second weekend for the sixth time in program history.

Alabama presents “a tall task for us,” said BYU coach Kevin Young. The Cougars haven’t made the Elite Eight since 1981 and have never advanced to the Final Four.

Should the matchup meet expectations and go according to plan, Thursday night’s game in Newark, New Jersey, will be the highest-scoring game in this year’s bracket and potentially one of the highest-scoring games in recent tournament history.

NCAA FORECAST: How our experts predict the Sweet 16 and beyond

SWEET 16 RESEED: Ranking the remaining tournament teams from 1 to 16

Only two games from the opening weekend topped 170 points: Alabama’s 90-81 win against No. 15 Robert Morris in the first round and the Cougars’ 91-89 thriller against No. 3 Wisconsin in the second round.

The Tide rank first nationally in scoring at 90.8 points per game. They’ve scored at least 80 points in every game but four. Among those four were losses to Purdue (87-78), Mississippi (74-64) and Tennessee (79-76). On a per-game basis, Alabama also ranks near the top of Division I in assists (16th), bench points (sixth), field-goal percentage (17th), made free throws (seventh), 3-point attempts (14th) and makes (20th), and fastbreak points (27th).

BYU is 25th in the country at 80.2 points per game, a total buoyed by a late-season surge that has seen the Cougars crack the 80-point mark in all but two of their past 11 games. Like the Tide, BYU is potent from deep, ranking 29th nationally in 3-point attempts and 11th in makes per game, while sitting at 21st in overall field-goal percentage and sixth in effective field-goal percentage.

“We’ve got some guys playing well on the offensive end,” Alabama coach Nate Oats said. “Hopefully, we continue to play well on offense. But our defense is going to have to be at an elite level against BYU. Our defense is going to get tested against these guys on Thursday.”

Crossover games featuring these teams in matchups against the SEC and Big 12 provide a glimpse into the frenetic style that will decide Thursday’s pairing.

Back in late November, Alabama beat Houston 85-80 in overtime for just the Cougars’ fourth loss since the 2018-19 season when scoring 80 or more points. One of those defeats was an 83-82 loss at Alabama on Dec. 11, 2021. Also in November, BYU lost 96-85 in overtime to Mississippi, with the two teams combining for 27 points in the extra frame.

“They’re a really high-octane offense,” BYU senior guard Trevin Knell said of the Crimson Tide. “They have really dynamic guards that are really well-coached. I think it’s going to be fun to play a team from the SEC and fun to play a team of that caliber.”

Both offenses are defined by high-level guard play and deep, productive benches.

“They play a lot like us, very fast paced,” said Alabama senior guard Mark Sears. “And it should be a very fun game, but it’s going to come down to getting stops.”

Alabama is led by Sears, who leads the team at 18.6 points per game despite shooting 40.1 percent from the field, down from 50.8 percent a year ago. Another three guards are averaging in double figures in sophomore Aden Holloway (11.3 points per game), freshman Labaron Philon and senior Chris Youngblood. Also in double figures in veteran forward Grant Nelson (11.5 points per game), though the senior has been limited of late by an injury to his left knee.

Overall, the Tide and coach Nate Oats have nine players in their current rotation averaging at least 14.5 minutes per game, with all nine averaging at least 5.7 points per game.

BYU will go even deeper down the bench. Eleven players average at least 7.4 minutes per game and eight have made at least 33 attempts from 3-point range, led by forward Richie Saunders’ 78 makes in 181 attempts. A junior in his first year in the starting lineup, Saunders led the Cougars with 16.3 points per game. Another four guards are averaging at least 6.9 points per game, led by freshman Egor Demin’s 10.5 points and team-best 5.4 assists per game.

“I wasn’t planning on playing 11 guys this late in the year,” said Young. “Usually, it goes the other way.”

The story of nearly any other possible matchup in this year’s tournament, especially among teams still alive in the chase for the national championship, would be how an opponent plans to stop Alabama or BYU, or at a minimum slow down two of college basketball’s top offenses.

But this will be different. The Cougars won’t look to stop the Crimson Tide as much as outscore them, and the feeling is mutual. With an Elite Eight berth on the line, both teams could easily hit the century mark in scoring — and keep on going.

“Like, we’re both one and two in offensive ratings right now, so it’s going to be definitely a fast-paced game,” Knell said. “But I’m excited to hopefully be able to play some good defense, not have it 150-149 or something like that like in the 1990s. But yeah, that would be awesome.”

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Cameron Boozer has unfinished business.

Even with four consecutive Florida state high school boys’ basketball championships for Columbus (Miami), including this year’s victory over Windermere in the title game, the senior is seeking more.

After losing to Montverde (Florida) in the semifinals of last season’s national tournament, Boozer wants to close out his high school career with another championship.

“Once you get that close, you crave to get back. … The approach of our whole team coming (in)to season was to win, to defend and to play together,” Boozer said. “And I think right now we’re peaking going to nationals.”

Before that tournament begins April 2, Boozer, the son of former Duke and NBA star Carlos Boozer, was named the Gatorade National Player of the Year for the second time. He also won the award in 2023.

“It’s a blessing, first of all, to win,” Boozer said. “Not that many people have won two, so super thankful. Super thankful for everyone around me. Obviously, my coach (Columbus’ Andrew Moran) has been with me since I think eighth grade, so I’ve had a lot of great supporting casts around me, so I think it’s a blessing for sure.”

Boozer is the fourth two-time winner of the award, joining Greg Oden, LeBron James and Brandon Knight. Duke star freshman Cooper Flagg earned the honor last season.

Boozer, a projected top-five pick in the 2026 NBA draft if he decides to enter, and his fraternal twin brother, Cayden, will follow their dad and play for Duke next season.

“Carlos just texted me, I was sending him a bunch of photos of everything leading up to this and it’s just amazing to see where (Cameron’s) career has gone so far,” Love said. “I always say I’m (an) honorary Dukie for the 30-plus games I played with Coach K (Mike Krzyzewski) over the course of USA basketball and (Duke coach) Jon (Scheyer) being a friend and somebody who I played against in high school as well, I’ll just be watching everything and then I’ll be seeing him at this level here pretty soon.”

The 6-9 Boozer averaged 22.6 points, 12.0 rebounds, 3.2 assists, 2.0 steals and 1.3 blocks this season and helped Columbus to a 27-3 record and a No. 1 ranking in the USA TODAY Super 25 Boys Basketball Poll. Boozer is the No. 2 player in USA TODAY’s list of top recruits, and Cayden is No. 20.

“I just love that Cam leans into the process. I love that he leans into being a great teammate and a great leader. And I think that’s a large portion of what the Gatorade national boys’ basketball player of the year is about,” Love said. “It’s not just what you do on the court, it’s what you do in the community, it’s what you do for your teammates, it’s what you do in the classroom.”

Boozer has a weighted 4.88 grade-point average, has played the cello for several years and performed with a local orchestra, volunteers at a church and serves as an algebra and geometry tutor.  

After the national tournament and the McDonald’s All-American game April 1 (both Boozer brothers are playing in that, too), Cameron will finish high school and begin preparing for Duke.

“That’s why we went through the process and did all the steps, going on every visit and looking into each school thoroughly because the reality is you only get to go to college once and you really want to enjoy that experience while you’re there,” Cameron Boozer said. “And then also while you’re enjoying it, you also want to be in the right place to develop for the next level. And for us, Duke was the right place for that.”

(This story was updated with additional information.)

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Guess who’s coming to the NFL league meetings?

Serena Williams and Caitlin Clark.

The two sports icons will be featured on a panel discussion hosted by Mellody Hobson on Sunday night, part of the kickoff for the league meetings in Palm Beach, Fla. The panel, which will also include Eli Manning, will focus on the growth of women’s sports.

The NFL has a vested interest as it promotes growth in women’s flag football, coinciding with an increasing number of women in key roles with the league and its teams.

“The NFL is certainly interested in learning from the experience of some of the greatest athletes who have ever lived,” Jeff Miller, an NFL executive vice president, said during a media Zoom call on Wednesday. “Certainly, Serena Williams fits that description, and Caitlin Clark’s engagement with college basketball and the WNBA, as well as Mellody Hobson, who is part-owner of the Broncos and invests in sports, including women’s sports.

“The owners, the clubs, are interested in learning more.”

Miller emphasized that flag football is a high priority for the NFL, stepping up efforts as the 2028 Summer Games loom with women’s and men’s flag football debuting as Olympic sports.

Flag football also represents another avenue for the NFL to strengthen its international footprint amid ambitions to boost football (i.e. American football) as a more prominent global sport.

“This is really about the momentum over the last few years,” said Troy Vincent, NFL executive vice president, football operations.

Clark, who became college basketball’s all-time leading scorer at Iowa and was the WNBA’s Rookie of the Year last season with the Indiana Fever, has publicly stated a desire to become an NBA owner.

Hobson, president and co-CEO of Ariel Investments and former Starbucks chair, purchased a share of the Broncos in 2022.

Vincent knows the optics that the panel discussion will reiterate to owners and other key NFL figures, as more women gain prominent roles in the industry.

And there’s no denying the star power pegged to help hammer home the relevance of women’s sports to the NFL.

As Vincent put it, “We just want to continue that conversation amongst the membership.”

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Throughout a fascinating, often scintillating, often perplexing, now-circuitous NFL career, Russell Wilson has always been where his feet are … even if his head frequently seems to be in the clouds. Eternally upbeat, Russ always seems to view that proverbial glass as brimming over – and maybe that’s inevitable when you’ve crafted your own “Mr. Unlimited” persona as an alter ego.

Yet the boundaries Wilson rarely acknowledges have typically been apparent to much of the football world.

There was the time his interception in the final minute of Super Bowl 49 wrested defeat from the jaws of victory for the Seattle Seahawks, ending their bid to win consecutive titles. Wilson was sure they’d be back on the Super Sunday stage and maybe even fulfill some of their dynastic projections at the time. But it never happened, a locker room rift with Wilson at its center accelerating the demise of the Legion of Boom era.

Then there was the time he trademarked the phrase “Let Russ Cook” during the 2020 campaign, effectively co-signing the pleas of Seattle fans who wanted him to have more offensive freedom despite then-coach Pete Carroll’s preference to adhere to a ball-control philosophy for three quarters – at least. But neither the Seahawks nor Wilson have won a playoff game since, his relationship with the franchise souring to the point that he was a member of the Broncos by 2022.

Ah, yes … Denver. Wilson headed east to the Rockies in search of a second ring that would be wholly divorced from his NFL roots in the Emerald City, where the Seahawks’ lone Lombardi is often (and rightly) credited mostly to its historically good LOB defense. Wilson, naturally, wanted to win big for the Broncos, who surrendered a boatload of draft capital to acquire him before subsequently granting a five-year, $243 million extension.

You know the rest. After arriving as the presumed post-Peyton Manning savior, bringing his own support staff into the facility and punctuating every interview with ‘Broncos Country, Let’s Ride’ – a bit which Wilson remained committed to uncomfortably deep into a 5-12 season that rookie head coach Nathaniel Hackett didn’t survive to completion – this horse was beaten to death in so many ways. Wilson was released a year later, at great salary cap cost, after coach Sean Payton went into “Let’s deride” mode as it pertained to his QB’s play and style before eventually benching him (which was at least partially a financial decision).

Last season with the Pittsburgh Steelers? It was obvious to many (me included) that Wilson, now 36, had enough left in the tank to help them to another nine- or 10-win regular season, and that was probably about it – Justin Fields clearly the better option if the team wanted to actually invest at the quarterback position rather than go the patchwork route. Despite Fields’ encouraging six-week start while Wilson recovered from a training camp calf injury, coach Mike Tomlin clearly disagreed – with me? – and pivoted to Wilson, that decision initially appearing inspired but ultimately proving the naysayers correct even as Wilson remained publicly confident that Pittsburgh was a Super Bowl-caliber squad … even as it melted down prior to entering the postseason smelter.

So what is my point?

You might think it’s to cook Russ – he agreed to join the New York Giants on a one-year deal Tuesday evening – as he enters the 14th season of his NFL career. (And it’s completely fair to wonder how Wilson’s approach to interviews and social media plus his sometimes awkward and cringey shtick play in the hyper-aware Big Apple – where everything is amplified – given how much it was parsed in much smaller NFL markets. Also, you totally forgot when he announced a 2019 record-setting contract extension with the Seahawks … while in bed … shirtless … with his wife, Ciara … after midnight … even on the West Coast. So yeah.)

But no.

This is where the scales get (somewhat) balanced, and I remind you that he is a 10-time Pro Bowler, a championship-certified quarterback who’s started 17 playoff games, a guy who’s prevailed in 130 of his 216 NFL appearances (a remarkable winning percentage of .604). His 99.8 career passer rating ranks fifth in league history.

Do I think, with one season to re-establish himself, Wilson will take a Giants team – one that will probably be fortunate to finish third in the NFC East – to the postseason? No, not so much. But that’s not really the point this time.

Aside from Daniel Jones’ 2022 outlier, the Giants have been saddled with sub-par quarterback play since Eli Manning was in his prime a decade ago – and even he had his share of misadventures. Wilson should provide a measure of stability if he can continue to replicate his career-long statistical norms, which he did in Pittsburgh last year and, frankly, even in Denver in 2023. Sure, he and coach Brian Daboll will have to blend the parameters of the playbook with Wilson’s penchant for freelancing and thriving outside of structure – but isn’t that what Daboll did while coaching Josh Allen in Buffalo? Wilson is also generally pretty good at safeguarding the ball, which Jones (and even Manning) wasn’t.

Yet that may all be secondary.

Manning was notorious for his insipid public approach as the face of the franchise (even if that was at odds with his far more playful and beloved reputation in the locker room). Just about every time Jones was at the podium, he appeared as if he’d just embarked on a colon cleanse.

Wilson isn’t everyone’s cup of tea, which was well documented in Seattle. He’s also very much the cup of tea many of his past teammates have preferred. His sunny disposition online and in the public eye – and, presumably, in the Giants’ building – should be a welcome, and likely needed, change of pace for an operation that’s endured so much football misery since it last won the Super Bowl 13 years ago. And like Manning and Jones before him, Wilson is quick to praise teammates, whether or not they deserve it, and equally willing to shoulder blame, whether or not he deserves it.

And even if his earnest approach isn’t necessarily infectious, his experience and professionalism should be boons – however temporary – to a young team with promising young players like Malik Nabers, Tyrone Tracy, Andrew Thomas and Theo Johnson (and that’s just on the offensive side). New York should also allow Wilson to make a much bigger philanthropic footprint while enabling him to slake his non-football interests and maybe even grease the skids to his post-NFL endeavors.

Wilson can be a spectacular, flawed, mesmerizing, frustrating player. That was the case in Pittsburgh last year – and very much true during his Tarkenton-esque prime in Seattle. That should not only play well on New York’s back pages, it should also make the Giants relevant and entertaining anew – possibly even competitive but minus the expectations that followed Russ to Denver and, to a more muted extent, Pittsburgh. Maybe Wilson winds up being the optimal bridge to Shedeur Sanders. Maybe Wilson winds up being the optimal bridge to Arch Manning. Whatever the case, it’s actually hard to imagine things going worse for Big Blue than they already have in recent years.

So best to embrace some of Wilson’s banal optimism and start fresh in 2025 for an organization that really has nowhere to go but up after tying for the league lead with 14 losses in 2024. At least one of Wilson’s new teammates, receiver Darius Slayton already has, noting on X that his new quarterback’s Super Bowl triumph 11 years ago occurred at MetLife Stadium.

Better yet, Slayton advised: “Giants country…..Lets Ride”

For better or worse.

But – channeling Russ here – undoubtedly for the better. Go, G-Men.

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