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Environmental groups appear to be breaking with the Democratic Party after protesters disrupted a recent leadership meeting, which comes as the party attempts to regain its footing after suffering defeat in the 2024 presidential election.

The Democratic National Committee (DNC) held a candidate forum on Thursday evening in Washington, D.C., ahead of their upcoming election to determine who will lead the campaign arm into the next election cycle. 

While the event was intended to showcase some of the party’s potential new faces, it was interrupted by several protesters, including climate activists from the Sunrise Movement, a youth-led, left-wing climate action organization, who demanded the DNC establish a working election strategy for the party after the 2024 loss.

‘What will you do to get fossil fuel money out of Democratic politics? We are facing a climate emergency!’ Fox News Digital heard one protester shout.

Other protesters made calls for the DNC chair candidates to bring back the party’s ban on corporate PAC and lobbyist donations.

‘To defeat Trump, the Democratic Party needs to loudly and proudly take a stand against billionaires and show voters that Democrats are the only party ready to fight for working people,’ Adah, an activist from the Sunrise Movement who made an interruption, said in a statement issued by Sunrise.

‘That’s how we will win back young voters and working class voters and defeat Trump,’ Adah added.

About a dozen protesters interrupted and were kicked out of the event — the final meeting ahead of Saturday’s DNC election. 

The Democratic candidates and moderates grew frustrated with the protesters who were interrupting the event. 

Jason Paul, a candidate running for DNC chair, said the protesters were ‘hijack[ing] the whole evening’ and turning the event ‘into scream night.’

‘I’m surprised I haven’t seen more of it,’ former Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley told reporters after the event. ‘They’re going to be on this planet a lot longer than I am, and if they stop caring passionately about the planet, then we have no hope at all. So it didn’t bother me.’

Eight candidates are running to serve as chair of the DNC next cycle, including O’Malley, Wisconsin chair Ben Wikler, Minnesota chair Ken Martin, and former two-time Democratic presidential candidate Marianne Williamson.

The DNC chair election will be held Saturday.

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Congressional Black Caucus Chair Yvette Clarke has accused President Donald Trump of trying to ‘purge’ non-White workers from the federal government.

‘Ourrepublic’s president, Donald Trump, chose to address a nation in mourning with only fiction and White supremacist ideologies,’ Clarke said during a Friday press conference in Brooklyn, New York.

‘Yesterday, he spun that fiction for one reason and one reason alone, and that is to further his administration’s purge of America’s minority employees.’

Her comments are in response to Trump’s press conference on the deadly midair collision in Washington, D.C., this week. A Black Hawk military helicopter crashed into an American Eagle passenger plane that was moments away from landing, likely killing all 67 people aboard both aircraft.

Trump speculated whether diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) efforts played a role in the tragedy during a press conference Thursday, though both he and other officials maintain the cause is not yet clear.

‘It just could have been,’ Trump said when asked if he believed the crash was caused by diversity hiring. ‘We’ve had a much higher standard than anybody else. And there are things where you have to go by brainpower. You have to go by psychological quality, and psychological quality is a very important element of it. These are various, very powerful tests that we put to use. And they were terminated by Biden.’

He claimed former President Joe Biden ‘went by a standard that seeks the exact opposite.’

‘But certainly, for an air traffic controller, we want the brightest, the smartest, the sharpest. We want somebody that’s psychologically superior. And that’s what we’re going to have,’ Trump said.

Investigations into the collision are still ongoing, and there currently is no evidence that points to DEI or other specific causes.

Though Trump did not mention race during his press conference, Clarke claimed Trump’s remarks were evidence of a ‘racist’ agenda.

‘We wait for the absolute truth of the matter. It is with great and righteous indignation that I recognize the comments and actions of one individual in particular, who did not attempt whatsoever to wait for those facts,’ Clarke said. 

‘The individual who, rather than empathize with the families of the 67 victims of this heartbreaking disaster, attempt to unify a grieving country, or even offer his prayers, chose to capitalize on this tragedy by furthering his racist, insane agenda against America’s diverse employees.’

She later said, ‘He will continue with the vilification and demonization, he will continue with this madness, until our republic is as White and as male as this administration can bend and break the law to make it.’

Democrats have hammered Trump for tying the collision to DEI policies under the last administration. 

Meanwhile, there are voices on the left pushing blame on Trump’s aim to slash the federal workforce and other Republican policies.

Fox News Digital reached out to the White House for comment on Clarke’s remarks.

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The top Republican on the Senate health committee, Sen. Bill Cassidy, faced criticism from fellow Republicans after he suggested his vote for Robert F. Kennedy Jr. as Health and Human Services (HHS) secretary is not a lock. 

Cassidy, chair of the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions, said during closing remarks at Kennedy’s second confirmation hearing of the week that he was ‘struggling’ to confirm the HHS secretary nominee over his inability to admit vaccines are safe and don’t cause autism. ‘A worthy movement called ‘MAHA,’’ Cassidy said Thursday, ‘to improve the health of Americans, or to undermine it, always asking for more evidence, and never accepting the evidence that is there … That is why I’ve been struggling with your nomination.’ 

GOP Rep. Clay Higgins, R-La., did not hold back his anger over Cassidy’s remarks, saying, ‘RFK is going to run HHS whether you like it or not.’ The post included a photo of Cassidy and Kennedy shaking hands at Thursday’s confirmation hearing.

‘The Senate is ours, and the moment Trump decides he’s had enough of random senators delaying our mission, JD [Vance] is walking in and taking the gavel as president of the Senate,’ Higgins said. Vice President JD Vance would be the tie-breaking vote if the resulting tally goes along party lines and Cassidy and two other Republicans defect. Vance did so after GOP Sens. Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska and Susan Collins of Maine voted against Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s nomination.     

‘There’s zero you can do about that,’ Higgins said. ‘We, the people, will not be stopped. We’re saving the country and RFK is part of the formula. So, vote your conscience, senator, or don’t. Either way, we’re watching.’

GOP organizer and strategist Scott Presler said that if Cassidy did not vote for Kennedy, that he would ‘personally come to Louisiana’ to organize a primary challenge against Cassidy in an effort to oust him. ‘We already have a home base in Iberia Parish,’ Pressler said. Meanwhile, a chapter of the Louisiana Republican Assembly replied to Pressler’s threats, noting they were ‘ready to mobilize when needed.’

Charlie Kirk, another GOP organizer and activist who is also a close ally of President Donald Trump, shared a slightly more measured condemnation of Cassidy. ‘I believe this was a sincere moment from Chairman Bill Cassidy,’ Kirk wrote in response to the senator’s closing remarks at Thursday’s hearing. However, Kirk added that he ‘respectfully’ thinks that Cassidy ‘has this backwards.’

‘Many already don’t trust vaccine manufacturers who enjoy legal immunity for any injuries they cause. Many already don’t trust our big food producers and the ingredients they use. Many already don’t trust big medicine, big hospitals, or big pharma,’ Kirk said. ‘RFK Jr. has said repeatedly he’s pro-vaccine, but he’s willing to ask the same questions millions of parents are asking right now about ramped-up vaccine schedules, harmful ingredients, and a blind trust in the manufacturers that are enriched by government mandates, even after COVID.’

While Republicans were incensed by Cassidy’s remarks, the president of Advancing American Freedom (AAF), a conservative nonprofit founded by Trump’s former Vice President Mike Pence, applauded Cassidy’s critical approach to Kennedy’s nomination.

‘It’s refreshing to see senators taking their advise and consent role seriously,’ AAF President Tim Chapman said when asked about Cassidy’s comments. ‘We have separate branches of government for a reason, and nominees, such as RFK, who will be handling the largest amount of taxpayer dollars and controlling the federal response to the life issue deserve serious consideration. Every senator must treat this nominee with the same gravitas that Senator Cassidy is.’

Fox News Digital reached out to representatives for Cassidy but did not receive a response by publication time. 

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A covert agency within Iran’s Ministry of Defense and Armed Forces Logistics, tasked with the development of Iran’s nuclear program, has been found to be operating out of top sites used by Iran’s space program.

Iran has hidden elements of its nuclear development program under the guise of commercial enterprises, and it has been suspected of using its space program to develop technologies that could be applied to its nuclear weapons program. 

Fox News Digital has learned that according to information obtained by sources embedded in the Iranian regime, evidence collected over several months shows that Iran’s chief nuclear development agency, the Organization of Defensive Innovation and Research, has been operating out two locations previously recognized as space development and launch sites.

‘These reports, compiled from dozens of sources and thoroughly validated, indicate that in recent months, SPND has intensified its efforts to construct nuclear warheads at both the Shahrud and Semnan sites,’ the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI) said in a report exclusively obtained by Fox News Digital.

The information was obtained by individuals affiliated with the People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran and given to the NCRI, an Iranian opposition organization based out of Washington, D.C., and Paris. The NCRI’s deputy director of its Washington, D.C., office, Alireza Jafarzadeh, was the first to disclose to the world information about Iran’s covert nuclear program in 2002.

One of the sites, the Shahroud Space Center, which has been suspected of being used by Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) to develop intermediate-range ballistic missiles, is also now reported to have ‘large-scale’ SPND personnel operating out of it – a move Jafarzadeh described as a ‘significant red flag.’

The Shahroud Space Center caught global attention in 2022 when Iran announced it had developed the Ghaem-100 rocket, which could be used to send low-orbit satellites into space, but also as a ballistic missile with a range of nearly 1,400 miles, greater than what was previously achieved with the Qased rocket.

However, according to sources familiar with activity at the Shahroud Space Center ‘SPND’s experts are working on a nuclear warhead for the Ghaem100 solid-fuel missile with a range of more than 3,000 kilometers [more than 1,800 miles] and a mobile launch pad.’

The site is under high security and personnel are apparently prohibited from driving on to the complex. Instead, they are required to park at a checkpoint at the entrance to the site, before being transported inside the complex by the IRGC. 

‘The Ghaem-100 missile, with a mobile launchpad that enhances its military capability, was produced by the IRGC Aerospace Force and copied from North Korean missiles,’ the NCRI report said. ‘The production of the Ghaem missile was designed from the very beginning to carry a nuclear warhead. The IRGC Brigadier General Hassan Tehrani Moghaddam, the father of the IRGC’s missile program, personally pursued the project.’

It is unclear what level of nuclear payload the Ghaem-100 missile would be capable of carrying at the range of 1,800 miles, though this is still shy of the roughly 3,400 miles needed to be classified as an intercontinental missile. 

The second site, located in the northern city of Semnan, the Imam Khomeini Spaceport – Iran’s first spaceport – made international headlines just last month when Tehran launched its heaviest-ever rocket into space carrying a payload of roughly 660 pounds, relying on a liquid propellant.

According to the NCRI report, Iran is using this technology to develop liquid-fuel propellants, like the Simorgh rocket with a range of more than 1,800 miles, used for launching heavier satellites into space – but with the capability of carrying nuclear warheads.

Liquid fuel enables a missile to have greater propulsive thrust, power and control. Though it is heavier than solid fuel and requires more complex technologies. 

‘Creating a Space Command of the IRGC’s Aerospace Force has served to camouflage the development of nuclear warheads under the guise of launching satellites while additionally giving the regime independent communications necessary for guiding the nuclear warheads,’ Jafarzadeh told Fox News Digital. 

The International Atomic Energy Agency earlier this month warned that Iran has developed some 440 pounds of near-weapons grade uranium that has been enriched to the 60% purity threshold – shy of the 90% purity levels needed to develop a nuclear bomb. 

Though only some 92 pounds of weapons-grade uranium is reportedly required to create one nuclear bomb, meaning Iran, if it further enriched its uranium, could possess enough material to develop five nuclear bombs.

However, Jafarzadeh warned that the international community needs to be paying attention to Iran’s activities beyond enriching uranium. 

‘It is naïve to only focus on calculating the amount or purity of enriched uranium without concentrating on the construction of the nuclear bomb or its delivery system,’ he said. ‘All are integral components of giving Iran’s mullahs an atomic bomb.’

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House Republicans are rolling out a new package of election security legislation this week, with GOP lawmakers already setting eyes on 2026.

Republican Study Committee Chairman August Pfluger, R-Texas, introduced the bills this week, with four lawmakers co-sponsoring the entire package and various other members supporting specific pieces.

The three pieces of legislation are a bill to prohibit noncitizen residents of Washington, D.C., from voting in local elections, a bill to block noncitizens from helping administer elections and a constitutional amendment to prevent noncitizens from voting.

It is currently illegal for noncitizens to vote in federal elections. Though the law does not apply to state and local elections, there is currently no state in the U.S. that allows noncitizens to vote in statewide elections.

Some areas, however, allow for noncitizens to vote in local-level elections – including Washington, D.C.

‘Free and fair elections are the cornerstone of our democracy, which is why protecting them from noncitizen influence is essential to our nation’s sovereignty and will ensure America has a flourishing democracy for decades to come,’ Pfluger told Fox News Digital.

‘These bills are three commonsense steps we can take to ensure noncitizens are not influencing our elections by voting in them or administering them. We must safeguard the integrity of our electoral system, and these bills will work to do just that.’

Earlier this year, House Republicans passed the Safeguarding American Voter Eligibility (SAVE) Act, which requires proof of citizenship in the voter registration process.

The majority of Democrats have cried foul at GOP-led efforts to crack down on noncitizen voting, with progressive lawmakers accusing Republicans of trying to spread doubt about the country’s election processes by targeting something that’s already illegal in most cases.

Democrats also criticized Republicans for pushing bills like the SAVE Act just weeks before the November election. 

However, Pfluger and his GOP allies are now side-stepping that criticism by introducing the bills well ahead of the 2026 midterm races, when historical precedent suggests that House Republicans face an uphill battle to keeping their majority.

Among the co-sponsors of the entire package is House Budget Chairman Jodey Arrington, R-Texas, who is playing a critical role in congressional Republicans’ efforts to pass a massive conservative policy overhaul via the budget reconciliation process.

Border security and immigration reform are expected to be a significant part of that forthcoming legislation.

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A stunning new poll this week found that a mere 31% of Americans have a favorable view of the Democratic Party, with a whopping 57% viewing it negatively, and if you want to know why, look no further than the shameful antics of lefty senators in this month’s confirmation hearings.

What emerged through all the snide screeching and sarcastic snobbery is a Democratic Party that is pushing a Big Pharmaceutical agenda, agitating for forever wars, obsessed to the point of mania with January 6, and that believes the Army should be performing sex change operations. 

And they wonder why they lost the election.

In a pair of hearings featuring Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., President Donald Trump’s nominee to lead the Department of Health and Human Services, the Democrats railed against his views on food and health, while ignoring the chronic disease and overprescription of drugs for our kids he seeks to address.

Sen. Bernie Sanders was specifically called out by RFK Jr. in the hearing for taking $1.5 million dollars from Big Pharma, to which the Vermont Senator shot back, ‘out of $200 million!’ while insisting that money came from pharmaceutical workers.

The American people aren’t dumb, they know that big pharma employees are, by and large, big fans of big pharma, and what RFK, Jr. was pointing out was that so are most Democrats in Congress.

When it came to Tulsi Gabbard, Trump’s pick for director of National Intelligence, Sen. Mark Kelly D-Ariz., gravely expressed concern that her criticism of Middle East regime change wars was somehow Russian propaganda, not a legitimate policy position.

To this Gabbard wisely responded, ‘My fear was a repeat of the deployment of another half a million soldiers like we saw in Iraq toward what was the Obama administration’s goal, which was regime change in Syria.’

Avoiding new wars is a big part of why Trump was elected and Kamala Harris was defeated. The American people want a sound foreign policy, not simply a knee-jerk reaction to whatever dictators around the globe say or do.

But the Democrats weren’t done impugning the president’s nominees. They saved particular ire for Kash Patel, who Trump tapped to head the FBI. 

Sen. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., leading purveyor of the Russian Collusion Hoax, at one point asked the nominee to stand and face the Capitol Police in the room while the senator discussed Patel’s efforts to help the families of those imprisoned for the Capitol riot.

First of all, these are exactly the kinds of stupid antics that make Americans furious, and second, Schiff needs to realize that voters rejected Democrats’ constant hemming and hawing about January 6, they just want a fair FBI that doesn’t target political enemies.

Finally, in Pete Hegseth’s hearing for the top spot at the Pentagon, Democrats seemed more interested in making sure mothers can serve in combat and that the military perform sex change operations than ensuring the lethality and readiness of our armed forces. 

What we witnessed this month in the senate is not just a Democratic Party out of touch with the American people, but one that isn’t even in the same ideological galaxy.

Voters made clear that they want to Make America Healthy Again, they don’t want forever wars, they don’t want politics in the FBI, and they want a military focused on fighting, not social justice. The Senate Democrats seem to oppose all of this.

These are the wages of a political party that has spent the last decade solely defining itself as the opposite of Trump. Whatever Trump says or does, they’re against it. It is the only platform they have left.

And Trump knows and uses this fact, by putting himself on the common sense side of issue after issue, he forces Democrats, or maybe we should say tricks them, into defending the absurd and indefensible.

A glass-half-full Democrat may look at the abysmal poll numbers and say that this is natural after a big loss, or that there is plenty of time to fix it before the next election, but they have to want to fix it, and know what to fix.

In order to do this, Democrats must take their laser focus away from Donald Trump and his pugnacious braggadocio and put that focus where it belongs, on the American people.

If they don’t, if Democrats remain nothing more than the Anti-Trump party, then their period in the political wilderness could last a very, very long time.

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The Democratic National Committee (DNC) plans to focus much of its campaign efforts on winning over rural voters in the 2026 midterm elections, according to the party’s outgoing chairman— a sprawling effort they hope will help the party engage with and educate new voters, and loosen what many see as President Donald Trump’s ironclad grip on many red state voters.

The new strategy was previewed exclusively to Fox News Digital by outgoing DNC Chair Jaime Harrison ahead of the DNC’s slated vote Saturday to select his successor as next party leader.

In an interview, Harrison said the strategy, which has been weeks, if not months in the making, is designed to refute many of Trump’s campaign trail claims on the economy, health insurance and taxes for average Americans.

Rather, Harrison said the aim is to tie Trump more closely to these policies and to make the case to voters directly that Trump is ‘using rural America, and giving rural voters nothing in return.’

‘An examination of Trump’s second term agenda and first administrative actions reveals that rural families and the resources they rely on are in greater jeopardy than ever before,’ the DNC said in a preview of its new election strategy memo, shared exclusively with Fox News. 

‘One can conclude, Donald Trump is using rural America and giving rural voters nothing in return,’ the memo continued.

Trump’s rhetoric has long been praised as refreshing by voters, who resonate with what many said they see as his unorthodox, anti-establishment bona fides. However, there is a difference between Trump as a presidential candidate and Trump as president. It is ‘him just saying things and not having the power to implement them,’ compared to being back in the Oval Office, Harrison said. 

The DNC’s effort, however, will seek to challenge that assumption by highlighting victories secured by former President Joe Biden in his first term, including tightening CAFE fuel economy standards for gas-fired vehicles, investing in EV manufacturing and battery supply chains, cracking down on PFAS contaminants and pollution, and allocating billions of dollars in clean energy and climate spending.

Trump has vowed to undo many of these policies after retaking control of the Oval Office.

To date, he has made good on his promise. Trump used his first week in office to sign hundreds of executive orders and actions, a dizzying flurry of orders that, among other things, sought to crack down on immigration, unleash U.S. liquefied natural gas exports and freeze all congressionally approved spending, if only temporarily.

Democrats, for their part, have sought to use Trump’s vice-grip on the post-inauguration news cycle to double down on their efforts to appeal to voters and prepare for the midterms, no matter how far-off they might seem.

This includes focusing on issues like healthcare coverage and medical providers, both of which have suffered ‘major’ disparities in rural America, and where doctors have exited en masse amid a flurry of hospital closures and a dearth of insured patients.

Many of the Republican-led states that did not opt to expand Medicaid saw wide hospital closures, higher out-of-pocket costs for prescriptions and much more limited access to opiod recovery or substance abuse programs, Harrison said.

Rural communities are also seeing more limited access to doctors, emergency treatment centers and a lack of access to important medication, as Biden-era programs wane.

‘These things are going to have a detrimental impact on rural America,’ he said.

Still, Harrison acknowledged that the Democratic Party also needs to do its part to meet voters where they are at in 2026, just months after the party’s humbling defeat in the 2024 presidential election.

However, changing hearts and minds will not happen overnight, he said.

Rather, it will require many conversations from state party leaders at the local level, who can both identify key issues for voters and help recruit good candidates for the upcoming election cycle.

‘I think what we have to do is paint a picture for the American people of all the things that we rely upon— all the things that are necessary and needed in these communities, and that sometimes we don’t even know are [programs] that the federal government is funding,’ Harrison said.

 ‘Those things are in jeopardy under this administration.’

‘We want to let people know these things aren’t just happening by happenstance. It’s happening because Donald Trump is taking this radical right wing extremist agenda and trying to implement and therefore impacting the quality of your life.’

The DNC’s effort will also spell out to voters what they say will happen if these policies are rolled back, in accordance with Trump’s plans, Harrison said. 

‘The second thing is having our cannons— we go out, and we work with our state parties, and recruit candidates to run in 2026,’ he said of candidates who are well-positioned to speak to the communities they are representing.

In Harrison’s view, this will also help explain to voters how Trump’s drastic cuts or reductions will impact their communities specifically. 

‘And then we continue to have that conversation, one-on- one, in small and larger groups with the people in those communities,’ he said. ‘And that is how we put ourselves on a much stronger foot going into the 2026 midterm election. ‘

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The plane crash outside Washington D.C.’s Reagan National Airport left the figure skating world in shock Thursday as reports revealed that many members of the figure skating community were on the flight that collided with a U.S. military Black Hawk helicopter on Wednesday night.

The skaters were returning from a national development camp following the U.S. Figure Skating Championships in Wichita, Kansas. The exact number of victims with ties to figure skating is still unknown.

Many of figure skating’s most popular stars were quick to post their thoughts and prayers in support of the victims. Olympic gold medalist and NBC figure skating analyst Tara Lipinski and Johnny Weir, a former figure skater and NBC partner, made posts to their Instagram accounts as did Olympic bronze medalist Ashley Wagner. Former Olympian Tonya Harding made a post on X (formerly Twitter) expressing her devastation.

However, no one had a more emotional response than two-time Olympic figure skating medalist Nancy Kerrigan.

During a press conference Thursday, Kerrigan revealed that she knew at least two skaters on the plane: Spencer Lane and Jinna Hahn. Both Lane and Hahn’s mothers, Molly Lane and Jin Hahn, were reportedly also on the flight.

‘I’ve never seen someone love skating as much as these two, and that’s why I think it hurts so much,’ said Kerrigan. ‘When you find out you know some of the people on the plane, it’s even a bigger blow.’

WATCH: Full press conference with Nancy Kerrigan

Six confirmed dead from Skating Club of Boston

Kerrigan’s ties to the plane crash run even deeper though. Kerrigan is a Skating Club of Boston alum, although she made it clear that she had never skated at the club’s new facilities. With six of the passengers on the plane confirmed to be members of the same club, Kerrigan was obviously wrecked by the news.

‘Our community is pretty small,’ Kerrigan said through tears. ‘So, it’s not just here that’s hurting. It’s every rink that has skating, has some sort of feeling toward this. It’s tragic.’

Kerrigan expressed that she thought it was ‘weird’ for her to be doing interviews so soon after the crash. She did, however, note that it was important for her to be present for the press conference in support of her community.

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We begin this edition of the Starting Five with a disclaimer. We are not the NCAA. As such, we do not have to go through umpteen committees to change/invoke a rule.

We’re therefore going to utilize a ‘one game per conference’ policy in this week’s preview of the top five games to watch in men’s college basketball. No, we’re not doing this to hate on the SEC, which has three top-25 matchups on Saturday by itself. But we do want to highlight other leagues with all time zones represented.

In addition, we’re going to bring in a sixth game off the bench as a bonus offering for this weekend when the sport truly takes center stage. With all that out of the way then, here are our picks for the six best games to watch on the first day of February.

No. 6 Florida at No. 8 Tennessee

Time/TV: Saturday, noon ET, ESPN

As mentioned above, there are a couple of other games of significance around the SEC – specifically in the Magnolia State. But we’ll highlight this top-10 clash. Things have not gone swimmingly for Tennessee since being knocked off the No. 1 perch, but the Volunteers’ previous encounter with Florida earlier this month was the only one of their four losses in which they were blown out. They’ll hope the rematch in their own building will go much better, but the Gators have won three in a row and five of their last six in conference play. Tennessee’s stout defense keeps it in most contests, that off day in Gainesville notwithstanding. The issue for the Volunteers is they can struggle to get buckets when they absolutely need them, especially when facing opponents with equally strong interior defense – which describes nearly everyone in the SEC. Things get easier for the Vols when their treys are falling, but the Gators are holding opponents to just 27.9% from the arc while hitting 34.3% themselves. Florida enjoys a rebounding margin of nearly 10 on average while also recording 8.4 steals and just under five blocks per game as a team.

No. 19 Texas Tech at No. 5 Houston

Time/TV: Saturday, 6 p.m. ET, ESPN2

We head next to the Lone Star State for this clash of former Southwest Conference opponents who are now two of the Big 12’s hottest teams. The Cougars are the lone squad still unscathed in conference play and have won 13 in a row overall. The Red Raiders are riding a five-game winning streak themselves and have lost just once since the calendar turned to 2025, and that was a more-than-forgivable overtime decision against Iowa State. Houston followed its memorable escape at Kansas with Wednesday’s win at short-handed West Virginia, but the Cougars will nonetheless be glad to have a friendly crowd for this one. Texas Tech will get a return visit from the Cougars on Feb. 24 but wouldn’t mind getting a leg up on the road. The game features two of the league’s most efficient facilitators, Houston’s Milos Uzan and the Red Raiders’ Elijah Hawkins.

WARM RECEPTION?: Kentucky welcomes back John Calipari this weekend

No. 24 Connecticut at No. 9 Marquette

Time/TV: Saturday, 8 p.m. ET, Fox

The quest for a third consecutive championship season has been quite rocky for the Huskies, who find themselves in fourth place in the Big East. They’ll try to gain a little ground on the road against one of the league coleaders, but the Golden Eagles have put together an impressive resume and hope to add another quality result. UConn found a way to get past DePaul on Wednesday night despite the ongoing absence of standout freshman Liam McNeeley (ankle). There is no disputing the Huskies’ defensive intensity, but keeping Marquette’s Cam Jones and Stevie Mitchell on lockdown for a full 40 minutes is asking a lot.

North Carolina at No. 2 Duke

Time/TV: Saturday, 6:30 p.m. ET, ESPN

The sport’s most fierce rivals find themselves in very different places as they meet for the first time this season. The Blue Devils are in juggernaut mode with a top NCAA seed well within reach, while the Tar Heels are in desperate need of a good result to get back on the right side of the bubble. UNC has dropped three of its last four, with the lone win in that stretch requiring overtime on its home floor to get by a Boston College squad that is below .500. The lack of interior depth remains an issue for the Tar Heels, meaning they might not have many answers for Duke’s Cooper Flagg, who can score from multiple levels. UNC does still have reigning ACC player of the year R.J. Davis, but he’ll need a lot of help in the hostile environs of Cameron Indoor Stadium.

New Mexico at Utah State

Time/TV: Saturday, 9:30 p.m. ET, FS1

We’ll close the Starting Five-plus-one with a couple of offerings from the western part of the country. Up first is this huge showdown in the Mountain West with first place on the line. The league isn’t as deep as last year when six squads from the league went dancing, so this is a major opportunity for a top-tier win for both contenders. The Aggies staved off UNLV earlier this week to avenge their lone MWC loss of the season to date, while the Lobos have enjoyed a few extra days off after taking down that same Rebels’ squad Saturday. Both rosters saw plenty of turnover via the portal, but regular followers of the league will remember Utah State’s veteran backcourt tandem of Ian Martinez and Mason Falslev and New Mexico’s standout floor leader Donovan Dent.

Gonzaga at Saint Mary’s

Time/TV: Saturday, 11 p.m. ET, ESPN

It will be a shame to see this rivalry come to an end when Gonzaga departs the West Coast Conference for the revamped Pac-12, so we must enjoy these last few encounters while we can. It’s the Gaels who hold the upper hand in the league standings, though the Bulldogs appear to have righted themselves after a rare two-game slide as they put up 98 against Oregon State on Tuesday to avenge one of those setbacks. Finding offense against Saint Mary’s figures to be more challenging, however, as evidenced by the 30-0 run the Gaels used to put away Santa Clara on Wednesday, the same Santa Clara squad that went for over 100 in a win at Gonzaga. The key inside matchup between Bulldogs big man Graham Ike and Mitchell Saxen of the Gaels will be worth watching.

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The narrative that Ryan Day’s career began on third base discounts his achievements. Anyway, he got Ohio State to home plate. Day deserves his flowers.
Deep Notre Dame quarterback competition headlined by CJ Carr and Steve Angeli among top offseason topics.
Brian Kelly headed to hot seat at LSU? Maybe pump the brakes on that thought.

The narrative that Ryan Day’s career began on third base discounts his achievements as an offensive coordinator and quarterback developer before he succeeded Urban Meyer as Ohio State’s coach. Day earned Chip Kelly’s respect while starring for him as New Hampshire’s record-breaking quarterback, then caught Meyer’s eye as a Florida graduate assistant. Within a coaching industry where nepo babies are unmissable, Day didn’t gain that shortcut.

But, even to the extent that ‘third base’ narrative rings true by Day landing Ohio State as his first head coaching job, Day deserves praise for assembling an uber-talented team and bringing the Buckeyes across home plate for their first national championship in more than a decade.

Day’s coaching performance remains a water-cooler topic as the offseason uncorks, as does runner-up Notre Dame’s outlook and the College Football Playoff format.

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Let’s answer some reader mail addressing these topics:

Does Ryan Day get too much credit at Ohio State?

Gene writes: I think that Coach Day is given too much credit, except for raising money and recruiting. Having the best talent that money can buy, … he should win it all.  … Doing the expected is reason for appreciation but not high praise.

My response: College football championships are won foremost through stockpiling talent and getting the stars to play together as a unit. Nick Saban had a mind for the game, sure, but he became the GOAT because nobody consistently attracted and united more talent than Saban’s Alabama. Then, Kirby Smart replicated Saban’s success as a recruiter, motivator and developer.

As the saying goes, Jimmys and Joes matter more than X’s and O’s.

Day proved himself an ace recruiter, before and after NIL, and energizing NIL fundraising now is part of a coach’s duties. His persistent ability to magnetize talent made winning a national championship a matter of when, not if.

Day hired excellent coordinators and let them do what they do best while he effectively served as CEO. He kept the Buckeyes focused and motivated after another soul-sucking loss to Michigan. Yes, Day built an enviable amount of talent, but others (see: Alabama, Georgia) achieved less this season with talented rosters.

Day burnished his quarterback development résumé, too, while transfer Will Howard flourished in the postseason.

Discounting Day’s coaching abilities because he’s a skilled recruiter and he galvanizines NIL is like saying your mechanic gets too much credit, because all he does is fix your car. That’s the job.

Recruiting, fundraising, leadership and motivation are college football’s coaching pillars. Day became the coach Ohio State needed, because he assembled and inspired an unmatchable roster, much as Smart and Saban did during their national championship seasons.

Should the College Football Playoff get smaller?

Tim writes: I read your column about the CFP.  I believe 12 teams are too many.  The games proved that to be the case. … Pick the eight best teams and seed them.

My response: The playoff will not shrink in size. Not happening. If anything, it might grow to 14 teams in 2026.

Even if we could wave a wand and shrink the playoff, I wouldn’t want to. I like that this playoff earmarks byes for the top conference champions. Byes would go away in a three-round, eight-team playoff.

With an 11-game playoff, you’re naturally going to have some lopsided outcomes. That’s not new, though. The four-team playoff regularly featured blowouts. The NFL’s wildcard round featured several blowouts, too, but I don’t detect a clamoring to shrink the NFL playoff.

Fortunately, the CFP games improved as the rounds progressed, peaking with two excellent semifinals.

The first-round format heightens the chance for blowouts because the better-seeded team hosts. That’s one argument for keeping quarterfinal games at neutral sites. Playing at bowl sites removes score-tilting home-field advantage.

Let’s leave room for a larger sample size before making sweeping rebukes of this format. Just because the No. 8 vs. No. 9 game became a blowout this season, doesn’t mean that will repeat.

Is it Steve Angeli or CJ Carr for Notre Dame?

Guy writes: I think you are grossly underestimating the abilities of Steve Angeli, (a contender for Notre Dame’s starting quarterback vacancy). We have not seen CJ Carr in game action. … As in the Penn State game, Angeli has shown himself to be a more than adequate alternative.

My response: The Irish require a standout quarterback, not a “more than adequate” quarterback, to become national champions. More wide receiver starpower would help, too. It’s a pitch-and-catch game, as much as block-and-tackle. Virginia transfer Malachi Fields boosts the receiving corps, but that leaves the matter of replacing starting quarterback Riley Leonard.

Angeli probably would offer Notre Dame a respectable floor. The Irish would do well to retain him, but if the Irish are serious about pursuing a national championship in 2025, then a healthy Carr is the choice. He earned rave reviews after signing as a blue-chip recruit. His September elbow injury ended the chance of seeing his abilities this season. Never mind the floor. A healthy, effective Carr offers Notre Dame the highest ceiling.

Ohio State had too much talent for Notre Dame

James writes: You are right on!!! Glad someone said it: Ohio State was superior to Notre Dame with the skill-position guys. Are the Irish just recruiting star rankings?

My response: It’s not a matter of Notre Dame being too focused on star ratings. To the contrary, the Irish would benefit from signing a five-star receiver.

Ohio State’s top three receivers, Jeremiah Smith, Emeka Egbuka and Carnell Tate, were five-star recruits, as rated by 247Sports. Smith rated as the nation’s No. 1 overall recruit in the 2024 class.

Michael Floyd, who signed with the Irish in 2008, remains the last receiver with a 247Sports Composite five-star rating to sign with Notre Dame. Floyd became a first-round NFL Draft pick after a stellar Notre Dame career.

What’s the difference between a four-star and five-star wide receiver? I don’t mean to oversimplify it, but consider Notre Dame’s Jaden Greathouse compared to Ohio State’s Smith. Greathouse was a four-star, and Smith a five-star. See the difference? Greathouse is good. Smith is sensational.

Brian Kelly is College Football Playoff or bust at LSU

Tim writes: Full disclosure, SEC homer and LSU fan. If Brian Kelly doesn’t have us in CFP next year, look for his buyout!

My response: Kelly crushed the hot-stove league. LSU plundered an impressive bounty of portal prizes – both in quantity and quality – to accompany a top-10 recruiting class. Add it up, it’s the best player acquisition haul all of Kelly’s tenure.

Kelly’s been good, not great, for LSU, totaling 29 wins in three seasons. It’s fair for LSU fans to enter next season with a playoff-or-bust mentality, particularly considering Garrett Nussmeier returns as the SEC’s most proven quarterback. Kelly’s quest will hinge on retooling the offensive line and finally engineering improvement on defense for a unit mired in a yearslong slump.

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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