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Dick’s Sporting Goods on Tuesday said it’s expecting 2025 profits to be far lower than Wall Street anticipated, making it the latest retailer to forecast a rocky year ahead as consumers contend with tariffs, inflation and fears around a potential recession. 

In an interview with CNBC, Executive Chairman Ed Stack said the company’s exposure to China, Mexico and Canada for sourcing is very small, but it recognizes that falling consumer confidence could impact spending.

“I do think it’s just a bit of an uncertain world out there right now,” said Stack. “What’s going to happen from a tariff standpoint? You know, if tariffs are put in place and prices rise the way that they might, what’s going to happen with the consumer?”

On a call with analysts, CEO Lauren Hobart insisted the company is not seeing a weak consumer, and said its guidance is based on the overall uncertain environment.

“We definitely are feeling great about our consumer,” said Hobart. “We are just reflecting an appropriate level of caution given so much uncertainty out in the marketplace.”

Shares of the company opened about 2% lower.

Despite the weak guidance, the sporting goods retailer posted its best holiday quarter on record. Its comparable sales rose 6.4%, far ahead of the 2.9% growth that analysts expected, according to StreetAccount. 

Here’s how Dick’s did in its fiscal fourth quarter compared with what Wall Street was anticipating, based on a survey of analysts by LSEG:

Earnings per share: $3.62 vs. $3.53 expected

Revenue: $3.89 billion vs. $3.78 billion expected

The company’s reported net income for the three-month period that ended Feb. 1 was $300 million, or $3.62 per share, compared with $296 million, or $3.57 per share, a year earlier.  

Sales rose to $3.89 billion, up about 0.5% from $3.88 billion a year earlier. Like other retailers, Dick’s benefited from an extra week in the year-ago period, which has skewed comparisons. But unlike many of its peers, Dick’s still managed to grow both sales and profits during the quarter, even with one less selling week. 

In the year ahead, Dick’s is expecting earnings per share to be between $13.80 and $14.40, well short of Wall Street estimates of $14.86, according to LSEG. It anticipates net sales will be between $13.6 billion and $13.9 billion, which at the high end is in line with estimates of $13.9 billion, according to LSEG. Dick’s expecting comparable sales to grow between 1% and 3%, compared with estimates of up 2.5%, according to StreetAccount. 

The gloomy earnings outlook comes after a wide array of other retailers gave weak forecasts for the current quarter or the year ahead amid concerns about sliding consumer confidence and the impact tariffs and inflation could have on spending. Kohl’s also offered a weak outlook for the year ahead on Tuesday, leading its shares to plummet 15%.

Some retailers blamed an unseasonably cool February for a weak start to the current quarter, but most recognized they’re also operating in a tough macroeconomic backdrop, and it’s harder than ever to forecast how consumers are holding up. In February, consumer confidence slid to its lowest levels since 2021, the jobs report came in weaker than expected and unemployment ticked up. Over the last few years, a strong job market has led many economists to brush away concerns about rising credit card delinquencies and debt, but those cracks could grow deeper if unemployment continues to rise. 

On Monday, some of those concerns triggered a stock market sell-off, extending losses after the S&P 500 posted three consecutive negative weeks. The Nasdaq Composite saw its worst day since September 2022, while the Dow lost nearly 900 points and closed below its 200-day moving average for the first time since Nov. 1, 2023.

Beyond the uncertain macroeconomic environment, Dick’s plans to invest more heavily in its “House of Sport” concept and e-commerce in the year ahead, which it also expects will weigh on profits. The massive, 100,000-square-foot stores are a growth area for the company and include features like rock climbing walls and running tracks. 

In the year ahead, Dick’s plans to spend $1 billion on a net basis building 16 additional House of Sport locations and 18 Field House locations, which take some of the experimental elements of the House of Sport but fit it into the size of a traditional Dick’s store. 

The strategy comes at a strong point for sports in the country, which is expected to be a tail wind for the business. The 2026 World Cup will be held in North America, women’s sports are more popular than ever, and consumers are increasingly focused on health and wellness. 

“We’re going to have a moment here in the next three or four years, from a sports standpoint, that I think is going to put sport on steroids,” said Stack. “We’re going into a sports moment right now, and we are investing very heavily into that sports moment over the next several years because this is going to last through [2030] and maybe beyond.”

— Additional reporting by CNBC’s Courtney Reagan.

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

No, they’re not done. But it’s not going to be easy.

The New York Yankees, the closest thing to a pennant favorite in the muddled American League, took about the biggest hit a club could absorb in losing the seemingly superhuman Gerrit Cole to Tommy John surgery.

Cole will be back – probably not until fairly deep into the 2026 season. And the Yankees should return to the playoffs this year – though probably not without some roster enhancements.

A look at the reverberations throughout the Yankees roster, the AL East and the majors as a whole as Cole undergoes reconstructive elbow surgery on Tuesday:

The end of the world as they know it

For a guy with a Cy Young Award on the shelf and a once-record $324 million contract, Cole’s durability and brilliance seemed strangely underappreciated.

It didn’t help that Cole’s much-anticipated Year 1 in the Bronx – coming off a year the Yankees reached Game 6 of the ALCS – was truncated by the COVID-19 pandemic. He made his dozen starts and posted a 2.84 ERA, nudged the Yankees a round in the playoffs before an ALDS loss to Tampa Bay.

What followed were three largely fantastic seasons, during which Cole made three All-Star teams, posted 30 to 33 starts, paired a 1.01 WHIP with 11 strikeouts per nine innings and took home the 2023 Cy Young Award.

The yellow flags began waving one year ago, when an elbow scare knocked Cole out until June. The fatalists among us who figured that was a harbinger for eventual surgery were proven correct.

Even still, Cole dominated once he got his sea legs, posting a 2.67 ERA in his last 13 outings; the Yankees won his first three postseason starts and he handed them a 1-1 tie in Game 1 of the World Series before many, many things went sideways.

It is the kind of production that isn’t fully appreciated until it is gone.

Fall on me

So, who picks up the slack?

It’s a complicated problem, exacerbated by second-year right-hander Luis Gil’s lat injury that will knock him out at least two months. Put it this way: Veteran Marcus Stroman came to camp grousing that he had no rotation spot and at this rate, he’ll be starting on Opening Day.

OK, let’s not weep too much for the Yankees: Their rotation begins with $380 million worth of left-handers coming out of the chute, thanks to their $218 million off-season investment in Max Fried. It’s not that the Yankees are bereft – it’s that they have zero margin for error.

Fried has looked comfortable in pinstripes and ready to take on the next stage of his career. He must live up to it.

Lefty Carlos Rodón’s pattern of good year, bad year has largely continued into his $162 million deal with the Yankees. He must back up a solid 2024 – 32 starts, a 3.96 ERA – with continued good health and production.

Clarke Schmidt is a nice back-end rotation piece; suddenly, he’s the ranking right-hander in the rotation and above all, needs to stay healthy.

Stroman? At this stage of his career, he’s proven effective out of the gate, evidenced by his 2.60 ERA as the Yankees won eight of his first 12 starts in pinstripes; he had a 5.70 ERA in his final 18 appearances and, at 33, does not miss many bats.

The Yankees just might take that in 2025, holding the fort down until Gil returns and forming a mix-and-match at the back end of the rotation with young Will Warren and maybe non-roster invitee Carlos Carrasco, who has had a good spring, to the extent that tells us anything about what Cookie can offer after his 38th birthday next week.

After that?

The cupboard is glaringly bare.

Everybody hurts

And that lack of depth – thinned over the years by trades for Juan Soto and others – is before any other starter feels a twinge or a pull, an inevitable development during a 162-game season.

While nobody roots for a colleague to get hurt, Cole’s departure certainly raised the most eyebrows among rivals, opening the door wider for what should be a five-team AL East dogfight.

Yet everyone has their problems. Grayson Rodriguez’s elbow is barking in Orioles camp, where they were already counting on 41-year-old Charlie Morton to shore up the rotation. Boston, finally a threat after a largely moribund decade, will start the year with Brayan Bello and Kutter Crawford on the injured list, with question marks on Lucas Giolito and Walker Buehler’s ability to consume significant innings.

In today’s game, attrition is inevitable. If nothing else, the Yankees at least know early on that they probably need to delve into the trade market.

Accelerate

Yep, it certainly hurts for a Yankee fan to look back at how close they came to a World Series title with Soto – because now, they could certainly use Michael King and others used to acquire Soto.

But they never stop shooting their shot in the Bronx. The question is, what’s left in the stockpile?

One year ago this week, Dylan Cease was traded to the Padres, proof enough that it’s never too late to add. But the Padres have not yet signaled they’re willing to flip Cease or King and still have a team with pennant aspirations.

The Miami Marlins would likelier draw a bigger haul for 2023 Cy Young winner Sandy Alcántara once he has a first half worth of dominant starts behind him. It’s probably the same case in St. Louis, where resetting has proven elusive, yet the returns for a Sonny Gray or Miles Mikolas would probably be better with a dozen teams, rather than two or three, in the market.

And just what do the Yankees have to deal?

Their farm system has taken hits from trades and injuries and in recent years, they’ve walked away from deals that might include anticipated stars, such as Jasson Dominguez or Anthony Volpe. So they’re probably not trading budding slugger Spencer Jones, and are thin in that mid-range prospect area that might facilitate a deal for a higher-end stopgap.

Tough spot.

Cole’s injury also means they need to start preparing for 2026 now. He’ll likely not return until around next year’s All-Star break; acquiring a starter in their walk year would put them back in the same spot come winter.

But that’s a problem for another time. The Yankees have always worried about tomorrow, tomorrow, if you will. It’s just that today got a whole lot cloudier.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

March Madness is beginning with conference tournaments underway, Selection Sunday fast approaching and the start of the 2025 men’s NCAA basketball tournament less than a week away. It’s time to figure out how to watch every game or figure out the channel for truTV), and who might be on the call when the next buzzer beater or Cinderella emerges.

For the 15th season in a row, CBS and Turner Sports are combining to broadcast all 67 games of the NCAA Tournament, starting with First Four action on March 18. It will be the first March Madness on CBS since the death of the network’s longtime college basketball studio host and play-by-play announcer Greg Gumbel. But there will be plenty of familiar faces on set, with TNT’s ‘Inside the NBA’ trio of Ernie Johnson, Charles Barkley and Kenny Smith returning and the addition of former Michigan Fab Five star and ESPN NBA commentator Jalen Rose as an analyst.

CBS and Turner Sports have done joint coverage of the men’s NCAA Tournament since 2011. The two networks previously agreed to an 8-year, $8-billion contract extension with the NCAA for broadcasting rights to the event through 2032.

Here’s a break down of March Madness coverage plans for CBS and Turner Sports in 2025, as well as the studio and game announcer teams for this year’s NCAA Tournament:

March Madness 2025: Men’s NCAA Tournament game announcers

The lead CBS announce team of Ian Eagle, Bill Raftery and Grant Hill, with Tracy Wolfson on sideline duties, will broadcast the Final Four and national championship game from San Antonio for the second-straight season. Here’s the rest of the broadcasters for men’s NCAA Tournament games this year:

Through Final Four/national championship: Ian Eagle (play-by-play), Bill Raftery (analyst), Grant Hill (analyst) and Tracy Wolfson (sideline)
Through Elite Eight: Brian Anderson (play-by-play), Jim Jackson (analyst), Allie LaForce (sideline)
Through Elite Eight: Kevin Harlan (play-by-play), Dan Bonner (analyst), Stan Van Gundy (analyst), Lauren Shehadi (sideline)
Through Elite Eight: Andrew Catalon (play-by-play), Steve Lappas (analyst), Evan Washburn (sideline)
First/second round: Lisa Byington (play-by-play), Robbie Hummel (analyst), Jalen Rose (analyst), Andy Katz (sideline)
First/second round: Spero Dedes (play-by-play), Jim Spanarkel (analyst), Jon Rothstein (sideline)*
First/second round: Tom McCarthy (play-by-play), Debbie Antonelli (analyst), Steve Smith (analyst), AJ Ross (sideline)
First/second round: Brad Nessler (play-by-play), Brendan Haywood (analyst), Dana Jacobson (sideline)

*Will also broadcast First Four games in Dayton, Ohio

March Madness 2025: NCAA Tournament studio commentators

As part of its 2025 NCAA Tournament coverage, CBS and Turner Sports will once again broadcast from two different studio sets based in either New York or Atlanta.

From New York: Ernie Johnson (host), Charles Barkley, Kenny Smith and Clark Kellogg.
From Atlanta: Adam Lefkoe (host), Jay Wright, Candace Parker and Seth Davis

Adam Zucker (host), Wally Szczerbiak (analyst), Gene Steratore (rules analyst) and Jami Erdahl (game updates) will also work in studio roles during the the 2025 NCAA Tournament. Lefkoe, Wright, Rose and Davis will work as a team in studio during First Four action.

How to watch March Madness: TV, streaming for 2025 NCAA Tournament

The 2025 men’s basketball NCAA Tournament will be broadcast on CBS, TNT, TBS and truTV, beginning with First Four games on March 18 and 19 on truTV. First-round action starts on March 20.

NCAA Tournament games can be streamed on the March Madness On Demand app, Paramount+, Sling or Fubo, which is offering a free trial.

Watch 2025 NCAA Tournament games with Fubo

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Ukraine on Tuesday accepted a deal put forward by the Trump administration during a meeting in Saudi Arabia, a significant step forward in securing a ceasefire agreement and bringing an end to the war with Russia.

‘We’ll take this offer now to the Russians, and we hope that they’ll say yes,’ Secretary of State Marco Rubio told reporters. 

Rubio, standing alongside national security advisor Mike Waltz, did not detail exactly what was in this agreement, but according to a readout provided by Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s office, Kyiv has agreed to a 30-day ceasefire contingent on Moscow’s acceptance of the terms.

‘We hope the Russians answer to that,’ Rubio said. ‘The best goodwill gesture the Russians can provide is to say yes.’

In response to Kyiv’s willingness to accept Washington’s hard-fought preliminary proposal, President Donald Trump agreed to lift the pause on U.S. security assistance to Ukraine ‘effective immediately’ and renewed U.S. intelligence sharing.

Rubio said if and once Moscow agrees to this preliminary agreement, the real negotiations can commence. 

‘This is very serious. Today people will die in this war. They died yesterday, and sadly, unless there’s a ceasefire tonight, they’ll die tomorrow,’ Rubio said. ‘The president wants that to stop.’

‘We’ve gone from if this war is going to end to how this war is going to end,’ Waltz told reporters. 

Issues involving the return of children abducted by Russia and the return of prisoners of war will be addressed in the ‘second phase’ of negotiations, the pair said.

Waltz confirmed that the Trump administration and the Ukrainian delegation discussed ‘substantive details’ on security guarantees to ensure lasting peace between the two nations – though neither Kyiv nor Washington have yet confirmed the elements of those discussions. 

‘Both delegations agreed to name their negotiating teams and immediately begin negotiations toward an enduring peace that provides for Ukraine’s long-term security,’ the readout of the talks said. ‘The United States committed to discussing these specific proposals with representatives from Russia. 

‘The Ukrainian delegation reiterated that European partners shall be involved in the peace process,’ the readout added. 

Rubio said a mineral deal will be discussed at a further date.

‘We were here in pursuit of peace,’ he told reporters. ‘That doesn’t mean the mineral deal is not very important.’

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

It’s happening: Southwest Airlines will start charging passengers to check bags for the first time.

It’s a stunning reversal that shows the low-cost pioneer is willing to part with a customer perk executives have said set it apart from rivals in more than half a century of flying in hopes of increasing revenue.

Southwest’s changes come after months of pressure from activist Elliott Investment Management. The firm took a stake in the airline last year and won five board seats as it pushed for quick changes at the company, which held on for decades — until now — to perks such as free checked bags, changeable tickets and open seating.

For tickets purchased on or after May 28, Southwest customers in all but the top tier-fare class will have to pay to check bags, though there will be exceptions. Elite frequent flyers who hold “A-List Preferred” status will still get two bags and A-List level members will get one free checked bag. Southwest credit card holders will also get one free checked bag.

“Two bags fly free” is a registered trademark on Southwest’s website. But its decision to about-face on what executives long cast as a sacrosanct passenger perk brings the largest U.S. domestic carrier in line with its rivals, which together generated $5.5 billion from bag fees last year, according to federal data.

Southwest executives have long said they didn’t plan to charge for bags, telling Wall Street analysts that it was a major reason why customers chose the airline.

“After fare and schedule, bags fly free is cited as the No. 1 issue in terms of why customers choose Southwest,” CEO Bob Jordan said on an earnings call last July.

But Southwest has changed its tune.

“What’s changed is that we’ve come to realize that we need more revenue to cover our costs,” COO Andrew Watterson said in an interview with CNBC about the baggage fee changes. “We think that these changes that we’re announcing today will lead to less of that share shift than would have been the case otherwise.”

In September, Southwest’s then-chief transformation officer, Ryan Green, told analysts that its analysis showed Southwest would lose more money from passengers defecting to rivals if it started charging for bags than it would make from the fees.

“The fact that free bags is a key driver of choice creates the risk that customers may choose the competition if we change the policy,” he said.

Southwest said last month that it had parted ways with Green.

The airline also said Tuesday that it will launch a new, basic economy fare, something rivals have offered for years.

Southwest, in addition, will change the way customers earn Rapid Rewards: Customers will earn more of the frequent flyer miles depending on how much they pay. Redemption rates will vary depending on flight demand, a dynamic pricing model competitors use.

And flight credits for tickets for tickets purchased on or after May 28 will expire one year, or earlier, depending on the type of fare purchased.

It’s the latest in a string of massive strategy changes at Southwest as its performance has fallen behind rivals.

Last July, Southwest shocked passengers when it announced it would ditch its open seating model for assigned seats and add “premium” extra legroom options, ending decades of an single-class cabin.

The airline is also looking to slash its costs. Higher expenses coming out of the pandemic have taken a bite out of airline margins.

Last month, Southwest announced its first mass layoff, cutting about 1,750 jobs roughly 15% of its corporate staff, many of them at its headquarters, a decision CEO Jordan called “unprecedented” in the carrier’s more than 53 years of flying.

“We are at a pivotal moment as we transform Southwest Airlines into a leaner, faster, and more agile organization,” he said last month.

Earlier this year, Southwest announced the retirement of its longtime finance chief, Tammy Romo, who was replaced by Breeze executive Tom Doxey, and its chief administrative officer, Linda Rutherford. Both executives worked at Southwest for more than 30 years.

Southwest has also cut unprofitable routes, summer internships and employee teambuilding events its held for decades.

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

Major League Baseball’s stadium landscape looks dramatically different in 2025, with the Tampa Bay Rays (hurricane damage to Tropicana Field) and Athletics (en route to Vegas) temporarily moving into minor-league ballparks.

After their dome’s roof was ripped off in October, the Rays will play 2025 home games at George M. Steinbrenner Field in Tampa, the spring training training facility of the rival New York Yankees. On the West Coast, the Athletics will play the next three seasons in Sacramento at Sutter Health Park – home of the San Francisco Giants’ Triple-A affiliate – while awaiting their new stadium in Las Vegas, expected to open in 2028.

In addition to the new ballparks on the MLB circuit, two others underwent naming sponsor changes for the new season. The Houston Astros’ home is now called Daikin Park after more than two decades as Minute Maid Park, while the Chicago White Sox dropped a word from Guaranteed Rate Field and now play at Rate Field.

Last year, eight USA TODAY Network reporters and editors ranked MLB’s stadiums from 1-30. With two of those stadiums out of the picture for 2025 and the temporary homes yet to host a big-league game, here’s a look at an updated 1-28:

1. PNC Park – Pittsburgh Pirates

Year opened: 2001
Capacity: 38,747

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2. Oracle Park – San Francisco Giants

Opened: 2000
Capacity: 41,265

3. Wrigley Field – Chicago Cubs

Opened: 1914
Capacity: 41,649

4. Oriole Park at Camden Yards – Baltimore Orioles

Opened: 1992
Capacity: 44,970

5. Fenway Park – Boston Red Sox

Opened: 1912
Capacity: 37,755

6. Petco Park – San Diego Padres

Opened: 2004
Capacity: 40,209

7. Dodger Stadium – Los Angeles Dodgers

Opened: 1962
Capacity: 56,000

8. Coors Field – Colorado Rockies

Opened: 1995
Capacity: 50,480

9. T-Mobile Park – Seattle Mariners

Opened: 1999
Capacity: 47,929

10. Target Field – Minnesota Twins

Opened: 2010
Capacity: 38,544

11. Citi Field – New York Mets

Opened: 2009
Capacity: 41,800

12. Kauffman Stadium – Kansas City Royals

Opened: 1973
Capacity: 37,903

13. Citizens Bank Park – Philadelphia Phillies

Opened: 2004
Capacity: 42,901

14. Comerica Park – Detroit Tigers

Opened: 2000
Capacity: 41,083

15. Daikin Park – Houston Astros

Opened: 2000
Capacity: 40,963

16. Truist Park – Atlanta Braves

Opened: 2017
Capacity: 41,084

17. Busch Stadium – St. Louis Cardinals

Opened: 2006
Capacity: 45,494

18. LoanDepot Park – Miami Marlins

Opened: 2012
Capacity: 37,442

19. Progressive Field – Cleveland Guardians

Opened: 1994
Capacity: 34,830

20. Yankee Stadium – New York Yankees

Opened: 2009
Capacity: 50,287

21. Rogers Centre – Toronto Blue Jays

Opened: 1989
Capacity: 41,500

22. Globe Life Field – Texas Rangers

Opened: 2020
Capacity: 40,300

23. Angel Stadium – Los Angeles Angels

Opened: 1966
Capacity: 45,603

24. American Family Field – Milwaukee Brewers

Opened: 2001
Capacity: 41,900

25. Nationals Park – Washington Nationals

Opened: 2008
Capacity: 41,339

26. Great American Ball Park – Cincinnati Reds

Opened: 2003
Capacity: 42,271

27. Chase Field – Arizona Diamondbacks

Opened: 1998
Capacity: 48,633

28. Rate Field – Chicago White Sox

Opened: 1991
Capacity: 40,615

TBD – Temporary homes for 2025

Athletics – Sutter Health Park, West Sacramento

Home of San Francisco Giants’ Triple-A Sacramento River Cats
Opened: 2000
Capacity: 14,000

Tampa Bay Rays – George M. Steinbrenner Field, Tampa

New York Yankees’ spring training facility and home of Single-A Tampa Tarpons
Opened: 1996
Capacity: 11,026

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Delaware men’s basketball looks to cap off a historic run with its fifth win in five days in the CAA tournament championship on Tuesday night.

The Blue Hens (16-19) are the first double-digit seed to ever reach the conference final of the CAA tournament, as Delaware has won four games in four days, including an upset of No. 1 seed Towson in the semifinals Monday. They’re looking to secure an NCAA Tournament bid with a losing record.

Awaiting Delaware is UNC-Wilmington (26-7), the No. 2 seed of the CAA tournament.

The first team to ever win four games in a single CAA tournament, Delaware is hot at the right time. The Blue Hens have scored 80, 79, 100 and 82 in wins against Stony Brook, Campbell, William & Mary and Towson. Delaware shot 62.1% from 3-point range against William & Mary, breaking a program record with 18 3-pointers. It shot 55.1% from the field and 45% from 3-point range on Monday night.

Perhaps the wildest part of Delaware’s run is its streak prior to the conference championship.

Here’s a look at the Blue Hens’ record, including how they fared prior to getting hot with an NCAA Tournament bid on the line:

Delaware basketball record

Delaware didn’t have the resume of most teams looking to play its way into the NCAA Tournament.

In fact, the Blue Hens ended the regular season with a 1-11 record heading into the CAA tournament and only a 5-13 conference record. Delaware finished third-to-last in the final CAA standings, but that didn’t stop it from this historic run.

The Blue Hens have CAA tournament experience, winning the conference championship in 2022 and earning a No. 15 seed in the NCAA Tournament, where it lost to Villanova in the first round. That year, coach Martin Ingelsby and Delaware made a run in the CAA tournament as a No. 6 seed, also defeating UNC-Wilmington in the championship game.

Can the Blue Hens do it again? Only two teams have won five games in five days to reach the NCAA Tournament before, according to The Field of 68’s Jeff Goodman: UConn (2011) and NC State (2024) won the national championship and went to the Final Four, respectively. Those are quite the expectations if Delaware can win Tuesday.

Here’s a look at Delaware’s record heading into the CAA Tournament:

Season record: 16-19, 5-13 CAA
Final 12 regular-season games: 1-11

Here’s a look at Delaware’s final scores in each of its past 12 games:

March 1: UNC-Wilmington 88, Delaware 58
Feb. 27: Charleston 94, Delaware 84
Feb. 22: Hofstra 78, Delaware 65
Feb. 20: Drexel 78, Delaware 74
Feb. 15: Campbell 96, Delaware 91
Feb. 13: Towson 75, Delaware 70
Feb. 8: Delaware 74, William & Mary 64
Feb. 6: UNC-Wilmington 77, Delaware 67
Feb. 1: Monmouth 92, Delaware 83
Jan. 30: Towson 76, Delaware 66
Jan. 25: Drexel 67, Delaware 54
Jan. 23: Hofstra 93, Delaware 68

Worst records to make NCAA Tournament

Delaware would be among the teams with the worst records to ever make the NCAA Tournament should it win on Tuesday night and finish the season 17-19 with five consecutive wins heading into the Big Dance.

However, only one No. 15 seed in the NCAA Tournament (Penn in 1985) was listed by the NCAA, as the rest of the teams earned No. 16 seeds in March Madness.

Penn finished 15-15 that season. If Delaware avoids being a No. 16 seed in the tournament, the Blue Hens will become the first non-No. 16 seed to ever finish the regular season with a losing record. Navy (15-18) also has a chance to make the NCAA Tournament with a losing record this season, as it takes on American in the Patriot League final on Wednesday.

(This story was updated to add information.)

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Gerrit Cole’s season-ending elbow injury puts the New York Yankees in a bind on the field as they look to return to the World Series.

It also comes with financial repercussions after Cole signed the largest free-agent contract for a pitcher in baseball history when he joined the Yankees in 2020.

The Bronx Bombers had the second-highest total payroll in the majors last season at just under $304 million. Cole, who won the AL Cy Young award in 2023, was the team’s second highest-paid player at $36 million (behind two-time MVP Aaron Judge’s $40 million).

Gerrit Cole contract details

Gerrit Cole, the No. 1 overall pick in the 2011 MLB draft, signed a nine-year, $324 million free-agent contract with the Yankees in 2019.

At the time of the signing, it was the highest annual value contract in baseball history. And in total value, it is still the largest contract ever for a pitcher.

One relatively minor provision at the time was a clause giving Cole the ability to opt out of the final four years at the end of the 2024 season.

Cole’s opt-out dance with Yankees

Cole did, in fact, exercise his right to opt out this past winter. The Yankees could have voided his decision by adding an additional year to the deal — guaranteeing him $36 million for the 2029 season. However, they declined and Cole became a free agent.

The two sides continued to talk, and in the end, reinstated the original terms of the deal. Cole returned to the Yankees for four years and $144 million.

Gerrit Cole’s 2025 salary

Cole is due to be paid $36 million again this season as he recovers from Tommy John surgery on his pitching elbow.

Recovery time is usually 12-18 months.

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Unrivaled has announced Stephen Curry — the four-time NBA Champion, two-time MVP and Olympic gold medalist — as the latest big-name investor into the 3-on-3 women’s basketball league on Tuesday. 

Curry’s investment was included during Unrivaled’s oversubscribed Series A investment round in December, where the league secured $28 million in Series A funding. Including the $7 million raised during the league’s seed round announced in May 2024, Unrivaled has generated $35 million in investments. 

“I am incredibly proud to be joining the Unrivaled family as the league continues to set a new standard for how women’s professional sports should operate—empowering athletes and ensuring they have a real stake in their own success,” Curry said in a statement. “Unrivaled is not just innovating the way we play basketball, but also how we value and invest in the athletes who drive the game forward.”      

Curry is the latest icon to invest in the upstart league, joining Alex Morgan and Trybe Ventures, Carmelo Anthony, Giannis Antetokounmpo, Coco Gauff, Michael Phelps, Ashton Kutcher and Mila Kunis, The Berman Family, Ann Sarnoff, Dawn Staley, Geno Auriemma, David Levy, John Skipper, Moira Forbes, Tyus and Tre Jones, Dan Rosensweig, and Gary Vaynerchuk.

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Rep. Ashley Hinson, R-Iowa, says it’s time to give the Department of Justice the tools it needs to tackle China’s trade crimes. The congresswoman’s Protecting American Industry and Labor from International Trade Crimes Act has bipartisan support as both Democrats and Republicans look to stop threats posed by China.

China-based companies have been accused of stealing American businesses’ intellectual property (IP) and flooding the market with cheaper versions of their products, which are often low quality. Chinese companies have also allegedly committed trade crimes through transnational shipping, which involves the shipping of products to another country to evade U.S. tariffs.

‘This is about protecting America’s bottom line, because the bottom line is China has been ripping off our businesses and our workers for decades,’ Rep. Hinson told Fox News Digital. ‘You know, we talk a lot about the tariffs and the penalties that exist for those who go around our laws, but we also have to back that up with enforcement of our laws.’

Hinson’s legislation would establish a DOJ task force focused on investigating and prosecuting trade-related crimes, creating a mechanism for enforcing U.S. law.

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One of the companies that is grappling with the effects of Chinese IP theft is CQ Medical, which focuses on radiotherapy and healthcare innovations. A China-based company with U.S. headquarters in Ohio has allegedly been undercutting CQ Medical by offering lower-quality products at two-thirds of the price. According to a statement from CQ Medical, the China-based company is using ‘nearly identical’ product names, which has led to consumer confusion.

‘And this is stuff that really can help our hospitals to properly treat cancers with radiation therapy. So, when you are undercutting an American company that is doing the research and development they’re facing now, an unfair competitive advantage from a China-based company that is stealing that intellectual property,’ Hinson said to Fox News Digital.

Hinson says the problems facing CQ Medical are ‘at the heart of what we need to push back on’ when it comes to tackling China’s IP theft practices and trade crimes.

The Iowa congresswoman emphasized the need to ‘push back’ on ‘unfair and illicit trade practices’ to protect American companies and consumers. In the case of CQ Medical, the products produced by its Chinese competitor put patients at risk because of their low quality. They also put American workers at risk of not seeing job opportunities here at home.

‘You look at rural America and the impact that a company like CQ Medical has. They’re creating those jobs, and they’re bringing people to places like Iowa and Pennsylvania. And when you look at the footprint that they have, they want to grow and expand in places here at home,’ Hinson told Fox News Digital. 

Hinson explained to Fox News Digital that CQ Medical is the tip of the iceberg, and Chinese trade crimes are costing America’s economy ‘hundreds of billions if not trillions of dollars a year’ by offering products at extremely reduced prices.

The Protecting American Industry and Labor from International Trade Crimes Act passed the House in December 2024. However, the congresswoman is reintroducing it in the current congressional session in the hopes of it becoming law.

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