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Olympic icon Peggy Fleming was visiting a friend in California on the morning of Jan. 30 when her husband Greg Jenkins called from their home in Colorado to tell her about a plane crash in Washington, D.C., involving members of the U.S. figure skating community, young skaters and their parents and coaches. 

As she watched the news on television, her mind raced to another place, another time, another tragedy. 

“What a flashback it was,” she said in a phone interview earlier this week. “It was like it was happening all over again.”

On Feb. 15, 1961, Fleming was a promising 12-year-old skater in Southern California when she awoke to the news that her coach, William Kipp, and the entire U.S. figure skating delegation  — 18 skaters and 16 officials, coaches, judges and family members — had been killed in a plane crash near Brussels on the way to the world championships in Prague.

‘I heard it right before I went to school that day,” Fleming said. “My mom had seen it on television. And I just couldn’t believe it. It was just unreal. So I did go to school — you just don’t know the impact at that age — and I think of what a disaster that really was, and all those talented skaters, their lives just cut short, and all the top coaches in the U.S. were gone.”

This month, as Fleming began to process the horror of the mid-air collision at Reagan National Airport that killed 11 skaters, four coaches and 13 family members, a friend told her about a memorial skating show, Legacy on Ice, that was being planned at Capital One Arena in Washington. 

Fleming contacted U.S. Figure Skating and offered to be a part of the show. “It’s all so tragic,” she said. “We want the families to know we care.”

So this weekend, 76-year-old Peggy Fleming is coming to Washington to participate in the Sunday afternoon show that will honor the 67 victims of the air disaster, including the young skaters and members of the skating community who were killed on their way home from a national development camp after the U.S. championships in Wichita. 

In this way, she is serving as a bridge between her sport’s two unspeakable tragedies, 64 years apart. “It just brings back so many memories,” she said. “I feel so bad for all these families. It’s heartbreaking.”

Fleming said she will not be skating Sunday but rather serving as a presenter offering an introduction during a segment of the show. 

“Are you kidding?” she said with a laugh. “I’m not even bringing my skates. I’m just there to support.”

Her presence at the show is especially meaningful, said 1988 Olympic gold medalist Brian Boitano, who is co-hosting the show with 1992 Olympic gold medalist Kristi Yamaguchi. 

“She saved figure skating,” Boitano said Thursday in a phone interview. “Out of the ashes comes the phoenix. She was the phoenix.”

Spurred on by two coaches who came to the United States to find work after the crash — first England’s John Nicks for a year, then Italy’s Carlo Fassi for the length of her competitive career — Fleming won five national titles from 1964-68 and the gold medal at the 1968 Winter Olympics in Grenoble, France. Her victory launched figure skating into the television age, so it was fitting that she went on to commentate on the sport with the late Dick Button for 28 years on ABC and ESPN. 

“She had everything come together to make a champion,” Nicks, now 95, said over the phone Thursday. “Her physique, the self confidence to perform under pressure, being such a likeable person — many, many things went into being Peggy Fleming.”  

“The ultimate icon of the sport,” Boitano said. “When you think of figure skating, you think of Peggy Fleming.”

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Washington Capitals star Alex Ovechkin is on pace to pass Wayne Gretzky’s NHL career goal record before season’s end.

Ovechkin, 39, entered this season needing 42 goals to break Gretzky’s record of 894 career goals, which has stood since 1999. The Washington captain has 30 goals this season and needs 12 more with 23 games left to become the NHL’s all-time leader.

Ovechkin scored 15 times in his first 18 games before suffering a fractured left fibula during a Nov. 18 game against the Utah Hockey Club. He has scored 15 times since he returned on Dec. 28.

This season, he moved into second place with 20 consecutive 20-goal seasons and set a record for number of goalies scored against in his career. He tied records for game-winning goals and most franchises against which he has a hat trick. And he became the first player to score 200 goals in three different decades.

If he doesn’t reach Gretzky’s goal record this season, he has one more season left on his contract.

Here’s where Ovechkin stands in his chase of Gretzky’s goal record:

How many career goals does Alex Ovechkin have?

Ovechkin has 883 career goals.

How many goals does Alex Ovechkin need to pass Wayne Gretzky?

Ovechkin needs 12 goals to break Gretzky’s record.

How many goals does Alex Ovechkin have this season?

Ovechkin has 30 goals and 17 assists in 43 games. Factoring in the 16 games he missed, that is a 46-goal pace, giving him a chance to break the record this season.

What did Alex Ovechkin do in his last game?

Ovechkin had no points on four shots in a 5-2 loss to the St. Louis Blues on Thursday night.

When is Alex Ovechkin’s next game?

The Capitals play Saturday, March 1, at home against Tampa Bay. He has 50 goals in 82 career games vs. the Lightning.

Alex Ovechkin goals in 2024-25

Oct. 19: 1 vs. New Jersey
Oct. 23: 1 vs. Philadelphia
Oct. 29: 2 vs. N.Y. Rangers
Oct. 31: 1 vs. Montreal
Nov. 2: 1 vs. Columbus
Nov. 3: 1 vs. Carolina
Nov. 6: 1 vs. Nashville
Nov. 9: 2 vs. St. Louis
Nov. 17: 3 vs. Vegas
Nov. 18: 2 vs. Utah
Dec. 28: 1 vs. Toronto
Dec. 29: 1 vs. Detroit
Jan. 2: 1 vs. Minnesota
Jan. 4: 1 vs. N.Y. Rangers
Jan. 11: 1 vs. Nashville
Jan. 16: 1 vs. Ottawa
Jan. 23: 1 vs. Seattle
Jan. 30: 1 vs. Ottawa
Feb 1: 1 vs. Winnipeg
Feb. 4: 1 vs. Florida
Feb. 6: 1 vs. Philadelphia
Feb. 23: 3 vs. Edmonton
Feb. 25: 1 vs. Calgary

Alex Ovechkin career goals breakdown

Even strength: 558, third overall

Power play: 320, a record

Short-handed: 5

Empty net: 64, a record

Game winners: 135, tied for first with Jaromir Jagr

Overtime goals: 27, a record

Multi-goal games: 178, second overall

Goalies scored against: 181, a record

Hat tricks: 32, tied for fifth overall. Ovechkin has hat tricks against 20 franchises, tying Brett Hull’s record.

20-goal seasons: 20, tied for second

30-goal seasons: 19, a record

40-goal seasons: 13, a record

Alex Ovechkin empty-net goals

Ovechkin has a record 64 empty-net goals, but Gretzky is up there, too, with 56. Ovechkin passed Gretzky in that category last season.

Alex Ovechkin goals per season

Season: Goals, career total

2005-06: 52, 52
2006-07: 46, 98
2007-08: 65*, 163
2008-09: 56*, 219
2009-10: 50, 269
2010-11: 32, 301
2011-12: 38, 339
2012-13: 32*, 371
2013-14: 51*, 422
2014-15: 53*, 475
2015-16: 50*, 525
2016-17: 33, 558
2017-18: 49*, 607
2018-19: 51*, 658
2019-20: 48*, 706
2020-21: 24, 730
2021-22: 50, 780
2022-23: 42, 822
2023-24: 31, 853
2024-25: 30, 883

*-led league in goals that season

NHL all time goal leaders

The top 21 NHL all-time goal scorers all have 600 or more goals. All of the players are in the Hockey Hall of Fame, except Ovechkin, Sidney Crosby and Jagr, who are still playing.

1. Wayne Gretzky, 894 goals in 1,487 games

2. Alex Ovechkin, 883 goals in 1,469 games

3. Gordie Howe, 801 goals in 1,767 games

4. Jaromir Jagr, 766 goals in 1,733 games

5. Brett Hull, 741 goals in 1,269 games

6. Marcel Dionne, 731 in 1,348 games

7. Phil Esposito, 717 goals in 1,282 games

8. Mike Gartner, 708 goals in 1,432 games

9. Mark Messier, 694 goals in 1,756 games

10. Steve Yzerman, 692 goals in 1,514 games

11. Mario Lemieux, 690 goals in 915 games

12. Teemu Selanne, 684 goals in 1,451 games

13. Luc Robitaille, 668 goals in 1,431 games

14. Brendan Shanahan, 656 goals in 1,524 games

15. Dave Andreychuk, 640 goals in 1,639 games

16. Jarome Iginla, 625 goals in 1,554 games

17. Joe Sakic, 625 goals in 1,378 games

18. Bobby Hull, 610 goals in 1,063 games

19. Sidney Crosby, 610 goals in 1,331 games

20. Dino Ciccarelli, 608 goals in 1,232 games

21. Jari Kurri, 601 goals in 1,251 games

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Wayne Gretzky, the Canadian hockey legend known around the world as ‘The Great One,’ is suddenly in a big pickle in his home country because of his relationship with U.S. President Donald Trump.

Gretzky, 64, served as the honorary captain for Canada in the 4 Nations Face-Off championship game in Boston on Feb. 20, and his presence created more fuel for a brewing controversy north of the border. The greatest hockey player of all-time has faced criticism in his homeland over his association with Trump in light of the president’s political threats related to tariffs and comments about Canada becoming the 51st state of the United States.

The negative rhetoric led Trump, fellow Canadian hockey legend Bobby Orr and Gretzky’s wife to defend his national pride in recent days. Orr wrote an op-ed for the Toronto Sun last Saturday to express his disappointment at the treatment Gretzky received for his appearance on behalf of Canada’s hockey team last week, while Trump posted on his social media website, Truth Social, in an apparent effort to help Gretzky.

Janet Jones Gretzky, who attended Trump’s presidential inauguration in Washington last month with her husband, then posted a thank you to Orr on her Instagram account Thursday. The caption offered a glimpse into the toll this controversy is taking on Wayne Gretzky.

‘I have never met anyone who is more Proud to be a Canadian and it has broken his heart to read and see the mean comments,’ Janet Jones Gretzky wrote. ‘He would do anything to make Canadians Proud, with his Love for Hockey and his Country.’

The rising political tension between the United States and Canada since Trump returned to the White House in January coincided with the NHL’s first 4 Nations Cup this year, and it helped create a level of interest in the tournament that caught even the most staunch hockey supporters by surprise.

Trump called the American team to wish them luck ahead of the game and Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau needled Trump on social media after Canada’s 3-2 overtime win. Trump, in reference to Canada joining the United States as the 51st state, declared Gretzky a ‘free agent’ on social media Wednesday in an effort to demonstrate Gretzky supports an independent Canada.

‘Wayne is my friend, and he wants to make me happy, and is therefore somewhat ‘low key’ about Canada remaining a separate Country,’ Trump wrote, in part. ‘… He’s the Greatest Canadian of them all, and I am therefore making him a ‘free agent,’ because I don’t want anyone in Canada to say anything bad about him. He supports Canada the way it is, as he should, even though it’s not nearly as good as it could be as part of the Greatest and Most Powerful Country in the World, the Good Ole’ U.S.A.!’

Orr was the first notable hockey figure to publicly back Gretzky as more Canadians turned against one of its country’s sports heroes and called for him to speak out against Trump’s recent comments regarding Canada. Some fans in Edmonton even started an online petition for a freeway named after Gretzky to be changed. It had more than 10,000 signatures as of Thursday.

‘How fickle can people be, when someone who has given so much time and effort to Canadian hockey is treated in such a way,’ Orr wrote in the op-ed. ‘Listen, we all have our personal beliefs as they pertain to things such as religion and politics. Wayne respects your right to such beliefs – why can’t you respect his?’

Known as ‘The Great One’ during a 20-year career with the Edmonton Oilers, Los Angeles Kings, St. Louis Blues and New York Rangers, Gretzky is the league’s all-time leader in points, goals and assists. Washington Capitals star Alex Ovechkin is currently on the verge of passing his goals record.

Gretzky represented Canada in international competition throughout his career, including the 1998 Nagano Olympics when NHL players were allowed to participate for the first time. He was executive director of the 2002 Olympic team that won gold in Salt Lake City and ended Canada’s 50-year championship drought.

Gretzky retired from playing professional hockey in 1999 and later became part-owner and coach of the Arizona Coyotes. He’s currently a studio analyst for TNT.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

President Donald Trump was asked several times on Thursday about comments he made last week, when he called Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy a ‘dictator,’ though he oftentimes either ignored the question or could not remember making the statement.

Trump met with U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer at the White House on Thursday, when the two leaders addressed peace talks between Ukraine and Russia.

The president told reporters he has had back-to-back ‘very successful’ calls with Russian President Vladimir Putin, as well as with Zelenskyy, with hopes of bringing the war between Ukraine and Russia to an end.

‘I think we’ve made a lot of progress, and I think it’s moving along pretty rapidly,’ Trump said. ‘[Friday], the progress toward peace will continue when President Zelenskyy visits the White House. He’ll be here tomorrow in the early part of the day, and we’ll be signing a historic agreement that will make the United States a major partner in developing Ukraine’s minerals and rare earths, oils and gases.’

The president and Zelenskyy will meet at the White House around 11 a.m. Friday, and Trump said the rare earth minerals agreement will provide the basis for a sustainable future between the two countries.

With Zelenskyy’s visit quickly approaching, reporters asked Trump on Thursday if he had plans to apologize to the Ukrainian president for calling him a dictator.

Earlier this month, Trump blasted Zelenskyy as a ‘dictator without elections’ after the U.S. left Ukraine out of its initial peace talks with Russia.

‘A Dictator without Elections, Zelenskyy better move fast or he is not going to have a Country left,’ Trump wrote on Truth Social at the time. ‘In the meantime, we are successfully negotiating an end to the War with Russia, something all admit only ‘TRUMP,’ and the Trump Administration, can do. Biden never tried, Europe has failed to bring Peace, and Zelenskyy probably wants to keep the ‘gravy train’ going.’

When Trump greeted Starmer at the White House on Thursday, one reporter asked the two leaders about having common ground, with Trump describing Zelenskyy as a dictator and Starmer describing Putin as a dictator.

After dodging the question, another reporter asked Trump if he still believed Zelenskyy was a dictator.

‘Did I say that?’ Trump asked. ‘I can’t believe I said that. Next question.’

After the two leaders met in the Oval Office, they faced reporters once again, and a reporter asked Trump if he would take the opportunity to apologize to Zelenskyy for calling him a dictator while praising Putin, who is a dictator.

Rather than address calling Zelenskyy a dictator, Trump spoke about the upcoming meeting with the Ukrainian president, saying, ‘I think we’re going to have a very good meeting tomorrow. … We’re going to get along really well.’

While Ukraine and Russia were a big topic during Trump and Starmer’s meeting, so were tariffs. One reporter asked Trump if Starmer had persuaded him not to impose tariffs on the U.K.

Trump said Starmer tried hard to convince him not to impose the tariffs.

‘I think there’s a very good chance that, in the case of these two great friendly countries, I think we could very well end up with a real trade deal where the tariffs wouldn’t be necessary,’ Trump said. ‘We’ll see.’

While the U.S. and U.K. started with a rocky relationship in colonial days, it has flourished into one that both leaders agree is special and will remain strong.

In fact, Trump was handed a letter from King Charles through Starmer, inviting the president and first lady for a state visit.

‘It was my privilege and honor to bring a letter with me today from His Majesty the King, not only sending his best wishes but also inviting the president and the first lady to make a state visit to the United Kingdom, an unprecedented second state visit,’ Starmer said, noting this has never happened before. ‘It’s so incredible. It will be historic, and I’m delighted that I can go back to His Majesty the King and tell him that President Trump has accepted the invitation.’

Immediately following Starmer’s announcement, Trump thanked the prime minister and offered a compliment.

‘What a beautiful accent,’ the president said. ‘I would have been president 20 years ago if I had that accent.’

Fox News Digital’s Danielle Wallace contributed to this report.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Paramount Global told its employees this week that it’s ending numerous diversity, equity and inclusion policies, according to a memo obtained by CNBC.

In the memo sent to employees Wednesday, Paramount said it would comply with President Donald Trump’s executive order banning the practice in the federal government and demanding that agencies investigate private companies over their DEI programs.

Co-CEOs George Cheeks, Chris McCarthy and Brian Robbins cited the executive order in the memo, as well as the Supreme Court and federal mandates, as the impetus for the media giant’s policy changes.

Among the changes, the company said it “will no longer set or use aspirational numerical goals related to the race, ethnicity, sex or gender of hires.” Paramount also said it ended its policy of collecting such stats for its U.S. job applicants on forms and career pages, except in the markets where it’s legally required to do so.

“To be the best storytellers and to continue to drive success, we must have a highly talented, dedicated and creative workforce that reflects the perspectives and experiences of our many different audiences. Values like inclusivity and collaboration are a part of the Paramount culture and will continue to be,” the co-CEOs wrote in the memo.

They added that they will continue to evaluate their policies and seek talent from all backgrounds.

Paramount has taken part in a number of diversity, equity and inclusion efforts. It donated millions to racial justice causes in 2020 after the police murder of George Floyd and has touted initiatives such as a supplier diversity program and Content for Change, a campaign to overhaul storytelling about racial equity and mental health. The company has hosted an annual Inclusion Week for years and maintains an Office of Global Inclusion.

“Diversity, equity and inclusion is fundamental to our business,” former CEO Bob Bakish said at Paramount’s 2023 Inclusion Week, according to The Hollywood Reporter.

Paramount joins companies like Walmart, Target and Amazon in rolling back their DEI goals and policies in recent months. Others, like Apple and Costco, have publicly defended and committed to their DEI stances, even as the Trump administration has escalated its attacks on the practices.

Media companies have taken a variety of steps to respond to the Trump administration’s policy changes since the president’s inauguration last month.

Earlier this month, Disney changed its DEI programs, which included updating performance factors and rebranding initiatives and employee resource groups, among other things.

Around the same time, public broadcaster PBS — which, as a recipient of federal funding, is more directly affected by Trump’s order than corporations are — said it would shut down its DEI office. CNBC reported that DEI employees would exit the company in order for it to stay in compliance with Trump’s executive order.

Meanwhile, the Federal Communications Commission began investigating Comcast over its DEI efforts. Trump’s executive order, signed on his first day in office, directs federal agencies to identify and probe “most egregious and discriminatory DEI practitioners” in their sectors. Comcast previously said in a statement it would cooperate with the investigation.

Disclosure: Comcast owns NBCUniversal, the parent company of CNBC.

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

Between 31 automatic bids and shoo-ins from the powerhouse conferences like South Carolina, LSU, USC and N.C. State, much of the 68-team field for the NCAA tournament is already set.

There are still spots to be had, though, and two weeks for teams living on the bubble to make their case to the selection committee that they deserve one of them.

In no particular order, here’s a look at some of the teams the committee might be looking at for those last few spots in the NCAA tournament:

Virginia Tech (17-10 overall, 8-8 in the ACC)

The Hokies play in a tough conference, and their wins over Louisville and Georgia Tech help their case. Especially that Georgia Tech one, coming in double overtime and on the road.

But the home losses to Stanford and Syracuse hurt, and Virginia Tech could use a win or two in the ACC Tournament to solidify a spot.

Nebraska (18-10, 9-8 in Big Ten)

The Cornhuskers were considered a lock at one point, with a 20-point road walloping of then-No. 17 Maryland their most impressive win. But their losses to other ranked teams haven’t been close and a bad loss at home to Washington last weekend raises questions.

Washington (17-12, 8-9 in Big Ten)

The Huskies are one of the bubbliest of the bubble teams, with wins over Minnesota and Nebraska and single-digit losses to USC, Oregon and Maryland. Beating Oregon in the regular-season finale and winning a game or two in the Big Ten tournament would go a long way in getting them off the bubble and securely into the tournament.

Saint Joseph’s (21-7, 12-5 in Atlantic 10)

Already teetering on the edge, Saint Joseph’s might have sealed its fate with a 74-65 loss to Dayton on Thursday night. It had convincing wins over George Mason and a ‘good” loss to Utah but also lost to VCU, which doesn’t have a winning record overall or in the A-10.

Colorado (18-10, 9-8 in Big 12)

Buffs have wins over West Virginia and Kansas State, and six of their 10 losses have been to ranked teams or teams receiving votes. But most of those losses have not been close, and the availability of leading scorer Frida Formann (stress fracture in foot) remains uncertain.

Iowa State (20-10, 11-6 in Big 12)

The Cyclones get credit for a tough non-conference schedule, playing UConn, South Carolina and Iowa. But beating Colorado by 30 at home is the closest they have to a signature win – unless they can knock off K-State this weekend.

Quinnipiac (22-3, 14-2 in MAAC)

Very much an outsider; is the committee really going to give the MAAC two teams? If it does, Quinnipiac deserves consideration. One of its three losses was in OT at Miami, and another was to MAAC leader Fairfield.

Princeton (18-6, 9-2 in Ivy)

Hard to see the committee taking three Ivy teams, and Harvard is likely in because of the strength of its schedule while Columbia currently leads the league. Best chance the Tigers have is to beat Harvard on Friday, then hope Harvard wins the Ivy League tournament.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The NCAA recorded nearly $1.4 billion in revenue for its 2024 fiscal year, the association’s new audited financial statement shows. Even adjusting for inflation, that total is the association’s best in at least two decades, and it represents a nearly $91 million increase over the revenue total it reported for 2023.

The new statement, obtained Thursday by USA TODAY Sports, is the first that reflects the NCAA’s anticipated liability of nearly $2.8 billion from the damages portion of the proposed settlement of three athlete-compensation antitrust cases against the association what had been the Power Five conferences.

The NCAA’s latest fiscal year ended Aug. 31, 2024. The proposed settlement was reached in July 2024 and received preliminary approval from U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken in October. In notes to the new financial statement, the association’s outside auditors wrote: “The NCAA anticipates the Court will enter final approval of the settlement in fiscal year 2024-25.”

As such, while the proposed deal provides for the damages payments to occur over 10 years, an expense of $2.7 billion in fiscal 2024. As a result, for accounting purposes, as of Aug. 31, 2024, the NCAA’s net assets were shown as being a negative number: minus-nearly-$2 billion.

Setting aside the amount recorded in conjunction with the proposed settlement, the NCAA ran a surplus of nearly $166 million in fiscal 2024. Like the revenue total, that also is one the association’s best outcomes in at least the past two decades.

According to data collected by USA TODAY Sports dating from the 2005 fiscal year, the NCAA’s previous best annual surplus, adjusted for inflation, was just over $140 million in 2021.

The 2024 revenue of $1.377 billion is the NCAA’s best, on an inflation-adjusted basis – just ahead of the $1.372 billion in 2019.  

And the notes to the settlement show that the ongoing 2025 fiscal year shapes up to be even better from a revenue perspective.

Its revenue from the multimedia and marketing rights to the Division I men’s basketball tournament are set to be $955 million — a $122 million increase over the 2024 total, as the association goes through the first year of the eight-year extension to the contract it negotiated in March 2016 with CBS and Turner Broadcasting (now known as Warner Bros. Discovery).

In addition, the NCAA’s multi-sport package with ESPN that features the Division I women’s basketball tournament and was extended for eight years in January 2024 is set to produce nearly $53 million more in fiscal 2025 than it did in fiscal 2024.

Future increases in the revenue from those agreements will be more gradual the ones occurring in 2025.

In addition to the multi-media and marketing rights revenue, the NCAA’s other primary revenue sources are from championships outside the College Football Playoff, including from ticket sales, and from investments. For business purposes, the CFP operates independently from the NCAA.

In fiscal 2024, the NCAA reported just over $263 million in championships revenue and just over $120 million in net investment gains.

NCAA senior vice president of administration and chief financial officer, Mario Morris, said in a statement given to USA TODAY Sports that the association anticipates becoming debt-free during the 2025 fiscal year. According to the NCAA, this will come from the association making its final payment connected to its acquistion of the NIT basketball competition in 2005.

The NCAA “continues to provide its membership with sound fiscal operations and its student-athletes with quality benefits and an unmatched championship experience,” Morris said in the statement.  “ … moving forward, revenue generation is top of mind and efforts to reduce costs are a priority.”

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

INDIANAPOLIS – Several feet to his left was Travis Hunter. The same distance to his right was Will Johnson. In between, at the podiums for the 2025 NFL Scouting Combine on Thursday morning, was Cobee Bryant. 

Hunter and Johnson may be better cornerbacks and will definitely be selected higher at the draft in April. Neither, however, have much on Bryant when it comes to trash talking. 

“Just getting in people’s heads,” Bryant said. “That’s one of my games. I kind of (model) my game off Jalen Ramsey, because he does a lot of trash talk as well.” 

Ramsey, the fifth overall pick by the Jacksonville Jaguars in 2016 and three-time All-Pro who’s also played for the Los Angeles Rams and Miami Dolphins, messaged Bryant on Instagram this week. Bryant has been watching Ramsey highlights since high school. Ramsey finally followed him back on the platform recently and was complimentary of Bryant’s game, which was a thrill for him.

The posturing isn’t limited to a game setting. Bryant is a self-described “social-media guy” and often disseminated his thoughts there during his time with the Kansas Jayhawks and offered perspective on opponents. He and Kansas State Wildcats quarterback Avery Johnson had an offseason war of words on X, formerly Twitter, a year ago.

NFL STATS CENTRAL: The latest NFL scores, schedules, odds, stats and more.

But the most high-profile trash talk from Bryant came ahead of the Jayhawks’ game against Colorado last season. 

“I’m not going to lie, I have been waiting,” Bryant said at the time. “I already marked this on my notes… I’ve been waiting on this game all season. This is gonna be the game.” 

Later on social media, he posted, “Now I’m piss (sic) hurry tf (sic) up Saturday I meant that … bet.”

Kansas won 37-21 despite Hunter’s eight catches, two touchdowns and 125 receiving yards. Bryant did have two pass breakups though, and Colorado quarterback Shedeur Sanders messaged him during the week before the week to play man coverage so he could test him with his arm. The matchup against the Buffaloes was his signature trash-talking performance, Bryant said.

Bryant sees comments online and isn’t afraid to dive deep on the internet. 

“That kind of motivates me a lot, seeing bad comments people say,” he said. “It kind of gets me going.

“I try to take the comments onto the field and translate it to the game. Now the person can’t say anything no more in the comments.” 

Not letting it affect him once the whistle blows is essential, Bryant said. 

“Really just locking in on the small things,” he said. 

At the East-West Shrine Bowl, ESPN NFL draft analyst Matt Miller referred to Bryant as a “Trash Talk Team All American.” 

“I always try to prove a point to people: I’m really like that,” Bryant said ahead of the showcase.Fellow Jayhawks cornerback Mello Dotson was Bryant’s roommate the night before home and away games. Sometimes, Dotson would sleep in the living room so he could actually rest.

Even off the field, Bryant is always talking. 

“All day long,” Dotson said Thursday. “Before games, I didn’t want to listen to that. 

“He thrives off of talking trash.” 

Bryant launched “The Kickin’ it with Cobee Podcast” in 2024, although only five episodes exist on YouTube and none published in the last four months. 

On Thursday, Hunter within earshot, Bryant didn’t take the bait at the combine. 

“He’s explosive. He’s a good player,” Bryant said. 

Hunter’s college coach, Deion Sanders, was Bryant’s inspiration. His father was a fan of Sanders and talked to him after the teams played. When they met – two like-minded people with the gift of gab – Bryant became shy. 

The Evergreen, Alabama native – a town about halfway between Mobile and Montgomery – became the first Kansas player to be named first-team all-Big 12 in three straight seasons. 

Bryant had 13 interceptions in four seasons at Kansas, with four apiece in his final two years. 

“I know how to react to the ball. My reaction time’s pretty good. That’s how I catch a lot of picks.” 

But he is most proud of his tackling ability despite his size. Bryant is 6-foot but weighed 171 pounds at the East-West Shrine Bowl. He expects to check in at 180 pounds at the combine and knows to have success at the next level, he’ll have to put on weight. In the NFL, he wants to tackle big running backs and mentioned the Philadelphia Eagles’ Saquon Barkley by name. 

To those who insist he lacks the size to succeed in the NFL, Bryant does something uncharacteristic: he lets the film speak for itself. 

“I want to show the world that I’m one of the best in the country,” he said. “That’s my mindset.”The combination of having something to prove and that he “can do something to somebody” is why he loves the game. 

“It’s fun hitting anybody on the football field,” Bryant said. “In football, you can do a lot of things that you can’t experience outside of football.” 

Over four seasons in college, Kansas head coach Lance Leipold became like a father to him, Bryant said. Bryant wasn’t the type of person who always listened to authority, but Leipold was “on my butt about that a lot.” Bryant can get in his own head occasionally and this week he reached out to Leipold and asked whether he was prepared for the showcase that is the combine. 

“I know you’re ready for this moment,” was Leipold’s response, Bryant said.   

And yes, even though his first name is spelled differently, his namesake is the late Kobe Bryant. 

At Kansas, “HawkMamba” became his nickname after a team broadcaster said it on the air once.  

Living up to the hype of the Los Angeles Lakers legend is important to Bryant, who would be the second NFL player with the name along with the Seattle Seahawks safety Coby Bryant, but doesn’t mean everything. 

“I don’t want to be like Kobe Bryant. I want to be myself,” Cobee Bryant said. “But really, just living up to the name, because Kobe Bryant was a legend. I want to show the world, and I want to leave football a Hall of Famer. That’s what I’m aiming for right now.”

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Andrea Lucas, the Trump administration’s acting chair of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), blasted The Washington Post and reporter Jeff Stein for spreading ‘fake news’ about DOGE cutting 90% of the EEOC’s workforce.

Lucas explained that Stein, the chief economics reporter at The Washington Post, mixed up federal agencies that have nothing to do with each other.

The Post reported that ‘an office within the Labor Department that enforces equal employment opportunity laws’ is planning on reducing its workforce by 90%. The article went on to state that the Department of Labor plans to cut its Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs (OFCCP) from more than 50 offices and nearly 500 employees to four offices and 50 employees.

Stein also posted on X that, among the ‘major changes’ planned by Elon Musk’s DOGE, the Labor Department was eying ‘gutting EEOC office by *90%*.’

After Lucas called out the error on X, Stein posted another message in which he said, ‘To clarify, the office I refer to above is an office within the Labor Department that enforces workers’ civil rights laws.’

Speaking with Fox News Digital, Lucas said the Post’s reporting ‘undermines’ the EEOC’s ability to enforce the law by misleading the public.

‘We pushed back with corrections … and WaPo [Washington Post] retweeted being like, ‘Oh, I was talking about the OFCCP,’ which is in fact what he should have been doing if he bothered to get us back straight,’ she said. ‘But the main message is that reporting is misleading.

‘The Department of Labor may be contemplating significant cuts to OFCCP. I don’t know. We’re totally separate from OFCCP.’

Lucas said any potential cuts by DOGE to the Labor Department and the OFCCP are ‘entirely distinct from the work that the EEOC does,’ which she explained is to ‘enforce Title VII, which explicitly creates the EEOC and gives us a specific mission to combat discrimination.’

Lucas said the EEOC is ‘fully operational and continues to be laser-focused on combating discrimination,’ which she said includes discrimination on behalf of diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) interests.

Lucas said the EEOC is ‘fully comply[ing] with the president’s executive orders calling for evenhanded civil rights enforcement.’

After four years of the Biden administration using federal agencies to advance DEI, Lucas directed the EEOC to issue a warning to U.S. employers that the commission would be prioritizing the enforcement of legal and financial consequences for ‘anti-American bias’ against workers during hiring.

‘Discriminatory employers should be aware the EEOC is not asleep,’ she said. ‘This kind of fake news really can muddy the water and make it unclear to workers that this government watchdog remains active and ready to defend them against unlawful discrimination, including DEI-related discrimination.’

On DOGE, Lucas said, ‘I fully support the president’s mission and DOGE’s mission to ensure government efficiency.’

But she remains confident the EEOC is here to stay.

‘We’re working really hard to make sure that we have the most productive workforce possible, and we’re looking to make the agency a really evenhanded and efficient workforce,’ Lucas said. ‘But I’m confident that we have an important role to play because our jurisdiction and mission are directly related to the civil rights executive orders. 

‘So, we’re a law enforcement agency, and we’re here to execute on those and enforce the law.’

The Washington Post did not respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment by time of publication.

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INDIANAPOLIS – Colston Loveland looked like he’d been in a rodeo accident.

Perhaps somewhere in the multiverse, he was?

Loveland, an All-Big Ten tight end who played for Michigan the past three seasons and projects as a first-round pick in the 2025 NFL draft, met with reporters at the scouting combine Thursday morning with his right arm in a heavy sling (no, he won’t be running the 40-yard dash).

He’s recovering from shoulder surgery and won’t be cleared to participate in full-contact drills for a few more months. However ESPN reported that Loveland’s surgeon wrote a letter to all 32 NFL teams in a bid to assure them that the former Wolverines star should be ready to roll for rookie minicamp in May and that he’d be a full participant whenever his future team’s training camp opens.

“It’s doing good, yeah, it feels great,” Loveland said when asked about his arm.

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“Surgery went great, got some X-rays – they look really good. Just taking it day by day.”

Loveland suffered the injury early last season and, though he often played through it, was limited to 10 games and couldn’t post against the hated Ohio State Buckeyes or in the ReliaQuest Bowl against Alabama. He still managed 56 receptions and five touchdowns – personal bests during his time at Ann Arbor.

But a 20-year-old who grew up in Gooding, Idaho, nearly strayed from his football path as a teenager … because of the allure of rodeo.

“I got like into rodeo because of my cousin,” beamed Loveland, “he was big into it – all my cousins were. And I kinda started getting into it, and I was loving it. But it’s a lot – you’ve got to get horses, trailers, saddles – you’ve got to get the whole deal. And I was still playing football and basketball at the time.

“And I did talk about it with my family, but I was like, ‘I’m just gonna play basketball and football, keep it at that, and I’ll just hang around my cousins and do it with them.’ It’s fun, the rodeo stuff.”

And indicative of how Loveland’s Idaho roots have shaped him.

“I just love just like being out there, like every time I go home,” he said, “the land, it’s just open. All my family, my cousins, everyone’s out there.”

He cites Gooding’s small-town values and the blue-collar work ethic he consistently witnessed as positive influences on his football trajectory, saying, “That definitely had an impact on me.”

Yet he did enjoy occasionally missing school when it was time to brand his uncle calves ever year.

“That was always a good time,” said Loveland.

Asked if rodeo translated at all to football, he cited the toughness required and need to convert every time you get opportunities to be in the spotlight.

And though he won’t be riding Broncos, Loveland might be playing for them – relatively close to home – next season after meeting with Denver officials this week. Sean Payton is admittedly seeking a “Joker” type player for his offense and, coincidentally, Loveland tries to model his game after Jimmy Graham, who filled that role sublimely for Payton when he was coaching the New Orleans Saints.

“I would say I’m one of the best route-runners in this draft, I truly believe that. Think I’ve got great hands,” said Loveland.

“Feel like I’m pretty polished.”

If still a bit banged up as football is apparently a more dangerous endeavor for Loveland than rodeos ever were – given his answer when asked if he was ever hurt during one.

“No, I actually never did (get injured), which I was lucky enough not to,” he said.

“This is really the first kind of injury I’ve ever really had.”

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