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The Department of Justice has dismissed Diversity, Equity and Inclusion (DEI) lawsuits brought against various police and fire departments across the country under the Biden administration, which deemed aptitude tests in certain cases as discriminatory.

The lawsuits, which the DOJ said did not show evidence of intentional discrimination, were filed in efforts to require race-based hiring after statistical disparities between applicants of different races and genders.

‘American communities deserve firefighters and police officers to be chosen for their skill and dedication to public safety – not to meet DEI quotas,’ Attorney General Pam Bondi said.

 

Typically acknowledged in the proposed consent decrees, the departments used neutral selection tools, such as credit checks, exams and physical exercises, to choose candidates for the open positions, and White men tended to score or perform better.

For example, a case filed in October against the City of Durham (North Carolina), alleged ‘unintentional’ discrimination against Black applicants because they did not pass the written test with a score of 70% or better as often as White candidates did, which resulted in fewer Black employees.

The complaint proposed getting rid of the neutral written test and ‘back pay and/or preferential hiring to Black candidates who were not hired because of the written exam’ as solutions. The cost would have been around $980,000 in monetary relief, according to the case.

 

In a different case filed against Maryland State Police in October 2024, it was suggested that the agency not use its current selection tools, which consisted of a written test with a score of 70% or better and a physical test that involved push-ups, sit-ups, a flexibility reach, a trigger pull and a 1.5-mile run.

‘Because Black applicants passed the test less often than White applicants and because women passed the physical test less often than men, the Civil Rights Division concluded that Maryland was illegally discriminating against Black applicants and women,’ the case said.

The suggested changes involved ditching the prior selection tools and providing a total of $2.75 million in monetary relief to Black candidates who were not hired because of written test results and women who were not hired because of physical test results.

The DOJ said similar cases were also brought against the cities of South Bend, Indiana, and Cobb County in Georgia.

Cases dismissed on Wednesday marked ‘an early step toward eradicating illegal DEI preferences across the government and in the private sector,’ the DOJ said.

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Rep. Joe Wilson, R- S.C., announced that he plans to put forward a proposal for the development of a $250 bill that features President Donald Trump.

‘Grateful to announce that I am drafting legislation to direct the Bureau of Engraving and Printing to design a $250 bill featuring Donald J. Trump,’ the congressman declared in a post on X.

‘Bidenflation has destroyed the economy forcing American families to carry more cash. Most valuable bill for most valuable President!’ he added.

Current U.S. law indicates that only the portrait of a dead person may appear on U.S. currency and securities.

Wilson, who has served in the House of Representatives for more than two decades, is not the only GOP lawmaker who wants to honor the current president.

Rep. Anna Paulina Luna, R-Fla., put forward a measure last month that calls for Trump’s likeness to be added to Mount Rushmore.

‘The Secretary of the Interior, acting through the Director of the National Park Service, shall arrange for the carving of the figure of President Donald J. Trump on Mount Rushmore National Memorial,’ the text of her proposal reads.

The four presidents featured on Mount Rushmore include George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Theodore Roosevelt, and Abraham Lincoln.

‘President Trump’s bold leadership and steadfast dedication to America’s greatness have cemented his place in history. Mount Rushmore, a timeless symbol of our nation’s freedom and strength, deserves to reflect his towering legacy—a legacy further solidified by the powerful start to his second term,’ Luna said, according to a press release. 

‘He will be forever remembered among the great like Presidents George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Abraham Lincoln, and Theodore Roosevelt,’ she declared.

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Eugene Daniels, the current president of the White House Correspondents Association (WHCA) announced February 25 that the White House’s move to take control of who is in the press pool that travels with the president (substituting President Donald Trump’s judgment for that of the WHCA, which has ‘run’ the pool for decades) ‘suggests the government will choose the journalists who cover the president. In a free country, leaders must not be able to choose their own press corps.’ 
 
‘Since its founding in 1914, the WHCA has sought to ensure that the reporters, photographers, producers and technicians who actually do the work – 365 days of every year – decide among themselves how these rotations are operated,’ Daniels added, ‘so as to ensure consistent professional standards and fairness in access on behalf of all readers, viewers and listeners.’ 
 
Daniels’ hysterical assertions that the WHCA guarantees professional ‘standards’ and ‘fairness’ came on the same day as the announcement that he was leaving his post as one of the editors of Beltway gossip site Politico to host a cable talk show at MSNBC, the same network which ousted Jonathan Capehart and Joy Reid. There is a contradiction there which I’ll leave to others. 

 
Daniels’ assertions are absurd, of course, and bereft of even a junior-high-school-American history-course-level attempt to provide context for Trump’s decision to open the press room to new ‘new media’ and to open the traveling press pool to this ascendant ‘new media’ flourishing in The United States. 

Some facts: The James S. Brady Press Briefing Room was named as such in 2000 for the press secretary wounded in the assassination attempt on President Ronald Reagan. The press room was built in 1970 at the direction of President Richard Nixon, and covered over a swimming pool built in 1934. The WHCA was founded in 1914 and the West Wing in which it — as well as the Oval Office and offices of senior officials, the Cabinet Room, the Situation Room and the White House Mess — was built in 1902. 
 
So Daniels’ claims for turf in and access for the WHCA do not have any basis in the Constitution or the First or 14th amendments. Daniels’ claims are that the practices that grew up — and which have evolved — over time under the direction of legacy media should always remain fixed.  

These arguments are levied despite the fact he worked until recently for a gossip sheet that didn’t exist a quarter-century ago and is jumping ship from there to a sinking cable network that is as shrill in its daytime, nightly and weekend coverage as its audience is as small as that of a single preseason NFL game television. Like I said: Absurd. 

So why the outrage? It is the expected reaction of a guild losing its right to license membership. Chuck Todd, the former moderator of NBC’s ‘Meet the Press,’ made some excellent and valid points about the cost of pool coverage, which legacy networks traditionally bore and which will either have to be reasonably apportioned among journalists in the pool or picked up in whole by the White House out of the president’s budget just as the president’s budget pays for the press room. 

But it is basic First Amendment ‘black letter law’ that the government may not engage in viewpoint discrimination. So, the president cannot pick reporters for the pool based only on their political point of view. And he did not purport to do so. What he and his team are doing is breaking up an aristocracy of media that depends on Beltway profile. 
 
This will be a departure for the country as White House-based coverage of the president has been a game rigged by that aristocratic guild, which itself has shifted left, left, left over the last many decades. 

 
To be sure, there are a few conservatives in the press room and some center-right folks in the pool. But the collective legacy media moved inexorably to the left over the past 50 years, beginning with Nixon’s 1968 election and the Democrats’ U-turn on Vietnam.
 
The gap that opened between legacy elites and ordinary Americans evolved from ‘hidden’ to ‘open’ and indeed is now flaunted, (The WHCA annual dinner, ‘The Nerd Prom,’ is exhibit A.) 

So Daniels’ claims for turf in and access for the WHCA do not have any basis in the Constitution or the First or 14th amendments. Daniels’ claims are that the practices that grew up — and which have evolved — over time under the direction of legacy media should always remain fixed.  

Now Trump is breaking the guild and I and most alternative media of the center-left and center-right are not unhappy at all with the new developments (and I have never wanted nor will ever want, a seat in the press room or on the plane.) Most competitors of legacy media just want a level playing field.  

There is zero reason for there to be a press room anywhere. There is zero reason for a WHCA. And goodness knows there is zero reason for ‘the nerd prom.’ It is time to fairly and, on a rotation, perhaps leavened by lottery, to admit journalists to the press room and into the ‘pool.’ 

Members of the guild: Recall the lesson of the late, great writer Michael Kelly: Journalism is a craft, not a profession. Anyone can practice it. Some are better than others. A few, like the Washington Post’s Dan Balz, are examples of excellence and probity. Study the greats. Emulate them. The byline is the brand, and the brand doesn’t mean a damn. 

Hugh Hewitt is host of ‘The Hugh Hewitt Show,’ heard weekday mornings 6am to 9am ET on the Salem Radio Network, and simulcast on Salem News Channel. Hugh wakes up America on over 400 affiliates nationwide, and on all the streaming platforms where SNC can be seen. He is a frequent guest on the Fox News Channel’s news roundtable hosted by Bret Baier weekdays at 6pm ET. A son of Ohio and a graduate of Harvard College and the University of Michigan Law School, Hewitt has been a Professor of Law at Chapman University’s Fowler School of Law since 1996 where he teaches Constitutional Law. Hewitt launched his eponymous radio show from Los Angeles in 1990.  Hewitt has frequently appeared on every major national news television network, hosted television shows for PBS and MSNBC, written for every major American paper, has authored a dozen books and moderated a score of Republican candidate debates, most recently the November 2023 Republican presidential debate in Miami and four Republican presidential debates in the 2015-16 cycle. Hewitt focuses his radio show and his column on the Constitution, national security, American politics and the Cleveland Browns and Guardians. Hewitt has interviewed tens of thousands of guests from Democrats Hillary Clinton and John Kerry to Republican Presidents George W. Bush and Donald Trump over his 40 years in broadcast, and this column previews the lead story that will drive his radio/ TV show today.

 

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Sen. Marsha Blackburn, R-Tenn., advocated for the Trump administration to release the full, unredacted records related to sexual predator and financier Jeffrey Epstein as Attorney General Pam Bondi now says the Department of Justice could release the records Thursday. 

‘I think tomorrow…breaking news. Right now, you’re going to see some Epstein information being released by my office. What you’re going to see, hopefully tomorrow, is a lot of flight logs, a lot of names, a lot, a lot of information. But it’s pretty sick what that man did,’ Bondi told Fox News’ Jesse Watters Wednesday night.

Her comments came hours after Fox News Digital spoke with Blackburn, who has been among the most vocal Capitol Hill lawmakers calling to release the Epstein records.

‘For me, this is not about the celebrity. And I know that there are many people that want to see who all flew on his planes and guested at his Caribbean island,’ she told Fox News Digital on Tuesday. ‘But let’s break these human trafficking rings apart. Let’s get these people apprehended. Let’s get them prosecuted. Let’s get them jailed. Let’s put an end to this and save lives.’

On Monday, Blackburn sent a letter to newly sworn-in FBI Director Kash Patel calling for the complete flight logs from Epstein’s private jet and helicopter, records belonging to Epstein’s partner Ghislaine Maxwell, and video footage from Epstein’s Palm Beach, Florida residence.

The Tennessee Republican has long advocated for the release of the Epstein documents, arguing that making the full set of records public will expose the complex network behind global human and sex trafficking.

‘This will give us insight into this web of human and sex traffickers that has just spread like wildfire across the globe, and it will help us to begin to get accountability for the victims of this horrendous trade,’ she said.

Blackburn said that viewing the intricacies of Epstein’s ring will help elected officials uncover the truth and get to the ‘bottom of this.’

‘At the time I started this, I was the top Republican on the Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Human Rights and the Law,’ she said. ‘So to get this information, we can begin to break these rings apart and find out who he [Epstein] was in business with, who his associates and affiliates were.’

Blackburn said that the sex trafficking web – a $150 million per year business – needs government accountability.

‘Law enforcement tells me regularly, we need to figure out who constructed this network, who is all involved in this web, [and] how it tied into other countries,’ she said. ‘And to get information and insight to help us begin to break apart the network and get accountability is going to be vitally important.’

The senator noted that the mystery surrounding Epstein’s unexpected death prior to his 2019 trial feeds into the public’s curiosity and skepticism.

‘I do find it very interesting that the French human trafficker and then Epstein both died in jail while they were awaiting trial,’ she said. ‘This speaks to the curiosity that people have, and the concern that this was much larger than just flights to an island. That this was a part of a global human trafficking and sex trafficking ring.’

Attorney General Pam Bondi said Friday that Epstein’s client list was awaiting review, and that she was also looking over the President Kennedy and Martin Luther King assassination files.

‘It’s sitting on my desk right now to review,’ Bondi told ‘America Reports’ host John Roberts Friday about the Epstein files. ‘That’s been a directive by President Trump.’

During his campaign, President Donald Trump promised the declassification of the files. The House’s Task Force on the Declassification of Federal Secrets is scheduled to hold its first public hearing on March 26.  

The White House and the FBI did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Fox News Digital.

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U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer is staring down a geopolitical tightrope ahead of his meeting with President Donald Trump on Thursday as he looks to stay strong on support for Ukraine, as well as maintaining relations with the U.S. — London’s chief ally. 

But the tense international atmosphere is not the only hurdle Starmer is facing following his waning approval ratings at home.

The U.K. saw a massive political shake-up in July 2024 after voters ended the Conservative Party’s 14-year reign and voted in the Labour Party under Starmer. But in the months following his election, Starmer’s approval ratings reportedly took a historic dip.

Controversial topics like axing a winter fuel repayment program, policy reversals relating to political donations, and partisan uproar over issues like immigration, knife crime and a deal that could hand over the Chagos Islands to Mauritius along with more than $11 billion, have reportedly contributed to Starmer’s tanking support. 

Colin Brazier, an award-winning retired English journalist and veteran observer of the U.K.’s culture wars, told Fox News Digital that with some eight months in power, there’s a reason why Starmer’s approval ratings have ‘fallen faster than almost any previous incumbent.’

‘Why?’ he asked. ‘New taxes on everything from schools to farms and a sense that Britain is ‘undeveloping’ before our very eyes. Immigration on a scale never before seen is testing the Welfare State, transport network, housing stock and National Health Service to destruction. Starmer’s Labour Party detests MAGA at a cellular level. But their beleaguered leader needs to show statesmanship, and a picture with the president does that.’

But one foreign policy expert believes that the Starmer-Trump meeting could be an opportunity for the prime minister to gain some points at home while also soothing diplomatic ties. 

‘I think what he’s obviously been doing is trying to take the edge off some of President Trump’s sort of more surprising statements… then trying to put Britain in the best positive light when it comes to the president’s considerations,’ Alan Mendoza, Executive Director of the Henry Jackson Society, a non-partisan U.K.-based think tank told Fox News Digital.

‘The polling tells you that President Trump is very unpopular in Britain,’ Mendoza said. ‘But that doesn’t mean that the British government is going to listen to those opinion polls. The British government has to govern.

‘British people may have a certain view of President Trump, but the British government, the British political class, may well have a very different view of what he’s trying to achieve and where they should be positioning themselves,’ he added.

Despite Starmer’s waning ratings and low favorability of Trump among Brits, Mendoza doesn’t think these factors will shape how Starmer approaches his meeting with Trump on Thursday.

Instead, Mendoza pointed to the successful meeting between Trump and French President Emmanuel Macron, as an indicator of how Starmer’s discussions could go.

‘I think there would be a path to great popularity if he’s able to shape President Trump’s thinking on certain subjects,’ Mendoza said. 

Starmer’s ability to make inroads with Trump could have immediate implications as issues that directly impact Brits’ pockets are expected to be top agenda items — including the looming U.S. tariffs on U.K. steel.

The British embassy confirmed to Fox News Digital that while topics involving U.S.-U.K. defense alliances and support for Ukraine are expected to be addressed, topics involving shared economic and trade-based partnerships will also be prioritized. 

Trump’s threat to slap 25% tariffs on U.K. and EU imports is a topic Britain hopes it is uniquely positioned to address given its ‘very specialized’ trading position on steel and aluminum, U.K. secretary for business and trade, Jonathan Reynolds, told the BBC this month.  

A British embassy spokesperson said Starmer will look to highlight the economic ‘synergies’ shared between the U.K. and U.S. when it comes to tech, AI, trade and investments.

‘That’s going to be a big priority,’ spokesman Ed Roman said. 

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President Donald Trump’s nominee for labor secretary is expected to pass a key vote before the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions (HELP) on Thursday after picking up Democrat support from Sen. Maggie Hassan, D-N.H. 

Lori Chavez-DeRemer’s past support for the Protecting the Right to Organize (PRO) Act jeopardized her confirmation last week, when Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., said he would not vote for her if she continued to support the PRO Act. Paul’s reluctance meant Chavez-DeRemer would likely need a Democrat’s vote to pass a key confirmation hurdle. 

Hassan’s support, as a Democrat on the HELP Committee, all but confirms Chavez-DeRemer will pass through her committee vote.

‘The Department of Labor plays an integral role in supporting workers and small businesses alike, and after hearing significant support from constituents, including members of labor unions in New Hampshire, I will support Representative Chavez-DeRemer’s nomination as Secretary of Labor,’ Hassan shared in a statement to Fox News Digital. 

Hassan admitted that she ‘may not agree on everything’ with Chavez-DeRemer, but she is ‘qualified’ to serve and earned ‘significant support’ from New Hampshire voters.

‘Though we may not agree on everything, after meeting with Representative Chavez-DeRemer and listening to her testimony during her confirmation hearing, I believe that she is qualified to serve as the next secretary of labor, and I look forward to working with her to support New Hampshire’s workers and small businesses,’ Hassan added. 

Chavez-DeRemer supported the PRO Act as a representative for Oregon’s 5th Congressional District but told senators during her confirmation hearing that she no longer supports overturning Republican-supported right-to-work laws under the PRO Act.

The PRO Act would effectively kill state-level laws that prevent employers and unions from requiring workers to pay union dues as a condition of their employment. Republicans oppose the PRO Act for overturning right-to-work laws. 

Chavez-DeRemer could still earn back Paul’s vote after she distanced herself from the PRO Act during her Senate hearing. With Hassan’s support, Chavez-DeRemer is no longer reliant on Paul for confirmation. 

‘If she wanted to make a public statement saying that her support for the PRO Act was incorrect and she no longer does, then I’d think about her nomination,’ Paul told Fox News Digital in a statement ahead of Chavez-DeRemer’s hearing. 

‘So you no longer support the aspect of the PRO Act that would have overturned state right-to-work laws?’ Paul asked during the hearing. 

‘Yes, sir,’ she replied. 

Paul’s office did not respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment on how he will vote in committee today.

Chavez-DeRemer testified before the HELP Committee on Feb. 19. If the committee votes to send Chavez-DeRemer’s nomination before the full Senate, Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., can file a motion to end Senate floor debate on the nominee, triggering a cloture vote to halt deliberations. Once debate closes, senators cast their final confirmation vote. 

During her hearing, Chavez-DeRemer advocated for trade school investments to expand ‘educational pathways beyond the traditional four-year degree’ to strengthen the American workforce. She said she is committed to leveling the playing field for American businesses, workers and unions. 

Chavez-DeRemer also thanked Trump and credited him with the ‘single greatest political achievement of our time’ in building a ‘new coalition of working-class Americans.’

‘President Trump has united a new coalition of working-class Americans like never before. With 59.6% of Teamsters backing him, historic support from African-American and Latino voters, and record-breaking turnout in once-solid blue cities and states, Americans are speaking loud and clear. They are calling for action, progress and leadership that puts the American worker first,’ Chavez-DeRemer said.

Trump nominated Chavez-DeRemer for secretary of labor less than three weeks after he was elected president.

‘Lori has worked tirelessly with both Business and Labor to build America’s workforce, and support the hardworking men and women of America,’ Trump wrote.

‘I look forward to working with her to create tremendous opportunity for American Workers, to expand training and apprenticeships, to grow wages and improve working conditions, to bring back our manufacturing jobs. Together, we will achieve historic cooperation between Business and Labor that will restore the American Dream for Working Families,’ he added.

Fox News Digital’s Julia Johnson contributed to this report.

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Japan has won the SheBelieves Cup, denying the United States Women’s National Team a sixth consecutive win in the tournament.

Japan needed a tie or win on Wednesday to hoist its first SheBelieves Cup trophy, while the USWNT needed to win outright in order to clinch the title for the eighth time in a decade. Japan got the win, 2-1.

Here’s everything you need to know about the 2025 SheBelieves Cup final:

USWNT vs. Japan highlights

Final: Japan 2, USWNT 1

Japan only needed to tie to win the SheBelieves Cup, but it left no doubt by defeating the U.S. Women’s National Team 2-1 in the final. Toko Koga’s goal in the 50th minute stood up as the winner.

The two sides were evenly-matched: The USWNT had five shots on goal on nine attempts; Japan had four on 10 and held a very narrow edge in possession (50.3% to 49.7%).

The loss was the first for the USWNT under head coach Emma Hayes.

Halftime: USWNT 1, Japan 1

There were two goals scored in the first 15 minutes but none in the next 30. The teams hit the locker rooms tied 1-1.

Japan has two shots on goal and six attempts; the United States has three and four, respectively. Japan has the possession edge (55.4% to 44.6%).

Ally Sentnor scores equalizer; US tied with Japan

The U.S. women settled into the championship match after yielding an early goal to Japan and were able to answer back quickly. Ally Sentnor scored the equalizer for the USWNT at the 14-minute mark. Catarina Macario split defenders with a pass up the middle to Sentnor, who scored with a brilliant strike. It marked Sentnor’s second international goal of her career.

Japan scores in opening minutes, leads USWNT 1-0

It didn’t take long for Japan to get on the board. Yuka Momiki gave Japan a 1-0 lead in the SheBelieves Cup final Wednesday night by finding the back of the net in the opening two minutes of the match. American Emily Sonnett collided with goalkeeper Jane Campbell as they both tried to defend and they both went to the ground, offering up an empty net for Momiki.

USWNT vs. Japan SheBelieves Cup: TV channel, time, how to watch

Date: Wednesday, Feb. 26
Time: 10:30 p.m. ET
TV: TBS
Stream: Sling TV
Location: Snapdragon Stadium (San Diego, Calif.)

Watch USWNT vs. Japan on Sling TV

USWNT’s SheBelieves Cup Roster

GOALKEEPERS (2): Jane Campbell (Houston Dash), Mandy McGlynn (Utah Royals)
DEFENDERS (8): Tierna Davidson (NJ/NY Gotham FC), Crystal Dunn (Paris Saint-Germain, FRA), Emily Fox (Arsenal FC, ENG), Tara McKeown (Washington Spirit), Jenna Nighswonger (Arsenal FC, ENG), Emily Sams (Orlando Pride), Emily Sonnett (NJ/NY Gotham FC), Gisele Thompson (Angel City FC)
MIDFIELDERS (6): Korbin Albert (Paris Saint-Germain, FRA), Sam Coffey (Portland Thorns FC), Lindsey Heaps (Olympique Lyon, FRA), Claire Hutton (Kansas City Curren), Jaedyn Shaw (North Carolina Courage), Lily Yohannes (Ajax, NED)
FORWARDS (7): Lynn Biyendolo (Seattle Reign FC), Michelle Cooper (Kansas City Current), Catarina Macario (Chelsea FC, ENG), Yazmeen Ryan (Houston Dash), Emma Sears (Racing Louisville FC), Ally Sentnor (Utah Royals), Alyssa Thompson (Angel City FC)

Japan’s SheBelieves Cup Roster

GOALKEEPERS (3): Ayaka Yamashita (Manchester City, ENG), Chika Hirao (Albirex Niigata Ladies), Akane Okuma (INAC Kobe Leonessa)
DEFENDERS (6): Saori Takarada (Leicester City, ENG), Moeka Minami (AS Roma, ITA), Saki Kumagai (London City Lionesses, ENG), Hana Takahashi (Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Urawa Reds Ladies), Toko Koga (Feyenoord, NED), Hikaru Kitagawa (BK Häcken, SWE), Rion Ishikawa (Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Urawa Reds Ladies)
MIDFIELDERS (7): Hinata Miyazawa (Manchester United, ENG), Kiko Seike (Brighton & Hove Albion, ENG), Fuka Nagano (Liverpool, ENG), Yui Hasegawa (Manchester City, ENG), Aoba Fujino (Manchester City, ENG), Momoko Tanikawa (Bayern Munich, GER), Maika Hamano (Chelsea, ENG), Honoka Hayashi (Everton, ENG), Narumi Miura (Washington Spirit), Yuka Momiki (Leicester City, ENG)
FORWARDS (3): Riko Ueki (West Ham United, ENG), Mina Tanaka (Utah Royals), 19-Remina Chiba (Eintracht Frankfurt, GER)

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The Iowa Hawkeyes women’s basketball team ended a two-game losing streak with a 79-66 road win over their Big Ten foe Michigan Wolverines on Wednesday night at Crisler Center.

Iowa guard Sydney Affolter led the way with a career-high 24-points, 11 rebounds, three assists and two steals to mark her sixth double-double of the season. Affolter scored 14 points in the first quarter and matched her previous career-best of 18 points by halftime. She finished the night shooting 9-of-12 from the field and a perfect 4-of-4 from three. Teammate Lucy Olsen was also red-hot from beyond the arc and exploded for 20 points and five rebounds, shooting 8-of-16 from the field and 4-of-6 from three.

Michigan’s Syla Swords finished with a double-double of her own in the loss with a team-high 22 points and 10 rebounds. Brooke Daniels added eight points off the bench.

Here’s a recap of the Big Ten showdown between Iowa and Michigan:

Iowa pulls away to defeat Michigan 79-66

The Wolverines came within eight points of the Hawkeyes with 7:30 remaining in the game, but Iowa surged and closed the contest out on a 11-6 run to win 79-66. The Wolverines gave up 28 points on 16 turnovers.

End Q3: Iowa 64, Michigan 56

After trailing by as many as 21 points, Michigan went on a 24-11 run to cut their deficit to single digits. Iowa leads 64-56 heading into the fourth quarter. 

Syla Swords led the way scoring eight of her 18 points in the third quarter. She’s shooting 7-of-12 from the field and 4-of-7 from three and is only two rebounds away from a double-double. Michigan’s bench has also impacted the game with 17 points, led by Brooke Daniel’s eight. 

The Wolverines’ run was spurred by four Hawkeyes’ turnovers in the third quarter. Sydney Affolter has a game-high 20 points, while Lucy Owens has 16 points. 

Halftime: Iowa 49, Michigan 32

It’s raining threes in the Crisler Center in Ann Arbor, Michigan. The Hawkeyes are collectively shooting 75% from beyond the arc (9-of-12) and head into the locker room with a 17-point lead over Michigan at halftime.

The first quarter belonged to Iowa’s Sydney Affolter, who had 14 points and four 3-pointers in the quarter, but the second quarter belonged to Lucy Olsen. Olsen didn’t attempt a shot in the first quarter, but then proceeded to drop 16 points in the second quarter, shooting 6-of-10 from the field and 4-of-4 from three.

Despite getting multiple looks at the basket with 9 offensive rebounds, the Wolverines struggled to secure the basketball and gave up 10 turnovers to the Hawkeyes, including six in the second quarter alone. Iowa converted the turnovers into 19 points. 

Michigan’s Syla Swords is on double-double watch with a team-high 10 points and six rebounds, while Jordan Hobbs added 7 points. Michigan is shooting 40.6% from the field and 4-of-15 from three. 

End Q1: Iowa 25, Michigan 18

The Iowa Hawkeyes have a 25-18 lead over the Michigan Wolverines after one quarter of play, thanks in part to Iowa guard Sydney Affolter. Affolter was red-hot in the first quarter and didn’t miss a shot, literally. She scored 14 points in the opening 10 minutes, shooting 5-of-5 from the field and 4-of-4 from three. Collectively, Iowa shot an impressive 66.7% from the field and 5-of-6 from three. 

Meanwhile, Syla Swords leads Michigan with 7 points. The Wolverines are shooting 50% from the field and 2-of-6 from three, but Michigan surrendered four turnovers for seven points to Iowa. 

How to watch Iowa vs. Michigan women’s basketball

Date: Wednesday, March 26
Time: 7 p.m. ET
Stream: Big Ten Plus
Location: Crisler Center (Ann Arbor, Michigan)

Watch Big Ten action with Big Ten Plus

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INDIANAPOLIS – Abdul Carter has already been to two Super Bowls. Now he’s ready to play in one.

“You definitely need a franchise edge rusher. If you look at all the great teams – all the great teams that have won Super Bowls – you have to one standout, great defensive player,” the former Penn State star said Wednesday at the NFL scouting combine.

“And I feel like I’m that.”

A shoulder injury suffered in the Fiesta Bowl on New Year’s Eve will prevent Carter from working out this week – and given he’s widely projected to be among the 2025 draft’s top three prospects, he might not have regardless of his health.

But the Big Ten’s 2024 Defensive Player of the Year will likely test off the charts when it comes to confidence. Asked if he should be the No. 1 overall selection, which is held by the Tennessee Titans, Carter replied: “I feel like it’s very realistic. I feel like I’m the best player in the country, and the best player should be selected number one.”

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He’s already interviewed behind closed doors with the Titans, whose rookie general manager, Mike Borgonzi, has vowed to take a “generational talent” if the team retains its pick.

“I feel like it went well,” Carter said of the meeting with Tennessee.

“I’m impressed with the coaches, I feel like they were impressed with me. They have the number one pick, I want to be the number one pick.”

But is he actually a “generational talent” the Titans can’t afford to bypass?

Carter had 12 sacks last season for the Nittany Lions and led all FBS players with 23½ tackles for loss. He stands 6-3 and said he currently weighs 248 pounds, nearly identical measurements to a player he’s often compared to, Buffalo Bills linebacker Von Miller … who is most definitely generational. Elite burst and the ability to bend around offensive tackles are also traits Miller and Carter share.

And in terms of intangibles, Carter expresses a willingness to lead and set an example for his teammates on and off the field. He’s also tough, playing in the Orange Bowl nine days after injuring his shoulder and registering a sack among his five tackles even as Penn State’s national championship bid was extinguished by Notre Dame.

‘My teammates needed me,’ he said of the decision to play with the injury.

‘I felt like, leave it all out there and give us the best opportunity to win. And I feel like that’s what I did.’

NFL Network chief draft analyst Daniel Jeremiah lists Carter as his top-rated prospect this year and, given he’s a pass rusher – perhaps the most premium position in the NFL outside of quarterback – thinks the Titans would be wise to choose him.

“I think when you look at the pieces already on that defensive line, and you go out and you get Abdul Carter, I think you’ve got a chance to have one of the best units in the league,” said Jeremiah.

“That’s a good foundation to build off of.”

Carter’s foundation was laid in his hometown, Philadelphia.

“I feel like I’m shaped a lot by my Philly roots,” he said. “It’s my toughness, my grit – I feel like that’s really just the biggest thing I can take from Philly. It really made me into the man I am today.”

It also made him into an Eagles fan for most of his life, and he attended Super Bowls 57 and 59 to cheer his team on, grateful to see them wallop the Kansas City Chiefs earlier this month while knowing he’ll soon have to turn in his fan card.

“It was dope, I really just got to enjoy my last year really being a fan – being from Philly, born and raised, supporting the Eagles really my whole life. Got to take my dad to the Super Bowl, just enjoying being a fan one last year,” said Carter, fully aware he could realistically wind up playing for the hated New York Giants, who possess the draft’s third overall pick.

“Whatever team drafts me,” he grinned, “I’m loyal to that team.”

Carter, who wore the famed No. 11 Penn State jersey previously donned by the likes of LaVar Arrington, NaVorro Bowman and Micah Parsons – all eventual NFL stars – plans to work out at the university’s pro day next month and expects to “perform at an elite level.” He’s already resumed training – often with Parsons, the Dallas Cowboys All-Pro pass rusher serving as a mentor.

In a few weeks, Carter expects to have answered any questions about his worthiness as a top pick, including the notion he might be undersized for some teams.

“I ain’t never been too small for nothing my whole life,” he said.

“It’s all about heart for me, it’s all about will for me – and I’ve got more of that than anybody.”

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Japan has won the SheBelieves Cup, denying the United States Women’s National Team a sixth consecutive win in the tournament.

Japan needed a tie or win on Wednesday to hoist its first SheBelieves Cup trophy, while the USWNT needed to win outright in order to clinch the title for the eighth time in a decade. Japan got the win, 2-1.

Here’s everything you need to know about the 2025 SheBelieves Cup final:

Final: Japan 2, USWNT 1

Japan only needed to tie to win the SheBelieves Cup, but it left no doubt by defeating the U.S. Women’s National Team 2-1 in the final. Toko Koga’s goal in the 50th minute stood up as the winner.

The two sides were evenly-matched: The USWNT had five shots on goal on nine attempts; Japan had four on 10 and held a very narrow edge in possession (50.3% to 49.7%).

The loss was the first for the USWNT under head coach Emma Hayes.

Halftime: USWNT 1, Japan 1

There were two goals scored in the first 15 minutes but none in the next 30. The teams hit the locker rooms tied 1-1.

Japan has two shots on goal and six attempts; the United States has three and four, respectively. Japan has the possession edge (55.4% to 44.6%).

Ally Sentnor scores equalizer; US tied with Japan

The U.S. women settled into the championship match after yielding an early goal to Japan and were able to answer back quickly. Ally Sentnor scored the equalizer for the USWNT at the 14-minute mark. Catarina Macario split defenders with a pass up the middle to Sentnor, who scored with a brilliant strike. It marked Sentnor’s second international goal of her career.

Japan scores in opening minutes, leads USWNT 1-0

It didn’t take long for Japan to get on the board. Yuka Momiki gave Japan a 1-0 lead in the SheBelieves Cup final Wednesday night by finding the back of the net in the opening two minutes of the match. American Emily Sonnett collided with goalkeeper Jane Campbell as they both tried to defend and they both went to the ground, offering up an empty net for Momiki.

USWNT vs. Japan SheBelieves Cup: TV channel, time, how to watch

Date: Wednesday, Feb. 26
Time: 10:30 p.m. ET
TV: TBS
Stream: Sling TV
Location: Snapdragon Stadium (San Diego, Calif.)

Watch USWNT vs. Japan on Sling TV

USWNT’s SheBelieves Cup Roster

GOALKEEPERS (2): Jane Campbell (Houston Dash), Mandy McGlynn (Utah Royals)
DEFENDERS (8): Tierna Davidson (NJ/NY Gotham FC), Crystal Dunn (Paris Saint-Germain, FRA), Emily Fox (Arsenal FC, ENG), Tara McKeown (Washington Spirit), Jenna Nighswonger (Arsenal FC, ENG), Emily Sams (Orlando Pride), Emily Sonnett (NJ/NY Gotham FC), Gisele Thompson (Angel City FC)
MIDFIELDERS (6): Korbin Albert (Paris Saint-Germain, FRA), Sam Coffey (Portland Thorns FC), Lindsey Heaps (Olympique Lyon, FRA), Claire Hutton (Kansas City Curren), Jaedyn Shaw (North Carolina Courage), Lily Yohannes (Ajax, NED)
FORWARDS (7): Lynn Biyendolo (Seattle Reign FC), Michelle Cooper (Kansas City Current), Catarina Macario (Chelsea FC, ENG), Yazmeen Ryan (Houston Dash), Emma Sears (Racing Louisville FC), Ally Sentnor (Utah Royals), Alyssa Thompson (Angel City FC)

Japan’s SheBelieves Cup Roster

GOALKEEPERS (3): Ayaka Yamashita (Manchester City, ENG), Chika Hirao (Albirex Niigata Ladies), Akane Okuma (INAC Kobe Leonessa)
DEFENDERS (6): Saori Takarada (Leicester City, ENG), Moeka Minami (AS Roma, ITA), Saki Kumagai (London City Lionesses, ENG), Hana Takahashi (Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Urawa Reds Ladies), Toko Koga (Feyenoord, NED), Hikaru Kitagawa (BK Häcken, SWE), Rion Ishikawa (Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Urawa Reds Ladies)
MIDFIELDERS (7): Hinata Miyazawa (Manchester United, ENG), Kiko Seike (Brighton & Hove Albion, ENG), Fuka Nagano (Liverpool, ENG), Yui Hasegawa (Manchester City, ENG), Aoba Fujino (Manchester City, ENG), Momoko Tanikawa (Bayern Munich, GER), Maika Hamano (Chelsea, ENG), Honoka Hayashi (Everton, ENG), Narumi Miura (Washington Spirit), Yuka Momiki (Leicester City, ENG)
FORWARDS (3): Riko Ueki (West Ham United, ENG), Mina Tanaka (Utah Royals), 19-Remina Chiba (Eintracht Frankfurt, GER)

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