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House conservatives are cheering the apparent scale-down of the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), led by President Donald Trump and Elon Musk.

‘USAID is a corrupt governmental organization run by unelected bureaucrats created to shovel taxpayer dollars to Democrats’ pet projects overseas,’ Rep. Andy Biggs, R-Ariz., told Fox News Digital.

‘At nearly $37 trillion in national debt – and a $1.8 trillion annual deficit – we can’t afford to continue giving money to countries that hate America and everything we stand for,’ he said.

Rep. Eric Burlison, R-Mo., told Fox News Digital that shutting down USAID ‘will help reduce our national debt and relieve the burden on taxpayers, while compelling aid-dependent countries to achieve true self-reliance, snapping them out of the dependency cycle USAID has perpetuated under the false banner of ‘development.’’

House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Brian Mast, R-Fla., endorsed the idea of ending its independent agency status on CBS News’ ‘Face the Nation’ over the weekend.

‘I would be absolutely for, if that’s the path we go down, removing USAID as a separate department and having it fall under one of the other parts of the Department of State, because of its failure,’ Mast said.

USAID is an independent agency in the federal government that provides civilian foreign aid to help encourage development, fight poverty and disease, and promote democracy overseas.

However, conservatives argue that the agency has strayed from its intended purpose and have called for steep cuts to its multibillion-dollar budget.

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., wrote on X, ‘7 months ago, I tried to DEFUND USAID. Only 81 Republicans voted ‘aye’ which is ‘yes’ to my amendment to prohibit funding to USAID. 127 Republicans and 204 Democrats voted NO to my amendment and voted to FUND USAID. I FULLY SUPPORT ELIMINATING USAID!!!’

Rep. Eli Crane, R-Ariz., similarly said on the platform, ‘I once proposed an amendment on the House floor to cut the USAID budget by 50%. A sensible start. You won’t be shocked to know that it didn’t have enough support from my fellow Republicans.’

Fifty senior USAID staff have been placed on administrative leave, sources told Fox News over the weekend. Staff have also been barred from communicating with anyone outside the agency without approval. 

Its computer systems have also been taken over by Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency, the sources said.

Democrats have criticized the USAID crackdown, particularly with regard to Musk – who they point out is an unelected ally and donor to Trump. 

‘Agency watchdogs track down waste, fraud and abuse. Trump fired them all. The Government Accountability Office monitors federal spending. What Elon Musk is doing isn’t oversight. An unaccountable billionaire doesn’t have the power to cancel spending he disagrees with,’ Rep. Shontel Brown, D-Ohio, wrote on X.

Rep. Diane DeGette, D-Colo., said, ‘USAID is critical in advancing U.S. national security interests, providing humanitarian aid, and strengthening global stability. Musk is an unelected billionaire with no authority to make these decisions. This isn’t governance, it’s authoritarianism.’

Fox News’ Jennifer Griffin contributed to this report

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A newly formed outside group aligned with President Donald Trump says it’s taking aim at Republican senators who remain undecided on Robert F. Kennedy Jr., as it pushes to confirm Trump’s Health and Human Services secretary.

Patient First Coalition (PFC), a nonprofit advocacy group launched last week, says it’s now beginning what it describes as a ‘massive grassroots effort’ to encourage Republican senators to support Kennedy, the vaccine skeptic and environmental crusader who ran for the White House in 2024 before ending his bid and endorsing Trump.

Kennedy survived back-to-back combustible Senate confirmation hearings last week, where Trump’s nominee to lead 18 powerful federal agencies that oversee the nation’s food and health faced plenty of verbal fireworks over past controversial comments, including his repeated claims in recent years linking vaccines to autism, which have been debunked by scientific research.

The move by PFC, which says it’s a collective group of organizations committed to advancing Kennedy’s so-called ‘Make America Healthy Again’ agenda, comes ahead of Tuesday’s key confirmation vote by the Senate Finance Committee.

‘All uncommitted Republican Senators will be targeted in this grassroots effort,’ PFC highlighted.

Shannon Burns, the group’s senior advisor, shared that ‘our grassroots phase will include television, radio and podcast interviews with our advisory board members, as well as guest columns in newspapers across the country.’

‘We will enable thousands of calls and emails into Senate offices from millions of Americans who support this agenda. We want to organize them, mobilize them, and make sure their voices are heard before the Senate votes,’ Burns added.

PFC pointed out that it will initially give ‘special focus’ to GOP senators in Louisiana, Maine, Alaska, Kentucky and North Carolina.

Those states are home to Sen. Bill Cassidy, the Louisiana physician and chair of the Senate Health Committee, Sens. Susan Collins of Maine and Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, who are often at odds with Trump, Sen. Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the former longtime Senate Republican leader, and Sen. Thom Tillis of North Carolina.

‘Your past of undermining confidence in vaccines with unfounded or misleading arguments concerns me,’ Cassidy told Kennedy at the end of Thursday’s confirmation hearing.

PFC is one of a handful of outside groups targeting GOP senators in the fight to confirm Trump’s nominees.

A source in Trump’s political orbit tells Fox News that those groups could ‘exact consequences’ on Republican senators who don’t support the president’s Cabinet nominees.

And Trump on Sunday took to social media to demand that Senate Republicans ‘GET TOUGH VERY FAST’ in confirming the rest of his Cabinet.

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The Senate Republican campaign committee is touting that it is off to a strong fundraising start as it aims to defend and expand its majority in the chamber in the 2026 midterm elections.

The National Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC) announced on Monday that it raked in a record $8.5 million in January, which the committee says is its best ever off-year January haul.

‘To deliver on the promises President Trump made to the American people, we must protect and grow our Republican Senate Majority,’ South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott, the new NRSC chair, said in a statement.

Scott teased that ‘the NRSC’s record-breaking January is just the beginning. We will work tirelessly to ensure Republicans have the resources and operations needed to win in battleground states across the Senate map.’

However, in a memo sent to Senate Republican chiefs of staff, NRSC Executive Director Jennifer DeCasper noted that the committee will ‘enter this cycle with nearly $24 million in debt and unpaid bills from last cycle and limited cash on hand.’

The NRSC ended 2024 with $2.7 million in its coffers.

The rival Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee has yet to announce its January fundraising.

Republicans won control of the Senate in November’s elections by flipping an open seat in West Virginia, and ousting Democratic incumbents in Montana, Ohio and Pennsylvania. The GOP currently holds a 53-47 majority in the Senate.

Senate Republicans enjoyed a very favorable map in the 2024 cycle as they won back control of the majority. An early read of the 2026 map shows they will continue to play offense in some states, but will be forced to play defense in others.

The GOP will target an open Democrat-held seat in battleground Michigan, where Sen. Gary Peters announced last week that he would not seek re-election in 2026. They will also target first-term Sen. Jon Ossoff in battleground Georgia and longtime Sen. Jeanne Shaheen in swing state New Hampshire.

However, Democrats plan to go on offense in blue-leaning Maine, where GOP Sen. Susan Collins is up for re-election, as well as in battleground North Carolina, where Republican Sen. Thom Tillis is also up in 2026.

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Ontario will pull all American alcohol from its government-run liquor shelves beginning Tuesday in response to U.S. President Donald Trump’s 25% tariffs on Canadian imports.

Outlets of the Liquor Control Board of Ontario will also take U.S. products out of its catalog so other retailers can’t order or restock those items, according to a Sunday statement by Premier Doug Ford.

“Every year, LCBO sells nearly $1 billion worth of American wine, beer, spirits and seltzers. Not anymore,” Ford said. “There’s never been a better time to choose an amazing Ontario-made or Canadian-made product.”

Ford’s announcement came just hours after Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau slapped retaliatory tariffs of 25% against $155 billion of U.S. goods.

The LCBO is one of the largest wholesalers of alcohol, selling more than 1.1 billion liters of alcohol products in Ontario in 2023. According to the Observatory of Economic Complexity, Canada primarily imports hard liquor from America with an estimated $320 million in sales. The U.S.’s second main export destination for liquor as of October 2024 is Canada, with a $25.9 million trade value, according to the OEC.

In a statement provided to CNBC, the LCBO said it will be stopping all sales of U.S. alcohol products online and in stores “indefinitely,” adding that it is the “importer of record” for all American alcohol into Ontario. LCBO currently lists more than 3,600 products from 35 U.S. states, the statement added.

The move follows other similar Canadian premiers’ announcements of retaliation to the tariffs, including Nova Scotia Premier Tim Houston directing the Nova Scotia Liquor Corporation to remove all American alcohol from their shelves on Tuesday and British Columbia Premier David Eby directing the BC Liquor Distribution Branch to “immediately stop buying American liquor from “red states” and remove the top-selling “red-state” brands from the shelves.”

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Sports fans in Canada booed the American national anthem at pro sports events over the weekend.

A similar incident happened Sunday night as the Los Angeles Clippers played the Toronto Raptors.

On Saturday, the president signed a trio of executive orders, imposing 25% tariffs on Mexican and most Canadian imports and 10% on goods from China, starting Tuesday.

How did athletes react to the booing?

Clippers coach Tyronn Lue and forward Kawhi Leonard declined to comment on the situation when asked about it after the Raptors’ 115-108 win.

Chris Boucher, a forward for the Raptors, was also asked after the game about the situation and whether he’d experienced anything like that before.

“No, no, no,” the Canadian citizen and former Oregon Duck told reporters after the game. “But have you ever seen us getting taxed like that?”

Who was singing the national anthem as the crowd was booing at games?

A 15-year-old singer was initially cheered during the NBA game before she started singing and then was met with boos from the crowd.

There was a mix of emotions with cheers and boos scattered within the crowd after the American anthem. The crowd erupted with cheers when the Canadian anthem, “O Canada” began.

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American sprinter Noah Lyles competed in his first major event since the 2024 Paris Olympics, running the 60-meter race at Sunday’s New Balance Indoor Grand Prix.

Lyles blazed his way to a win and took a shot at Miami Dolphins wide receiver Tyreek Hill in a written message to the cameras, that came via a piece of paper Lyles had taped to his back.

‘Tyreek could never,’ the note read.

Lyles’ message is the latest in a line of barbs traded by the two star athletes. Their dialogue began after Hill opined he would beat the 100-meter gold medalist in a head-to-head race in an August appearance on FanDuel TV’s ‘Up and Adams.’

‘I’m not going to beat him by a lot, but I would beat Noah Lyles,’ Hill told Kay Adams.

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

Naturally, that — along with Hill’s assertion that Lyles pretended he was sick after he won the bronze in the 200 meters while battling COVID at the Olympics — didn’t sit well with Lyles. He appeared on the ‘Nightcap’ podcast with Shannon Sharpe and Chad Ochocinco shortly after Hill’s comments and called out the veteran receiver for ‘chasing clout.’

‘Tyreek is just chasing clout,’ Lyles said. ‘Anytime somebody fast comes up, he says he wants to race them. If he really wanted to race people, he would’ve showed up, like DK Metcalf. The man raced in the 60m this year in the Masters division.’

‘The man dodges smoke,’ Lyles added of Hill. ‘I don’t have time for that. If he’s truly serious about it — I’m not talking about you just talking on the internet and you ain’t actually coming to me and talking to my agent and saying let’s set something up — if you’re seriously about it, you’ll see me on the track.’

Hill evidently was serious about his interest. In September, Lyles revealed the two parties were ‘in conversations’ to race one another. A deal was reportedly reached in October, though no race date was announced.

As such, Lyles’ message could have been planned in the hopes of building tension ahead of that event. It could also be a sign the rivalry between the two speedsters is legitimate.

Either way, Lyles would have the advantage if the two square off in the 60-meter race, which is equivalent to about a 65-yard dash. Lyles’ personal best in the event is 6.43 seconds at the 2024 USA Track and Field Indoor Championships, and he clocked a 6.52 in it at Sunday’s race.

Hill, meanwhile, last ran the 60-meter race at the 2023 USATF Masters Indoor Championships, completing it in 6.70 seconds.

Noah Lyles 100m time

For those wondering, Lyles’ best time in the 100m came at the 2024 Paris Olympics. He clocked a 9.79 in the race as he won his first-ever Olympic gold medal.

Tyreek Hill 40 time

Hill ran the 40-yard dash — the NFL’s most popular measure of straight-line speed — in 4.29 seconds. His best time in the 100 meters came in 2013, when he ran a wind-assisted 9.98 at the NJCAA Outdoor Track & Field Championships. He was just 0.02 seconds slower than the winner of the event, Canadian Olympic gold medalist Andre De Grasse.

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North Korea is criticizing Secretary of State Marco Rubio’s description of the country as a ‘rogue state,’ calling it ‘nonsense’ while vowing to take ‘tough counteraction’ to any provocations from the Trump administration. 

Rubio made the remark last week during an appearance on ‘The Megyn Kelly Show,’ where he was speaking about the goals of U.S. foreign policy. 

‘It’s not normal for the world to simply have a unipolar power. That was not – that was an anomaly. It was a product of the end of the Cold War, but eventually you were going to reach back to a point where you had a multipolar world, multi-great powers in different parts of the planet. We face that now with China and to some extent Russia, and then you have rogue states like Iran and North Korea you have to deal with,’ Rubio said, according to the State Department. 

North Korea’s foreign ministry said in response that Rubio ‘talked nonsense by terming the DPRK a ‘rogue state’ while enumerating the foreign policy of the new U.S. administration.’ 

‘The Foreign Ministry of the DPRK deems the U.S. State Secretary’s hostile remarks to thoughtlessly tarnish the image of a sovereign state as a grave political provocation totally contrary to the principle of international law which regards respect for sovereignty and non-interference in other’s internal affairs as its core and strongly denounces and rejects it,’ read a statement published by North Korean state media. 

‘Rubio’s coarse and nonsensical remarks only show directly the incorrect view of the new U.S. administration on the DPRK and will never help promote the U.S. interests as he wishes,’ the statement added, taking a swipe at the Trump administration. 

‘We will never tolerate any provocation of the U.S., which has been always hostile to the DPRK and will be hostile to it in the future, too, but will take tough counteraction corresponding to it as usual,’ it concluded. 

Rubio said during the interview that ‘now more than ever, we need to remember that foreign policy should always be about furthering the national interest of the United States and doing so, to the extent possible, avoiding war and armed conflict, which we have seen two times in the last century be very costly.   

‘They’re celebrating the 80th anniversary this year of the end of the Second World War. That – I think if you look at the scale and scope of destruction and loss of life that occurred, it would be far worse if we had a global conflict now. It may end life on the planet,’ he also said. ‘And it sounds like hyperbole, but that’s – you have multiple countries now who have the capability to end life on Earth. And so we need to really work hard to avoid armed conflict as much as possible, but never at the expense of our national interest. So that’s the tricky balance.’ 

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President Donald Trump’s administration is facing scrutiny this week after working with billionaire Elon Musk to shut down the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), an organization Musk called a ‘viper’s nest’ of mismanaged funding.

Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) worked with the Trump administration to shut down USAID on Monday. While the agency’s long-term future remains unclear, lawmakers and activists have repeatedly accused USAID of using funding to leverage policy changes across the globe. Under President Joe Biden’s administration, the organization was frequently used to push abortion in Africa, critics say.

Biden cleared path for international abortion push

Biden cleared the path for U.S. funding to flow toward pro-abortion groups across the globe just days after entering office. He signed an executive order rescinding the Reagan-era ‘Mexico City Rule’ on Jan. 28, 2021.

The rule, first rescinded by President Barack Obama and then reinstated during Trump’s first term, prevented foreign aid from going to nongovernmental organizations that promote abortion or provide abortion services.

‘These excessive conditions on foreign and development assistance undermine the United States’ efforts to advance gender equality globally by restricting our ability to support women’s health,’ Biden said at the time.

Biden’s rule change cleared USAID to send millions in funding to aggressive abortion organizations like Marie Stopes International (MSI). MSI said it relied on USAID for 17% of its total donor income under the Obama administration, adding that the lack of U.S. support created an $80-million ‘funding gap’ over the final three years of Trump’s term.

The group said the countries most heavily impacted by the lack of funding were Madagascar, Uganda and Zimbabwe.

Biden accused of ‘hijacking’ AIDS program to push abortion in Africa

Rep. Chris Smith, R-N.J., accused Biden in 2023 of ‘hijacking’ a successful AIDS relief program to push an international abortion agenda.

Smith’s accusations centered on PREPFAR, a funding program within USAID that, at the time, had already allocated some $100 billion toward fighting AIDS across the world, saving 25 million lives and preventing millions of infections.

Smith says two groups, Population Services International (PSI) and Village Reach, had received $96.5 million and $10.1 million, respectively, from PEPFAR under Biden, and both groups have a track record of pushing abortion.

‘PSI proudly proclaims it provides abortion and lobbies to eliminate pro-life laws,’ Smith said at the time. ‘PSI provides comprehensive abortion and post-abortion care services in nearly 20 countries throughout the world.’

Smith alleged Village Reach used PEPFAR funds ‘to promote abortion in Malawi and lobby for changes in pro-life laws’ and also ‘helped Malawi establish a government-funded hotline (that included providing information and referrals for ‘sexual and reproductive health,’ i.e., abortion).’

A third group, Pathfinder International, received $5 million in PEPFAR funding from 2021 to 2023. Smith said the group ‘lobbies to weaken or eliminate pro-life laws in nations around the world’ and is ‘explicit in its promotion of abortion in other countries, stating it is ‘committed to expanding access to … safe abortion.’

Biden admin accused of pushing lax abortion laws in Sierra Leone

Biden’s administration was accused in December of pressuring the government of Sierra Leone to adopt more permissive abortion policies in exchange for foreign assistance.

A report from the Daily Signal stated that The Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC), a U.S. government-run funding allocator, was threatening to withhold hundreds of millions in foreign assistance funding if the nation didn’t relax its policies, a former senior U.S. government official told the outlet.

The MCC CEO Alice Albright signed an agreement with Sierra Leone’s finance minister, Sheku Bangura, in late September. The agreement called for the country to receive $480 million in foreign assistance so long as it met the MCC’s ‘rigorous standards for good governance, fighting corruption and respecting democratic rights.’

The organization denied any effort to influence Sierra Leone’s abortion policies in a statement to Fox News Digital in December.

‘The Millennium Challenge Corporation is unaware of any Sierra Leonean abortion legislation and has never made any requests to the Government of Sierra Leone regarding abortion policies. Any such legislation would be an internal matter for Sierra Leone with no U.S. government developments fund made contingent on its passage,’ the organization said in a statement.

Footage circulating on social media showed raucous pro-life protesters demonstrating inside Sierra Leone’s parliament at the time as lawmakers debated legislation detailing more permissive abortion rules.

Fox News’ Andrew Mark Miller contributed to this report.

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The Senate will hold a vote Monday evening on whether to confirm President Donald Trump’s nominee to head the Department of Energy, Chris Wright.

Wright, the CEO and founder of Liberty Energy Inc., an energy industry service provider based in Colorado, was tapped by the 47th president to head the Department of Energy under his administration.

The Trump nominee has received bipartisan support for his nomination, being introduced by a Democrat, Sen. John Hickenlooper of Colorado, during his confirmation hearing with the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee this month. 

Wright will face the final hurdle of his confirmation process on Monday evening during a full Senate vote on his confirmation.

If confirmed, Wright will be sworn in this week as the next secretary of energy.

Wright, during his confirmation hearing, said he had identified three ‘immediate tasks’ where he would focus his attention: unleashing American energy, leading the world in innovation and technology breakthroughs and increasing production in America.

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IOWA CITY, Iowa — Officially, the recognition was for everything Caitlin Clark did for Iowa basketball.

The scoring records. The titles. The back-to-back appearances in the national title game.

Long before her No. 22 jersey was hoisted into the rafters Sunday afternoon, though, it was obvious this was so much more. Clark transcended her sport, forever changing the way the world sees women and women’s athletes, and this was her fans’ chance to thank her for it.

They were lined up outside several hours before tipoff. Well before the doors opened, even. Sure, it was unseasonably warm out, but this is still the Midwest and it is still February.

When fans were finally allowed inside Carver-Hawkeye Arena, students rushed to grab first-come, first-serve seats while season ticket-holders went to theirs at a more leisurely pace. Most wore Clark’s number. Or T-shirts referring to her. “You break it, you own it.” The word “HER” imposed on the state of Iowa.

When Clark took her seat, a few minutes before the game began, a roar went up as if she’d just made a game-winning 3.

“It’s been fun looking back on this whole past year and everything that’s been able to happen, just the journey we went on,” Clark said before the game. “It’s kind of a weird feeling coming back here and not being able to play, but it’s just a really exciting time still for this program. I’m very fortunate to be a part of it.”

Women’s basketball has always had a following at Iowa, and women’s sports was on an upward trajectory before Clark started knocking down circus shots. But she has captured attention in a way few women athletes have, and that has made an impact on and off the court.

Iowa made more from ticket sales for the women’s team last year than they did the men’s, and season tickets were sold out again this season. Sponsors and investors are tripping over themselves to get a piece of women’s sports.

The “Nobody cares!” crowd has crawled back into their holes, knowing they’d only be embarrassing themselves if they tried to diss and dismiss women’s sports. The girls and young women who cheer Clark look at her and know they can be anything they want.

Even more important, the boys and men who watch her know that, too.

“The positive image you’ve brought to this basketball program, this university, this state, women’s basketball nationally is unmeasurable,” former Iowa coach Lisa Bluder, who retired after last year’s run, told Clark during the retirement ceremony.

“I’ve spent my entire career trying to empower young women. But you’ve done more of that in the last four years than anybody could imagine,” she added. “You showed why it’s wise to invest in women’s sports. Why it’s wise to invest in women.

“It’s not only the right thing to do,” Bluder said, her words almost drowned out by the roaring crowd, “it’s the smart thing to do.”

While Clark can see the larger crowds and increased interest for women’s sports, it’s one thing to recognize it and another to truly comprehend it. That probably won’t fully happen until she’s done playing.

But Sunday’s game gave her a glimpse of what ‘the Caitlin Clark effect’ looks like from the other side.

The Hawkeyes have, understandably, struggled after losing not just Clark but Kate Martin and Gabbie Marshall, but they came out roaring against fourth-ranked USC. The Trojans didn’t have a field goal until JuJu Watkins hit a 3 with 26 seconds left in the first quarter, and Iowa led by as much as 19 midway through the second quarter.

USC rallied, though, and it was a back-and-forth game throughout the second half until Lucy Olsen got hot down the stretch in the fourth quarter.

Sitting in the stands with her boyfriend, brothers and parents, Clark waved her hands and pointed when Iowa had the ball, as if trying to direct the Hawkeyes where to go, and she leapt to her feet every time Iowa took a shot. As Iowa began pulling away, Clark was standing the whole time, leaning forward and screaming encouragement to the Hawkeyes.

The noise throughout the arena was deafening, as thrilling an atmosphere as you’ll find in basketball, at any level, men’s or women’s. When the final buzzer sounded on Iowa’s 76-69 win, the student section poured onto the court to celebrate.

HIGHLIGHTS: Iowa upsets USC as Caitlin Clark’s jersey is retired

“The energy from everybody, it was electrifying,” said Watkins, the sophomore phenom who is poised to be the game’s next rock star and might someday challenge Clark’s records.

“It’s just a testament to what Caitlin’s done and what direction the sport is heading,” Watkins added. “I’m super grateful to have a part in it and be able to showcase my talents and what the women’s game can do.”

That is Clark’s true legacy.

The jersey in the rafters, the retired number, it’s a tangible reminder of her achievements as a player. But Clark’s greatness is so far-reaching and so transformative, there isn’t a banner big enough to adequately reflect it.

‘It was great to see the love that she gets,’ said Watkins, who along with the entire USC team stayed on the court to watch Clark’s jersey be retired. ‘I’m a big fan of hers, so to see her get her flowers, it’s amazing.’

Watkins may some day have an event like this in Los Angeles when her career at USC is over. But Sunday belonged to Clark, a fitting recognition for her achievements and widespread influence.”

Follow USA TODAY Sports columnist Nancy Armour on social media @nrarmour.

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