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‘I could be sitting at the front row at an award show and I still don’t feel like a cool kid.’
– A 22-year-old Taylor Swift, already a superstar well along her path to world dominion

Threaded through this past momentous January week, amid the grand pomp of an American inauguration, the peaceful handover of power, the breathless flurry of executive orders, the debates over pardon limits, the frigid temperatures, the euphoria and the dysphoria within the United States populace, the prayers, and the partying, there have been a few peculiar memes about Donald Trump’s new status.

Not as the 47th (and 45th) POTUS, not as a fella with a mandate and mojo to spare, not as a former/current leader returning to the Oval Office with newfound clarity and purpose. 

The topic: Is Donald J. Trump cool? And, relatedly, can he be considered, at last, a full-fledged, fully accepted, member of the American president’s club, a club so exclusive there are only four other living members, and only 45 members in total, since 1789?

Trump certainly was not uniformly greeted as a worthy colleague when he first took office in 2017, following his shock and awe defeat of more than a baker’s dozen of top tier Republican contenders and his epic vanquishing of Hillary Clinton and the Clinton dynasty. 

The snide and dismissive remarks from bold-faced politicians and celebrities, the mocking of Trump’s credentials as a potential policy maker and self-appointed sage, continued throughout the campaign season, well beyond 2016’s Election Day, and all the way through his first term in office.

Barack and Michelle Obama themselves remained stony-faced as they handed over the metaphorical White House keys, and had nary a kind word during the run of Trump’s first administration. Admittedly, the Obama-Trump chronicle had started on a cruel and sour note, with Trump’s accusations about Obama’s birthplace and legitimacy, and both sides trading insults and expressions of mutual disdain. 

(Example 1: Obama on Trump, insisting voters would never elect Trump in 2016 because they knew ‘that being president is a serious job… It’s not hosting a talk show or a reality show, it’s not promotion, it’s not marketing, it’s hard. It’s not a matter of pandering and doing whatever will get you in the news on a given day.’ Example 2: Trump on Obama: ‘He’s a terrible president. He’ll probably go down as the worst president in the history of our country. He’s been a total disaster.’)

Trump, meanwhile, never expected to be accepted by the president’s club when he took office in 2017, and said as much. In any case, he was busy with the big job, its tasks huge and unfamiliar even for a global icon who had, at least on the surface, achieved massive success with nearly every new professional venture, from real estate magnate to best-selling author to blockbuster television star. 

Whether one considers Trump’s first White House go-round impressive, disastrous, or somewhere in between, it was unquestionably shambolic, dominated by a cult of personality and punctuated by wild Trump tweets, in-house melodrama, and unceasing national nitpicking. The confusion and ugliness of the storming of the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, served as an apposite sendoff to Trump’s chaotic, polarizing term.

Even while living inside the White House, Trump remained an outsider of sorts, allowed conceptual entry into the winner’s circle, but held back in the outer borough by a perceived barrier of grace, personality, milieu and taste. For all Trump’s money and celebrity, whether in Manhattan or in Washington, the Queens-born billionaire had never come across as an elite, which is why a 2016 blue collar focus group voter in New Hampshire blithely described him as ‘someone just like me.’

During his first term, the magazine covers and New York Times profiles that Trump coveted were accompanied by withering headlines and scornful narratives. The media landscape was harsh and unsettled, reflecting the unprecedented political chasms in the country. Trump’s interactions with foreign dignitaries often were scrutinized more for stylistic superficialities and culture clashes rather than for political or diplomatic achievements.

Trump had no choice but to shake off the slings and slights, and embed himself more firmly in the embrace of his MAGA base. After four years in office and lessons learned from his 2020 loss to Joe Biden, Trump regrouped and came back strong. He had assists from unlikely sources: a hostile left-leaning media scrum that overplayed its hand and turned off free thinking voters and independents; backfiring federal and state lawfare efforts; and a cover-up of President Biden’s mental decline that led to bedlam within the Democratic Party.

Trump played it smart, showing growth and relative discipline. After surviving two assassination attempts during the summer of 2024, he showed depth and heart. When he won the 2024 election, he showed confidence and conviction.

But what about cool?

It sure looked cool when Trump and Obama were seated together on Jan. 9 at the funeral service for President Jimmy Carter, a celebration of the Georgian’s long life and abundant contributions to the country. Forty-four and 45/7 chatted away, heads together, smiling, chuckling, the two raddest cats in a sea of power and prestige. Kamala Harris, teeth gritted, sat in the tangibly frigid front pew with the Bidens; Bill Clinton was relegated to an aisle seat, spotlight pointed elsewhere. 

Afterward, Trump acknowledged the rapprochement. ‘Boy, they look like two people that like each other,’ Trump said of the visuals. ‘And we probably do. We have a little different philosophies, right? But we probably do. I don’t know. We just got along. But I [get] along with just about everybody.’

That rapprochement may have been short-lived, however. Several weeks later, at Trump’s inauguration on Jan. 20, lip-readers claim Obama cheekily murmured to George W. Bush, ‘How can we stop what’s happening?’ with 43 offering a smirk in reply.

Nevertheless, having been granted the greatest political mulligan in American history, Trump has scored the only prize that ever eluded him – status as a two-term president. And this time around, he has a far more comprehensive and specific vision of what he hopes to accomplish and how he wishes to be remembered when he leaves office in four years.*

Just days into his term, Trump, irrevocably changed by two attempts on his life, and carrying with him the experience of four years in the White House and four years out, may have something more important than cool: a purpose. Trump can weave together some of his greatest strengths: the bulwark of his MAGA fan base, his gifts as history’s greatest presidential television producer, and his profound desire to depart the office, whenever that might be, as one of the POTUS GOATS. 

So really, who needs to be cool?** 

To return once again to the wise and formidable Taylor Swift: ‘My life doesn’t gravitate towards being edgy, sexy, or cool… I’m imaginative, I’m smart, and I’m hardworking.’

For President Trump and for all of us, those are words to live by.

*Cue the murmurs about lifting the two-term limit on the presidency. 

**Cool presidents: Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, Andrew Jackson, Abraham Lincoln, Ulysses Grant, Theodore Roosevelt, FDR, JFK (although for some, really more mysterious and glamorous than cool), LBJ, Ronald Reagan, George W. Bush, Barack Obama. 

Uncool presidents: John Tyler, Franklin Pierce, Chester B. Arthur, Richard Nixon.

So indifferent to being cool they became cool: George Washington, Jimmy Carter.

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Newly appointed U.K. ambassador to the U.S., Lord Peter Mandelson, is readying himself to take up the top job of preserving the ‘special relationship’ long championed by London and Washington, but first he’s looking to set the record straight. 

In an exclusive interview with Fox News Digital, Mandelson, when asked about previous comments he made regarding the recently re-elected president, including in 2019 when he said President Donald Trump was ‘a danger to the world,’ said his opinion of the president had changed.

‘I consider my remarks about President Trump as ill-judged and wrong,’ he said. ‘I think that times and attitudes toward the president have changed.’

‘I think that he has won fresh respect,’ he added in reference to Trump’s second election as president. ‘He certainly has from me, and that is going to be the basis of all the work I do as His Majesty’s ambassador in the United States.’

The incoming ambassador’s comments come amid reports that the U.K.-U.S.’s ‘special relationship’ could be put to the test, and Mandelson’s appointment may be blocked by the White House. 

Mandelson rejected these claims and said, ‘I’ve heard nothing from the president or the White House or anyone working for him that suggests that there’s going to be any difficulty about my appointment.’

But speculation on the reliability of the U.S. in that trans-Atlantic relationship remains high following comments made by officials from Trump’s campaign, as well as by close ally and tech titan Elon Musk.

Musk, who engaged in a social media spat leveled at British Prime Minster Keir Starmer earlier this month, is not in Trump’s Cabinet, but he has been charged with overseeing the new Department of Government Efficiency.

Despite the negative social media banter by those who have Trump’s ear, the president and Starmer engaged in an apparently friendly phone call over the weekend – suggesting Trump may look to prioritize the U.S.-U.K. partnership.

‘They’re not Siamese twins, President Trump and Prime Minister Starmer, but they’re both pragmatic people. They know where each is coming from, they want to find common ground,’ Mandelson said. ‘I feel very optimistic. I feel very upbeat about the relationship that they’re both going to have.’

Mandelson is the first non-career diplomat to take up the job as chief U.K.-U.S. liaison in over half a century. That could prove beneficial for Mandelson when up against Trump, who has long strayed from engaging in traditional diplomacy.

‘The president isn’t a career diplomat, and I’m not a career diplomat,’ Mandelson said. ‘I came into politics to change things for the better for people, and so did he.

‘We share a similar, if not identical, outlook on the world and motivation in politics. But I think above all, we believe in something which is really special between our countries,’ he added, pointing to the enduring relationship between the U.S. and U.K.

Mandelson said his chief priorities will be to work with the U.S. on trade, technological developments and defense partnerships – particularly in the face of adversarial powers like China.

‘I think that the United States and Britain, working together, can outsmart and keep ahead of the curve as far as China is concerned,’ the incoming ambassador said. ‘[Trump] wants a dialogue with China, he wants to do deals with China. But he’s also not going to be naive about China. 

‘We face a challenge together from China, and we’ve got to make sure that we are able to deter that challenge or that threat when they’re having aggressive intents toward us,’ he added. 

Mandelson championed the trilateral alliance shared by the U.S., the U.K. and Australia, established with the intent of countering China’s aggression in the Indo-Pacific. 

‘Security in the Euro-Atlantic area depends on making sure that China is kept at bay in its own region,’ he said. ‘China has the right to prosper, to generate higher standards of living for its own people, but not at the expense of others.’

Mandelson argued that despite international apprehensions over certain security uncertainties under the Trump administration, the U.K. does not share in these concerns.

‘There are so many threats and challenges the world is facing at the moment. It takes courage, somebody, sometimes, who’s prepared to be argumentative and, indeed, disruptive, not just take business as usual,’ he detailed.

‘Frankly, I think President Trump could become one of the most consequential American presidents I have known in my adult life,’ Mandelson said. 

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A longstanding complaint among college basketball fans is being addressed.

The start time of the NCAA men’s basketball national championship game is being moved 30 minutes earlier, from 9:20 p.m. ET to 8:50 p.m. ET, the NCAA announced Tuesday.

The tip-off time for the sport’s marquee game has long been a point of contention for college basketball diehards, particularly those who live in the eastern time zone and typically have to stay up past 11:30 p.m. on a Monday night for the final buzzer to sound.

The move comes not only in the wake of years of complaints, but sagging interest. The past two title games, both won by UConn, have drawn the two lowest television ratings in the event’s recorded history — 14.69 million in 2023 and 14.82 million in 2024. Just eight years ago, North Carolina’s championship victory over Gonzaga had about 23 million viewers.

The College Football Playoff made a similar decision in 2022, moving up the kickoff time of its championship game from 8 p.m. ET to 7:30 p.m., though this year’s title matchup between Ohio State and Notre Dame didn’t begin until closer to 7:45 p.m., with ESPN’s pregame coverage bleeding over past the announced kickoff time.

This year’s championship game is set to be played on Monday, April 7 at the Alamodome in San Antonio.

The news of the slightly earlier tip-off time was largely met with approval, though some expressed disappointment, believing 8:50 p.m. is still too late for a weeknight.

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Greg Olsen is experiencing the broadcasting equivalent of being on the sidelines and isn’t a fan of it.

The former NFL tight-end turned announcer will be watching Super Bowl 59 like the rest of us rather than his preferred alternative. Olsen found a home in the broadcast booth, becoming one of the more likable and informative people to put on the headset in the league right now.

He is just two years removed from calling Super Bowl 57, earning rave reviews amongst the viewing audience. Now, the 39-year-old Olsen is on the bench at Fox Sports, replaced by Tom Brady in the analyst chair for the network’s top NFL announcing team.

“In my mind, I’m going to call big-time games again,” Olsen told the Charlotte Observer in an interview Monday. “I’m going to call Super Bowl games again. I just don’t know the timeline or the venue.”

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

Olsen was demoted to Fox’s No. 2 team following Brady’s arrival at the network. He was paired with Joe Davis, the voice of MLB’s Los Angeles Dodgers and the World Series on Fox. With that move came a significant pay cut, dropping his salary from $10 million to $3 million, according to the New York Post.

His former partner, Kevin Burkhardt, is set to call the Super Bowl in New Orleans alongside Brady. Burkhardt and Olsen served as Fox’s No. 2 team before rising to the top spot after Joe Buck and Troy Aikman departed for ESPN.

Olsen has made it clear that he’s not a fan of being No. 2 again.

“It’s pretty clear that the path, the upward trajectory as far as Fox goes, probably is a non-factor,’ he said. ‘I don’t know what the future holds. I enjoy working at Fox. Fox has been very good to me. They know. I’ve been very honest with them that I’m not content just calling one o’clock regional games for the rest of my career.”

However, despite his unhappiness, Olsen isn’t holding it against Brady.

“But yeah, it’s hard to sit there and watch games that over the last couple of years you were preparing for, and you were calling. And then you’re sitting there on your couch and you’re watching the game, you’re almost kind of broadcasting the game in your brain. You’re saying, ‘Oh, man, what would I have said on this play? There was so much to talk about there. That would’ve been super fun to dive into.’”

With just two years left on his contract at Fox, it will remains to be seen where Olsen might head next if the top job doesn’t open again at his current employer.

Fox has Brady for nine more years to finish off a10-year, $375 million contract. ESPN has Aikman. CBS has Tony Romo. NBC has Cris Collinsworth.

None appear to be on the move anytime soon, especially after NBC reportedly inked Collinsworth to an extension through the 2030 Super Bowl, according to The Athletic.

The next NFL rights deal isn’t until 2032 when Amazon is expected to bid for the rights to the big game.

With each of the four networks that broadcast Super Bowls having a long-term commitment to its top analysts, it’s hard to see Olsen’s path forward.

While it’s a long shot at best, the clearest path forward is Brady stepping away to become more involved with his ownership stake in the Las Vegas Raiders. However, despite the controversy surrounding his involvement there, he has given no indication of that happening.

Olsen compared his two years as the No. 1 analyst to having nice accommodations.

“It’s like you stay at a really nice hotel,” Olsen said. “And until you stayed at that hotel, you’re like: ‘I’m good anywhere.’”

Time will tell if he ever returns to living a life of luxury. At the very least, he surely has enough reward points by now.

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The Dallas Cowboys kept some continuity by promoting offensive coordinator Brian Schottenheimer to replace former head coach Mike McCarthy. Now, Schottenheimer is turning to a familiar face on the defensive side of the ball as he begins to fill out his coaching staff.

The Cowboys hired former Chicago Bears head coach Matt Eberflus to be their new defensive coordinator, the team announced Tuesday.

Eberflus has experience in Dallas, as he spent the 2011-17 seasons on Jason Garrett’s staff. He was a linebackers coach in each of those seasons and helped Sean Lee and Anthony Hitchens produce some of the best seasons of their careers under his tutelage. Eberflus earned a promotion, also taking on the role of passing game coordinator in his final two seasons, before taking the defensive coordinator job with the Indianapolis Colts in 2018.

Eberflus’ tenure in Indianapolis got off to a rocky start, as he signed his contract thinking Josh McDaniels would be the team’s head coach. McDaniels later backed out of the role, leaving Eberflus in flux, but he stayed aboard in that role and reaped the rewards.

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

The Colts had a top-10 scoring defense in three of Eberflus’ four seasons in Indianapolis. He parlayed that success into Chicago’s head coaching job but struggled to a 14-32 record in two-plus seasons with the Bears.

Eberflus, 54, will now return to the Cowboys as Dallas’ third defensive coordinator in as many seasons. In 2023, Mike Zimmer struggled to replicate the success enjoyed by Dan Quinn’s defenses, as the Cowboys ranked 28th in yards allowed and 31st in points allowed.

Zimmer, 68, told reporters Monday he expects to retire from coaching in the NFL, opening the door for Eberflus.

Now, Eberflus will look to get the Cowboys back on course. His track record should excite Dallas fans hoping to see Micah Parsons and DeMarvion Overshown remain on an upward trajectory.

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MEDLEY, Fla. – Unrivaled women’s basketball players will compete for a share of a $350,000 prize pool during the new league’s 1-on-1 tournament next month.

Thirty of Unrivaled’s 36 players will participate in the tournament Feb. 10-14 to “Crown the One” best player in the women’s basketball league started by, and featuring, WNBA players.

The winner of the tournament will win $200,000, the runner-up will receive $50,000, and the other two semifinalists will take away $25,000. Each club teammate of the winner will also receive $10,000, according to a league press release Tuesday.

Unrivaled fans will get to vote on player seedings in the tournament from Jan. 30 to Feb. 2. The tournament field will be announced in early February.

Unrivaled 1-on-1 tournament rules

The first round of the tournament will be split in two sessions on Feb. 10. The second round and quarterfinals will be played on Feb. 11. The semifinals and final will be on Feb. 14.

Each game before the final will be played to 11 points or 10 minutes, whichever comes first. The final will be a best-of-three series, also with a winning score of 11 points.

Players will play make-it, take-it style – if they score, they retain possession. There will be a running clock and a shot clock of seven seconds per possession.

Unrivaled 1-on-1 tournament player pods

Unrivaled players were separated into four pods with the goal of distributing talent, positions and creating compelling matchups. Fans will vote to seed the players and form matchups in a 1-8, 2-7, 3-6, and 4-5 format. There are eight players in Pods B and C, and seven players each in Pods A and D, where the top seed will have a first-round bye.

Pod A

Shakira Austin – Lunar Owls
Rae Burrell – Vinyl
Natasha Cloud – Phantom
Chelsea Gray – Rose
Jewell Loyd – Mist
Azurá Stevens – Rose
Alyssa Thomas – Laces

Pod B

Napheesa Collier – Lunar Owls
Tiffany Hayes – Laces
Rhyne Howard – Vinyl
Lexie Hull – Rose
Rickea Jackson – Mist
Katie Lou Samuelson – Phantom
Courtney Williams – Lunar Owls
Jackie Young – Laces  

Pod C

Aliyah Boston – Vinyl
Jordin Canada – Vinyl
Kahleah Copper – Rose
Aaliyah Edwards – Mist
Allisha Gray – Lunar Owls
Marina Mabrey – Phantom
Kate Martin – Laces
Breanna Stewart – Mist  

Pod D

DiJonai Carrington – Mist
Skylar Diggins- Smith – Lunar Owls
Dearica Hamby – Vinyl
Kayla McBride – Laces
Arike Ogunbowale – Vinyl
Satou Sabally – Phantom
Brittney Sykes – Rose

Which Unrivaled players are not participating in 1-on-1 tournament?

Sabrina Ionescu, Brittney Griner, Angel Reese, Stefanie Dolson, Courtney Vandersloot and Cameron Brink are not listed as participants for the Unrivaled 1-on-1 tournament.

How to watch Unrivaled women’s basketball

Unrivaled games are broadcast on TNT and truTV in the United States, and available to live stream on Max, TSN+ in Canada, and YouTube Live internationally on Monday, Friday and Saturday nights.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Things are heating up in Phoenix.

The Phoenix Mercury have reportedly acquired five-time All-Star forward Alyssa Thomas in a trade with the Connecticut Sun, multiple outlets, including ESPN and The Athletic, reported Tuesday. The Mercury will send guards Natasha Cloud and Rebecca Allen as well as the 12th overall pick in the 2025 WNBA draft to the Sun, in exchange for Thomas and Ty Harris. 

Thomas averaged 10.6 points, 8.4 rebounds and 7.9 assists last season, while shooting 50.9% from the field. Thomas led the Sun to a playoff berth in 2024, marking Connecticut’s eight consecutive postseason appearance, the longest active streak in the WNBA. The Sun defeated the Indiana Fever 2-0 in the best-of-three first round series, before losing to the Minnesota Lynx 3-2 in the best-of-five semifinal series.

In addition to earning All-Star and All-WNBA First Team nods in 2024, Thomas won an Olympic gold medal with the U.S. women’s basketball team at the 2024 Paris Olympics.

WNBA TRADE: Jewell Loyd heads to Aces, Kelsey Plum to Sparks in blockbuster trade with Storm

Thomas was drafted No. 4 overall out of Maryland by the New York Liberty and was instantly shipped to Connecticut in a draft-day trade. In 11 seasons with the Sun, Thomas has earned five All-Star nods, three All-WNBA Team nods and six All-Defensive Teams honors. Thomas led the Sun to the WNBA Finals in 2019 and 2022 and was the runner-up for the Most Valuable Player award in 2023.

She leaves the Sun as the franchise’s career leader in games played (319), assists (1,463), steals (494), rebounds (2,396), field goals made (1,502) and free throws made (884). She also the WNBA’s all-time triple-double leader with 15, including the regular season and playoffs.

Thomas is set to join a Mercury team that is in flux. All-star center Brittney Griner and All-star guard Diana Taurasi, who led the Mercury to a WNBA Championship in 2014, are both unrestricted free agents. After finishing last in the league in 2023 with a 9-31 record, the Mercury finished in seventh place in 2024 with a 19-21 record. The team advanced to the postseason, before being swept in the first round by the Lynx.

Thomas is engaged to former Connecticut teammate DeWanna Bonner, who is also an unrestricted free agent. Bonner played 10 seasons in Phoenix after the Mercury selected her with the No. 5 overall pick in the 2009 WNBA draft before she was traded to the Sun in 2020.

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The Sacramento Kings recently shook up their coaching staff. It appears their roster may be next.

ESPN’s Shams Charania reported that Sacramento will field trade requests for All-Star guard De’Aaron Fox ahead of the NBA trade deadline on Feb. 6. ‘There will be plenty of suitors, but it’s believed that Fox has a target destination in mind ahead of 2026 free agency,’ Charania added.

Fox is averaging 25.2 points, shooting 46.8% from the field and 32.4% from three, in addition to a career-high five rebounds and 6.2 assists. He’s in the fourth season of a five-year, $163 million contract and is set to become a free agent following the 2025-26 season.

NBA TRADE DEADLINE: 10 players who could be on the move ahead of NBA trade deadline Feb. 6

According to James Ham, citing multiple sources, Fox may already have a preferred destination in mind:

All things Kings: Latest Sacramento Kings news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

Fox, who was drafted out of Kentucky by Sacramento with the fifth overall pick of the 2017 NBA Draft, earned his first All-Star nod during the 2022-23 season, when the Kings made the playoffs for the first time in 16 years. Fox was named the league’s inaugural NBA Clutch Player of the Year and Mike Brown was named NBA Coach of the Year, but the Kings have struggled to replicate that success and missed the playoffs entirely last year during the 2023-24 season.

Although some claimed that friction between Brown and Fox ultimately lead to Brown’s dismissal, Fox clarified that he wasn’t responsible for the termination.

‘I feel like there’s this perception that people thought that we were at odds,’ Fox told ESPN in December. ‘You can ask anybody in this organization: me and Mike have never even had an argument. We could disagree with something. We talked about it and it was gone.’

Fox doubled down on social media, writing, ‘There was never any push back about anything. This narrative of us butting heads or me going to management saying anything is (expletive). So you can run with that if you want to,’ he wrote on social media in December.

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Jake Paul vs. Logan Paul?

The brothers jointly announced it Tuesday on social media, describing it as, ‘The moment you’ve waited a decade for.’

But there’s mounting speculation − and good reason to believe − this will not be an actual boxing match.

The post from the brothers on X, formerly Twitter, indicates the event will be streamed March 27 on Max.

More information is expected Thursday that likely will clarify the nature of the event.

It is not listed on BoxRec, which charts sanctioned professional and amateur fights. BoxRec does not list exhibitions.

A prospective fight between Logan Paul and Conor McGregor has failed to materialize and Jake Paul has yet to announce his next fight since beating Mike Tyson on Nov. 15 by unanimous decision.

It’ll be hard to top the numbers from Paul’s blockbuster bout against Tyson. That fight, held in front of 72,300 at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas, generated more than $18 million at the live gate – more than any boxing event in the U.S. outside of Nevada, according to Most Valuable Promotions, a company founded by Paul.

Netflix said its broadcast of the fight peaked with 65 million concurrent livestreams, including 38 million in the U.S.

Follow Josh Peter on social media @joshlpeter11

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The Golden State Warriors announced Tuesday afternoon that they will be retiring Andre Iguodala’s No. 9 jersey ahead of their Feb. 23 contest against the Dallas Mavericks.

Iguodala was a four-time NBA champion, with each title coming as a member of the Warriors (2015, 2017, 2018, 2022). He was named Finals MVP in 2015 after the Warriors defeated the Cleveland Cavaliers in six games. He also helped the Warriors reach the Finals on two other occasions (2016, 2019). Iguodala retired on Oct. 20, 2023 prior to his age-40 season.

‘Andre will go down as one of the smartest, shrewdest and most unique and successful players ever to wear a Warriors uniform,’ Warriors co-executive chairman and CEO Joe Lacob said in a statement. ‘Four titles, six Finals appearances, a Finals MVP – exceeded even our wildest imaginations.’

Here’s what to know about his jersey retirement ceremony.

All things Warriors: Latest Golden State Warriors news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

Iguodala’s career

Although Iguodala’s best years were arguably with the Warriors, he did play eight seasons with the Philadelphia 76ers before heading west. He was named an All-Star once (2012) during that stretch and received Defensive Player of the Year votes six times with Philly.

After joining the Warriors, Iguodala was relegated to the bench, but still played a very pivotal role in their dynasty. He earned 6th Man of the Year consideration four times with Golden State, including two second-place finishes (2016, 2017). He also finished fifth in Defensive Player of the Year voting during his first season with the team (2014).

Iguodala’s incredible defensive talent came in very handy when the Warriors faced LeBron James in the 2015 NBA Finals. Iguodala did not put up gaudy offensive numbers, but his ability to limit James’ impact earned him Finals MVP.

Why are the Warriors waiting until Feb. 23?

The team is waiting until Feb. 23 because it will be playing the Mavericks that night. Beloved shooting guard Klay Thompson, who was a key member to the Warriors dynasty, having played for the club between 2011 and 2024, joined the Mavericks during the 2024 offseason.

Thompson’s presence at Iguodala’s jersey retirement ceremony will be a huge plus as Iguodala has made it known how important Thompson was to his career.

During an interview in October 2023 following his retirement, Iguodala said, ‘obviously Steph [Curry], Klay [Thompson], and Draymond [Green], just being so unique in who they are, it’s just a powerful formula. It would be really hard to duplicate.’ He continued, ‘Without those guys, I wouldn’t be in this position.’

Curry and Green are still members of the Warriors.

What other Warriors have had their numbers retired?

Only six Warriors have had their numbers retired:

No. 13: Wilt Chamberlain
No. 14: Tom Meschery
No. 16: Alvin Attles
No. 17: Chris Mullin
No. 24: Rick Barry
No. 42: Nate Thurmond

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