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President Donald Trump’s announcement that the United States will resume nuclear weapons testing for the first time in more than three decades has sent shockwaves through both Washington and world capitals. He argues the move is necessary to ‘keep pace’ with Russia and China, whose programs he claims are active, and to ensure that America’s deterrent remains credible. We will not be outmatched, Trump declared, ordering the Pentagon to ‘immediately’ begin preparations.

That declaration reverberated across the globe. To some, it signals renewed American strength — proof that Washington will no longer rely on self-imposed restraints while adversaries modernize unencumbered.

The rationale: deterrence and parity

Trump’s rationale rests on deterrence. If Russia or China are conducting secret or low-yield tests in violation of international norms, then the U.S., he argues, cannot appear constrained.

That logic has merit in theory. Yet in practice, there is no publicly verified evidence that Moscow or Beijing have conducted full-scale nuclear explosions in recent years. Both remain bound, at least politically, to the global testing moratorium.

America, for its part, has maintained a robust and credible deterrent through its Stockpile Stewardship and Management Program — using advanced supercomputing, materials science and subcritical testing to ensure our arsenal’s reliability without detonating a single weapon since 1992. However, Russia’s 2023 de-ratification of the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty (CTBT) signals potential erosion of that restraint.

In short, our nuclear arsenal works. Our delivery systems are being modernized.

A brief history: lessons written in fire

To understand what is at stake, it helps to recall how we got here. The U.S. conducted its first nuclear test — the ‘Trinity’ explosion — on July 16, 1945, in New Mexico. Over the next half-century, America performed more than 1,000 nuclear detonations, first in the atmosphere, later underground and underwater. Each test expanded our understanding of the bomb’s formidable power and devastating potential — but the environmental and human toll, from the Pacific islands to Nevada, was staggering.

By the early 1960s, public outrage and the Cuban Missile Crisis convinced world leaders that unrestrained testing endangered humanity itself. The Limited Test Ban Treaty of 1963 banned explosions in the atmosphere, outer space, and underwater. The final U.S. test occurred on Sept. 23, 1992, after which Washington joined a global moratorium pending ratification of the CTBT — still unsigned by a few key states, including ours. Nevertheless, the norm held. For 33 years, no nation except North Korea has crossed that line and, perhaps, South Africa, in 1979.

That moratorium has been one of the quiet triumphs of post-Cold War diplomacy: a restraint observed not out of naiveté, but wisdom born of horror. It allowed nations to modernize defensively while preserving the taboo against nuclear explosions, the ultimate boundary between deterrence and apocalypse.

The risks: moral, strategic and existential

To resume testing now risks unraveling that fragile consensus. Once the U.S. breaks the silence, others will follow. Russia could justify its own tests as reciprocal. China, already expanding its arsenal to 600 warheads, is expected to reach about 1,000 nuclear warheads by around 2030 and might accelerate that program. India and Pakistan could feel emboldened. North Korea would seize the moment to demonstrate ‘parity.’ Within years, the world could witness a cascade of underground detonations from East Asia to the Middle East. The psychological barrier separating possession from use would erode.

From a moral perspective, this is not a step to take lightly. Theologians and strategists alike have long argued that nuclear weapons pose unique ethical dilemmas.

From a policy standpoint, the cost-benefit calculus is equally stark. Resuming tests would erode U.S. moral authority in arms-control negotiations, undermine the CTBT and alarm allies who rely on America’s extended deterrence. It would also hand propaganda victories to adversaries eager to paint Washington as reckless. The environmental, safety and political costs of reopening test sites would be significant, and the scientific benefit — according to our own laboratories — minimal.

As the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN) warns, renewed testing would undermine decades of global norm-building around restraint and open the door to new proliferation.

A better path: lead, don’t imitate

Rather than igniting a new nuclear competition, the U.S. should seize this moment to lead the world toward restraint. Trump’s instinct to project strength is understandable; deterrence remains vital in a world of aggressors. But true strength includes moral leadership.

If the president genuinely wishes to reassert American primacy, he could do so not by detonating weapons, but by convening a global summit of nuclear-armed states — the U.S., Russia, China, France, the United Kingdom, India, Pakistan, Israel and North Korea — to renew or formalize a universal moratorium on nuclear testing. Such a proposal could leverage the CTBTO’s Article XIV Conference mechanism for enhanced verification and transparency.

Such a summit would accomplish three things:

Reestablish dialogue among powers that rarely sit at the same table, easing nuclear tensions.
Reaffirm deterrence without destruction, updating verification mechanisms and transparency measures using modern technology.
Restore moral leadership, demonstrating that America’s power is disciplined by conscience, not driven by fear.

By proposing such a gathering — perhaps under United Nations auspices or as a U.S.-hosted initiative at the Nevada National Security Site — President Trump could transform a provocative decision into a statesmanlike opportunity. He could remind the world that American strength serves peace, not annihilation.

Conclusion: the test before us

For decades, humanity has lived under the shadow of weapons too powerful to use. Their silence has been our safety. Breaking that silence risks inviting a new arms race and edging civilization closer to the brink. History’s lesson is clear: once the nuclear threshold is crossed, even in testing, it becomes easier to cross again.

President Trump has proven that boldness can reset stagnant debates. But boldness without wisdom can also destabilize the world we seek to defend. The real test before us is not of plutonium or warheads, but of leadership — whether we will master our power, or once again let our power master us. True leadership demands the courage to combine military readiness with moral restraint, ensuring that power serves peace rather than pride.

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A former spokesperson for then-President Joe Biden admitted to Congress in August testimony, which surfaced on social media Wednesday, that he had only met with the aging president between one and five times in over two years despite previously claiming he was ‘sharp’ ‘every single day.’

In a July 2, 2024, interview on MSNBC, then-Biden spokesperson Ian Sams said of the former president that ‘When I deal with him, he is sharp, he is asking tough questions, that’s the President Biden that so many of us experience every single day.’

Pressed by the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform on how many times he had met with Biden, Sams admitted that he had ‘interacted with him pretty infrequently’ and ‘met with the president a handful of times during my tenure in the White House.’

He further admitted that some of these interactions were online or over the phone. During his testimony he recalled two in-person meetings with Biden.

Sams worked in the White House from 2022 to 2024, serving in the roles of special assistant to the president, spokesperson and senior advisor in the White House Counsel’s Office.

Sams was pressed on whether the basis of his statements on Biden’s mental fitness was from his ‘handful’ of interactions with the former president.

‘You said that you met him personally maybe a handful of times. Are those the interactions that you were discussing when you say, ‘I deal with him’?’ a committee staff member asked, to which Sams responded, ‘Yes.’

‘Do you think that’s a bit misleading?’ Sams was asked.

He answered, ‘I think it was pretty direct and honest and said that when I do deal with him, he’s, you know, sharp and he was asking incisive questions during my meetings with him.’

‘But you dealt with him five times in 24 months. That’s not exactly a large scope of knowledge on how he interacts with staff,’ the committee staffer pressed, adding, ‘Do you think that statement suggests that you deal with him more than you did?’

Sams shot back, ‘I don’t think so. I mean, I spoke about my own interactions with him.’

Despite this, Sams maintained that though he ‘definitely noticed some aging’ in Biden, ‘I had no reason to think that he was anything other than capable of being the president and executing his duties.’

The House Oversight Committee GOP posted on its official X account, ‘Ian Sams, one of Joe Biden’s spokespersons, met with him only TWICE in over TWO YEARS. Then he would go on live television and say he interacted with him EVERY SINGLE DAY.’

‘He was LYING to the American people to cover up for Biden’s decline,’ the GOP account wrote.

Committee Chair James Comer, R-Ky., also posted on X, writing, ‘Biden’s top spokesman, Ian Sams, admitted to Congress he met Joe Biden only twice in two years. But that didn’t stop him from loudly insisting Joe was ‘fit.’’

‘Ian was just reading from a script written by Biden’s handlers,’ added Comer.

In a statement released by the Oversight Committee, Comer went on to say, ‘The Biden Autopen Presidency will go down as one of the biggest political scandals in U.S. history. As Americans saw President Biden’s decline with their own eyes, Biden’s inner circle sought to deceive the public, cover-up his decline, and took unauthorized executive actions with the autopen that are now invalid.’

‘Our report reveals how key aides colluded to mislead the public and the extraordinary measures they took to sustain the appearance of presidential authority as Biden’s capacity to function independently diminished,’ he went on, adding, ‘Executive actions performed by Biden White House staff and signed by autopen are null and void. We are calling on the U.S. Department of Justice to conduct a thorough review of these executive actions and scrutinize key Biden aides who took the Fifth to hide their participation in the cover-up.’

Fox News Digital reached out to Sams for comment but did not immediately receive a response.

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Noelle Quinn is taking her talents to Unrivaled.

On Thursday, the 3-on-3 women’s professional league announced Quinn will serve as the inaugural head coach of Breeze BC, one of two new teams to join Unrivaled for the league’s second season, which tips off in January. Quinn previously served as the head coach of the WNBA’s Seattle Storm for five seasons (2021-25). Her contract wasn’t renewed in September for the 2026 season after the Storm’s second consecutive first-round playoff exit.

“We’re thrilled to add such exceptional talent to our head coaching roster in our second season, elevating the strong foundation established by our inaugural coaching staffs across Unrivaled,” Unrivaled general manager Clare Duwelius said in a statement.

Quinn is not the only Unrivaled head coach with WNBA experience. Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Famer Teresa Weatherspoon previously served as the head coach of the Chicago Sky in 2024 and will lead the Vinyl BC for the second consecutive season after her team fell just short of winning the first Unrivaled League championship game in March against the Rose BC.

Unrivaled expanded from six teams to eight teams following the league’s successful inaugural season, adding Breeze BC and Hive BC to the ranks. Rena Wakama, who serves as the head coach of the Nigerian Women’s National Team and an assistant coach of the Chicago Sky, was tapped to lead Hive BC.

Four of the inaugural coaches from last season returned to Unrivaled for the second season, including Weatherspoon (Vinyl BC), Andrew Wade (Laces BC), DJ Sackmann (Lunar Owls BC) and Nola Henry (Rose BC). New York Liberty assistant coach Zach O’Brien will succeed Phil Handy as the head coach of Mist BC. Connecticut Sun assistant Roneeka Hodges will succeed Adam Harrington as the head coach of Phantom BC.

“We thank Phil (Handy) and Adam (Harrington) for their leadership last season and look forward to building on the momentum for the league this year,’ Duwelius said.

Although 46 of the 48 players participating in the second season of Unrivaled have been unveiled, the eight head coaches will have to wait until the selection show to see which players will fill out their roster.

2026 Unrivaled head coaches

Breeze BC: Noelle Quinn
Hive BC: Rena Wakama
Laces BC: Andrew Wade
Lunar Owls BC: DJ Sackmann
Mist BC: Zach O’Brien
Phantom BC: Roneeka Hodges
Rose BC: Nola Henry
Vinyl BC: Teresa Weatherspoon

The USA TODAY app gets you to the heart of the news — fastDownload for award-winning coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, the eNewspaper and more.

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Chicago Sky forward Angel Reese will not play in Unrivaled in 2026. Reese, who was named the Defensive Player of the Year after the 3-on-3 basketball league’s inaugural season, helped the Rose BC to the first championship.

Unrivaled filled out its player roll for the 2026 season on Thursday, Oct. 30, by announcing the final three players who will make up its eight teams. The league will open its second season in Miami in January.

Dominique Malonga, the No. 2 overall pick of the Seattle Storm in the 2025 WNBA draft, is joining Unrivaled for the 2026 season. The 6-foot-6 French center was the youngest player in the WNBA last season, at 19. Malonga averaged 7.7 points and 4.6 rebounds a game and was selected for the WNBA All-Rookie Team.

Aari McDonald, who was signed by the Indiana Fever on hardship contract last season, will play in Unrivaled for the first time this season. She was one of five Fever players to have her season cut short by injury. McDonald fractured her foot in August.

Rebecca Allen, a member of the Australian national team who played for the Sky in 2025, will also join Unrivaled.

DiJonai Carrington, who had previously committed to playing this season, had to relinquish her spot because of a ‘significant’ left midfoot sprain suffered while playing in the postseason with the Minnesota Lynx.

2026 Unrivaled players

Rebecca Allen, Chicago Sky
Shakira Austin, F, Washington Mystics
Rachel Banham, G, Chicago Sky
Monique Billings, F, Golden State
Aliyah Boston, F, Indiana Fever
Cameron Brink, F, Los Angeles Sparks
Paige Bueckers, G, Dallas Wings
Rae Burrell, G, Los Angeles Sparks
Veronica Burton, G, Golden State Valkyries
Jordin Canada, G, Atlanta Dream
Sonia Citron, G, Washington Mystics
Natasha Cloud, G, New York Liberty
Napheesa Collier, F, Minnesota Lynx
Kahleah Copper, F, Phoenix Mercury
Skylar Diggins, G, Seattle Storm
Aaliyah Edwards, F, Connecticut Sun
Dana Evans, G, Las Vegas Aces
Allisha Gray, G, Atlanta Dream
Chelsea Gray, G, Las Vegas Aces
Brittney Griner, C, Atlanta Dream
Dearica Hamby, F, Los Angeles Sparks
Natisha Hiedeman, G, Minnesota Lynx
Naz Hillmon, F, Atlanta Dream
Rhyne Howard, G, Atlanta Dream
Lexie Hull, G, Indiana Fever
Kiki Iriafen, F, Washington Mystics
Rickea Jackson, F, Los Angeles Sparks
Ezi Magbegor, F, Seattle Storm
Kate Martin, G, Golden State Valkyries
Marina Mabrey, G, Connecticut Sun
Dominique Malonga, Seattle Storm
Aari McDonald, Indiana Fever
Kelsey Mitchell, G, Indiana Fever
Arike Ogunbowale, G, Dallas Wings
Kelsey Plum, F, Los Angeles Sparks
Saniya Rivers, G, Connecticut Sun
Satou Sabally, F, Phoenix Mercury
Maddy Siegrist, G, Dallas Wings
Alanna Smith, F, Minnesota Lynx
Azurá Stevens, F, Los Angeles Sparks
Breanna Stewart, F, New York Liberty
Sug Sutton, G, Washington Mystics
Brittney Sykes, G, Seattle Storm
Alyssa Thomas, G, Phoenix Mercury
Erica Wheeler, G, Seattle Storm
Courtney Williams, G, Minnesota Lynx
Jackie Young, G, Las Vegas Aces
Li Yueru, C, Dallas Wings

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Charlotte Hornets’ star LaMelo Ball has been fined $35,000 for making an obscene gesture at a referee during the 144-117 loss to the Miami Heat on Tuesday, Oct. 28.

Ball made the gesture after being called for an offensive foul while driving to the basket with just over four minutes remaining in the fourth quarter. Ball was promptly assessed a technical foul, his sixth of the year.

How much was Ball fined?

Ball was fined $35,000 for his gesture at the referee.

This is the second time he has been fined since coming into the NBA. In 2024, he was fined $100,000 for an offensive anti-gay term he used during a post-game interview.

How did Ball perform?

Ball finished the game with a team-high 20 points. He also led the team with eight rebounds and nine assists. On the season, the All-Star is averaging 26.3 points, 9.5 assists, and 8.3 rebounds per game through the first four contests of the year.

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Mississippi coach Lane Kiffin is a top target for both LSU and Florida, creating a major off-field storyline.
Several teams, including Ohio State and Indiana, are in a strong position to make the College Football Playoff.
The Heisman Trophy race remains wide open, with several quarterbacks emerging as leading candidates.

Drama, debate, controversy, madness, chaos: November will have it all.

College football’s regular season rounds the corner and heads toward the finish line with heavy focus on the College Football Playoff. While two teams have separated themselves from the pack in the Big Ten, races in the ACC, Big 12 and SEC could come down to the final weekend of the month and rivalry games that may decide who gets seated and where in the 12-team bracket.

Another major theme in November will be the direction of high-profile coaching searches at LSU, Florida and Penn State. While the Nittany Lions’ search has cast a wider net, the Tigers and Gators have zeroed in on Mississippi coach Lane Kiffin.

The playoff, a potentially wild coaching cycle and a very open-ended Heisman Trophy race are among the storylines to watch across the final month of the regular season:

Where will Lane Kiffin land?

There’s always a chance Kiffin opts to stay at No. 8 Mississippi and retains ownership of a program he’s built into one of the best in the SEC. While NIL and the transfer portal have trimmed the resource gap separating traditional SEC powers from the rest of the pack, there are still better odds he lands at one of LSU or Florida, rivals set to duel for Kiffin’s signature in November’s defining off-field storyline.

Meanwhile, Kiffin will look to land the Rebels’ plane in the playoff — or maybe the conference championship game, though that’s less likely — against a four-game stretch of South Carolina, The Citadel, Florida and Mississippi State. While this is a smooth run by SEC standards, the Rebels haven’t made things easy all season: Six of their past seven games have been decided by a single possession, including a puzzling nail-biter against Washington State.

Not even a bellyflop in November could derail Kiffin’s candidacy for these two positions, though. Should the Rebels take care of business, in fact, Kiffin could become a case study for coaches who have teams in the playoff mix while negotiating for another opening.

Would he leave for another SEC program before the postseason? Could he simultaneously balance coaching one team while recruiting for another? Would Florida and LSU be willing to wait until January to make the hire official, potentially losing a chunk of their rosters while missing out on the transfer-portal window? What Kiffin decides could set a precedent.

Will the Big Ten get a fourth playoff team?

No. 1 Ohio State and No. 2 Indiana are currently the safest bets in the Power Four to make the playoff. No. 6 Oregon is in good shape with only a loss to the Hoosiers in hand, though the Ducks have to get back in gear before taking on Iowa, Southern California and Washington.

After sending four teams into last year’s bracket, the Big Ten may be capped at three playoff teams given the ridiculous depth in the SEC — the league has nine teams in the US LBM Coaches Poll — and the number of potential one- and two-loss teams in the Big 12 and ACC. Given the wealth of contenders, it’s reasonable to expect that a three-loss Big Ten team would be squeezed out of the field.

Based on that condition, there are five Big Ten teams in the mix for this fourth spot: No. 21 Michigan, Iowa, Southern California, Washington and Nebraska. One of the Trojans and Cornhuskers will be eliminated after Saturday night’s matchup in Lincoln. USC then hosts Iowa on Nov. 15 and heads to Autzen Stadium a week later.

The race could come down to the final weekend of November, when the Hawkeyes travel to Lincoln and Michigan hosts the Buckeyes. The Wolverines could shake up the entire playoff picture by beating OSU to reach the Big Ten championship game.

Can Vanderbilt lock down an at-large berth?

The No. 11 Commodores will be impossible to keep out of the field with road wins this month against No. 19 Texas and No. 14 Tennessee.

But there will be almost no room for error in November. A loss in Austin this weekend would hand the Longhorns a potentially huge head-to-head tiebreaker. Dropping one of Auburn and Kentucky at home would be devastating. And with the Volunteers favored to beat No. 18 Oklahoma, New Mexico State and Florida, the season finale in Knoxville could be a win-or-go-home eliminator for the final at-large SEC berth.

Beating elite opponents on the road is the last hurdle for Clark Lea’s program, which is just 4-13 away from home since he took over in 2021. While Vanderbilt topped then-No. 10 South Carolina in Columbia back in September, the Commodores haven’t earned a road win against an SEC opponent that finished the season ranked since Alabama in 1950.

What teams are in the best shape?

Five teams hold the pole position for the playoff heading into November:

Ohio State could lose twice and still earn an at-large berth, though even one loss — to Michigan or to a shared opponent with Oregon — could once again hold the Buckeyes out of the Big Ten championship game.
Indiana will be expected to steamroll Maryland, Penn State, Wisconsin and Purdue; even a loss wouldn’t prevent the Hoosiers from reaching Indianapolis thanks to the tiebreaker against the Ducks.
No. 3 Texas A&M has an excellent road win against No. 12 Notre Dame and will be a playoff lock with a win against Missouri on Nov. 8 or the Longhorns on Black Friday.
As noted, Mississippi’s remaining schedule should grease the Rebels’ path to the playoff amid the high likelihood of off-field drama.
And after dropping games to No. 9 Miami and A&M by a combined four points, Notre Dame will not be held out of the field by closing with wins against Boston College, No. 23 Navy, Pittsburgh, Syracuse and Stanford.

Oregon doesn’t make the list because of those three difficult Big Ten games, two coming on the road. While there’s a case for No. 7 Georgia Tech, the unbeaten Yellow Jackets could get squeezed out of an at-large bid by losing once in ACC play, dropping the rivalry against No. 5 Georgia and then losing in the ACC championship game.

Who wins the Heisman Trophy?

Few Heisman races in recent history have been this uncertain and unsettled heading into November. That raises the possibility of a contender coming out of relative anonymity this month, such as Georgia Tech’s Haynes King or Cincinnati’s Brendan Sorsby.

But the conversation has coalesced around four quarterbacks. Indiana’s Fernando Mendoza is the current favorite thanks to his 1,932 passing yards and 24 touchdowns. He’s followed by Alabama’s Ty Simpson, who has been spectacular during the Crimson Tide’s seven-game winning streak and has just one interception in 261 attempts.

Just behind this pair is Ohio State’s Julian Sayin, who has hit on 80.6% of his attempts with 11 touchdowns and no turnovers in Big Ten play. Then comes Texas A&M sophomore Marcel Reed, last seen putting on a clinic in the second half against LSU, and Vanderbilt’s Diego Pavia.

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The Buss family’s four-decade run as majority owner of the Los Angeles Lakers is ending as the NBA approved the sale of the team to Mark Walter.

The Buss family will retain an ongoing interest, and the league said the transaction is expected to close shortly.

Walter, the CEO and co-chairman of TWG Global, is also a majority owner of the Los Angeles Dodgers.

“Mark Walter has a long association with our leagues, having served as a minority owner of the Lakers and as the principal owner of the WNBA’s Sparks for more than a decade,” NBA Commissioner Adam Silver said in a statement.  “As Mark assumes his role as majority owner of the Lakers, I have no doubt that he will be a committed steward of the team and a great addition to our league given his many successful ventures in business and sports.

Dr. Jerry Buss bought the Lakers in 1979 for $67.5 million, and the team achieved immediate success, winning an NBA championship the following year. Los Angeles went on to win nine more titles in 16 appearances under Buss, until he died in 2013.

Upon his death, control of the team went into a family trust, with Jeanie Buss, his daughter, serving as the team’s Governor. She will remain the team’s Governor for a period of at least five years following the closing of the transaction.

“I also want to thank and congratulate Jeanie Buss and the Buss family for 46 years of transformational leadership and service.  While this historic transaction transfers the Buss family’s majority interest in the Lakers, I am thrilled that Jeanie will remain the team’s Governor and an active and engaged member of our league.”

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The Washington Nationals are on the verge of finalizing a deal to bring on board Blake Butera as their next manager, according to Jeff Passan of ESPN.

At 33 years of age, Butera is set to become the youngest manager in the MLB in more than 50 years.

Butera has managed in the minor leagues for four seasons and also spent one year as a minor league coach within the Tampa Bay Rays’ system. In October 2023, he was named the Rays’ senior director of player development after serving as an assistant field coordinator for one year. Butera played college baseball at Boston College and was drafted by the Tampa Bay Rays in the 35th round of the 2015 MLB draft. He played for two seasons before transitioning into a coaching role.

The Nationals have been on a quest for a new manager after parting ways with Dave Martinez and president of baseball operations Mike Rizzo in July. Rizzo and Martinez led the Nats to a World Series victory in 2019, but Washington has finished no higher than fourth place in their division since then.

Who is Blake Butera?

Blake Butera has held several positions within the Rays organization, and he most recently served as Tampa Bay’s senior director of player development for the past two seasons. At 33 years old, Butera will become the youngest manager since Frank Quilici, who was hired by the Minnesota Twins in 1972 at the age of 33.

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The 2025 NFL trade deadline hasn’t built much of a buzz, but there are still several notable players who could be dealt.
The New Orleans Saints are a potential seller to watch thanks to receivers Chris Olave and Rashid Shaheed, as well as cornerback Alontae Taylor.
The New York Jets also have to decide whether they’re prepared to part with key contributors, such as running back Breece Hall and linebacker Quincy Williams.

The recent action around the NFL trade deadline has made it clear that most deals made ahead of next Tuesday’s cutoff will begin in the bargain bin.

After two weeks of no movement, things finally picked back up early this week with a handful of low-stakes swaps. The Los Angeles Rams and Philadelphia Eagles added cornerbacks in Roger McCreary and Michael Carter II, respectively, while the New England Patriots shipped off spare parts in edge rusher Keion White (San Francisco 49ers) and Kyle Dugger (Pittsburgh Steelers). Of course, those exchanges are a far cry from the frenzy set off just last year with the likes of Davante Adams, Amari Cooper and Marshon Lattimore changing places.

And with just one more round of games before teams need to buckle down and decide whether to change course, it doesn’t seem like many of the biggest names that have been floated in rumors – including the Las Vegas Raiders’ Maxx Crosby, Cincinnati Bengals’ Trey Hendrickson and New York Jets’ Quinnen Williams, among others – look particularly likely to be sent packing. Yet any opening for teams to reshape their fortunes is bound to drive intrigue, and there are several notable figures who could be realistic trade considerations.

With that in mind, here is our ranking of the top realistic trade candidates ahead of next Tuesday’s deadline:

2025 NFL trade candidates

1. Chris Olave, WR, New Orleans Saints

Installing second-round pick Tyler Shough as the starting quarterback only to deprive him of his top target might amount to rebuild malpractice. Olave acknowledged that he’s been in discussions with the Saints regarding an extension, and the most reasonable outcome here is for the two sides to stick together given how few true assets New Orleans has at its disposal. But that same problem could entice the Saints to consider flipping the speedy receiver for the right price if the organization doesn’t envision him as a staple for the foreseeable future. With his fifth-year option locked down, Olave would be an enticing target for any passing attack seeking a little midseason juice.

2. Jaelan Phillips, DE/OLB, Miami Dolphins

If the true Pro Bowl-caliber tier of edge rushers is off limits, Phillips might be the best acquirable option. It remains to be seen whether the Dolphins would truly split ways with the former first-rounder, however, given how intent the team’s embattled leadership appears to be in trying to catch up in the playoff race. But creating a bidding war for a pass rusher would be the easiest way to look to the future, and Phillips – even as a potential half-year rental – could be dealt more cleanly than teammate Bradley Chubb. He’s found his stride with 18 pressures in his last four games, according to Next Gen Stats, and he can hold his own against the run as well.

3. Breece Hall, RB, New York Jets

Dealing their lead back was already shaping up to be a difficult proposal for the Jets after No. 2 option Braelon Allen went down with a knee injury that will sideline him until late in the season. Parting with Hall looks like an even more difficult proposition after the fourth-year back ran for a season-high 133 yards and two touchdowns while also throwing the clinching score in a breakthrough first win over the Bengals. Still, even though first-year coach Aaron Glenn has shunted rumors aside, the new regime has to take the long view, and there’s a window to sell high here. If made available, Hall would stand alone as the most appealing ball carrier available thanks to his ability to shoulder the load – he ranks sixth in rushing yards – while also serving as an every-down contributor. And regardless of whether he moves, the running back demonstrated he knows how to stir up intrigue with his tweeting of a cryptic GIF on Wednesday.

4. Alontae Taylor, CB, New Orleans Saints

Competent starting cornerbacks are difficult to come by at the trade deadline, so an imbalance between supply and demand pushes Taylor up the board a bit here. Losing the talented cover man would further dent a ramshackle Saints secondary, but he’s one of the more valuable chips that the organization has at its disposal. Taylor’s versatility, aggressiveness and playmaking streak could make him a coveted piece for any defense due for a little something extra on the back end.

5. Quincy Williams, LB, New York Jets

Younger brother Quinnen seems likely to stay put, but might Gang Green part with Quincy? The front office has already made a substantial investment at linebacker with Jamien Sherwood’s three-year, $45 million deal in March, and a rebuilding team probably doesn’t want to approach the top of the market twice at a non-premium position. A reunion with former Jets coach Robert Saleh, under whom Williams became a 2023 All-Pro selection, on the 49ers’ shorthanded defense would be fun, but there could be multiple suitors for a playmaker with good range.

6. Jakobi Meyers, WR, Las Vegas Raiders

The Silver and Black’s understandable refusal to oblige Meyers’ trade request before the season was based on the presumption that a return to relevance was imminent. Things change quickly, though. The Raiders are just 2-5 and look as far back as ever in the hypercompetitive AFC West. With Meyers poised for an exit this spring in free agency, there’s little reason for either side to see this arrangement out given that Las Vegas – flush with more than $100 million in projected cap space for 2026, according to Over The Cap – doesn’t seem likely to reap any compensation pick rewards for his departure. In a thinned-out receiver market, the seventh-year veteran holds distinct value as a complementary piece who could help stabilize an aerial attack.

7. Riq Woolen, CB, Seattle Seahawks

Doesn’t seem like there’s much of an impetus to take any parts away from a Seahawks defense that’s conceding the third-fewest yards per play (4.7) of any team. Still, it’s clear after a season-and-a-half that Woolen is an odd fit for Mike Macdonald’s defense and a long shot to hang around in 2026, when he’s set to hit the open market. Woolen is coming off an excellent outing against the Houston Texans in which he allowed just two catches for 13 yards on seven targets. Depth concerns may ultimately dissuade Seattle from shipping him off, but the 6-4, 210-pound cornerback should intrigue any teams that lean heavily on man coverage.

8. David Njoku, TE, Cleveland Browns

With less than $1.26 million in base salary, Njoku figures to be one of the cheaper options out there, as landing the former first-round tight end likely won’t necessitate forking over much draft capital. He’s been hobbled by a knee injury, but he still produces as a receiver. The Browns already have seen rookie Harold Fannin Jr. position himself as the long-term answer at tight end, so it’s time for Cleveland to scrounge up whatever it can for Njoku.

9. Rashid Shaheed, WR, New Orleans Saints

If dealing Olave is a non-starter for a New Orleans team that seemingly resists a full rebuild at every turn, maybe a more reasonable outcome would be sending off Shaheed. The dynamic downfield target could jolt any offense with his deep speed, which hasn’t been put to optimal use in a season in which his average yards per catch has plummeted from 17.5 to 11.1. It’s worth noting, though, that Shough took an early shine to him, with Shaheed getting eight of his season-high 12 targets last week after the rookie signal-caller was subbed in for Spencer Rattler.

10. Kevin Zeitler, G, Tennessee Titans

At 35, he’s spending the twilight of his career with a franchise that has already fired its coach. Beyond providing Cam Ward a tiny bit more comfort in an already trying year for the rookie, there’s little point in keeping Zeitler, who, like the recently traded Roger McCreary, might not be a priority for Tennessee to re-sign. Plenty of contenders could use some fortifying on the interior, and the 2023 Pro Bowl selection could get back to doing his best work for a legitimate playoff threat after doing superlative work with the Baltimore Ravens and Detroit Lions in recent years.

11. Chig Okonkwo, TE, Tennessee Titans

Tennessee has tried to bring along its receiving corps for Cam Ward with fellow rookies Elic Ayomanor and Chimere Dike playing vital roles. It doesn’t seem as though Okonkwo factors into that future, especially with first-year tight end Gunnar Helm steadily progressing. A major run-after-catch threat, Okonkwo could find his talents better appreciated elsewhere.

12. Arden Key, DE/OLB, Tennessee Titans

The Titans are treading water for the rest of the season, and it’s difficult to say with any confidence that Key figures into the organization’s plans beyond that. The edge rusher’s production has never quite lined up with his physical tools, but Key has reached six sacks in three of his last four seasons. If a contender strikes out on its higher-priced options or just wants to look at a rotational piece on the edge rather than pursuing a full overhaul, he’d be a sensible settling point.

13. Arnold Ebiketie, OLB, Atlanta Falcons

After recording six sacks in each of the last two seasons, the former second-round pick has yet to bag a single one in 2025. Maybe it’s time for a change of scenery, especially with Atlanta having reconfigured its pass rush by equipping new defensive coordinator Jeff Ulbrich with Jalon Walker and James Pearce Jr., both of whom are first-round rookies. The Falcons might resist parting with him as they try to move past a clear letdown through the first two months of the season, but they have to be mindful about their draft assets, as they’re without both their first-rounder and fifth-rounder next spring.

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Lady Vols basketball legend Candace Parker was elected to the Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame in her first year of eligibility on Thursday, Oct. 30.

Former WNBA MVP Elena Delle Donne, Minnesota Lynx coach Cheryl Reeve, NBA analyst Doris Burke, international players Isabelle Fijalkowski and Amaya Valdemoro and Kirkwood Community College coach Kim Muhl also were elected. Barbara Kennedy-Dixon is being honored posthumously. The class will be inducted on June 27, 2026, at the Tennessee Theatre in Knoxville.

Parker, who retired in 2024, played 16 seasons in the WNBA. She was a two-time WNBA MVP, a three-time champion and a 10-time All-WNBA selection. Parker’s No. 3 jersey was retired by the Los Angeles Sparks and Chicago Sky during the summer.

Parker won WNBA Rookie of the Year and MVP in 2008, the only player to accomplish the feat. She’s also the only WNBA player to rank in the top 10 in career points, assists, rebounds and blocks.

Parker led Tennessee to back-to-back national championships in 2007 and 2008, winning Most Outstanding Player of the Final Four both years.

Delle Donne helped the Washington Mystics to their only title in 2019. The two-time MVP became the first player in WNBA history to finish a regular season with a 50% field goal percentage, 40% 3-point field goal percentage and 90% free throw percentage during the 2019 season.

Reeve, who has coached the Lynx for 16 seasons, has the most career wins (364) and playoff wins (52) in WNBA history. She coached the Lynx to four championships and the U.S. women’s national team to an eighth consecutive Olympic gold medal at the 2024 Paris Games.

ESPN analyst Burke, who’s in the Naismith Hall of Fame, made history when she called the 2024 NBA Finals. Burke started her career as an analyst for Big East games and as the radio and TV voice of the New York Liberty.

Valdemoro won three WNBA championships with the Houston Comets, played in two Olympic Games for Spain and won Spanish League titles eight times. Fijalkowski is a five-time French League champion and the all-time leading scorer in the league.

Muhl has coached for 36 seasons at Kirkwood Community College in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. He has won nine NJCAA Division II championships and has a career record of 1,045-171.

Kennedy-Dixon, who played at Clemson from 1978-82, scored 3,113 career points for seventh all-time in women’s college basketball history. A two-time All-American, she holds ACC career records for scoring, rebounds (1,252), field goals (1,349) and field goal attempts (2,688).

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