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TORONTO – Bo Bichette knows exactly what Vladimir Guerrero Jr. promised to do if the Toronto Blue Jays win the World Series: Give his championship ring to his father, the Hall of Famer who only once reached the Fall Classic at the tail end of a decorated career.

Bichette, who has played with Guerrero since both were teenagers, looks at it a little differently. He knows Vlad the Elder, with his 449 career home runs, .931 lifetime OPS, American League MVP award and nine All-Star selections, deserves some shine.

But consider what Vlad Jr. has done: Five All-Star appearances and 183 home runs by the age of 26. A career .861 OPS. The revitalization of a Blue Jays franchise thirsting for a superstar, until it realized one was already under its auspices.

Indeed, Guerrero’s 14-year, $500 million contract extension signed earlier this year ensured he’d stay in Toronto.

But this October heralded something far more elusive than a signature on a contract: Six home runs in 11 postseason games. An absurd 1.440 postseason OPS, with a .442/.510/.930 line.

And the tears shed by a God-fearing, Canadian-born icon in the making that belie his tender age.

So Bo has some advice for Vladdy, the guy he likes to call his brother: Keep the ring.

“I hope he keeps the ring for himself,” says Bichette, who hopes to return from a knee injury in this World Series. “It’s obvious how much it means to him, the emotions he shows.

“But if he decides to give it, I’m sure that means more to him. Watching how much it means to him has been very inspiring to see.”

As the Blue Jays clinched a playoff berth, and then the American League East, and vanquished the Yankees in the AL Division Series, and finally survived seven games to claim the pennant against the Mariners, Vladdy’s final-out stance is well established.

He drops to his knees. He points to the heavens. Before he cavorts with his teammates, he fairly drips with gratitude.

Guerrero came up with Bichette, and reached the playoffs for the first time with George Springer, all the while as the Blue Jays missed out on bigger-ticket additions.

Yet doing it with these guys means plenty.

“It means a lot,” Guerrero tells USA TODAY Sports. “These are my teammates. I feel so good to be here, with them. I feel so proud to win here, with them.

“This is the team that got us here and we are trying to win it all.”

It’s a feeling reflected back twofold. Guerrero has been a Blue Jay since he was 16, the jewel of the international signing class that season, a third baseman with a generational expectation to bear.

Bichette was in the same boat. He, Guerrero and Cavan Biggio – son of Hall of Famer Craig Biggio – climbed the organizational ladder together in Toronto.

Bichette has had his injury-plagued moments, his All-Star turns and now this season where he’s rediscovered his top form, only to get hurt just before the playoffs – and his pending free agency.

Still, he remains remarkably zen about it all, knowing what his longtime running mate has done.

“For me, it’s incredibly special to watch him doing what he’s doing not only on the field but as a leader and how much this means to him,” says Bichette. “He’ll be a brother for life, for sure. He means a lot to me.”

Even more to the Blue Jays. Guerrero’s blazing, low line drives have often been described as “two-irons,” zipping up the gaps and down the lines of major league parks. When he elevates?

It can sometimes appear his ball is headed to the heights of the CN Tower, adjacent to Rogers Centre.

His 41-year-old teammate, Max Scherzer, has been around long enough to have given up a homer to Vlad Sr. And is wholly appreciative to own that perspective.

“Let’s just say his dad swung at a few more pitches out the zone,’ says Scherzer of the notorious bad-ball tendencies of the elder Guerrero. “I love that I’ve gotten to have that experience. I love that I’m old and got to play with his dad and now play with Vladdy Jr.

‘I love how much he’s grown, even over the course of this season. We can all talk about his bat, and he’s even leveling up in front of our eyes.”

It’s enough to make a hitting coach take five when Guerrero is in the cage.

OK, not really. David Popkins is too dedicated to his job for that. But he also realizes a hitting savant when he sees one.

“A lot of butt-smacking. A lot of, ‘Good jobs,’” he says, with only a hint of self-deprecation. “Any way I can help at any time. He’s incredible. He’s very talented. He understands things. You might bring something up, and he already knows about it.”

Straight from central casting, you might say.

“If you were to construct a superstar that’s built for the game, you would pick a son of a superstar hitter, that has been around the game since a young child, that has loved every second of it,” says Popkins. “That is literally how you would build someone that’s built for this game.

“I truly believe he’s built for this moment, built for this series.”

Vladdy Jr. sure hopes so. He was born in Montreal when his dad was an Expo and remains determined to win one for Canada.

“Of course,” he says. “Always.”

Four more, he implored the crowd from the stage after the ALCS. Should that wish get fulfilled, the ring will arrive around Opening Day.

And as much as Bichette would like his organizational brother to keep it, Vladdy says no such luck.

“One hundred percent,” he says about giving the ring to his father.

Alas. Yet at 26, Vlad seems confident he’ll get another shot at one for himself, always seeing a bigger picture.

“He’s thinking about the game at a much higher level now,” says Scherzer. “Those are things that, to me, define a superstar.”

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

A gambling scandal left NBA fans with their mouths agape and the Portland Trail Blazers without their head coach. Former NBA champion Tiago Splitter is taking the reins in the Pacific Northwest as the Blazers’ interim head coach, and his first game is Friday night.

His adversary is no easy foe, though. The Golden State Warriors are 2-0 on the season and are fresh off a 137-131 win over the Denver Nuggets Thursday night. Although Denver’s Aaron Gordon dropped 50 in that game, the Warriors were resilient, thanks in large part to Steph Curry dropping 42 points of his own.

Portland lost its first game of the season in what was set to be its fifth season with Billups as head coach. The team has not finished above .500 in any season under Billups.

Why is Tiago Splitter the Blazers’ interim head coach?

Splitter is in his first season with the Blazers, serving as an assistant coach. Though he is a new addition to the club, he has lots of experience as a coach.

He served as player development coach for the Brooklyn Nets in 2019 and was respected enough to survive multiple coaching staff changes within the organization, staying on throughout the Steve Nash and Jacque Vaughn eras. He left the Nets in 2023.

Splitter joined the Houston Rockets as an assistant afterwards and took a one-year gap in Europe before coming back to the NBA in 2025.

Splitter was thrust into the interim head coaching role after Billups was arrested as part of an FBI investigation into illegal gambling. Billups was charged in connection with an illegal poker operation that allegedly had ties to the mafia.

The NBA placed Billups on ‘immediate leave’ after he was indicted, alongside guard Terry Rozier, who was also indicted in the investigation. Billups was in court in Portland Thursday afternoon.

Tiago Splitter’s comments on Chauncey Billups arrest

Ahead of Friday’s game, Splitter was asked his thoughts on the FBI investigation that resulted in Billups’ arrest. Splitter did not speak on the matter.

Splitter stressed that he is ‘focused on moving forward.’ He also noted that the mood in the Blazers’ facility Thursday was ‘not good,’ but he is ready for what comes next.

Tiago Splitter NBA stats

Splitter spent most of his seven NBA seasons as a role player for the San Antonio Spurs, Atlanta Hawks, and Philadelphia 76ers. He was a key player on the Spurs’ 2014 championship team, though, starting 50 games for the team while averaging 8.2 points and 6.2 rebounds per game. He averaged 7.9 points per game for his career while shooting a solid 55.5% from the field.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The last time the Philadelphia Eagles faced NFC East foe New York, they played without one of their stars. Defensive tackle Jalen Carter was a late scratch from the game due to injury.

They’ll be without another star this week against the Giants but this time it’s one on offense.

Wide receiver A.J. Brown is out for the Eagles’ Week 8 game against New York, the team confirmed on Friday, Oct. 24. He did not practice at all this week.

Brown had his best game of the season in Week 7 against the Minnesota Vikings. He had four catches for a season-high 121 yards and two touchdowns.

Philadelphia’s win over Minnesota ended the team’s two-game losing streak. Their losses to the Denver Broncos in Week 5 and the Giants in Week 6 equalled their total losses over the prior calendar year.

The Eagles’ offense had its best game of the season in that Vikings win with 361 total yards, including 316 through the air. With Brown out, they could have a tougher time replicating that success this week against New York.

Here’s what we know about his potential return.

When will A.J. Brown return?

Brown won’t see the field again until Week 10 on the road against the Green Bay Packers at the earliest. That’s because the Eagles have their bye after this week’s game against the Giants.

But this could be a longer-term injury considering hamstring recovery times can vary from player to player, and he did not practice at all this week.

Currently, there is no clear timetable for when he will be back on the field.

A.J. Brown stats

Brown’s underperformed for much of the year compared to his career averages. He’s taken to social media to post cryptic messages insinuating his displeasure with the Eagles’ offense in 2025.

With his standout game against Minnesota, Brown’s closer to normal for his NFL career. Here’s how his stats look through Week 7:

Targets: 51
Catches: 29
Receiving yards: 395
Receiving touchdowns: 3

De’Vonta Smith has more catches (38) and receiving yards (504) than Brown so far this season to lead Philadelphia. Tight end Dallas Goedert has a team-high five receiving touchdowns.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Looking to become Major League Baseball’s first repeat World Series champion since the turn of the millennium, the Los Angeles Dodgers have to win four of the next seven games against the Toronto Blue Jays.

The 2025 World Series begins on Friday, Oct. 24 in Toronto, a showdown between two of the best teams in baseball this season. The Blue Jays (94-68) have home-field advantage for the Fall Classic and got here by beating their rival New York Yankees in the AL Division Series and the Seattle Mariners in a thrilling seven-game ALCS.

The Dodgers (93-69) had to play an extra round to get back to the World Series and have won nine of 10 games in these playoffs after sweeping the Milwaukee Brewers, who had MLB’s best record, in the NLCS.

The Blue Jays are in the World Series for the first time since 1993, the year they won their second consecutive title. For the Dodgers, it’s a fifth appearance in nine seasons, winning it all in 2020 and 2024.

Here’s how USA TODAY Sports’ MLB writers see the World Series playing out:

World Series predictions

Bob Nightengale: Dodgers in 6
Gabe Lacques: Dodgers in 6
Jesse Yomtov: Dodgers in 5

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

TORONTO — In Game 1 of the World Series, Bo Bichette will bat cleanup and play second base for the Toronto Blue Jays, while right-hander Trey Yesavage will get the start on the mound. 

And this will be their first time on a big league field together.

Such is the partially ad hoc nature of this Blue Jays playoff run, as they won the American League East three weeks after Bichette suffered a sprained left knee ligament, then won seven of 11 postseason games to advance to their first World Series since 1993. 

Along the way, they worked Yesavage – who started the season at their lowest full-season minor league affiliate – into the rotation and he’s proven a playoff ace, beating the Yankees in the AL Division Series and Mariners in the AL Championship Series to earn the Game 1 call. 

Their opponents, the Los Angeles Dodgers? It looks a lot more stable: Shohei Ohtani, Mookie Betts and Freddie Freeman are atop the lineup, while lefty Blake Snell will aim to continue his historic run of dominance in these playoffs. 

Snell has won all three postseason starts, giving up just two earned runs in 21 innings pitched (0.86 ERA) in beating the Reds, Phillies and Brewers. He’ll take a 14-inning scoreless streak into his start. 

The Dodgers are aiming to become the first club to repeat as champions since the 1998-2000 Yankees, while the Blue Jays seek their first championship since consecutive titles in 1992-93.

Bichette will play second base for the first time since a single game in 2019 at Class A, Toronto opting for the postseason continuity of Andrés Giménez at shortstop. 

‘This has been, obviously, on my mind the entire run, just trying to get as healthy as I could be and as ready as I could be for this,’ Bichette said before Game 1. ‘I thought at one point it might be the ALCS, but once that wasn’t an opportunity, I turned my attention to hopefully having an opportunity to be here for this.

‘I don’t know if relief is the word, but I’m definitely super blessed and grateful to have this opportunity.’ 

Follow for live updates:

What time is Dodgers vs Blue Jays World Series game Friday?

World Series Game 1 begins at 8:00 p.m. ET at Rogers Centre in Toronto, home of the Blue Jays.

What channel is the World Series on? Where to watch Dodgers vs Blue Jays

TV channel: Fox
Live stream: Watch World Series live on Fubo

Watch Dodgers vs Blue Jays LIVE on Fubo

World Series lineups tonight

Dodgers lineup for Game 1

Shohei Ohtani (L) DH
Mookie Betts (R) SS
Freddie Freeman (L) 1B
Will Smith (R) C
Teoscar Hernández (R) RF
Max Muncy (L) 3B
Enrique Hernández (R) LF
Tommy Edman (S) 2B
Andy Pages (R) CF

Blue Jays lineup for Game 1

George Springer (R) DH
Davis Schneider (R) LF
Vladimir Guerrero Jr. (R) 1B
Bo Bichette (R) 2B
Alejandro Kirk (R) C
Daulton Varsho (L) CF
Ernie Clement (R) 3B
Myles Straw (R) RF
Andrés Giménez (L) SS

Is Bo Bichette playing in the World Series?

Blue Jays infielder Bo Bichette is on Toronto’s World Series roster and is batting cleanup, playing second base in the Game 1 lineup. Bichette, who is a free agent after the season, has not played since Sept. 6 due to a knee injury.

‘This has been, obviously, on my mind the entire run, just trying to get as healthy as I could be and as ready as I could be for this,’ Bichette said before Game 1. ‘I thought at one point it might be the ALCS, but once that wasn’t an opportunity, I turned my attention to hopefully having an opportunity to be here for this.

‘I don’t know if relief is the word, but I’m definitely super blessed and grateful to have this opportunity.’ 

Dodgers’ Freddie Freeman, son of Canadians, thrilled for Blue Jays

“They’ve invested in their team, into that stadium, the visiting clubhouse, they’ve put a lot into the Toronto Blue Jays,’ Dodgers first baseman Freddie Freeman told reporters before the World Series.

‘So to just see the city come together, and get to experience so much jubilation that they had going to the World Series for the first time in 30-plus years, you know it’s an exciting time.

“And being from Canada, it’s pretty cool.’

Kiké Hernández stats in MLB playoffs are stunning

TORONTO — It is October, and the Los Angeles Dodgers are in the World Series, and Kiké Hernández is striking baseballs with authority once again, a phenomenon that defies all logic and statistical trends amassed over a significant sample size.

“These are the games I live for,” Hernández said the day before Game 1. “In life, you get put on the planet to do certain things.

“And for me, I feel like I was put on this planet to love my family, make people laugh and play October baseball.”

— Gabe Lacques

Dodgers vs Blue Jays prediction for 2025 World Series

Bob Nightengale: Dodgers in 6
Gabe Lacques: Dodgers in 6
Jesse Yomtov: Dodgers in 5

World Series national anthem singer tonight

 Voices of Fire is performing the U.S. and Canadian national anthems before the opening game of the World Series.

World Series first pitch for Game 1: Cito Gaston

The ceremonial first pitch for Game 1 is being thrown by Cito Gaston, the Blue Jays’ manager for their 1992 and 1993 World Series titles.

Dodgers World Series roster 2025

Pitchers (12): LHP Anthony Banda, LHP Jack Dreyer, RHP Tyler Glasnow, RHP Edgardo Henriquez, LHP Clayton Kershaw, RHP Will Klein, RHP Roki Sasaki, RHP Emmet Sheehan, LHP Blake Snell, RHP Blake Treinen, LHP Justin Wrobleski, RHP Yoshinobu Yamamoto.

Position, two-way players (14): SS Mookie Betts, OF Alex Call, OF Justin Dean, INF/OF Tommy Edman, 1B Freddie Freeman, INF/OF Kiké Hernández, OF Teoscar Hernández, INF/OF Hyeseong Kim, 3B Max Muncy, DH/P Shohei Ohtani, OF Andy Pages, INF Miguel Rojas, C Ben Rortvedt, C Will Smith.

Blue Jays World Series roster

Pitchers (12): RHP Chris Bassitt, RHP Shane Bieber, RHP Seranthony Dominguez, RHP Braydon Fisher, LHP Mason Fluharty, RHP Kevin Gausman, RHP Jeff Hoffman, LHP Eric Lauer, LHP Brendon Little, RHP Max Scherzer, RHP Louis Varland, RHP Trey Yesavage.

Position players (14): C Tyler Heineman, C Alejandro Kirk, INF/OF Addison Barger, INF Bo Bichette, INF Ernie Clement, INF Ty France, INF Andrés Giménez, INF Vladimir Guerrero Jr., INF Isiah Kiner-Falefa, OF Nathan Lukes, OF Davis Schneider, OF George Springer, OF Myles Straw, OF Daulton Varsho.

Who is pitching for the Dodgers tonight? Blake Snell stats

Two-time Cy Young winner Blake Snell takes the mound for the Dodgers in Game 1.

Snell has won all three of his starts in the 2025 postseason, giving up just two earned runs in 21 innings pitched (0.86 ERA) against the Reds, Phillies and Brewers. He takes a 14-inning scoreless streak into his Game 1 start.

‘It’s going to be great energy, good baseball, two really good teams,’ Snell said. ‘I just can’t wait to be a part of it.’

Blue Jays World Series appearances

Toronto won back-to-back World Series championships in 1992 (vs. Braves) and 1993 (vs. Phillies), the only times in franchise history the club has reached the Fall Classic since coming into existence in 1977.

How many times have the Dodgers won the World Series?

The Dodgers have won eight World Series titles in franchise history – one in Brooklyn and seven in Los Angeles

1955 vs. Yankees
1959 vs. White Sox
1963 vs. Yankees
1965 vs. Twins
1981 vs. Yankees
1988 vs. Athletics
2020 vs. Rays
2024 vs. Yankees

Ontario to pull tariff ad that angered Trump ‒ but will stay up for World Series

WASHINGTON ‒ The Ontario, Canada, provincial government will continue airing an ad critical of tariffs on American TV through the weekend ‒ and then pause the commercial ‒ after President Donald Trump halted United States trade negotiations with Canada over his objections to the ad.

Ontario Premier Doug Ford, in an Oct. 24 statement, said he’s directed his team to keep airing the commercial ‒ which features remarks from the late U.S. President Ronald Reagan ‒ so it will be seen during Games 1 and 2 of the World Series, set for Friday and Saturday, October 24 and 25.

Ford said the province of Ontario will pause the ad effective Monday, Oct. 27 ‘so that trade talks can resume.’ He cited a conversation he had with Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney to come to the decision. — Joey Garrison, USA TODAY

Dodgers vs Blue Jays World Series odds

World Series schedule 2025

Game 1: Friday, Oct. 24 in Toronto – 8 p.m. ET, FOX
Game 2: Saturday, Oct. 25 in Toronto – 8 p.m. ET, FOX
Game 3: Monday, Oct. 27 in Los Angeles – 8 p.m. ET, FOX
Game 4: Tuesday, Oct. 28 in Los Angeles – 8 p.m. ET, FOX
*Game 5: Wednesday, Oct. 29 in Los Angeles – 8 p.m. ET, FOX
*Game 6: Friday, Oct. 31 in Toronto – 8 p.m. ET, FOX
*Game 7: Saturday, Nov. 1 in Toronto – 8 p.m. ET, FOX

World Series winners by year

2024: Dodgers
2023: Rangers
2022: Astros
2021: Braves
2020: Dodgers
2019: Nationals
2018: Red Sox
2017: Astros
2016: Cubs
2015: Royals
2014: Giants
2013: Red Sox
2012: Giants
2011: Cardinals
2010: Giants

Who won the World Series last year?

The Dodgers defeated the Yankees in five games to win the 2024 World Series.

When did the Dodgers move to LA?

The Dodgers left Brooklyn after the 1957 season, playing their first game in Los Angeles in 1958.

The Giants departed New York for San Francisco at the same time, bringing the historic rivalry to the West Coast.

2025 World Series umpires

MLB announced the umpires and full schedule for the crew chosen to call this year’s World Series. Mark Wegner has been designated as crew chief for the first time. It’s his third World Series overall overall during a 25-year career.

Here’s how the umpires will line up for Game 1:

Home plate: Will Little
First base: Mark Wegner (crew chief)
Second base: John Tumpane
Third base: Alan Porter
Left field: Adam Hamari
Right field: Jordan Baker
Reserve: Adrian Johnson

How to watch World Series on Fubo

Watch Dodgers vs Blue Jays LIVE on Fubo

Dodgers vs Blue Jays World Series tickets

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The best way to prepare for an Olympics is to … not.

For many athletes, the Winter Olympics in Milan Cortina fall in the middle of their competitive seasons. Focus solely on the Games, and you put the rest of the season at risk. Go about your season as you would any other, and there’s a good chance you’ll go into the Olympics in peak form.

At least, that’s how skier Mikaela Shiffrin looks at it.

“There’s not a lot you can do in our sport to peak for a big event like the Olympics or world championships. It’s one of those events that falls directly in the center of our season, just weeks if not days after our last World Cup competition,” Shiffrin said earlier this week.

“The idea that most of us tend to have is, the more consistently you perform through the World Cup season, the more you will have momentum, some level of competence — confidence and competence — to bring into the Games.”

That doesn’t mean Shiffrin doesn’t consider the Olympics to be important. She’s experienced some of her highest highs (two gold medals) and lowest lows (Beijing, enough said) at the Games, and knows full well what they mean to her and the rest of the world.

But making the Olympics the end-all and be-all for the year, putting her entire focus on those few races, all but ensures a disappointment.

“The best you can do is to, at least for me, prioritize the races that I think I’ll be the most comfortable with,” Shiffrin said.

That begins with Saturday’s giant slalom race in Soelden, Austria.

What races will Shiffrin do?

Ahead of last season, Shiffrin had planned to race slalom, giant slalom, super-G and, if she could get enough training in, downhill. But the November crash in Killington, Vermont, that left her with a deep puncture wound in her abdomen altered not only her plans for the rest of that season, but this one, too.

Though she returned to the World Cup circuit — and got her 100th and 101st wins — PTSD from the crash limited her GS training and racing. She devoted a good chunk of her offseason to finding her GS rhythm again and, while she feels like she’s in a good spot, that took up time she otherwise would have spent training super-G and downhill.

So downhill is out for this season. Super-G is still a possibility, but Shiffrin has come to terms with the idea that she probably won’t race it at Milan Cortina.

“(The World Cup race) at St. Moritz will be the opportunity for me to see where I stand, if it’s even possible to qualify for the Olympics in super-G,” Shiffrin said. “And if it’s not, then I will move forward with GS and slalom and narrow my focus.

“So that’s kind of very up in the air, a lot of uncertainty there. But I adore super-G, so I don’t want to let it go entirely,” she added. “But it also means that I’ve got to get quite a bit more super-G training in the next weeks, which is hard to balance.”

Strong US team

Acknowledging that downhill and, probably, super-G aren’t a possibility this year caused Shiffrin some “bittersweetness.” But that was tempered with excitement and pride about the rest of the U.S. women’s team, which is the strongest it’s been in years.

Five U.S. women made World Cup podiums last season, the most since 2012-13. Besides Shiffrin, Lauren Macuga won the super-G at St. Anton and claimed a silver in downhill. Breezy Johnson had a bronze in the downhill. Paula Moltzan got bronzes in slalom and GS.

And Lindsey Vonn won silver in the super-G at the World Cup finals after coming out of retirement following a partial knee replacement.

Johnson also won the downhill at the world championships, while Macuga (super-G) and Moltzan (GS) got bronzes.

“The U.S. team is stacked,” Shiffrin said. “I think if I raced downhill, I wouldn’t even qualify. And that’s just kind of the realistic side of it. So in that sense, it’s a little bit liberating to say. I have so many teammates who, they’ve got this.”

Plus, there’s the team combined to look forward to at these Games.

The team combined replaces the super combined. It’s the same premise, one run each of downhill and slalom, only it’s now split between two skiers. Shiffrin and Johnson paired up for the inaugural event at the world championships and won gold.

They had a blast doing it, too, and Shiffrin is thrilled with the opportunity to participate in the team combined again, this time at an Olympics.

“It’s a really incredible dream about team combined,” said Shiffrin, who won a silver in the super combined at the Pyeongchang Games in 2018. “So I would expect to be racing three events. I think that’s pretty safe to say.”

All that’s in the future, though. For now, Shiffrin’s attention is solely on the races right in front of her. The best way to do well at the Olympics is to do well on the World Cup circuit first.

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

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

FORT LAUDERDALE, Florida — Lionel Messi will receive the MLS Golden Boot Award from Commissioner Don Garber before Inter Miami begins its pursuit of the 2025 MLS Cup on Friday, Oct. 24.

The pregame ceremony will take place before No. 3 Inter Miami hosts No. 6 Nashville SC in Game 1 of their MLS Cup Playoffs first-round, best-of-three series at Chase Stadium. The match begins at 8 p.m. ET.

Messi – who had a hat trick at Nashville to finish with 29 goals in the regular-season finale last week – will receive the award and play in his first match after signing a three-year extension to remain with the club one day earlier.

‘I’ve always said that I’ll base my decision on how I feel day to day and how I feel physically and mentally to continue playing and to continue being part of this club. And honestly, I felt really good during the year. I’m happy living in Miami, as is my family, and honestly, the decision was easy,’ Messi told NBC Nightly News.

Here’s everything you need to know about today’s Inter Miami vs. Nashville SC match, and follow along here for live updates from USA TODAY Sports:

Is Messi playing today?

Yes, Messi is expected to play. His status will be confirmed when Inter Miami announces its starting lineup an hour before the match.

What time is the Inter Miami vs. Nashville match?

The match begins at 8 p.m. ET (7 p.m. in Nashville, 9 p.m. in Argentina).

Buy Inter Miami tickets on StubHub

How to watch Inter Miami vs. Nashville on TV and live stream?

The match will be on Apple TV, FS1 and Fox Deportes in the United States.

Watch MLS Cup Playoffs on Apple TV

The latest on Messi’s new deal with Inter Miami

Messi agreed to a three-year contract extension through 2028 to remain with Inter Miami, the club announced on Thursday, Oct. 23.

‘Since I arrived in Miami, I’ve been very happy, so I’m truly glad to continue here,’ Messi said in a statement as he signed the contract inside Inter Miami’s future stadium, Miami Freedom Park, which is expected to open in 2026.

What happened in the last Inter Miami vs. Nashville match?

Messi scored in the 34th, 63rd and 81st minutes, and assisted Telasco Segovia’s final blow in 90’+1’. Baltasar Rodriguez (67’) also scored for Inter Miami in the 5-2 win.

Sam Surridge, who finished tied for second in the Golden Boot race with 24 goals like LAFC’s Denis Bouanga, scored in the 43rd minute. Jacob Shaffelburg also scored in first-half injury time (45’+6’) for Nashville.

Messi, Inter Miami MLS Cup playoff schedule

Nov. 1: Game 2 at Nashville, 7:30 p.m. ET
Nov. 8: Game 3 at Inter Miami, Time TBD (if necessary)
No. 10-18: FIFA international window
Nov. 22-23: Conference semifinals
Nov. 29-30: Conference finals
Dec. 6: MLS Cup Final

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Brian Daboll and the New York Giants have to pay a hefty sum for the coach’s actions in last week’s win over the defending-champion Philadelphia Eagles.

Daboll was fined $100,000 and the Giants were docked $200,000 after the coach was found to have violated league protocols by poking his head inside the medical tent while quarterback Jaxson Dart was being evaluated for a concussion.

Additionally, running back Cam Skattebo was fined $15,000 for conduct detrimental to the league.

In a joint statement released on Oct. 24, the NFL and NFLPA found that Daboll and Skattebo’s actions ‘had no actual impact on the exam or the care’ of Dart, but ‘their conduct was inconsistent with and demonstrated a disregard for the concussion protocol’s requirements,’ leading to the fines.

Daboll explained after the game that he was trying to ascertain Dart’s availability for a potential fourth-down play and not trying to influence any assessment or timeline for a potential return.

‘I’ll say this, like I said last night, I went in, didn’t actually go in, just stuck my head in to see how our quarterback was doing. Just asked him, ‘How you doing?” Daboll said last Friday. ‘In no way would I want a player to come back out there that wasn’t ready to play. I think I have great respect for that process.’

The league and NFL Players Association launched a joint investigation of the incident one day after the game. The NFL also sent out a memo, per multiple reports, reminding all 32 teams that medical personnel are the only figures other than the player in question who are permitted in the tents during a concussion evaluation.

‘I spoke to Coach Daboll this morning about approaching the medical tent last night. While I firmly believe, as he has stated, that he was not trying to influence the process in any way, he understands that the appearance of going to the tent is inappropriate,’ Giants co-owner John Mara said in a statement last Friday. ‘We have protocols in place as a league to ensure player safety, and we need to allow our medical staff to execute those protocols without interference.

‘We understand that the situation is under review by the NFL and NFLPA, and obviously we will cooperate fully.’

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Randy Livingston, who struggled with a gambling problem, believes more scandals will emerge until conversations about addiction are normalized.
The investigation led to the indictment of a head coach, a current player, and a former player.
Livingston now works as a ‘Responsible Gaming Ambassador’ and has spoken to NBA rookies about the risks.

A former NBA player who says he struggled with a gambling problem during his 11-year career in the league told USA TODAY Sports he is ‘not surprised at all’ that a federal investigation led to the arrest of an NBA head coach, a current NBA player and former NBA player.

‘In the last three, four years, I’ve been saying the possibility of scandal was very high,’ Randy Livingston told USA TODAY Sports on Friday, Oct. 24. ‘It doesn’t matter if it’s college football, college basketball, pro basketball, pro football.

‘ … I would think this is not going to stop. There’ll be more and more until we start to make the conversations normal.’

Livingston, 50, has said he never bet on sports and he primarily gambled on cards and in casinos. After getting sober in 2017, Livingston said, he began speaking out publicly and heard from other NBA players seeking help for gambling problems.

He also said people reached out after the explosive news that Portland Trail Blazers coach Chauncey Billups, Miami Heat guard Terry Rozier and former NBA player Damon Jones had been indicted stemming from an FBI investigation into illegal gambling.

Livingston, a former point guard who played in the NBA from 1996-2007, is a ‘Responsible Gaming Ambassador’ with FanDuel, which runs an online sports book. He said he talked to the NBA’s rookie classes the last two years.

Noting the first stop for rookies is summer league basketball in Las Vegas, Livingston said, ‘Gambling, prostitution, I mean all the things. So there’s some things that I think could change, but just we got to bring awareness and just make sure people are educated and understand the risk involved.’

He said he thinks his talking to the rookies ‘was a step in the right direction. But obviously we got a long ways to go with it.

‘The more we start to normalize the conversation and the more we bring awareness, and … help people understand this addiction and warning signs and how to get help if you’re in the addiction, those things are truly important.’

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President Donald Trump is heading off to Asia Friday evening, not long after North Korea fired off a ballistic missile for the first time in months and as questions loom regarding trade negotiations with China.

The White House confirmed that Trump will meet with Chinese President Xi Jinping Thursday during the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) Summit.

The meeting comes amid escalated tensions between the two countries on trade after Beijing announced Oct. 9 it would impose export controls on rare-earth magnets, which are used in a host of products ranging from electric cars to F-35 fighter jets. In response, Trump announced the U.S. would impose a new 100% tariff on all Chinese goods, which is slated to take effect Nov. 1.

Even so, Trump sought to diffuse tensions and has routinely touted his relationship with Xi in recent weeks. Additionally, he has voiced confidence both parties will walk away from the summit pleased and that a deal will be made.

‘I think we are going to come out very well, and everyone’s going to be very happy,’ Trump said Thursday.

The summit between Trump and Xi will mark the first time they’ve met in person since Trump took office in January. The two previously met in person in June 2019 in Japan.

Trump’s meeting with Xi will come on the tail end of a larger trip to the region. Trump is first headed to Malaysia to meet with Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim Sunday afternoon before participating in the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) dinner in the evening.

While in Malaysia, he will also meet with Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Manet and Thai Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul.

Trump will then head to Tokyo Monday and is slated to meet on Tuesday with Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi, who was just elected earlier in October. Takaichi is the first woman to serve as the prime minister of Japan.

Trump will then close out his trip heading to South Korea, where he will meet with the South Korean President Lee Jae Myung and will deliver keynote remarks at the APEC CEO lunch.

Trump is scheduled to return to Washington Thursday.

Meanwhile, North Korea has upped its aggression in recent days, firing off multiple short-range ballistic missiles Wednesday, the first one Pyongyang has launched since May. Meanwhile, North Korean Leader Kim Jong Un showed off a new intercontinental ballistic missile at a military parade in front of Chinese, Russian and other top officials Oct. 10.

‘We are aware of the DPRK’s multiple ballistic missile launches and are consulting closely with the Republic of Korea and Japan, as well as other regional allies and partners,’ U.S. Indo-Pacific Command (INDOPACOM) said in a statement on Wednesday.

‘The United States condemns these actions and calls on the DPRK to refrain from further unlawful and destabilizing acts,’ INDOPACOM said. ‘While we have assessed that this event does not pose an immediate threat to U.S. personnel, or territory or to our allies, we continue to monitor the situation.’

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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