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Mookie Betts is chasing his fourth World Series title, third with the Los Angeles Dodgers.
Since a February 2020 trade from the Red Sox, the Dodgers have been to the World Series three times since acquiring Mookie Betts.
After switching to shortshop for the 2025 season, Mookie Betts’ defensive prowess has made him a Gold Glove finalist.

LOS ANGELES — He is Michael Jordan in spikes.

He is Tiger Woods with a glove.

He’s Tom Brady with bat.

He is Los Angeles Dodgers shortstop Mookie Betts.

Oh sure, he’s not an international sensation who can’t walk along the streets of Los Angeles, let alone Tokyo, without an army of photographers and reporters running after him like Shohei Ohtani.

He’s not a folk hero as the son of a Hall of Famer and beloved by everyone in his own country like Toronto Blue Jays first baseman Vladimir Guerrero Jr.

He doesn’t throw resurrect memories of Bob Gibson throwing complete games in the postseason like Yoshinobu Yamamoto.

No, all Betts does is win.

And win.

And win.

He’s obsessed with it.

Forget the glossy statistics, don’t pay attention to the numbers on the back of his bubblegum card, and don’t bother comparing him to any of the legends who have played this game.

You want to define Mookie Betts.

Just look at the rings on his finger.

Betts already has won a World Series championship in Boston. He won two more in Los Angeles. And he is three victories away from having a ring for every finger on his left hand but his thumb.

“That’s all that matters to me,’’ Betts quietly says before the Dodgers host the Toronto Blue Jays in Game 3 on Monday (8 p.m. ET on FOX). “I want to win. That’s all I think about, winning.’’

Betts, 31, in the fifth year of a 12-year, $365 million contract, wants his final baseball resting place to be in Cooperstown, N.Y., home of the Baseball Hall of Fame.

He’s not worried about his legacy, or his individual statistics, but making sure all of the victories, postseason appearances and World Series championships get him over the threshold.

“Being in the Hall of Fame is kind of a driver of mine,’’ Betts says. “The legacy comes with the winning. I just know that if I can do my end goal, which is to be in the Hall of Fame, what comes with it comes with it.

“You can’t argue with winning. You can argue with stats on the back of the baseball cards. There’s a lot of people that do that. But not a lot of people can say they won four or five rings, you know. That’s what I’m trying to say.

“And then there’s no arguments.’’

He looks at Buster Posey, who had only 1,500 hits as a catcher, but won three World Series championships with the San Francisco Giants and should be inducted in the 2027 Hall of Fame class.

He’s in awe of the late Yogi Berra, who won 10 World Series championships with the New York Yankees.

He admires Derek Jeter, the Yankees shortstop great who won five World Series titles.

Betts wants to be that guy, too, the ultimate winner who will do anything and everything possible to make his team a champion.

You want him to play right field? Ok, he won six Gold Gloves, a batting title and an MVP award as a right fielder.

You want to move him to second base? No problem, he’ll win a Silver Slugger award and make the All-Star team there, too.

And this year, you want to see if he can play shortstop? Well, he’s a Gold Glove finalist and Betts has the Dodgers back in the World Series with his brilliant defense while hitting 20 homers, scoring 95 runs and driving in 82.

“Shohei Ohtani might be the best baseball player on earth right now,’’ Milwaukee Brewers manager Pat Murphy says. “Freddie Freeman has touched our hearts many times in the wrong way. But Mookie Betts, what he’s doing in the game of baseball, is incredible, to move from outfield to playing shortstop on the Los Angeles Dodgers, a team that’s stacked with everything you can be stacked with.

“For him to do that, and do it well, is incredible. Imagine Steph Curry just saying, “Ok, he’s going to go play power forward and guard the other team’s best player.’ That’s what it’s like. So he’s going to guard the other team’s best player, who’s bigger, whatever. Never done it and he does it and they win still. And he puts up his 30-plus a game. …

‘I’m just telling you, man, if you’re talking about most valuable player [award], you’re going to go through the stats and all that kind of stuff. But if you’re talking about a player that really was valuable to this team this year, I’m saying Mookie Betts is number one.’’

Betts, who has seven top-10 MVP finishes, won’t finish in the top 10 this season with his slow starts, but he’s undeniably the finest athlete in the game.

“Makes playing shortstop look easy for a guy that’s a Gold Glover in right field,’’ Blue Jays manager John Schneider says. “He’s just consistent. I think he understands the speed of the game, understands big stages of the game. … A couple plays that he’s made, man, just going to his right against us in the first couple games, pretty impressive what he does.

“And the fact that he’s hitting at the top of the order, I think Mookie’s a hell of a player.’

Really, there’s absolutely nothing Betts can’t do.

Go ahead, name a sport, and he’ll beat you.

Grab your golf clubs, and he’ll beat you in every round.

You want to hit the nearby bowling alley? Go ahead and challenge the guy who has bowled multiple perfect games in competition, and might bowl professionally when he’s done with baseball.

Yamamoto has thrown back-to-back complete games this postseason, but when he comes to Betts’ house to bowl, uh, it doesn’t work out too well.

“He actually comes over pretty often,’’ Betts said, last bowling against him before their flight to Toronto. “He knows how to keep it on the lane. He tries to curve it a little bit. He’s learning.’’

You want to pick up a ping-pong paddle? Feel free to go ahead and embarrass yourself.

Pickleball? Good luck trying to beat him after he picked up the sport a couple of years ago.

“It’s absolutely insane what he does,’’ Dodgers third baseman Max Muncy says. “But I feel like the only person that I can think of that could do something like that is Mookie. I’m sure he could pitch. He can do everything else, why not?’’

Has there ever been a sport Betts hasn’t conquered, we ask?

“Uh, not really,’’ he says. “It’s because I try and play the stuff that I’m good at. If I’m not good at it, I’ll figure it out, learn, and at least to be serviceable in it. I think my brain just kind of works that way when it comes to sports.

“I can’t really explain it, it just does.’’

Ok, have you ever tried a sport in which you didn’t dominate?

“Honestly, I don’t even remember,’’ he says.

Well, considering he has excelled at every position he’s played on a baseball field, every outfield position, second base and shortstop, why not try the hot corner at third? How about first base? For giggles, why not put on the shin guards and catch? He pitched in high school, why not now?

“I don’t think there’s anything that his competitive drive wouldn’t allow him to do,’’ Dodgers reliever Blake Treinen says. “Could he pitch and get a few big outs? You know he could. He’d probably be a great reliever, and then win a Gold Glove doing it.’’

Sorry, Betts says, but he’s good sticking at shortstop for now.

“I don’t want to do anything else,’’ Betts said. “I just want to win, that’s it, whatever it takes.’’

Besides, Betts cares too much about winning than to turn his versatility into a sideshow. He’s too busy making sure the Dodgers don’t become vulnerable at a time when the rest of the baseball world is trying to gun them down.

“Nothing’s easy,’’ Betts says. “Winning the World Series is hard in itself, but then coming back is another animal because the target’s always on your back.

“But it’s also fun to play like that. There’s an art to it. There’s a mindset to it. It’s something that a lot of us Dodgers have learned to embrace. Not everyone can say that they got to play on a team that was expected to win, loving those expectations, and embracing those expectations.’’

Betts also is Exhibit 1-A to the argument that the Dodgers aren’t bad for baseball with their massive payroll, but actually are just smarter than most teams.

The Boston Red Sox shopped Betts a year before he was eligible for free agency in February 2020. Any team in baseball could have had him. His contract didn’t include a no-trade clause. The Red Sox were just looking for prospects in return.

The Dodgers sent the Red Sox outfielder Alex Verdugo, young shortstop Jeter Downs, catcher Connor Wong and agreed to take on starter David Price’s contract. Well, Verdugo has turned into nothing more than a journeyman. Downs is playing for the Fukuoka SoftBank Hawks in Japan. Wong hit .190 in a backup role with the Red Sox. And Price retired three years ago.

The Red Sox haven’t been back to the World Series since the trade.

The Dodgers have been to the World Series three times in six years.

“So, anybody could have made that trade,’’ Betts said. “Everybody’s capable of doing the same thing. Everybody can spend money if they want to, and our guys want to.

“I’m sure there’s a whole money component to it, which I’m not here to debate all that. I just know that everybody has the ability to do this, and we chose to do it. We enjoy winning from the top to the bottom.’’

And, oh, have they won.

They’ve been to the postseason 13 consecutive times, won 12 NL West titles, five pennants and are trying for a third championship in that timeframe.

Hello dynasty, it’s Mookie.

“I don’t even know what a dynasty really is,’’ Betts says. “I just know we’ve been good. [Team president] Andrew [Friedman] and those guys keep putting a good product out there. There’s no secret. There’s no magic formula. We just want to win, and purely your will to win.

“You look in here, and everybody is driven to win. You want to be with good guys. You want to come to a clubhouse where nobody gets in trouble. Nobody’s idling. Nobody argues. Nobody fights. You kind of come in and take care of your business. We hold each other accountable, which I think is huge.

“We just want to be the smartest players, the best players, the most talented players, and yeah, the nicest as well.’’

It’s all that Mookie wants, and well, a few more of those championship rings for his other hand, as well.

Follow Bob Nightengale on X @Bnightengale.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The Los Angeles Lakers needed someone to supply the offense against the Sacramento Kings on Sunday night and Austin Reaves was willing to take on the challenge.

He set a new career-high of 51 points, surpassing his previous mark of 45, in the Lakers’ 127-120 victory over the rival Kings. He became the 12th player in Lakers history to record 50-plus points in a single game.

Reaves had the opportunity to lead the offense following the absence of Luka Doncic, who was ruled out in the hours leading up to the game due to a finger sprain and a lower left leg contusion and will miss at least a week.

‘He was fantastic and did a little bit of everything tonight,’ Lakers coach JJ Redick told reporters after the game. ‘He was all over the place and scored the basketball at an incredible level. … He lives in the moment and is ready for every moment that comes.’

Reaves filled in the void left behind and nearly produced a triple-double performance and finishing with 11 rebounds and nine assists for the Lakers.

The fifth-year player also had a career-high night from the free-throw line, shooting 21-of-22. He also became the eighth player in franchise history to make 20-plus free throws in a game.

The Lakers players celebrated with Reaves in the moments after the game and in the locker room to acknowledge his big night.

‘It means a lot,’ Reaves said. ‘We play basketball for those moments, and for them to treat me like that is special.’

Lakers vs. Kings highlights

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This post appeared first on USA TODAY

President Donald Trump shot down speculation that he would run as a vice presidential candidate in 2028, telling reporters aboard Air Force One that Republicans already have ‘great’ prospective candidates.

Trump made the statement during a gaggle with reporters on Sunday, brushing off questions about whether he would fully pursue such an option. Trump pointed to Vice President JD Vance and Secretary of State Marco Rubio as two potential successors, while denigrating potential Democratic candidates as ‘low IQ.’

‘We have great people. I don’t have to get into that, but we have one of them standing right here. We have JD, obviously. The Vice President is great. Marco is great, I think. I’m not sure if anybody would run against those. I think if they ever formed a group, it would be unstoppable,’ Trump said.

‘They have Jasmine Crockett, a low IQ person. They have AOC’s low IQ. If you give her an IQ test, have her pass, like, the exams that I decided to take when I was at Walter Reed. I took those very hard, they’re really aptitude tests, I guess, in a certain way, but they’re cognitive tests. Let AOC go against Trump. Let Jasmine go against him,’ he continued.

‘The first couple of questions are easy. A tiger, an elephant, a giraffe, you know. When you get up to about five or six, and then when you get up to 10 and 20 and 25, they couldn’t come close to answering any of those questions,’ he asserted.

Asked about whether he would run as vice president in 2028, Trump noted that he would be ‘allowed to do that,’ but he called the plan ‘too cute.’

‘Is it the White House, or the White House counsel’s, or your legal position, I guess, that you could do that?’ a reporter pressed.

‘You’d be allowed to do that, but I wouldn’t do that. I think it’s too cute,’ Trump responded.

Trump’s comments come as he flies across Asia meeting with world leaders in a five-day tour this week. The president landed in Japan early Tuesday morning, and he is expected to meet with newly-elected Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi in Tokyo. Takaichi is Japan’s first female prime minister.

Trump also confirmed on Sunday that he would be open to meeting with North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un during his visit to South Korea.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

President Donald Trump said he’d be willing to extend his trip abroad to Asia if North Korea’s Kim Jong Un wants to meet with him.

‘But I’d love to meet with him if he’d like to meet. I got along great with Kim Jong Un. I liked him, he liked me,’ Trump said during a gaggle on Air Force One.

When asked if he’d extend his trip in order to meet with the North Korean figure, Trump indicated that he would be willing to do so.

The president had previously noted during a prior gaggle aboard Air Force One that he would be open to meeting with Kim Jong Un.

‘I got along very well with him,’ he said of the foreign leader.

North Korea is one of the few nations around the globe armed with nuclear weapons.

During his first term, Trump met with Kim Jong Un several times.

He even made history as the first sitting U.S. president to step into North Korea.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

In a political environment where little is agreed upon, there stands one exception: China. That country is cited by nearly every national security expert as the No. 1 geopolitical threat to the U.S. The question is how to coexist without being codependent, how to compete without conflict, and how to protect American producers and consumers while China plays by its arbitrary rules.

No sooner had a meeting between President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping been announced before China threatened U.S. access to rare earth minerals. The U.S. countered by threatening an additional 100% tariff on Chinese imports.

Most Americans could not conjure why China would make such a provocative move after both presidents agreed to meet. Surely, the Chinese government must know Trump would react. Xi has been the leader of China for well over a decade with no sign of relenting.

Conversely, Trump is nearly a year into his final term in office. China has always played the long game, assuming Americans lack the will to wait out a prolonged contest. China thinks patience will win — that Americans can’t sustain pressure. It may wind up being surprised that patience is an overrated virtue and how quickly this administration can act.

The Trump administration has already resolved conflicts around the globe, as evidenced by its history-defying peace agreement in the Middle East. The administration has used tariffs and the threat thereof to increase revenue for the U.S., balance the trade playing field and reposition the U.S. for increased domestic manufacturing.

It has been clear about the threats posed by Venezuela, repositioned our relationship with Colombia, opened dialogue between Israel and moderate Arab states, bombed Iranian nuclear ambitions and closed a porous border. All of that in less than a year.

The conflict left to be resolved is in Eastern Europe, and the ‘white whale’ among outstanding trade agreements is China. The two are interconnected. While the U.S. was trying to isolate Russia for its aggression against Ukraine, China was providing both military and economic assistance to Russia.

Next on the administration’s agenda is ending the Russian invasion of Ukraine and negotiating a trade agreement with China that can withstand the reality that the problematic forces within today’s Chinese Communist Party aren’t going anywhere.

Even if Xi steps down or his power wanes, there is no Chinese equivalent to America’s 22nd Amendment — no constitutional limit to the number of terms or years a leader can serve. That means Beijing’s leadership can remain in power indefinitely, which is a central pillar of the Communist Party’s strategy. The United States must live with that reality and yet negotiate from a position of strength to achieve our interests.

While recent reports suggest Xi’s grip may be weakening amid internal purges and speculation about dissent within the Chinese Communist Party, history teaches such reports are often exaggerated. And even if Xi were to fall, his successor would continue the long-term authoritarian policies that define modern China.

China perceives time and our democratic system as allies in its strategy. The key is to make Beijing recognize Trump’s impatience with that country’s malingering and duplicity is not a weakness but rather a threat to their own interests.

The administration’s China pressure strategy isn’t confined to tariffs. It extends to the technological front, where the next great battles for global power will be fought.

The Trump administration has already resolved conflicts around the globe, as evidenced by its history-defying peace agreement in the Middle East. 

Recognizing that China’s dominance in communications and artificial intelligence poses an existential threat to U.S. security, the Trump administration has moved to aggressively end Beijing’s control of critical infrastructure.

For example, the Department of Justice has taken decisive steps to counter the dominance of Huawei, a company controlled by the Chinese Communist Party, over global telecommunications. Huawei still controls the global telecom market (and, by extension, the AI and 5G future) and has repeatedly been found by the Department of Defense and our security agencies to include backdoors and security vulnerabilities.

To level this playing field, the Trump administration — working together with U.S. intelligence officials — approved the HPE-Juniper merger, giving America a credible competitor and a real chance to out-innovate China while securing critical communications infrastructure.

There were opponents to this merger — both the usual suspects and a few new ones. Democrat attorneys general, led by Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser — are crying foul but doing so without access to any of the information necessary to make an informed decision. Too often, visceral disdain for the president has supplanted a reasoned consideration of national security realities.

When the president perceived national security threats in the computer chip realm, he took the unprecedented step of teaming with Intel. Unconventional? Yes. But these are not traditional times, and the next conflicts will not be waged in conventional terms.

While progress has been made both practically and in principle with China, more remains to be done, which is why the president and his economic, trade and national security teams are willing to meet with China. Next may come tightening export controls on other sensitive technologies and strengthening military partnerships in the Indo-Pacific to deter Chinese ambitions.

Beijing has watched Trump re-invigorate NATO, end several wars, impose tariffs and meet intended pain with imposed pain. Beijing has seen patience when warranted, power when called for, and an overarching preference for peace.

While recent reports suggest Xi’s grip may be weakening amid internal purges and speculation about dissent within the Chinese Communist Party, history teaches such reports are often exaggerated. 

Do not mistake diplomacy for weakness or discussion for a lack of resolve. Trump can make peace, level the playing field, stop intellectual property theft, punish currency manipulation and allow for healthy, fair competition, even among perceived opponents.

The fact that someone seeks peace does not mean he isn’t preparing for a world without it. China would be wise to know that while democracy limits a person’s time in office, it does nothing to deter the speed with which actions can be taken to preserve that democracy.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Luka Dončić spearheaded the Los Angeles Lakers’ offense for the first two games of the 2025-26 NBA season.

The Lakers went 1-1 to start the season, but it could be the Lakers’  momentum on offense that’s coming to a screeching halt.

Dončić suffered multiple injuries in the team’s rout of the Minnesota Timberwolves on Friday.

The Slovenian was listed as questionable with a left finger sprain on Saturday evening for the game against the Sacramento Kings on Sunday, Oct. 26.

He was officially ruled out on Sunday with a finger sprain and a lower left leg contusion and will miss at least a week.

The star guard is expected to be reevaluated next week. That leaves the Lakers without their two best scorers in Dončić and LeBron James and in search of where the offensive production will come from. When James’ injury was announced on Oct. 9, the four-time MVP was expected to be reevaluated in three to four weeks.

‘We have to do everything with pace tonight,’ Lakers coach JJ Redick told reporters before Sunday’s game against the Kings.

He has only scored a game over 40+ points once in his career, scoring 45 in a game against the Indiana Pacers on Feb. 8, when James and Dončić were not available to play.

More could be asked of new center Deandre Ayton, who has a career high of 35 points, but who only scored 10 points in the season opener against the Golden State Warriors and 15 against Minnesota.

The Lakers had just four players come off the bench against Golden State before seeing six bench players play in the 128-110 win over the Timberwolves. The question for the Lakers now is where the scoring production will come from on the second unit. Jake LaRavia had the most off the bench against Minnesota with six points. He also had five against the Warriors.

Marcus Smart and Jarred Vanderbilt provided a strong defensive mentality when they came in, but now will likely need to step it up on the offensive end. Smart has 12 total points through the first two games. Vanderbilt has just two.

Jaxson Hayes will be unavailable for a second straight game due to left knee soreness.

How to watch Lakers vs. Kings

The Kings will host the Lakers on Sunday, Oct. 26, at 9 p.m. ET (6 p.m. PT) at the Golden 1 Center. The game will be available on NBA League Pass and locally on NBC Sports California and Spectrum Sports Network.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Jerry Jones and the Dallas Cowboys are rumored to be willing participants ahead of the NFL’s Nov. 4th trade deadline.

One might believe the Cowboys’ 44-24 blowout loss to the Denver Broncos on Sunday might persuade Jones to be aggressive in the coming days leading up to the deadline, but the Cowboys’ owner told reporters Week 8’s disappointing performance won’t have any impact on the team’s decision-making process.

“A loss is discouraging but as far as my temperament, if I saw a proposition for us to help this team, no matter what this score was today, I would look at it on the merits of this team. If you’re talking about trading for a player or trading a player, I’d completely look at it on the merits of this team, both for next week or the weeks after or for the longer term,” Jones told reporters following the Cowboys’ loss. “No, today would not affect decisions on trading for a player.”

Denver produced 426 total yards during Sunday’s wire-to-wire win over Dallas to improve its winning streak to five in a row. Cowboys QB Dak Prescott threw two interceptions and was sacked twice by a Broncos defense that leads the league with 36 sacks.

The Cowboys gave up a season-high 44 points. Dallas came into Week 8 ranked second-to-last in the NFL in both total defense and points allowed.

Jones hasn’t been shy about the possibility of the Cowboys making a move in advance of the trade deadline. The Cowboys clearly need assistance on defense. Their defensive shortcomings have only magnified after they traded Micah Parsons to the Green Bay Packers just prior to the start of the regular season.

Follow USA TODAY Sports’ Tyler Dragon on X @TheTylerDragon.

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USA Today Sports has live coverage of theSteelers vs. Packers in today’s NFL ‘Sunday Night Football.’

Congratulations to fantasy football managers who survived ‘Byemageddon’ in Week 8. A new challenge will await them in Week 9, when four more teams are out of action.

The Cleveland Browns, New York Jets, Philadelphia Eagles and Tampa Bay Buccaneers will all be off in Week 9. That will render several big-name fantasy producers – namely Saquon Barkley and Emeka Egbuka – unavailable, leaving fantasy managers looking for solid bye-week replacements.

Meanwhile, other fantasy footballers will be looking for injury replacements. New York Giants rookie Cam Skattebo suffered a gruesome-looking ankle injury in Week 8, so his replacements will be among the hottest potential adds on the Week 9 waiver wire.

This week, the waiver wire contains more intriguing running back targets than usual. There are also a couple of passing-game weapons that could be nice upside plays or bye-week fillers for fantasy managers in need of help in that area.

Here’s a look at the best players to target on waivers ahead of Week 9.

Week 9 fantasy football waiver wire targets

RB Tyrone Tracy Jr., New York Giants (Rostered in 48% of Yahoo leagues)

Giants running back Cam Skattebo suffered a gruesome ankle dislocation in the second quarter of the team’s Week 8 game against the Eagles. He was carted off in an air cast and he figures to be out long-term, if not for the remainder of his rookie season.

That will open the door for Tracy to re-emerge as New York’s lead back. The second-year pro racked up 39 yards on 10 carries, most of which came after Skattebo’s exit. The 25-year-old entered Sunday’s game having averaged just 3.5 yards per carry on the season, but he totaled 1,123 scrimmage yards and five touchdowns across 12 starts (and 17 appearances) during his rookie campaign in 2024.

RB Devin Singletary, New York Giants (Rostered in 1% of Yahoo leagues)

The Giants figure to feature Tracy as their primary Skattebo replacement, but Singletary is also part of the plan to replace Skattebo. The 28-year-old had three touches and 28 yards after the rookie left Sunday’s game, but he could see increased action moving forward.

Last season, Singletary averaged just 6.2 touches per game from Week 7 on compared to Tracy’s 15.6. Still, the veteran is worth adding as a high-end handcuff who could emerge as a matchup-dependent flex if the Giants lighten Tracy’s workload because of an early-season shoulder dislocation.

RB Tank Bigsby, Philadelphia Eagles (Rostered in 17% of Yahoo leagues)

Bigsby was viewed as a solid fantasy sleeper to start the 2025 NFL season but an in-season trade to the Eagles briefly quashed his value. Now, the 24-year-old has emerged as the clear-cut backup behind Saquon Barkley and fared well in the fourth quarter after Barkley exited the game with a groin issue.

Barkley may not miss any time because of his injury, especially with the Eagles on bye in Week 9. Still, Bigsby showed what he could do if Barkley ever does miss a game, racking up 104 yards on nine carries in relief of him. Fantasy managers should act accordingly and get him on their rosters as a high-upside handcuff.

RB Dylan Sampson, Cleveland Browns (Rostered in 13% of Yahoo leagues)

Sampson is in a similar boat to Bigsby. The starter in front of him (Quinshon Judkins) got hurt, but the severity of the injury isn’t yet clear. The Browns are also heading into a Week 9 bye, so Judkins may not miss much time.

Even so, Sampson is worth adding. He seems to have usurped the backup role from Jerome Ford – who has been the subject of trade rumors – and would be in line to emerge as Cleveland’s backfield leader if Judkins does miss any time.

Sampson didn’t log a yard on three carries against the Patriots, but he had five catches for 26 as a checkdown option for Dillon Gabriel. That could give him flex value in PPR leagues even if Judkins ends up being OK.

RB Isaiah Davis, New York Jets (Rostered in 9% of Yahoo leagues)

Davis remains behind Breece Hall in New York’s running back rotation, but Hall has been the subject of trade rumors. If the Jets trade the free-agent-to-be, that could allow Davis to step into the lead back role in New York with Braelon Allen (knee) still out of action.

Even if the Jets keep Hall, Davis can still be trusted as a flex in PPR leagues. He had five catches for 44 yards against the Bengals as part of a 12-touch, 109-yard outing.

WR Jayden Higgins, Houston Texans (Rostered in 27% of Yahoo leagues)

With Nico Collins out in Week 8, Higgins emerged as C.J. Stroud’s favorite target. The rookie saw a team-high eight targets and turned them into four catches for 34 yards and a touchdown.

Higgins may not see as high a target share when Collins returns from his concussion. Still, he could earn the team’s No. 2 receiver position as the season progresses, at which point the 6-4, 215-pound wide-out would be an intriguing fantasy option thanks to his size.

WR Jaylin Noel, Houston Texans (Rostered in 9% of Yahoo leagues)

Like Higgins, Noel has started building chemistry with Stroud. Noel posted five catches for 63 yards a week after generating four catches for 77 yards against the Seahawks.

Noel (5-11, 201 pounds) may not profile as the same type of scoring threat as Higgins, but his shiftiness and separation skills should make him a solid WR3 or flex option moving forward.

WR Troy Franklin, Denver Broncos (Rostered in 37% of Yahoo leagues)

Franklin had a great showing against Dallas’ bottom-ranked defense against fantasy wide receivers. The second-year pro led the team in targets (8), receptions (6), receiving yards (89) and receiving touchdowns (2) while continuing to show great chemistry with Bo Nix.

Franklin has a tough matchup on deck with the Houston Texans, but he’s still worth rostering as the second-most targeted player on a solid-looking Broncos offense.

QB Sam Darnold, Seattle Seahawks (Rostered in 36% of Yahoo leagues)

Jalen Hurts and Baker Mayfield are on bye in Week 9. Fantasy managers searching for replacements for them can look no further than Darnold, who is facing a solid-looking matchup with a Commanders team that has surrendered the sixth-most fantasy points per game to QBs entering Week 8.

Darnold has posted multiple passing touchdowns in four of his last six games and is averaging 250.6 passing yards per game this season. He has a high floor and should be ready for a big outing after his Week 8 bye.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Argentine President Javier Milei secured a decisive victory Sunday in midterm elections, expanding his control of Congress and giving his government fresh momentum to push forward with deep spending cuts and sweeping free-market reforms.

The result gives Milei’s libertarian movement a boost and marks another sharp turn for one of Latin America’s largest and most volatile economies.

Milei’s party, La Libertad Avanza, won about 41.5% of the vote in Buenos Aires province, a historic upset in a region long dominated by the Peronist opposition. The rival coalition took 40.8%, according to figures cited by Reuters and The Associated Press.

Nationwide, La Libertad Avanza increased its seats in the lower house from 37 to 64, positioning Milei to more easily defend his vetoes and executive decrees that have defined his economic agenda.

‘The result is better than even the most optimistic Milei supporters were hoping for,’ Marcelo Garcia, Americas director at the risk-analysis firm Horizon Engage, said in comments reported by Reuters. ‘With this result, Milei will be able to easily defend his decrees and vetoes in Congress.’

Political consultant Gustavo Cordoba told Reuters the outcome reflected a cautious optimism among voters who appear willing to give Milei’s economic policies more time.

‘Many people were willing to give the government another chance,’ Cordoba said. ‘The triumph is unobjectionable, unquestionable.’

Reuters reported that inflation has fallen from 12.8% before Milei’s inauguration to 2.1% last month. His government has also posted a fiscal surplus and pushed through broad deregulation measures — a dramatic reversal after years of economic turbulence.

According to The Associated Press, the U.S. government under President Donald Trump offered Argentina a $40 billion aid package, including a $20 billion currency swap and a proposed $20 billion debt-investment facility, after tying future U.S. support to Milei’s performance in the midterms.

Investors reacted positively to the results. Reuters reported that Argentine bonds and stocks are expected to rally as Milei’s stronger hand in Congress gives him the political capital to accelerate his reforms

Milei called the election ‘a turning point for Argentina,’ according to AFP via the Times of Israel.

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In Sunday’s 38-14 loss to the Indianapolis Colts, the No. 1 pick in this year’s NFL draft once again aired out his feelings in a public fashion.

With the Titans trailing 17-7 in the third quarter, Tennessee opted to punt from Indianapolis’ 42-yard line after being stonewalled on a third-and-3 run by Tony Pollard. That call didn’t sit well with Ward, who appeared to mouth an expletive and question the decision by interim coach Mike McCoy in an interaction that quickly became a viral clip on social media.

Johnny Hekker’s punt only went 22 yards, and Colts running back Jonathan Taylor raced for an 80-yard touchdown on Indianapolis’ next play.

‘I think I’m a competitor,’ Ward said in a postgame news conference when asked about the interaction. ‘Our whole offense is like that. Our whole defense is like that. … I just think the biggest thing is we want to be an aggressive team. Especially with the record we have right now, we have to be an aggressive team at the end of the season to get where we want to be.’

Ward stood by his reaction but said it was a product of an aggressive mindset, adding that the problem was ultimately one of execution.

‘I just think it’s a missed opportunity for us as a team to get a first down and keep the drive moving. We weren’t down that much at that time,’ Ward said. ‘So, we’re going to always support whatever decision is made, but at the end of the day, we shouldn’t put ourselves in that position. We should get the first down on third down.’

McCoy, who was in just his second game as interim coach after Tennessee fired Brian Callahan, said he believed that the thinking that drove the decision was sound despite the outcome.

‘It was something we talked about,’ McCoy said of weighing whether to go for it on fourth down. ‘You know, hindsight, you look back and the last thing I thought they were going to do was have the big touchdown run after that. So yeah, I got it. You look back and say, ‘I should have gone for that.’ But initially when I said to punt it, you pin them deep, and the defense had done nice through the second quarter.’

Ward completed 22 of 38 passes for 259 yards with one touchdown and one interception.

Save for a 22-21 win over the Arizona Cardinals in Week 5, the Titans have dropped every game since their season opener by at least 10 points.

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