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A 25-year-old woman who caused the car accident that killed Minnesota Vikings rookie cornerback Khyree Jackson and two former high school teammates last year pleaded guilty to three counts of negligent homicide under the influence of alcohol.

Prosecutors will recommend a five-year sentence for Cori Clingman, but she is most likely to spend only three years in prison when she is sentenced on Feb. 4. She has been on home detention and left the courthouse without comment.

‘Each count that Ms. Clingman has pleaded to carries a maximum penalty of five years in prison, and based on the circumstances of this case, we are recommending a sentence of 15 years, suspend all but three. The judge, of course, will make the final decision,’ Prince George’s County State’s Attorney Tara Jackson said. 

The Maryland State Police responded to a crash at 3:14 a.m. on July 6, 2024, in Upper Marlboro, Maryland. The three people killed, who were former Wise High School football teammates, were occupants of a maroon Dodge Charger. Isaiah Hazel, 23, was the driver, Jackson was the front-seat passenger and Anthony Lytton Jr., 24, was seated in the back of the vehicle.

Two other vehicles, a silver Infiniti Q50, driven by Clingman, and a silver Chevrolet Impala, were involved in the crash. Authorities say Clingman attempted to change lanes, driving at 109 mph and was legally intoxicated, hitting the Charger and Impala. The Charger hit multiple tree stumps and came to rest there.

None of the four people in the other two vehicles were injured.

Jackson began his collegiate career at Fort Scott Community College in Kansas in 2019 before transferring to Alabama and starting the Crimson Tide’s national championship game loss to Georgia in 2022.

Jackson finished his career at Oregon in 2023, where he had 34 tackles, with two sacks, seven pass breakups and three interceptions, earning first-team All-Pac 12 honors.

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A USA TODAY Sports poll of 10 NFL experts ranked the top MVP candidates at the 2025 season’s midpoint.
New England Patriots quarterback Drake Maye and Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes rounded out the top three.
Nine different players, including eight quarterbacks and one running back, received at least one vote in the poll.

As the 2025 NFL regular season crosses its midpoint, the race to be the league’s MVP is a microcosm of the chase for the Lombardi Trophy – a wide-open field with an array of worthy candidates, if not an apparent clubhouse leader.

As such, USA TODAY Sports polled 10 of its NFL experts in a bid to handicap the MVP debate – everyone charged with ranking five submitted candidates. Like the Associated Press voting for the actual award, first-place votes were worth 10 points, second-place votes were worth five, third-place votes were worth three, fourth-place votes were worth two and fifth-place votes were worth one.

Nine players landed on at least one ballot. Here’s how they ranked from fewest points to most (first-place ballots listed in parentheses):

9. QB Daniel Jones, Indianapolis Colts – 2 points

“Daniel Jones” and “MVP” were probably never used simultaneously in the same sentence prior to 2025. “Indiana Jones” and “MVP” were intertwined sporadically thereafter … until Daniel Jones resurfaced last Sunday with one of his patented five-turnover games. All of that aside, Jones seems to have found a home in Indy and his best professional season, which includes a league-high 2,404 passing yards, has been at the forefront of the Colts’ surprise resurgence.

8. QB Jalen Hurts, Philadelphia Eagles – 10 points (1)

Kinda typical Hurts – the stats not necessarily eye-popping, even as the wins continue to pile up. ICYMI, Philly moved back into the NFC’s projected No. 1 playoff slot last weekend … during the bye week. And while there have been rampant questions about the offense this season, few have been targeted specifically at Hurts, who’s completing more than 70% of his passes, has a 15-to-1 touchdown pass-to-interception ratio and has added five more TDs with his legs. But, probably most important, he continues to be the steadying influence this talented team so often seems to need as it seeks a third Super Bowl berth over a four-season span.

7. QB Baker Mayfield, Tampa Bay Buccaneers – 18 points (1)

He seemed to be the unofficial MVP front-runner a few weeks ago, but the Bucs have split their past two games – both quiet outings for Mayfield. Still, the peripatetic No. 1 pick of the 2018 draft has stabilized an offense that’s been besieged by injuries dating to last season and shown no let-up. And Mayfield has been clutch in crunch time, leading the league with four fourth-quarter comebacks and four game-winning drives. Hard to imagine where this ship would be without its captain.

6. QB Sam Darnold, Seattle Seahawks – 20 points

He’s certainly proven his Pro Bowl coming-out party with Minnesota in 2024 was no fluke. Darnold has seemingly been a perfect fit in the Pacific Northwest, his firm but laid back style dovetailing culturally with the ‘Hawks while his efficient play has taken this offense to a new level. No NFC quarterback has a higher passer rating (116.0), while Darnold has made his shots count – those 13.7 yards per completion, often to WR Jaxon Smith-Njigba, leading the league. And, really, who had Seattle tied for the NFC’s best record (6-2) at the halfway mark?

5. QB Josh Allen, Buffalo Bills – 22 points (1)

This squad is also 6-2, the reigning MVP his usual sterling self while accounting for 20 total touchdowns. Allen’s 70.4% completion rate would be his personal best, while his passer rating (107.0) is just a tick off his career high from 2020 (107.2). However, if Allen wants to go back to back from a personal level, he’ll almost surely have to get the Bills back atop the AFC East.

4. RB Jonathan Taylor, Colts – 23 points (1)

Will he be the first non-quarterback to win MVP honors since Adrian Peterson in 2012? Fat chance … and Taylor might not even be the Offensive Player of the Year if Smith-Njigba becomes the NFL’s first 2,000-yard receiver. Nevertheless, Taylor is having a splendid year for the surprising Colts – arguably the linchpin of this team, not Jones – and leads the league with 895 rushing yards and 14 touchdowns from scrimmage, six of them covering at least 18 yards.

3. QB Patrick Mahomes, Kansas City Chiefs – 24 points

Hate to speak for my colleagues, but this feels like something of a projection given K.C. wouldn’t even make the playoffs if the season ended today (it doesn’t). But Mahomes is on pace to pass for 4,400+ yards and 32 TDs, which would be his best numbers since 2022 – also the last year he was the MVP. And if an offense that has WR Rashee Rice back and could soon have LT Josh Simmons returning to the lineup finds another gear in the second half, perhaps the Chiefs will win their 10th consecutive AFC West crown and Mahomes’ third league MVP.

2. QB Drake Maye, New England Patriots – 31 points (1)

The second-year passer is the league’s breakout star of 2025, leading the NFL in passer rating (116.9) and completion rate (74.1%) – and that figure could threaten Drew Brees’ single-season standard (74.4% in 2018), even though Maye is much more inclined to strike deep downfield than Brees was and typically does so in New England’s less forgiving environs. Maye’s 2,285 yards and 17 TDs through the air have already surpassed his rookie numbers (in four fewer games), and with 270 yards rushing, he’s starting to legitimately justify the comparisons to Allen. Most importantly, Maye’s already gotten the best of Allen’s Bills once this season, and might not only lead the Patriots to their first AFC East title since Tom Brady was there but maybe even the conference’s No. 1 playoff seed.

1. QB Matthew Stafford, Los Angeles Rams – 60 points (5)

Could a 17-year vet who’s only been a Pro Bowler twice and gotten AP MVP votes just once in a career that’s brought belated recognition take home the league’s most prestigious award for on-field performance? Seems like ages ago that Stafford’s status for this season was in question as he battled a balky back during training camp. But his game has been almost perfectly healthy since as he paces the league with 21 TD passes (with just 2 INTs) and 268.4 passing yards per game. Most importantly, the 37-year-old has the Rams tied for the NFC’s best record (6-2) and might just lead them back to the Super Bowl a year after nearly engineering a stunning upset of the eventual champion Eagles in Philly’s playoff snow.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Editor’s Note: This story has been updated with new information

Indiana football looked to be on the cusp of a historic collapse at Penn State for its first loss of the season, which could have dropped the Hoosiers in the rankings precipitously after entering the game ranked No. 2 in the US LBM Coaches Poll.

Then Fernando Mendoza and Omar Cooper Jr. stepped in.

Facing third-and-goal at the Penn State 7-yard line, Mendoza and Cooper connected for a touchdown, with the latter making a ridiculously impressive toe-tapping catch to give the Hoosiers the 27-24 win over the Nittany Lions on Saturday, Nov. 8 at Beaver Stadium.

‘That’s the best catch I’ve seen all season long,’ Fox Sports’ Joel Klatt said on the broadcast of Cooper Jr.’s catch.

Watch: Omar Cooper Jr. makes game-winning TD catch for Indiana vs Penn State

Here’s a look at Cooper Jr.’s game-winning touchdown catch for Indiana:

The heroic touchdown from Mendoza to Cooper Jr. put an end to Penn State’s late fourth-quarter run that included two touchdowns from Nittany Lions running back Nicholas Singleton and an interception from Mendoza. Singleton’s second touchdown of the fourth quarter, his third of the game, put Penn State up 24-20.

‘It felt amazing,’ Cooper Jr. told Fox Sports’ Jenny Taft after the game on the feeling of reeling in that catch. ‘There was a lot that I missed earlier in the drive before. I made mistakes. I just went to Fernando, ‘That was my fault and we’re going to get another chance. Our defense is going to get a stop and we are going to drive (down the field) and get a touchdown.’ That is what we came here to do.’

The game-winning catch from Cooper Jr. also created a piece of history for the Hoosiers, giving Indiana its first-ever win against Penn State at Beaver Stadium in program history. It is just the Hoosiers’ third-ever win in program history against Penn State. The Nittany Lions now lead the all-time series record to 25-3.

Indiana’s perfect season continues at 10-0 going into its Week 11 home game against Wisconsin.

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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Anna Hall can remember her first “catastrophic failure” at sports, at least in her eyes. She was 12.

The reigning world champion at heptathlon comes from a family of athletes. Her father, David Hall, was a quarterback at Michigan. He also ran track and played basketball at the school in the early-to-mid-1980s.

Her older sisters, Kathryn and Julia, were athletes at Michigan, too.

“We grew up competing with each other, literally over everything: grades, who could learn how to ride a bike first,” Anna Hall tells USA TODAY Sports. “So I always knew I wanted to do sports just because I saw my sisters in it. I was constantly chasing them down, being three years behind. I was not as fast, but I was determined to catch up to them.”

Along with her sisters, Hall had qualified for a USA Track & Field junior national meet.

“To me, that was like the end of the world,” she says, “and I went just for high jump and I was so nervous, I didn’t even make a bar.”

She thought her dad was disappointed, but he took her to In-N-Out Burger after it was over, she says, “like it was a normal Wednesday.”

Looking back, she felt propelled forward.

“I know it’s not the end of the world,” says Hall, now 24. “No matter how this goes, I’m going to In-N-Out with my dad.

‘I’ve failed a lot. I think anybody that’s gone far in anything has.”

We feel we are in control of success and how it affects our lives. But what about failure?

Why, especially as young athletes and parents, do we usually dislike it so much? We spoke with Dinin (also a father of two) and Hall to gather 10 perspectives on failure you might not think about:

1. Let’s come out and say it: Failure (like losing) stinks. But that’s the point.

Dinin has become known as the ‘TikTok Professor’ for his bite-sized lessons about the importance of failure.

He has based his life on it as an English Ph. D-turned-software engineer who built venture-backed tech companies.

“One of the things I had to learn is, like, 98% of what’s gonna happen is not gonna to work the way you intended,” he says, “and it was a lesson that I didn’t (know) because I was a Duke undergrad way back when. And so I still had that mindset of everything has to be perfect. …  

“You wind up with these kind of weird phrases like, ‘Fail fast’ and ‘embrace failure.’ And I’m like, ‘No, failure stinks. That’s the most ridiculous thing I’ve ever heard.’ It’s not good to fail. It’s just also not bad to fail. It’s just natural.”

Dinin was speaking with USA TODAY Sports in a video interview earlier this week from a symposium hosted by TrueSport and the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency. It focused on mental wellness and supportive sports systems.

TrueSport is a learning and teaching organization that operates with the understanding that sports is a lab for life, where athletes have unlimited opportunities for success and failure.

At the event, Dinin asked questions the way he dangles what he calls ‘failure challenges’ to his students.

Could you sell a Jolly Rancher for $100?

He told his class they had one hour to do it.

“Some of the students are gonna run around, they’re gonna embrace it, they’re gonna be trying to sell, they’re gonna be failing,” he says. “Some of them are gonna walk over to the coffee shop on campus and get themselves a croissant and a cappuccino and just sit there for an hour. And you might go, ‘Well, that kid didn’t do their work.’ No, actually, the only thing that matters isn’t what you did. It’s, ‘What does it teach you about yourself? And how can you use that information to put yourself in a position to be more successful in the future?’ ”

2. Sports are something we grow into, and they become self-motivating when we fall short

We can’t be scared to be wrong in venture capitalism. Doesn’t sports work the same way?

It’s a process we may not realize as we’re going through it – taking failures and losses really hard – but we do in time.

Hall goes back to the burger stop after she bombed that big meet.

“I remember years later when I started to become one of those athletes that loves pressure and thrived under pressure, I was like, ‘Oh, I needed that first experience of going to a meet that you perceive as the biggest deal ever and crashing out at it to learn how to be like, ‘OK, the next time I go, I know what the pressure is like, I know I’m ready for it,’ ” she says.

“It definitely needs to come from you. The expectations from my parents (David and Ronette) were always just mostly surrounding morals, saying thank you to my coach when I left practice and doing the drill they asked me to do as hard as I can do it.”

3. Education, and getting better at sports, means failure, or at least an A-

Dinin says Duke students are products of an education system managed through grades.

“If you don’t get that checkpoint, the worst thing that can happen is you fail the grade, you get held back,” Dinin says. “But in the rest of life, right, we have a very different relationship with failure. You don’t keep trying the same thing over and over again until you get it, until it works.

“We all still operate just the same way once we leave school. And so I think that’s a huge part of where our complex relationship with failure comes from.”

He offers incentives, instead, by giving students a poor mid-semester grade to see how they react.

“It’s always interesting to see which ones write me an email within 10 minutes of giving that grade, like, ‘I don’t understand,’ ” he says. “It’s designed that the good outcome is by the end of the semester.”

4. Criticism is ultimately what makes you better

Now, let’s look at the concept of failure through the lens of a Duke athlete.

“I say, hell hath no fury like a Duke student who gets an A-minus,” Dinin says. “Athletes take that lower grade and they go, ‘OK, what do I need to do to improve?’

“In the entrepreneurial world, athletes are some of the best students because they’re the ones who understand that you’re not gonna get things right the first time or the second or the third or the fourth or the 20th.’

As athletes, Dinin says, we come to realize the time horizons it takes to excel at something.

“They definitely understand the concept of trial and error and failure,” he says. “Anna Hall didn’t become incredible in a weekend. And she didn’t start incredible.”

5. If we love to do something, failure – and the right amount of pressure – can fuel us

Whichever sport Anna and her sisters tried – field hockey, lacrosse, swimming, basketball, track – they needed to do their best at them.

Her father, the three-sport college athlete, would hold them accountable to that standard. That was the pressure.

“If I was playing soccer, he’s like, ‘Well, then go kick the ball around in the backyard with your sister,’ ” Hall says. “And if I was like, ‘No, I don’t ever want to do that,’ then, ‘OK, like, maybe let’s not do soccer.’

“I think a small bit of pressure is actually really healthy because there’s pressure in all areas of life, whether that’s school, work. But it was geared towards doing what you love.”

6. When we have passion for something, failure is the motivator, not the deterrent

After about eighth grade, when Hall stopped playing soccer and pursued track full-time, she became consumed with the variety of the heptathlon’s events and the practice to perfect them.

When you love something, you can throw yourself into it, even if you get cut from a team. It’s not the same feeling as, say, preparing for an organic chemistry retake, which you might dread.

“At the Olympic Games or the world championships, it is fun because it’s the moment you’ve been dreaming of, but you really learn that the process and the day in and day out of enjoying practice and enjoying seeing yourself get better at something, that is really where your joy and development comes from,” Hall says. “I won the world championships this year and I’m super proud of that medal, but ultimately what made that moment special was all that went into it, not necessarily just standing on top of the podium.”

WHAT IS FUN? Sometimes, as a tennis star learned, it’s overcoming struggle

7. There isn’t a right answer – or a winner and loser – to everything

Before she became a world champion, Hall broke her foot during a fall in 2021, ahead of the Tokyo Olympics. She also had knee surgery in 2024, months before Paris.

“Honestly, my headspace was horrible,” she said at the symposium. “I think, people were always like, ‘Oh, how did you stay so positive?’ I didn’t. Every day, I was like, I don’t think this is going to work. I’m terrified.”

Dinin says athletes tend to have a sense there’s a winner and loser in every choice they make.

“Winning isn’t (always) whether or not you got the best time,” he says. “Winning is often what do you value the most?’

Sports is hard enough, Hall’s father used to tell her. It’s not worth it if you don’t love it, or dwell too much on wins and losses. Find the right team, or an energetic coach, that makes you want to come back no matter what.

“Having an injury on my takeoff legs, I was actually fearful to jump,” Hall says. “Every time I said I couldn’t do it, or I didn’t think it would work, there was five people telling me, ‘We’re gonna do this, and this is how.’ I think when you have people surrounding you speaking life into you like that, it’s almost like they forced me to believe in myself.”

8. Sometimes bodies fail, and we have to be patient

Dinin has a women’s basketball player in class who tore her ACL right before the season started. She feels like a failure, he says, because so much of her identity is tied to her sport.

Perhaps you have a kid with a similar injury, or even a repeat injury, and they have been forced to be patient.

“Athletes really struggle with (that),’ Dinin says. ‘They get injured and it just totally changes who they are because it’s all they know. It’s like, ‘It’s OK, bodies fail.’ This is again, something that we get taught in school, right? Perfect attendance.”

After having knee surgery the year of the Paris Olympics, Hall took time to reflect on how she could avoid putting herself in that situation again. The answer: taking a break.

Following her world championships win, she took five weeks off from physical activity, with the exception of an occasional Pilates class.

“For a professional athlete that’s really unheard of,” she says. “But my coaches (said) no, it’s really important to actually get out of shape a little bit, let your body heal itself and then the fitness will come back. I was super sore those first few days, but I didn’t lose everything.”

9. Turn off the ‘parent brain’: Being the best doesn’t necessarily mean being successful

Dinin says he fails daughters Adeline, 10, and Imogen, 7, when he relies too much on what he calls “parent brain.”

He can sit with students who tell him they don’t like their classes to prepare them to become a physician or lawyer and say, “It’s OK, there’s so many jobs in the world. Go into visual media studies.”

But when his kindergartner or first-grader comes home and tells him she didn’t do well on her addition? Forget painting. You’ve got to be really good at math and science.

“I’m like, ‘No, you gotta go be a doctor because that’s the stable profession,’ ” he says. “And so, I have to imagine the same thing happens for parents of youth sports. Objectively, we can sit back and say, ‘Hey, it’s OK. Things work out. People get to where they need.’

“But then when you’re that parent, watching that kid on the soccer field and that kid’s maybe hoping for a scholarship or (to) get on the traveling team or whatever it is, and then suddenly all that goes out the window and you just want them to be the best instead of be successful.”

10. Failure is a synonym for learning, and learning is everywhere

Hall is focused on Los Angeles in 2028, looking at her injuries as blips, and building blocks of learning.

It’s the way Dinin challenges his students to think. The final exam is based on a list of tasks he hands out at the beginning of the semester, such as pen-spinning, juggling or playing the harmonica.

He holds a talent show based on how well you learn your new skill.

“Usually the way every student learns is the night before they cram,” he says. “But that’s actually the worst kind of learning you can do. The best kind of learning is slow, methodical every time, bit by bit. And there’s just no way you can become a great juggler in one night. And so, you can really see whether or not they have figured out how to embody this lesson of slow, incremental, failure-based learning.”

A good outcome, he said, is that by the end of the semester, the student doesn’t care what their grade is. Really.

“When I make everything about a grade, it just totally undercuts the class,” he says. “No matter where you are, the best university in the world or anywhere else, you are going to be failing all the time. (It) means you have access to education all the time.”

Borelli, aka Coach Steve, has been an editor and writer with USA TODAY since 1999. He spent 10 years coaching his two sons’ baseball and basketball teams. He and his wife, Colleen, are now sports parents for two high schoolers. His Coach Steve column is posted weekly. For his past columns, click here.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

But Heisman Trophy contender Fernando Mendoza choreographed a game-winning drive that ended in an acrobatic touchdown grab by Omar Cooper Jr., moving the No. 2-ranked Hoosiers to 10-0 on the season after the 27-24 win.

It has been that kind of season for Curt Cignetti and Co. so far, and the second-year coach showed some rare emotion in the immediate aftermath of his team’s come-from-behind win.

‘Great play in the end zone,’ Cignetti told Fox Sports sideline reporter Jenny Taft. ‘Didn’t draw it up in the dirt but, I mean we saw what they were doing. And it was a great throw and catch. And you know what? This was an unbelievable win. I’ve seen a lot of stuff in my days. I’ve never seen anything quite like this.’

Mendoza took a sack on first-and-10 from Indiana’s own 20-yard line, moving the Hoosiers back to their own 13. With no timeouts remaining, the first-year Cal transfer set the tone for the remainder of the drive after hitting Cooper Jr. on a 22-yard rope down the seam on the next play.

Mendoza also found tight end Riley Nowakowski for a 29-yard gain on the drive, dropping in a pass between multiple defenders.

More magic came on third-and-goal from the 7 with 36 seconds remaining, when Cooper Jr. made perhaps the catch of the year for the game-winning score. Cooper Jr. leapt into the air and came down with the pass, miraculously keeping his flailing right leg from touching out of bounds before dragging his left foot in just inside the marker.

‘Refused to lose, basically,’ Cignetti told Fox sideline reporter Jenny Taft after the game. ‘Sacked on the (1-yard line), haven’t done anything the last five, six passes, he’s got no protection, right. Run the ball through us, play-action pass. No timeouts left, make a play on second and who knows what, 30? For a first down.’

Cignetti is now 21-2 in his second season at Indiana and is a virtual lock to reach the College Football Playoff for the second consecutive year.

‘Every game’s important,’ Cignetti said. ‘We played a little shorthanded, but that’s part of the deal for every team in America. And we gotta play better in a lot of different areas and we’re lucky to win, but I am so proud of these kids.’

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The Senate is in for a rare weekend session as the chamber remains in limbo while lawmakers try to find a way out of the government shutdown.

Behind the scenes, appropriators are cooking up a trio of spending bills to attach to the House-passed continuing resolution (CR), along with an extension to the bill that would, if passed, reopen government until December or January.

But the package was not ready for primetime Saturday, and no votes were held. Instead, Senate Republicans spent hours railing against Obamacare and Senate Democrats’ desire to extend the expiring premium subsidies on the floor. 

When the package does hit the floor, Senate Democrats, as they’ve done 14 times previously, are likely to block it. It all comes as the upper chamber is scheduled for a week-long recess to coincide with Veterans Day.

Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., now wants to keep lawmakers in town until the shutdown ends.

When asked if there would be a vote on the plan, Thune said it would be ideal to have the package on the floor, but ‘we’ve got to have votes to actually pass it.’ Republicans are reticent to put the CR out again just to see it fail.

‘I’ve been talking all morning with some of the folks that are involved with the meeting, and I think we’re getting close to having it ready,’ Thune said. ‘We just need to get the text out there.’

The spending package, however, is just one piece of the puzzle to reopening the government. 

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and his caucus, freshly emboldened by sweeping Election Day victories earlier in the week, are sticking by their newly released plan that would extend the expiring Obamacare subsidies by one year and create a bipartisan working group to negotiate next steps after the government reopens.

But Senate Republicans immediately rejected the idea; Thune called it a ‘non-starter,’ while others in the GOP were angered by the proposal.

Sen. Eric Schmitt, R-Mo., said he would appeal to President Donald Trump and his administration to slash funding from ‘pet projects’ in blue states and cities to pay federal workers as the shutdown drags on.

‘The idea that you’ve got a bunch of kamikaze pilots trying to burn this whole place down because they’re emboldened by an election where Democrats won in Democrat areas is totally insane,’ he said.

Senate Democrats were largely unsurprised that Republicans rejected the offer, however.

‘I know many Republicans stormed out of the gate to dismiss this offer, but that’s a terrible mistake,’ Schumer said.

Thune and his conference have, throughout the course of the 39-day shutdown, said they would only deal with the subsidies after the government reopened and have offered Schumer and Senate Democrats a vote on a bill addressing the healthcare issue once the closure ends.

‘I’m not surprised,’ Sen. Mark Kelly, D-Ariz., said. ‘They don’t want to help people with their healthcare.’

But Republicans countered that a simple extension of the enhanced subsidies, which were modified under former President Joe Biden during the COVID-19 pandemic, would funnel money straight to insurers.

Sen. Katie Britt, R-Ala., has been in talks with Senate Democrats on a path forward, particularly through jump-starting government funding with the impending trio of spending bills.

After Schumer unveiled Democrats’ plan, she charged that ‘since Obamacare came into effect, look who’s gotten rich? It’s not the people.’

‘They’re talking about the people’s premiums and have … they have taken it to the companies that are actually making the money off of it? They’re not,’ Britt said. ‘So, I look forward to hearing why in the world they want to continue these profits and not actually help the people they serve.’

Senate Democrats, however, contend that their offer was fair.

Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., argued that there were some in the caucus that wanted to do a multi-year extension, while others wanted to go beyond just the enhanced subsidies. He reiterated his frustration that the core of the issue, from his perspective, was that neither Schumer nor Thune would sit down and negotiate.

‘We made a really simple, really scaled-down offer that could get the government up and operating and [is] really good for them politically,’ he said. ‘I just still don’t understand why they won’t accept the offer.’

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Gus Johnson’s voice has been the excitable soundtrack to dozens of thrilling moments in college football over the course of his decorated broadcasting career.

On Saturday, he narrated a play so exciting he nearly lost that distinctive voice.

Facing a third-and-goal from the Penn State 7-yard line, Indiana quarterback Fernando Mendoza beat a ferocious oncoming pass rush to get off a throw to the back of the end zone. 

Hoosiers wide receiver Omar Cooper Jr. rose high in the air to haul in the pass and, remarkably, got a foot down in bounds for a go-ahead touchdown with 36 seconds remaining in the game as No. 2 Indiana held off an upset bid to earn a 27-24 victory against a Penn State team playing under an interim coach.

Perhaps the only people inside Beaver Stadium more roused by the touchdown than Indiana’s players and coaches was Johnson.

“Touchdown! Wow!” Johnson exclaimed, with his voice rising about as high in octave as it physically could. “Omar Cooper! Unbelievable!”

Johnson had every reason to be excited, with his partner in the booth, Fox Sports analyst Joel Klatt, calling it “the best catch I’ve seen all season long.”

With the win, the Hoosiers improve to 10-0 on the season, with only games against unranked Wisconsin and Purdue teams remaining on their schedule. The victory was Indiana’s first-ever at Penn State.

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President Donald Trump wants the new Washington Commanders stadium to be named after him, reports ESPN.com.

According to the report, the White House has been in contact with the Commanders’ ownership group to express interest in having the new facility named after him.

The proposed $3.7 billion domed stadium will be situated on the same site as the Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium, which served as the team’s home from 1961 to 1996. The Commanders will reportedly cover $2.7 billion of the cost, with the city contributing the remaining $1 billion, while also leasing the stadium to the team.

The team then moved to Northwest Stadium in Landover, Maryland, before the 1997 season. The team has made the playoffs only seven times, including last year’s NFC Championship appearance, since moving into their current stadium. Washington has not won the Super Bowl since 1992.

The stadium was known as FedExField from 1997 to 2024, continuing the standards of sports teams leasing stadium naming rights to corporate sponsors. Among NFL stadiums, only Soldier Field in Chicago and Green Bay’s Lambeau Field don’t have a corporate name attached to their stadium.

Trump is expected to be in attendance for the Commanders’ home game against the Detroit Lions on Sunday. Since returning to office for a second term in January, Trump has been to Super Bowl LIX, the Daytona 500, two UFC fights, the FIFA Club World Cup, the U.S. Open tennis men’s final and the Ryder Cup.

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Don’t read too much into the score of the first game of the U.S. women’s Rivalry Series against Canada.

The Americans beat their archrivals 4-1 on Thursday night in Cleveland, thanks to three power-play goals by Abbey Murphy and a vault-like effort in the final two minutes by goaltender Aerin Frankel. It was the third win in a row over Canada, a streak that includes an overtime thriller in April to win the world title.

“Let’s see what happens after two games,” U.S. coach John Wroblewski said.

That isn’t just coach speak. The PWHL doesn’t begin training camps until next week, which meant Thursday night was the first competitive game for those players since May. All but three of Canada’s players are in the PWHL, while almost a third of the U.S. roster is in college.

That includes Murphy, who is in her final year at Minnesota.

“Some of our college players have a little more timing to their game right now,” Wroblewski said. “I didn’t think some of our pros looked all that sharp tonight, either.”

Besides, the U.S. women only need to look back to last year’s Rivalry Series to avoid getting complacent. The Americans won the opener 7-2 only to have the Canadians jump out to a 4-1 lead in the second game on their way to a 5-4 shootout win.

“We ended up tying and getting into overtime, but that was Canada’s game. Let’s just see what happens after Saturday,” Wroblewski said.

Here’s what you need to know about the second game of the Rivalry Series:

When do the U.S. women and Canada play?

Game 2 of the Rivalry Series between the USA and Canada is at 6 p.m. ET on Saturday, Nov 8.

Where is the game being played?

The game is at Key Bank Center in Buffalo, New York

Where can I watch the USA-Canada Rivalry Series?

The game will air on NHL Network.

How can I stream the USA-Canada Rivalry Series?

Fubo and certain Sling TV packages carry NHL Network. Fubo offers a free trial for new subscribers. 

Watch Rivalry Series on Fubo

Homecoming game

“The Cleveland Queen” had a night to remember.

Laila Edwards, who grew up in Cleveland Heights, had an assist on the first U.S. goal Thursday night. She also drew the loudest cheers when she was introduced as a starter, and Hilary Knight handed over ceremonial puck drop duties to her.

The day before the game, Cleveland Cavaliers forward Larry Nance Jr. was spotted wearing Edwards’ jersey.

“This has definitely been a very special couple of days that I’m going to remember forever,” said Edwards, who had not played in her hometown since her sophomore year in high school. (She went to a Bishop Kearney High School in Rochester, New York to play hockey.)

“It’s been super fun and I’m sad it’s ending,” she added.

Saturday’s game will be a homecoming for veteran forward Hayley Scamurra, who grew up in Buffalo, and Haley Winn, who is from Rochester, which is about an hour away.

What is the Rivalry Series?

Now in its sixth season, the Rivalry Series features the U.S. and Canadian women’s national teams. This year’s edition consists of four games, the first two in the United States and the last two in Canada.

The Americans won the opener in Cleveland 4-1. After Saturday night’s game in Buffalo, the Rivalry Series will wrap up with games Dec. 10 and 13 in Edmonton, Alberta.

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The college football season is building to a crescendo when the College Football Playoff field is announced next month. Between now and that final weekend, there are five Saturdays of games that will set the table for sorting out the 12 teams selected.

As the games have more magnitude, the pressure is greater on teams and coaches. That pressure can lead to surprising results. Week 11 offers plenty of opportunities for contenders to post big wins or have big disappointments. There are key matchups in the SEC, Big 12 and Big Ten that will shape those races

Who will take a big step forward Saturday? Who are the teams in potential trouble that could see their postseason hopes dashed?

The USA TODAY Sports college football staff will help answer some of those questions. Matt Hayes, Jordan Mendoza, Paul Myerberg, Erick Smith, Eddie Timanus and Blake Toppmeyer have their bold predictions for Week 11 of the college football season.

Mississippi State bowl-eligible after Georgia upset

Georgia has been living on the edge during its SEC schedule with multiple fourth-quarter comebacks that have put the Bulldogs in contention for the league title. Mississippi State knows about close games, but has fallen short at home in previous matchups against ranked opponents. Things flip Saturday with Miss State getting its sixth win and becoming an unlikely bowl participant. — Matt Hayes

Texas Tech rolls by Brigham Young

The Big 12 race hinges on the matchup between the Cougars and Red Raiders, with both teams hopeful to make the playoff. However, the case for two teams will be difficult after Texas Tech makes a statement. BYU has played a bit dangerously in recent weeks, and it won’t fly against Texas Tech’s offense in what will be a rocking environment. The Red Raiders don’t let the game remain close and all eyes will be on how far BYU falls down the College Football Playoff rankings. — Jordan Mendoza

Luck runs out for Virginia

Virginia’s luck runs out with a loss to Wake Forest that will cause the Cavaliers to plummet in the US LBM Coaches Poll and the playoff rankings. A loss would be devastating from an at-large perspective and would make an ACC championship the only avenue to a playoff berth. UVA has won two ACC titles since joining the league in 1954, with the most recent in 1995.  — Paul Myerberg

Iowa makes playoff case with takedown of Oregon

We’ve seen the story before with Oregon. A team physical on both lines of scrimmage takes the game to the Ducks and ends up the winner. That was the recipe for Indiana when it won on the road in Eugene. That’s the recipe Iowa can employ when Oregon visits Saturday. Yes, the Hawkeyes don’t have a great offense, but they showed against the Hoosiers they’re a tough opponent in Iowa City. They lost that game in the final two minutes. This time, they win a close one to damage the Ducks and put themselves in College Football Playoff position. — Erick Smith

Indiana pours it on Penn State

Penn State’s season of misery is about to get even worse. It’s not personal, you understand, just business. Indiana will be coming to State College Saturday with a point to prove. The Hoosiers saw what Ohio State could do against the Nittany Lions last week, so now they will be intent upon showing they can do it even better. Expect at least another 50burger. — Eddie Timanus

Alabama piles misery on LSU

After LSU gets walloped by Alabama, Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry calls a news conference and feeds a “mannequin” wearing purple and gold to a live tiger. He threatens to deport Baton Rouge native Scott Woodward and vows to continue the bloodlettings until the situation improves or he otherwise shutters the university. I’m kidding. I swear, I’m kidding. But, seriously, this game pits rivals that are racing in opposite directions. Kalen DeBoer is undefeated at Bryant-Denny Stadium. That will continue, with a game that’s not nearly as close as we would’ve expected in August. — Blake Toppmeyer

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