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Hingle McCringleberry was indeed aghast − and will apparently respond in kind.

After Carolina Panthers running back Rico Dowdle was hit with a 15-yard penalty for unsportsmanlike conduct following his second touchdown at Lambeau Field in Sunday’s 16-13 win over the Green Bay Packers, the man who brought the two-pump rule before the NFL’s competition committee − OK, not really − weighed in.

Actor and comedian Keegan-Michael Key, who portrayed McCringleberry, a fictional wide receiver in a famous ‘Key & Peele’ skit that mocked over-legislated football celebrations, posted the following on Instagram on Sunday evening:

‘Rico! Man, you got robbed − you only did two pumps,’ said a flabbergasted Key, tongue firmly placed in cheek.

‘I’m sorry, man. Now I’m gonna have to write a new sketch.’

Dowdle, surrounded by offensive teammates in the end zone, intentionally offered two thrusts after his score … but no more. Officials flagged him anyway, Dowdle leaving the field perplexed while holding up two fingers.

In the skit that launched him into the zeitgeist, McCringleberry, a rookie member of the ‘Rhinos,’ was repeatedly flagged for celebrating his touchdowns with three pumps − knowing he’d be free and clear by stopping at two.

‘From my understanding and everything I’ve learned, we go over stuff like this every week in the meeting room. I definitely think you’re supposed to get two pumps,’ Dowdle said following the game.

‘Hopefully, I don’t get a fine.’

(In case it wasn’t obvious, the NFL has no official rule spelling out how many pumps are or are not permissible.)

Dowdle’s infraction comes at a time when the league has been emphasizing good sportsmanship. Following the penalty, Carolina kicker Ryan Fitzgerald missed the lengthier extra-point try − a misfire that enabled the Packers to subsequently tie the game 13-13.

However Dowdle, who ran for 130 yards on the day, rumbled for 19 yards on Carolina’s final drive, setting up Fitzgerald for a game-winning 49-yard field goal at the gun.

‘I missed it. I am not going to touch on that,’ Panthers quarterback Bryce Young said.

‘We won, so I am grateful for that.’

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Why should NFL general managers have all the fun?

While the Nov. 4 NFL trade deadline is rapidly approaching, fantasy football managers have a bit more freedom to work toward making some big deals of their own since most fantasy leagues don’t have their trade deadlines for another couple weeks.

So if your team is looking to make a move to bolster a deep playoff run, it’s time to take a look at which players could help you get there — and which players may be worth sending somewhere else.

WEEK 10 BYES: Cincinnati, Dallas, Kansas City, Tennessee

Here are some of this week’s best trade candidates:

Fantasy football players to buy for Week 10

QB Jaxson Dart, New York Giants

This doesn’t feel logical, but just hear me out. Dart generally isn’t among the top 15 QBs in the weekly rankings. Yet he’s managed to finish as the QB5 (pending Monday’s game), QB13, QB2 and QB3 over the past four weeks. He has a rushing TD in each of those games and has turned the ball over a total of one time during that span. This week, Dart faces a Bears defense that just gave up 470 passing yards and four TDs to Joe Flacco.

WR Tee Higgins, Cincinnati Bengals

You’re likely buying high on Higgins after his fabulous 121-yard, two-touchdown effort against Chicago. But the Bengals are on bye this week, and another fantasy team that’s struggling to stay in playoff contention just may be willing to mortgage part of the future to get an immediate starter who’s just a bit of a downgrade. The Bengals have one of the best schedules for wideouts down the stretch (Steelers, Patriots, Bills, Ravens twice), so even if you’re unlikely to land Ja’Marr Chase, at least make an offer for Higgins.

RB Quinshon Judkins, Cleveland Browns

Judkins played only 18 snaps in Week 8 before exiting with a shoulder injury. We don’t really have an update since the Browns were on bye in Week 9, but coach Kevin Stefanski did say last week that Judkins’ status was ‘day-to-day.’ That’s still a good sign if he’ll have nearly two weeks to recover by the time they play the Jets. Judkins has been a workhorse back ever since taking over the starting role and with the weather turning colder along Lake Erie, the Browns will figure to lean on him even more.

RB Bucky Irving, Tampa Bay Buccaneers

Irving has already missed four games with a foot injury and we won’t know his status for this week until the Bucs hit the practice field on Tuesday. However, he did have the benefit of a Week 9 bye, so he won’t have to worry about an off week once he returns. Tampa Bay has made do with Rachaad White and Sean Tucker in the backfield, but Irving has so much more upside. If Irving is close to 100% by the fantasy playoffs, he could be the missing piece to put your team over the top.

TE Tyler Warren, Indianapolis Colts

After all Warren has accomplished in his rookie season, good luck getting his fantasy manager to part with him. But if you can get a foot in the door after his season-low 26 receiving yards in Week 9, you can highlight this week’s matchup against a Falcons defense that’s been the NFL’s stingiest against tight ends … followed by a bye in Week 11. Take the short-term hit now and reap the benefits later with matchups against Jacksonville in Weeks 14 and 17 and Seattle in Week 15.

Fantasy football players to sell for Week 10

TE Jake Ferguson, Dallas Cowboys

Ferguson could be a prime sell-high candidate, especially if he has a good game against the lowly Arizona Cardinals. He leads all tight ends in receptions and PPR fantasy points on the season, even before he steps on the field Monday night. But he reached those heights largely while star WR CeeDee Lamb was out for four weeks with an ankle injury. (With Lamb back as the top target, Ferguson didn’t have a catch last week vs. Denver.) He has also feasted on defenses that have trouble covering the tight end. After tonight, that won’t be the case again until Week 14 with a bye week followed by games against the Raiders (look it up!), Eagles and Chiefs.

RB Kyle Monangai, Chicago Bears

Starting in place of veteran D’Andre Swift, Monangai ran wild for 198 total yards to slot in as the RB3 for the week. He’s obviously earned more playing time when Swift returns, but coach Ben Johnson remains loyal to his former/current player. Let someone else be mesermized by the rookie’s performance against the Bengals ‘defense.’ He scored double-digit fantasy points only once while sharing time with Swift. Maybe you hold Monangai for this week’s game against the Giants, but Chicago has a brutal schedule in the fantasy playoffs.

RB Kyren Williams, Los Angeles Rams

Williams totaled a season highs in carries (25) and rushing yards (114) while plowing for a touchdown against the Saints. But not every game script is going to fall so perfectly in place for Williams. Rams QB Matthew Stafford leads the NFL with 21 TD passes and he’s going to stick with what’s been working so well. Kyren has seen his rushing touchdown totals regress from 14 last season to just three so far. And backup Blake Corum is seeing consistent work in relief.

WR Nico Collins, Houston Texans

WR Jameson Williams, Detroit Lions

The up-and-down season for Williams just hit another peak thanks to a 37-yard, highlight-reel touchdown catch. But don’t mistake his four catches for 66 yards as an indication that the squeaky wheel from Week 7’s goose egg is getting greased. The Lions already have WR Amon-Ra St. Brown and TE Sam LaPorta as their top targets in the passing game — and they need to get RB Jahmyr Gibbs back on track much more than they need to keep feeding Jamo. Not even a matchup with Washington this week can make him a must-start.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., and Senate Republicans are considering pushing back the House-passed government funding extension in a bid to give lawmakers more time to pass spending bills.

The House’s continuing resolution (CR) would reopen the government until Nov. 21. That bill has been blocked by Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and Senate Democrats 13 times so far and has pushed the shutdown into record-breaking territory.

Given that the original seven-week plan has now shrunk to just three weeks as the shutdown drags on, Thune and the Senate GOP realize that more time will be needed to pass appropriations bills.

‘The House-passed CR is, you know, the idea that we could get any appropriations bills done, you know, by November the 21st now, that date’s lost,’ Thune said.

The objective now is to produce a CR that extends the funding deadline, possibly into January. Thune said that he was ‘certainly open’ to extending the deadline into next year. Senate Republicans tried to get a package of three bills on the floor, along with possibly more, late last month. But that move was blocked by Senate Democrats.

‘As you look at the calendar, if you want to do normal appropriations work, you look at how long it takes to get bills across the floor in the Senate and through the House,’ he said. ‘It’s, you know, the longer sort of runway there is better.’

To do so would either require a fresh CR, or the House-passed bill could be amended. Still, anything that Republicans hash out will need to break through the 60-vote threshold in the Senate and require support from Democrats.

Any changes to the House’s bill, or a new bill, would also need to be sent back to the House, which House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., has kept out of session now for over six weeks.

Johnson, when asked about time running out on the House-passed CR, didn’t say whether lawmakers would need to craft a new one or extend the Nov. 21 deadline. He blamed Senate Democrats, however, for running out the clock. 

‘We’re very mindful of the clock,’ Johnson told Fox News’ Will Cain on ‘The Will Cain Show.’ ‘And the great irony here is the Democrats are the ones that are taking the time off that clock. We needed it.’

But lawmakers in the lower chamber already expected that more time would be needed given the blockade in the upper chamber.

House Appropriations Committee Chairman Tom Cole, R-Okla., told Fox News Digital in an interview late last month that he believed a new CR would be needed, ‘having wasted this much time.’

Asked about what timing he believed would be realistic, Cole said he could see a short-term measure ‘probably into early January’ in a bid to avoid a colossal, year-end funding bill known as an omnibus where all 12 appropriations bills and numerous spending and policy riders are crammed into one bill.

‘In both chambers, both parties, there’s a dread of what’s called the Christmas omnibus, where we put you right up to the edge of Christmas, and they don’t let you go home to your family until you pass a God awful omnibus bill. We don’t want to do that to our members,’ he said.

But there’s another faction within the GOP calling for a longer-term bill. A source familiar with the House Freedom Caucus told Fox News Digital last month that its chairman, Rep. Andy Harris, R-Md., would advocate for a bill extending into December 2026 — provided he agreed with the details in the measure itself.

Meanwhile, Thune said that he was optimistic that the shutdown could end this week. The Senate is nearing yet another scheduled recess, this time for Veterans’ Day next week, that could see lawmakers leave Washington, D.C., with the government still closed.

He wasn’t ready to outright cancel the recess, but noted that ‘if we don’t start seeing some progress or some evidence of that by at least the middle of this week, it’s hard to see how we would finish anything by the end of the week.’

‘I think we’re getting close to an off-ramp here, but, you know, this is unlike any other government shutdown,’ he said.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

President Donald Trump is ordering the aircraft carrier USS Gerald R. Ford to head to the Caribbean as he ramps up his crusade against drugs — marking the first time a carrier has conducted an operational deployment in the region in more than 30 years.

Trump has built up naval assets in the region as attacks against alleged drug boats have increased since September, but sending an aircraft carrier is an unprecedented move. A warship like the Ford hasn’t participated in military operations in the region since 1994, when two carriers were dispatched to respond to political unrest in Haiti for Operation Uphold Democracy, according to U.S. Southern Command’s (SOUTHCOM) records shared with Fox News Digital. 

The Ford’s deployment comes as Trump has signaled that Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro may not be in office much longer. The Trump administration has conducted 15 strikes in the Caribbean, while U.S. lawmakers have raised concerns about their legality and a broader conflict in the region.

During Operation Uphold Democracy, aircraft carriers USS Dwight D. Eisenhower and USS America headed to the region as part of a multinational intervention, after Haitian Lt. Gen. Raoul Cedras led a military coup in 1991 that ousted the island’s first freely elected president, Jean-Bertrand Aristide.

In July 1994, the United Nations passed a resolution authorizing the use of military force to restore democracy in Haiti, paving the way for Operation Uphold Democracy to launch in September 1994 as a military buildup designed to pressure Cedras’ regime to step down, according to the State Department’s Office of the Historian.

At the time, President Bill Clinton justified the intervention, which involved nearly 25,000 U.S. troops, as necessary to remove the Cedras regime after employing ‘every diplomatic avenue possible.’

Clinton said in a radio address Sept. 17, 1994, that the Cedras regime had two options: either leave peacefully or be ousted forcefully.

‘The remaining question is not whether they will leave but how they will leave,’ Clinton said in a radio address Sept. 17, 1994. ‘They can go peacefully and increase the chances for a peaceful future and a more stable future for Haiti in the near term, not only for all those whose democracy they stole but for themselves as well. They can do that, or they will be removed by force.’

In addition to military forces, Clinton also announced that former president Jimmy Carter, former Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Colin Powell and Chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee Sen. Sam Nunn, D-Ga., had departed for Haiti in a final attempt to secure a peaceful transfer of power.

U.S. forces started to arrive in Haiti Sept. 19, 2024, while diplomatic negotiations between the U.S. delegation and Cedras’ regime were underway, ultimately prompting Cedras’ regime to surrender and allowing Aristide to return to power.

Since Operation Uphold Democracy, carriers have sailed through SOUTHCOM’s waters for several exercises and supported humanitarian efforts. For example, the USS George Washington completed exercises in the region as part of the Southern Seas 2024 deployment aimed at facilitating maritime partnerships with allies as part of a homeport change from Norfolk, Virginia, to Yokosuka, Japan.

The carrier participated in these exercises in 2008 and 2015 during homeport changes between the East Coast and Japan. Altogether, there have been a total of 10 Southern Seas missions since 2007, according to SOUTHCOM.

Additionally, the aircraft carrier USS Carl Vinson also assisted with humanitarian relief efforts in 2010 after Haiti suffered a massive earthquake as part of Operation Unified Response, according to Naval History and Heritage Command.

Meanwhile, Trump is ramping up strikes against alleged drug boats in the Caribbean — totaling 15 strikes since the beginning of September — stoking concerns from lawmakers on both sides of the aisle about whether they are legal. For example, Sens. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., Tim Kaine, D-Va., and Rand Paul, R-Ky., introduced a war powers resolution prohibiting U.S. armed forces from engaging in ‘hostilities’ against Venezuela.

‘The Trump administration has made it clear they may launch military action inside Venezuela’s borders and won’t stop at boat strikes in the Caribbean,’ Schiff said in a statement Oct. 17.

However, Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., said Oct. 26 that the Trump administration has the authority it needs to conduct these strikes, and that Trump has decided its ‘time’ for Maduro to go.

The White House did not respond to a request for comment from Fox News Digital. 

The Trump administration repeatedly has stated it does not recognize Maduro as a legitimate head of state, and claims he is instead a leader of a drug cartel. Likewise, the Trump administration increased the reward for information leading to Maduro’s arrest to $50 million in August, claiming he is ‘one of the largest narco-traffickers in the world.’

After the Trump administration announced the Ford would head to SOUTHCOM’s area of operations, Maduro accused Trump of ‘fabricating a new eternal war.’

‘They promised they would never again get involved in a war, and they are fabricating a war,’ Maduro said in a national broadcast on Oct. 24.

Meanwhile, Trump said Sunday in an interview with CBS’ ’60 Minutes’ that although he doesn’t expect a war with Venezuela, he believes Maduro’s days are limited when asked about ordering the carrier to the region.

The Ford may be the Navy’s newest carrier, but it’s already been quick to respond to several significant conflicts since its first full-length deployment in 2023. For example, the Pentagon sent the Ford to the Eastern Mediterranean in October 2023 after Hamas’ initial attack on Israel.

While in the Caribbean, the Ford is expected to conduct strike operations on land, and provide close air support for special operations troops, according to experts.

‘I estimate the FORD will be doing strike operations against narcotics trafficking and manufacturing sites ashore as well as providing close air support to special operations troops,’ Bryan Clark, director of the Hudson Institute think tank’s Center for Defense Concepts and Technology, said in a Monday email to Fox News Digital.

Brent Sadler, a senior fellow for naval warfare and advanced technology at The Heritage Foundation, a conservative think tank in Washington, said that the carrier’s deployment seeks to put additional pressure on Venezuela, so Caracas doesn’t retaliate following the U.S. military strikes in the region. 

‘The Ford’s arrival in SOUTHCOM area is not unprecedented but given the ongoing attacks on Cartel boats significant. I see this move as intended to deter Venezuela from escalating the crisis and providing the President extra options should he want to increase the attacks on the Cartels,’ Sadler said in an email to Fox News Digital on Monday. ‘That said, I would anticipate the Ford’s air wing being very active in air surveillance and defense.’

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

President Donald Trump issued scads of Truth Social posts on Sunday backing politicians for re-election, including GOP Arkansas Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders and a slew of House Republicans.

‘Sarah Huckabee Sanders has my Complete and Total Endorsement for Re-Election — SHE WILL NOT LET YOU DOWN!’ the president exclaimed in one post. 

Sanders, who served as Trump’s White House press secretary during a portion of his first term, is the daughter of U.S. Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee, a former Arkansas governor.

She thanked Trump.

‘Thank you, President @realDonaldTrump! It’s an honor to have your endorsement, and Arkansas stands with you in the fight to Make America Great Again!’ she declared in a post on X. 

Trump also expressed his support for many House Republicans, including Reps. Jim Jordan and Warren Davidson of Ohio, James Comer of Kentucky, and many others.

‘Jim Jordan is a very good friend, fighter, and WINNER, and has my Complete and Total Endorsement for Re-Election — HE WILL NEVER LET YOU DOWN!’ the president declared in a Truth Social post.

The GOP will be trying to maintain its majorities in the House and Senate during the 2026 midterm elections. Election Day will be exactly one year from today, on Nov. 3, 2026.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

European left-wing politicians are crossing the Atlantic to study a campaign model they see as a blueprint for revival — the campaign of New York Assemblyman Zohran Mamdani, a Democratic Socialist whose grassroots machine has captured attention far beyond his Queens district.

According to a Politico Europe report on Monday, far-left delegations from France, Germany and the U.K. visited New York this week to observe Mamdani’s operation firsthand. Among them were the deputy leader of the U.K. Green Party; a parliamentary officer for Germany’s Left (Die Linke) Party; as well as a French member of the European Parliament, with the goal of translating what they see as a successful campaign into more victories for Europe’s hard-left parties.

Alan Mendoza, executive director of the London-based Henry Jackson Society, told Fox News Digital, ‘Nobody would have thought New York would succumb to this five years ago. But there are certain conditions — a problematic economy, cost-of-living issues, and weak opposition — that make it fertile ground. Those conditions certainly exist in many European cities, so you can see an immediate crossover.’

Mendoza added, ‘It’s no surprise they’re coming to study Mamdani’s campaign,’ he said. ‘It looks like it’s going to be a very successful one, and the fact that somebody with his views and policies looks like they’re about to be elected as mayor of one of the most famous cities in the world is a boon to all those who share his politics internationally.’

Mendoza described Mamdani as a ‘trailblazer’ for hard-left movements that have often struggled to win major offices in Western democracies. ‘He’s bringing victory where there has always previously been defeat for politicians of the far left,’ he said. ‘His tactics, his style, his pronouncements — his form of forging a governing coalition, are going to be of keen interest to similar hard leftists around the world.’

In New York, Mamdani has built his base through neighborhood-level activism, which European politicians see as a path to reenergize voters. The former leader of the U.K.’s Labour Party, Jeremy Corbyn, who now leads the upstart Your Party, said on social media that he and his team phone banked for Mamdani.

Corbyn shared the phone-banking link which leads a website organized by the Democratic Socialists of America’s NYC chapter which is urging volunteers to mobilize voters for Mamdani.

Mendoza warned that replicating Mamdani’s ideological platform could deepen polarization. ‘Europe is already more statist and more left-wing as a rule than America anyway,’ he said. ‘So if he can win in New York, why can’t a hard leftist win in Europe? The question is whether those policies would actually work — and history shows they don’t.’

Mendoza dismissed identity as a driving factor behind Mamdani’s success, despite debates over his immigrant background. ‘It’s not an ethnicity question,’ he said. ‘It’s a question of what his ideology is — and that can be shared by people whether they’re born in a country or not.’

Fox News’ Emma Bussey contributed to this report.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Why should NFL general managers have all the fun?

While the Nov. 4 NFL trade deadline is rapidly approaching, fantasy football managers have a bit more freedom to work toward making some big deals of their own since most fantasy leagues don’t have their trade deadlines for another couple weeks.

So if your team is looking to make a move to bolster a deep playoff run, it’s time to take a look at which players could help you get there — and which players may be worth sending somewhere else.

WEEK 10 BYES: Cincinnati, Dallas, Kansas City, Tennessee

Here are some of this week’s best trade candidates:

Fantasy football players to buy for Week 10

QB Jaxson Dart, New York Giants

This doesn’t feel logical, but just hear me out. Dart generally isn’t among the top 15 QBs in the weekly rankings. Yet he’s managed to finish as the QB5 (pending Monday’s game), QB13, QB2 and QB3 over the past four weeks. He has a rushing TD in each of those games and has turned the ball over a total of one time during that span. This week, Dart faces a Bears defense that just gave up 470 passing yards and four TDs to Joe Flacco.

WR Tee Higgins, Cincinnati Bengals

You’re likely buying high on Higgins after his fabulous 121-yard, two-touchdown effort against Chicago. But the Bengals are on bye this week, and another fantasy team that’s struggling to stay in playoff contention just may be willing to mortgage part of the future to get an immediate starter who’s just a bit of a downgrade. The Bengals have one of the best schedules for wideouts down the stretch (Steelers, Patriots, Bills, Ravens twice), so even if you’re unlikely to land Ja’Marr Chase, at least make an offer for Higgins.

RB Quinshon Judkins, Cleveland Browns

Judkins played only 18 snaps in Week 8 before exiting with a shoulder injury. We don’t really have an update since the Browns were on bye in Week 9, but coach Kevin Stefanski did say last week that Judkins’ status was ‘day-to-day.’ That’s still a good sign if he’ll have nearly two weeks to recover by the time they play the Jets. Judkins has been a workhorse back ever since taking over the starting role and with the weather turning colder along Lake Erie, the Browns will figure to lean on him even more.

TE Tyler Warren, Indianapolis Colts

After all Warren has accomplished in his rookie season, good luck getting his fantasy manager to part with him. But if you can get a foot in the door after his season-low 26 receiving yards in Week 9, you can highlight this week’s matchup against a Falcons defense that’s been the NFL’s stingiest against tight ends … followed by a bye in Week 11. Take the short-term hit now and reap the benefits later with matchups against Jacksonville in Weeks 14 and 17 and Seattle in Week 15.

Fantasy football players to sell for Week 10

TE Jake Ferguson, Dallas Cowboys

Ferguson could be a prime sell-high candidate, especially if he has a good game against the lowly Arizona Cardinals. He leads all tight ends in receptions and PPR fantasy points on the season, even before he steps on the field Monday night. But he reached those heights largely while star WR CeeDee Lamb was out for four weeks with an ankle injury. (With Lamb back as the top target, Ferguson didn’t have a catch last week vs. Denver.) He has also feasted on defenses that have trouble covering the tight end. After tonight, that won’t be the case again until Week 14 with a bye week followed by games against the Raiders (look it up!), Eagles and Chiefs.

RB Kyle Monangai, Chicago Bears

Starting in place of veteran D’Andre Swift, Monangai ran wild for 198 total yards to slot in as the RB3 for the week. He’s obviously earned more playing time when Swift returns, but coach Ben Johnson remains loyal to his former/current player. Let someone else be mesermized by the rookie’s performance against the Bengals ‘defense.’ He scored double-digit fantasy points only once while sharing time with Swift. Maybe you hold Monangai for this week’s game against the Giants, but Chicago has a brutal schedule in the fantasy playoffs.

RB Kyren Williams, Los Angeles Rams

Williams totaled a season highs in carries (25) and rushing yards (114) while plowing for a touchdown against the Saints. But not every game script is going to fall so perfectly in place for Williams. Rams QB Matthew Stafford leads the NFL with 21 TD passes and he’s going to stick with what’s been working so well. Kyren has seen his rushing touchdown totals regress from 14 last season to just three so far. And backup Blake Corum is seeing consistent work in relief.

WR Nico Collins, Houston Texans

Texans QB C.J. Stroud left Sunday’s game with concussion symptoms, turning the offense over to backup Davis Mills. While Collins was still the main option, he turned a season-high 11 targets into seven receptions for 75 yards as Houston failed to get into the end zone with Mills running the show. Collins has gone through concussion protocol himself this season and didn’t play in Week 8 because of it. If you can get market value for a top-10 caliber wide receiver, do it.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The NCAA Division I Board of Directors and the College Sports Commission have codified a series of name, image and likeness bylaws resulting from this summer’s House settlement, including new standards for prospective high school and junior college student-athletes.

According to guidelines issued by the CSC, which was established in the wake of the House settlement as a clearinghouse for all NIL deals, high school and junior college prospects will need to disclose all NIL deals worth $600 or more upon enrollment.

All high school prospects will be required to report all third-part NIL agreements over $600 that “were executed, agreed upon, or that include payments” beginning on July 1, 2025, or a prospect’s first day of junior year. Likewise with JUCO prospects, who will have to report NIL deals over that total as of July 1 or the “initial enrollment at a two-year college, whichever occurs later.”

In each case, prospective student-athletes will have two weeks from initial enrollment to report all deals into a clearinghouse, called NIL Go, developed by the CSC. That timeline differs slightly from the rules established for current Division I student-athletes, who must submit documentation of new NIL deals totaling over $600 within five business days or face ineligibility.

The codified bylaws set forth the standard by which all possible NIL deals will be evaluated, confirming that all agreements must be for “a valid business purpose and do not exceed a reasonable range of compensation.”

According to the CSC, the reasonable range for NIL payments are “at rates and terms commensurate with compensation paid to similarly situated individuals.” The bylaws state that “pay-for-play” deals do not meet the standard of a valid business purpose.

The bylaws also set the amount of revenue sharing institutions can provide to student-athletes at $20.5 million for the 2025-26 academic year, a total equal to “22% of the average total revenue in certain categories as set forth in the House settlement,” according to the CSC.

The CSC was established after the House settlement as an independent body tasked with enforcing compliance with new NIL regulations. The CSC is the designated enforcement group responsible for the investigation of alleged violations and assessment of penalties.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Week 9 in the NFL proved that the action is only picking up as the campaign reaches midseason and the trade deadline approaches.

One week after a historically lopsided slate, Sunday proved exponentially more scintillating thanks to upsets, close calls, injuries and plenty of other notable developments. And the shifting isn’t likely to stop there, as Tuesday’s trade deadline could prompt more movement in the next 36 hours or so, even if the swaps are of the more minor variety seen in the last month or so.

Here are the biggest winners and losers from Week 9 in the NFL:

NFL Week 9 winners

Pittsburgh Steelers’ defense

The league’s highest-paid defense has been sharply criticized this season for being static and ineffective, particularly in consecutive losses in the last two weeks. Sunday, however, marked a clear breakthrough. In a 27-20 win over the Indianapolis Colts, Pittsburgh nabbed six takeaways from an offense that only had four turnovers in its previous eight games. Good fortune surely played into that sharp contrast, but so too did strong execution. Running back Jonathan Taylor was held to a season-low 45 yards on 14 carries by a unit that made his erasure its top priority. From there, the Colts struggled to replicate their previous magic, as edge rushers Alex Highsmith (two sacks) and T.J. Watt (one sack) feasted against an Indianapolis front that was out of sorts in obvious passing downs. Pittsburgh still has to prove it can exist somewhere closer to this performance extreme rather than the other it in which it resided recently, but conjuring an answer for the league’s most efficient attack made quite the statement.

Colston Loveland

When the Chicago Bears tight end hauled in his first career touchdown to give his team a third-quarter lead against the Cincinnati Bengals, it seemed like a nice contribution from a player who otherwise had largely been an afterthought in his rookie campaign. On this day, though, he would be nothing short of essential to the Bears, especially with starter Cole Kmet sidelined by a second-quarter concussion. With Chicago staring down a crushing collapse after giving up 15 points in the final two minutes, Loveland hauled in a Caleb Williams dart down the seam, bounced off one would-be tackler and spun past another before racing for a go-ahead, 58-yard score. It was enough to give Loveland more receiving yards on the day (118) than he had all year before Sunday (116). More importantly, he put Chicago right in the thick of a condensed NFC North race on a day when the organization seemed to be teetering on the verge of disaster. It might be another year before the No. 10 overall pick becomes a staple of the offense, but after this performance, it will be hard for coach Ben Johnson to overlook what dimensions the field-stretching threat adds to the aerial attack.

Rico Dowdle

For most running backs, tallying a franchise-record 473 yards from scrimmage over a two-game span would lead to a featured role for the rest of the season. For Dowdle, it yielded a split with typical starter Chuba Hubbard. Dave Canales acknowledged last week, however, that the rugged ball carrier gave the offense something a little extra, and Dowdle did just that in powering a 16-13 win over the Green Bay Packers. Not only did he notch his first game with two rushing touchdowns, his 130 yards on 25 carries kept Carolina chugging on a windy day during which Bryce Young passed for just 102 yards. The only party capable of pushing back on him was the officiating crew, who flagged Dowdle for his, uh, evocative touchdown celebration. At 5-3, the Panthers are in the mix to end a seven-year playoff drought. That’s thanks in no small part to Dowdle, who seems due for a much bigger payday this offseason than the one he received in March with a $2.75 million deal.

Brian Flores

The Minnesota Vikings’ performance behind center has sparked the most headlines, but there’s been slippage across the board – including from Flores’ vaunted defense. Sunday’s 27-24 win over the Detroit Lions served as a needed return to form on several fronts. A maligned defensive front bottled up Jahmyr Gibbs and David Montgomery, allowing the dynamic backfield duo to post just 65 yards on 20 carries. Detangling the Lions’ intricate offense allowed the Vikings to tee off on Jared Goff, who took five sacks as the offense converted just five of 17 third-down attempts. That helped enable Minnesota to play its own brand of complementary football, with a solid ground game (142 yards on 29 carries) aiding J.J. McCarthy in the quarterback’s return from an ankle injury. It’s going to be difficult for this group to reach a level anywhere close to the lofty highs it discovered last season, but this was an encouraging showing against a team that long had Flores and the Vikings’ number during the Ben Johnson years.

Buffalo Bills’ playoff-seeding outlook

There’s still that little matter of holding onto the AFC East crown for a sixth consecutive season, which might not prove so easy given the New England Patriots’ one-game lead and highly favorable schedule down the stretch. But Buffalo’s 28-21 win over the Kansas City Chiefs held importance beyond the symbolic value of vanquishing the foe that has repeatedly blocked the franchise’s Super Bowl path. Of course, the Bills have been here before, having now won the last five regular-season matchups with no postseason breakthrough to follow. But Sean McDermott’s crew now possesses a two-game advantage on Kansas City in the loss column, along with the all-important head-to-head tiebreaker. If the defense can thwart surging passing attacks the way it halted Patrick Mahomes (who was pressured on 52.6% of his dropbacks, according to Next Gen Stats) and Co., then maybe Buffalo is the AFC team to be feared rather than Kansas City.

Cam Little

The second-year kicker already set himself apart from many of his peers by booting a 70-yard field goal in preseason. Now, however, he officially stands above everyone else in NFL history with a record-setting 68-yard field goal against the Las Vegas Raiders. Little hasn’t been the picture of reliability, with three misses – two field-goal attempts and a point-after try – in the last two games. With range like this, though, he’s a legitimate asset for an offense that still hasn’t fully found its stride. Yet with the Dallas Cowboys’ Brandon Aubrey already having drilled two kicks of at least 64 yards in regular-season games, it might not be long before Little faces a legitimate challenge for his new mark.

Matthew Stafford

Good weekend to be a Southern California sports fan. One day after his old pal Clayton Kershaw secured another World Series title, Stafford made quick work of the New Orleans Saints’ undermanned secondary with four touchdown throws – all coming against the blitz – in the Los Angeles Rams’ 34-10 romp. Two of his scoring strikes went to Davante Adams, while Puka Nacua caught another. The quarterback also averted disaster with Nacua’s rib injury, with coach Sean McVay saying after the game that the receiver could have returned if he had been needed. The MVP race is a flavor-of-the-week matter right now with no clear front-runner, but Stafford is keeping himself at the forefront of the conversation.

NFL Week 9 losers

Washington Commanders

Pinpointing blame for player injuries is typically a fruitless endeavor in a sport that can swing multiple parties’ fortunes in an instant. In the case of the Commanders and Jayden Daniels’ gruesome elbow injury in Sunday night’s 38-14 loss to the Seattle Seahawks, however, it’s fair game to question coach Dan Quinn’s culpability. Daniels was hurt on a second-down scramble with his team trailing 38-7 with less than eight minutes remaining. Even by the rosiest outlooks, that comeback isn’t materializing. Worse yet, Quinn said after the game that Washington’s performance was ‘unacceptable’ and that the team ‘missed the opportunity by a mile.’ Why, then, leave it all on the shoulders of Daniels to try to claw all the way back? The quarterback already has an acknowledged issue with protecting himself that dates back to his Heisman Trophy-winning year at LSU, during which he would routinely subject himself to massive hits when taking off as a runner. It’s difficult for an organization that has embraced an all-in mentality to pull back, especially when the season has gone as haywire as this 3-6 campaign has for the Commanders. But now the near future looks murky for Daniels, who reports indicated had suffered a dislocated elbow, and Quinn will have to answer for an unwillingness to cut his losses.

Packers

The bottom line was bad enough, with Green Bay being dealt another stunning defeat as well as the loss of breakout star Tucker Kraft, who the team fears suffered a torn anterior cruciate ligament, per multiple reports. But the manner in which the Packers arrived at their last-second defeat compounded the agony. Once again, a team that couldn’t hang with the NFL’s elite last season can’t seem to handle its most straightforward matchups this year. From Jordan Love’s several questionable throws on Sunday – one of which resulted in an interception – to kicker Brandon McManus missing another field goal, the Packers have plenty of baked-in volatility. But Matt LaFleur is ultimately responsible for a unit that too often amounts to less than the sum of its parts, with the coach bemoaning a 1-of-5 red-zone performance Sunday. On a day when the Lions also faltered, Green Bay should have seized the opportunity to build some separation in the NFC North. Instead, the outing helped reinforce that the division is fully up for grabs in the final two months.

Bengals’ defense

For a minute, it appeared as though Joe Flacco’s career performance and Cincinnati’s offensive resilience might be enough to cover for another dreadful day from the team’s defense. But it took just that same minute – less, even – for the Bengals to squander a stunning rally that briefly looked capable of saving the franchise’s season. Yes, the tackling and coverage on Loveland’s game-winning touchdown were nothing short of shameful. But pinning the outcome on that one play would be reducing the group’s problems to a single misstep, and that in no way captures the full extent of the futility here. The Bears trampled the Bengals for 283 yards, the bulk of it coming from hard-charging Kyle Monangai in the seventh-round rookie’s first start. When Chicago wasn’t simply pushing Cincinnati aside, however, it was literally playing ‘hot potato,’ which was the name of the trick play on which Caleb Williams scored a receiving touchdown. And the defense’s known vulnerability over the middle continued to be exploited, as opposing tight ends now have 12 touchdowns against the unit this season. One week after begging for a leader to emerge, coach Zac Taylor said he felt ‘sick to lose like that.’ In reality, though, his team has been floundering in this fashion for quite a while. It just hasn’t seemed this dramatic until now.

Los Angeles Chargers’ protection plan

Any confidence the Bolts had in their ability to safeguard Justin Herbert was short-lived. In his second game back from a high-ankle sprain that sidelined him for three weeks, left tackle Joe Alt was carted off in the second quarter of the Chargers’ 27-20 win over the Tennessee Titans. With Alt out – and starting right tackle Bobby Hart also leaving due to a groin injury – Herbert took a season-high six sacks while also throwing a pick-six in the face of a blitz. Even with star defensive tackle Jeffery Simmons inactive on the day, the Titans’ pedestrian collection of pass rushers applied consistent heat, with Dre’Mont Jones and Jihad Ward each notching four hits. If Alt misses another significant stretch of time, the Chargers will be hard-pressed to stave off the likes of the Steelers, Jaguars and Philadelphia Eagles, all of whom are ahead in the team’s next four contests.

Parker Romo

Gillette Stadium just isn’t the kicker’s scene. Two-plus months after Romo lost a competition to rookie Andy Borregales for the New England Patriots’ job, Romo missed an extra point that proved decisive in the Atlanta Falcons’ 24-23 loss. Romo enjoyed a nice debut in stepping in for Younghoe Koo, converting all five field-goal attempts in a Week 2 win over the Vikings. But he’s missed three field goals since then, and it’s difficult for a team with this little margin for error to operate like this.

San Francisco 49ers’ injury luck

Weathering personnel losses has become a way of life for San Francisco for a year-plus, but the 49ers’ injury hits have reached a level of absurdity. The latest blow: First-round rookie defensive end Mykel Williams is feared to have torn his anterior cruciate ligament in Sunday’s 34-24 win over the New York Giants. For a unit that’s already without its superstars in defensive end Nick Bosa and linebacker Fred Warner, a breaking point feels imminent despite the impressive work of coordinator Robert Saleh. Keion White’s addition last week should add a bit of depth and upside along the defensive front, but San Francisco can’t be reasonably expected to forge ahead in the playoff chase unless it brings aboard another piece before the trade deadline. 

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The Dallas Cowboys are playing the Arizona Cardinals on ‘Monday Night Football’ to close NFL Week 9. Less than 24 hours after that game ends, the 2025 NFL trade deadline will come to pass.

That will give Jerry Jones and the Dallas brain trust little time to make a definitive decision about which direction to take the Cowboys at the midpoint of the league’s season.

The Cowboys have sported one of the league’s best offenses during the first half of the 2025 NFL season, but their defense has ranked second-worst in defensive EPA per play. As a result, they are 3-4-1 across their first eight games, keeping them well behind in the NFC East race and on the outside looking in for the NFC wild-card race.

That said, if Dallas can bolster its defense, it may have a shot to climb the ladder and get into the NFC playoff picture. That could be enough to convince Jones, 83, to try to find some upgrades on the trade market, even if the Cowboys will merely be floating around .500 at best by the time the deadline arrives.

Who could the Cowboys target if they do become buyers? Here’s a look at the top defensive options Dallas could pursue.

EDGE Bradley Chubb, Miami Dolphins

NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport reports the Cowboys ‘are in the market for a pass rusher’ ahead of the 2025 trade deadline. That’s not a major surprise, considering the team doesn’t have a true, No. 1 pass rusher after trading Micah Parsons to the Green Bay Packers on eve of the 2025 NFL season.

The Dolphins figure to be one of the deadline’s major sellers after parting with general manager Chris Grier following a Week 9 loss to the Baltimore Ravens on ‘Thursday Night Football.’ They already offloaded Jaelan Phillips to the Eagles for a third-round pick and would probably relish finding an opportunity to trade Chubb, who is under contract through 2027 and has a $19.45 million base salary for next season.

The Cowboys may view that as a reasonable price for Chubb, especially since the 29-year-old’s 25 pressures this season are seven more than any player currently on Dallas’ roster.

EDGE Trey Hendrickson, Cincinnati Bengals

If Chubb represents a realistic option for the Cowboys, Hendrickson may be the pie-in-the-sky one. USA TODAY Sports’ Tyler Dragon reports the Bengals are ‘unlikely’ to deal the star edge rusher despite him playing on an expiring contract.

But could the 3-6 Bengals be swayed to offload Hendrickson, who requested a trade during the offseason? If so, the Cowboys would be a sensible landing spot for the 30-year-old, who produced 17.5 sacks in back-to-back seasons and has generated 23 pressures and four sacks across seven games this year.

EDGE Jermaine Johnson, New York Jets

Johnson generated 7.5 sacks and made a Pro Bowl in 2023. Since then, he has played in seven games due to injury and has generated just one sack.

Johnson is still just 26 and is under contract for a reasonable $13.4 million in 2026. The Florida State product has athletic upside, and perhaps a change of scenery could allow him to regain the solid form of his breakout, second season.

The issue with trading for Johnson? He wouldn’t come cheap. The Athletic reports the Jets are asking for ‘a second-round pick or better’ to part with the fourth-year edge rusher.

Still, Dallas could consider targeting him as a long-term replacement for Parsons at a fraction of the cost.

EDGE Arden Key, Tennessee Titans

If Dallas just wants to add depth to its edge rush rotation, it could consider targeting Key. The 29-year-old has racked up at least 4.5 sacks in four consecutive seasons and has 1.5 sacks in a rotational role across five games with the Titans this season.

Key is playing on an expiring contract and would be a cheap addition for the Cowboys. The only question is whether he would move the needle enough to justify pursuing him.

LB Logan Wilson, Cincinnati Bengals

Wilson has requested a trade away from the Bengals and hopes to be dealt away from Cincinnati, per USA TODAY Sports’ Tyler Dragon. Could he find a new home in Dallas?

The Cowboys could use an upgrade at linebacker, as Kenneth Murray Jr. – their primary starter at the position – ranks 80th among 83 qualified players at the position this season, per Pro Football Focus. Wilson may not be as good in coverage as he once was, but the 29-year-old team captain remains a quality downhill linebacker who has posted 100-plus tackles in four consecutive seasons.

LB Demario Davis, New Orleans Saints

Davis would be a bigger upgrade for the Cowboys at linebacker, as he remains one of the league’s best run-stopping linebackers. He is graded as PFF’s third-best run defender at linebacker and has generated 84 tackles thus far in 2025, good for fourth-most in the league.

While Davis would be a major upgrade for Dallas, it would be of the short-term variety. He is set to turn 37 in January and is playing on an expiring contract.

CB Riq Woolen, Seattle Seahawks

Woolen has allowed a career-worst 98.9 passer rating when targeted and grades as PFF’s 96th cornerback out of 103 qualifiers. He may need a change of scenery, and the Seahawks could be willing to provide that if they are content to roll with the trio of Devon Witherspoon and Josh Jobe as their top cornerbacks with rookie Nick Emmanwori in the slot.

Dallas could then use Woolen in place of the injured Trevon Diggs and hope the 6-4, 210-pound cornerback can become a matchup nightmare again in Matt Eberflus’ defense.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY