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President Biden appeared to attempt to rehabilitate the image of notorious late pro-segregation Sen. Strom Thurmond on Monday during one of the final speeches of his presidency.

Biden made the comments while speaking at a White House reception for new Democratic members of Congress. The president offered up several redeeming details about Thurmond, though he said he wasn’t defending the man.

‘In my career I have been asked to do the eulogy of the most incredibly different people. Strom Thurmond, 100 years old. On his deathbed, I get a phone call from the hospital. From the hospital, from out of Walter Reed and his wife, Nancy said. Joe, I’m here with the doctors at the nurses station. Strom asked me to ask you whether or not you’d do his eulogy,’ Biden said, adding that he accepted the offer.

‘Strom Thurmond decided that separate but equal was not right, not that Blacks and Whites should be together. But if you do separate equal, you had to spend as much money on Black schools as White schools. By the time Strom Thurmond left the United States Senate, he had. And I’m making the case for him,’ Biden continued.

‘But he had more African-Americans in his staff than any United States senator had, more. Strom Thurmond had an illegitimate child with a Black woman [and he] never denied it. Never stopped paying for his upbringing. There’s a lot of strange people, a lot of different people. And I mean, well, I bet I can look at you and I can find some strange things too,’ Biden added.

Biden has repeatedly mentioned his relationship with Thurmond at various times during his presidency. He claimed in August 2023 that he had ‘literally’ convinced Thurmond to vote for the Voting Rights Act before his death in 2003, when he was just 21 years old.

‘I was able to — literally, not figuratively — talk Strom Thurmond into voting for the Civil Rights Act before he died,’ Biden said at the time.

‘And I thought, ‘well, maybe there’s real progress,” he added. ‘But hate never dies, it just hides. It hides under the rocks.’

Biden was born on Nov. 20, 1942. The Civil Rights Act passed the Senate on June 19, 1964.

While Thurmond and Biden were contemporaries in the Senate, the president would have been 21 at the time of the landmark legislation’s passing — and nowhere near the Senate seat he won at 29 years old.

Fox News’ Houston Keene contributed to this report.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced on Monday that he intends to resign as party leader and prime minister after pressure from within his own Liberal Party increasingly grew amid heightened criticisms over his handling of the economy and threats levied by President-elect Donald Trump. He said he will resign once the party selects a new leader. 

I intend to resign as party leader, as Prime Minister, after the party selects its next leader through a robust nationwide competitive process,’ Trudeau told reporters. ‘Last night, I asked the president of the Liberal Party to begin that process. This country deserves a real choice in the next election, and it is become clear to me that if I’m having to fight internal battles, I cannot be the best option in that election.’

‘As you all know, I am fighter and I’m not someone who backs away from a fight. Particularly when the fight is as important as this one is. But I have always been driven by my love for Canada, by my desire to serve Canadians, and by what is in the best interests of Canadians and Canadians deserve a real choice in the next election,’ Trudeau added. ‘And it has become obvious to me with,, the internal battles that I cannot be the one to carry the liberal standard into the next election.’

Trudeau, who led the nation for nearly a decade, has been grappling for months with significant drops in his approval ratings over mounting frustration relating to issues like the soaring cost of living and rising inflation. 

Though there was no official path for his party to boot him from the top job, the now nearly-former prime minister faced either the threat of a Parliamentary vote of no confidence, or a lengthy fight to hold on to his position until the October 2025 elections – either option was expected to see a crushing end to Trudeau’s time in office.

The long-time prime minister saw an increase in calls for his resignation, with at least seven Liberal Members of Parliament as well as from opposition party leaders calling on him to set aside, following the abrupt departure of his finance minister, Chrystia Freeland, who wrote a scathing letter of resignation, citing criticisms over his handling of certain economic policies as well as the threats levied by Trump.

Freeland, once seen as Trudeau’s chief ally and who helped oversee the 2020 U.S.-Mexico-Canada deal during the last Trump administration, warned that how Canada responds to Trump’s November threat to slap a 25% tariff on Canadian imports ‘will define us for a generation, and perhaps longer.’

‘For the past number of weeks, you and I have found ourselves at odds about the best path forward for Canada,’ she wrote. ‘Our country today faces a grave challenge.’

 

‘The incoming administration in the United States is pursuing a policy of aggressive economic nationalism,’ she continued, urging the prime minister to show more backbone when it comes to standing up to Trump and his ‘coming tariff war.’

The comments made by Freeland sent shockwaves across the Canadian government, with many backing her calls to show strength in the face of the potentially tough economic times ahead. 

Trudeau, who appointed close friend Dominic LeBlanc to take over as finance minister, later held a special meeting with his caucus, during which, according to LeBlanc, he said that he ‘heard very clearly, and listened carefully to their concerns, and he would reflect on it.’

Trudeau’s resignation means the Liberal Party can appoint an interim prime minister to lead the country until the elections next fall, giving them potentially a fighting chance to bring renewed support back to the Liberal Party. 

It remains unclear who will likely take over Trudeau’s seat, but LeBlanc – who also met with Trump at his Mar-a-Lago residence earlier this month alongside the former prime minister – was reported to be a leading contender.

Trump has not yet pubically commented on Trudeau’s resignation and his transition team did not respond to previous Fox News Digital questions over his impact on Canadian politics. 

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President Joe Biden said Friday that he has decided to block a $15 billion takeover of U.S. Steel by the Japanese company Nippon Steel, capping off a yearlong business saga that drifted into election politics.

A national security review by a Treasury Department committee failed to reach a consensus on the deal last month and deferred the final decision to the president. NBC News had reported in September that Biden was preparing to block the takeover.

The president, who leaves office in little more than two weeks, faced a challenging political calculus over the fate of the iconic Pittsburgh-based firm: Allowing a foreign entity with far greater resources to take it over could put the business on stabler financial footing, while keeping U.S. Steel in American hands risked the company’s survival under intense foreign competition. But the deal was opposed by a powerful steelworkers union.

U.S. Steel’s Clairton Coke Works in Clairton, Pa. Quinn Glabicki for The Washington Post via Getty Images

‘As I have said many times, steel production — and the steel workers who produce it — are the backbone of our nation,’ Biden said in a statement. ‘A strong domestically owned and operated steel industry represents an essential national security priority and is critical for resilient supply chains. … Without domestic steel production and domestic steel workers, our nation is less strong and less secure.’

President-Elect Donald Trump had also voiced opposition to the takeover proposal during the 2024 presidential campaign. A Trump representative did not immediately respond to a request for comment Friday.

U.S. Steel’s stock fell more than 6% Friday.

In a joint statement, U.S. Steel and Nippon Steel condemned Biden’s decision, saying it ‘reflects a clear violation of due process and the law.’ The companies also hinted at taking legal action.

‘Instead of abiding by the law, the process was manipulated to advance President Biden’s political agenda,’ the statement said. ‘The President’s statement and Order do not present any credible evidence of a national security issue, making clear that this was a political decision. Following President Biden’s decision, we are left with no choice but to take all appropriate action to protect our legal rights.’

Later Friday, U.S. Steel CEO David Burritt released a statement ripping Biden, calling the president’s decision ‘shameful and corrupt.’

‘He insulted Japan, a vital economic and national security ally, and put American competitiveness at risk. The Chinese Communist Party leaders in Beijing are dancing in the streets. And Biden did it all while refusing to even meet with us to learn the facts,’ he wrote in the statement. ‘We intend to fight President Biden’s political corruption.’

The roughly 11,000-worker company, founded in 1901, has dwindled since its heyday, when it employed a peak of roughly 340,000 during World War II. Its share price has barely edged higher since the 1990s as cheaper steel production abroad ramped up, especially in Asia.

When reached for comment Thursday night, a spokesperson for U.S. Steel referred to a previous statement, saying that the deal ‘enhances U.S. national and economic security through investment in manufacturing and innovation,’ going on to argue that the transaction would ‘combat the competitive threat from China.’

‘It is the best way, by far, to ensure that U. S. Steel, including its employees, communities, and customers, will thrive well into the future,’ the spokesperson said. ‘It is our hope that President Biden will do the right thing and adhere to the law by approving a transaction that so clearly enhances U.S. national and economic security.’

Nippon Steel, Japan’s largest steelmaker, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

United Steelworkers, the union representing many of the company’s employees, hailed the announcement.

“We’re grateful for President Biden’s willingness to take bold action to maintain a strong domestic steel industry and for his lifelong commitment to American workers,” the union said in a statement. “Moving forward, we’re confident that with responsible management, U.S. Steel will continue to support good jobs, healthy communities and robust national and economic security well into the future.”

Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro issued a separate statement calling on U.S. Steel to continue to continue to prioritize protecting jobs in the western part of the state.

“This matter is far from over,” he said. “We must find a long-term solution that protects the future of steelmaking in Western Pennsylvania and the workers who built U.S. Steel and built this country.”

The potential blocking of the deal had raised concerns that it could harm U.S. relations with Japan, a key U.S. ally and the country’s largest foreign investor.

There was no immediate comment from officials in Japan, where Friday was a bank holiday. Japanese government officials have previously declined to comment on matters concerning the management of individual companies but said it is essential for the U.S. and Japan to strengthen economic relations, “including the expansion of mutual investment.”

American and international business groups have also criticized what they say is the politicization of the deal.

The proposed acquisition drew controversy almost as soon as it was announced in December 2023, with Biden saying in a statement that month that it “appears to deserve serious scrutiny in terms of its potential impact on national security and supply chain reliability.”

Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris, the Democratic presidential nominee, both campaigned against the proposed acquisition, saying U.S. Steel should remain American-owned.

Trump said in December that he would block the acquisition and revive U.S. Steel through a combination of tax incentives and tariffs.

Nippon Steel tried to assuage politicians’ concerns, saying in a statement in September that U.S. Steel would remain an American company owned by Nippon Steel North America. Nippon Steel also said that Americans would make up the majority of the board of directors of U.S. Steel, and that the American company, under its new ownership, would stay headquartered in Pittsburgh.

‘Nippon Steel will prioritize production at U. S. Steel to meet the demand in the U.S. steel market,’ Nippon Steel said.

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Mike McCarthy has seemingly been on the hot seat every offseason since the Dallas Cowboys hired him to be their franchise’s ninth-ever head coach ahead of the 2020 NFL offseason.

Once again, that appears to be the case as the NFL’s ‘Black Monday’ arrives.

McCarthy is in the midst of a disappointing fifth season with the Cowboys. Dallas struggled to win consistently early in the season, and many wrote them off after Dak Prescott suffered a season-ending hamstring injury in Week 9 against the Atlanta Falcons.

However, the Cowboys played well over the final seven weeks of the NFL season. That, along with Dallas owner Jerry Jones’ steadfast praise of the veteran coach, gave McCarthy some momentum going into the offseason.

Another complicating factor in Dallas’ decision is that McCarthy is in the final year of his contract. Therefore, Jones and Co. will need to work quickly to extend him if they want the 61-year-old to continue coaching in Dallas.

NFL STATS CENTRAL: The latest NFL scores, schedules, odds, stats and more.

Here’s what to know about McCarthy’s status as the 2024 NFL season winds down.

Will Cowboys fire Mike McCarthy?

McCarthy’s status with the Cowboys appears to be murky, but not necessarily due to a lack of confidence from Dallas’ ownership.

Jones has often endorsed McCarthy throughout the 2024 NFL season. The most recent example came during his weekly interview on 105.7 The Fan ahead of Week 18.

‘Well, I feel good about Mike McCarthy,’ Jones said, per Cowboys.com. ‘The main thing is, I like the job that he’s done, it’s unfortunate we’ve had the year that we’ve had, but I feel good about Mike.’

That doesn’t sound like an owner eager to move on from McCarthy. That said, the bigger question appears to be less about whether the Jones’ want McCarthy to return and more about whether the veteran coach would prefer to work elsewhere in 2025.

Numerous reports, including CBS Sports’ Jonathan Jones, have indicated that McCarthy could be among the top coaching candidates on the market in 2025 if he doesn’t stay in Dallas. This could uniquely position McCarthy to decline an offer from the Cowboys if he believes he could land a spot with a team like the Chicago Bears or New Orleans Saints, where he was an offensive coordinator from 2000 to 2004.

That’s part of the reason The Athletic’s Dianna Russini reports that the Cowboys ‘are already doing their homework on potential head coaches.’ They don’t want to be left in the lurch if McCarthy leaves for greener pastures in 2025.

Mike McCarthy contract details

McCarthy signed a five-year contract with the Cowboys when he agreed to be the team’s head coach in 2020. That contract will expire shortly after the 2024 NFL season on Jan. 14, per NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport and Tom Pelissero.

That will give the Cowboys a nine-day negotiating window to agree to a new deal with McCarthy.

Will the two parties agree to an extension in that window? Rapoport and Pelissero report that ‘there have been no substantive talks yet about an extension for McCarthy in Dallas,’ which could complicate the process.

As CBS Sports’ Jonathan Jones reports, the other concern is whether McCarthy would settle for a four-year deal if offered an extension. A source told Jones that it wasn’t clear whether the veteran coach would be willing to accept that deal.

Either way, the Cowboys will have a lot of work to do in short order if they want to keep McCarthy. If they can’t agree to a deal right away, it could allow the Super Bowl 45 winner to see what he’s worth on the open market – and potentially leave on his own accord.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The Cincinnati Bengals are making at least a few changes after their late-season push fell short of the playoffs.

The Bengals are firing defensive coordinator Lou Anarumo, according to multiple reports. Offensive line coach Frank Pollack, linebackers coach James Bettcher and defensive line coach Marion Hobby have also been dismissed, according to The Athletic.

Anarumo, 58, had been one of the most highly regarded defensive architects in the NFL the past few seasons. He was a finalist for the Arizona Cardinals’ head coaching job that eventually went to Jonathan Gannon after the 2022 season.

But the Bengals’ defense came undone this past season, with the unit proving to be a major hindrance in a season in which Joe Burrow and Ja’Marr Chase helped keep the team’s playoff hopes alive into the final week. Despite defensive end Trey Hendrickson leading the NFL in sacks with 17 1/2, Cincinnati finished 25th in total defense (348.3 yards allowed per game) and scoring (25.5 points allowed per game).

The Bengals missed the playoffs and finished 9-8 for the second consecutive season.

All things Bengals: Latest Cincinnati Bengals news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

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The Jacksonville Jaguars are once again back in the market for a head coach after firing Doug Pederson on Monday.

Now, what direction will owner Shad Khan turn after making clear prior to the season that he believes this is the ‘best team’ ever assembled in franchise history?

Since buying the franchise in 2011, Khan has not had any coach last more than four seasons. The turbulence hasn’t let up much in recent years, with Pederson not making it past his third season after Urban Meyer was axed prior to the conclusion of his lone campaign.

But brighter days might be ahead, with the organization potentially better positioned than it was in previous searches to land a top candidate.

Despite finishing just 4-13, the Jaguars’ roster is dotted with young talent – starting, of course, with quarterback Trevor Lawrence, but extending to rookie wide receiver Brian Thomas Jr. and edge rushers Josh Hines-Allen and Travon Walker, among others. There should be sufficient cap space (currently $42.8 million for 2025, according to Over The Cap) and draft capital, with a top-five pick and extra selections in the third and fourth rounds ahead.

All things Jaguars: Latest Jacksonville Jaguars news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

With that in mind, here’s a look at the most sensible candidates for the Jaguars’ head coaching vacancy

Jaguars coach candidates after Doug Pederson’s firing

Ben Johnson

He’s the architect of the NFL’s highest-scoring attack. He’s only 38. And he’s a critical part of what has become the league-wide model for building a winning culture. It’s easy to see why Johnson, the Detroit Lions’ offensive coordinator, is seen by many as the big prize – at least among the pool of coaches who have never held a top job in the NFL before – of this year’s hiring cycle. But Johnson has been exceedingly discerning in evaluating other openings, bowing out of proceedings the last two years to return to the Lions. Reeling him in would be a massive victory for Khan, but there no doubt will be heated competition for his services – and no guarantee he leaves at all.

Mike Vrabel

The former Tennessee Titans coach certainly knows his way around the AFC South after claiming two division titles and three playoff trips from with the Jaguars’ rival from 2018-23. His brand of smashmouth football might not be what many envisioned for Lawrence, but putting together a sturdy run game and defense could prove critical to his development given the lack of support on both fronts this year. Given his track record, Vrabel figures to be a hot commodity this cycle. Ultimately, however, the Jaguars could have a hard time contending with the New England Patriots given Vrabel’s ties to the organization.

Anthony Weaver

Could the Miami Dolphins defensive coordinator emerge as a top candidate for Khan? The 44-year-old interviewed with the Washington Commanders and Atlanta Falcons last year when he was assistant head coach and defensive line coach for the Baltimore Ravens, and he now has coordinator duties on his résumé. The Dolphins finished the year ranked fourth in yards allowed (314.3) and 10th in points allowed (21.4 per game), and Weaver helped the team turn the page on last year after multiple players clashed with Vic Fangio.

Liam Coen

Perhaps no candidate has done as much to boost his profile this season as Coen, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers offensive coordinator who replaced Dave Canales and has delivered sterling results. In Coen’s scheme, Baker Mayfield enjoyed a career year that included 4,500 passing yards and 41 touchdown throws, and the rushing attack has gone from the league’s worst to a top-five ground game. That output helped keep Tampa Bay afloat despite injuries to Chris Godwin and Mike Evans, among others. Even if Coen, 39, doesn’t land a top gig this year, he’s done enough to put himself on the interview list for several teams. But three years after things fizzled out with Byron Leftwich, could the Jaguars link up with another prolific offensive architect for Tampa Bay?

Todd Monken

For some teams, the Ravens offensive coordinator’s age (58) might be a strike against him. For the Jaguars, it could be a selling point, as his extensive experience at both the collegiate and pro level have helped him develop an ability to connect and teach with young players. Monken’s attacks have proven to be highly adaptable, and he built on last year’s MVP campaign for Lamar Jackson by integrating Derrick Henry into a unit that leads the NFL in yards per game at 424.9. He served as the Jaguars wide receivers coach from 2007-10, a run that predated Khan’s arrival but still gives him some degree of familiarity with the franchise.

Kliff Kingsbury

As someone with former head coaching experience and a track record of bringing along young quarterbacks, Kingsbury could check several boxes for Khan. In his first year as offensive coordinator for the Commanders, the former Arizona Cardinals coach has put himself back on the radar for top jobs by helping develop Jayden Daniels into the Offensive Rookie of the Year front-runner. Kingsbury acknowledged he’s interested in returning to the head-coaching ranks with the right opportunity, and he should get a chance to make his case on the interview circuit this year.

Kellen Moore

Moore, 36, interviewed with Jacksonville and was a finalist for the Dolphins’ opening in 2022, when the then-Dallas Cowboys offensive coordinator was a hotshot candidate. His stock has since cooled considerably, but it could be on the rise again. The Eagles surged all the way to the NFC’s No. 2 seed after making adjustments coming out of their bye. His mentorship of Dak Prescott should be a strong selling point for an organization that has struck out multiple times in finding the right person to bring along Lawrence.

Joe Brady

Still only 35, the Buffalo Bills offensive coordinator has already interviewed for head coaching jobs with the Los Angeles Chargers, Atlanta Falcons and New York Jets. In his first full season leading Josh Allen and Co. after taking on the position in an interim capacity last November, Brady has kept the unit among the league’s highest-scoring outfits despite the loss of receiver Stefon Diggs, while Allen has mounted an MVP-worthy campaign. The Jaguars are familiar with just how potent his attacks can be after Buffalo scorched Jacksonville for a 47-10 win in Week 2.

Frank Smith

Winning over the locker room should be no problem for Smith, the Dolphins offensive coordinator who finished first in a NFL Players Association poll of the top assistants at his position. Smith has been touted as a top-notch teacher and communicator. How he would handle play calling as a head coach looms as a potential question mark given coach Mike McDaniel handles those duties in Miami, but that doesn’t have to be a deal breaker.

Brian Flores

The Minnesota Vikings defensive coordinator showed great ability to compensate for personnel shortcomings last season, and he’s created further havoc in 2024 with one of the league’s best groups at creating pressure. Yet Tua Tagovailoa’s critical comments about how the former Dolphins head coach treated him might draw special scrutiny from Khan after the Meyer ordeal, and it’s unclear exactly how Flores’ lingering lawsuit against the NFL might affect his candidacy with any team.

Aaron Glenn

Rebuilding morale would be a lot easier with the leadership of someone like Glenn, the Lions defensive coordinator who has learned under the likes of Sean Payton and Dan Campbell. Glenn has an impressive track record of getting results, helping lift Detroit’s defense to rank seventh in scoring despite the loss of Aidan Hutchinson. He’s also widely respected, as he was the leading vote-getter for the top defensive coordinator in an NFLPA poll. The three-time former Pro Bowl defensive back also made a one-year pitstop with the Jaguars as a player in 2007. But he figures to be in demand elsewhere, with potential interviews with the Jets, Chicago Bears and New Orleans Saints.

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The frontrunner, the colossus, the team no opponent should want to face in College Football Playoff, hid in plain sight. No hiding now, Ohio State.
Money talks. Talent follows. Ryan Day built Ohio State into nation’s most talented team, thanks in part to NIL investment.
Buckeyes will carry frontrunner mantle into Cotton Bowl game against Texas.

The front-runner, the colossus, the team no opponent should want to face in this College Football Playoff, hid in plain sight.

If we ever didn’t see it, then we let ourselves look past the 300-pound gorilla. We either allowed an unsightly loss to a bitter rival cloud our judgement, or we ignored college football’s history that tells us the most talented teams enjoy the best shot at national titles.

Coaches can make college football sound pretty complex, but when you boil it down, the coiner of the phrase “Jimmys and Joes beat X’s and O’s” was one smart cookie.

Ohio State, its first two playoff games, combined an unmatchable amount of “Jimmy and Joe” talent with shrewd X’s and O’s.

The result: Back-to-back blowout wins against teams that had combined for a 23-2 record. That included its 41-21 Rose Bowl rout of No. 1 Oregon.

No more hiding in plain view, Ohio State. No more playing opossum against Michigan and getting to spend a few weeks as a doubted squad.

We see you clearly now, Buckeyes. You’re the monster. You sit in the catbird seat. You’re the team that, on your best day, performs as well as 2019 LSU or 2020 Alabama or 2022 Georgia. You’re the front-runner, not only against Texas in the Cotton Bowl, but against whomever comes next.

UP AND DOWN: Winners and losers from college football bowl season

Ohio State investment pays off in College Football Playoff

Ohio State spent a reported $20 million in NIL investment to assemble this team, and you don’t need to be an NFL scout to spot the Buckeyes’ obvious advantages.

“You guys keep talking about a $20 million roster,” former Alabama coach Nick Saban said on “College GameDay” before the Buckeyes’ season opener. “If you don’t pay the right guys, you’ll be (crap) out of luck.”

Well, Nick, they paid the right guys, and that’s what made the Michigan loss so inexplicable, because the Buckeyes are loaded.

The College Football Playoff semifinals feature four premier defenses, but Ohio State’s ranks as the best, a unit that’s not surrendered more than 17 points to any opponent other than Oregon.

More, the Buckeyes built the most complete team, featuring the nation’s most elite receivers, a backfield tandem as good as any, an improving offensive line and a quarterback who only muddled through one truly bad game. Will Howard’s lone stumble just so happened to occur when the most eyes were upon him, while Ohio State continued its cursed streak against Michigan.

Saban could tell us all about the value of talent acquisition. College football’s existence before NIL collectives and transfer free agency was one of a few teams, headlined by Saban’s Alabama, stockpiling the deepest wealth of talent, emerging as juggernauts and ruling with a strong grip.

Saban did a lot well at Alabama, but his persistent ability to magnetize, unify and develop the most talented players ranked as his super skill, unlocking his six national titles in Tuscaloosa.

The playing field leveled somewhat these past few years when donors from coast to coast started buying players with deals doled out through organized collectives rather than an under-the-table bagman.

Although NIL spending is not open record, nobody would deny Ohio State paced the spending war for this season. Money talks. Talent followed. Ohio State coach Ryan Day put together the best roster, Buckeyes fans knew it, and they fumed after Day lost twice during the regular season, including to the dreaded rival up north.

And because of that loss to Michigan, the CFP selection committee got heavy-handed with the Buckeyes’ seeding. The committee placed a No. 8 next to their name, after they’d built a résumé worthy of the No. 5 seed, awarded to the top at-large team.

Against Texas, how will Ohio State react to front-runner’s mantle?

That seed and the accompanying bracket placement dealt the Buckeyes the toughest path to the national championship game among teams seeded within the top eight.

No matter. Talent prevailed.

Asked to explain the 187-yard receiving day from Jeremiah Smith, Ohio State’s freshman wide receiver, in the Rose Bowl, Oregon coach Dan Lanning said: “The guy is NFL-ready.”

So are many of Smith’s teammates. Lanning’s Ducks trailed Ohio State by 34 points long before the sun began to sink beyond the San Gabriel Mountains.

The NFL must wait on Smith – he’s a 19-year-old performing like a multi-time All-Pro – but plenty of Buckeyes will hear their names called by Roger Goodell three months from now.

The easy narrative became that losing to Michigan motivated the Buckeyes or refocused them or forced the coaching staff to remove guardrails from the game plan. A serving of truth probably could be found in each idea, but the other reality is, Ohio State spent much of the season performing like a top-tier squad, wilted on one November day against a rival, then resurrected as the behemoth it is.

By smashing Tennessee and splintering Oregon, Ohio State showed its cards, and there’s no hiding it now. The Buckeyes wrested away favorite status. Are they strong enough to carry that mantle?

Blake Toppmeyer is the USA TODAY Network’s national college football columnist. Email him at BToppmeyer@gannett.com and follow him on X @btoppmeyer. Subscribe to read all of his columns.

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SEC fans, are you feeling bummed about how the football season played out? Don’t worry, because the league has decided to completely take over men’s college basketball.

It was an historic non-conference slate for the SEC with every team emerging with three losses or fewer and nearly every team stacking up plenty of Quad 1 wins that will come in handy if in the mix for the NCAA men’s tournament. The success in the first two months set the stage for the conference that expanded to 16 members to have the opportunity to set a record with 12 teams in the field.

Now that conference play has arrived this weekend, the carnage of teams knocking off each has begun.

It’s going to be a wild next two months of conference play as teams fight for their tournament spots and potential high seedings in March. The chaos already kicked off this weekend with two undefeated teams going down − Florida losing to Kentucky and Alabama dominating Oklahoma.

That’s just the beginning of what’s going to be the SEC cannibalizing itself. Unlike what happened in the race for the College Football Playoff, losses in the league aren’t going to be damaging. No game is going to be easy. How bad will it be? Look at Auburn’s schedule as an example: The Tigers already have a Division I-high six Quad 1 wins, and 13 of their remaining 17 games would fall in the Quad 1 category.

With so many strong contenders, going 13-5 or 12-6 may be enough to win the SEC, and an 8-10 conference record should be good enough to make the tournament. By the time we get to March, there will be no need for those hypothetical scenarios.

What are the other storylines coming out of the weekend? We take a look.

The Big Ten mystery

While the SEC is overflowing with tournament and title contenders, the other mega conference can’t say the same.

No real threat has emerged from the Big Ten quite yet, and while they should be near the top of conference with the most tournament teams, there’s a possibility no team will earn a top-three seed. Entering the week, it was the newcomers Oregon and UCLA leading the pack, but the Ducks gave up 109 points to Illinois in a 32-point loss and the Bruins couldn’t buy a bucket in a defeat at Nebraska. At the moment, it’s Michigan and Michigan State standing as the long unbeatens in conference play..

It’s a troubling sign for a conference that hasn’t won a national championship since 2000,.

Cooper Flagg looking like a No. 1 pick

There was plenty of hype with the arrival of Cooper Flagg, and so far he has delivered.

Duke is riding an eight-game win streak, and Flagg has played a big part of that, showing that he has settled in the college game. During this run, he has scored at least 20 points in six of those games, including an impressive start to ACC play.

Flagg’s productivity can be seen all over the court, and it appears he can just pick and choose how he attacks. He’s scoring at an elite rate, dishing the ball out and helping set the tempo defensively. He played a huge role in the blowout wins against Georgia Tech and SMU, finishing the week with 48 points, 14 rebounds, nine assists, five steals, and three blocks. Not so bad for the projected No. 1 pick in next year’s NBA draft.

UConn continues win streak without Liam McNeeley

The two-time defending champions had to play their first game without their star freshman, and they did it in dramatic fashion.

Liam McNeeley is expected to be out for some weeks due to an ankle injury, and early against Providence, it was evident Connecticut was missing its second-leading scorer. The Huskies were down by 14 points in the second half, and showed resilience with a 17-2 run as the game headed toward the home stretch to beat the Friars 87-84.

Now 4-0 in Big East play, Dan Hurley’s squad is in prime position to continue its hold on the conference.

The turnaround at West Virginia

Darian DeVries continues to completely change the trajectory of West Virginia with the Mountaineers winners of seven in a row, including a big road victory over Kansas earlier in the week. That win snapped the Jayhawks’ streak of 33 consecutive home wins in conference home openers and was West Virginia’s first in Allen Fieldhouse.

Javon Small has taken the scoring load in the absence of Tucker DeVries to become a star for West Virginia. He leads the Big 12 with 19.5 points per game while the Mountaineers continue stopping opposing offenses, ranking in the top 20 in several defensive categories.

Conference play has just started, and West Virginia has already surpassed last season’s win total of nine, generating plenty of optimism in Morgantown.

Teams to watch out for: Washington State and Georgetown

Opportunity awaits for a pair of teams that are flying under the radar.

Last season was a dream for Washington State as the Cougars reached the second round of the tournament. Then nearly everyone left when the Pac-12 was disintegrated, including Washington State coach Kyle Smith. But incoming coach David Riley came into Pullman and brought some of his players from Eastern Washington to provide a solid foundation. Playing as a member of the West Coast Conference this season, the Cougars have started off with a 3-0 start in the league after a defeat of San Francisco. Awaiting Washington State on Saturday is a trip to Spokane to face Gonzaga, a test that could determine if the Cougars are legit enough to contend in the WCC and make a run at the tournament field.

Georgetown has been spending the past decade trying to maintain relevance in the sport, and the Hoyas have a big opportunity to do so. The Hoyas at 12-2 and 3-0 in conference play, but don’t have any impressive wins so far. This week, they travel to Marquette and host Connecticut in a pivotal stretch for second-year Ed Cooley. One victory would do wonders for the resume, and two would boost them into the tournament conversion.

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Russia is planning to share advanced satellite technology with North Korea, according to a warning from Secretary of State Antony Blinken. 

‘The DPRK is already receiving Russian military equipment and training. Now, we have reason to believe that Moscow intends to share advanced space and satellite technology with Pyongyang,’ Blinken said while in Seoul, using North Korea’s official name.

Such technology would allow North Korea to identify targets and aim strikes at adversaries across the world, including the U.S. As of last year, North Korea was estimated to have an arsenal of 50 nuclear weapons. 

The warning comes as North Korea fired a ballistic missile into the Sea of Japan, expanding its weapons tests in the weeks before President-elect Donald Trump takes office. 

In one of his last moves as head of the State Department, Blinken was visiting Seoul for talks with South Korean allies about the North Korean nuclear threat. He’ll also visit with officials in Japan, France, Italy and the Holy See. 

Supplying North Korea with satellite technology would come after North Korea supplied Russia with troops and arms to fight in its war on Ukraine. 

Russia ‘may be close’ to accepting North Korea’s nuclear weapons program, reversing decades of commitment to denuclearizing the DPRK. 

Russia helped North Korea launch its first successful satellite in 2023. A Russian rocket launched Iranian satellites into orbit in November, ratcheting up the 21st century space race between the U.S. and its foes. 

Last year, Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, chair of the House Intelligence Committee, issued an ominous warning calling on the Biden administration to declassify information that was later revealed to be about Russia’s anti-satellite capabilities. 

In May, Assistant Secretary of Defense for Space Policy John Plumb warned that Russia was developing an ‘indiscriminate’ nuclear weapon designed for space, highlighting its potential impacts on communications, commerce and national security.

In a year-end political conference, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un vowed to implement his ‘toughest’ anti-U.S. policy and condemned the Biden administration for strengthening ties with South Korea and Japan, describing the alliance as a ‘nuclear military bloc for aggression.’

During his administration, President-elect Trump met with Kim three times for talks about nuclear programs. However, emboldened by Russian support and a lessened enforcement of international sanctions, Kim may be less likely to stand down in talks with the U.S. than ever before. 

It is also unclear if Trump would put the same emphasis on bolstering U.S. alliances in Asia that the Biden administration did. In the past, he has complained about the cost of keeping 28,000 U.S. troops in South Korea to deter threats from the north and pushed for Seoul to increase its own defense contributions. 

The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

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Vice President Kamala Harris is set to do what only two other vice presidents in recent history have done – preside over her defeat in a White House election.

On Monday afternoon, Harris will preside over a joint session of Congress, when lawmakers will certify President-elect Donald Trump’s victory over the current vice president in November’s election.

The vice president said her mission is to ensure a peaceful transfer of power from one administration to the next.

Harris, in a recorded video message released ahead of congressional certification of the 2024 Electoral College vote, said it is a ‘sacred obligation’ she will uphold, ‘guided by love of country, loyalty to our Constitution and my unwavering faith in the American people.’

Pointing to four years ago, when Trump supporters stormed the U.S. Capitol in an unsuccessful effort to upend congressional certification of Trump’s 2020 election loss to President Biden, Harris said ‘as we have seen, our democracy can be fragile.’

‘It is up to each of us to stand up for our most cherished principles,’ the vice president emphasized.

The Capitol was attacked hours after Trump, at a large rally on the National Mall near the White House, repeated his unproven claims that the 2020 election was riddled with massive voter fraud and stolen from him. Trump urged then-Vice President Mike Pence not to certify the election results.

Harris, in her role of presiding over the Senate, becomes the first vice president to oversee the congressional confirmation of their electoral loss since then-Vice President Al Gore did it in January 2001, following his razor-thin defeat to then-Texas Gov. George W. Bush in the 2000 election, which was decided by a Supreme Court ruling.

Four decades earlier, then-Vice President Richard Nixon presided over the certification of his narrow election loss in a 1960 showdown with then-Sen. John F. Kennedy.

Biden, in comments Sunday night, joined Harris in emphasizing that he was ‘determined to do everything in my power to respect the peaceful transfer of power.’

The president, pointing to the Jan. 6, 2021 storming of the Capitol, told new Democrats in Congress that ‘now it’s your duty to tell the truth. You remember what happened, and I won’t let January 6th be rewritten or even erased.’

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