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Well, that was fast.

The standings reveal plenty of ambiguity, evidenced by the utterly cloudy trade deadline picture that will likely reveal a dud of a July trade bazaar. Yet there are several team and individual exploits – some ignominious – coming into view as the field reaches the turnaround point and heads for home.

A look at several paces to keep an eye on this summer, be they realistic goals or something to dream on:

Cal Raleigh: 66 home runs

Yeah, this remains totally irrational. For now, though, we’ve learned not to doubt “Big Dumper” until the big guy stops blasting balls out of ballparks.

And we’re not too far away from “Judge Watch” infographics – yes, can a previously unheralded catcher break the American League record of 62 set by the greatest power hitter of this generation?

Some signs suggest yes. Raleigh’s expected slugging percentage of .593 falls short of his actual .658 mark, which, we should note, is nearly 200 points north of his full-season career high.

And this is the thing: Catchers typically tail off as the summer grows longer. Raleigh’s career first-half OPS of .812 falls to .754 after the All-Star break. Yet last year, when he hit a career-high 34 homers, his slug was virtually identical (.435 to .437) and his OPS also went up after the break (.734 to .767). An interesting data point to monitor: With Statcast now measuring bat speed, can Raleigh maintain his 88th-percentile 74.9 mph hack all year?

So little is guaranteed for catchers, always just a foul tip away from a few weeks on the shelf. We can’t even guarantee Raleigh will break Salvador Perez’s record of 48 home runs for a primary catcher. We also can’t set any limits on B-Dumps, either, since he finds a way to exceed them.

Aaron Judge: Triple Crown

What’s the current hindrance keeping Judge from the game’s first Triple Crown since Miguel Cabrera in 2012? See above.

Yep, Judge currently trails Raleigh in homers (32-28) and RBIs (69-63), though their track records and the fact Judge plays right field and enjoys the occasional short-porch bonus at Yankee Stadium augurs well for the big guy. Less in his favor is whether the decent to hot starts of veteran teammates like Trent Grisham, Paul Goldschmidt and Cody Bellinger are sustainable, affecting his RBI chances.

And then there’s Judge’s run toward what would be his first batting title. Incredibly, he was batting .400 as late as May 7, before mildly regressing to a more human .361. For once, his top competition is not Raleigh but rather Athletics rookie Jacob Wilson, batting .347, including a scorching .361 at home in Yolo County.

And plenty of other spoilers lurk in the batting leaders, perhaps most notably Astros shortstop Jeremy Peña (.325), who’s amid a career year, and Guardians hit machine José Ramírez (.318).

A few factors could boost Judge in this chase, particularly if he sees fewer pitches in the second half and his average remains less prone to dips like the 2-for-24 (.083) he recently suffered through against the Red Sox and Angels. Yet, taking his walks would save his average but hinder his homer and RBI totals. Not easy, huh?

That’s one reason the Triple Crown remains one of the game’s great feats of badassery, despite what the naysayers might claim.

Tarik Skubal: 9.6 strikeout-walk ratio

A little esoteric, you say? Well, sue us: Nobody’s on pace for 20 wins or 300 strikeouts and there’s really no better way to illustrate the dominant two-year run Skubal’s on.

He’s struck out 125 and walked just 13 this season, and that ratio is 115-9 over his last 14 starts. (The Tigers are 12-2 in those games, shockingly). Such dominance paired with efficiency has enabled all his other greatness: The 205-inning pace, the majors-leading 2.12 FIP and 0.87 WHIP, all creating such value for the Tigers that he should garner a few down-ballot MVP votes along with a second Cy Young should he maintain.

And that 9.6 ratio? It’d be second-highest in AL history, behind … Phil Hughes? Yes, the one-time All-Star produced an 11.63 mark in 2014 for the Minnesota Twins.

Will Smith: .330 batting average

Just three times has a catcher won the NL batting title: Buster Posey in his 2012 MVP season in San Francisco and Ernie Lombardi for Cincinnati in 1938 and the Boston Braves in 1942.

Smith has a 19-point lead over teammate Freddie Freeman at the moment, scary company to keep. But the batting average only scratches the surface of Smith’s value to the Dodgers.

He’s batting a majors-leading .426 with runners in scoring position, a testament to his ability to clean up hitting behind Freeman, Mookie Betts and Shohei Ohtani. His .425 OBP leads the NL. And while 13 Dodgers pitchers are currently on the injured list, Smith’s 3.2 WAR is tops among NL catchers and seventh overall, helping the superteam stay on track.

Like his AL counterpart Raleigh, keeping up that pace at the plate will be challenging given the work asked of him behind it. Yet unlike Raleigh, Smith doesn’t get the occasional DH day since Ohtani occupies that spot, giving him more chances to truly sit on his average. Come and get him, fellas.

Colorado Rockies: 125 losses

This one’s gonna be fascinating, in a grim kind of way. As you might have heard, the Rockies steadied the ship just a bit after a 9-50 start. Yet after a 15-game stretch of winning baseball (OK, 8-7), there they went again, losing six of seven to fall back under what we’ll call the Reinsdorf Line.

Yep, the Rockies need to win at better than a .253 clip to ensure they don’t break the 2024 Chicago White Sox’s modern record of 121 losses before the ink in the record books had a chance to dry.

It’s true: The Rockies are playing much better than when they were losing 21-0 and firing their manager. Young players such as Michael Toglia are gaining their footing, and catcher Hunter Goodman is a bona fide All-Star.

Problem is, the ’24 White Sox only bottomed out in historic fashion after the trade deadline, when they shipped off Erick Fedde, Michael Kopech, Tommy Pham and others, leaving a ship rudderless. They went 9-39 in the immediate aftermath, cinching their spot in infamy.

So how might the Rockies look, post-deadline? There’s honestly not a ton to deal, unless they finally move third baseman Ryan McMahon, or spin off veteran pitchers Antonio Senzatela or German Marquez, further destabilizing the rotation.

If they’re so inclined, their top asset, given the incessant need for relief help at the deadline, might be right-hander Jake Bird, who gets plenty of swing-and-miss (11.5 Ks per nine) and will have three seasons remaining before free agency. Yet that might make them inclined to hold him, as well.

Either way, it’s highly probable the Rockies will look different – read: worse – after July 31. And that much harder to avoid history.

The big question: Will the 2024 White Sox pop champagne and light cigars if the Rockies break their record, or keep it intact?

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Thirty picks down, 29 to go.

The first round of the 2025 NBA Draft got off without a hitch. Unsurprisingly, Cooper Flagg went No. 1 overall to the Dallas Mavericks, while Duke teammates Kon Knueppel (No. 4) and Khaman Maluach (No. 10) each went inside the top 10.

It wasn’t until later in the first round when the unexpected selections picked up. As certain names flew off the board, fans were left with questions like, ‘How is that player still available?’ Although the NBA draft is only two rounds, that second round can often be where championship teams are built. With the recent success of second-round picks like Nikola Jokic, Draymond Green, and Jalen Brunson, there’s plenty of reason to remain invested in these selections if you’re an NBA fan.

Here are the best players still available on Day 2 of the 2025 NBA Draft.

2025 NBA DRAFT, ROUND ONE: Full list of NBA draft picks, analysis of first round

2025 NBA Draft: Best players still available in Round 2

Guards

Chaz Lanier, Tennessee

Senior, guard, 6-4, 199 pounds, 23 years old
2024-25 stats: 18.0 ppg, 3.9 rpg, 1.1 apg, 0.9 spg, 43.1% FG, 39.5% 3PT, 75.8% FT

Adou Thiero, Arkansas

Junior, guard, 6-8, 220 pounds, 21 years old
2024-25 stats: 15.1 ppg, 5.8 rpg, 1.9 apg, 1.6 spg, 54.5% FG, 25.6% 3PT, 68.6% FT

Forwards

Rasheer Fleming, Saint Joseph’s

Junior, forward, 6-8¼, 232 pounds, 20 years old
2024-25 stats: 14.7 ppg, 8.5 rpg, 1.5 bpg, 1.4 spg, 1.3 apg, 53.1% FG, 39% 3PT, 74.3% FT

Noah Penda, Le Mans Sarthe (France)

Forward, 6-6, 232 pounds, 20 years old
2024-25 stats: 10.2 ppg, 5.1 rpg, 2.6 apg, 1.4 spg, 0.4 bpg, 44.0% FG, 30.4% 3PT, 69.3% FT

Centers

Maxime Raynaud, Stanford

Senior, center, 7-0¼, 237 pounds, 22 years old
2024-25 stats: 20.2 ppg, 10.6 rpg, 1.7 apg, 1.4 bpg, 46.7% FG, 34.7% 3PT, 77% FT

Ryan Kalkbrenner, Creighton

Senior, center, 7-1, 270 pounds, 23 years old
2024-25 stats: 19.2 ppg, 8.7 rpg, 1.5 apg, 2.7 bpg, 0.5 spg, 65.3% FG, 34.4% 3PT, 68.1% FT

The USA TODAY app gets you to the heart of the news — fastDownload for award-winning coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, the eNewspaper and more.

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Besides, Roseman, 50, has absorbed more blows than that, at least figuratively, over the years in his love/hate role as the Philadelphia Eagles general manager. So, after the projectile connected while Roseman and his suddenly stunned family cruised on a float during the downtown parade in mid-February, it seemed natural that the fearless GM was determined to shake it off.

Hey, it’s tradition for champs to be showered in confetti. In Philly, they hurl beer cans, too.

“I saw one of my friends from college. He said, ‘I can understand why you dropped it,” Roseman reflected during a recent interview with USA TODAY Sports.

“I didn’t drop anything, bro. And it was with enough velocity and force that it put me down. My family, they got scared s—less. I was like, ‘Get my trainers, let’s clean it up and keep going,’ and I’ll deal with it after.”

A short time later, Roseman turned it into a message for fans during his speech at the championship rally. As he aptly put it, “I will bleed for this city!”

The episode was not only classic Philly. It was also quite a metaphor for the resilience that Roseman has exhibited in climbing to the top of his profession.

Roseman has spent his entire 25-year career in the NFL with the Eagles, but this is actually his second stanza as GM after he was stripped of roster-building power (a long time ago) during the Chip Kelly era in the mid-2010s.

And look at him now. In assembling teams that reached the Super Bowl three times in seven years, twice claiming the crown, a strong argument can be made that Roseman – a wheeler-dealer grounded in the old-school principle that winning is built in the trenches — is the NFL’s best GM.

After all, the team that blew out the Kansas City Chiefs in Super Bowl 59 in February contained just 21 players (and only 10 starters) from the 2022 team that narrowly lost to KC three years earlier. Last year, Roseman’s free agent haul included 2,000-yard rusher Saquon Barkley; Zack Baun, a former New Orleans Saints special teamer who blossomed into first-team All-Pro linebacker; and since-departed right guard Mekhi Becton, a New York Jets bust who switched from tackle. He traded for since-departed safety C.J. Gardner-Johnson, who led the team in interceptions; traded up in the second round to draft cornerback Cooper DeJean and made Quinyon Mitchell the franchise’s first first-round cornerback since 2002.

“He doesn’t get enough credit for re-tooling,” Chiefs coach Andy Reid told USA TODAY Sports. “That is so hard to do.”

Reid sensed that Roseman was something special way back when. After Joe Banner, then the Eagles president, hired Roseman for his first job as a front office intern in 2000, Reid was the coach with GM power who ultimately found a role for him in the personnel department as his era evolved with the Eagles.

“Even when he was working with Joe, you could see that he was passionate about the personnel side of it,” Reid said. “So, I brought him over to the personnel side and he jumped on, dug in and was willing to do anything and everything. I thought that was a positive.”

In 2010, Roseman became the NFL’s youngest GM at 34. But in 2015, Kelly (for whom Roseman led the search to bring to Philadelphia in 2013) was given the GM power. It was a huge test of his resilience. Roseman told his wife, Mindy, that it was likely that they would move on.

“It’s the nature of the business,” Roseman reflected. “I was resigned to that fact, but also at that time I realized that I wasn’t being true to the vision that I thought was important to build a football team. And that if I ever got the opportunity again, I wasn’t going to have any regrets.”

Brandon Graham remembers. The longtime defensive end, who announced his retirement in March, was Roseman’s first draft pick.

“That had to be a dark time,” Graham told USA TODAY Sports. “I know inside, he couldn’t wait to prove himself when he got another shot. That’s what it’s all about. It built that chip on his shoulder.

“And kudos to Mr. Lurie for keeping an ace in the hole.”

Roseman looks back at the manner in which Eagles owner Jeffrey Lurie handled his case as a “a gift.” Lurie made Roseman an executive vice president, then gave him the freedom to find ways to grow personally and professionally.

“I wanted to do what a lot of fired coaches do, which is basically improve on myself,” Roseman recalled. “He said, ‘I’ll support it; just bring everything back.’ ”

Roseman met with leaders of Fortune 500 companies. He picked the brains of executives and coaches of European soccer clubs, NBA teams and Major League Baseball teams. The connective theme was team building. He said insight gained from San Antonio Spurs president R.C. Buford – “Maybe the best executive of all time,” Roseman said – was pivotal.

“It was really self-exploration,” Roseman said. “And I certainly didn’t count on coming back as Eagles GM in a year.”

Yet that’s exactly what happened. Kelly was fired before finishing his third season and Roseman regained the GM job.

A rising star coach. Will the NFL let him shine?

“In a way, Jeff and the Eagles were lucky,” Banner told USA TODAY Sports.

Sure, there have been high-profile hits and misses during both GM stints. Yet Banner’s early impressions of Roseman – a fearless risk-taker with supreme confidence who reminded him of himself – have stood up over time.

“He took a lot of heat for a long time,” Banner said.

Roseman knows. In some ways, the heat can fortify the resilience. Yet he is also quick to point out that there have been more hits than misses. And the criticism that came with the second-round selection of Jalen Hurts in 2020, followed by the stunning trade of Carson Wentz in 2021, turned into an NFL version of a rose garden.

While Hurts has developed into a star, the Wentz deal parlayed into draft capital that resulted in receivers A.J. Brown and DeVonta Smith, and D-tackles Jalen Carter and Jordan Davis. In other words, heat can be so sweet.

After preventing the Chiefs from achieving an historic three-peat, the Eagles are favored by oddsmakers to repeat as Super Bowl champs. Of course, now is not the time to plot any victory lap – or even to ponder look-out moments at a championship parade.

“This is such a humbling business,” Roseman said. “We’ve had our struggles as well. So, you’ve just got to keep moving forward and figuring out the best ways to improve your team.”

Which, given the track record, keeps the Eagles in very good hands.

 Follow Jarrett Bell on social media: X: @Jarrett Bell

Bluesky: jarrettbell.bsky.social

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Just when I thought Kalen DeBoer’s offseason couldn’t go much better, the Alabama coach received the perfect gift from an opposing quarterback. Florida State’s Thomas Castellanos served bulletin board material that will provide the program jet fuel throughout the dog days of summer.

Castellanos, a transfer from Boston College, will make his first start for the Seminoles when they host Alabama in the season opener, and the quarterback with the 58.6% career completion rate foresees something big going down at Doak Campbell Stadium.

“You go back and watch every first game that I played in, we always start fast,” Castellanos told On3. “I dreamed of moments like this. I dreamed of playing against Alabama. They don’t have Nick Saban to save them. I just don’t see them stopping me.”

There’s an obvious clapback about Bobby Bowden not being around to save Florida State anymore – the Noles went 2-10 last season – but I digress.

Kalen DeBoer’s task: Restore Alabama’s aura of authority

DeBoer strives to be his own man rather than mimic than inimitable, but here’s an unmissable opportunity to take a page from Saban’s book. Back in his day, the GOAT would have mainlined this quote into the Crimson Tide’s cerebrum and let it be a motivational prod.

Some minion in the Mal Moore Athletic Facility in Tuscaloosa ought to be pounding Control+P keys on their laptop and plastering the walls, the nooks and the crannies with Castellanos’ quote.

Athletes tend to look under every rock on the internet in hopes of finding a naysayer doubting them. And this was no Russian bot tweeting a nastygram on X. This was an opposing quarterback firing a shot across the bow.

Ill-advised though Castellanos’ words were, didn’t he say what many of us wonder? No, not the part about Alabama being incapable of stopping him. Last we saw of Castellanos, he threw seven passes in a loss to Syracuse, completed two, and got intercepted once.

Castellanos’ boast of fast starts sounds like a rewrite of history, too. He passed for 138 yards in Boston College’s 2023 season-opener loss to Northern Illinois, then tossed for 106 yards in Week 1 last season.

Sizzlin’ starts!

The part about Saban not being around to save Alabama anymore rings true, though. Castellanos isn’t the only opponent yapping while the elephant naps. Vanderbilt quarterback Diego Pavia predicted recently on the “Bussin’ with the Boys” podcast that the Commodores would beat Alabama for a second consecutive season.

Alabama’s invincibility cloak got packed away inside a trunk that snapped shut after its undefeated 2020 season.

DeBoer’s charge is to revive Alabama’s aura of authority after he stumbled to a 9-4 record in his debut, the Tide’s worst record since Saban’s first season in 2007.

“I feel like we are taking the steps,” DeBoer told me in April. “You’ve got to go through some hard times, I feel. More times than not, you go through the hard times to actually realize the big moments.”

Many coaches share that philosophy, but Alabama fans will expect a leap this season, not a small step.

Alabama gained more than it lost this offseason

I see DeBoer’s debut as no cause for panic, but neither DeBoer nor Florida State’s Mike Norvell should expect another mulligan after each endured 2024 seasons that fell short of the program standard.

The Seminoles didn’t even meet the Willie Taggart standard for mediocrity. Never mind the Bowden bar.

Norvell responded with another big transfer haul. Castellanos offers a quarterback upgrade after FSU’s experiment gone wrong with DJ Uiagalelei.

At Alabama, DeBoer smartly reunited with Ryan Grubb, his longtime right-hand man. He tapped Grubb in January to be the Crimson Tide’s offensive coordinator. DeBoer nabbed several useful transfers, too, like wide receiver Isaiah Horton from Miami, and he kept Alabama from losing a single scholarship player in the spring transfer window.

DeBoer and his Tide enjoyed a good offseason.

And it just got better.

Saban, a motivational master, understood that sometimes the best inspiration comes from your opponent’s lips.

Blake Toppmeyer is the USA TODAY Network’s national college football columnist. Email him at BToppmeyer@gannett.com and follow him on X @btoppmeyer.

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As had long been expected, Cooper Flagg’s name was called with the first pick of the NBA draft Wednesday night. But despite filling his trophy case, including national player of the year honors, during his sublime freshman (and only) season at Duke University – not to mention a reputation burnished by holding his own against Team USA’s superstars prior to last year’s Paris Olympics – further expectations commensurate with Flagg’s draft position will only continue to expand.

His hype train quickly gained steam in high school, where he led the Montverde Academy Eagles to 34-0 record and a national championship as a senior, before driving the Blue Devils to this year’s Final Four. Of course, none of that guarantees Flagg will be an NBA legend or even revitalize the Dallas Mavericks, who, one year removed from losing in the NBA Finals, are apparently hoping he can (on some level) fill the Luka Dončić-sized hole in their lineup.

But pro sports rarely work that tidily. For every LeBron James, there’s a Kwame Brown and maybe even an Andrea Bargnani or Ben Simmons. For every Peyton Manning, there’s a Jeff George. The spotlight is simply harsher when it comes to top picks. Highly regarded Bears quarterback Caleb Williams had a decent rookie season in 2024 despite the regrettable circumstances around him. Yet his career is already being (unfairly?) measured against the man chosen right after him, Washington Commanders counterpart Jayden Daniels, who may have had the greatest NFL season ever by a rookie QB.

Welcome to the Association, Coop. To illustrate the daunting climb ahead of you, I’m going to rank this century’s No. 1 picks in the NFL – I’m old enough to have covered LeBron and Brown when they were NBA newbies, but football is my area of (alleged) expertise – from best to worst. (This year’s top selection, Cam Ward of the Tennessee Titans, gets a one-year exemption, for obvious reasons.)

1. QB Eli Manning, San Diego Chargers (2004)

Tabbed by the Bolts against his family’s will, he was traded to the New York Giants within an hour of being picked in a megadeal involving Philip Rivers. Both passers will likely find their way to the Hall of Fame eventually, though Manning was not elected in 2025, his first year of eligibility. But he does own a pair of Super Bowl MVP trophies after vanquishing Tom Brady’s New England Patriots in style two times over. Maybe Eli wasn’t as good individually as older brother Peyton, the No. 1 pick in 1998 and a five-time league MVP, but that doesn’t detract from the exceptional performer and ambassador he was for the Giants over 16 seasons.

2. QB Matthew Stafford, Detroit Lions (2009)

A late-career surge with the Rams, which included a Super Bowl win to cap the 2021 season, will probably certify Stafford’s Canton credentials. But he deserves more credit than he probably gets for his often-scintillating play on some Lions teams that were overly reliant on him and WR Calvin Johnson for seven years. And Stafford’s relative excellence in Motown hardly subsided in the five seasons following Megatron’s retirement after the 2015 campaign.

3. DE Myles Garrett, Cleveland Browns (2017)

From a personal perspective – four-time All-Pro, 2023 Defensive Player of the Year, 102½ sacks in 117 NFL games – he’s probably already done enough to gain entry into the Hall. In terms of team success, the Browns only have one playoff win since Garrett arrived – not that he’s remotely to blame.

4. QB Joe Burrow, Cincinnati Bengals (2020)

Admittedly, this is something of a projection for a guy who’s played the equivalent of four full seasons when injuries are factored in. But Burrow has already carried Cincy to a Super Bowl – a huge feather in his cap – and a pair of appearances in the AFC championship game. He seems to be an MVP-in-waiting, and perhaps that comes this season if he’s able to – forced to? – overcome a deficient Cincinnati D. After leading the league with 4,913 yards and 43 touchdowns through the air in 2024, many league observers thought Burrow deserved quite a bit of MVP consideration despite the Bengals’ failure as a team.

5. QB Jared Goff, Los Angeles Rams (2016)

Despite starting Super Bowl 53, he was part of the package the Rams gave up for Stafford in 2021 – and his relocation to Detroit was widely viewed as something of a salary dump at the time. But give Goff, a two-time Pro Bowler in LA, copious credit – he’s become an even better quarterback with the Lions, throwing for at least 4,400 yards each of the past three seasons and leading the franchise to a level success (including successive division titles) it had not previously experienced during the Super Bowl era (since 1966).

6. QB Cam Newton, Carolina Panthers (2011)

During his first five seasons, the super-sized dual threat lived up to his Superman persona – faster than a speeding linebacker, more powerful than a … linebacker – peaking in 2015 with league MVP honors while the Panthers won the NFC. But Newton was notably terrible in Super Bowl 50 and experienced a steady descent afterward, dogged by injuries and inconsistency.

7. QB Andrew Luck, Indianapolis Colts (2012)

Targeted as the virtually irreplaceable Peyton Manning’s successor, Luck seemed up to the unenviable task … when he was healthy enough to play. He led the Colts to a 33-15 record and a trio of playoff appearances during his first three seasons, which culminated with a loss in the 2014 AFC championship game. But, like Newton, Luck was a big man who was also a big target when he often resorted to a devil-may-care playing style. He only posted 38 times over his final four seasons – he was named Comeback Player of the Year in 2018, when he passed for 39 TDs and nearly 4,600 yards – and shockingly retired during the 2019 preseason, unable to further shoulder the pain and expectations of his job. The Colts have yet to recover.

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8. QB Michael Vick, Atlanta Falcons (2001)

While it probably wouldn’t be accurate to say he’s the paradigm of the dual-threat quarterbacks who are becoming the rule rather than the exception in the modern NFL – I’m giving that credit to Randall Cunningham – Vick certainly inspired a legion of uber-athletic passers who followed him. Had he worked harder as a younger player rather than relying on his gifts – just ask Vick – remained clear of dogfighting and the jail time it earned him and avoided injuries later in his career, he might have wound up a champion and Hall of Famer. Regardless – legend.

9. QB Carson Palmer, Cincinnati Bengals (2003)

For a brief moment, it appeared he might be the guy to do what Burrow seems to be managing and lead the Bengals out of the wilderness. But Palmer tore up his knee on the first pass of his playoff debut – a 66-yard completion – and Cincinnati retreated into irrelevance. Fed up with the organization in later years, Palmer was traded to another backwater in 2011, joining the Raiders for 25 forgettable games. He eventually enjoyed a renaissance with the Cardinals and nearly took them to the Super Bowl.

10. QB Baker Mayfield, Browns (2018)

He materialized as Cleveland’s choice at the 11th hour – a decision he largely vindicated. However the Browns’ decision to dump Mayfield for Deshaun Watson in 2022 will forever be viewed as an unequivocal disaster. But it may have also catalyzed Mayfield into becoming the player he is now – a two-time Pro Bowler who’s thrown for 69 TDs and nearly 9,000 yards in two years with the Buccaneers. He has plenty of runway ahead to move much further up this list.

11. DE Mario Williams, Houston Texans (2006)

He was the surprising choice over electric USC RB Reggie Bush. But Williams justified his very unpopular selection with the locals, compiling nearly 100 sacks in 11 NFL seasons. A four-time Pro Bowler, most of his career was spent in virtual anonymity with bad teams in Houston and Buffalo. Williams never started a playoff game.

12. QB Alex Smith, San Francisco 49ers (2005)

He spent his career as NFL hurdler – overcoming the transition from Urban Meyer’s college offense at Utah to a pro scheme; getting chosen (instead of Aaron Rodgers) by a bad Niners squad; losing his job to Colin Kaepernick after suffering a concussion in 2012; losing his job to Patrick Mahomes in Kansas City in 2018; and suffering a gruesome leg injury late in his career at Washington, but one he miraculously came back from. Still, Smith, a three-time Pro Bowler, was a good player, outstanding teammate and great interview who made the most of his 16-year career (though two seasons were wiped out by injuries).

13. LT Jake Long, Miami Dolphins (2008)

He was a Pro Bowler and dominant player in each of his first four seasons before injuries largely short-circuited the balance of his nine-year career. The Fins thought enough of Long to choose him instead of future league MVP Matt Ryan.

14. LT Eric Fisher, Kansas City Chiefs (2013)

His draft wasn’t exactly star-studded, and Fisher emerged as something of a surprise choice at the top of it. Nevertheless, he was a solid player over the course of a decade, earned a pair of Pro Bowl nods and is one of just three players – along with Eli Manning and Stafford – to play in and win a Super Bowl after being selected No. 1 overall in the 21st century.

15. QB Kyler Murray, Arizona Cardinals (2019)

His potential hasn’t sufficiently matched the production to this point, though he was the Offensive Rookie of the Year and followed that up with Pro Bowl recognition in 2020 and ’21. But Murray ended the 2021 season with a poor performance in a wild-card loss to the Rams and has had to answer a lot of questions about his health and work ethic in recent years. Still, plenty of time yet for his career to truly take off, and the Cards seem to be perched for a breakout.

16. DE/OLB Jadeveon Clowney, Texans (2014)

A three-time Pro Bowler, the peripatetic pass rusher has been a very good player who maybe hasn’t been given due credit for his all-around game given edge players are so often judged by sacks − and Clowney has never even had 10 in a single season. Yet it is probably fair to say that he’s never lived up to his highlight-reel promise while at the University of South Carolina.

17. QB Trevor Lawrence, Jacksonville Jaguars (2021)

Projected as a generational prospect years before the Jags secured the opportunity to take him, Lawrence has fallen well short of fulfilling that hype … so far. However, the Meyer debacle during his rookie year and last year’s injury weren’t Lawrence’s fault. And he did flash during the 2022 playoffs while leading Jacksonville to the divisional round. His story is far from written, and a new chapter awaits with the arrival of super-hyped rookie Travis Hunter to help the cause in Duval County.

18. OLB/DE Travon Walker, Jaguars (2022)

A dark horse who galloped to the top of the draft board, Walker has reached double-digit sacks each of the past two seasons. Yet, to date, he hasn’t been nearly the player Detroit’s Aidan Hutchinson, who was drafted directly after him, is. But it’s still early in the process.

19. QB Caleb Williams, Chicago Bears (2024)

Greatness is expected of him. But as a rookie, he was the victim of an insufficient organizational infrastructure, one that likely contributed to Williams reverting to some of his troubling college habits – and that meant too many sacks and fumbles. However the arrival of offensively brilliant coach Ben Johnson could spark exponential improvement in Williams’ performance.

20. QB Jameis Winston, Tampa Bay Buccaneers (2015)

Talented. Enigmatic. Beloved. Vexing. If you need a season to sum up Winston, it would be 2019, when he passed for more than 5,000 yards, 33 TDs and 30 INTs. If you need a game to sum up Winston, it occurred last season – when he threw for 497 yards and six TDs (four to his Cleveland teammates, two to Denver Broncos defenders) in a memorable Monday night loss. Usually a favorite in any locker room he graces, Winston has mostly been a backup since the Bucs replaced him with Brady after that 2019 campaign that nearly drove then-coach Bruce Arians crazy.

21. QB Sam Bradford, St. Louis Rams (2010)

His injury history at Oklahoma was predictive of similar setbacks in the NFL. In a sense, his pro career peaked when he won Offensive Rookie of the Year honors. Bradford played for four teams, finishing with a career passer rating of 84.5 and a 34-48-1 record in 83 starts. He never appeared in the postseason.

22. QB Bryce Young, Panthers (2023)

He struggled massively as a rookie and was benched in the early stages of his sophomore season. But after getting back into the lineup, Young started to serve reminders of why Carolina loved him in the first place. Now enjoying continuity under second-year coach Dave Canales, Young has a chance to blossom in 2025.

23. QB David Carr, Texans (2002)

The first selection in club history, he’s probably best known for being sacked a single-season record 76 times during his rookie season. Carr was constantly running for his life in Houston, subsequently developed poor on-field habits and never settled in as the franchise’s foundation. He was a solid backup later in his career, winning a ring with the 2011 Giants.

24. DE Courtney Brown, Browns (2000)

Need a snapshot of why the Browns have almost always stunk? Brown was the No. 1 pick a year after Cleveland kicked off the 1999 draft by choosing QB Tim Couch. Both were waylaid by injuries and their enlistment by an expansion team. Brown wound up with 19 sacks in six NFL seasons – basically what T.J. Watt does for the archrival Pittsburgh Steelers in a year.

DRAFT BUSTS: *50 biggest of past 50 years

25. QB JaMarcus Russell, Oakland Raiders (2007)

Woof. Russell, who began his career with a lengthy holdout, never approached the hype generated by his howitzer arm and legendary pro day. He lasted just three seasons, losing 18 of 25 starts and compiling an abysmal 65.2 passer rating, before laziness and weight gain washed him out of the league. Who could the Raiders have taken instead? Calvin Johnson, Joe Thomas, Adrian Peterson, Patrick Willis, Marshawn Lynch and Darrelle Revis all came off the board in the first half of Round 1 in ’07.

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Senate Republicans pushed back against a leaked report that President Donald Trump’s strikes on Iran did not obliterate the Islamic Republic’s nuclear program, but still wanted more information on the full extent of the damage done to the key facilities.

A widely reported ‘low confidence’ assessment from the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) suggested that the weekend strikes, dubbed Operation Midnight Hammer, did not completely destroy Iran’s nuclear capabilities.

Trump has remained firm that the sites were ‘totally obliterated,’ and the White House has strongly pushed back against the report. And both the Israeli and Iranian governments agree that the sites were badly damaged.

Members of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and Senate Armed Services Committee told Fox News Digital that they were confident in the president’s assessment and pushed back against the DIA’s findings.

‘First of all, one of the things I’d consider is the DIA said that Ukraine would be wiped out in three days,’ Sen. Kevin Cramer, R-N.D., told Fox News Digital. ‘And second, whatever the damage to Fordow is, the damage to the [nuclear] capabilities of Iran are devastating.’

Cramer said that the effectiveness of the bombing, which was carried out by several B-2 bombers armed with bunker-busting bombs, could not be ‘overstated,’ and warned that lingering questions surrounding the effectiveness of the operation were just ‘fodder for political discussion.’

‘I think the mission was accomplished,’ he said.

Senate Armed Services Committee Chair Roger Wicker, R-Miss., had not yet read the report, but called the DIA’s finding and subsequent news reports ‘bogus.’ Wicker’s sentiment came just after Senate Republicans met behind closed doors with Israeli Ambassador Yechiel Leiter.

‘We just spoke to the Israeli ambassador to the United States just a few moments ago, and his assessment is that their capability has been destroyed for years,’ Wicker said.

Still, just how damaged the nuclear facilities are, particularly the Fordow Fuel Enrichment Plant buried deep under layers of rock, is a question lawmakers want answered and believe would only come from a true boots-on-the-ground assessment.

Senators are set to receive a briefing Thursday afternoon from Trump officials on the strikes, and expect to learn more about the true extent of the damage.

Sen. Mike Rounds, R-S.D., told Fox News Digital that he’d seen all the evidence and there was not ‘an inconsistency’ between the president’s assertions and the materials he had seen.

He said that the briefing would allow lawmakers ‘a chance from multiple sources to glean what’s actually down deep underneath,’ but noted that until more clear information was available, absolute confirmation of the total damage wrought by the bombs was not complete.

Whether another strike should be authorized should further intelligence show that the program was not fully destroyed, Rounds said, ‘another strike depends on what the other options would be.’

‘I don’t think you ever take anything off the table for the president, but there might be other ways of handling it as well, because we’ve really opened that place up now,’ he said.  

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A group of House Republicans is demanding details on how government agencies are addressing the growing threat of unauthorized drone incursions on U.S. military installations. 

In letters sent Thursday, the Subcommittee on Military and Foreign Affairs requested a trove of documents and communications from the Departments of Defense (DoD), Transportation (DOT), and Justice (DOJ). 

The letters note that in 2024 alone, there were 350 drone incursions at over 100 U.S. military bases. 

Lawmakers believe many of the responses to the illegal incursions, including an instance where a group of drones traipsed over Langley Air Force Base for over two weeks in December 2023, have been insufficient and fragmented. 

Under current rules, base commanders must establish ‘hostile intent’ before taking action — a threshold the lawmakers say is ill-suited to fast-moving and ambiguous drone threats.

Coordination between military installations, the DOJ, Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), and local law enforcement is often ‘improvised and bureaucratically delayed,’ the letter states, leaving gaps that adversaries could exploit.

To assess the issue, Republicans are asking the agencies to turn over documents by July 10, including: all interagency policies and agreements on drone detection and mitigation; a list of all facilities protected under Title 10 Section 130(i); communications involving DoD, DOJ, FAA, and others about drone threats and authority gaps; all incident reports related to drone incursions since January 2022; any internal reviews assessing current legal frameworks and recommending reforms; plans for a joint federal-state-local task force on counter-drone coordination.

Fox News Digital has reached out to DoD, DOJ, and DOT for comment.

The lawmakers frame their demands as part of a broader push for legislative reform and operational clarity in the face of escalating drone threats to national security. ‘This is a rapidly evolving threat that requires a unified and proactive response,’ the letter states, emphasizing the need for better data sharing and resource allocation between agencies.

The threat comes at a time when the lethal capabilities of modern drone warfare have been proven on the ground in Ukraine and in the Middle East. 

READ THE LETTER BELOW. APP USERS: CLICK HERE

From the early days of Russia’s 2022 invasion, unmanned aerial systems (UAS) have been deployed with devastating effect by both Russian and Ukrainian forces, transforming how battles are fought and how intelligence is gathered. What began as surveillance and artillery-spotting platforms has evolved into a full-scale integration of explosive-laden loitering munitions, or ‘kamikaze drones,’ capable of precision strikes deep behind enemy lines.

One of the most notorious platforms is the Iranian-made Shahed-136, a low-cost, GPS-guided drone that Russia has used in swarms to overwhelm Ukrainian air defenses and strike civilian infrastructure, including power stations and residential areas. These drones, launched in waves, have been used to sow terror and inflict strategic damage while costing a fraction of conventional missiles. Ukraine, for its part, has responded with creative adaptations, converting consumer camera drones into improvised bombers and launching strikes on Russian trenches, vehicles, and even naval assets in the Black Sea.

Israel used drones alongside warplanes to assault top generals and key military and nuclear facilities in Operation Rising Lion this month. Iran fired back its own onslaught of drones toward Israel.

Military analysts have said Ukraine represents the first major war where drones are central to strategy, not just supporting tools. Their widespread deployment has forced a tactical rethink, prompted innovations in electronic warfare and counter-UAS systems, and prompted debate about how quickly drones may outpace manned aircraft in aerial combat. 

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A Senate Republican wants to see the Senate parliamentarian fired and plans to introduce a resolution that would require the position to be term-limited.

Fury erupted among conservatives Thursday morning following the news that Senate Parliamentarian Elizabeth MacDonough ruled several key reforms and tweaks to Medicaid in the Senate GOP’s version of President Donald Trump’s ‘big, beautiful bill’ did not pass muster with Senate rules.

That means that the current provisions that do not comply with the Byrd Rule must be stripped, but Republicans can still scramble to rewrite and resubmit the policy to the parliamentarian.

However, Sen. Roger Marshall, R-Kan., wants immediate action taken against the parliamentarian.

‘In 2001, Majority Leader Trent Lott fired the Senate parliamentarian during reconciliation,’ Marshall told Fox News Digital. ‘It’s 2025 during reconciliation, and we need to again fire the Senate parliamentarian.’

He argued that, based upon early reports, the parliamentarian’s rulings against myriad provisions in the bill may erase up to $500 billion in spending cuts, which could hamper the bill’s survival among fiscal hawks and miss the goal of hitting up to $2 trillion in spending cuts over the next decade. 

Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., has made clear that he did not intend to overrule the parliamentarian. Fox News Digital reached out to the top Senate Republican for comment.

Marshall, like other congressional Republicans, was particularly incensed over the parliamentarian’s rulings that gutted numerous changes Senate Republicans made to the widely-used Medicaid program that triggered conservatives.

Among the axed provisions was the Senate GOP’s harsher crackdown on the Medicaid provider rate, or the amount that state Medicaid programs pay to providers on behalf of Medicaid beneficiaries, which proved a divisive policy among some in the conference.

Other provisions that were nixed included denying states Medicaid funding for having illegal immigrants on the benefit rolls, preventing illegal immigrants from participating in Medicaid and the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP), and preventing Medicaid and CHIP funding from going toward gender-affirming care.

Republicans viewed those as key cost-saving changes, and their removal has likely set back their plan to put the mammoth bill on Trump’s desk by July 4.

The parliamentarian is chosen by the Senate majority leader and serves without term limits in the role.

Marshall wants to put an end to that practice and plans to introduce a resolution on Thursday that would only be allowed to serve one, six-year term.

‘The current parliamentarian has been in office since 2012, appointed by Harry Reid,’ Marshall said. ‘This is NOT an elected position. Power tends to corrupt,  and absolute power corrupts absolutely. Term limits on a person with this absolute power need be implemented.’

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Conservative lawmakers were infuriated on Thursday morning after the Senate’s de facto ‘scorekeeper’ for President Donald Trump’s ‘big, beautiful bill’ ruled that key parts of the GOP agenda bill must be stripped out.

‘The Senate Parliamentarian is not elected. She is not accountable to the American people. Yet she holds veto power over legislation supported by millions of voters,’ Rep. Greg Steube, R-Fla., wrote on X. ‘It is time for our elected leaders to take back control.’

He called on Vice President JD Vance to ‘overrule the Parliamentarian and let the will of the people, not some staffer hiding behind Senate procedure, determine the future of this country.’

The Constitution names the vice president as president of the Senate as well, though it is a largely ceremonial role save for when they are needed to cast a tie-breaking vote in the chamber.

The Senate parliamentarian is typically appointed by the Senate majority leader and serves at their pleasure, with no term limit. 

Their role is to make apolitical judgments about Senate rules and procedure. In the budget reconciliation process, which Republicans are working through now, the parliamentarian’s job is to rule on whether aspects of the bill fall within the necessary guidelines to qualify for reconciliation’s simple majority passage threshold.

However, with several rulings that found key portions of Trump’s agenda do not fall into reconciliation’s budgetary guidelines, Republicans on the other side of Capitol Hill – in the House of Representatives – are urging the Senate to break norms and disregard several of the parliamentarian’s decisions.

‘They ought to heed the advice of the president – don’t change the bill,’ Rep. Ralph Norman, R-S.C., told Fox News Digital earlier this week. 

Meanwhile, Sen. Tommy Tuberville, R-Ala., even called for the parliamentarian to be fired.

‘The Senate Parliamentarian also ruled that ILLEGAL IMMIGRANTS are eligible for federal student loans. Does she not realize that our student loan crisis is already out of control??? ZERO taxpayer dollars should go towards student loans for ILLEGALS,’ he wrote on X.

‘THE SENATE PARLIAMENTARIAN SHOULD BE FIRED ASAP.’

And Rep. Eric Burlison, R-Mo., told Fox News Digital, ‘The House Freedom Caucus fought tooth and nail for Medicaid reforms that would save taxpayers billions and protect the program for those who truly need it. But now, the unelected parliamentarian has struck down key provisions of [the bill.]’

‘The Senate must act quickly to correct this failure,’ Burlison said.

Rep. Jeff Van Drew, R-N.J., wrote on X on Wednesday evening, ‘Respecting the rules matters, but so does respecting the voters. They didn’t give an unelected staffer the power to decide what is in the budget—that’s the job of Congress.’

‘It doesn’t have to be this way. The Republicans senators are not required to adhere to anything she says,’ Van Drew said.

Rep. Keith Self, R-Texas, said on the platform, ‘The rogue Senate Parliamentarian should be overruled, just like activist judges.’

Despite calls from irate House Republicans and some senators, Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., has stood firm in his position that he would not seek to overrule the parliamentarian.

‘That would not be a good outcome for getting a bill done,’ he told reporters. 

When asked about the parliamentarian’s ruling on the provider taxes, Thune said that there were things that Republicans can do to get ‘to that same outcome.’ 

‘I mean, we may not have everything that we want in terms of provider tax reforms, but if we can get most of the reforms there, get the savings that come with it,’ he said. ‘This is all about saving taxpayers money and reforming these programs in a way that makes them not only more fiscally sustainable long-term, but strengthening and getting rid of the waste, fraud, and abuse in the programs.’

Senate Democrats vowed to inflict as much pain as possible through the process known as the ‘Byrd Bath,’ which tests if each provision, line-by-line, is compliant with the Byrd Rule that governs the budget reconciliation process. 

So far, Senate Parliamentarian Elizabeth MacDonough has ruled several key provisions, including oil and gas leasing, public land sales, changes to the cost-sharing formula for food benefits, among others, as being out of compliance with the Byrd Rule. 

However, it was a slew of rulings unveiled Thursday morning the gutted numerous changes Senate Republicans made to the widely-used Medicaid program that triggered conservatives. 

Among the axed provisions was the Senate GOP’s harsher crackdown on the Medicaid provider rate, or the amount that state Medicaid programs pay to providers on behalf of Medicaid beneficiaries, which proved even a divisive policy among some in the conference. 

Other provisions that were nixed included denying states Medicaid funding for having illegal immigrants on the benefit rolls, preventing illegal immigrants from participating in Medicaid and the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP), and preventing Medicaid and CHIP funding from going toward gender-affirming care. 

Republicans viewed those as key cost-saving changes, and their removal has likely set back their plan to put the mammoth bill on Trump’s desk by July 4. 

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Five months into Vice President JD Vance’s tenure inside the White House, Fox News Digital spoke to several of his colleagues about his specific role and accomplishments, including some that his peers say have been overlooked by most media outlets. 

Several in Vance’s political circle used words like ‘Swiss army knife’ and ‘utility player’ to describe a vice president, who they say flexibly steps into a variety of roles, including being a key voice on Capitol Hill guiding the president’s Cabinet nominees successfully through the Senate.

‘He was very much involved in that, he made phone calls, he listened to people, he provided advice and thoughts and would talk things out with people,’ GOP Sen. Marsha Blackburn said, adding that Vance does not get enough credit for the ‘level of engagement’ with his former colleagues in the Senate. 

Ohio GOP Sen. Bernie Moreno told Fox News Digital that Vance has been an ‘enforcer’ in the Senate, not just when it came to confirming President Donald Trump’s Cabinet in a heated political climate, but also playing a significant role helping the president’s ‘big, beautiful bill’ make its way through Congress. 

If he [Trump] needs help with nominees, he is going to come over and do that, if he needs help with a Big Beautiful Bill, because obviously President Trump has got a lot on his plate, he’ll come over to talk to his colleagues,’ Moreno said. ‘If he has to lobby one on one, he’s built good relationships.’

Moreno, who ran against Vance for Senate in 2022 before dropping out and endorsing him and then running successfully in 2024 with Vance’s endorsement, went on to say that he has not heard ‘one negative comment’ from Republicans in the Senate about Vance’s performance.

In fact, one senator said to me today that their impression after the lunch yesterday was that he really started to look really presidential and how impressive he is,’ Moreno said. 

A senior White House official praised Vance’s ‘direct impact’ in the Senate when it comes to legislative efforts and Cabinet confirmations, adding that Trump’s domestic agenda is where his ‘impact has been felt the most.’ 

JD Vance throughout the whole transition, was always going to bat for Hegseth and for different nominees,’ the official said. ‘So he played a very active role making sure all the various Cabinet officials got confirmed.’

Vance’s influence has been felt on the foreign policy front, as well as the vice president making high-profile trips to India, the Vatican and Germany outlining the president’s ‘America First’ agenda. 

In India, Vance was involved with and touted progress made toward a U.S.-India trade deal, saying a partnership between the Trump administration and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi would ensure a 21st century that’s ‘prosperous and peaceful.’ 

Vance delivered a speech in Germany in February when he directly called out the organizers of the Munich conference, who he said had ‘banned lawmakers representing populist parties on both the left and the right from participating in these conversations.’

The speech sparked a social media firestorm, drawing criticism from some and praise from others, including Fox News contributor Jonathan Turley, who described Vance’s remarks as a ‘Churchillian’ moment for free speech. 

As the war between Russia and Ukraine raged on, Vance took an active role in the dialogue between Trump and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and was front and center in the viral White House blowup between the two leaders, calling out the Ukrainian leader for ‘lack of respect.’

Vance, who has been labeled as an ‘attack dog’ for Trump dating back to the campaign trail last year, gave several interviews outlining his belief that, at the time, Zelenskyy was impeding the peace process. 

Former Trump senior advisor Jason Miller told Fox News Digital that Vance has been influential when it comes to helping promote the president’s foreign policy agenda.’

That influence was on full display in recent weeks as the United States bombed several nuclear sites in Iran, causing a stir with conservatives on social media on the merits of getting involved in a foreign conflict after Trump and Vance campaigned against drawn-out foreign wars of the past. 

‘Going into the conflict with Iran, I think was pretty notable for a couple of things. One, just the fact that the way he was elevated and was at the president’s side for the entire time, really how he had a seat at the table as part of the decision-making and the driving force for what happened,’ Miller said. 

‘But then also, the fact that the vice president played such an important role of talking to people from across the MAGA coalition, people who are very much into America First and may have initially been skeptical with regard to Iran and being kind of the one of the main people in the admin who can kind of talk with both camps,’ he continued. ‘And as we saw with his Twitter posts both before the action and then even afterwards being able to really articulate, lay out the rationale for what President Trump is doing and make sure that the people across the coalition have a clear understanding of it.’

Vance was front and center following the strike on Iran, sitting down for an interview with Fox News anchor Bret Baier on ‘Special Report’ outlining the reasoning for the strike as news broke that a ceasefire had been negotiated with the countries involved. 

The White House official told Fox News Digital that when the president ‘calls a play,’ Vance ‘makes sure it’s run’ even if the two may have a different perspective, which is a sentiment that Miller echoed, saying that Trump promotes a ‘team environment’ to get perspective from all sides, even though he is ultimately the one who makes the final decision.

I think that the president and the vice president are very much in lockstep when it comes to the ultimate goals that they’re trying to accomplish,’ Miller said. 

In terms of the media’s portrayal of the relationship between Trump and Vance, Moreno told Fox News Digital that ‘any story that says there’s daylight between what Trump believes and what JD believes can be rejected out of hand, because it’s not actually how it works.’

‘JD doesn’t view himself as the person who’s there to enact his agenda. He’s there to enact President Trump’s agenda.’

When it comes to Vance’s accomplishments on foreign and domestic policy in the first five months of the administration, both Miller and Moreno expressed the belief that the vice president has gotten more done in half a year than former Vice President Kamala Harris accomplished in four years. 

You’re talking about literally polar opposites between her and JD,’ Moreno said. ‘Even a mentally diminished Biden understood what a great liability Kamala Harris was, he basically froze her and put her in the basement. President Trump realizes, because he’s a very smart guy, because he’s the one that made the decision to pick JD Vance realizes that JD is very effective for him and isn’t looking to overshadow or take the spotlight, but rather move his agenda forward.’

Miller agreed, saying that ‘Vice President Vance is easily the best vice president and most notable Vice President we’ve had in the last 30 plus years and is light years of improvement over Kamala Harris.’

While speculation has run rampant about what the Republican Party will look like after Trump completes his second term and whether Vance is the heir apparent in a crowded Republican field, Miller told Fox News Digital that Vance is not focused on that but has been ‘crushing it’ on the campaign trail raising money for the party. 

He’s a huge draw out on the midterm fundraising trail and he’s someone who many people view as the future of the movement,’ Miller said. 

Ultimately, Moreno told Fox News Digital that he does not think Vance gets enough credit for being one of the most ‘grounded’ politicians he has encountered who genuinely cares for his friends and family and always keeps his humble beginnings in Middletown, Ohio, at the forefront of the decisions he makes. 

‘America First, and I said it when I nominated him in Wisconsin, it’s not a political slogan, it’s his North Star,’ Moreno said. ‘It’s why he is doing what he’s doing. I don’t think people realize that. I think people don’t know enough about him as a man.’

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