Archive

2025

Browsing

Add veteran guard Fred VanVleet to the list of players who will not hit the open free-agent market.

The Houston Rockets will not pick up the final season of a three-year, $128.5 million contract VanVleet signed in 2023. However, the VanVleet plans to sign a two-year, $50 million deal to remain with the Rockets, a person with direct knowledge of the deal told USA TODAY Sports.

The person requested anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly about the agreement.

VanVleet has a player option and can become a free agent following the 2025-26 season. Houston’s decision to not pick up $44.8 million remaining on VanVleet’s contract and renegotiate a new deal gives the Rockets, who reached a deal to acquire Kevin Durant late last week, salary cap flexibility for additional roster moves.

Houston values what VanVleet brings on and off the court. A 2019 NBA champion with the Toronto Raptors, VanVleet averaged 14.1 points, 5.6 assists and 3.7 rebounds in 2024-25.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The 2025 NBA Draft has arrived.

At 8:05 p.m. ET inside the Barclays Center the Dallas Mavericks are expected to make Cooper Flagg the sixth Duke basketball player to be taken with the top overall pick, with the San Antonio Spurs likely taking Rutgers’ Dylan Harper at No. 2 overall at 8:10 p.m. ET.

But for the picks that follow those, there remain some questions and uncertainty on how NBA teams will attack the remainder of the field.

Some of those players who find the buzz around their name continuing to rise going into Night 1 of the two-day NBA draft include Rutgers’ Ace Bailey, Georgetown’s Thomas Sorber, Duke’s Kon Knueppel and Baylor’s VJ Edgecombe to name a few.

Here’s the latest on each of those four players’ NBA mock draft projections ahead of the first round:

2025 NBA draft: Expert predictions on several prospects

Ace Bailey

By now, it’s well documented that Bailey is one of the more polarizing prospects in this year’s NBA draft class. The reason for this is that the Rutgers guard didn’t make a visit to an NBA facility and turned down several invites from NBA teams, including the Philadelphia 76ers.

In 30 games this season at Rutgers, Bailey averaged 17.6 points, 7.2 rebounds, 1.3 assists and 1.3 blocks per game while shooting 46% from the field.

Here’s a look at where some NBA draft experts have Bailey going in the NBA draft:

USA TODAY: No. 4 overall to the Charlotte Hornets
ESPN: No. 6 overall to the Washington Wizards
The Athletic: No. 6 overall to the Washington Wizards
Yahoo Sports: No. 7 overall to the New Orleans Pelicans

Kon Knueppel

Though Flagg headlined the Duke roster this season, Knueppel was right up there as one of the more impactful players on the Blue Devils’ roster. A reason for this was that Knueppel was able to showcase that he can be an all-around guard with his defense, playmaking and shooting.

In 39 games this past season at Duke, Knueppel averaged 14.4 points, 4.0 rebounds and 2.7 assists per game while shooting 47.9% from the field.

Here’s a look at where some NBA draft experts have Bailey going in the NBA draft:

USA TODAY: No. 7 overall to the New Orleans Pelicans
ESPN: No. 4 overall to the Charlotte Hornets
The Athletic: No. 4 overall to the Charlotte Hornets
Yahoo Sports: No. 4 overall to the Charlotte Hornets

Thomas Sorber

Sorber is one of the more intriguing prospects entering Night 1 of the NBA draft as his stock has increased in recent weeks despite still recovering from a season-ending foot injury with a timeline of return to playing around early August.

In 24 games this past season at Georgetown, Sorber finished second on the Hoyas in scoring at 14.5 points per game while leading the team in field-goal shooting at 53.2%.

Here’s a look at where some NBA draft experts have Bailey going in the NBA draft:

USA TODAY: No. 18 overall to the Washington Wizards
ESPN: No. 17 overall to the Minnesota Timberwolves
The Athletic: No. 17 overall to the Minnesota Timberwolves
Yahoo Sports: No. 14 overall to the San Antonio Spurs

VJ Edgecombe

With Bailey’s uncertainty in the NBA draft, Edgecombe appears to have become the clear-cut projected No. 3 overall pick to the 76ers. Noted in USA TODAY’s latest mock draft, Edgecombe displayed his athleticism at Baylor this past season and in the draft process while showing ‘can be explosive and has an elite knack for steals’ and can ‘contribute at the NBA level and can be aggressive at the point of attack.’

In 33 games this season at Baylor, Edgecombe averaged 15.0 points, 5.6 rebounds, 3.2 assists and 2.1 steals per game while shooting 43.6% from the field.

Here’s a look at where some NBA draft experts have Bailey going in the NBA draft:

USA TODAY: No. 3 overall to the Philadelphia 76ers
ESPN: No. 3 overall to the Philadelphia 76ers
The Athletic: No. 3 overall to the Philadelphia 76ers
Yahoo Sports: No. 3 overall to the Philadelphia 76ers

NBA draft first round order 2025

Here’s the full draft order for the first round of the NBA draft:

Dallas Mavericks
San Antonio Spurs
Philadelphia 76ers
Charlotte Hornets
Utah Jazz
Washington Wizards
New Orleans Pelicans
Brooklyn Nets
Toronto Raptors
Houston Rockets (reportedly traded to Phoenix)
Portland Trail Blazers
Chicago Bulls
Atlanta Hawks (via Sacramento)
San Antonio Spurs (via Atlanta)
Oklahoma City Thunder (via Miami)
Memphis Grizzlies (via Orlando)
Minnesota Timberwolves (via Detroit)
Washington Wizards (via Memphis)
Brooklyn Nets (via Milwaukee)
Miami Heat (via Golden State)
Utah Jazz (via Minnesota)
Atlanta Hawks (reportedly traded to Brooklyn)
New Orleans Pelicans (via Indiana)
Oklahoma City Thunder (via Los Angeles Clippers)
Orlando Magic (via Denver)
Brooklyn Nets (via New York)
Brooklyn Nets (via Houston)
Boston Celtics
Phoenix Suns (via Cleveland)
Los Angeles Clippers (via Oklahoma City)

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The country is, once again, divided along partisan lines, this time over the U.S. joining Israel in military strikes against Iran’s nuclear sites, according to a Quinnipiac University poll released Wednesday. 

Such was the case on Capitol Hill this week as congressional Democrats railed against the ‘unconstitutionality’ of President Donald Trump ordering attacks on three nuclear sites in Iran, while most Republican lawmakers celebrated his bold move to prevent Iran from obtaining nuclear capability. 

Forty-two percent of voters support the U.S. strikes against Iran, while 51% oppose them, according to the Quinnipiac University poll, conducted between June 22-24 in the days after the U.S. strikes on Fordow, Natanz and Isfahan in Iran. 

The results were split along party lines, with 81% of Republicans supporting the strikes compared to 75% of Democrats opposing them. Sixty percent of independents opposed the strikes, while 35% supported them. 

‘No ambivalence from Republicans on the U.S. bombing of Iran’s nuclear sites. By a large margin, GOP voters give full-throated support to the mission,’ Quinnipiac University Polling Analyst Tim Malloy said in a statement. 

Half of voters, at 50%, think the strikes would make Americans less safe, while 42% said they would make Americans safer. 

Results were once again split along party lines. Seventy-six percent of Democrats said striking Iran’s nuclear program would make Americans less safe, while 80% of Republicans said it would make Americans safer. 

According to the poll, nearly 8 in 10 voters are either very concerned, 44%, or somewhat concerned, 34%, about the U.S. getting dragged into war with Iran. Only 22% of voters are not concerned. 

‘American voters, most of whom are not supportive of the country joining in the Israel-Iran conflict, are extremely troubled by the possibility that involvement could metastasize and draw the U.S. into a direct war with Iran,’ pollster Malloy said. 

Forty-two percent of voters think the U.S. is too supportive of Israel, while 45% say support for Israel is about right. Only 5% say the U.S. is not supportive enough. 

The percentage of voters calling the U.S. too supportive of Israel is at an all-time high since Quinnipiac University first posed the question to registered voters in January 2017. The percentage of voters calling the U.S. not supportive enough is an all-time low since then, the poll reveals. 

Half of voters, 50%, support Israel’s military strikes against nuclear and military sites inside Iran, while 40% oppose them. Eighty percent of Republicans support them, while 60% of Democrats do not. 

The Quinnipiac University Poll included 979 self-identified registered voters nationwide who were surveyed from June 22-24, with a margin of error of plus or minus 3.1 percentage points. 

Trump announced the U.S. successfully struck Iran’s nuclear sites Saturday night. Israel had launched a series of coordinated attacks on Iran the previous week, which Iran had retaliated against, prompting the countries to exchange strikes. After the U.S. struck Iran, the Islamist country launched retaliatory attacks on a U.S. air base in Qatar. 

The president indicated a ceasefire between Israel and Iran earlier this week, touting a successful mission to hinder Iran’s nuclear sites without engaging the U.S. in an escalatory Middle East conflict. 

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

The Medicaid debate among Senate Republicans continues to rage on, but a new proposal geared toward sating concerns over the survivability of rural hospitals could help to close the lingering fissures within the conference.

Senate Republicans are sprinting to finish their work on President Donald Trump’s ‘big, beautiful bill,’ which is filled with key priorities like making his first-term tax cuts permanent, funding his immigration and border security agenda, and rooting out waste, fraud and abuse across a variety of programs.

But lawmakers are still at odds over changes made in the Senate’s version of the bill to the Medicaid provider tax rate and the effects that it could have on rural hospitals, threatening to derail the legislation near the finish line.

A proposal making the rounds from the Senate Finance Committee obtained by Fox News Digital would create a separate stabilization fund that would go toward aiding and upgrading rural healthcare.

The committee’s proposal would allocate $3 billion annually to states that apply to the program over the next five fiscal years.

But that amount is too low for some senators and far too much for others.

Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, has been working on a similar proposal but would prefer a much higher fund of $100 billion. That number is unlikely to pass muster with her colleagues and still isn’t high enough for her.

‘I don’t think that solves the entire problem,’ she said. ‘The Senate cuts in Medicaid are far deeper than the House cuts and I think that’s problematic as well.’

Collins would prefer a return to the House GOP’s proposed changes to the provider tax rate, rather than the Senate’s harsher crackdown.

The Senate changes to the provider tax rate hit close to home for Collins, whose state’s rural hospitals are already in jeopardy because the state of Maine failed to advance its budget in time, leaving roughly $400 million in Medicaid funding that would have gone to rural hospitals in limbo.

‘Obviously any money is helpful. But no, it is not adequate,’ she said.

Indeed, the changes to the Medicaid provider tax rate, which were a stark departure from the House GOP’s version of the bill, angered the Republicans who have warned not to make revisions to the health care program that could shut down rural hospitals and boot working Americans from their benefits.

The Senate Finance Committee went further than the House’s freeze of the provider tax rate, or the amount that state Medicaid programs pay to healthcare providers on behalf of Medicaid beneficiaries, for non-Affordable Care Act expansion states and included a provision that lowers the rate in expansion states annually until it hits 3.5%.

However, Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) Administrator Dr. Mehmet Oz and some Senate Republicans have argued that the provider tax rate is a scam rife with fraud that actually harms rural hospitals more than it helps.

Sen. Rick Scott, R-Fla., was in the same camp, and has argued that the rate should be nixed completely. He has similarly pushed for a separate fund but wasn’t keen on the cost of the current proposal.

‘I don’t know that we need $15 billion,’ he said. ‘But this needs to be run by CMS.’

And others wanted to see more money injected into a stabilization fund.

‘I think $5 billion a year would more than make them whole,’ Sen. Roger Marshall, R-Kan., said.

He contended that, as the only lawmaker who has run a rural hospital, there are only roughly 12 million people on Medicaid in rural America, and that lawmakers should ‘tighten things up’ when it comes to funding the health care program.

He said that being on Medicaid was ‘not the same as having healthcare,’ and added that ‘at best, two thirds of doctors accept Medicaid, and even many of the specialists, when they say they do, they won’t give you an appointment for six months or a year.’

‘Medicaid is not the solution,’ he said. ‘It’s the most broken federal system up here.’ 

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Emil Bove forcefully rejected criticisms that he was President Donald Trump’s ‘henchman’ or ‘enforcer’ during a Senate hearing Wednesday focused on his nomination by Trump to serve as a federal judge.

Bove, a top Department of Justice (DOJ) official vying to fill a lifetime role on the Third Circuit Court of Appeals, said media reports painted a ‘wildly inaccurate caricature’ about him.

‘I am not anybody’s henchman. I’m not an enforcer,’ Bove said, referring to descriptors used in headlines about him. ‘I’m a lawyer from a small town who never expected to be in an arena like this.’

Bove served as a key attorney on Trump’s personal defense team during the president’s four criminal prosecutions. Prior to that, he led drug trafficking and terrorism cases during his decade as a prosecutor in the Southern District of New York.

But Bove’s formidable demeanor and controversial decisions upon joining DOJ leadership, which included dismissing New York City Mayor Eric Adams’ corruption charges and warning of personnel action for FBI employees who worked on Jan. 6 cases, have caused his nomination to the powerful appellate court bench to attract heightened scrutiny.

Capping off a string of reports examining these controversies was a whistleblower claim leveled Tuesday, one day prior to Bove’s nomination hearing.

The whistleblower, Erez Reuveni, a 15-year veteran of the department who was fired this year for perceived insubordination, alleged that Bove warned during an internal meeting that DOJ attorneys might need to say ‘f*** you’ to judges and defy any adverse orders they issue regarding one of Trump’s most provocative maneuvers to deport alleged illegal immigrants.

Senate Democrats, who have widely objected to Bove’s nomination, grilled the nominee over the claim, noting that flouting court orders was unconstitutional and disqualifying. Bove said he has never advised anyone to defy judges’ orders.

‘Did you or did you not make those comments during that meeting?’ Sen. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., pressed.

‘I did not suggest that there would be any need to consider ignoring court orders. At the point at that meeting there were no court orders to discuss,’ Bove said. 

Schiff repeated the profane phrase several times, asking if Bove said it in relation to the courts.

‘I don’t recall,’ Bove said.

‘You just don’t remember that,’ Schiff replied incredulously.

Other Democrats pressed Bove on the Adams saga, which had led in February to a handful of high-level DOJ employees resigning in protest of Bove’s order that they dismiss the mayor’s federal corruption charges. A judge ultimately dropped Adams’s charges at Bove’s request, but not before excoriating the DOJ for giving ‘inconsistent’ justifications for wanting to drop the case.

Bove was accused by the ousted lawyers of asking the courts to toss out Adams’s charges in exchange for the mayor’s cooperation with the Trump administration’s immigration policy. Bove denied the allegation when pressed on it.

‘The suggestion that there was some kind of quid pro quo was just plain false,’ Bove said.

Despite Democrats’ concerns, as well as concerns voiced by some defense lawyers who said they have had negative experiences with the nominee, Bove has some loyal supporters. No Republican senators have voiced opposition to him at this stage, a sign that he could eventually be confirmed, albeit narrowly.

In an interview prior to the hearing, Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche, Bove’s longtime friend and colleague, told Fox News Digital that Bove was a ‘freaking brilliant lawyer.’

Blanche said reports that Bove was unqualified were ‘distorted’ and that installing him on the Third Circuit was a ‘no-brainer.’

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Chris Schwegmann is getting creative with how artificial intelligence is being used in law.

At Dallas-based boutique law firm Lynn Pinker Hurst & Schwegmann, he sometimes asks AI to channel Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts or Sherlock Holmes.

Schwegmann said after uploading opposing counsel’s briefs, he’ll ask legal technology platform Harvey to assume the role of a legal mind like Roberts to see how the chief justice would think about a particular problem.

Other times, he will turn to a fictional character like Holmes, unlocking a different frame of mind.

“Harvey, ChatGPT … they know who those folks are, and can approach the problem from that mindset,” he said. “Once we as lawyers get outside those lanes, when we are thinking more creatively involving other branches of science, literature, history, mythology, that sometimes generates some of the most interesting ideas that can then be put, using proper legal judgement, in a framework that works to solve a legal problem.”

It’s just one example of how smaller businesses are putting AI to work to punch above their weight, and new data shows there’s an opportunity for much more implementation in the future.

Only 24% of owners in the recent Small Business and Technology Survey from the National Federation of Independent Business said they are using AI, including ChatGPT, Canva and Copilot, in some capacity.

Notably, 98% of those using it said AI has so far not impacted the number of employees at their firms.

At his trial litigation firm of 50 attorneys, Schwegmann said AI is resolving work in days that would sometimes take weeks, and said the technology isn’t replacing workers at the firm.

It has freed up associate lawyers from doing “grunt work,” he said, and also means more senior-level partners have the time to mentor younger attorneys because everyone has more time.

The NFIB survey found AI use varied based on the size of the small business. For firms with employees in the single digits, uptake was at 21%. At firms with fifty or more workers, AI implementation was at nearly half of all respondents.

“The data show clearly that uptake for the smallest businesses lags substantially behind their larger competitors. … With a little attention from all the relevant stakeholders, a more equal playing field is possible,” the NFIB report said.

For future AI use, 63% of all small employers surveyed said the utilization of the technology in their industry in the next five years will be important to some degree; 12% said it will be extremely important and 15% said it will not be important at all.

Some of the most common uses in the survey were for communications, marketing and advertising, predictive analysis and customer service.

“We still have the need for the independent legal judgment of our associate lawyers and our partners — it hasn’t replaced them, it just augments their thinking,” Schwegmann said. “It makes them more creative and frees their time to do what lawyers do best, which is strategic thought and creative problem solving.”

The NFIB data echoes a recent survey from Reimagine Main Street, a project of Public Private Strategies Institute in partnership with PayPal.

Reimagine surveyed nearly 1,000 small businesses with annual revenue between $25,000 and $50,000 and also found that a quarter had already started integrating AI into daily workflows.

Schwegmann said at his firm, AI is helping to even the playing field.

“One of the things Harvey lets us do is review, understand and incorporate and respond much faster than we would prior to the use of these kinds of AI tools,” he said. “No longer does a party have an advantage because they can paper you to death.”

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

PALM BEACH GARDENS, FL — Despite practicing with his teammates for the first time in a week, Real Madrid star Kylian Mbappé was left off the team’s travel roster for the final group match of the FIFA Club World Cup on Thursday, June 25.  

Mbappé missed Real Madrid’s first two group matches, and was hospitalized on June 19 “to treat an acute case of gastroenteritis,’  the club said. He participated in a workout at the team hotel last Friday, June 20, and did some weightlifting on Monday, June 23.  

Real Madrid faces Austrian side FC Salzburg at Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia in the group finale, with the tournament’s knockout stage beginning Saturday, June 28.

A day before the match, Mbappé appeared to ease himself into the first 15 minutes of practice open to media at The Gardens North County District Park, where the club has trained during the Club World Cup. Mbappé lightly stretched, jogged and participated in a kicking and agility drill during the viewing period.  

Real Madrid and Salzburg each have a path to the Club World Cup’s round of 16, but will play to decide which will win Group H. Both clubs have four points in the standings.  

Saudi Arabian club Al-Hilal has two points and an outside chance to reach the next round, while Mexican side Pachuca has been eliminated. They play Thursday at GEODIS Park in Nashville, Tennessee, with the final Group H games synchronized to start at 9 p.m. ET.

If Real Madrid is the Group H runner-up, it will meet the Group G winners in Orlando on June 30 in the round of 16. If Real Madrid wins Group H, it will meet the Group G runner-up in Miami on July 1. 

Here are the scenarios for Real Madrid to advance, according to FIFA:  

Real Madrid will qualify as Group H winners if:  

Win vs. FC Salzburg.  
Draw vs. FC Salzburg.  
Draw 0-0 with FC Salzburg, and Al Hilal do not beat CF Pachuca by a margin of three or more goals, or a margin of two goals while scoring at least four (4-2, 5-3, etc). 
Draw 0-0 vs. FC Salzburg, Al Hilal beat Pachuca 3-1, and Real Madrid finish above Al Hilal on fair play ranking, or if equal, win the drawing of lots.  

Real Madrid will qualify as Group H runners-up if:  

Loss to Salzburg, and Pachuca wins against Al Hilal. 
Draw 0-0 with Salzburg, and Al Hilal beat Pachuca by a margin of three or more goals, or a margin of two goals while scoring at least four.  
Draw 0-0 with Salzburg, Al Hilal beat Pachuca 3-1, and Real Madrid finish below Al Hilal on fair play ranking, or, if that is equal, lose the drawing of lots. 

The biggest stories, every morning. Stay up-to-date on all the key sports developments by subscribing to USA TODAY Sports’ newsletter.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The Cleveland Browns are hosting a wide-open quarterback competition for the 2025 NFL season.

The team’s newest wide-out, Diontae Johnson, believes an early favorite emerged in the four-man race during minicamp.

‘I think they are going to roll with Kenny [Pickett] for right now,’ Johnson said during an appearance on the ‘Sports and Suits’ podcast. ‘I’ve been seeing Kenny going like right now with the ones. Then Joe [Flacco] will come in.’

The Browns acquired Pickett in an offseason trade with the Philadelphia Eagles, who acquired Dorian Thompson-Robinson and a fifth-round pick in the deal. It marked the second consecutive offseason during which Pickett was traded, as the 2022 first-round pick was dealt from the Pittsburgh Steelers to the Eagles in 2024.

Pickett served as the backup behind Jalen Hurts during his lone season in Philadelphia. He played sparingly, winning his lone start while completing 25 of 42 passes for 291 yards, two touchdowns and one interception.

Pickett saw action in the Eagles’ 40-22 blowout win over the Kansas City Chiefs in Super Bowl 59, failing to complete his only pass and taking a knee three times to seal the victory.

Johnson – who played with Pickett in Pittsburgh – thinks that recent experience with a Super Bowl-winning team could aid the 27-year-old as he looks to establish himself as an NFL starter.

‘I think they are probably going to roll with him just to see like coming off the season – he was with Philly and having a Super Bowl,’ Johnson said. ‘So, I think they are going to stick with him through the preseason. Then, you know, they can live with what Joe comes and brings to the table.’

Johnson didn’t provide much information on where rookie draft picks Dillon Gabriel and Shedeur Sanders fall in Cleveland’s current pecking order. Generally, the soon-to-be 29-year-old is trying not to focus too much on Cleveland’s quarterback battle.

Instead, he is simply trying to re-establish himself as a top NFL receiver after he played for three different teams in 2024 and was cut by the Baltimore Ravens after refusing to play in a game because of the cold.

‘I just want to attack every day one day at a time,’ Johnson said. ‘Not try to think too much about what’s ahead and just be where my feet are because if I do that, I feel like I’m going to be pressing.’

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The 2025 NBA Draft has arrived.

At 8:05 p.m. ET inside the Barclays Center the Dallas Mavericks are expected to make Cooper Flagg the sixth Duke basketball player to be taken with the top overall pick, with the San Antonio Spurs likely taking Rutgers’ Dylan Harper at No. 2 overall at 8:10 p.m. ET.

But for the picks that follow those, there remain some questions and uncertainty on how NBA teams will attack the remainder of the field.

Some of those players who find the buzz around their name continuing to rise going into Night 1 of the two-day NBA draft include Rutgers’ Ace Bailey, Georgetown’s Thomas Sorber, Duke’s Kon Knueppel and Baylor’s VJ Edgecombe to name a few.

Here’s the latest on each of those four players’ NBA mock draft projections ahead of the first round:

2025 NBA draft: Expert predictions on several prospects

Ace Bailey

By now, it’s well documented that Bailey is one of the more polarizing prospects in this year’s NBA draft class. The reason for this is that the Rutgers guard didn’t make a visit to an NBA facility and turned down several invites from NBA teams, including the Philadelphia 76ers.

In 30 games this season at Rutgers, Bailey averaged 17.6 points, 7.2 rebounds, 1.3 assists and 1.3 blocks per game while shooting 46% from the field.

Here’s a look at where some NBA draft experts have Bailey going in the NBA draft:

USA TODAY: No. 4 overall to the Charlotte Hornets
ESPN: No. 6 overall to the Washington Wizards
The Athletic: No. 6 overall to the Washington Wizards
Yahoo Sports: No. 7 overall to the New Orleans Pelicans

Kon Knueppel

Though Flagg headlined the Duke roster this season, Knueppel was right up there as one of the more impactful players on the Blue Devils’ roster. A reason for this was that Knueppel was able to showcase that he can be an all-around guard with his defense, playmaking and shooting.

In 39 games this past season at Duke, Knueppel averaged 14.4 points, 4.0 rebounds and 2.7 assists per game while shooting 47.9% from the field.

Here’s a look at where some NBA draft experts have Bailey going in the NBA draft:

USA TODAY: No. 7 overall to the New Orleans Pelicans
ESPN: No. 4 overall to the Charlotte Hornets
The Athletic: No. 4 overall to the Charlotte Hornets
Yahoo Sports: No. 4 overall to the Charlotte Hornets

Thomas Sorber

Sorber is one of the more intriguing prospects entering Night 1 of the NBA draft as his stock has increased in recent weeks despite still recovering from a season-ending foot injury with a timeline of return to playing around early August.

In 24 games this past season at Georgetown, Sorber finished second on the Hoyas in scoring at 14.5 points per game while leading the team in field-goal shooting at 53.2%.

Here’s a look at where some NBA draft experts have Bailey going in the NBA draft:

USA TODAY: No. 18 overall to the Washington Wizards
ESPN: No. 17 overall to the Minnesota Timberwolves
The Athletic: No. 17 overall to the Minnesota Timberwolves
Yahoo Sports: No. 14 overall to the San Antonio Spurs

VJ Edgecombe

With Bailey’s uncertainty in the NBA draft, Edgecombe appears to have become the clear-cut projected No. 3 overall pick to the 76ers. Noted in USA TODAY’s latest mock draft, Edgecombe displayed his athleticism at Baylor this past season and in the draft process while showing ‘can be explosive and has an elite knack for steals’ and can ‘contribute at the NBA level and can be aggressive at the point of attack.’

In 33 games this season at Baylor, Edgecombe averaged 15.0 points, 5.6 rebounds, 3.2 assists and 2.1 steals per game while shooting 43.6% from the field.

Here’s a look at where some NBA draft experts have Bailey going in the NBA draft:

USA TODAY: No. 3 overall to the Philadelphia 76ers
ESPN: No. 3 overall to the Philadelphia 76ers
The Athletic: No. 3 overall to the Philadelphia 76ers
Yahoo Sports: No. 3 overall to the Philadelphia 76ers

NBA draft first round order 2025

Here’s the full draft order for the first round of the NBA draft:

Dallas Mavericks
San Antonio Spurs
Philadelphia 76ers
Charlotte Hornets
Utah Jazz
Washington Wizards
New Orleans Pelicans
Brooklyn Nets
Toronto Raptors
Houston Rockets (reportedly traded to Phoenix)
Portland Trail Blazers
Chicago Bulls
Atlanta Hawks (via Sacramento)
San Antonio Spurs (via Atlanta)
Oklahoma City Thunder (via Miami)
Memphis Grizzlies (via Orlando)
Minnesota Timberwolves (via Detroit)
Washington Wizards (via Memphis)
Brooklyn Nets (via Milwaukee)
Miami Heat (via Golden State)
Utah Jazz (via Minnesota)
Atlanta Hawks (reportedly traded to Brooklyn)
New Orleans Pelicans (via Indiana)
Oklahoma City Thunder (via Los Angeles Clippers)
Orlando Magic (via Denver)
Brooklyn Nets (via New York)
Brooklyn Nets (via Houston)
Boston Celtics
Phoenix Suns (via Cleveland)
Los Angeles Clippers (via Oklahoma City)

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

This week has been a big one for the Boston Bruins.

They unveiled a retooled logo on June 23 and teased about a possible change to their jersey for the 2025-26 NHL season. The following day, Stanley Cup-winning captain Zdeno Chara and former No. 1 overall pick Joe Thornton were elected to the Hockey Hall of Fame.

The Bruins then released the new uniforms on June 25.

In addition to the tweaked logo, it features new secondary artwork on the shoulder, new striping on the sweater and socks, gold detailing on the gloves and the club’s wordmark on the pants.

The shoulder patch features a crawling bear silhouette similar to the one that was on the Bruins’ first jersey in 1924. The thickness of the striping is slightly altered, similar to the Bruins jersey of the 1980s and 1990s eras.

This jersey unveil was accompanied by a video featuring Michael J. Fox.

Boston Bruins new logo

The Bruins released a new logo on social media that keeps the traditional spoked B but makes changes to the colors. Instead of a black B with gold spokes, there now will be a gold B with black spokes on their home jerseys.

The logo for the road jerseys will remain a black B with gold spokes but just like the home version, the spokes have no outlines.

The logos for 2025-26 and beyond are similar to what the team wore for its centennial season in 2023-24 and also are close to what was worn before 1995.

The Bruins accompanied the logo change with a video featuring the slogan: ‘Built by Boston. Powered by Tradition.’

The changes follow a season in which the Bruins’ eight-year playoff streak came to an end. With the team out of the hunt, general manager Don Sweeney traded Brad Marchand, Charlie Coyle, Trent Frederic and Brandon Carlo at the deadline.

The Bruins, who fired coach Jim Montgomery during the season, named former Boston player Marco Sturm as coach on June 5.

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

This post appeared first on USA TODAY