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Memphis Grizzlies star Ja Morant suffered a sprained ankle in practice on Sunday, Oct. 5.
The team has listed Morant as ‘week-to-week’ with the injury.
Morant has a history of injuries, playing in only 59 games over the past two seasons.
His status for the regular season opener on Oct. 22 against the New Orleans Pelicans is uncertain.

The Memphis Grizzlies told reporters that Morant suffered a sprained ankle in practice on Sunday, Oct. 5, ahead of the team’s preseason opener against the Detroit Pistons on Monday. It’s another setback for the highlight-producing point guard, who has had trouble staying on the court since emerging as one of the league’s young stars three years ago. He was No. 25 in USA TODAY’s NBA player rankings for the 2025-26 season.

Morant, 26, played in just 59 games combined the past two seasons, missing all but nine games during the 2023-24 campaign because of a 25-game suspension handed out by the NBA and a season-ending shoulder injury. He missed 32 games last season due to a variety of ailments. Morant told reporters at the Grizzlies media day last week that one of his individual goals for the 2025-26 season was ‘to play 82’ games.

Morant’s status for the start of the regular season remains unclear, with the Grizzlies set to face the New Orleans Pelicans on Oct. 22. He is out for the team’s preseason game Monday vs. the Pistons. Here’s what we know about Morant’s latest injury, including a timeline announced by the team:

Ja Morant injury update

A Memphis Grizzlies spokesperson told reporters on Monday, before Memphis played the Detroit Pistons in its 2025 NBA preseason opener, that Morant suffered a sprained left ankle in practice on Sunday. He is considered ‘week-to-week,’ the team said, according to the Memphis Commercial Appeal.

Ja Morant injury history

Injuries and durability concerns are nothing new for Morant. He missed at least two games in a row five different times during the 2024-25 season and did not finish the team’s first-round playoff series loss against the Oklahoma City Thunder.

The list of injuries Morant dealt with last season, according to the Grizzlies injury report, included issues with his back, shoulder, knee, ankle, foot, hamstring and hip. He only played nine games after his suspension to start the 2023-24 season due to shoulder surgery after suffering a labral tear in a training session. That’s the only major injury of Morant’s NBA career.

Morant has, however, suffered several ankle sprains over his six seasons, including one in December 2020 in which he missed eight games. A knee injury against the Golden State Warriors kept Morant from completing the Grizzlies’ playoff run in 2022.

Ja Morant stats

7th season, 307 career games
Career: 22.6 points, 7.4 assists, 4.7 rebounds, 1.0 steals
2024-25: 50 games, 23.2 points, 7.3 assists, 4.1 rebounds, 1.2 steals
2020 NBA Rookie of the Year
2022 NBA Most Improved Player
2022 second team all-NBA
2-time All-Star

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Penn State dropped to No. 45 following a 42-37 loss to previously winless UCLA.
Texas is now ranked No. 33, and Florida State sits at No. 35 after their respective defeats.
Virginia and Cincinnati made notable jumps in the rankings after significant wins.

You’ll have to keep scrolling down the USA TODAY Sports NCAA Re-Rank 1-136, past the top 10, the top 25, even the top 30, before bumping into preseason favorites Texas, Florida State and Penn State.

The former contenders turned two-loss disappointments are well off the pace set by the top teams in the Bowl Subdivision. The Longhorns and Nittany Lions in particular are miles away from lofty preseason expectations of returning to the College Football Playoff and winning the national championship.

Texas is down to No. 33 after losing 29-21 to Florida. The Longhorns managed just 52 rushing yards and were stung by two Arch Manning interceptions. Florida State drops to No. 35 after losing 28-22 to Miami.

Penn State plummets to No. 45 after falling behind 27-7 at halftime to previously winless UCLA and eventually losing 42-37. The Nittany Lions allowed 280 rushing yards and had no answer for Nico Iamaleava, who had one of the best games of his career with 294 yards of total offense and five total touchdowns.

Looking at the team’s overall résumé, Penn State has a competitive loss to Oregon, the horrendous loss to the Bruins and three totally meaningless wins against Nevada, Villanova and Florida International. And the Nittany Lions didn’t play well in those wins, either, making the No. 45 ranking an accurate reflection of what they’ve achieved and how they’ve looked through five games.

Penn State now comes in behind nine other Big Ten teams: No. 1 Oregon, No. 2 Ohio State, No. 7 Indiana, No. 14 Illinois, No. 20 Michigan, No. 26 Southern California, No. 28 Washington, No. 31 Nebraska and No. 40 Iowa.

In more positive news, No. 19 Virginia imrpoved16 spots after beating Louisville in overtime and No. 24 Cincinnati went up 18 spots after handing Iowa State its first loss. The 4-1 Bearcats are looking like one of the best teams in the Big 12.

College football NCAA Re-Rank 1-136

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Can Duke repeat? Louisville and Clemson were the surprise teams last season. They won’t sneak up on anyone this season. Can Hubert Davis’ Tar Heels rebound from a down year? Can Will Wade bring his McNeese State magic to NC State?

We polled writers within the USA TODAY Network who cover ACC schools for their preseason predictions, all-conference teams and preseason awards.

You can watch ACC media days on the ACC Network, starting 1 p.m., Tuesday and again at 9 a.m., Wednesday.

USA TODAY Network ACC basketball preseason poll

Duke
Louisville
NC State
North Carolina
Virginia
Miami
SMU
Notre Dame
Clemson
Syracuse
Virginia Tech
Wake Forest
Pittsburgh
Georgia Tech
Florida State
Cal
Stanford
Boston College

2025-26 preseason All-ACC basketball team

FIRST TEAM

Darrion Williams, NC State, forward, Sr. (unanimous selection)
Cameron Boozer, Duke, forward, Fr. (unanimous selection)
Markus Burton, Notre Dame, guard, Jr.
Mikel Brown Jr., Louisville, guard, Fr.
Ryan Conwell, Louisville, guard, Sr.

SECOND TEAM

Malik Reneau, Miami, forward, Sr.
Henri Veesaar, North Carolina, center, Jr.
Caleb Wilson, North Carolina, forward, Fr.
Isaiah Evans, Duke, guard, So.
Seth Trimble, North Carolina, guard, Sr.

HONORABLE MENTION

Clemson: Nick Davidson
Georgia Tech: Baye Ndongo
Louisville: Isaac McKneely, J’Vone Hadley
Miami: Tre Donaldson
NC State: Tre Holloman
SMU: Boopie Miller
Syracuse: Naithan George, JJ Starling
Virginia: Johann Grunloh, Malik Thomas
Virginia Tech: Neoklis Avdalas

ACC basketball preseason Player of the Year

Duke freshman Cameron Boozer was named on 56% of the ballots, edging out NC State’s Darrion Williams. The 6-9 Boozer is the heir apparent to Cooper Flag and is a projected top-three pick in the 2026 NBA draft.

ACC basketball preseason Newcomer of the Year

NC State forward Darrion Williams was a runaway winner. The Texas Tech transfer was named on 78% of the ballots. Louisville newcomers Ryan Conwell (Xavier transfer) and Adrian Wooley (Kennesaw State transfer) also received votes.

A first-team All-Big 12 pick, Williams was among the top players in the portal after averaging 15.1 points, 5.5 rebounds and 3.6 assists for the Red Raiders last season. He showed up in the NCAA tournament, scoring 28 points in a second-round win over Drake and 23 against eventual national champion Florida in the Elite Eight. He’ll be key to Will Wade’s turnaround in Raleigh.

ACC basketball preseason Freshman of the Year

Duke forward Cameron Boozer got all but one vote (Louisville’s Mikel Brown Jr., got the other). Boozer, the son of former Duke star and two-time NBA All-Star Carlos Boozer, joins Jon Scheyer’s Blue Devils alongside twin brother Cayden. A three-level scorer, Boozer should hit the ground running in Durham.

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Miami’s strong resume, including wins against Notre Dame and Florida State, has sparked debate about them being the No. 1 team.
Penn State’s playoff hopes are in jeopardy following a damaging loss to UCLA, making their path to a 10-2 record difficult.
Despite a loss to Florida, Texas may still have a chance to salvage its season with key upcoming games against Oklahoma and Georgia.

Week 6 in college football was pure gold for us here at Overreaction HQ, with fan bases and pundits all over the map experiencing peak elation, existential despair, and every emotion in between. Our job of course is to try and sort everything out.

We’ll go through the top five overreactions of the weekend, with the goal of providing enough perspective to get a feel for whether these kneejerk responses are justified or just one-week blips on a long season. So whether you’re feeling high in the sky or down in the dumps, take a deep breath, and let’s delve into what we’ve just witnessed.

Miami should be No. 1

We will concede that the Hurricanes at this moment have the best resume. Their conquest of the Sunshine State along with the opening-week triumph against Notre Dame has more collective value than the results for the teams ranked ahead of them in the US LBM Coaches Poll, as Ohio State and Oregon saw their best wins depreciate in value over the weekend (more on those teams below).

The Hurricanes need the teams they’ve beaten thus far to keep winning, however, as the rest of their schedule offers few opportunities for what might qualify as quality victories, while the Big Ten squads they’re pursuing and the SEC clubs chasing them have many chances to move the proverbial needle ahead of them.

But again, the polls are not considered by the playoff committee, and we’re still a month away from getting a glimpse into their process with the release of their initial rankings. In short, talking about who should be No. 1 is always fodder for debate, but it doesn’t mean much with over half the season to go.

Penn State is cooked

From what constitutes a good win, we now consider the opposite question of how damaging a bad loss is. In this space a week ago we laid out the path to recovery for the Nittany Lions after their much more forgivable loss to Oregon. But the UCLA result will be a constant anchor on their overall body of work, much in the way of a basketball bubble team with a Quad 4 loss on the eve of March Madness.

Trouble is, in football there are fewer datapoints available to overcome a stain on the resume. Mathematically speaking, Penn State can run the table and get to 10-2. That would require wins at Ohio State and home against Indiana, a tall order given the team’s well-documented track record against top-10 teams under James Franklin. There’s also the always treacherous trip to Iowa, and even a late home date with Nebraska could be iffy after what we saw from the Lions in the first half at the Rose Bowl. Just one more loss the rest of the way would put Penn State in a pool of other 9-3 at-large candidates, and it’s unlikely its resume would stack up well against those others with the UCLA defeat and a lack of notable out-of-conference achievements to bolster it. So yes, it’s probably not an overreaction to say that one was a season-killer.

Texas is cooked

The Longhorns would appear to be in similarly dire straits after their loss to Florida, in which Arch Manning had few answers and even the usually reliable defense couldn’t shut down the struggling Gators.

But Texas fans might have more reason for hope than Nittany Lions’ faithful. For one thing, it’s possible that Florida might have more wins in it going forward, which would mitigate the damage to the Longhorns’ body of work. We’ve also seen narratives turn on a dime in this sport from one week to the next. Should Texas find a way to topple Red River foe Oklahoma next week, the entire conversation changes.

With that said, however, the ‘Horns can probably afford no more than one more loss the rest of the way, and this team will need to show something we haven’t seen yet to convince us a strong enough finish is in the cards. . The remaining slate includes a trip to Georgia and a home finisher against Texas A&M, as well as a tricky date with Vanderbilt.

Top Ten Texas Tech?

With Iowa State falling from the ranks of the unbeaten at Cincinnati, Texas Tech now carries the banner as the highest-ranked squad from the Big 12, and as such the de facto league favorite. But are the Red Raiders actually a top-10 team? At this early juncture in the league campaign, about the only answer we have for that question is, maybe.

We’ll allow this much – at least the Red Raiders have looked the part. Texas Tech’s preconference schedule was about as tissue-soft as it could have been. But the Red Raiders handled their first two league assignments against then-undefeated opponents, both on the road, with similar start-to-finish dominance. Houston’s resume was also inflated, but Utah had begun the season by rolling UCLA, a result that is now not so easy to dismiss. In the end, we suppose, every poll position is earned, so Red Raider fans should enjoy the ride.

Finally ranked, Memphis is the American favorite

With the season near the midpoint, the likelihood is high that the fifth automatic playoff qualifier will come from the American Conference. But the race to determine that league’s champion is barely underway.

Memphis, the defending conference champ, is at present the lone league member in the Top 25. But the Tigers have plenty of company. Navy and North Texas also have unblemished records thus far, and South Florida and Tulane also picked up valuable wins against the so-called Power Four conferences in the first month. A true favorite in what should bea compelling race in the American is hard to identify until we start getting more head-to-head results, so stay tuned.

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The last two Stanley Cup Finals have had a familiar look, with the Florida Panthers downing the Edmonton Oilers both times.

Are we looking at a third consecutive meeting and a three-peat for the Panthers?

USA TODAY Sports’ NHL panel doesn’t think so, with neither team chosen to make the Final.

Two have the Carolina Hurricanes reaching the Final for the first time since 2006 and two have the Colorado Avalanche coming out of the Western Conference.

One had the Panthers winning the Atlantic Division and the Oilers are represented in individual awards with Connor McDavid or Leon Draisaitl winning the Hart Trophy.

Here are USA TODAY Sports’ preseason predictions for the 2025-26 NHL season:

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.

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The Florida Panthers enter the 2025-26 season with a chance at a rare NHL three-peat.

No NHL team has won three in a row since the New York Islanders won four in the early 1980s, and the Panthers are also looking for a fourth consecutive trip to the Stanley Cup Final.

But their chances are complicated because captain Aleksander Barkov and Matthew Tkachuk will miss considerable time with injuries. Both are recovering from surgery, Barkov after he was hurt in practice.

Of course, the Panthers remain among the elite teams, especially after general manager Bill Zito was able to re-sign his key free agents.

Here where the Panthers and the other 31 teams place in USA TODAY’s initial NHL power rankings for the 2025-26 season:

1. Dallas Stars

New coach Glen Gulutzan inherits a strong team in his second stint with the Stars, starting with a full season out of trade deadline acquisition Mikko Rantanen.

2. Vegas Golden Knights

They addressed their need for more scoring from the wing by signing 100-point scorer Mitch Marner. But they’ll have to deal with an injury to defenseman Alex Pietrangelo.

3. Edmonton Oilers

The Oilers have changed up the people surrounding Connor McDavid and Leon Draisaitl, but those two make Edmonton a contender for a third consecutive trip to the final.

4. Florida Panthers

The two-time defending champions have tremendous injuries. Barkov is gone for seven to nine months and Tkachuk is out until December. But they also have tremendous depth and a front office and coaching staff that will help them overcome.

5. Carolina Hurricanes

After two seasons of being unable to get trade acquisitions to stay, they added coveted free agent Nikolaj Ehlers. The defense also got younger.

6. Tampa Bay Lightning

Always a threat to win the division, they’re aided as rival Toronto and Florida deal with key absences.

7. Winnipeg Jets

No goalie has won three consecutive Vezina trophies since Dominik Hasek in the 1990s. Connor Hellebuyck will try to join him and also is the reigning Hart Trophy winner.

8. Colorado Avalanche

Captain Gabriel Landeskog is back for a full season, adding to an already loaded roster that has Norris Trophy winner Cale Makar and former MVP Nathan MacKinnon.

9. Washington Capitals

The Capitals have brought back key contributors from last season. Everything went right in the 2024-25 regular season, especially Alex Ovechkin’s goal record. Can coach of the year Spencer Carbery repeat the magic?

10. Toronto Maple Leafs

Coach Craig Berube faces the challenge of guiding a team without Marner. The Leafs’ bottom six is better, but a second consecutive division title might be out of reach.

11. New Jersey Devils

All is good with the Hughes brothers. Jack is healthy after last year’s surgery and Luke is averaging $9 million a year in a deal he signed during the preseaon.

12. Minnesota Wild

13. Los Angeles Kings

Their defense has taken a step back, but the team will be motivated to try to make a run in Anze Kopitar’s final season.

14. Ottawa Senators

They ended a seven-year playoff drought, and Brady Tkachuk and company have the tools to get back.

15. Utah Mammoth

A playoff appearance seems likely. JJ Peterka joins a talented forward group and they added Stanley Cup-winning defenseman Nate Schmidt.

16. St. Louis Blues

The Blues squeezed into the playoffs and nearly upset the No. 1 overall Jets. They’ll push for another berth.

17. Columbus Blue Jackets

They rode the memory of Johnny Gaudreau to within two points of a playoff berth. Better scoring depth and goalie Jet Greaves could get them there this season.

18. Vancouver Canucks

Goalie Thatcher Demko is healthy, Brock Boeser re-signed and Adam Foote was promoted to coach. They really need Elias Pettersson to return to elite status.

19. New York Rangers

Pretty much everything went wrong as the Rangers missed the playoffs a year after winning the Presidents’ Trophy. New coach Mike Sullivan has his work cut out to get them back to the playoffs.

20. Montreal Canadiens

The Canadiens made the playoffs and added Noah Dobson. They’ll be among many teams competing for a wild-card spot.

21. Calgary Flames

The Flames extended goalie Dustin Wolf, coach Ryan Huska and others after missing the playoffs on a tiebreaker. They’ll be in the mix again this season.

22. Anaheim Ducks

23. New York Islanders

The Islanders need better injury luck after Mathew Barzal and Anthony Duclair missed a combined 90 games last season. Dobson is gone but that creates an opportunity for No. 1 overall pick Matthew Schaefer.

24. Buffalo Sabres

The Sabres, trying to end a record 14-year playoff drought, are dealing with injuries. Not a good sign.

25. Detroit Red Wings

The Red Wings are trying to end a long drought (nine years). They had a fine offseason but it doesn’t seem enough.

26. Boston Bruins

Goalie Jeremy Swayman will be better after not missing training camp this year and David Pastrnak is always dangerous. Does this team have enough depth after last season’s sell-off?

27. Philadelphia Flyers

The key additions are coach Rick Tocchet, forward Trevor Zegras and penalty killer Christian Dvorak, but the question, as usual, is whether they can keep the puck out of their net.

28. Pittsburgh Penguins

Longtime coach Sullivan is gone, replaced by Dan Muse. The Penguins’ core is skilled but aging and the team could end up shedding some secondary veterans, depending on how the season goes.

29. Seattle Kraken

The Kraken fired coach Dan Bylsma after one season and brought in Lane Lambert, who didn’t last two seasons as Islanders head coach. This team is still looking for an identity.

30. Nashville Predators

The Predators can’t be as disappointing as last season, right? After ‘winning’ the 2024 offseason, they finished with the third worst record. The 2025 offseason was low-key, and they’ll need plenty of bounce-back individual efforts.

31. San Jose Sharks

The Sharks loaded up with second-tier veterans to reach the cap floor but youngsters Macklin Celebrini and Will Smith hold the key.

32. Chicago Blackhawks

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This government shutdown isn’t President Donald Trump’s first rodeo navigating a lapse in government funding — but this time, the focus is less on the White House as all eyes are locked on Congress and its budget impasse. 

While the 35-day shutdown during Trump’s first term centered around the president’s priorities to fund a border wall between the U.S. and Mexico, the current shutdown doesn’t pit the White House against the legislative branch. 

Rather, there is a stalemate between Republicans and Democrats in Congress over certain healthcare provisions — alleviating pressure on the White House and giving Trump time to post videos showing House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., in a sombrero in an AI-generated clip underscoring Republicans’ claims that Democrats want to provide healthcare to illegal immigrants. 

This paves the way for Trump to remain in the wings during the partial shutdown, and let Democrats take the fall for the consequences, according to libertarian political columnist Kristin Tate.

‘By staying relatively quiet right now, President Trump is allowing Democrats to ‘own’ the shutdown,’ Tate said in a Wednesday email to Fox News Digital. ‘The president realizes that if he says anything confrontational right now, the narrative will center around his remarks rather than the Democrats’ refusal to support a reasonable spending bill.’ 

‘By maintaining a low profile, Trump is allowing the public to see how the Democrats are acting,’ Tate said. ‘The Democrats will ultimately bear most of the political consequences of the shutdown.’

The government entered a partial shutdown Wednesday, amid a stalemate between Senate Republicans and Democrats over a short-term funding bill to keep the government open through Nov. 21. The House had previously passed the temporary spending bill in September. 

Three Senate Democrats joined Republicans to vote for the stopgap funding bill Tuesday, but the measure fell short of the required 60 votes needed for passage. 

Meanwhile, Trump and Republicans have claimed Democrats are seeking to provide health care for illegal immigrants, keeping the government from operating. They cite a provision that would repeal part of Trump’s tax and domestic policy bill — the so-called ‘big, beautiful bill’ — which scaled back Medicaid eligibility for noncitizens. 

But Democrats have said Republicans’ claims are false, and instead, have said they want to permanently extend certain Affordable Care Act subsidies that are set to lapse at the end of 2025. 

‘They say that undocumented people are going to get these credits,’ Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said Tuesday. ‘That is absolutely false. That is one of the big lies that they tell.’

The shutdown differs from the one during Trump’s first term, where Trump and Democrats in Congress sparred about nearly $6 billion in funding for a U.S.-Mexico border wall in the spending bill for weeks. 

Ultimately, Trump backed off amid mounting pressure to reopen the government so federal employees could resume being paid after weeks of stalled payroll, and signed off on legislation to temporarily reopen the government without the border wall funding. 

Matt Wolking, who previously served as the deputy communications director for Trump’s 2020 campaign, said that the main difference between this shutdown in comparison to the previous one is that Democrats are the one requesting a policy change — not the White House. 

‘Trump is as engaged as ever — and using humor effectively, of course — and the biggest difference between now and then is that now it’s Democrats who are demanding a specific policy change,’ Wolking said in a Wednesday email to Fox News Digital. ‘They voted against funding the government because they want taxpayer-funded health care for illegal immigrants, and that’s why Trump and Republicans are well positioned to win the shutdown messaging battle this time.’ 

Additionally, Republican strategist Matt Gorman said that Democrats have put themselves in a tough position since they were the ones that voted against the continuing resolution. 

‘Times have shown over and over through the years that the public supports funding the government. They penalize the party that attaches extra policy priorities to whatever bill does that,’ Gorman, who previously served as the communications director for the National Republican Congressional Committee, said in a Wednesday email to Fox News Digital. ‘You’re already seeing moderate Democrats splinter off. As this goes on, I expect that to continue.’

Meanwhile, Trump is taking advantage of the shutdown to advance his priorities to whittle down the federal government in an unprecedented move. The White House’s Office of Management and Budget ordered agencies in Septemberto draw up plans for a reduction-in-force in the event of a lapse in appropriations. 

While federal employees typically are furloughed during government shutdowns, the Trump administration’s plans would permanently scale back the size of the federal workforce if a government shutdown occurs.

‘Republicans must use this opportunity of Democrat forced closure to clear out dead wood, waste, and fraud,’ Trump said in a social media post on Wednesday. ‘Billions of Dollars can be saved. MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!’ 

Vice President JD Vance has adopted a proactive role carrying the administration’s position, and told reporters Tuesday he predicted the shutdown wouldn’t last long. Specifically, he said that evidence suggests moderate Democrats are ‘cracking a little’ because they understand the ‘fundamental illogic’ of the shutdown. 

Still, he said that layoffs were forthcoming. Trump said Sunday that layoffs were ‘taking place right now’ as thousands of workers’ jobs remain in jeopardy. 

‘We’re going to have to make things work,’ Vance said. ‘And that means that we’re going to have to triage some certain things, that means certain people are going to have to get laid off. And we’re going to try to make sure that the American people suffer as little as possible from the shutdown.’

The White House said in a statement to Fox News Digital that every shutdown comes with consequences.

‘The Democrats can reopen the government at any time,’ White House spokesperson Abigail Jackson said Monday. 

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House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., dismissed the top House Democrat’s demand for a primetime debate on the government shutdown.

Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., wrote to Johnson on Monday morning challenging him to a debate on the House floor ‘any day this week,’ to be broadcast live ‘to the American people.’

Johnson suggested he would not entertain that, however, calling the move a ‘publicity stunt’ to reporters that same morning.

‘When the poll says that about 13% of the people approve of your messaging, then you make desperate pleas for attention, and that’s what Hakeem Jeffries has done,’ Johnson said.

‘We debated all this on the House floor. As you know, before we passed our bill, he spoke for seven or eight minutes. He had all of his colleagues lined up. They gave it their best shot, and they argued, and they stomped their feet and screamed at us and all that. And still we passed the bill in bipartisan fashion and sent it over to the Senate.’

The House speaker was referring to a short-term federal funding bill aimed at keeping the government running through Nov. 21, in order to give congressional negotiators more time to pass fiscal year (FY) 2026 spending priorities.

That bill passed the House largely along party lines — with two Republicans opposed and one Democrat in support — but has stalled in the Senate.

‘The House has done its job. I’m not going to let Hakeem try to pretend for theatrics. I mean, this is a [Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y.] decision. The ball is in the Senate’s court now,’ Johnson said.

‘We don’t need to waste time on that nonsense. Those debates have been had. I mean, Hakeem is a friend and a colleague. I respect him, but we all know what he’s trying to do there.’

The government is in its sixth day of the current shutdown, with Senate Democrats having rejected the GOP-led funding plan four times.

Democrats in the House and Senate, infuriated by being sidelined in federal funding talks, have been pushing for an extension of Obamacare subsidies enhanced during the COVID-19 pandemic. Those enhancements would expire by the end of 2025 without congressional action.

‘Democrats have been clear and consistent in our position. The country needs immediate, bipartisan negotiations between the White House and congressional leadership in order to reach an enlightened spending agreement that reopens the government, improves the lives of hardworking American taxpayers and addresses the Republican healthcare crisis,’ Jeffries wrote to Johnson on Monday.

‘Unfortunately, Donald Trump and your party decided to shut down the government, because the GOP refuses to provide healthcare to everyday Americans. Further, you have kept House Republicans on vacation instead of working with Democrats to reopen the government.’

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The government shutdown entered its sixth day on Monday, and Senate Democrats are so firmly planted in their position that unless there is a deal on expiring Obamacare tax credits, they will not reopen the government. 

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and his caucus have largely remained unflinching in their demand that Republicans and President Donald Trump agree to a deal on the tax credits, which are set to expire by the end of the year.

It’s one of several demands they made in their counter-proposal to the GOP’s continuing resolution (CR), and appears to be the one that they believe to be the most attainable. Their other demands, repealing the healthcare section of the ‘big, beautiful bill’ and putting guardrails on the rescissions, are a nonstarter for Republicans and the White House.

Still, no party that has introduced unrelated demands into a government shutdown fight has walked away with a victory. The last government shutdown in early 2019 saw Trump demand that Democrats provide funding for his border wall, and he walked away empty-handed.

Throughout last week, Senate Democrats maintained a posture that they wanted Republicans to come to the negotiating table on the subsidies, which are set to sunset at the end of this year. Conversations among members are ongoing, which both Schumer and Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., have encouraged.

‘We want Democrats to talk with Republicans,’ Schumer said. ‘And so it’s a good thing.’

But, he countered that Republicans hadn’t offered ‘anything really new — just the same old stuff.’

‘And so, nothing new on [Obamacare], nothing on rescissions,’ he said. ‘And so, look, Democrats want to go back and negotiate again, but they got to negotiate with something, get something in return.’

Democrats’ initial push was to make the subsidies — created during the COVID-19 pandemic to ease the cost of healthcare premiums available through the Affordable Care Act (ACA) — permanent. The subsidies were later enhanced through the Inflation Reduction Act in 2022 when Democrats last had a trifecta in Washington. That change removed the income cap on the subsidies. 

Republicans have said that they are interested in working out something on the tax credits, but that there should be reforms to the program.

‘The Obamacare enhanced, or COVID subsidies, are inflationary, and rates have been going up because that program is fundamentally flawed in ways designed,’ Thune said. ‘That doesn’t mean it can’t be reformed and fixed. It can, but we can’t get to that conversation until we get the government back open.’

Lawmakers are set to again vote on Republicans’ CR, and it is again expected to fail for a fifth time Monday, given that no deal was struck over the weekend. Both sides agree that a deal won’t come from the top level, but will have to be borne from negotiations among rank-and-file members.

Sen. Mike Rounds, R-S.D., has been directly involved in the member-level negotiations and said that Republicans did want to tackle the Obamacare issue. But, Democrats have to agree to reopen the government first.

‘It would be nice if Sen. Schumer could say his shutdown is complete, but we suspect that it will take members of his conference to make that decision on his behalf,’ Rounds said. 

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The best sports broadcasters can even turn broken plays into entertainment for fans viewing at home.

Mike Tirico showed off that skill with a hilarious, off-script call during Week 5’s ‘Sunday Night Football’ divisional clash between the New England Patriots and Buffalo Bills.

In the second half, there had still only been nine total points scored in the Sunday night prime-time game. When Bills quarterback Josh Allen threw a pass away into the stands, Tirico seized on an opportunity to inject some excitement into the broadcast.

After a fan standing in the front row caught Allen’s throwaway, he turned around and bolted for the exit. Tirico was on the call for the fan’s mad dash up the Highmark Stadium stairs.

‘Nice catch there,’ Tirico began as the fan wearing a Matt Milano jersey hauled in Allen’s throwaway. ‘Oh, he’s gone!’

‘Milano! Milano’s gonna go! He’s in row 10! He’s in row 15! He might get a beer! Where are you going, man? It’s your moment! Milano, row 40, led by Allen (another fan wearing an Allen jersey). He’s going to take it the distance!’

‘Maybe it wasn’t his seat, maybe he doesn’t want to be on TV. He’s gone,’ Tirico said.

The moment was up among the most exciting for the Bills that night. Buffalo scored a touchdown one play after the throwaway to take its first and only lead of the night. The Patriots scored a touchdown on the ensuing drive and held on to win the divisional matchup, handing the Bills their first loss of the year.

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