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House Democrats are ready to go to war to save enhanced Obamacare subsidies that are set to expire at the end of this year, even if it means risking a partial government shutdown.

Democrats and some moderate House Republicans have been sounding the alarm about the expiring healthcare subsidies for weeks, a fight that’s now coming to a head as the Senate is poised to vote on a short-term federal funding bill called a ‘continuing resolution’ (CR) aimed at keeping the government funded through Nov. 21.

House Democrats held an in-person caucus meeting on Capitol Hill Monday night to paint a contrasting image with House Republicans who are home in their districts during a potential shutdown.

‘One, yes, we should get it done in this CR,’ Rep. Jim Himes, D-Conn., told Fox News Digital after the meeting when asked if getting the subsidies included was worth risking a potential shutdown. ‘The Republicans in the last 20 years have asked for policy goal after policy goal in this similar situation.’

‘And number two, we need some commitments that if we sign up for a budget, the budget will actually be observed,’ he added.

Both Himes and Rep. Rosa DeLauro, D-Conn., the top Democrat on the House Appropriations Committee, referenced earlier comments by senior appropriator Rep. Steve Womack, R-Ark., to Politico, questioning why Democrats would join the GOP in funding negotiations given the Trump administration’s propensity for cutting spending that Congress agrees on.

DeLauro told reporters after the meeting that Republicans ‘absolutely’ needed to deliver on Obamacare, formally known as the Affordable Care Act (ACA), in written legislation.

‘Why should we believe them if it’s not in legislation?’ she asked.

DeLauro said earlier, ‘We certainly don’t want to shut down. We’ve said that all along, and all we need is good, bipartisan cooperation. That’s what’s necessary. We’ve been able to do that before, I anticipate we ought to be getting there now. And all this is about is affordability, affordability of health care costs.’

Other House Democrats who spoke with Fox News Digital did not directly say the subsidies were worth risking a shutdown, but argued they needed to be addressed immediately.

‘Healthcare costs are skyrocketing, and so look, I mean, to not address that reality is political malpractice. Congress has an obligation to do something, and we have to do something now. We’re here in Washington because we want to fix the problem. Republicans aren’t here,’ Rep. Jim McGovern, D-Mass., said.

‘It’s about whether people continue to afford to have adequate healthcare…this is a big issue, and this is a fight the American people, I think, are on our side on.’

Rep. Greg Landsman, D-Ohio, said when asked if the subsidies were worth risking a shutdown now, ‘I think this will be [President Donald Trump’s] shutdown, because he’s not just the president, but for his entire second term, he has tried to give everyone the impression that he is all powerful. And that does come at a cost.’

‘[Republicans] could extend these tax credits that are very popular and necessary at a time with rising costs, by simply sitting down and negotiating with us,’ Landsman said.

Rep. Eugene Vindman, D-Va., pointed out that ‘notices are supposed to go out as early as Wednesday that ACA tax credits are going away.’

‘The Democrats are happy to support any bill that would protect Americans’ healthcare, our education, and we’re ready to vote. We’re here working right now, Republicans aren’t here,’ Vindman said.

Already existing ACA subsidies were increased dramatically during the COVID-19 pandemic under former President Joe Biden. 

And while the credits were meant as a temporary expansion, they’ve since become a political lightning rod with healthcare premiums poised to rise for millions of Americans.

There have been some conversations about limiting the income brackets eligible for those enhanced subsidies, while conservatives have pushed for them to be eliminated altogether.

House and Senate GOP leaders have signaled they would be willing to have those discussions later this year and are accusing Democrats of trying to jam partisan demands into a seven-week government funding bill.

While House Democrats appear united on the matter, however, it’s the Senate that is pivotal in the current equation. 

The House passed the CR largely along party lines earlier this month, and it’s now on the Senate to advance the measure before midnight on Oct. 1 to avert a shutdown.

But even Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., signaled on Monday evening that Democrats would hold firm.

‘They say give us 45 days. Since March, we’ve had 45 days and 45 days and 45 days and 45 days. We asked to meet earlier, they didn’t want to,’ Schumer told reporters. ‘So we think when they say later, they mean never. We have to do it now, first because of the timing issue, and second, because now is the time we can get it done.’

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American companies have won a record $170 billion in foreign government contracts since President Donald Trump returned to office, the Department of Commerce announced Tuesday. 

The deals amount to 98 contracts and are expected to generate $144 billion in U.S.-manufactured exports and support nearly 600,000 American jobs, according to the International Trade Administration (ITA), the Commerce Department’s arm for trade and exports. 

The total dwarfs the $12 billion in contracts signed during the same period in 2021 under former President Joe Biden. 

The aerospace and defense sector took the lion’s share, securing $153 billion in signed contracts. Other deals included about $5 billion in nuclear, oil and gas projects, $800 million in information technology, and more than $600 million in safety and security equipment. 

Commerce officials said the latest tally underscores a renewed focus to prioritize U.S. industry and competitiveness abroad. 

‘The record-breaking U.S. business wins under President Trump’s leadership reflect an unwavering commitment to rebuilding U.S. industry for the American worker,’ Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said in a statement.

‘With record business deals abroad, America is strong again, and together with the American worker, President Trump is transforming the U.S. economy, rebalancing our global trade and restoring America’s place in the world,’ he added.

The deals are driven in part by the ITA’s Advocacy Center, a Commerce Department team that helps U.S. companies compete for foreign government contracts by ensuring bids are judged on merit.

‘In the first nine months of the Trump administration, ITA advocacy has worked tirelessly to win contracts to support hundreds of thousands of American jobs,’ said Under Secretary of Commerce William Kimmitt. 

‘We will continue to be an unrelenting advocate around the world in support of American workers,’ he added.

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Oregon has emerged as a national championship contender after defeating Penn State on the road.
Ole Miss is now considered a legitimate playoff contender after a win against LSU, though some question if they are overrated.
Despite early losses, Notre Dame is still considered a viable candidate for the 12-team College Football Playoff.

∎ Kirby Smart can’t beat Alabama.

∎ James Franklin can’t beat the best teams on his schedule.

∎ LSU can’t move the ball.

∎ Sam Pittman entered the season as a fired-coach-in-waiting.

The weekend also re-established Alabama as a top-10 team, and reaffirmed field stormings are theatrical, but dangerous.

Here’s what else lingers on my mind after an eventful weekend of ranked showdowns:

Is Alabama football back?

If Alabama wants full adoration after beating Georgia, then it must beat Vanderbilt and Missouri. I’ll believe Alabama is ‘back,’ once the Crimson Tide show consistency, something never previously attained in the Kalen DeBoer tenure.

Remember, the Tide got up for the big games last season, too. They toppled Georgia. They thrashed LSU. They won the Iron Bowl. They also wilted against a pair of teams that finished the regular season 6-6.

“We didn’t handle success last year,” DeBoer acknowledged this week.

To wit, Alabama lost to Vanderbilt a week after beating Georgia.

Seismic though this latest takedown of Georgia was, Alabama looks more like a team positioned for repeated high-wire acts, rather than the destructive Tide of yore.

Stringing together wins against Vanderbilt and Missouri on the heels of this emotional triumph would show this year’s team is not a reincarnation of last season. These next two SEC foes are the type of meat-and-potatoes opponents Alabama must beat to inspire belief it’s built to endure the rigors of an unrelenting schedule.

Alabama has made strides since its season-opening loss to Florida State. Quarterback Ty Simpson progressed from question mark to marquee asset.

Nick Saban’s “Rat poison!” phrase became something of a laugh line, but the spirit behind it rings true. His best teams avoided the pitfalls after emotional wins.

The teams that emerge from the SEC minefield and advance to the College Football Playoff will be those that show the most consistency, and not the one-week wonders.

Which is Alabama?

Vanderbilt and Missouri will help tell us.

Is Oregon a national championship contender?

What’s in the water up in Eugene that Dan Lanning keeps pumping out electric quarterbacks? From Bo Nix to Dillon Gabriel and now Dante Moore, Oregon’s cycled through one tough-as-nails competitor after another.

Moore used his dual-threat talents to squeeze the Ducks past Penn State in a daunting road environment after a cross-country flight.

The preseason hype machine told us Franklin’s Nittany Lions were the Big Ten’s option 1B candidate for the national championship, alongside Ohio State. That hype ignored the reality, to win a national championship, Franklin would need to beat a few teams of Oregon’s caliber, and his teams perpetually wilt when the spotlight shines brightest.  

Sure, Penn State rallied and made for an exciting finish, but how did the game end? With a Drew Allar interception. The same way Penn State’s playoff loss to Notre Dame ended.

Never mind the NFL mock drafts. Franklin and Allar aren’t a national championship combination, but Lanning and Moore might be.

Did Ole Miss go from underrated to overrated?

The Rebels were undervalued in preseason rankings. Voters have overcorrected. Ole Miss shot up to No. 4 in the US LBM Coaches Poll after a 24-19 win against LSU.

I’m in on the Rebels as a legit playoff contender. Their offense is punchy, and their schedule is accommodating. But, Ole Miss as the nation’s fourth-best team? I’m not there yet. How quickly we forget Ole Miss surrendered 35 points to Arkansas two weeks ago.

This was a huge moment for Lane Kiffin and his program, and the game cemented Division II transfer Trinidad Chambliss as a bona fide SEC quarterback.

Kiffin severely outcoached Brian Kelly, and Chambliss executed at a high level.

However, this result also served as a product of LSU’s month-long inability to ignite on offense. Quarterback Garrett Nussmeier isn’t throwing with his usual zip. Either he’s playing hurt, or, well, I don’t know how to explain it, but when you combine Nussmeier’s regression with LSU’s persistent lack of a ground game, LSU’s offense is limited.

Notre Dame still can make College Football Playoff, right?

Yes, yes, and yes. Was that clear enough?

Folks, it’s Notre Dame. Do you believe the committee is going to omit the Irish if they rip off 10 straight victories and finish 10-2? Notre Dame lost to a Group of Five directional school last September, and it not only made the playoff, it hosted a game.

Losses to Miami and Texas A&M add up to one loss to Northern Illinois. Bing, bang, bong, and the Irish are a No. 7 playoff seed again, touting a “signature” win against 8-4 Southern California, or some such thing.

Here’s the playoff pitch for the 10-2 Irish: Notre Dame’s redshirt freshman quarterback CJ Carr kept getting better, and the defense regrouped and improved after a bad start.

Oh, here’s the more succinct pitch: It’s Notre Dame.

The only thing that could keep 10-win Notre Dame out of a 12-team playoff would be Texas A&M tanking, after the Aggies beat the Irish in South Bend. No tanking yet for the Aggies. They’re undefeated. That’s great for Notre Dame. So is its remaining schedule.

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

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Now that the season is nearly a quarter of the way through, there are only two ways to improve your rosters — waiver wire and trades.

Evaluating a fantasy trade can be a daunting task. Most managers value their players more than they’re actually worth. That’s where the Week 5 fantasy football trade value charts come in. You can also check out our Week 5 fantasy rankings to help with lineup and waiver decisions this week.

The charts can be used as your very own fantasy football trade analyzer in standard, half-PPR (point per reception) and full PPR leagues. Someone sends you an offer? Simply pull out a calculator (on your phone, you don’t need an actual calculator) and plug in the values for each player. Don’t worry, six-points-per-passing-touchdown and superflex leagues are covered as well.

Important note: If you’re offered an uneven trade (i.e., a 2-for-1 or 3-for-1), include the values for the players you’d be moving to the bench or dropping within your calculation. Example: If someone in your half-PPR league offers you Trey Benson, Zay Flowers, and Travis Hunter (combined value of 85) for Puka Nacua (68), it might look like you’re getting the better end of it. However, if you’re bumping down, say, Darius Slayton and Kendre Miller (combined value of 40) in the process, it’s a net negative deal for you.

Another note: The ‘1 QB’ values are for standard scoring leagues. Quarterback value diminishes in PPR formats, so deduct roughly 3% of their values in half-PPR and another 3% for full PPR (this number drops as the season goes on and people look to consolidate). Example: Patrick Mahomes’ value in standard formats is 27. In half-PPR, his value would be 26 (deducted 3%), and in full PPR, his value would be 25 (deducted 6%).

The rankings are based on how players should be valued in 12-team leagues. Players are sorted in order of their half-PPR values.

(NOTE: App users might need to switch to a browser if the charts aren’t showing up.)

Quarterback trade value chart

(Note: ‘6/TD’ is for leagues that award six points for passing touchdowns and ‘SFLEX’ stands for superflex.)

Running back trade value chart

Wide receiver trade value chart

Tight end trade value chart

Overall Week 5 fantasy football rest-of-season rankings

Note: These values are for 12-team, one-QB leagues with half-PPR scoring.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The Trump administration is looking to cut funding for a program that provides permanent housing to the homeless, a move that may leave those the program aims to help back on the streets, according to a report.

More than 170,000 people could be at risk of experiencing homelessness when more than half the funding for the Department of Housing and Urban Development’s (HUD) permanent housing program is cut, Politico reported on Monday, citing three HUD employees, internal HUD documents and a person with knowledge of the Continuum of Care (CoC) program.

The cut funds will be moved to transitional housing assistance with some work or service requirements, according to the internal documents and those with knowledge of the situation. The cuts could have a greater impact on rural areas that have less access to city and state funds to supplement federal dollars, the people told the outlet.

‘When the subsidy and the support that goes along with those subsidies is removed, it puts people at grave risk,’ said the person with inside knowledge of the CoC program. ‘And most of these folks without these supports will likely end up back in emergency shelters or back on our nation’s streets.’

HUD Secretary Scott Turner wrote in a  Fox News Digital opinion piecei earlier this month about a ‘paradigm shift’ in the department’s approach to homelessness and housing.

‘But our goal is to let HUD use real, proven effective strategies, and there is no evidence that giving free apartments to the homeless without preconditions or participation requirements – like job training or treatment – leads to good outcomes,’ Turner wrote. 

‘There is evidence, however, that countless lives have been lost to overdoses in HUD-funded housing because of this failed ideology,’ the secretary continued.

Turner wrote that HUD wants to continue to help support work that aims to aid those experiencing homelessness and battling addiction to recover and become self-sufficient.

Permanent housing funding for 2026 is currently $3.3 billion and could be cut in half to $1.1 billion through the Trump administration’s effort, according to Politico. 

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

The Transportation Security Administration (TSA) and the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) uncovered that the Biden administration placed some Americans who resisted the COVID-19 mask mandate or were involved in the events of Jan 6, 2021, on prolonged TSA watchlists, including some on a no-fly list typically reserved for suspected terrorists.

Fox News Digital acquired the findings of an internal investigation conducted by the agencies that showed that then-President Joe Biden’s TSA initiated ‘Operation Freedom to Breathe’ in September 2021, roughly six months after the CDC relaxed the COVID-19 mask mandate, which targeted Americans who previously resisted mask mandates set forth by the Biden Administration. 

The initiative placed 19 Americans on various levels of intensive watchlists, with more than half added to the highest severity no-fly list, preventing them from boarding a flight in the U.S. entirely. Eleven of the individuals remained on watchlists until April 2022, when the national mask mandate was lifted by the Biden administration. 

‘Biden’s TSA Administrator [David] Pekoske and his cronies abused their authority and weaponized the federal government against the very people they were charged with protecting,’ Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem told Fox News Digital. 

‘Biden’s TSA wildly abused their authority, targeting Americans who posed no aviation security risk under the banner of political differences,’ Noem added. ‘President Trump promised to end the weaponization of government against the American people, and we are making good on that promise.’

Fox News Digital reached out to Pekoske, but did not receive a response.

The investigation also concluded that Biden’s TSA placed roughly 280 individuals allegedly involved in the Capitol protests on Jan 6, 2021, on watchlists, including five on a no-fly list. 

Biden’s TSA ignored internal concerns raised by career intelligence officials and TSA’s Chief Privacy Officer that placing individuals on the list ‘is clearly unrelated to transportation security,‘ and that ‘TSA is punishing people for the expression of their ideas when they haven’t been charged, let alone convicted of incitement or sedition,’ according to emails from a top privacy official at TSA dated Jan 13, 2021, obtained by Fox News Digital.

Another TSA intelligence employee also expressed worry over watchlisting individuals allegedly involved in the Capitol protest, saying most individuals who were arrested ‘are technically curfew breakers,’ and that ‘I hope we don’t end up adding them [to a watchlist] on just the arrest,’ according to an internal email obtained by Fox.

Internal emails said that TSA mainly relied on the George Washington University Program of Extremism academic database and social media, rather than traditional sources like the FBI and local police, to determine which individuals should be placed on watchlists.

One individual, a national guardsman deployed to the Capitol for Biden’s inauguration on Jan 20, 2021 and was not present at the Capitol on Jan 6, 2021, was added to a no-fly list because of bad intelligence from Biden’s FBI.

Another individual, the wife of a federal air marshal who was also not present at the Capitol on Jan 6, was added to a watchlist due to additional bad intelligence from the Biden FBI.

Americans allegedly involved with the events of Jan 6, 2021, who were not tied to unrelated, individual incidents, were removed from various watchlists on June, 28, 2021. 

A majority of Americans allegedly involved with the events of Jan 6, 2021, who were placed on watchlists were removed from them on June, 28, 2021, though some who had been charged remained watchlisted until they were cleared.

Sources at TSA say the Biden administration’s targeting of Americans is the most expansive use of putting U.S. citizens on a no-fly list in history. 

Noem told Fox News Digital that the agency will be ‘referring this case to the Department of Justice and for Congressional investigation.’

Preston Mizell is a writer with Fox News Digital covering breaking news. Story tips can be sent to Preston.Mizell@fox.com and on X @MizellPreston

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

The potency of a singular Major League Baseball game is roughly the equivalent of a weak cup of Folgers. And then the playoffs arrive, and it’s triple shot espressos, on the house.

When the league introduced the wild-card game to the playoff format in 2012, it brought an unprecedented level of urgency to proceedings that typically unfold over best-of-five or best-of-seven sagas. Suddenly, seasons came down to a matter of three or four hours, not five or six days.

And the emotions produced in that overheated format rarely disappoint.

While that immediacy has been watered down a bit with the 2022 introduction of the best-of-three wild card series, the urgency has not – especially when the Game 1 winner went on to win all 12 series to date – 10 of them via two-game sweep.

With the four 2025 wild-card series set to tip off Sept. 30, USA TODAY Sports takes a look at the most surreal moments of the era:

2012: Infield-fly bedlam

The very first National League wild-card game showed just how supercharged emotions can get – and force everyone to scurry for their rulebook.

With the Atlanta Braves trailing 6-3 in the top of the eighth, Freddie Freeman drew a walk and David Ross singled to bring the tying run to the plate with one out. Andrelton Simmons’ pop fly to shallow left field seemed to mute that momentum – until the Turner Field crowd started screaming and St. Louis Cardinals shortstop Pete Kozma peeled off the ball at the last moment.

Weird move. Left fielder Matt Holliday was more than a few feet behind him; Kozma “swore I heard him” amid the screams of 52,631. The ball fell. The crowd erupted. The bases were fixing to be loaded, with one out.

Yet left field umpire Sam Holbrook signaled that the infield-fly rule was in effect, befuddling the casual observer who might not have realized that “infield” is just an operative term, and a missed catch well on the outfield grass could qualify.

Meanwhile, Atlanta went nuts.

A 19-minute delay ensued when fans tossed trash and likely other unmentionables onto the turf. And while the bases did get loaded on a Brian McCann walk, closer Jason Motte came in to strike out Michael Bourn.

Season over, and Chipper Jones’ career over in Atlanta, officially so after a protest was denied. Hey, you can’t protest a judgment call. And Holbrook made the right call in that situation. (Probably).

2015: Sean Rodriguez loses it

The Pirates are approaching almost four decades of nearly uninterrupted ineptitude in Pittsburgh, but the handful of times they poked their head into the playoffs supplied some wild memories. On the positive side: PNC Park in full throat, forcing Johnny Cueto to drop the ball.

On the negative side: Sean Rodriguez scoring a TKO against a water cooler.

Oh, that didn’t effect the outcome of the 2015 wild-card tussle between the Pirates and Chicago Cubs. More like the wild coda of a frustrating night in which Jake Arrieta dominated the Pirates, throwing the first postseason shutout for the Cubs in 70 years.

It all went sideways when Pirates reliever Tony Watson drilled Arrieta with a pitch, causing benches to empty in a relatively moderate tussle, by baseball standards. Rodriguez, the veteran utilityman, positioned himself as “likes-to-fight-guy,” aiming to break containment and go after any Cub he could find.

Eventually, David Ross (that man is everywhere!) grabbed Rodriguez near the neck, which really set him off. Ejected and dejected, he threw a dizzying array of right hooks and left crosses at a Gatorade jug in the Pirates dugout.

Pitchers throwing shutouts. Pitchers batting. Backup infielders losing their mind. Maybe the game was better when it wasn’t “optimized.”

2016: A flying beer, a cooped-up closer

The one-game-and-out format magnifies everything, most notably fan emotions (see above) and managerial moves.

This AL wild card battle between Toronto and Baltimore featured all of that, in the ugliest fashion.

With the score tied 2-2 in the bottom of the seventh inning, Blue Jays outfielder Melvin Upton hit a routine fly to fairly deep left field, where the Orioles’ Hyun-Soo Kim camped under it. Just as the ball was about to fall into his glove, a nearly-full can of whizzed by his head, landing about three feet to the left of him.

Kim winced as he spotted the can, the catch made securely. Security and the umpiring crew rushed toward the outfield. And the Orioles were incensed.

“That’s about as pathetic as it gets,’’ says Orioles center fielder Adam Jones. ‘You don’t do that. I don’t care how passionate you are. Yell. Cuss. Scream. Say we suck. We’re horrible. We get it. We’re the opponent. You could hit him in the back of the head and you have no idea what could happen. That’s a full beer that’s being thrown.”

Amazingly, the malicious toss came one year after a similar bottle-chucking episode during the Blue Jays’ 2015 AL Division Series against Texas resulted in a banning of upper deck beer sales at Rogers Centre. Deep-pocketed fans, we suppose.

The drama reached its zenith in the ninth, 10th and 11th innings as the game remained deadlocked and Orioles manager Buck Showalter kept Zach Britton – coming off one of the greatest seasons ever for a closer – stuck in the bullpen. The Orioles never gave him a lead to save but they also saw their season end with their best pitcher on the sidelines when Ubaldo Jiménez gave up a walk-off 11th-inning homer to Edwin Encarnación.

“He’s our best pitcher,” says Jimenez, “and he couldn’t get in the game.”

2019: Juan Soto’s ball had eyes

Hard to imagine now, but the Washington Nationals once qualified for the playoffs five times in eight seasons. Yet they were sitting on a history of postseason futility – 0-4 in NLDS appearances – when they stared at a 3-1 deficit entering the bottom of the eighth inning against the Milwaukee Brewers.

That’s when crazy stuff started happening: Josh Hader hitting light-hitting Michael A. Taylor with a pitch. Ryan Zimmerman’s two-out ducksnort – exit velocity, 69.2 mph – found grass in short center field. A walk to Anthony Rendon, loading the bases.

Enter 20-year-old Juan Soto, already emerging as a generational talent yet locked in a left-on-left matchup with the All-Star Hader. No matter: He lashed a single to right field, a little harder – 97.9 mph – than Zimmerman’s. Hard enough that, even with two outs, right fielder Trent Grisham charged hard, knowing he might be able to throw out pinch runner Andrew Stevenson and choke off the tying run.

And then the ball swerved wickedly, a sharp right turn, right past Grisham.

The bases emptied. The Nationals were three outs from their first playoff triumph – even if just one lousy game – and, little did they know, on their way to a World Series title.

“It’s going to sting for a long time,” Grisham said in the aftermath.

2022: Buck Showalter comes up empty

The ’22 New York Mets already had a tragic feel about them, starting with a “this is our year!” optimism borne of signing Max Scherzer and then backing it up by roaring out to a 38-19 start. That June giddiness soon gave way to despair, though, as a 10 ½-game lead on June 2 was eaten away by the defending champion Atlanta Braves.

Eventually, both clubs landed on 101 wins. And since this was the first year of the expanded wild card playoff, there’d be no tiebreaker game and the Braves won the division based on head-to-head record.

Tough beat. And a tougher draw when the Soto-led San Diego Padres were their best-of-three match.

The series was squared 1-1 when Joe Musgrove squared off against Chris Bassitt in the decisive Game 3, and Musgrove was untouchable, retiring the first 12 Mets before a Pete Alonso single in the fifth.

When Musgrove came out for the sixth, the Padres leading 4-0, Showalter tried taking the air out of their tires.

He ordered the umpiring crew to inspect Musgrove’s face and equipment for banned substances, hinting in a pregame production meeting that Musgrove’s spin rates had been elevated in recent weeks.

Musgrove stood stone-faced as umpire Alfonso Marquez checked his ears, his face, his glove … and found nothing.

It was an embarrassing way for the Mets to go out, along with Showalter, who’d manage one more playoff-less season. In short, undressing an opposing pitcher is kind of like asking a question in court: You better know the answer before you ask.

Instead, Musgrove tossed seven innings of one-hit, shutout ball and the 101-win Mets went home.

“I’ve seen him do it before,’ Musgrove said of Showalter afterward. ‘I get it; they’re on their last leg, they’re desperate and it is what it is.

‘It motivated me a bit. It fired me up. An opportunity to stick it to them, a little bit.’

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Miami Dolphins wide receiver Tyreek Hill suffered a gruesome-looking leg injury in the second half of his team’s 27-21 win over the New York Jets during Week 4.

Hill’s injury occurred at the end of a 10-yard completion from Tua Tagovailoa to the veteran receiver. Hill was tackled by a Jets defender while going out of bounds, and his leg was twisted in the process.

The ESPN broadcast briefly showed Hill lying on the ground, and it appeared his knee was facing the wrong direction.

Hill was quickly tended to by medical staffers from both the Dolphins and the Jets. ESPN sideline reporter Katie George reported the medical personnel ‘cut off Hill’s cleat’ and the tape surrounding his ankle before putting his leg into a stabilizer.

Hill’s mother also came down to the field to console her son, and gave him ‘a kiss on the forehead,’ according to George.

Hill was then loaded onto a cart and taken off the field. He was seen smiling as he left the field.

Tyreek Hill injury update

Dolphins coach Mike McDaniel announced during his postgame news conference Monday that Hill had suffered a knee dislocation. The 42-year-old coach did not provide any additional information about Hill’s injury.

‘That’s what I know about it, ‘ McDaniel said. ‘I’m sure I’ll be given more information tomorrow.’

McDaniel noted Hill was ‘in the best spirits of any player’ he had seen down on the field injured.

‘He immediately had wide eyes and was talking, ‘I’m good. Just make sure the guys get this win,” McDaniel said Hill told him. ‘You know, he was focused on the team.’

While McDaniel didn’t provide an update on Hill’s recovery timeline, NFL Network reporter Cameron Wolfe noted Hill’s injury would cost him the remainder of the 2025 season if an MRI confirms a dislocated knee.

The Dolphins announced shortly after Hill left the game he had been ruled out for the remainder of the contest because of a knee injury.

Miami also reported Hill was being taken to a local hospital for ‘imaging, evaluation and observation.’

ESPN’s broadcast showed Hill being taken out of the stadium in a wheelchair. He had a heavy brace on his left leg while a medical staffer was helping to hold up his foot.

(This story will be updated as more information becomes available.)

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

All 30 teams have now reported for training camps, the first preseason game will tip off Thursday, Oct. 2 between the New York Knicks and Philadelphia 76ers in Abu Dhabi, and teams are starting their campaigns with the same objective in mind: hoisting the Larry O’Brien trophy at the end of the season.

That, however, remains a long way off, as most teams will begin practices this week, looking to shake off summer rust and get into shape. In any case, everyone is chasing the defending NBA champion Oklahoma City Thunder, who have an excellent chance to become the first team to repeat in eight seasons.

Here are USA TODAY Sports’ NBA power rankings, with all 30 teams having reported for training camps:

NBA power rankings – training camp edition

1. Oklahoma City Thunder

The Thunder have a team built to win for years to come. Can they maintain their edge and focus over a grind of a season to become the first team to repeat as champions in eight years?

2. Denver Nuggets

The Nuggets had a stellar offseason, and Cameron Johnson figures to add a new dimension to Denver’s offense.

3. Houston Rockets

Losing veteran point guard Fred VanVleet to a torn ACL shouldn’t dampen all the enthusiasm they generated from a busy offseason that included the Kevin Durant trade, but it is a significant blow.

4. New York Knicks

Expectations are sky-high for the Knicks, who have rounded out their roster and may depend more on their bench with new coach Mike Brown coming in.

5. Cleveland Cavaliers

Lonzo Ball and Larry Nance Jr. are solid additions, but the Cavaliers will need to stay healthy — and will need their stars like Donovan Mitchell and Evan Mobley to take another step forward.

6. Los Angeles Clippers

This is very much a win-now roster, but with an inquiry surrounding Kawhi Leonard and owner Steve Ballmer about possible salary cap circumvention, can L.A. focus on basketball?

7. Minnesota Timberwolves

Could an MVP-caliber season be incoming for Anthony Edwards? He spoke at media day on Monday, Sept. 29 and vowed to be fully engaged, even against weaker opponents.

8. Los Angeles Lakers

The vibes were high at media day, with LeBron James and a slimmed-down Luka Dončić seemingly focused on elevating the Lakers into a legitimate contender. They still need some depth in the frontcourt, and a lot will ride on DeAndre Ayton.

9. Boston Celtics

Videos of Jayson Tatum hitting the court just five months after his Achilles rupture have Boston faithful optimistic that a return could be in the cards later this year. But would Boston be better served to retool for next season?

10. Detroit Pistons

Not many people are talking about the Pistons, who are a threat to become powers in an Eastern Conference that is wide open. With Jaden Ivey returning, Cade Cunningham will not need to be on the ball as much. Might that slow Detroit’s offense?

11. Golden State Warriors

Golden State would do well to have a long-term plan for Jonathan Kuminga, because it’s becoming apparent that if he signs his qualifying offer, there’s a massive risk that he’ll be gone at the end of the season, with the Warriors getting nothing in return. And with an aging roster, a scoring presence like Kuminga could go a long way.

12. Indiana Pacers

Coach Rick Carlisle said Tyrese Haliburton’s Achilles injury would be an opportunity for young players to step up. Look for Andrew Nembhard and Bennedict Mathurin to try to fill that void.

13. Orlando Magic

The Magic should return a stingy defense that swarms opponents along the perimeter. As long as they stay healthy, and as long as Desmond Bane helps solve their 3-point shooting woes, they could break out.

14. San Antonio Spurs

Coach Mitch Johnson said Monday that Victor Wembanyama has no restrictions. That’s incredible news for San Antonio, which has a stellar core of playmakers in De’Aaron Fox and Stephon Castle, who should ease things considerably for Wemby.

15. Memphis Grizzlies

Can they get a healthy Ja Morant? He remains one of the most explosive, dynamic players, and one who can ignite.

16. Milwaukee Bucks

There’s a weird vibe hanging around the Bucks. Giannis Antetokounmpo essentially confirmed that he was considering his options over the summer and he’s not necessarily giving the Bucks a vote of confidence. If the wheels fall off, this could get messy.

17. Atlanta Hawks

Adding Kristaps Porziņģis, Nickeil Alexander-Walker and Luke Kennard was massive, but the continued progression of Jalen Johnson would be the thing that gets Atlanta closer to becoming a legitimate competitor.

18. Dallas Mavericks

Coach Jason Kidd tempered expectations Monday that Kyrie Irving would be able to return soon from his torn ACL. It’s tough to see the Mavs being legitimate threats in a crowded West without him.

19. Chicago Bulls

They locked up Josh Giddey and took care of him in the long-term. But this is a roster that still needs an infusion of star talent.

20. Philadelphia 76ers

Joel Embiid was slimmed down at media day, but he made it clear that he would be limited to start training camp and would likely need load management throughout the season. The Sixers could be dangerous, but they’ll need him on the floor.

21. Miami Heat

Losing Tyler Herro for the first two months of the season, potentially, comes as a significant blow to a team that struggled to score — especially late in games — even when he was on the floor.

22. Toronto Raptors

This team will go as far as Brandon Ingram and Scottie Barnes take them.

23. Sacramento Kings

Domantas Sabonis has made it clear he wishes he had a star point guard to play off of. It’s almost like they could use a guy … like De’Aaron Fox.

24. Phoenix Suns

Trading away Kevin Durant leaves Devin Booker as the unquestioned No. 1 option. He said during media day that he would use his voice as a leader. His biggest project should be getting fellow guard Jalen Green to play without hesitstion.

25. Washington Wizards

They’re still a couple of years away from competing, but Washington does have a nice collection of players, starting with their French connection in Alex Sarr and Bilal Coulibaly.

26. Portland Trail Blazers

With Damian Lillard (Achilles) and Scoot Henderson (hamstring) each missing extended time, Portland could have an unsettled start to the season. Rookie big Yang Hansen could be an intriguing player to watch early on.

27. New Orleans Pelicans

Zion Williamson showed up rather slimmed down and appears to be in the best shape of his NBA career. It’s a great sign, as the Pelicans will need him to be on the floor.

28. Brooklyn Nets

The Nets, who might be forced to play their rookies — they drafted five in the first round alone — could be in for a long season.

29. Charlotte Hornets

The Hornets quietly had a decent offseason and have more shooting. There will probably still be a steep learning curve, however.

30. Utah Jazz

The Jazz might be a team that continues to build for the future and sells ahead of the February trading deadline.

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Now will come one of the harder parts of the fantasy football calendar: surviving an onslaught of bye weeks.

Four teams will be out of action in Week 5. The Pittsburgh Steelers will get a break after winning the NFL’s first-ever Dublin game while the Atlanta Falcons, Chicago Bears and Green Bay Packers will all have a normally scheduled week off.

Fantasy managers will be forced to find replacements for some of the key players on those teams, a group that notably includes Bijan Robinson, Josh Jacobs, DK Metcalf and D.J. Moore.

The process of finding quality replacements should be easier now that four weeks of data are available for all 32 of the NFL’s teams. That said, fantasy football aficionados will still have to avoid pitfalls when making key start ’em, sit ’em decisions, as a handful of normally strong starters are facing tough matchups in Week 5.

USA TODAY Sports outlines 16 players to start or sit in your fantasy matchups this week.

Fantasy football players to start in Week 5

Quarterbacks

Justin Fields, New York Jets (vs. Dallas Cowboys)

The Cowboys have allowed a league-high 1,237 passing yards and 12 total touchdowns to quarterbacks through four weeks. Fields hasn’t been consistent as a passer, but this matchup and his rushing floor against a Dallas defense that just allowed Jordan Love to log a 25-yard scramble are good enough to make him a top quarterback streamer in Week 4.

Jaxson Dart, New York Giants (at New Orleans Saints)

Dart is in a similar boat as Fields in Week 4. The rookie has a great rushing floor and showed a willingness to run often against the Chargers, logging 10 carries for 54 yards and a touchdown. The Saints have allowed the fifth-most FPPG to quarterbacks this season, so feel free to trust Dart as a bye-week fill-in, even if making his second-ever NFL start on the road in the Superdome won’t be easy.

Running backs

Woody Marks, Houston Texans (at Baltimore Ravens)

Marks overtook Nick Chubb in Houston’s running back rotation against the Titans, out-touching the veteran 21-15 and racking up 119 total yards and two touchdowns. Now, Marks gets to face a Ravens defense that has allowed the most fantasy points per game (FPPG) to running backs this season and will be playing without Nnamdi Madubuike (neck) and Roquan Smith (hamstring) in Week 5.

Trey Benson, Arizona Cardinals (vs. Tennessee Titans)

The Titans have allowed a league-high six rushing touchdowns to running backs this season. Benson handled eight of the Cardinals running backs’ 11 carries against the Seahawks and should continue to dominate carries with James Conner (ankle) out for the season.

Wide receivers

Chris Olave, New Orleans Saints (vs. New York Giants)

Olave logged his first touchdown in more than a calendar year against the Bills. He continues to see a high-volume of targets from Spencer Rattler – 10.8, tied for second-most in the NFL – so the fourth-year veteran figures to be a solid WR2 against a Giants team that has allowed a league-high 60 catches to wide receivers.

Elic Ayomanor, Tennessee Titans (at Arizona Cardinals)

The Cardinals have surrendered just two touchdowns to wide receivers this year, but their 58 catches allowed are tied for the second-most in the NFL. That could position Ayomanor, who has emerged as Cam Ward’s favorite target, to post solid numbers.

Tight end

Dalton Kincaid, Buffalo Bills (vs. New England Patriots)

The Patriots have allowed an average of 63 receiving yards per game to tight ends thus far in 2025. That could position Kincaid, who has a touchdown in three of his four games, for a big day.

Defense/special teams:

Seattle Seahawks (vs. Tampa Bay Buccaneers)

The Seahawks are averaging a league-high 12.3 FPPG defensively and get to take on a Buccaneers team dealing with several injuries along its offensive line. Baker Mayfield has generated nine turnover-worthy plays in 2025 – tied for the most in the NFL with Spencer Rattler – while being sacked eight times. That gives Seattle’s stop unit a high ceiling despite playing against a solid offense (24.3 points per game).

Fantasy football players to sit in Week 5

Quarterbacks

Brock Purdy, San Francisco 49ers (at Los Angeles Rams)

Purdy has made three career starts against the Rams. In two of those starts, he has failed to throw a touchdown pass and has just four career touchdowns against Los Angeles. The 25-year-old is also playing on a short week while being shortly removed from a two-game absence due to toe and shoulder injuries, so it’s probably best to fade him until after the mini-bye.

C.J. Stroud, Houston Texans (at Baltimore Ravens)

Stroud may be on the radar for some as a potential bye-week filler given the defensive injuries with which the Ravens are dealing. That said, the soon-to-be 24-year-old has just four total touchdowns this season and two came last week against the lowly Titans. So, while Baltimore is allowing the third-most FPPG to quarterbacks this season, Stroud hasn’t performed well enough to warrant a start.

Running backs

Jordan Mason, Minnesota Vikings (vs. Cleveland Browns)

Mason will continue to log a majority of Minnesota’s rushing workload with Aaron Jones sidelined, but the Vikings’ offensive line is banged up. Starting center Ryan Kelly (concussion) and right tackle Brian O’Neill (knee) were both forced out of the team’s Week 4 loss to the Steelers with injuries while left guard Donovan Jackson (wrist) also missed the game.

The Browns have allowed just 2.9 yards per carry and the second-fewest rushing yards to running backs thus far in 2025, so this doesn’t seem like a good spot in which to back Mason.

Jacory Croskey-Merritt, Washington Commanders (at Los Angeles Chargers)

The Commanders appear to be using a true committee approach at running back, as Croskey-Merritt and Chris Rodriguez Jr. tied for the team lead with seven carries last week. Neither figures to have much success against a Chargers defense allowing the second-fewest FPPG to RBs.

Wide receivers

Jerry Jeudy, Cleveland Browns (vs. Minnesota Vikings)

Jeudy has averaged a respectable 7.5 targets per game through four weeks, but he is averaging just 3.3 catches and 45.5 receiving yards entering Week 5 while failing to log a touchdown. It’s hard to imagine that changing against a Vikings defense that has allowed the fewest FPPG to wide receivers this season.

DeVonta Smith, Philadelphia Eagles (vs. Denver Broncos)

The Eagles are averaging a league-low 25.3 passing attempts per game. That will make it hard for Smith – who is averaging a career-low 9.3 yards per reception with a 9.7-yard average depth of target (ADOT) – to get the targets necessary to make a major impact against a strong Broncos defense.

Tight end

Hunter Henry, New England Patriots (at Buffalo Bills)

Henry ranks second on the Patriots in targets (15) while leading them in receiving touchdowns (3), but he has a difficult matchup in Week 5. The Bills have allowed just nine catches, 67 yards and a touchdown to opposing tight ends all season, and just limited Juwan Johnson to a three-catch, 28-yard outing. As such, Stefon Diggs is more likely to serve as Drake Maye’s top target as the veteran wide-out faces his former team.

Defense/special teams:

Denver Broncos (at Philadelphia Eagles)

As mentioned earlier, the Eagles average the fewest passing attempts per game (25.3) league-wide and also are tied with the Bills and Chiefs for the fewest giveaways (1). That will limit Denver’s opportunity to create splash plays, likely making the Broncos a middle-of-the-pack defense in Week 5.

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