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The SAFE Act is considered player-friendly and aligns more with Donald Trump’s vision for college athletics than a rival Republican bill.
Key provisions include expanding the Sports Broadcasting Act, allowing two free transfers, and letting players return to college after the NFL draft.
The bill also proposes sports agent fee caps and privacy protections for NIL contracts.

If politics truly is bloodsport, things just got wildly entertaining in Washington D.C. with the introduction of another bill to fix college sports. 

Not surprising: Democrats and Republicans see things differently.

More surprising: the Democrat-authored SAFE Act aligns more with President Donald Trump’s vision for college sports, a person close to the White House told USA TODAY Sports on the condition on anonymity.

The player-friendly SAFE Act, authored by prominent Democrat Senators and announced Monday evening, is a far-reaching bill that forces the federal trade commission into oversight of college sports. It is nearly polar opposite from the SCORE bill, which seeks antitrust exemptions from the federal government to make and enforce rules on NIL, player movement and eligibility.

The SAFE Act also provides for the expansion of the Sports Broadcasting Act of 1961 to college sports, allowing conferences to pool media rights in an effort increase revenue and provide funding for all sports.    

Reached Monday night, Texas Tech board of regents chairman Cody Campbell — a staunch proponent of conferences pooling media rights — said the SAFE Act is a good first step in fixing college sports.

“I am encouraged by seeing people stand up against greed, disrespect and disregard for the institution of college athletics and for the student athletes,” Campbell told USA TODAY Sports. “This is in sharp contrast to the position we have seen taken by the conference commissioners, and from the NCAA as they have lobbied in favor of legislation like the SCORE Act.”

Earlier this summer, a person close to the White House told USA TODAY Sports that Trump decided to use Campbell as his point person in his fight to save women’s and Olympic sports. A billionaire businessman, Campbell has been using his own money this fall to promote change in college sports.

Some of the highlights of the SAFE Act include sports agent reform capping fees at 5%, and establishing privacy protections for NIL contracts to ensure they’re not disclosed without a player’s consent — and are not subject to federal or state open records laws. 

The bill also covers player movement and the NFL draft, two critical components to roster building. Under the SAFE Act, players will be allowed two free transfers without losing a year of eligibility, and players will be allowed to return to college after the NFL draft, provided they do so within seven days of the draft.

While those are important, player-friendly steps, the biggest move, by far, is the expansion of the Sports Broadcasting Act of 1961 — something the Power conference presidents and commissioners are against. The SAFE Act ensures all sports will be paid for, and not eliminated because of a lack of funding.

An industry source told USA TODAY Sports this summer the Football Subdivision Conferences could get nearly twice the amount they currently receive for individual conference deals. The 10 FBS conferences currently make an estimated $4 billion annually combined through conference media rights deals, and the College Football Playoff contract.   

“The NCAA and conference commissioners clearly don’t care about the future of women’s sports or Olympic Sports,” Campbell said. 

Earlier this month, SEC commissioner Greg Sankey said he had yet to see evidence that expanding the SBA would result in “the numbers we’ve seen out there.”

Matt Hayes is the senior national college football writer for USA TODAY Sports Network. Follow him on X at @MattHayesCFB.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Bruce Bochy, two years after leading the Texas Rangers to their first World Series in franchise history, has managed his last game for the club.

Bochy, 70, steered the Rangers to the 2023 World Series title and won three World Series championships as the manager of the San Francisco Giants.

“Bruce Bochy is one of the greatest managers in baseball history and he will forever hold a place in the hearts of Ranger fans after bringing home the first World Series title in franchise history in 2023,” Chris Young, the Rangers President of Baseball Operations, said in a statement. “Boch brought class and respect to our club in his return to the dugout and we will always take pride in being part of his Hall of Fame career. We are grateful for everything he has given to the organization over the past few seasons and hopeful he can continue to impact the Rangers for many years to come.”

Bochy won World Series titles with the Giants in 2010, 2012 and 2014. His work during 2023 season with the Rangers led to unprecedented results. After qualifying for the postseason as a wild card, the Rangers went 13-4 in the postseason and thrilled their fans after defeating the Arizona Diamondbacks in the World Series, 4 games to 1.

It was the first and only championship in the Rangers’ 65-year history

But the team has struggled since winning the title, missing the playoffs while finishing 78-84 in 2024 and 84-84 this season.

Bochy is a shoo-in for the Hall of Fame. In addition to the four World Series titles, he has led teams to nine postseason appearances, six division titles and five pennants.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The Miami Dolphins defeated the New York Jets 27-21 for their first win of the season.
Dolphins wide receiver Tyreek Hill suffered a significant knee injury that overshadowed the victory.
Tight end Darren Waller scored two touchdowns in his debut for Miami.

The Miami Dolphins finally registered their first win of the regular season, but it cost them their best player.

The Dolphins defeated the New York Jets, 27-21, as part of a ‘Monday Night Football’ doubleheader. However, wide receiver Tyreek Hill’s knee injury overshadowed what was a desperately needed victory for Miami.

Hill’s leg landed awkwardly as he was tackled to the ground. The Dolphins medical staff put Hill’s leg in an air cast, and he was carted off the field. The Dolphins ruled him out shortly after and announced he would go to a local hospital for further evaluation. Coach Mike McDaniel said after the game Hill had dislocated his knee.

Tua Tagovailoa passed for 177 yards and two touchdowns. Dolphins linebacker Jordyn Brooks tallied 18 total tackles.

It was an ugly night in South Beach for the entire Jets team. The loss dropped New York to 0-4.

Here are the winners and losers from Monday night’s AFC East battle:

Winners

Darren Waller

Waller came out of retirement and was subsequently traded to the Dolphins during the offseason. He made his season debut Monday night and had an instant impact.

The tight end caught a four-yard touchdown on fourth and goal to cap off Miami’s second possession. Waller hauled in a second touchdown reception in the third quarter to pad Miami’s lead to 17-3.

Waller tallied three catches, 27 yards and two touchdowns. It was Waller’s first two-touchdown game since the 2020 season.

Expect Waller to be Miami’s second leading pass catcher as Hill likely misses an extended period.

Waller’s 6-foot-6 frame provides the tight end a great catch radius, which is quarterback friendly. That was highlighted when Tagovailoa found Waller in the back of the end zone as he leaped to high point the football.

Dolphins pass defense

The Dolphins edge rushers and timely blitzes created consistent pressure.

Justin Fields never appeared confident in the pocket and rarely had time to go through his progressions.

The Dolphins had two sacks, three QB hits and five tackles for loss.

Jordyn Brooks

Brooks deserves a game ball. The Dolphins linebacker produced a game-high 18 tackles. He was all over the field.  

Losers

The Jets

Well, yes, they lost. But in doing so the Jets committed a comedy of errors.

The fumble the Jets had on their first possession epitomized the entire evening. New York had three giveaways and 13 penalties for a total of 101 yards.

The Jets outgained Miami and had more first downs, but the mistakes hurt them dearly.  

Braelon Allen

The Jets running back had a costly fumble near the goal line as he was about to score on the first series.

On the ensuing possession, he injured his knee when he was tackled to the ground on a kickoff return and he nearly fumbled again.

The knee injury forced him to miss the rest of the contest.

Dolphins’ offense

The Dolphins are going to be without the best playmaker in Hill likely for the rest of the season. They have components that can help like running back De’Von Achane. But the Hill loss is huge.

Hill’s been Miami’s top playmaker ever since he arrived via trade in 2022.

Dolphins GM Chris Grier, coach Mike McDaniel, quarterback Tua Tagovailoa

Help wanted in Miami? Unfortunately for the Dolphins general manager, head coach and quarterback, a banner was seen flying above Hard Rock Stadium asking for the franchise to clean house.

The noise won’t be as loud this week since the Dolphins earned a much-needed win. But it won’t be quiet.

Follow USA TODAY Sports’ Tyler Dragon on X @TheTylerDragon.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The Indiana Fever continue to be the Cinderella story of the WNBA playoffs.

With five players suffering season-ending injuries, including Caitlin Clark, not many believed the Fever were destined for a long postseason run. Yet, here we are eight games later, and they have a chance at the Finals.

Indiana’s best-of-five series with Las Vegas Aces is tied at 2 with a winner-take-all Game 5 set for Tuesday in Las Vegas (9:30 p.m. ET). The winner faces the Phoenix Mercury, who advanced on Sunday by beating the No. 1 seeded Minnesota Lynx.

“We over me. That’s been our identity the entire season. We all we got, we all we need,” Boston said. “The beauty of this squad, whether you’re hurt or you’re not, everything that you do is for the betterment of this team for every win. That’s how we approach every single day in practice, film and every game.”

What time is Fever vs. Aces Game 5?

Game 5 of the WNBA semifinals series between the No. 2 seed Las Vegas Aces and No. 6 seed Indiana Fever is scheduled to tip off at 9:30 p.m. ET on Tuesday, Sept. 30 at Michelob Ultra Arena in Las Vegas.

How to watch Fever vs. Aces in WNBA playoffs: TV, streaming for Game 5

Date: Tuesday, Sept. 30
Time: 9:30 p.m. ET
Location: Michelob Ultra Arena (Las Vegas)
TV: ESPN2
Stream: Fubo, ESPN Unlimited

Stream Fever-Aces series on Fubo (free trial)

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The NHL is in the stretch run of the preseason schedule.

Preseason games end on Saturday, Oct. 4, giving teams time to make final roster assessments and test line combinations before the regular season begins and games start counting in the standings.

Teams will also have to figure out how to deal with key injuries, such as the two-time defending champion Florida Panthers, who lost captain Aleksander Barkov to anterior cruciate ligament surgery after he was hurt in practice.

Here’s a look at when the 2025-26 NHL regular season begins, how to watch and stream opening night and the home openers for every team in the league.

When is the NHL’s opening night?

The 2025-26 NHL season opens on Tuesday, Oct. 7 with three games.

Chicago Blackhawks at Florida Panthers, 5 p.m. ET

Pittsburgh Penguins at New York Rangers, 8 p.m. ET

Colorado Avalanche at Los Angeles Kings, 10:30 p.m. ET

The Panthers will raise their Stanley Cup banner before the first game. In the second one, new Rangers coach Mike Sullivan will face the Panthers team he had led to two championships. The last game will mark the start of the final NHL season for Kings captain Anze Kopitar.

NHL opening night: How to watch, stream

All three games will be broadcast by ESPN. They can be streamed on Fubo, which offers a free trial for new subscribers.

Follow NHL games on Fubo

NHL teams’ home openers

Anaheim Ducks: Oct. 14 vs. Penguins
Boston Bruins: Oct. 9 vs. Blackhawks
Buffalo Sabres: Oct. 9 vs. Rangers
Calgary Flames: Oct. 11 vs. Blues
Carolina Hurricanes: Oct. 9 vs. Devils
Chicago Blackhawks: Oct. 11 vs. Canadiens
Colorado Avalanche: Oct. 9 vs. Mammoth
Columbus Blue Jackets: Oct. 13 vs. Devils
Dallas Stars: Oct. 14 vs. Wild
Detroit Red Wings: Oct. 9 vs. Canadiens
Edmonton Oilers: Oct. 8 vs. Flames
Florida Panthers: Oct. 7 vs. Blackhawks
Los Angeles Kings: Oct. 7 vs. Avalanche
Minnesota Wild: Oct. 11 vs. Blue Jackets
Montreal Canadiens: Oct. 14 vs. Kraken
Nashville Predators: Oct. 9 vs. Blue Jackets
New Jersey Devils: Oct. 16 vs. Panthers
New York Islanders: Oct. 11 vs. Capitals
New York Rangers: Oct. 7 vs. Penguins
Ottawa Senators: Oct. 13 vs. Predators
Philadelphia Flyers: Oct. 13 vs. Panthers
Pittsburgh Penguins: Oct. 9 vs. Islanders
St. Louis Blues: Oct. 9 vs. Wild
San Jose Sharks: Oct. 9 vs. Golden Knights
Seattle Kraken: Oct. 9 vs. Ducks
Tampa Bay Lightning: Oct. 9 vs. Senators
Toronto Maple Leafs: Oct. 8 vs. Canadiens
Utah Mammoth: Oct. 15 vs. Flames
Vancouver Canucks: Oct. 9 vs. Flames
Vegas Golden Knights: Oct. 8 vs. Kings
Washington Capitals: Oct. 8 vs. Bruins
Winnipeg Jets: Oct. 9 vs. Stars

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

U.S. District Judge Royce Lamberth has blocked a new wave of terminations at Voice of America, offering harsh words for Kari Lake and saying the Trump administration’s conduct in his case would support civil contempt proceedings, if only the plaintiffs had asked.

In the 19-page ruling, Judge Lamberth halted the mass reduction in force at the U.S. Agency for Global Media (USAGM) and issued a warning that cuts would ‘cement’ VOA’s failure to meet legal obligations to provide reliable news.

Lamberth’s list of failures included statutory violations involving VOA shutting down mandated language services despite clear congressional directives.

He stated that VOA acknowledged its ‘radio presence’ had shrunk to a single 30-minute daily program in Dari and Pashto, leaving gaps in coverage for nations like North Korea and China.

Kari Lake was called out for admitting under oath that she hadn’t ‘given it a lot of thought’ whether Africa qualifies as a ‘significant region of the world’ under the law and confirmed VOA produces no programming for South America.

And Lamberth accused the Trump administration of misleading the court, going as far as to call it incredible to suggest the RIF was ‘uncertain’ while evidence showed it was already in motion.

The RIF notices covered both VOA and USAGM employees, and Lamberth rejected the government’s attempt to carve out non-VOA staff.

He accused Lake and her team of ‘thumbing their noses at Congress’s commands’ and showing ‘brazen disinterest’ in statutory duties — strong language worth including.

The contempt warning wasn’t just about tone; it was also tied to their failure to produce required documents about future RIFs, despite court orders.

Overall, the order keeps VOA’s workforce intact through Oct. 14, when Lake will be forced to work with her team to file a plan showing how they will restore the legally required programming.

The judge warned that their ‘disrespect’ for other rulings would have been enough to trigger a contempt trial.

‘Equity is allergic to rigidity,’ Lamberth wrote, pointing out the court’s power to stop executive overreach.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Let’s roll back the clock.

After the 2020 election, Donald Trump found himself the target of multiple investigations.

The flimsiest, and most partisan, was brought by Manhattan DA Alvin Bragg, who somehow elevated the Stormy Daniels payoffs from a misdemeanor to a felony, and got a conviction.

Then there was Jack Smith, who launched two investigations — one involving classified documents, the other on allegations related to Jan. 6.

And in Georgia, Fulton County DA Fani Willis investigated Trump’s famous phone call to Brad Raffensperger — ‘I just want to find 11,780 votes’ — and some of Trump’s lawyers, such as Sidney Powell and Jenna Ellis, pleaded guilty.

Beyond that, New York AG Letitia James filed a civil suit about inflated property values that led to a fine that has since grown to half a billion dollars — a penalty so outrageous that an appeals court threw it out on grounds of cruel and unusual punishment.

And what was the mindset of the media, the Democrats and at least half the country at that time?

It was that Trump had done a lot of bad things, and if he could be successfully prosecuted before the 2024 election, he could be knocked out of the race. 

But from Trump’s point of view, these were bogus cases brought by biased prosecutors — James had won election by vowing to go after him — and backed by unfair judges for the sole purpose of keeping him out of the White House.

Joe Biden may have kept hands off — Jack Smith was named special counsel by AG Merrick Garland — but to the president it was all a grand left-wing conspiracy.

And that’s why Trump feels entitled to payback.

That’s why James Comey was just indicted, with Trump firing his own U.S. attorney who believed there wasn’t enough evidence, replacing him with a loyalist whose job was to charge the former FBI director.

That’s why Tish James is now under investigation for alleged mortgage fraud, 

That’s why the Trump DOJ has just subpoenaed Fani Willis’ travel records from last year, and is investigating Sen. Adam Schiff.

To Donald Trump, this is all fully justified payback.

But he’s doing exactly what was done to him — going after political enemies — and doing it out in the open. He has ordered Attorney General Pam Bondi to pursue these cases, and fast, which is weaponizing the Justice Department against those he despises, in a way that no previous president has ever done. 

He pronounces these targets ‘guilty as hell’ — that alone would be a scandal in any other administration for prejudicing a trial — and celebrates the unveiling of indictments, such as calling Comey a ‘sick person,’ a ‘Dirty Cop’ and a ‘SLIMEBALL.’

So how does Trump justify doing what was done to him? He doesn’t. He’s never been big on consistency. And his MAGA base supports him no matter what.

Keep in mind that the perjury allegation — based on a vague exchange about a leak to the Wall Street Journal about the Clinton Foundation, ironically — was investigated by special counsel John Durham in the first term, and by the DOJ’s inspector general, and neither brought charges.

When Erik Seibert, the U.S. attorney in Virginia’s Eastern District, found insufficient evidence to charge Comey, Bondi pushed back in defense of the 15-year veteran, Still, Trump replaced him with White House aide and onetime beauty queen Lindsey Halligan, his former lawyer, who has never tried a criminal case. Halligan couldn’t even find the courtroom, and no prosecutor in the office agreed to accompany her, as is customary. Doesn’t matter. She had one job.

‘My family and I have known for years that there are costs to standing up to Donald Trump,’ Comey said in a video.

Fourteen of the 23 grand jurors backed the two charges, just over the required minimum, and the jurors dismissed a proposed third count.

National Review’s Andy McCarthy, a former federal prosecutor, called the indictment ‘so ill-conceived and incompetently drafted, he should be able to get it thrown out on a pretrial motion to dismiss.’

Dan Abrams, ABC’s chief legal analyst (and founder of Mediaite) said on ‘This Week’: ‘I don’t even think that many in the Trump administration believe they’re going to get a conviction. I think that there’s a 95 percent-plus chance that there won’t be a conviction. That it’ll either get dismissed by a judge, there’ll be a hung jury, there’ll be an acquittal. But I’m not certain that that’s the end goal here.’ 

In other words, making Comey’s life miserable and forcing him to pay legal fees may be satisfying enough.

Schiff, for his part, called the mortgage fraud allegation against him ‘the kind of stuff you see tinpot dictators do.’ .

But there’s a larger issue here than the culpability of Comey and the others. As a former Justice Department reporter, I know all too well that presidents are not supposed to intervene in criminal investigations, and that dates to a series of post-Watergate reforms after Richard Nixon’s attorney general went to prison.

But Trump does all this out in the open. There’s no need to rely on unnamed sources. When he issued a memo demanding investigations of his foes, he made it public. 

‘We can’t delay any longer, it’s killing our reputation and credibility,’ the president wrote on Truth Social. He complained that ‘nothing is being done,’ demanding that Bondi investigate Coney, James and Schiff. And now he’s talking about targeting Democratic donor and activist George Soros.

The president also has a knack for letting his allies off the hook. After New York Mayor Eric Adams was indicted on corruption charges, Trump ordered the case dropped. Then he tried to lure Adams out of the race by offering him a job, to boost the chances of defeating the man he calls ‘Communist’ Zohran Mamdani. Adams, stuck in single digits, just dropped out, and don’t be surprised if he winds up as an ambassador.

When a deranged shooter in Michigan opened fire during a Mormon church service, and set the place on fire, killing at least four people, before being shot to death, Trump called it ‘horrendous’ and called Gov. Gretchen Whitmer. Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said the killer hated Mormons.

The president called it ‘another targeted attack on Christians.’

What Trump and Leavitt neglected to mention is that the murderer has a Trump/Vance sign in front of his house.

So despite the president’s insistence that left-wingers are responsible for virtually all political violence, here’s a case where a right-winger, and Trump fan, is responsible for cold-blooded mass murder. But one day there will a Democrat in the White House again, ready to use the same tactics unleashed by Trump.

Dartmouth professor Brendan Nyhan, who heads a watchdog group, told the New York Times: ‘Do Republicans want to give President AOC unilateral powers to determine which Defense Department programs she wants to fund?’

His forthcoming report says ’50 percent of Democrats now support restricting or shutting down Fox News, up from 37 percent in 2021.’ I would find that chilling, even if I didn’t work at Fox. Where is it written that the government should be shutting down news outlets?

The larger point is this: Trump believes he’s entitled to payback because of all the indictments aimed at him. The Democrats believe Trump has shattered the wall that protected criminal probes from White House interference. And so we plunge into an endless cycle of retribution, with each administration investigating the previous one and justifying it as getting even for their own mistreatment. 

: The news conference that President Trump was going to hold with Bibi Netanyahu yesterday turned into a non-conference when Trump, of all people, refused to take questions — not even the traditional two from each side. So they each gave lengthy speeches and left.

But the president achieved something remarkable. He got Bibi to go along with his plan to end the war in Gaza. Trump even said he’d personally head a peace board designed to protect Israel’s security, that Hamas would release the remaining hostages, and mentioned Oct. 7.

Honestly, it was probably shrewd not to be distracted by questions.

Here’s the problem: Hamas hasn’t agreed to anything yet, and has stuck by its insistence on a complete withdrawal of Israeli forces before any hostages are released. So the terrorist group is unlikely to agree.

If Hamas rejects the plan, Netanyahu said, ‘Israel will finish the job by itself.’

Then he said, ‘we can do this the easy way or the hard way’ — apparently unaware that was the much-condemned line that FCC Chairman Brendan Carr used to threaten action against Jimmy Kimmel.

Bibi also demanded an end to ‘incitement by the media,’ as if he or anyone else could tell the press what to do.      

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

The next domino in college athletes’ rights and Name, Image and Likeness legislation tipped Monday night.

U.S. Sens. Maria Cantwell (D-Wash.), Cory Booker (D-N.J.), and Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) introduced the Student Athlete Fairness and Enforcement (SAFE) Act, aiming ‘to codify athletes’ rights and protections in law, expand revenue for all schools, support women’s and Olympic sports and bring much-needed stability to the college sports system.’

The key provisions in the bill provide federal NIL protections, pooling of media rights, new broadcast revenue for Olympic and women’s sports, local market broadcast access for football and basketball, protections from bad actor agents, national standards for the transfer portal and preserves the House vs. NCAA settlement’s 22% revenue share cap.

‘This legislation is a path through the new world of NIL,’ Cantwell said in a statement. ‘This bill will protect athlete rights, preserve women’s and Olympic sports and help smaller schools compete. It is a fair shake for everyone, instead of the biggest, richest schools.’

Cantwell released a report in August showing how the SEC and Big Ten have severely outpaced the remaining conferences in financial firepower, primarily with their lucrative media rights payments.

The bill proposes amending the Sports Broadcasting Act of 1961 to allow schools to negotiate media rights as a group to increase value without violating antitrust laws. It states schools must use increased media rights revenues to keep the same number of scholarships and roster sports for non-revenue generating and women’s sports as provided during 2023-24 academic year.

And it says football and basketball games must be provided to local markets on a local broadcast outlet and not behind a paywall.

‘Those closest to college sports — including student-athletes and leaders of America’s colleges and universities at all levels — have consistently called on Congress to take action and address the actual threats facing college athletics,’ NCAA senior vice president for external affairs Tim Buckley said in a statement. ‘This includes protecting student-athletes from being forced to become employees, and ensuring academic standards and other commonsense rules can be applied consistently. There has never been more momentum in Congress to address these challenges and the NCAA will continue to work with all lawmakers to maximize opportunities for America’s 500,000-plus student-athletes.’

Among its provisions, if passed through Congress the SAFE Act would:

Provide federal NIL rights, replacing patchwork state-by-state laws.
Establish health and safety standards for heat exertion, brain injury, asthma; provide five years of post-eligibility medical coverage for sports-related injuries.
Protect scholarships, a 10-year guarantee.
Provide NIL contracts that outline what athletes must do under the contract and how much they’ll be paid.
Require agents cap their fees at 5% and to register with a state.
Allow students to transfer twice without having to sit out for a year; students can transfer without having to sit out for a year if their sport is cut or reduced.

This legislation is in response to the House introducing the Student Compensation and Opportunity through Rights and Endorsements (SCORE) Act. Cantwell, the top Democrat on the U.S. Senate Commerce Committee, on Aug. 25 sent a letter to NCAA Division I school chief executive officers and governing boards to “express my deep concerns” about a Republican-authored college-sports bill that has passed two House of Representatives committees.

The SCORE Act, the bill would establish a variety of national rules concerning how college sports operate. It includes antitrust-exemption language that specifically would allow the NCAA, and potentially the new College Sports Commission, to make operational rules affecting schools and athletes in areas that have come into legal dispute in recent years. That would include rules about transfers and the number of seasons for which athletes can compete.

Cantwell specifically claimed the bill’s language would allow the NCAA to alter the House settlement’s basic metric for determining the amount of money athletes would be able to receive in so-called revenue-sharing payments from schools so that it could increase from the 22% of certain revenues of the association’s power-conference schools.

‘In stark contrast to harmful legislation being considered in the House, our bill preserves athletes’ rights to advocate for themselves and ensures meaningful avenues for accountability,’ said Booker, who played football at Stanford. ‘Playing college football was one of the great gifts of my life – and it instilled in me a lasting conviction to fight for justice and fairness for athletes today and into the future.’

(This story was updated to add new information.)

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

It would appear that Mr. Finebaum might want to go to Washington.

Paul Finebaum, ESPN host and dean of college football radio, said in an interview with Outkick published Sept. 29 that he is interested in running for a U.S. Senate seat in Alabama that will be contested in the 2026 mid-term elections.

“The biggest issue is the direction of ‘Where are we going [as a country]?’ And I don’t like some of that,” Finebaum said. 

He added that he would like to make a decision within the next 30 to 45 days.

“I’ve been made aware that the qualifying deadline is in January. That’s ideal. I’d love to get to the end of the season. I don’t know if that’s realistic,” Finebaum said. The deadline to jump into the primary race is Jan. 23, 2026, according to Ballotpedia.

Finebaum would not be the first Alabama college sports figure linked to the seat of former Auburn head football coach Tommy Tuberville. Former Auburn head basketball coach Bruce Pearl said in his retirement announcement that he considered a run for the seat but decided against it.

“Many of you know that I thought and prayed about maybe running for United States Senate,” Pearl said. “That would have required leaving Auburn, and instead, the university has given me an opportunity to stay here and be Auburn’s senator.”

Finebaum told Outkick that Pearl’s announcement that he would not jump into the race opened the door to considering it.

“I ended up talking to someone… who made it clear that there was a desire for me to be involved. And this person… was compelling and compassionate in the approach to me, and I started thinking about this,” he said.

Charlie Kirk’s murder inspired Finebaum’s Senate aspirations

Finebaum pointed to the killing of conservative commentator Charlie Kirk on Sept. 10 as an inspiration to consider jumping into the political arena.

“It’s hard to describe, not being involved in politics, how that affected me and affected tens of millions of people all over this country. And it was an awakening,” Finebaum said.

Outkick, the conservative sports outlet, reported that Finebaum has been hesitant to discuss his politics due to ESPN policy and not to alienate his audience.

The host of “The Paul Finebaum Show” said that he recently moved back to Alabama, where his career began as a reporter and columnist for the Birmingham Post-Herald, after relocating from North Carolina, and he would run as a Republican. He added that he would run if asked by President Donald Trump.

“Impossible to tell him no. There’s no way I could,” Finebaum said.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Week 4 of the 2025 fantasy football season kept up the trend of being predictably chaotic.

With two Monday Night Football games pending, the top two quarterbacks are Dak Prescott and Matthew Stafford. The top six at running back include names like Kenneth Gainwell (RB3), Justice Hill (RB4) and Woody Marks (RB6). At wideout, the top 10 featured Drake London and Justin Jefferson for the first time all season. As usual, the tight end leaderboard was pure mayhem. Jake Tonges (TE5), Tommy Tremble (TE6), AJ Barner (TE8), Hunter Long (TE9) and Mitchell Evans (TE10) all finished inside the top 10.

Week 5 is now upon us.

Here’s an early look at Week 5 fantasy football rankings. Toggle between standard, half PPR (point per reception) and full PPR to see where players rank in your league’s format. Scroll to the bottom to view the complete rankings.

Our team at USA TODAY Sports has you covered with plenty of content to help with your Week 3 waiver wire and roster decisions. Looking for up-to-date player news? We’ve got it. Don’t forget to check out the rest of our content:

Waiver wire: 5 players to add | 5 players to drop

Analysis: 8 buy low, sell high candidates | Week 4 winners and losers

Please note: These rankings will change significantly as the week goes on. Check back on Sunday morning for final updates.

(The risers and sleepers sections will focus on players available in at least 40% of Yahoo leagues. All snap and target data from PFF.)

Week 5 fantasy football quarterback rankings: Risers and sleepers

Giants QB Jaxon Dart (23% rostered) – With two MNF games pending, Dart currently ranks as the QB9 on the week. Despite the Malik Nabers injury, Dart is still an intriguing add due to what he did on the ground. The rookie led all quarterbacks in rush attempts and finished with 54 yards and a score. If he maintains that kind of rushing usage, he’ll have one of the safer floors at the position.
Texans QB CJ Stroud (55%) – Stroud currently ranks as the QB13 on the week, which would be his second-best finish since Week 4 of last season. That’s just sad. The 23-year-old could be on the streaming radar in Week 5, as he’s taking on a depleted Ravens defense that has allowed the third-most fantasy points to quarterbacks this season.
Rams QB Matthew Stafford (42%) – After racking up 375 yards and three tuddies against the Colts, Stafford currently ranks as the QB2 on the week. Week 5 is probably one to keep the veteran on the bench (he hasn’t ranked higher than QB17 against the 49ers since 2021), but he gets the Ravens and Jaguars after that.

Week 5 fantasy football running back rankings: Risers and sleepers

Texans RB Woody Marks (31%) – Marks being available in a nice 69% of leagues is baffling, but that sure will change this week. The rookie took over the Houston backfield and garnered 22 opportunities (17 carries and 5 targets). He turned that into 119 total yards and 2 touchdowns. Nick Chubb likely will maintain a share of the backfield going forward, but Marks should be treated as a top 20 back until further notice.
Steelers RB Kenneth Gainwell (23%) – With Jaylen Warren being a surprise inactive in Dublin, Gainwell took full advantage. The 26-year-old played 77% of the snaps and received 78% of the backfield opportunities, resulting in 134 total yards and two trips to the end zone. The Steelers have a bye in Week 5, but Gainwell likely earned himself a more substantial role when they return in Week 6.
Saints RB Kendre Miller (5%) – Miller is in the same boat as Trey Benson was with the Cardinals prior to James Conner’s injury. He’s getting enough usage to have some standalone value during bye weeks, and he’s an injury away from having RB2 value. Miller has amassed 9 and 11 touches over the last two weeks while playing 27% and 31% of snaps, respectively.
Titans RB Tyjae Spears (32%) – The Titans are expected to open the practice window for Spears to return from IR, which makes him a worthwhile add in most leagues. Tony Pollard hasn’t been particularly efficient this season, and he hasn’t added much value as a pass-catcher. Spears should have immediate flex appeal in deep PPR leagues.

Week 5 fantasy football wide receiver rankings: Risers and sleepers

Packers WR Romeo Doubs (39%) – With Jayden Reed out, it was once again Doubs who led the way in Week 4. The 25-year-old led all Green Bay wideouts in snaps (75), routes (42), and targets (8). He turned that volume into 58 yards and three touchdowns, currently ranking as the WR3 on the week. Doubs will be a high-upside flex option when Green Bay returns from their bye in Week 6.
Browns WR Isaiah Bond (0%) – With Cedric Tillman set to be out ‘multiple weeks’ due to a hamstring injury, undrafted rookie Isaiah Bond has officially entered the fantasy picture. Bond had a 71% route rate in Week 4, and his snap share (55%) received a bump when Tillman went down. The 21-year-old caught three of his six targets for 58 yards and a touchdown and is worth adding for those in need of receiver depth.
Giants WR Darius Slayton (2%) – While Slayton already had a high snap share prior to Nabers’ injury, his target share should increase considerably going forward. Nabers sported a 29% target share so far this season. In 2024, Slayton racked up 22 targets (29% share) in the two games Nabers was sidelined.
Giants WR Wan’Dale Robinson (49%) – Robinson should also be a major beneficiary of the Nabers injury. The 24-year-old played a majority of snaps in two-receiver sets after the injury, according to PFF, which should significantly raise his fantasy value going forward. In last year’s two-game sample with Nabers inactive, Robinson garnered 20 targets (27% share).
Titans WR Elic Ayomanor (31%) – The rookie didn’t produce much in Week 4, but he still led all Titans wideouts in snaps (41), routes (27), and targets (5). To date, Ayomanor has seen three of the five end zone targets for Tennessee. Given his role and the fact that it usually takes rookies some time to acclimate, Ayomanor is worth rostering in most medium-sized leagues or deeper.

Week 5 fantasy football tight end rankings: Risers and sleepers

49ers TE Jake Tonges (2%) – With most of San Francisco’s skill position group banged up heading into Thursday Night Football, Tonges could be a sneaky stream. The 26-year-old made the most of his five targets against the Jaguars, turning them into 58 yards and a touchdown.
Jaguars TE Brenton Strange (28%) – While his performances haven’t been all that inspiring, Strange has done enough to remain a fringe TE1 option in PPR formats. The Penn State product has totaled between 9.9 and 12.1 PPR points in three of his four games this season, which is enough to make him the TE14. If the Jaguars start using Strange in the red zone, he’d become a set-and-forget start in most formats.
Giants TE Theo Johnson (5%) – After Nabers went down, it was Johnson who was tied with Wan’Dale Robinson for the largest target share on the team at 31%. The 24-year-old turned his five targets into three receptions for 17 yards and a touchdown. He’s an intriguing speculative add at fantasy’s most depressing position.

Week 5 fantasy football rankings: PPR and non-PPR

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