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The Democrats have a huge political opening.

With President Trump under fire from all directions — including some in his own party — it’s a rare chance for the opposition to put some points on the board.

And who are the most prominent Dems right now?

One is Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.

The other is Zohran Mamdani.

AOC is uber-liberal, and the New York mayoral candidate is a self-proclaimed democratic socialist.

Many party office-holders, not to mention media and political analysts, say the Democrats’ biggest problem is having lurched too far to the left. A fixation on pronouns, transgender sports and Palestinian rights. 

Does that sound like where most of America is in the fall of 2025?

There are plenty of clickbait headlines out there about AOC weighing a presidential race. But what Axios’ Alex Thompson, who had the scoop, actually reported is that she’s considering a White House run or a Senate race, against Chuck Schumer. So not much has changed.

AOC, now in her fourth term, just barely meets the constitutional requirement that a president be at least 35.

But there’s no question that she’s a dynamic campaigner, prodigious fundraiser and social media phenomenon, with an aura of authenticity.

Even Trump told Fox News, ‘She’s got a little spunk, she’s got a little something.’ But, he said, ‘her philosophy is bad for the country. I don’t think that philosophy can come close to winning.’

It’s true that what plays in her Queens-Bronx district doesn’t necessarily play in Peoria. I think she would beat Schumer, an establishment figure who seems to read all his statements, but even in the state there are plenty of conservative regions between the Bronx and Buffalo. 

On the House floor, the congresswoman condemned Charlie Kirk’s murder, but said:

‘We should be clear about who Charlie Kirk was: a man who believed that the Civil Rights Act that granted Black Americans the right to vote was a mistake, who, after the violent attack on Paul Pelosi, claimed that ‘some amazing patriot’ should bail out his brutal assailant, and accused Jews of controlling ‘not just the colleges — it’s the nonprofits, it’s the movies, it’s Hollywood, it’s all of it.’

She added: ‘His rhetoric and beliefs were ignorant, uneducated and sought to disenfranchise millions of Americans.’ 

So she wouldn’t even vote for a symbolic resolution honoring Kirk, the 31-year-old victim of a targeted assassination. That sort of rhetoric excites her base but isn’t exactly a step toward unity.

Mamdani, who is very likely to become mayor, has a history of socialist rhetoric that he’s trying to soften without retracting it. The inexperienced assemblyman clung to ‘Globalize the Intifada’ — meaning, wipe out Israel — but now says he can see how it’s misinterpreted and won’t encourage its use. He insists that as mayor he would have Bibi Netanyau arrested if he came to the U.N.  

And this isn’t ancient history. In 2022, he wrote on his website: ‘We need to dramatically curtail the power and presence of the N.Y.P.D.,’ cut the force by 1,300 officers through attrition, and cut police overtime and freeze hiring.

Why? ‘A racist police system’ aimed at controlling ‘Black & brown New Yorkers.’

Andrew Cuomo, who has been visiting mosques and churches, has turned much more aggressive, calling Mamdani ‘a man with no beliefs’ and ‘a hypocritical chameleon desperate for attention and adulation.’ But, of course, Cuomo was forced to resign as governor. No one remembers that he pledged to drop out of the race unless he was leading Mamdani by September. 

The democratic socialist has a double-digit lead, which is why Gov. Kathy Hochul endorsed him — she saw the train leaving the station. That prompted a swipe by President Trump, who regularly denounces Mamdani — which might not be helpful in New York City — said he’d have to look closely at federal money going to the Apple.

Trump already intervened in the mayor’s race by dropping an indictment against Mayor Eric Adams, though he failed to lure him out of the race with offers of an administration job.

AOC initially declined the back the long-shot Mamdani, the New York Times reports, but when he got hot she endorsed him as having the best chance to beat Cuomo.

The Republicans would like nothing better than to run against Instagram star AOC and Mayor Mamdani as the face of a hyper-liberal party.

And then there’s Kamala Harris, who’s out peddling her bridge-burning book ‘107 Days,’ starting with a Rachel Maddow sit down. I don’t think she could have beaten Trump in 1,000 days. Harris was a terrible candidate — cautious, risk-averse, hiding from the press for a month, unable to separate from Joe Biden.

I assume she has the self-awareness to realize another run for the White House would damage her further. The book takes shots at Biden (‘reckless’ to run again), Pete Buttigieg (couldn’t pick a gay guy), Josh Shapiro (wanted too much power), and Tim Walz (blew the veep debate). Some have clapped back, often through surrogates (Biden folks calling her a lousy VP).  

To bring things full circle, Harris just endorsed Mamdani. But Schumer and Hakeem Jeffries have not, undoubtedly for fear of being tied to whatever he does.

There are, of course, whole swaths of the country that want nothing to do with socialism or the far left.

Kamala Harris’ book focuses attention on the past just when the Democrats are desperate to turn the page.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Lionel Messi and Inter Miami didn’t just punch their ticket into the MLS Cup Playoffs in New York on Wednesday, Sept. 24.

They made an emphatic statement about how far they could go in the postseason while reminding fans how much longer this squad filled with former FC Barcelona teammates may have together in Major League Soccer.

Messi scored two goals in the second half (74’ and 86’) and assisted Baltasar Rodríguez before halftime (43’), while Luis Suarez scored a penalty goal as Inter Miami beat New York City FC 4-0 at Citi Field.

Inter Miami moved into third place with 55 points, behind Philadelphia (60 points) and FC Cincinnati in the MLS Eastern Conference standings, following the victory, while clinching a spot in the MLS Cup Playoffs.

“I’m happy with the victory, and with how we played. It was a good night for us, and above all, it shows us the way forward,” Inter Miami coach Javier Mascherano said after the victory.

Inter Miami has five regular-season matches remaining, and could still vie for the MLS Supporters’ Shield for the second straight season. They’re five points behind Philadelphia for the league lead in points.

Still, the expectation will be for Messi’s side to contend for their first MLS Cup title. In the meantime, the old Inter Miami stars are ensuring they have some fun along the way.

Messi put on a masterclass Wednesday, scoring twice with an assist in his second straight match. He became the fourth player in MLS history to record eight multi-goal games in a season, scoring at least twice in eight of his last 12 matches.

“For me, he tries to show everyone the team spirit,” Mascherano said of Messi, whose scores brought fans in Citi Field to their feet.

Messi retook the lead in the MLS Golden Boot race with 24 goals, breaking a tie with LAFC star Denis Bouanga. Messi leads MLS with 37 goal contributions as he became the first player in league history to record at least 35 of them in consecutive seasons.

Sergio Busquets delivered the hockey assist to Messi on the first goal of the match by Rodriguez (43’), then delivered the through ball to Messi to double the lead. Busquets could reportedly retire at the end of the 2025 MLS season.

“Obviously, Busi is playing. I don’t know how long he will play, but for me, he was one of the best midfielders in history. I went to Barcelona to learn from him,” Mascherano said of Busquets.

“It’s normal for me when I watch him giving these kinds of passes because during his long career, he did it too many times. Hopefully, he’s going to help us the rest of the season. Hopefully, he’s going help us in the playoffs. For us, he’s a key player.”

Suarez looked refreshed in his return from a three-match MLS suspension after his Leagues Cup spitting incident, as Messi allowed him to take the penalty kick.

Messi’s World Cup champion teammate, Rodrigo De Paul, drew the penalty scored by Suarez.

“We know that strikers always need goals, and even though he scored from the penalty spot, it’s important for him,” Mascherano said of Suarez.

It was the first Inter Miami clean sheet for goalkeeper Oscar Ustari since a scoreless draw in the Club World Cup opener against Egyptian side Al Ahly on June 14.

Inter Miami will travel to Canada after the match, and play against Toronto on Sept. 27 at 4:30 p.m. ET.

Inter Miami vs. NYCFC highlights

Inter Miami 4, NYC 0: Messi scores brace

Inter Miami 3, NYC 0: Luis Suarez scores penalty kick

Inter Miami 2, NYC 0: Messi scores goal

Inter Miami 1, NYC 0: Baltazar Rodriguez scores goal in 43’

Messi delivered a through ball to Baltazar Rodriguez, who scored in the 43rd minute as Inter Miami takes 1-0 lead.

NYC 0, Inter Miami 0: Messi free kick deflected by Matt Freese

Messi’s free kick tailed away while Matt Freese was still able to get a palm on it in the 38th minute. Messi’s kick was strong and on target before trailing off.

NYC 0, Inter Miami 0: NYC’s Nicolás Fernández misses prime opportunity

NYC 0, Inter Miami 0: Messi fires early shot

Lionel Messi lined up his shot from distance, but it was deflected in the 12th minute.

Messi in Inter Miami starting lineup vs. NYCFC

Is Messi playing tonight?

Messi has traveled to New York and is expected to play, coach Javier Mascherano said before Tuesday’s training session. Messi’s playing status for the NYCFC match will be confirmed when Inter Miami announces its starting lineup an hour before kickoff on Wednesday.

How to watch New York City FC vs. Inter Miami live stream?

The match will be available on MLS Season Pass via Apple TV.

Watch MLS Season Pass on Apple TV

When is New York City FC vs. Inter Miami match?

The match will be on Wednesday, Sept. 24 at 7:30 p.m. ET (8:30 p.m. in Argentina).

Where is the New York City FC vs. Inter Miami match?

The match will be played at Citi Field in Queens, NY – home of the New York Mets.

Will Inter Miami clinch MLS Cup playoff spot?

Inter Miami will clinch a spot into the MLS Cup playoffs with a win or draw against New York City FC.

What to know about Inter Miami and NYCFC

Inter Miami will play two matches on the road this week, with six matches to play until the end of the 2025 regular season.

Inter Miami is fifth in the MLS Eastern Conference standings with 52 points from 28 matches this season, but has three matches in hand to play after participating in the Club World Cup and Leagues Cup.

Luis Suarez returns from a three-game MLS suspension after spitting on a Seattle staff member after the Leagues Cup loss.

NYCFC is fourth in the East with 53 points, and has already clinched a spot in the MLS Cup playoffs.

NYCFC vs. Inter Miami betting odds

Here are the betting odds for today’s match, according to BetMGM:

NYCFC: +130
Draw: +280
Inter Miami: +165
Over/under: 3.5 goals

Lionel Messi Inter Miami contract update

Messi is also nearing a contract extension with Inter Miami to keep him in MLS and the United States for at least two more seasons, USA TODAY Sports reported on Sept. 18.

Will Messi play in 2026 World Cup?

Messi has yet to declare whether he will play in the World Cup co-hosted by the United States, Canada and Mexico next summer. But he did offer some insight after the Argentina match earlier this month.

“Because of my age, the most logical thing is that I won’t make it. But well, we’re almost there so I’m excited and motivated to play it,” Messi said on Sept. 4.

“Like I always say, I go day by day, match by match. That’s it taking it day by day, going by how I feel. Day by day, trying to feel good and above all, being honest with myself,” Messi added.

“When I feel good, I enjoy it. But when I don’t, honestly, I don’t have a good time, so I prefer not to be there if I don’t feel good. So, we’ll see. I haven’t made a decision about the World Cup.”

Messi’s upcoming schedule with Inter Miami and Argentina

Sept. 27: Toronto FC vs. Inter Miami, 4:30 p.m. ET
Sept. 30: Inter Miami vs. Chicago Fire, 7:30 p.m. ET
Oct. 4: Inter Miami vs. New England, 7:30 p.m. ET
Oct. 10: Argentina vs. Venezuela, 8 p.m. ET (International Friendly in Miami)
Oct. 11: Inter Miami vs. Atlanta United, 7:30 p.m. ET
Oct. 13: Puerto Rico vs. Argentina, 7 p.m. ET (International Friendly in Chicago)
Oct. 18: Nashville vs. Inter Miami, 6 p.m. ET

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The American League Central is deadlocked no more.

For the first time since April 22, the Detroit Tigers don’t have at least a share of first place in the division. And that’s because the Cleveland Guardians beat them again Wednesday, Sept. 24, this time 5-1 at Progressive Field in Cleveland.

Like they did Tuesday, the Guardians fell behind first after the Tigers scored a run in the third inning off starter Tanner Bibee. Cleveland answered in the bottom of the inning when rookie George Valera hit a two-run homer off Detroit starter Jack Flaherty. Steven Kwan gave the Guardians an insurance run with an RBI single in the fifth, and fan favorite Jose Ramirez put the game out of reach with a two-out, two-run double in the seventh.

Guardians vs Tigers highlights

Guardians vs Tigers final score

Cleveland wins 5-1, its fifth consecutive win against the Tigers, to put the Guardians in sole possession of first place in the AL Central.

Tigers ninth inning

Junis stays in for the Guardians, who are looking to close this one out.

Riley Greene: groundout to second base. 1 out.
Wenceel Perez: popout to shortstop in shallow center. 2 outs.
Zach McKinstry: singles to left between short and third. Still two outs, and now Cleveland will turn to closer Cade Smith.
Dillon Dingler: groundout to second. 3 outs. Ballgame.

Guardians eighth inning

Paul Sewald, who started the season on the Guardians roster, became the fifth pitcher of the night for Detroit. He allowed a leadoff single to Bo Naylor, but then got Gabriel Arias, Daniel Schneemann and Petey Halpin to fly out to get out of the inning. Score: Guardians 5, Tigers 1.

Tigers eighth inning

Jakob Junis came on for Cleveland and set the Tigers down in order with strikeouts of Gleyber Torres and Spencer Torkelson sandwiching a groundout by Kerry Carpenter. Detroit is down to its final three outs. Score: Guardians 5, Tigers 1.

Guardians score two more in seventh inning

Progressive Field is rockin’ after the Guardians adding two more runs to pad their lead over the Tigers, whose stunning late-season collapse appears to be spiraling out of control.

The Guardians loaded the bases with nobody out, and then got a two-out double by José Ramírez to plate two baserunners.

The inning opened with Daniel Schneemann taking first on a bases on balls and then C.J. Kayfus singled to right. A dropped foul ball pop fly by catcher Dillon Dingler opened the door for Brayan Rocchio to load the bases on another walk.

Tigers manager A.J. Hinch wasn’t messing around and called on his closer Will Vest to shut down a scoring threat. It didn’t work. After getting Steven Kwan to fly out and striking out George Valera, Vest gave up the double to Ramírez. Score: Guardians 5, Tigers 1.

Tigers seventh inning

The Guardians are counting on their bullpen to close out an 18th win in 21 games.

Left-hander Tim Herrin replaced Tanner Bibee on the bump and it was nervy at first. After hitting Zach McKinstry with a pitch, Herrin went to a full count against Dillon Dingler before registering a strikeout. After Andy Ibáñez grounded into a force out at second base, Herrin was sent to the dugout in favor of right-hander Hunter Gaddis, who promptly struck out Jahmai Jones. Score: Guardians 3, Tigers 1.

Guardians sixth inning

Tyler Holton kept the Tigers’ deficit at two runs with a 1-2-3 inning. After Kyle Manzardo grounded out, Holton struck out Bo Naylor and Gabriel Arias. Score: Guardians 3, Tigers 1.

Tigers sixth inning

Tanner Bibee kept the Tigers at bay, again.

Riley Greene’s single ended a run of seven consecutive batters retired by Bibee, but the hurler had little trouble making sure his team maintained its two-run lead. With 105 pitches through six innings, this was the final inning for Bibee. It was quite an effort for the 26-year-old right-hander in his third big league season. This marks 19 consecutive games that the Guardians’ starting pitcher has given up two or fewer runs. Score: Guardians 3, Tigers 1.

Guardians add to lead in fifth inning

Cleveland made the most of Brayan Rocchio’s second hit of the game. Rocchio swiped second base as Steven Kwan faked a bunt. Moments later, Kwan hit a line drive to left center that drove home Rocchio. Classic manufacturing a run baseball from the Guardians. It’s what good teams do to win ballgames.

Kwan’s hit chased Tigers starter Jack Flaherty from the game. Flaherty, who is tied for the American League lead in losses (14), is on the hook for this one, too. Tyler Holton came on in relief and recorded the final outs of the inning to minimize the damage. Score: Guardians 3, Tigers 1.

Tigers fifth inning

Guardians starter Tanner Bibee is cruising right along, completing a casual 1-2-3 inning. Trey Sweeney popped out, Parker Meadows struck out and Gleyber Torres grounded out to shortstop. Score: Guardians 2, Tigers 1.

Guardians fourth inning

Cleveland was unable to add to its lead, going down in order.

Bo Naylor grounded out to shortshop, Gabriel Arias struck out and Daniel Schneemann grounded out to first base. Score: Guardians 2, Tigers 1.

Tigers fourth inning

Detroit hitters have done a great job of being patient against Tanner Bibee, who’s now at 80 pitches through four.

Spencer Torkelson led off the inning with a single and then, after a Riley Greene strikeout, Wenceel Perez drew a walk. Zach McKinstry followed with a fielder’s choice to second and Dillon Dingler ended the inning with a fielder’s choice to third to end the threat. Score: Guardians 2, Tigers 1.

Guardians bounce back to take the lead

Cleveland wasted no time grabbing the lead, and it came from unexpected source.

No. 9 hitter Brayan Rocchio led off the inning with an opposite-field double to left and moved to third on a groundout by Steven Kwan. That brought up rookie designated hitter George Valera, who teed off on the first pitch and sent it over the center-field fence, over a leaping attempt by Parker Meadows. Valera let out a scream as he rounded the bases to celebrate his second career homer. Score: Guardians 2, Tigers 1.

Tigers get on scoreboard first

Just like in Tuesday’s series opener, Detroit is the first team to score.

Back-to-back one-out singles in the third inning by Dillon Dingler and Trey Sweeney, the Tigers’ 8-9 hitters, put runners at first and third. Parker Meadows followed with a hard line drive to right, where C.J. Kayfus secured the catch with a dive. Dingler easily tagged up and scored from third. Following another single by Gleyber Torres, Bibee got Kerry Carpenter to ground out to first to snuff further damage. Score: Tigers 1, Guardians 0.

Guardians second inning

For the second inning in a row, Cleveland got a two-out runner into scoring position but couldn’t chase him home. Jack Flaherty retired Bo Naylor and Gabriel Arias on strikes to lead off the inning, but then Daniel Schneemann hit a hard grounder to first that Spencer Torkelson couldn’t field and it trickled into right field. Schneemann ended up at second, where he was stranded after C.J. Kayfus lined out to left. Score: Tigers 0, Guardians 0.

Tigers second inning

Tanner Bibee struck out Spencer Torkelson looking to start the second, but then he walked Riley Greene on five pitches. After getting ahead 0-2 against Wenceel Perez, Bibee threw three consecutive balls before getting Perez to hit a smash to second baseman Brayan Rocchio, who gloved and started a 4-6-3 double play to end the top of 2. Score: Tigers 0, Guardians 0.

Guardians first inning

Jack Flaherty worked around a two-out double by Jose Ramirez by striking out Kyle Manzardo on three pitches. Steven Kwan led off Cleveland’s half of the first with a hard groundout to second, and then George Valera struck out before Ramirez’s 32nd double of the year. Score: Tigers 0, Guardians 0.

Tigers first inning

Tanner Bibee set down the Tigers 1-2-3 in the first inning on 14 pitches. After getting Austin Meadows to fly out and Gleyber Torres to ground out, Bibee struck out Kerry Carpenter on a diverse pitch mix. Score: Tigers 0, Guardians coming to bat.

How to watch Tigers vs Guardians

Date: Wednesday, Sept. 24, 2025
Time: 6:40 p.m. ET
Where: Progressive Field in Cleveland
TV: FOX Sports Detroit, CLEGuardians.TV
Stream: Fubo

Stream Tigers at Guardians with Fubo

Guardians take the field

After a 35-minute weather delay, the Guardians take the field, and the second game of this crucial three-game series is about to begin.

Guardians vs Tigers weather

Dreary Cleveland skies have cause the start of this AL Central showdown to be delayed. First pitch is now scheduled for 7:15 p.m. ET.

Guardians starting pitcher

Cleveland will go with right-hander Tanner Bibee, who has allowed just three earned runs over his last 21⅔ innings, which spans three starts. He’s 2-0 during that stretch, and is 11-1 with a 4.34 ERA on the season. He’s faced Detroit twice this year and is 2-0 with a 0.69 ERA in 13 innings. He’s racked up 16 strikeouts with just three walks against the Tigers in 2025.

Tigers starting pitcher

Detroit’s starter Wednesday will be Jack Flaherty, who is 8-14 with a 4.60 ERA this season. Flaherty has faced the Guardians twice this season, going 0-2 with a 3.09 ERA. His last game against Cleveland came last week in Detroit when he allowed one earned run over five innings, but took the loss.

Guardians starting lineup

Steven Kwan, LF
George Valera, DH
Jose Ramirez, 3B
Kyle Mnazardo, 1B
Bo Naylor, C
Gabriel Arias, SS
Daniel Schneemann, CF
C.J. Kayfus, RF
Brayan Rocchio, 2B

Tigers starting lineup

Parker Meadows, CF
Gleyber Torres, 2B
Kerry Carpenter, DH
Spencer Torkelson, 1B
Riley Greene, LF
Wenceel Perez, RF
Zach McKinstry, 3B
Dillon Dingler, C
Trey Sweeney, SS

AL Central standings

Heading into games on Wednesday, Sept. 24.

Cleveland Guardians: 85-72
Detroit Tigers: 85-72
Kansas City Royals: 79-78
Minnesota Twins: 68-89
Chicago White Sox: 58-99

MLB playoff bracket

Heading into games on Wednesday, Sept. 24. (*-denotes playoff berth has been clinched)

American League playoff bracket

*Toronto Blue Jays 90-67
*Seattle Mariners 88-69
Cleveland Guardians 85-72
*New York Yankees 89-68
Boston Red Sox 86-71
Detroit Tigers 85-72

National League playoff bracket

*Milwaukee Brewers 95-63
*Philadelphia Phillies 92-65
*Los Angeles Dodgers 88-69
*Chicago Cubs 88-69
*San Diego Padres 87-71
New York Mets 81-76

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

A lawsuit filed this week by a former University of North Carolina administrator accuses the university’s board of trustees of violating state open meetings laws on issues that include the hiring of football coach Bill Belichick and deliberations over conference realignment.

The board of trustees “has engaged in pattern and practice of systematically violating the Open Meetings Law by improperly invoking closed session exemptions to shield policy and budget deliberations from public scrutiny,” read the suit filed on behalf of former North Carolina Provost Chris Clemens, who held the title from 2021 through last April.

Clemens’ suit cites the example of the board’s deliberations over Belichick’s surprise hiring last December. According to the suit, the board “called an ‘emergency meeting’ with minimal notice” and then went into closed session to discuss the terms of the contract for Belichick and his coaching staff, which includes two of his sons.

The board “did not present any comparable thirty-year ‘net present cost’ analysis, nor did it invoke long-horizon fiscal restraint to defer that decision for a single UNC employee.”

“The perfunctory nature of the open session demonstrates that substantive deliberation occurred unlawfully in secret.”

The former New England Patriots coach signed a five-year deal worth $50 million.

In addition, the suit alleges the board used similar closed-door deliberations to review realignment opportunities in November 2023 and May 2024.

In the November meeting, the board entered a closed session to discuss “the financial implications of potential moves to the SEC or Big Ten.” In May, the group sat in closed session “to discuss conference realignment strategy and athletics department finances.”

“These discussions of institutional affiliation and departmental budget strategy are policy matters that must be conducted in open session,” the suit reads.

Members of the board also used auto-deleting messaging services such as Signal “to evade records retention and public inspection,” according to the suit.

Groups such as the board of trustees are beholden to North Carolina’s Open Meetings Law, which states that “the hearings, deliberations, and actions of these bodies be conducted openly.”

In his suit, Clemens said university officials asked him to resign after he raised concerns over tenure discussions conducted in closed session.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The 2025 Ryder Cup begins later this week at Bethpage Black in Farmingdale, New York. It will feature the best golfers from the United States and Europe competing in the biennial event.

Keegan Bradley (USA) and Luke Donald (Europe) were tabbed as captains. Team USA’s roster features World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler, U.S. Open champion J.J. Spaun and Xander Schauffele. Team Europe’s roster includes Rory McIlroy, Tommy Fleetwood and Robert MacIntyre.

Here’s what to know about the Ryder Cup going into the weekend:

Ryder Cup Odds

Odds as of Wednesday, Sept. 24:

Moneyline: USA (-145); Europe (+160); Tie (+1200)

Ryder Cup predictions

Golf.com: Europe storms back

Josh Schrock writes: ‘Entering singles with a three-point lead and the crowd behind them, the Americans appear to have all the momentum as the final day at Bethpage begins. But the tide soon turns as … Tyrrell Hatton beats Ben Griffin and then (Tommy) Fleetwood takes down (Bryson) DeChambeau 2 and 1 to clinch the cup for Europe.”

CBS Sports: United States wins close one

Patrick McDonald writes: “Everything screams Europe — form, experience, continuity, leadership, pedigree, meaning and whatever else you want to pile on — but something inside says the U.S. will get the job done by the thinnest of margins.”

PGA Tour: Europe will keep it close

Paul Hodowanic writes: “Two things can be true: 1) This is Europe’s best shot to win an away Ryder Cup since Medinah, boasting an experienced and talented roster that goes toe to toe with the Americans. 2) That still won’t be enough to end the home team dominance. The last five Ryder Cups have all been won by the hosts, all with at least a five-point margin. Europe can keep it closer, but ultimately the U.S. wins out.”

Sports Illustrated: Team USA falls short at home

Iain MacMillan writes: ‘We’re going to witness the fall of Team USA at this year’s Ryder Cup. The assumption that the Americans will always be the betting favorite will stop after Europe gets the job done on enemy soil.’

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Taylor Budowich, White House deputy chief of staff for communications and personnel, is set to leave the administration at the end of the month, Fox News has confirmed.

Budowich’s exit marks the most significant staff departure of President Trump’s current administration. 

A longtime Trump advisor and one of his most trusted communicators, Budowich is returning to the private sector. The California native’s role gave him broad influence over messaging and personnel decisions inside the West Wing.

Senior Trump advisor Stephen Miller, in a statement provided to Fox News Digital by the White House, called Budowich ‘one of the true MAGA faithful who has poured out his heart for this movement and our President. He is universally admired and respected. No matter the issue or need, his insights and talents are sought after and valued deeply. He is and remains a cherished and loyal ally to us all.’

Vice President JD Vance said Budowich is ‘an invaluable asset to this administration and someone I’ve personally relied on countless times during an amazing first year in office.’

‘His oversight of the White House’s communications team has been an incredible success, where they’ve done an outstanding job touting the truly historic accomplishments of President Trump’s second term,’ Vance continued in a statement provided to Fox News Digital. ‘In addition to all this, he’s played an integral role in coordinating this administration’s cabinet agencies and our Office of Public Liaison. He’ll be sorely missed, but I’m sure there are big things ahead for Taylor.’

Chief of staff Susie Wiles added that Budowich is ‘a dear friend, and I know that President Trump holds him in very high regard. I hate to see him go, personally and professionally, but obviously wish him well in whatever he decides is next.’

And longtime Trump aide Dan Scavino told Fox News Digital that Budowich is ‘an outstanding American patriot and an exceptional friend and colleague, both on the campaign trail previously and here at the White House. His unwavering dedication to advancing President Trump’s Make America Great Again agenda has made him a vital asset in Trump 2.0.

‘Taylor is the kind of person you want by your side in any type of challenge, on any day of the week,’ Scavino added. ‘I am grateful for his service to President Trump and the American people and have complete confidence that he will excel in his future endeavors. I wish him the best of luck.’

Budowich previously served as communications director for Save America PAC and as executive director of MAGA Inc., a pro-Trump super PAC.

He was a spokesman for Trump during and after the 2020 campaign and testified in the classified documents investigation in 2023.

In November 2024, Trump announced Budowich’s appointment as deputy chief of staff, giving him oversight of both communications strategy and personnel.

Budowich’s departure adds to speculation about who might fill his powerful West Wing role as the Trump White House continues shaping its agenda heading into the remainder of the term.

Budowich did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Cleveland Guardians designated hitter David Fry suffered ‘multiple, minimally displaced, left-sided facial and nasal fractures,’ after being hit in the face by a foul tip against the Tigers on Tuesday, the team announced in a statement Wednesday, Sept. 24.

The Guardians added that Fry is expected to recover fully over the next 6-8 weeks, and it is not expected that he will need surgery. Cleveland put Fry on the 10-day injured list and recalled outfielder Johnathan Rodriguez from Triple-A Columbus.

‘He’s a tough kid and we’re just super thankful that he’s home resting,’ Guardians manager Stephen Vogt told reporters before Wednesday’s game.

How did David Fry get injured?

During the sixth inning of Tuesday’s Guardians-Tigers game, with runners at first and second and no one out, Fry squared to bunt on a 2-2 pitch from Detroit ace Tarik Skubal. The ball grazed off Fry’s bat and struck him in the face. Fry immediately covered his his face and fell to the ground.

A deafening silence fell over the crowd, which had just woken up when the Guardians scored their first run of the game one batter earlier. A distraught Skubal threw his glove, turned away and tossed his hat aside. Jose Ramirez, Fry’s Cleveland teammate who was on first base, put his hands on his head in obvious concern.

Fry was taken from the game to Lutheran Medical Center and ended up at the Cleveland Clinic for testing and observation. He was released from the Cleveland Clinic and ‘is resting comfortably.’

‘It was straight to the face,’ Vogt said after the game, adding that Fry never lost consciousness. ‘We’re all thinking about David and his family right now. Obviously, we’re glad he is OK, but obviously it’s a really scary moment.’

Tarik Skubal visits David Fry

Skubal texted Fry after Tuesday’s game, saying ‘I just want to make sure he’s all right.’

Vogt ended up taking Skubal with him to visit Fry at the hospital. Skubal added that Fry texted back Wednesday and thanked him for coming to the hospital.

‘Obviously nothing intentional, but still apologize about the situation and it’s one of those freak baseball plays,’ Skubal said. ‘I mean, this is a game, but we’re all humans. … That’s real life stuff, not baseball game stuff.’

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Celtics star Jayson Tatum is 19 weeks into his recovery from a torn right Achilles tendon.
Tatum initially had doubts about his ability to return to basketball but is now focused on recovery milestones.
Tatum recently returned to the court for a light workout and plans to remain involved with the team during his rehab.

NEW YORK — It is Tuesday, and for Jayson Tatum this is important.

He settles into a couch in the Four Seasons in Lower Manhattan. His stylist has just picked out a red-and-grey-striped Marni mohair cardigan that hangs loosely on his frame. She fluffs the hem so it doesn’t bunch. His long-time barber Jules Gutierrez, at the last minute, lines him up with an edge comb.

And it is Tuesday, the 19th Tuesday since Tatum underwent surgery to repair the torn right Achilles tendon he suffered in a conference semifinals loss in May, ending his season and putting his 2025-26 campaign in doubt. Tatum is quick to mention this Tuesday milestone, and he does so with something like relief and pride and the acknowledgement of all the work left to come.

‘Oh, man, today, Tuesday – 19 weeks – I’m at 19 weeks,’ Tatum told USA TODAY Sports on Tuesday, Sept. 23. ‘Almost five months. It has been a long journey.

‘Six days a week of rehab, going through all the phases of surgery to stitches, to 50% weight bearing. Then you get to a phase where you drop the crutches, and then you finally get out of the boot. And now, man, I just feel like a normal human again. I’ve got a shoe on. I hadn’t worn a shoe in 12 weeks. That’s the best way to look at it: What is the next milestone that I can get to?’

For Tatum, the 27-year-old six-time Boston Celtics All-Star, the game’s prototype wing, the benchmarks and milestones are the things he can cling to, the things that both recall what he calls the ‘dark days,’ and the path toward a return to basketball, a return that he thought might never come.

‘I’m not going to say that I always believed,’ Tatum said. ‘There was a period at first, I remember I told my mom, it was during the first two or three weeks, we was sitting at the counter and I was like, ‘Mom, I don’t know. This might be it. It’s just going to be so much that I’ve got to do to get back to playing.’

‘What I’ve realized, is I can’t look too far ahead. Then I would get discouraged.’

One thing Tatum hasn’t shied away from, however, is looking back. He recalled the moments after the injury, when his thoughts, as he writhed on the floor at Madison Square Garden, ranged from the practical — “Am I going to be the same?” – to the irrational – “Am I going to be traded?”

He recalled crying on the phone with his grandmother, as the two prayed together for a speedy recovery. He recalled the frustration of feeling like every day was “Groundhog Day,” when he toiled in rehab but didn’t see any tangible gains.

‘You just have this idea of what the next X-amount of years of your life are going to look like, and then’ – he snapped – ‘it all changes.’

Eventually, the pain set in, too. Tatum was prescribed opioids and suffered severe side effects, causing him and his surgeon, Dr. Martin O’Malley of the Hospital for Special Surgery, to prescribe Journavx, a nonopioid signal blocker that Tatum has taken to manage the pain.

Tatum has partnered with Vertex Pharmaceuticals, the company that makes the medication.

‘It’s more so about sharing my experience about what worked for me,’ Tatum said. ‘And also just raising awareness that anybody that’s in a situation where they had surgery or they are dealing with pain, that you have the option of something else. You can talk to your doctor, go through your medical history and find what works for you.’

Now, though, there are signs of progress. Tatum has been rehabbing the injury six days per week, while also working on his core and other parts of his body.

Monday, Sept. 22 marked the first time Tatum got on the court for a basketball workout. It was only 15 minutes, but he’s looking to ramp up as his body heals. He has been jogging. Sprinting is the next goal. Change of direction will follow that.

Tatum said he will be around the Celtics during practices, meetings and games. He will travel with the team and plans to be a constant presence throughout his rehab.

‘My voice still matters,’ Tatum said. ‘I’ll be there, and I’mma watch the games. I’m going to try to help any way I can.’

It’s something of a transition year for Boston. The 2023-24 NBA champions, the Celtics offloaded a pair of key pieces from that build; center Kristaps Porziņģis was traded to the Hawks and point guard Jrue Holiday was shipped to the Trail Blazers. Tatum, who hasn’t fully ruled out a return to the court this season, will at least miss the majority of the year.

‘First and foremost, the culture that we built with the Celtics, the standard that we hold ourselves to, doesn’t change, regardless of the team that we have,’ Tatum said. ‘On top of that, we still have guys that were on that championship team that know what it takes.

‘It’s going to be a different year, but the standard is still the same.’

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The rules for the exhibition fight between Jake Paul and Gervonta Davis were supposed to address the most glaring aspect of the bout scheduled for Nov. 14 in Miami.

In their last fight, Davis weighed in at 133 ¾ pounds and Paul weighed in at 199 ½ pounds – a difference of more than 65 pounds. Press conferences held over the past two days to promote the fight accentuated the difference in size.

Paul, at 6-1, towered over Davis, 5-5 ½.

Davis fights as a lightweight. Paul typically fights as a cruiserweight. And Tim Shipman, executive director of the Florida Athletic Commission that regulates boxing in the state, said there would be stipulations as a result.

“You can’t do a fight like that as a pro fight,’’ Shipman told USA TODAY Sports Sept. 18.

But the fight rules, as announced Sept. 23 by Paul’s business partner Nakisa Bidarian, reveal few accommodations for the size difference between the fighters. (The Florida Athletic Commission has not responded to a request from USA TODAY Sports seeking confirmation of the fight rules.)

In short, the fight will be contested at a maximum of 195 pounds, knockouts will be allowed, official judges will score the fight and 12-ounce gloves will be used.

Andy Foster, executive director of the California State Athletic Commission, said the fight does not sound like an exhibition. ‘It’s not great,” he said, and of the weight discrepancy between the two boxers, he added, ‘It’s concerning.”

Mike Mazzulli, former president of the Association of Boxing Commissions, also addressed whether the fight seemed like an exhibition under the rules. ‘Well, not really he said.

Jake Paul vs Gervonta Davis size: Weight

The fight will be contested at a maximum weight of 195 pounds. That means Paul will have to weigh in about five pounds lighter than he usually does for fights. The Florida Athletic Commission has not disclosed whether there will be a rehydration clause, which would prevent Paul from entering the ring far heavier than 195 pounds. It’s also unclear how much heavier Davis will be than his standard weight of about 135 pounds.

Rick Thompson, chairman of the Georgia Entertainment and Athletic Commission, adamantly opposed the fight before it was moved to Florida from Georgia. He cited the weight discrepancy as a concern.

‘If shows that are basically stunts want to shop around until they find a jurisdiction that allows them, that’s their prerogative,” Thompson told USA TODAY Sports. ‘We’re just not going to trade safety of (the) fighters for profit.”

Glove size for Paul vs Davis

The fighters will wear 12-ounce gloves. As a lightweight, Davis typically uses eight-ounce gloves. As a cruiserweight, Paul usually wears 10-ounce gloves. Davis is thought to have a disadvantage because he’ll be wearing gloves four ounces heavier than normal, while Paul will be wearing gloves only two ounces heavier than normal.

Davis’ trainer, Calvin Ford, appeared to suggest Davis should wear eight-ounce gloves and Paul should wear 10-ounce gloves, as they typically do. Conventional wisdom: The lighter the glove, the harder punch and the more damage inflicted.

But Paul said it was Davis’ camp that requested the 12-ounce gloves, and the matter sounded unresolved.

Ten rounds

There will be 10 rounds, three minutes apiece. Davis likely will benefit from this because he is the better-conditioned athlete.

The fight will be scored

Official judges will score the fight, which is unusual for an exhibition match. Joe DeGuardia, a promoter based in New York, said an exhibition officially scored is an ‘oxymoron.”

‘Why would it be scored?” DeGuardia said. ‘…I don’t understand the concept of having a winner for a fight that’s an exhibition.”

Knockouts will be allowed

Usually, exhibitions do not end in a knockout. But in 2021, when Evander Holyfield fought Vitor Belfort in Hollywood, Florida, at the age of 58, he was knocked out in the first round.

Records

As is customary for an exhibition, the outcome of the fight will not count against either fighter’s record.

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An unlikely peacemaker emerged Sept. 23 at a news conference to promote the exhibition fight between Jake Paul and Gervonta Davis.

Only Fans model Rubi Rose.

During a faceoff between the boxers, Davis shoved Paul. Paul shoved back. Whereupon Rose, clad in a snug, blue micro-dress, stepped between the boxers and the fighters relented. Presumably until their 10-round bout Nov. 14 to be streamed by Netflix.

To be fair, Rose isn’t only an Only Fans model. The 27-year-old, born Rubi Rose Benton, also is a rapper who has appeared in music videos and commercials, including one for Paul’s W brand men’s care product line that includes deodorant.

Speaking of deodorant, the moment involving Rose smelled like potentially more than an eerie coincidence.

Rose sashayed behind the boxers just as Davis shoved Paul with two hands. Paul shoved back with one hand. Calmly, Rose stepped forward and gently pushed the boxers apart, restoring order.

She also underscored the size discrepancy between the two boxers.

Paul, who is 6-1, towered over Davis, who is 5-5½. And even Rose looked noticeably taller than Davis, who did not have the benefit of high heels.

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