Archive

2025

Browsing

The 2025 Ryder Cup opening ceremony went through without a hitch despite inclement weather forcing a schedule change ahead of one of golf’s biggest events.

The opening ceremony was originally scheduled for Thursday, but anticipated thunderstorms caused organizers to switch things up. The PGA released a forecast on Tuesday that included expectations of up to 0.75′ of rain. As such, the Ryder Cup opted to hold the opening ceremonies on Wednesday afternoon, when conditions were more favorable.

The weather at Bethpage Black figures to be a major theme of the early stages of the Ryder Cup, with showers expected for early play on Friday and possible rain Saturday afternoon. With the tournament already being played on one of the sport’s most challenging courses, this Ryder Cup is shaping up to be a serious test for every player involved.

The ceremonies themselves were just what you would expect. The captains on both teams offered passionate speeches, tying the Ryder Cup to a sense of national pride and the legacy you leave behind. Luke Donald captivated fans entirely by emphasizing that aspect of the tournament, claiming this year’s Europe team was playing for something ‘money cannot buy.’

The U.S. team certainly won the video side of the ceremonies though, with Stu Feiner providing voiceover work behind a beautiful video detailing Bethpage Black and the determination the United States needs to have to get the Ryder Cup back into American arms.

If this ceremony was any indication, we’re certainly in for a great weekend of golf.

Despite the ceremonies being moved up, they were still hosted by Carson Daly and Kira Dixon. However, at least one aspect changed: while Ryder Cup team captains typically announce opening pairings during the ceremonies, ESPN previously reported Wednesday that those announcements will come out Thursday.

Here’s what went down at the 2025 Ryder Cup opening ceremony:

Ryder Cup promo video

Amidst the programming, Stu Feiner provided the voiceover for this Ryder Cup hype video.

Foursomes the most important leg?

As mentioned on the Ryder Cup ceremony broadcast, in each of the last five Ryder Cup tournaments, the team that won the foursomes section went on to win the tournament entirely. In 2023, Europe went 4-0 in Friday foursomes.

Luke Donald with inspiring speech to Team Europe

The Ryder Cup is often praised for its ability to bring top golfers together for a common cause. They play for their nationality, their heritage in a sense, but oftentimes, that aspect of the event is not emphasized. That wasn’t the case with European captain Luke Donald’s pre-tournament speech.

Donald declared that this year’s European team is fueled by ‘something money cannot buy,’ referring to their desire to do their continent proud. If that level of competition holds throughout the weekend, we will be in for an extraordinary Ryder Cup.

Ryder Cup opening ceremonies: TV, streaming, how to watch

Date: Wednesday, Sept. 24
Time: 4-5 p.m. ET
Location: Bethpage State Park Black course (Farmingdale, New York)
TV: Golf Channel
Stream: Fubo, rydercup.com and Ryder Cup app

Watch the Ryder Cup opening ceremony on Fubo (free trial)

Last 5 Ryder Cup results

2023: Europe 16.5 – U.S. 11.5
2021: U.S. 19 – Europe 9
2018: Europe 17.5 – U.S. 10.5
2016: U.S. 17 – Europe 11
2014: Europe 16.5 – U.S. 11.5

Who is on the Ryder Cup teams?

Team USA:

Scottie Scheffler
Xander Schauffele
Collin Morikawa
Russell Henley
J.J. Spaun
Cameron Young
Sam Burns
Patrick Cantlay
Bryson DeChambeau
Harris English
Ben Griffin
Justin Thomas
Captain: Keegan Bradley

Team Europe:

Ludvig Aberg
Matt Fitzpatrick
Tommy Fleetwood
Tyrell Hatton
Viktor Hovland
Rasmus Hojgaard
Shane Lowry
Robert MacIntyre
Rory McIlroy
John Rahm
Justin Rose
Sepp Straka
Captain: Luke Donald

Ryder Cup 2025: TV, streaming, how to watch full tournament

Date: Sept. 26-28
Location: Bethpage State Park Black course (Farmingdale, New York)
TV: NBC, Golf Channel, USA Network
Stream: Peacock, Fubo (free trial to new subscribers)

Watch the 2025 Ryder Cup on Fubo (free trial)

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Eight federal inmates — once on death row for murders, including the killings of fellow prisoners, gang-related stabbings, and the slayings of two campers — have been transferred to a notorious ‘supermax’ prison in Colorado, the Justice Department told Fox News Digital. The news comes as U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi looks to crack down on the previous administration’s sweeping clemency actions.

The eight former death row inmates were transferred Tuesday to the U.S. Penitentiary Administrative Maximum Facility in Florence, Colorado, also known as ‘ADX,’ Justice Department officials confirmed. 

They were among the 37 death row inmates whose sentences Biden commuted in late December — prompting criticism and complaints that the record clemency and commutation actions were done as a political ‘Hail Mary,’ and without proper vetting.

More of the death row inmates are expected to be moved to ADX, some within weeks, according to one individual familiar with the matter.

The 37 death row inmates commuted by Biden are all expected to be moved to the facility by ‘early next year,’ the Justice Department source told Fox News Digital.

The effort comes as Bondi and the Trump administration have sought to reverse some of the Biden administration’s efforts on criminal justice reform for certain criminals, and instead moved to prioritize violent crime and cracking down on the nation’s worst offenders.

Though a commutation cannot be fully reversed, Justice Department officials told Fox News Digital, Bondi has prioritized ways to penalize these individuals, in coordination with directives from Trump, and to ensure that the ‘conditions of confinement’ are ‘consistent with the security risks those inmates present because of their egregious crimes, criminal histories, and all other relevant considerations,’ according to an earlier DOJ memo. 

The eight inmates sent to ADX this week were each convicted of first-degree murder within federal jurisdiction. 

Many had been convicted of crimes that were especially heinous or violent. One individual was convicted of murdering a married couple who was camping at a campsite in the Ouachita National Forest in July 2003. 

Another was convicted of kidnapping, robbing, and murdering a 51-year-old local bank president by tying him to a concrete block and chain hoist, and tossing him off of a bridge and into a lake. 

Many had also killed prisoners while serving time — a factor that can be used in weighing whether to transfer a convicted felon to a higher-security prison.

ADX is the only true federal ‘supermax’ prison in the U.S., and its inmates are as notorious as the prison’s reputation. Among them are Ramzi Yousef, convicted in the 1993 World Trade Center bombing; Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, one of the Boston Marathon bombers; former Sinola Cartel leader Joaquín Guzmán, or ‘El Chapo’; and Mamdouh Mahmud Salim, the co-founder of al-Qaeda.

‘President Biden’s decision to commute the death sentences of these monsters showed abhorrent disregard for our justice system and total disrespect for victims’ families already suffering through immense loss,’ Attorney General Pam Bondi said in a statement to Fox News Digital.

‘After meeting with many of the victims’ families at the Department of Justice and promising to take action on their behalf, eight of these prisoners have been transferred to the Colorado super-max prison ADX. This will ensure that they spend the remainder of their lives in conditions consistent with the egregious crimes they committed,’ she added.

Shortly after her confirmation as attorney general, Bondi issued a memo aimed at ‘restoring a measure of justice’ to the victims’ families. 

The measures granted by Biden earned more criticism than former President Barack Obama: As Fox News reported at the time, the vast majority of Obama’s clemency actions focused on commuting the sentences of federal inmates who met certain criteria outlined under his administration’s Clemency Initiative.

Bondi hosted victims’ families earlier this year to hear their concerns about the commutations, DOJ said. Some said they had been stunned by the eleventh-hour commutations, and that they not been given a heads-up by the Biden administration.

In February, Bondi issued a memo to the Bureau of Prisons ordering an evaluation of where these prisoners should be detained.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

This is Steven Pearl’s first head coaching position after serving in various roles at Auburn since 2014.
Bruce Pearl will remain with the athletic department as a special assistant to the athletic director.
Following the coaching change, Auburn players have a 30-day window to enter the transfer portal.

Steven Pearl was introduced as Auburn men’s basketball coach Wednesday, taking over for his father, Bruce, after the elder Pearl announced his decision to step down Monday following 11 seasons as Tigers coach.

This is Steven Pearl’s first head coaching job, an opportunity Auburn athletic director John Cohen said ‘has been earned.’

‘Steven Pearl has paid his dues,’ Cohen said. ‘He’s earned this opportunity. He’s the right fit for Auburn at the right time.’

Steven Pearl joined the program in 2014 as a strength and conditioning assistant, became director of operations the next season and was promoted to an on-court assistant two years later. In 2023, he was named associate head coach in 2023. He acknowledged it was at that time ‘hypothetical conversations’ between him and his father about the latter’s eventual retirement began.

‘I wasn’t going to let myself get too high or too low,’ he said. ‘I was just going to stay focused in my process of helping this team continue to grow, and continue to get better and continue to build while he was weighing his options.’

It was also announced Monday that Bruce Pearl would remain in the athletic department, as special assistant to the athletic director.

“There needs to be some separation there,’ Steven Pearl said Wednesday when asked how involved his father will be this upcoming season, but it doesn’t mean he won’t call on his father for help.

‘I’m going to ask him to come to practice every once in a while, just to bring some additional love and energy into the building,’ Steven Pearl said. ‘Or if we lose a tough game and our guys need a little pick me up, I’d be crazy not to call him and ask him to come and talk to the guys.’

Auburn players have a 30-day window to explore transfer options following the coaching change.

‘They have nothing but love for BP and understand and respect his decision,’ Steven Pearl said, adding that he’s told all of the players on his freshly built roster they’re allowed to ‘explore their options.’

Most of them were in attendance Wednesday, with a handful of notable exceptions, such as transfer additions Elyjah Freeman, Filip Jović and Keyshawn Hall, as well as the program’s lone returnee, Tahaad Pettiford.

Shortly after the news broke, Steven Pearl said Adbul Bashir found him, offering a hug and a message: ‘I’m with you, coach. I love you.’ Eventually, Kevin Overton and Kaden Magwood offered the same.

‘I needed that in that moment, so, thank you,’ Steven Pearl said. ‘It’s immediate validation for why we knew you were such special young men and student-athletes. I can’t thank you enough for your resilience, your trust, and your loyalty to Auburn. At a time in college athletics where those three things are far and few between, the world can learn a lot from the men in our locker room. And I’m proud of that. I can promise each and every one of you that I will go to work every day, every second, to reward you for your decision to stay loyal to this staff and to this program.’

Adam Cole is the Auburn athletics beat writer for the Montgomery Advertiser, part of the USA TODAY Network. He can be reached via email atacole@gannett.com or on X@colereporter.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Now out of a starting job, Russell Wilson could yet play a very important role … in another NFL city.
The NFL trade deadline is approaching on Nov. 4, but significant deals are often made weeks in advance.
Several high-profile players, including Tyreek Hill and Kirk Cousins, could be on the move as their teams’ circumstances change.

As summer gives way to autumn, it’s already apparent who’s falling into the pit of NFL irrelevance. Yet even in the depths of football purgatory there is opportunity – for spiraling teams and players looking to escape it.

The league’s trade deadline is drawing ever nearer, set to expire at 4 p.m. ET on Nov. 4, the day after Week 9 of the regular-season schedule concludes. But recent history – namely an expanding salary cap plus a collection of more aggressive general managers perhaps not as wed to draft capital as their predecessors – have shown that significant deals are now likely to go down much earlier than deadline day. Wideouts Davante Adams and Amari Cooper, for example, were dealt three weeks ahead of the 2024 cutoff. Three years ago, Christian McCaffrey was shipped from Carolina to San Francisco nearly two weeks before the deadline.

‘I’m always looking,” Bills GM Brandon Beane said last year after acquiring Cooper, also noting the advantage of giving an incoming player more time to adapt to his new surroundings and schematics.

“Any time you can add a player … I’m always going to monitor that.”

And while it’s not yet October and much can happen in the next three weeks, six weeks, etc., let’s take Beane’s advice and do some monitoring. Here are 10 players (sort of) NFL teams would be wise to watch as circumstances continue to unfold in the coming days and weeks:

QB Kirk Cousins, Atlanta Falcons

Acquiring him would be a break-glass-in-case-of-emergency situation. It would also require ample cap room from potential suitors given Cousins would be owed the prorated version of the $27.5 million he’s owed in base salary this season. He recently turned 37 but is also now two years removed from Achilles surgery. The conditions would certainly be specific – especially since Cousins’ no-trade clause permits him to kill any deal – but if a team like the Lions, Rams or Seahawks suddenly found itself with a long-term need behind center and lacking sufficient confidence that in-house backups could persevere for an extended period …

Team to watch – TBD: There’s a reason Cousins hasn’t been moved. Yet. But this is the NFL, and an unexpectedly desperate situation can arise at any time.

DE/OLB Leonard Floyd, Falcons

The veteran pass rusher signed a one-year, $10 million contract in March – meaning he’s eminently available. Following free agency, Atlanta spent a pair of first-round picks on edge players Jalon Walker and James Pearce Jr. And while there’s certainly value in having them learn from a 10th-year veteran with 67½ career sacks, there could also be incentive for GM Terry Fontenot to move Floyd, 33, given the Falcons’ ammunition for the 2026 draft has already been depleted by this year’s acquisition of Pearce.

Team to watch – 49ers:They just lost DE Nick Bosa to a torn ACL and re-obtaining Floyd, who had 8½ sacks for the Niners in 2024, would make sense.

DE Trey Hendrickson, Cincinnati Bengals

He had an eventful summer, briefly holding out from training camp amid protracted negotiations with the team to agree on the raise both Hendrickson and the Bengals acknowledged he deserved after leading the NFL with 35 sacks over the 2023 and ’24 seasons. Still, even though Hendrickson could now make up to $30 million in 2025, he’s nevertheless scheduled to walk in 2026. Clearly the Bengals didn’t pay him to trade him and have historically not been prone to splashy in-season moves. But Cincinnati, which did deal QB Carson Palmer during the 2011 campaign, also didn’t know two weeks ago that it would likely be without injured QB Joe Burrow for most of, if not the remainder of, the 2025 season. And if the Bengals D is going to continue looking as bad as it did last Sunday in Minnesota, why not move on from Hendrickson, 30, at a time when his production could still warrant a nice return given he’ll very likely be on the move in a few months anyway.

Team to watch – Eagles: They were linked to Myles Garrett and Micah Parsons earlier this year and could certainly use a veteran pass rusher after losing Super Bowl 59 hero Josh Sweat in free agency.

WR Tyreek Hill, Miami Dolphins

He said all the right things after Thursday’s loss dropped the Fins to 0-3 at a time when matters around the team seem quite fraught. Hill, who was voted the top player in the NFL in a survey of his peers just a year ago, quit on the team in the 2024 regular-season finale, was stripped of his team captaincy this summer, publicly criticized by QB Tua Tagovailoa and has been accused of domestic abuse by his estranged wife. Despite all that, he’s still the rare game breaker who can make a good team great. And with his base salary scheduled to balloon to nearly $30 million in 2026, the final year of his contract, the Dolphins can’t afford to wait much longer if they intend to get something back from their investment in Hill.

Team to watch – Chiefs: Maybe a reunion with his former team would be farfetched after Hill was shipped out of K.C. three years ago. But perhaps no team is better equipped to leverage his talent and manage his mood than the perennial AFC champs – who might need to execute another bold move to retain that “perennial” status.

RB Alvin Kamara, New Orleans Saints

Historically speaking, the Saints haven’t been inclined to throw in the towel. But if there were ever a year to do it – especially after GM Mickey Loomis exported CB Marshon Lattimore a year ago … Kamara is one of the best players in franchise history. He’s also a 30-year-old running back who’s rarely sniffed a Super Bowl and won’t do so in New Orleans this year or next, after which his contract expires. And despite his age, Kamara’s playing style has never been one that’s exposed him to the level of abuse most traditional backs endure. Used judiciously, he can still be a major asset in every phase of an offense. And it really seems like his situation lends itself to beneficial divorce proceedings for both parties.

Team to watch – Cardinals: Arizona appears positioned to vie for a playoff berth. But that became a more difficult objective in the aftermath of RB James Conner’s season-ending ankle injury. Kamara could immediately step into what was already a backfield-by-committee and would nicely complement second-year banger Trey Benson and seems well suited to play effectively off of multi-dimensional QB Kyler Murray.

WR Jakobi Meyers, Las Vegas Raiders

He’s in the final year of his contract. He asked for a trade last month. He established personal bests with 87 grabs for 1,027 yards in 2024 – pretty much a perfect complementary receiver. Shouldn’t be much of a holdup here unless the Silver and Black need further proof they’re on the road to nowhere in 2025.

Team to watch – Steelers: They’re already in go-for-it mode yet are getting little production from the wideout position beyond DK Metcalf and Calvin Austin III. And, yes, the Steelers prefer to roll with multiple tight ends. But some additional offensive variance couldn’t hurt, and it might be wise to have another dynamic pass catcher for those inevitable scenarios when Aaron Rodgers and Co. have to make up a sizable deficit without the luxury of time.

TE David Njoku, Cleveland Browns

He’s 29, in the final year of his contract (base salary of $1.3 million) yet can still be an impact player in the right situation. But Njoku is losing opportunities to rookie TE Harold Fannin Jr. with a team that could go full-on rebuild and/or reassess at any time.

Team to watch – Buccaneers: Njoku had one of his best seasons in 2018 with then-Browns rookie QB Baker Mayfield. Why not reunite them and bring an added element to a Tampa Bay offense that can’t seem to keep its pass catchers healthy?

DT Jeffery Simmons, Tennessee Titans

Game-wrecking interior defensive linemen are among the most valuable commodities in the NFL – and why the Titans signed Simmons to a four-year, $94 million extension two years ago. He’s under contract through 2027 but – right now anyway – it doesn’t appear like Tennessee will be in position to seriously contend by then. Yet rookie GM Mike Borgonzi could definitely expedite his rebuild by dealing a 28-year-old player who still has prime years left and could fetch a nice return.

Team to watch – Lions:Detroit again appeared Super Bowl-caliber during Monday night’s win at Baltimore. But injuries and depth deficiencies on defense cost the Lions dearly in 2024, to say nothing of the fact that DE Aidan Hutchinson is likely to draw more and more double teams as the year goes on. What an inside-out combo he and Simmons would be if united.

QB Kenny Pickett or Aidan O’Connell, Las Vegas Raiders

After failing to post for the Browns’ four-way quarterback battle in training camp, Pickett was traded in August – for the third time in fewer than 18 months – to backstop Geno Smith following O’Connell’s preseason wrist injury. Yet O’Connell is expected to be healthy before the deadline, and there’s little reason to have two veterans unlikely to claim the QB1 reins on merit holding clipboards – tablets, I mean tablets – behind Smith.

Team to watch – Packers: Malik Willis carried them in a pinch without Jordan Love last year, but he was hardly asked to operate the offense at a similar level. Maybe he’s up to the task now … and maybe the Pack would be wise to look at a more experienced fallback if, say, Love were to be lost for a six-week stretch.

QB Russell Wilson or Jameis Winston, New York Giants

Rookie Jaxson Dart’s time has come in Gotham … which leaves little reason to carry Winston and Wilson, particularly the latter given Wilson is on an expiring deal with an infinitesimal (prorated) base salary of $2 million. At this juncture, it’s difficult to see another extended starting opportunity presenting itself to either veteran. But one could be quite a valuable insurance policy for a playoff-caliber team suddenly in need of an intermediate bridge – which is probably a better outcome than being relegated to answering questions from a 22-year-old football savior who probably only needs one ‘mentor.’ And Wilson did show in Week 2 that he can still shine in bursts.

Team to watch – Chargers: Let’s say QB Justin Herbert suffers a high-ankle sprain or maybe breaks a finger on his passing hand. Are the Bolts really going to roll with Trey Lance or and/or undrafted rookie DJ Uiagalelei? Good luck finding a team with legitimate Super Bowl aspirations that’s in a more precarious position if its QB1 goes down.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Syracuse coach Fran Brown is changing the team’s culture by making losing and not competing unacceptable.
Brown has led the once-struggling program to significant wins, including a 10-win season in his first year.
Brown’s coaching philosophy, influenced by his time under Georgia’s Kirby Smart, focuses on relentless competition.

Before he became the next big thing in the college football coaching fraternity, before he won 13 of his first 17 games at forgotten Syracuse, Fran Brown had to change what was acceptable. 

Two things stood above all else, he told USA TODAY Sports in April: it’s not acceptable to lose and not acceptable to avoid competing.

“I never told anyone this, but when I first got to Syracuse, someone asked me, ‘What would be a good record, 8-4?’” Brown said, and now he’s getting agitated because this is the source of his frustration. “So you want me to pick four teams that are going to beat us? Then who am I?”

PATH TO PLAYOFF: Sign up for our college football newsletter

He waited for the answer, and there’s no reason to even attempt a response. 

“No one practices to lose games,” Brown continued. “So I stopped talking to that person.”

And started working on redefining what winning looked like at Syracuse. 

It didn’t take long to see why Brown, only two years into his head coaching career, will be the hottest prospect in this year’s hiring cycle. If you can win big at Syracuse, you can win big anywhere.

Winning looks like taking a wayward program lost in the shuffle of big-time college football, and winning 10 games out of the gate. This from a team that, before Brown arrived in 2024, was using a tight end at quarterback because it had no one else. 

Winning looks like taking a beaten down player from the transfer portal, and turning quarterback Kyle McCord – unfairly blamed for all of Ohio State’s problems in 2023 – into the nation’s leader in passing yards per game. 

It looks like following a 10-win season in 2024 with three wins in four games this season, including a road rout of Clemson last week. Two weeks earlier, after an overtime win over UConn, Brown had his team running gassers after the game, in front of the home crowd, because he didn’t think they were competing hard enough.

That’s what winning looks like. 

It looks like the unrelenting philosophy Kirby Smart – Brown’s mentor from his time as an assistant coach in Athens under the game’s best – used to build Georgia into a national power.

“We were trying to win the national title, and we didn’t do that,” Brown said of his first Syracuse team. “We were trying to win the conference championship, and we didn’t. We were just an average football team, when you look at it. When people get excited about fourth or fifth place, you’re messing with competition.”

That’s why no one complained about running gassers after playing 60 minutes. Why the Orange, two weeks later, played their best game under Brown.

But it’s more than winning, it’s the buildout and framework and ability to sustain. It’s believing in your values, and never wavering.

It’s not paying a million dollars for a wide receiver when your total NIL budget is about twice that amount. So when Syracuse’s All-ACC wideout Trebor Pena wanted his, Brown told him to find it somewhere else.

Four games into this season, Syracuse wideouts Justus Ross-Simmons and Darrell Gill Jr. have combined to catch 28 passes for 528 yards (18.9 ypc.) and eight touchdowns. Pena transferred to Penn State, and has 13 catches for 166 yards and one touchdown. 

And a fat NIL contract. 

“Nothing can be bigger than Syracuse, because once players start looking elsewhere, you forget what humble confidence is,” Brown said. “As a coach, I have to be genuine. Players know when you’re fake. You’re not going to get them to fight in the fourth quarter because they know you’re soft.”

They’re not going to keep fighting in the fourth quarter when their starting quarterback sustains a season-ending injury. Not this group, not this time.

They’re finding answers, not looking for excuses.

So when Rickie Collins takes over as the starting quarterback this week for Syracuse, he’ll build on what was expected of him when he entered the Clemson game late in the third quarter after starter Steve Angeli sustained a season-ending Achilles injury.

Collins threw a touchdown pass in his first full series while protecting a 13-point lead and completed two third-down throws in the fourth quarter to extend drives and bleed clock. He competed at a high level.

Basically, what Brown teaches from the jump.

“You have to be ready to go when it’s your turn,” Brown said earlier this week. “We have lot of kids on the team that are upset because they’re not playing. You just hope they can see it when it happens so close. You hope it’s contagious. Not, ‘I’m going to the (transfer) portal.’”

It all comes back to what’s acceptable. In a free-flowing, player-friendly world of malleable rules and easy exits, that non-negotiable foundation too often gets lost.

Angeli arrived from Notre Dame in April, and said the first thing Brown told him was he could lead the nation in passing — if he competed and sold out and reached his ceiling. 

Before Angeli left the Clemson game, he was leading the nation in passing yards per game.

“When you eliminate competing, you eliminate the reward,“ Brown said. “And then it becomes acceptable to lose.”

Instead of being unacceptable to relinquish one win.

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

The Green Bay Packers are facing the Dallas Cowboys on ‘Sunday Night Football’ in a Week 4 matchup that will pit Micah Parsons against his former team for the first time.

Parsons will be tasked during the contest with trying to get after Dak Prescott, who served as a friend and mentor to the 26-year-old during their four seasons together in Dallas.

That’s why Parsons knows he will feel mixed emotions if he is able to sack Prescott during Sunday’s contest.

‘It’s going to be painful,’ Parsons explained in a Tuesday interview with the Associated Press. ‘That’s my guy. He was always like a good mentor for me. But you know how it is. He always told me if I ever faced him that it’ll be a great matchup, so I’m excited to see what Sunday brings itself.’

Parsons appears less sentimental about playing in AT&T Stadium as a visitor for the first time since the blockbuster trade that sent him from the Cowboys to the Packers.

‘I accepted my fate weeks ago when the trade happened,’ Parsons said. ‘So, for me, it’s just all about playing another game and just doing what I do best, and that’s just be a disruptive football player. I think the media and the fans are trying to blow it up to be such a big thing. But I just look at it as just another game at AT&T.’

Parsons has, thus far, achieved his goal of being disruptive with the Packers. He has generated 19 pressures – second-most in the NFL behind Denver Broncos edge rusher Nik Bonitto – and 1.5 sacks across his first three games.

The Cowboys have allowed Prescott to be pressured 45 times – ninth-most in the NFL – through three games, so expect to see Parsons in the backfield often against his former teammates.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Steve Spurrier ignited the Florida-Tennessee rivalry, but he can find a silver lining to it falling off the annual SEC schedule.
Spurrier owned and infuriated Tennessee as Florida’s coach, but he now supports the Vols as long as they’re not playing a team he coached.
Florida-Tennessee was one of college football’s defining games in 1990s.

Steve Spurrier lets me in on a secret. Well, it’s not a secret, exactly, but it might surprise Tennessee fans to know the Head Ball Coach pulls for the Volunteers. Mostly, anyway.

That’s right, the Florida coach who tormented Tennessee and Phillip Fulmer throughout the 1990s, who famously said you can’t spell Citrus without U-T, likes seeing the Vols do well.

“I pull for Tennessee a lot, since that’s my home state and everything,” Spurrier told me. “I pull for them — unless they’re playing South Carolina or Florida or Duke. Those are my three schools.”

With Spurrier, it’s smart to check whether he’s kidding. He’s serious about his support?

“Certainly, certainly. I’m from Tennessee,” Spurrier says. Born in Miami Beach, Spurrier grew up in Johnson City, Tennessee.

Spurrier will have more opportunities to support the Vols in upcoming seasons, because the Florida-Tennessee rivalry won’t be played annually in the SEC’s new schedule model that begins next season. (South Carolina-Tennessee also won’t be retained annually.)

Each SEC team has been assigned three annual rivals. The other six opponents on the nine-conference schedule will rotate, so that each team plays those rotational opponents twice in a four-year span.

The upshot: Florida-Tennessee will not be played in 2026 or 2028.

Another sign of the times. Conference expansion and realignment interrupted more than a few rivalries.

“Nowadays,’ Spurrier, 80, said, ‘they don’t care about rivalries that much, I don’t think.’

Not enough to keep this one, anyway.

Florida-Tennessee rivalry ruled in the 1990s

There are bigger rivalries, and the SEC’s annual opponent assignments will retain rivalries like Florida-Georgia and Alabama-Tennessee.

But, losing this game stinks, especially for millennials like me who became college football fans in the 1990s, when the Florida-Tennessee rivalry peaked. No September game consistently mattered more during that era than Gators vs. Vols.

Don’t let anyone tell you this rivalry doesn’t matter anymore, either. I’ve covered this game when both teams were bad, and you wouldn’t have known that based on the raucous stadium environment.  

Two coaches who were a study of contrasts seeded this rivalry.

In one corner, Phillip Fulmer, the statesman.

In the other, Spurrier, the quipster who usually beat the statesman.

Ice and fire, they were.

Spurrier’s elite ability to stir the pot and jab Tennessee elevated the rivalry to a higher plane, at a time when this game charted a course for the SEC East.

Some rivalries have geography. Others have history. Florida-Tennessee had neither. That hardly mattered. These teams — and their fans — do not like each other. Period. That’s the bedrock of rivalry.

A handful of years back, the RockyTop subreddit polled Tennessee fans on their most hated rival. The tally of more than a 1,300 respondents showed that nearly 64% voted Florida, over Alabama, Georgia, Kentucky and Vanderbilt.

An unscientific exercise, sure, but I lived in Knoxville for more than six years, and I didn’t need science to detect the disdain Vols fans have for the Gators.

At Florida, the vitriol might not register quite as high for Tennessee. Georgia and Florida State rank as bigger rivals. After Spurrier departed and Fulmer retired, and the Vols set off for more than a decade of despair, Florida-LSU emerged as a bigger game.

That Florida-LSU rivalry is another that won’t continue annually.

“We’re not going to play them anymore? Oh, gosh,” Spurrier said, when I told him Florida-LSU was receding from the annual docket, too.

Despite being in the same conference, the Gators and Vols didn’t play during Spurrier’s career starring at quarterback for Florida, where he won a Heisman Trophy.

Spurrier did play LSU. He went 3-0 against the Tigers, then 11-1 as the Gators coach, a record he can quickly recite.

During Spurrier’s coaching tenure, there’s no doubt which rivalry game, Tennessee or LSU, sparked more emotions.

“Tennessee,” Spurrier said. “Much more.”

Kentucky — yes, Kentucky — interferes with Florida-Tennessee

The SEC’s new schedule model doesn’t leave room for every rivalry. But, rivalries like Alabama-LSU or Florida-Tennessee absolutely could have been kept. The SEC chose not to retain them.

The SEC assigned Alabama, Kentucky and Vanderbilt to Tennessee. Heck of a draw, right?

Alabama-Tennessee, sure. Gotta have the Third Saturday in October.

Tennessee-Vanderbilt, fine. That’s an in-state affair.

But, Kentucky-Tennessee instead of Florida-Tennessee? Yuck.

Florida also had room for the Vols. It received a draw of Georgia, Kentucky and South Carolina.

I realize Kentucky must play somebody, but not at the expense of a rivalry that gave us Fulmer versus Spurrier, Manning versus Wuerffel, “Faxgate,” “Pandemonium Reigns!” and “The Catch?”

Spurrier is a preacher’s son. His dad sometimes would receive free tickets to Vols games, and they’d head down to what was then known as Shields-Watkins Field.

Tennessee wasn’t an outlet for Spurrier’s playing career. The Vols were in a rut then, stuck in the single-wing offense.

Spurrier chose Florida and coach Ray Graves, a Knoxville native who played at Tennessee. Spurrier would’ve liked to have played against Tennessee, but he settled for beating Vanderbilt in Nashville his senior season.

As a coach, Spurrier haunted the Vols and ignited a rivalry.

As this series drops off the annual docket, Spurrier can find perhaps the only silver lining — he can support his home-state school a bit more frequently now.

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

Former Vice President Kamala Harris offered up several criticisms of the Biden White House’s communications team in her new book, painting a picture of a staff that did little to defend her.

‘They had a huge comms team; they had Karine Jean-Pierre briefing in the pressroom every day,’ Harris wrote in her book ‘107 Days’, released on Tuesday and providing detailed insight into her ill-fated presidential run. 

‘But getting anything positive said about my work or any defense against untrue attacks was almost impossible.’

Harris added that the ‘president’s inner circle seemed fine with it’ when ‘unfair or inaccurate’ stories about Harris circulated and that it even ‘seemed as if they decided I should be knocked down a little more.’

In a chapter titled ‘July 24: 104 days til the election,’ Harris suggested that Biden’s team was not only being unhelpful, but at times had worked against her in the past. 

‘This was total nonsense, but the White House seemed glad to let reporting about my ‘gaffe’ overwhelm the significant thaw in foreign relations I’d achieved,’ Harris wrote about the White House not pushing back against media reports she had ‘faked a french accent’ in 2021. 

‘Worse, I often learned that the president’s staff was adding fuel to negative narratives that sprung up around me,’ Harris wrote. 

Harris took issue in the book with Republicans who ‘mischaracterized’ her role as the ‘border czar’ and lamented that ‘no one in the White House comms team helped me to effectively push back and explain what I had really been tasked to do’ or to ‘highlight any of the progress I had achieved.’

In another part of the book, Harris wrote about how Biden began ‘taking on water’ over the conflict between Hamas and Israel, saying that ‘when polls indicated that I was getting more popular, the people around him didn’t like the contrast that was emerging.’

Harris also provided details about her struggles with the Biden campaign staff before and after she became the nominee, writing specifically about meetings the Biden-Harris team had during the campaign in a pavilion on the White House grounds. 

‘These political briefings often made no sense to me,’ Harris wrote. ‘Mike Donilon would filter the data from the polls and present the numbers in soothing terms: that the razor-thin, within-the-margin-of-error results were no cause for hair on fire; that really there was nothing to see here. Doug had wanted to stop sitting next to me because he got tired of me kicking him under the table when I asked a question and got a nonanswer.’

‘My chief of staff, Lorraine Voles, turned to me as we left one of these meetings and said, ‘If I ever organized that sort of dog-and-pony bullsh– for you, you’d have my head on a platter.’’

Harris’s husband, Doug Emhoff, was also quoted in the book with some strong words for the Biden team as Harris recounted an instance where his staff gauged the couple about their loyalty to Biden on July 4th, shortly before Biden dropped out of the race. 

‘They hide you away for four years, give you impossible, sh– jobs, don’t correct the record when those tasks are mischaracterized, never fight back when you’re attacked, never praise your accomplishments, and now, finally, they want you out there on that balcony, standing right beside them,’ Emhoff is quoted as saying. ‘Now, finally, they know you are an asset, and they need you to reassure the American people. And still, they have to ask if we’re loyal?’

Ultimately, Harris concluded that the Biden White House was mistakenly operating using ‘zero-sum’ thinking. 

‘If she’s shining, he’s dimmed,’ Harris wrote. ‘None of them grasped that if I did well, he did well. That given the concerns about his age, my visible success as his vice president was vital. It would serve as a testament to his judgment in choosing me and reassurance that if something happened, the country was in good hands. My success was important for him. His team didn’t get it.’

Fox News Digital reached out to Biden’s office for comment. 

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

A resurfaced clip of Virginia’s Democratic gubernatorial candidate telling supporters to ‘let your rage fuel you’ sparked new backlash from her GOP opponent, amid warnings that such rhetoric is contributing to political violence, from the ICE facility shooting to the killing of conservative activist Charlie Kirk.

Virginia Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears shared the clip shortly after a gunman opened fire on an ICE facility in Dallas – showing Democratic gubernatorial opponent former Rep. Abigail Spanberger offering an adage about ‘let[ing] your rage fuel you’ during a June political event. 

‘Rage. That’s what Abigail Spanberger is calling for,’ Earle-Sears wrote on X.

‘We’ve seen it with racist signs, cruel jeers, even cheering a father’s assassination for daring to disagree,’ she added, appearing to refer to Charlie Kirk.

Earlier this month, a protester at an Arlington event who was upset with Earle-Sears’ opposition to transgender bathroom policies in Washington, D.C., suburbs held up a sign that said if people cannot choose their own bathrooms, Earle-Sears, who is Black, cannot share their water fountains.

‘I’m asking for love,’ Earle-Sears said. 

‘Love for our neighbors and our Commonwealth. Because ‘Virginia is for lovers’ — not rage,’ she added, name-checking the commonwealth’s iconic tourism slogan of 56 years.

Spanberger, however, suggested her words were taken out of context.

‘Abigail has and will continue to condemn comments that attempt to make light of or justify violence of any kind — full stop,’ a Spanberger spokesperson told Fox News Digital.

‘Abigail has a long record of working across party lines and ideologies to get things done, and she will continue to bring people together as Virginia’s next governor.’

During the June event, Spanberger closed her speech with a story about once complaining about politics in front of her mother, who responded, ‘Let your rage fuel you.’

‘And so, Mom, I love you. I thank you for the sage advice. And to the rest of us, every time we hear a new story, we let it fuel us,’ she said.

‘Every time we turn on the news, we let it fuel us. Every time something bad is happening, we say, ‘Oh that’s motivation’.

‘Every time something happens in the world, in this country, coming out of Capitol Hill or coming out of this White House, we just say, ‘Boy, am I motivated today.’ We write more postcards, we knock more doors, we make more phone calls, we tell more friends about the importance of this election.’

After Kirk’s murder in Utah, Spanberger said she and her husband, Adam, were praying for his family and the Orem community, adding that ‘disagreements over policy, perspectives or even worldviews should never lead to violence.’

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Roseanne Barr is not holding back. 

During a recent interview, the comedian called out the television industry’s hypocrisy, especially after late-night host Jimmy Kimmel made his return to his show. 

‘It just shows how they think. I got my whole life ruined, no forgiveness, all of my work stolen and called a racist for time and eternity for racially misgendering someone,’ Barr said on NewsNation. ‘It’s a double standard.’

Her comments come just as ‘Jimmy Kimmel Live!’ returned to ABC, days after the host was suspended over his comments on conservative activist Charlie Kirk.

In 2018, Barr faced her own public controversies. 

At the time, she tweeted about former Barack Obama adviser Valerie Jarrett, which triggered ABC’s cancellation of her show, ‘Roseanne.’

She wrote on Twitter that political figure Jarrett, who is Black, looked like the ‘Muslim brotherhood & planet of the apes had a baby.’

Though Barr deleted the tweet within hours and issued a public apology, ABC wasted no time in cutting ties. The network canceled the ‘Roseanne’ reboot.

Channing Dungey, who was ABC Entertainment’s president at the time, issued a scathing statement: ‘Roseanne’s Twitter statement is abhorrent, repugnant and inconsistent with our values, and we have decided to cancel her show.’

Looking back on her 2018 cancellation, Barr said Kimmel criticized her publicly despite having his own controversial past.

‘He called me a racist even though I said repeatedly, which they repeatedly censored, that it was a mistake,’ Barr told the outlet. ‘I thought that the woman was a white woman from Iran.’

Barr went on to call the controversy a double standard.

‘He called me a racist even though he himself appeared in blackface on their network many times,’ she added, referencing Kimmel’s past comedy sketches that resurfaced in 2020.

That abrupt shutdown marked a turning point in Barr’s career, one she said the network and media have never allowed her to recover from.

Barr predicted Kimmel’s comeback would be met with celebration from fans. 

‘I think he’ll cheer himself on and his fans, all — what is it? — 2,000 of them. They’ll feel heartened and like they won another battle against Trump and the people of the United States. So, it’ll be a big celebration,’ she told the media outlet. 

‘Maybe if he had defended me, maybe this wouldn’t have happened.’

Fox News Digital has reached out to Barr for additional comment.

After a nearly weeklong suspension from ABC, the late-night host returned to ‘Jimmy Kimmel Live!’ Tuesday night, opening with a somber, 30-minute monologue, walking back the comments that got him pulled off the air.

‘I don’t think there’s anything funny about it,’ Kimmel said, tearing up as he addressed the assassination of conservative activist Kirk earlier this month. 

‘Nor was it my intention to blame any specific group for the actions of what … was obviously a deeply disturbed individual. That was really the opposite of the point I was trying to make.’

Kimmel acknowledged his original remarks may have been a misfire.

‘Felt either ill-timed or unclear or maybe both,’ he admitted.

Kimmel was suspended by Disney Sept. 17 after outrage erupted over his Sept. 15 monologue, in which he took direct aim at conservative media in the wake of Kirk’s murder.

‘We hit some new lows over the weekend with the MAGA gang desperately trying to characterize this kid who murdered Charlie Kirk as anything other than one of them,’ Kimmel said during the controversial episode. ‘And doing everything they can to score political points from it.’

Broadcasting giants Sinclair Broadcast Group and Nexstar Media Group, both of which carry dozens of ABC affiliates, announced they would be preempting Kimmel’s show due to what they called ‘ill-timed and insensitive’ commentary.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS