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It’s hard enough to know what you want. It’s even harder to know what others want. But what if what you want hinges on what somebody else wants…and they aren’t sure what they want?

Hence the conundrum now facing Congressional Republicans as they try to approve the ‘big, beautiful bill.’

GOPers are waiting for President Trump to push for very specific items to be in the bill – or fall by the wayside.

Congressional Republicans are aligned closely with the President and willing to bend to his wishes. But it complicates things when Trump calls for what he termed a ‘tiny’ tax increase for the super wealthy.

‘People would love to do it. Rich people. I would love to do it, frankly. Giving us something up top in order to make people in the middle income and the lower income brackets [have] more. So, it’s really a redistribution,’ said the president.

First, President Trump suggested a form of rations, limiting how many pencils kids need or how many dolls a little girl should have. That puzzled free marketeers in the GOP.

Now, to use his phrase, ‘redistribution.’

You understand how much heartburn this gives capitalists in Congress. But what’s worse is the mixed messaging.

When writing on Truth Social about creating a higher tax bracket for the wealthy, the president muddled his instructions for lawmakers:

‘Republicans should probably not do it, but I’m OK if they do!!!’ declared President Trump.

This exasperated Congressional Republicans who oppose raising any taxes – a long-held tenet of the Republican Party. 

In another political universe, taxing the wealthy would be – at best – a trial balloon. So, most Congressional Republicans decided it was time for this to pop.

‘No, we are not going to do tax increases,’ said Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., on Fox Business.

‘We don’t want to raise taxes on anybody. I mean, we’re about lowering taxes on Americans,’ said Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., on Fox.

But President Trump’s Republican Party is very different from the Reagan Republican Party. The GOP shifts to where Trump wants it. Just consider the approach to tariffs compared to free trade.

President Trump broadened the party’s base in the last election. The GOP is no longer dominated by big business, titans of commerce and the well-to-do. Part of the president’s appeal was the blue-collar coalition he cobbled together. And his fundamental economic message on taxes resonated with millions of voters. That’s why his top advisers say Trump is sticking to campaign promises.

‘President Trump has made it clear that he has his priorities, like no tax on tips. No tax on overtime. No tax on Social Security,’ said National Economic Council Director Kevin Hassett on Fox.

However, revenue generated from new taxes on the wealthy could help cover the cost of spending cuts.

‘We need to see what we need to do with the math to make sure that we are doing the country well fiscally and that we don’t just add to the debt,’ said Rep. Adrian Smith, R-Neb.

But Republicans are frustrated after House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., shrank the size of the tax cuts and spending reductions.

The tax breaks were supposed to be around $4.5 trillion at one point. They dwindled to $4 trillion. They were angling to lock in $2 trillion in tax cuts. They’re scaled back to $1.5 trillion.

‘Republicans talk a big game in campaigns,’ lamented House Budget Committee Chairman Jodey Arrington, R-Texas. ‘If we’re not able to bend the curve on mandatory spending, then we will send a very bad signal to the bond markets.’

But regardless of what’s in the package, the White House is expecting Congressional Republicans to ultimately vote yes on the ‘big, beautiful bill.’

‘The president has great political instincts. That’s why he’s back in the Oval Office,’ said White House spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt.

But that’s what Congressional Republicans found so vexing. The president may have great political instincts. But the marching orders were far from clear.

Trump conceded that a tax hike may be controversial politically.

Congressional Republicans suffer from political PTSD. They remember another Republican President who made one of the most famous political promises of all time. And then broke it.

‘No new taxes,’ intoned the late President George H.W. Bush in his address to a Joint Session of Congress in 1989.

But Bush famously reversed himself as part of a 1990 budget pact. That was not necessarily the reason ‘Bush 41’ lost reelection in 1992 to former President Clinton. And President Trump was sure enough to point that out on social media.

‘The Radical Left Democrat Lunatics would go around screaming, ‘Read my lips,’ the fabled Quote by George Bush the Elder that is said to have cost him the Election. NO, Ross Perot cost him the Election!’ wrote Trump.

The ‘Perot Effect’ certainly deprived George H.W. Bush of a second term more than breaking the ‘no new taxes’ promise. But that doesn’t mean that Republicans aren’t skittish about voting for tax increases.

And regardless, the legislative product that emerged from the Ways and Means Committee markup this week lacked the type of tax hike dangled by President Trump.

That said, Congressional Republicans certainly have their opinions about what they think of the developing ‘big, beautiful bill.’

‘A growing number of us, we don’t want smoke and mirrors. We want real cuts,’ said Rep. Ralph Norman, R-S.C. ‘$2 trillion (in cuts) is really a teardrop in the ocean.’

‘You’ve got front-loaded tax [cuts]. Backloaded spending restraint,’ groused Rep. Chip Roy, R-Texas. ‘Medicaid reforms and work requirements don’t kick in for four years.’

‘It’ll be ironic and sad in a way that conservatives will be voting for the largest increase in the debt ceiling,’ mused Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky. ‘I have a feeling it’s going to be wimpy on the spending cuts and maybe a little wimpy on the taxes, too.’

So, at least some Republicans grasp what they want in the bill. And they’re willing to take direction from the president. That’s why clear direction from 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. will be key next week as the House tries to pass the measure.

Members will say they can’t vote for the bill because it has this or excludes that. But they just might be able to vote yea if President Trump knows what he wants – and makes that clear to lawmakers.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

The defending Stanley Cup champion Florida Panthers are one win away from a third consecutive trip to the conference final and from extending the Toronto Maple Leafs’ playoff misery.

The Panthers embarrassed the Maple Leafs 6-1 on Wednesday and took a 3-2 lead in a series in which they had lost the first two games. They can clinch a trip to the third round with a victory Friday night in Sunrise, Florida.

The Maple Leafs came out poorly after back-to-back losses, failing to halt the Panthers’ momentum in the series. They were outshot 14-6 in the first period and outscored 1-0. Florida then outscored Toronto 3-0 in the second period. Maple Leafs goalie Joseph Woll was pulled for Matt Murray when Florida made it 5-0.

Toronto had reached the second round for the second time since 2004, but one more loss would make it 23 years since the team last reached the conference finals. They last won the Stanley Cup in 1967.

Takeaways from Game 5 between the Florida Panthers and Toronto Maple Leafs:

Panthers’ depth pays off

After the opening two losses, Panthers coach Paul Maurice swapped out his fourth line and tweaked his top two lines for Game 3, sparking the turnaround. Fourth-liners Jonah Gadjovich (Game 3) and A.J. Greer (Game 5) have scored since the move. Jesper Boqvist was inserted into the top line Wednesday for injured Evan Rodrigues and got a goal.

All told, 17 Panthers players have a goal in the playoffs. Florida received three goals from defensemen on Wednesday, and Sam Bennett scored his sixth goal of the playoffs.

Maple Leafs stars come up short

Auston Matthews doesn’t have a goal in the series and had a giveaway on the Panthers’ first goal by Aaron Ekblad. Mitch Marner, a pending unrestricted free agent, had a bad giveaway with a backhand pass on the Panthers’ third goal. He has one shot in the last three games. The top power play unit didn’t look good on a third-period effort.

Playoff Sergei Bobrovsky is back

He gave up 13 goals in the first three games of the series but nothing after Morgan Rielly scored midway through the third period of Game 3 until Nick Robertson scored with 1:06 left in Game 5. That was a shutout streak of more than 143 minutes. Though Toronto didn’t get many shots in the first period, Bobrovsky came up big on a William Nylander breakaway and a Matthew Knies power-play shot.

Panthers vs. Maple Leafs highlights

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Soccer fans in San Jose congregated outside Inter Miami’s team hotel this week to catch a glimpse of legendary star Lionel Messi, and the Argentine World Cup champion did not disappoint.

Messi waved to fans from his hotel balcony before jumping on a bus for training sessions this week in Northern California. Inter Miami plays the San Jose Earthquakes Wednesday night at PayPal Park.

This is Messi’s first time in the Bay Area since August 2009, when he starred for Barcelona and played a friendly against Chivas at Candlestick Park in San Francisco. It’s also the last time Inter Miami will be on the West Coast during the 2025 MLS regular season.

So fans want to know, ‘Is Messi playing today in San Jose?’

Messi is healthy, rested and in the starting lineup. He scored a goal in each of his last two matches, but Inter Miami has lost four of its last five matches across all competitions – outscored 14-9 during that stretch.

Messi’s firepower will be needed as Inter Miami aims to return to its winning ways against the Earthquakes, who lead MLS with 26 goals scored this season.

Here’s what you need to know about the game, and stay tuned for live updates by USA TODAY Sports for the San Jose vs. Inter Miami match tonight:

Cristian Arango goal: San Jose 1, Inter Miami 1

San Jose’s Cristian Arango has scored in the third minute in response, taking advantage of a poor pass by Inter Miami goalie Oscar Ustari to a teammate in the penalty area.

So much for that great start by Inter Miami.

Maxi Falcon goal: Inter Miami 1, San Jose 0

Inter Miami is on the board – before the first minute even passed in the game.

Jordi Alba sent a floater into the box, and defender Maxi Falcon scored on a header about 30 seconds into the match.

Quite a start for a club that has lost four of its last five matches in all competitions.

How to watch San Jose Earthquakes vs. Inter Miami live stream?

The match is available via MLS Season Pass on Apple TV.

Is Lionel Messi playing tonight in San Jose?

Yes, Messi was listed as a starter in Inter Miami’s starting lineup before the match.

What time is the San Jose vs. Inter Miami match today?

The match begins at 10:30 p.m. ET (7:30 p.m. PT; 11:30 p.m. in Argentina).

Messi waves to fans outside San Jose hotel

Here’s video of Messi waving to fans outside Inter Miami’s team hotel this week in San Jose.

Messi scores goals vs. Minnesota and New York Red Bulls

Messi has scored a goal in each of his last two matches: A 4-1 win May 3 against the New York Red Bulls, and in a 4-1 loss May 10 to Minnesota United.

David Beckham calls for respect from Minnesota United

‘Pink phony club’ was the caption used by Minnesota with a photo of players celebrating the 4-1 win — in which star Lionel Messi scored the only goal for Inter Miami.

‘Show a little respect @mnufc be elegant in triumph,” Beckham said in a comment on the post.

First-year Inter Miami coach Javier Mascherano said: “We must know how to live with criticism, and how to benefit from it. There is constructive criticism that allows you to see things and make you think. And there is some that is not valuable, simply attack for the sake of attacking. In my case, I am used to it and most of the players also must live with this.”

Luis Suarez won’t play vs. San Jose Earthquakes

Messi will be missing his longtime running mate Luis Suarez — the Uruguayan star did not travel with the club for their two-game road trip due to personal reasons. It’s unclear whether veteran forward Fafa Picault will play against San Jose. He did not play against Minnesota due to a migraine.

Messi, Inter Miami upcoming schedule

May 18: Inter Miami vs. Orlando City, 7 p.m. ET
May 24: Philadelphia Union vs. Inter Miami, 7:30 p.m. ET
May 28: Inter Miami vs. CF Montreal, 7:30 p.m. ET
May 31: Inter Miami vs. Columbus Crew, 7:30 p.m. ET

Messi, Inter Miami schedule for Club World Cup

June 14: Inter Miami vs. Al Alhy, 8 p.m. ET (Hard Rock Stadium in Miami)
June 19: Inter Miami vs FC Porto, 3 p.m. ET (Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta)
June 23: Inter Miami vs. Palmerias, 9 p.m. ET (Hard Rock Stadium in Miami)

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

We won’t go so far as to call this a dark day for baseball. Enough folks are already doing that work.

No, call it a dismal day for baseball. A stupid day for baseball. A grim relitigating of old business that the game would’ve been best served to leave in the dustbin alongside its many indignities.

Pete Rose is off Major League Baseball’s permanently ineligible list, and who knew that you could speed run to Cooperstown merely by kicking the bucket, no matter how felonious, how detrimental to the game you were when you were upright and breathing?

No, this decision by commissioner Rob Manfred smacks of executive branch overreach mixed with a dash of CEO malpractice. Manfred’s tenure – which will ultimately run about 15 years once he steps aside – was already a mixed bag, but dude was on a little bit of a roll there, for a minute.

The pitch clock has worked out great. Finessing the game out of cable television and into the streaming era is more painful than a rock in his loafers, but he’s kept the game in the hands of consumers even as the business model wobbles.

Yet Manfred’s legacy won’t, for many fans, extend much further than being known as the man who breathed life into a pariah in most markets, all while creating the perception that he was dog-walked by a president whose approval ratings are historically negative.

As he does, Manfred grabbed his lawyer’s quill and eloquently laid out the reasons for the posthumous Rose reinstatement, noting that no damage could be done beyond the grave, making the mildly plausible case that A. Bartlett Giamatti’s Rose banishment wasn’t the act of a commissioner but rather a legal maneuvering to head off potential litigation.

It all sounds a bit like another, lengthier memo Manfred issued, in the wake of the Houston Astros’ sign-stealing scandal emerging and Manfred doling out punishment in January 2020.

Back then, Manfred went out of his way to clear Astros owner Jim Crane any wrongdoing in the affair. This time, it’s making the case nobody was asking for – that Rose get back in the game, posthumously. Conclusions to reach and cases to make to get there.

And how well did Manfred’s Astros rulings go over with the public?

Yet it’s not just ‘optics’ that matter here. It’s the decades of Manfred’s office insisting that gambling on baseball was the worst thing a player, a manager, an MLB employee could do, that it unspooled any thread of integrity the game had.

It was a worthy stand to take.

It may mollify the most diehard Rose stans – a legion that includes the president – who could overlook his uncontested allegations of statutory rape, his felony tax conviction and his shameless self-promotion and parrying of responsibility in gambling on baseball to insist their guy should be in the game. Should be in the Hall of Fame.

And now could be in the Hall of Fame.

The Rose absolutists have been handed ammunition by MLB over the years with the league’s warm embrace of gambling. That agita should probably be directed toward the Supreme Court, whose 2018 ruling greased the skids for this burgeoning national crisis of sports gambling, though the four major sports leagues could certainly tamp down their no-sweat parlay enthusiasm a bit.

MLB had no control over widespread legalization of sports betting. It had 100% control of the Rose situation, and its stonewalling of any reinstatement efforts was, in many ways, honorable.

Now, two months after President Donald Trump promised pardons of Rose and urged he be sent to Cooperstown, nearly four decades of establishing a moral high ground was sacrificed.

And MLB has also ensured that, like a zombie emerging from a crypt, the Rose discourse will never die. In two years, a committee will determine if he should be on a ballot, and if so, 16 men and women will vote on Rose’s candidacy. If 12 of them say yes, Rose is a Hall of Famer.

It is old business that was seemingly settled long ago, now dredged up in the ugliest fashion. We can already see the chyrons on the sports talk shoutfests. Rose will always generate interest. It’s just not the kind of attention baseball should want.

In the interim, games will be played and ballplayers will gamble on their apps – though hopefully not on baseball! – and the industry will move onward.

But it’s hard to deny that the game’s integrity took a massive step backward, and unnecessarily ripped open an old wound.

The USA TODAY app gets you to the heart of the news — fastDownload for award-winning coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, the eNewspaper and more.

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The NBA on Wednesday fined Golden State Warriors forward Draymond Green $50,000 ‘for making an inappropriate comment that questions the integrity of game officials,’ president of league operations Byron Spruell said in a news release.

The incident happened late in the fourth quarter of Minnesota’s 102-97 victory in Game 3 at Chase Center in San Francisco on Saturday.

During a timeout with 15.2 seconds remaining and Minnesota ahead 102-94 and Green no longer in the game, he yelled the spread – 5½.

It’s common for the NBA to fine players for questioning the integrity of referees. Last season, the NBA fined Timberwolves center Rudy Gobert $100,000 for making the money gesture with his fingers.

Green also has five technical fouls in the playoffs, two away from drawing a one-game suspension.

Minnesota leads the series 3-1 with Game 5 Wednesday in Minneapolis (9:30 p.m. ET, TNT), and the Warriors will again be without All-Star guard Steph Curry (strained left hamstring).

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On Wednesday, Netflix announced a new sports series about the life of the current Colorado football coach, set to be released in 2026 with three 60-minute episodes. The show will be called “PRIME TIME” and will add to his extensive exposure on several platforms in recent years. For example:

∎ He recently concluded a 21-episode season of a weekly talk show he co-hosted on Tubi called “We Got Time Today.”

∎ In January, Amazon Prime Video released Season 3 of “Coach Prime,” which chronicled Sanders in his second season as coach of the Colorado Buffaloes.

∎ On Aug. 29, he begins his third season at Colorado with a prime-time game on ESPN at home against Georgia Tech. That will be the 14th straight game for his team on the flagship ESPN channel or network television (CBS, NBC, Fox, ABC).

The Netflix show currently is in production and promises to provide an “an in-depth look at one of pro sports’ most electrifying and polarizing figures, exploring his evolution from a two-sport pro phenom to a culture-defining coach and media personality,” according to Netflix.

Netflix said Sanders would open up about “deeply personal aspects of his life,” including his relationship with his biological father, surviving an attempted suicide and near-death health scares, which include his battle with blood clots.

Sanders, 57, is a Pro Football Hall of Famer who also played Major League Baseball before becoming a college football coach.  His two-year record at Colorado is 13-12, including a 9-4 record this past season.

“It means so much to finally be able to tell my unfiltered story, my TRUTH,” Sanders said in a statement provided by Netflix. “I was PRIME TIME, then I dropped the TIME and went by PRIME, and now I’m in the third quarter of my life and they call me COACH PRIME. Y’all knew a part of me each step of the way, but you never knew DEION … and I’m excited to share that with you all — the highs and lows, the truths and tragedies, and everything in between. They can’t stop or contain what God has purposed.”

Sanders’ flamboyant personality and ability to reinvent himself and succeed in various endeavors has turned him into a fame and marketing machine. In two seasons at Colorado, 21 of his 25 games have been on the flagship ESPN channel or network TV.

Being on camera extensively is a big part of his unconventional recruiting strategy, too. He and his CU football program also are regularly chronicled by select YouTube channels, including that of his eldest son, Deion Jr.

The university said the new Netflix show primarily focuses on Sanders’ life up to now, so the school’s involvement will be limited. The new show is being produced by the talent agency Sanders uses, SMAC Entertainment, along with Skydance Sports and NFL Films.

Follow reporter Brent Schrotenboer @Schrotenboer. Email: bschrotenb@usatoday.com

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This is schedule release week with Wednesday being the big day. Of course the defending Super Bowl champion Philadelphia Eagles will figure prominently. Makes total sense. But when next season arrives will the Eagles have their vaunted ‘tush push?’

The answer is likely no which means one of the best plays in recent league history (yes, I said best) could be absent from all of the various screens the Eagles will be on this coming season.

The fate of the play will likely be determined at the league meetings starting May 20 in Minneapolis. The NFL delayed a potential ban on the controversial play in the spring during the meetings then. The NFL needs 24 of 32 team owners to support or deny a rule change.

The belief was that the owners were just delaying the inevitable. No one knows for certain but the play seems destined to be eradicated.

The play is one of my favorites to see. It’s not just rugby as some have described it. The elegance of it is its simplicity. It’s also not easy to do and requires extensive practice. There’s a reason why a number of teams have tried and failed. Laughingly so. One weekend two years ago, three teams tried to do it, and couldn’t.

What the Eagles have done is find a secret weapon, refined it, worked on it constantly, and shaped it into something almost unstoppable. The league’s response has been not working on a way to stop it, but to try and ban it, like cowards.

One reason for wanting to ban it has been health and safety but the NFL admits there’s no definitive data proving that it causes injuries. There were no injuries reported from the ‘tush push’ last season. ESPN reported just 101 of the 35,414 offensive plays in 2024 were tush-push plays, or 0.285%.

I hate, absolutely hate, that the Eagles will be a huge part of the broadcast year next season, and we may not be able to see what’s become not just one of the team’s signature plays, but the NFL’s.

We already know part of Philadelphia’s schedule and the Eagles will be highly visible next season. The team will play in the Thursday night season opener against Dallas, a Week 10 Monday night game against Green Bay, the Black Friday game against Chicago, and a Dec. 20 Saturday doubleheader against Washington. Quick note: the Packers were the team that ratted out, err, proposed the ‘tush push’ ban. The Packers also lost to the Eagles twice last season.

Eagles owner Jeffrey Lurie told reporters recently that unless the play is proven to be a health and safety issue, his team should be allowed to continue using it. His quote here is long but I think it’s useful to see in its entirety.

‘I want to know what data there is,’ Lurie said. ‘I don’t think there is any. If you want to say that it could be (dangerous), it’s hard to make rules on could-bes and should-bes.

‘One of the reasons we like using the tush push is we think it’s a safer play than the quarterback sneak. The quarterback sneak, if you talk to quarterbacks about it, there’s more spearing going on. They’re less protected by players around them. And one of the reasons we got motivated to develop an expertise in this play is it was more protective to the quarterback.

‘So, it’s ironic that people would bring up health and safety. We’re at the top of the game in terms of wanting health and safety on every play. We voted for hip-drop tackle and a defenseless receiver.

“We will always, always support what is safer for the players. It’s a no-brainer. If this is proven to be less safe for the players, we will be against the tush push.

“But until that’s the case, to me, there would be no reason to ban this play.’

‘I would definitely say there are some people that have health and safety concerns, but there’s just as many people that have football concerns,’ Rich McKay, CEO of the Atlanta Falcons, and co-chairman of the NFL’s competition committee, has said previously. ‘It was much more about the play, the aesthetics of the play. Is it what football has been traditionally or is it more of a rugby play?’

It’s not a rugby play.

It’s gorgeous.

And when the Eagles star across numerous broadcasts this coming season, we may not see it.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

College sports fans and donors as much power and influence as ever in NIL era that began in 2021.
Old model of college sports featuring unpaid athletes is not returning, but more evolution awaits.
Fans and boosters enjoyed agency in NIL era. Their donations set the market rate.

You’re going to miss this era of college sports, because at least a portion of this so-called “chaos” excites you. It entertains you. It empowered you, the fan.

You’re going to miss this unregulated, unencumbered and ever so slightly unhinged era of college sports. You’ll miss that the absence of ‘guardrails’ meant enjoying the freedom to crank the speedometer as high as you can take it.

You’re going to miss that this era of college sports granted you, the fans, the most influence you’ve ever possessed.

Your dollars determined the market rate. How much you donated (or didn’t donate) dictated a roster’s payroll. You had a seat in the clown car. Heck, you might have been driving it. If your team won big, you could take pride in knowing you (and maybe a few millionaire and billionaire donors whom you don’t know) contributed to that success.

Maybe you think your team’s quarterback or slot receiver is overpaid, but, your dollars allowed for that payday. If the product stinks, you can snap your wallet shut and withhold NIL donations until the university brass triggers a coaching change.

More change is coming within college sports. I don’t know what shape this next system will take, only that it will be different. I’m skeptical fans will retain as much agency as they’ve had these past few years.

BEST OF BEST: Our ranking of college football’s top 25 coaches

Fans, donors took the wheel of NIL era of college sports

Coaches depended on you to fund their roster, but you weren’t obligated to fork over the cash. You controlled the power of the purse.

What does this power look like in action? Consider LSU this offseason. The school’s donors and fans increased their giving these past several months. For return on that investment, coach Brian Kelly assembled the nation’s top-ranked transfer class. Now, the Tigers look more like a playoff team, maybe even a national championship contender. That’s the byproduct of a fan and donor base working to achieve a common goal.

No longer must you depend on the ball coach being an ace recruiter (or good at sliding money under the table in a fast-food bag). Now, fan dollars gathered above the table facilitate roster assembly.

The NCAA’s former system of unpaid athletes isn’t returning, no matter how much reminiscing occurs. The courts deemed that old model illegal and smashed it to bits. Whatever’s next won’t look like 2020, but not like 2024, either.

NIL an optional fan expense; revenue-sharing will be more direct

Athlete empowerment irks a certain portion of College Sports Inc., and coaches understandably crave more roster control, but their grievances don’t end there. They disliked ceding control to third-party collectives. These NIL groups, bankrolled and operated by donors and fans, became college football’s lifeblood these past few years. Coaches and administrators would like nothing more than to tamp down fans’ power while still collecting their cash.

Schools are trying to bring the NIL operation in house and take control of dispensing your dollars.

Revenue-sharing awaits around the bend. That amounts to new expenses. If you think any serious administrative belt-tightening will occur to offset those costs, well, I’ve got a property in Illinois to sell you with a mountain view. Expect at least some of the revenue-sharing costs to be passed to fans. NIL donations were optional. Revenue sharing will be a more direct expense passed on in the form of ticket-price hikes. Athletic directors can dress up these price hikes by dubbing them “talent fees,” but no matter what they call it, this shifts more direct financial burden onto fans, even if your power decreases.

Off in the distance, federal bureaucrats sniff around the hen house. College sports leaders keep begging Congress to provide government regulations that rein in athlete freedoms and dial down the influence fans and donors enjoy in this current landscape.

I won’t try to convince you everything went perfectly these past few years. Stanford being in the same conference as Florida State will never make sense. It’s probably not ideal that athletes can transfer an unlimited number of times without penalty, either.

Overall, though, I wonder whether fans might someday look back on these past few years as the good ol’ days that were underappreciated in the moment.

Coaches, administrators and conference commissioners insist unfettered athlete freedoms, paired with unprecedented fan and donor influence, produced “chaos.” They called it the Wild, Wild West. I see it differently. Maybe, College Sports Inc. just couldn’t stand that you, the fans and donors, became the sheriff in town.

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

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Jake Paul sat near two championship belts and a cruiserweight champion during a news conference Wednesday in Hollywood.

It could be a sign that he’s trying to line up a title fight with Gilberto ‘Zurdo’ Ramirez, the owner of the belts and the WBO and WBA world cruiserweight champion.

“I’m ready now,’’ Paul said.

But first up: Julio Cesar Chavez Jr., the son of legendary fighter Julio Cesar Chavez Sr. and a former middleweight champion whom Paul will fight June 28. They’ll face off in a 10-round cruiserweight bout at the Honda Center in Anaheim, California.

The co-main on the card will pit Ramirez (47-1, 30 KOs) against Yuniel Dorticos (27-2, 25 KOs.)

Chavez (54-6-1 with 34 KOs) is coming off a victory by unanimous decision last July over Uriah Hall, who was fighting as a pro for only the second time.

Paul expressed little concern about his upcoming fight with Chavez, who was the WBC world middleweight champion in 2011 and 2012. “This is his toughest fight to date,’’ Paul said of Chavez, “and I’m going to embarrass him and make him quit like he always does.’’

Ramirez, a 33-year-old from Mexico, indicated he would be open to fighting Paul, the YouTuber-turned boxer, at some point. Chris Mannix, the emcee at the news conference, raised the possibility of a title fight not being too far behind for Paul.

Ramirez, the reigning cruiserweight champion, said of Paul: “I mean, I have this opponent I have to take care of first,’’ he said of Dorticos. “This match and then I mean, whoever don’t matter.’’

Paul would have to jump into the Top 15 rankings of the WBA or WBO to be eligible to fight Ramirez in what would amount to a voluntary title defense.

Earlier Wednesday, when asked about a title fight, Paul indicated it could take longer.

‘Yeah, we’re very close,” he said. ‘I think less than two years. The right opportunity just has to open up, but right now, I’m focused on this former world champion (Chavez), and this is going to build my resume and build my skillset under the lights.”

Paul, 28, embarked on his pro boxing career in 2020 and is 11-1 with seven knockouts. He is coming off a victory over Mike Tyson by unanimous decision on Nov. 20.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The Ravens and Henry have agreed to a two-year extension worth $30 million, a person familiar with the situation confirmed to USA TODAY Sports. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because the contract isn’t official. The deal includes $25 million in guaranteed money.

It’s the largest-ever contract for a running back over the age of 30.

Henry amassed 1,921 rushing yards and tied an NFL-high with 16 rushing touchdowns in his first year in Baltimore last season. His rushing yards output was the second most ever by a Ravens running back in a single season, it was also the second most in the NFL last year. Henry achieved the mark despite turning 31 years old in January.

Behind Henry and two-time MVP Lamar Jackson, the Ravens boasted the league’s No. 1 rushing attack, averaging just over 187 yards per contest last season.

Henry is now signed through the next few seasons and could end his superb career in the Charm City.

The Ravens signed Henry in free agency last offseason after he spent the first eight years of his career with the Tennessee Titans. The five-time Pro Bowler has produced 11,423 rushing yards and 106 rushing touchdowns in nine NFL seasons. His 11,423 career rushing yards leads all active players. He ranks 19th on the NFL’s all-time rushing list.

Henry’s career resume includes winning the NFL Offensive Player of the Year award in 2020 and he was the league’s single season rushing king in 2019 and 2020.

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