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NFL Network personality Rich Eisen will soon be returning, at least partially, to his roots at ESPN, according to a report from The Athletic.

Souces briefed on the move tell the Athletic ‘The Rich Eisen Show’ will move from Roku to ESPN this fall as part of the network’s new direct-to-consumer service. The report also says there ‘is a strong possibility’ Eisen’s weekday show – which runs from noon to 3 p.m. ET – could also be aired on ESPN Radio.

The move would reportedly be structured similar to an arrangement ESPN has with Pat McAfee, who licenses his namesake talk show to ESPN but still maintains ownership and editorial control.

Eisen, whose show airs at the same time as McAfee’s, is not expected to be on any of ESPN’s linear networks, which include ESPN, ESPN2 and ESPNews, according to the report.

Eisen, 55, was one of ESPN’s more popular anchors when he was hired by NFL Network as one of its first employees ahead its November 2003 launch.

The new deal won’t affect his status with NFL Network, where he will remain the main anchor for its Game Day and draft coverage. Eisen also serves as the play-by-play announcer for select regular-season games on the network.

ESPN – which this fall is set to begin offering the new service allowing consumers access to its programming without a cable subscription – declined to comment.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Conservative author, media figure and former Treasury official Monica Crowley was confirmed late Monday to become assistant secretary of state and chief of protocol with the rank of ambassador.

Crowley, who was a longtime former Fox News contributor and foreign affairs analyst, previously served in the first Trump administration and received the Alexander Hamilton Award from the Treasury Department during that time.

‘Monica will be the administration representative for major U.S. hosted events, including America’s 250th birthday in 2026, the FIFA World Cup in 2026, and the Olympic Games in Los Angeles in 2028,’ President Donald Trump said in a December statement announcing her nomination.

Crowley holds a doctorate in international relations from Columbia University.

The Arizona native grew up in New Jersey and began her career in former President Richard Nixon’s post-presidency, when she worked as a research assistant.

Her book, ‘Nixon Off the Record,’ was published in the wake of that role.

She joined Fox News Channel in 1996 – the same year it hit the airwaves – and often appeared with host Sean Hannity on ‘Hannity’ and its predecessor ‘Hannity & Colmes,’ with the late Alan Colmes.

She also starred in one episode of ‘House of Cards,’ where she played herself – and also hosted the syndicated ‘Monica Crowley Show.’

She has received several other awards, including Woman of the Year in 2010 from the Clare Boothe Luce Center for Conservative Women.

During Trump’s first term, she backed out of a National Security Council role when allegations of plagiarism in her doctoral dissertation surfaced. Crowley rejected the claims as a ‘hit job.’

The U.S. Travel Association lauded her nomination, saying that she will serve a ‘pivotal role’ in the Trump administration.

‘The speed with which this decision was made gives us great confidence that … Trump will seek to maximize the opportunities of the decade of sports and events that lies ahead,’ said CEO Geoff Freeman.

‘Landmark moments [she will be involved in planning] will attract millions of travelers to America and showcase the best of our great nation while creating a lasting benefit to our economy.’ 

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The identity of a Trump administration official who was allegedly targeted by the Biden administration’s State Department in a ‘disinformation’ dossier remains a mystery nearly two weeks after Secretary of State Marco Rubio revealed details on the file.

Rubio revealed at the most recent Trump administration Cabinet meeting April 30 that an unidentified Trump administration official who was present had been the subject of a State Department dossier detailing alleged promotion of social media ‘disinformation.’ 

Rubio, the State Department and the White House have not yet identified which official the Biden administration targeted. Fox News Digital has reached out repeatedly to the White House regarding the identity of the official, including on Monday, but did not receive replies. 

When asked for an update on the identity of the Trump official, the State Department directed Fox News Digital to Rubio’s April 30 remark, detailing that, ‘We are going to be turning over these dossiers to the individuals, and they’ll decide whether they want to disclose it or not.’

Rubio said during the April 30 Cabinet meeting that a little-known, now-defunct office within the State Department called the Global Engagement Center (GEC) had compiled disinformation dossiers on Americans across the country as part of an effort to ‘censor’ free speech, including an individual who has since joined the Trump administration. 

‘We had an office in the Department of State whose job it was to censor Americans,’ Rubio said during the meeting. ‘And, by the way, I’m not going to say who it is. I’ll leave it up to them. There’s at least one person at this table today who had a dossier in that building of social media posts to identify them as purveyors of disinformation. We have these dossiers. We are going to be turning those over to these individuals.’ 

Vice President JD Vance interjected, asking, ‘Was it me or Elon (Musk)? We can follow up when the media is gone,’ which drew laughter from the Cabinet. 

‘But just think about that. The Department of State of the United States had set up an office to monitor the social media posts and commentary of American citizens, to identify them as vectors of disinformation,’ Rubio continued. ‘When we know that the best way to combat disinformation is freedom of speech and transparency.’

Though Rubio did not identify which Trump official the Biden administration kept a dossier on, Elon Musk has previously railed against the Global Engagement Center. 

‘The worst offender in US government censorship & media manipulation is an obscure agency called GEC,’ Musk posted to X in January 2023. That was more than a year before Musk endorsed Trump in the 2024 presidential race and became a fixture of the administration in his temporary role with the Department of Government Efficiency. 

‘They are a threat to our democracy,’ Musk added.

Former President Barack Obama established the Global Engagement Center in 2016 through an executive order aimed at coordinating counterterrorism messaging to foreign nations before it expanded its scope to also include countering foreign propaganda and disinformation, State Department documents show.

Conservatives have slammed the office as a political weapon to silence free speech, including Rubio in an April op-ed when he cited a 2020 GEC report claiming that a ‘Russian disinformation apparatus’ was behind public speculation that the coronavirus was an ‘engineered bioweapon’ or was created by ‘research conducted at the Wuhan institute.’ 

In the years following the pandemic, the Department of Energy under the Biden administration and former FBI Director Christopher Wray said evidence indicated that COVID-19 was the result of a lab leak, while the Trump administration’s CIA reported earlier in 2025 that a lab leak was the likely origin of the virus.

In 2024, lawmakers did not approve new funding for the office in the National Defense Authorization Act, and it was scheduled to terminate on Dec. 23, 2024. The Biden administration, however, shuffled staffers and rebranded the office. 

It became the Counter Foreign Information Manipulation and Interference Hub just days before Trump’s inauguration, the New York Post reported in January. 

Rubio announced in April that the office would officially shutter. 

‘I am announcing the closure of the State Department’s Counter Foreign Information Manipulation and Interference (R/FIMI), formerly known as the Global Engagement Center (GEC),’ Rubio said in an April 16 statement announcing the office’s closure. 

‘Under the previous administration, this office, which cost taxpayers more than $50 million per year, spent millions of dollars to actively silence and censor the voices of Americans they were supposed to be serving,’ he wrote. ‘This is antithetical to the very principles we should be upholding and inconceivable it was taking place in America. That ends today.’ 

Rubio has railed against the office in previous interviews and op-eds, including authoring an opinion piece for the Federalist in April touting that he was dismantling the ‘censorship-industrial complex’ that had gripped agencies such as the State Department. 

‘Over the past half-decade, bodies like GEC, crafted by our own governing ruling class, nearly destroyed America’s long free speech history,’ he wrote in the op-ed. ‘The enemies of speech had new lingo to justify their authoritarian impulse. It was ‘disinformation,’ allegedly pushed by nefarious foreign governments, that was the No. 1 threat to ‘our democracy.’ To protect ‘our democracy,’ this ‘disinformation’ had to be identified and stamped out.’ 

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

House Republicans have seemingly dropped plans for a new millionaire’s tax hike to pay for other priorities in President Donald Trump’s ‘big, beautiful bill.’

The Ways & Means Committee, the House’s tax-writing panel, released nearly 400 pages of legislation on Monday, setting the stage for permanently extending Trump’s 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA), as well as a host of other new Trump tax priorities.

That includes no taxes on tipped and overtime wages, both of which are accomplished via new tax deductions.

For Trump’s promise to cut taxes on seniors’ Social Security, the legislation temporarily increases the standard tax deduction that seniors are allowed to take, affecting the end of last year through the beginning of 2029.

It would also raise the debt limit by $4 trillion – something Trump specifically asked Republican lawmakers to deal with before the U.S. runs out of cash to pay its debts sometime this summer, risking a national credit default.

Notably absent from the sweeping piece of legislation is a proposal floated last week that would have established a new tax bracket for people making $2.5 million per year or more, taxing them at 39.6% – which was the top tax rate before TCJA lowered it to 37%. 

Conservative groups like Americans for Prosperity and the Heritage Foundation fiercely fought any notion of a tax increase on the wealthy.

It was also publicly opposed by a number of leading Republican figures like former Speaker Newt Gingrich and ex-Vice President Mike Pence, along with Pence’s interest group, Advancing American Freedom.

Several House GOP lawmakers told Fox News Digital last week they could not support a millionaire’s tax hike. 

Two people familiar with discussions told Fox News Digital on Monday that they did not expect it to be included before the bill advanced through committee on Tuesday.

But Republicans find other cost-savings in the legislation, including stripping tax-exempt status from ‘terrorist-supporting organizations’ and using artificial intelligence (AI) software to identify and root out improper Medicare payments.

The bill would also dramatically reduce tax breaks for professional sports team owners, a measure known as amortization, which allows those owners to write off a portion of their purchase price.

Republicans also target large private colleges and universities, including Ivy Leagues, with higher excise taxes, which are federal duties paid on net earnings of the schools’ investments.

That rate is currently 1.4%. But the legislation would bring it to as high as 21% for the largest schools, like Harvard University and Yale University – as Trump continues to battle Ivy League over their funding.

The Ways & Means Committee is expected to advance its portion of the legislation on Tuesday afternoon.

It’s just one portion of Trump’s so-called ‘one big, beautiful bill,’ which Republicans are working to pass via the budget reconciliation process.

By lowering the Senate’s threshold for passage from 60 votes to 51, it allows the party controlling Congress and the White House to entirely skirt the minority and pass sweeping pieces of legislation – provided they deal with the national debt, tax, or spending.

Trump wants Republicans to use it to pass his agenda on taxes, the border, immigration, energy, and defense.

Meanwhile, the U.S. is currently more than $36 trillion dollars in debt.

House Republicans have pledged to find between $1.5 trillion and $2 trillion in cost savings in other areas to offset the cost of Trump’s new priorities and put the U.S. on a better fiscal path.

The tax legislation also increases the maximum allowed child tax credit (CTC) from $2,000 to $2,500, and includes added tax relief for small business owners who file their company under individual income tax brackets.

It also includes a modest victory for blue state Republicans in increasing the state and local tax (SALT) deduction cap from $10,000 to $30,000 for both single filers and married couples. Married taxpayers filing separately get a cap of $15,000.

That maximum amount gets phased out if a person’s income exceeds $400,000, back down to $10,000 once a person’s income hits $500,000.

SALT deductions are primarily aimed at helping people in high-cost-of-living areas, particularly people in the suburbs of Democratic strongholds like New York and Los Angeles.

Republicans representing those areas have said increasing the $10,000 SALT deduction cap is critical to them remaining in office – and therefore to the GOP keeping the House majority.

Several SALT Caucus Republicans balked at a $30,000 cap last week, blasting it as insufficient. It’s not clear if they will hold up the final bill over it, however, with at least one member of their group, Rep. Nicole Malliotakis, R-N.Y., told Fox News Digital she could agree to the new threshold.

The Monday release comes after Republicans unveiled a portion of their tax plan over the weekend. Other details like SALT deduction caps and potential new tax brackets were still being worked out, however.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Miami Hurricanes linebacker Adarius Hayes has been released from the hospital after being involved in a two-car crash Saturday that killed three people.

Police say Hayes was driving a Dodge Durango when it collided with a Kia Soul at an intersection in Largo, Florida.

The driver of the Kia, along with two children in the vehicle, ages 10 and 4 were killed in the crash. Another passenger was hospitalized with serious injuries, police say.

Hayes, a linebacker who played sparingly for the Hurricanes as a true freshman in 2024, was taken to a hospital with what were determined to be non-life-threatening injuries.

‘We are deeply saddened to learn the crash resulted in three fatalities, as confirmed by Largo Police, and our thoughts and prayers are with the families and loved ones of those lost,’ the school said in a statement.

Largo Police said Sunday there were ‘no signs of impairment with either driver” and no criminal charges were pending.

Hayes played in 12 games for the Hurricanes as a true freshman in 2024, making four tackles and recording one interception. He was a four-star prospect out of Largo High School and was ranked as Rivals’ No. 3 linebacker in the 2024 national recruiting class.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Inter Miami co-owner David Beckham took exception to two Minnesota United social media posts after a blowout loss Saturday.

“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.

In another post, the phrases: “History over hype, culture over cash” were printed on a massive tifo hanging in the Minnesota supporters’ section. The words “hype” and “cash” were printed in a shade of light pink on the navy and light blue banner.

“Respect over everything,” Beckham commented with a pink heart, tagging Minnesota’s social media account.

The loss was the second regular-season match Inter Miami dropped this season. However, it was the fourth defeat in five games across all competitions for Inter Miami, which includes the first three-game losing streak the club has endured since Messi joined the club in July 2023. 

And the 14-9 goal differential during this stretch isn’t a positive for first-year Inter Miami coach Javier Mascherano, who is a former FC Barcelona teammate of Inter Miami’s core stars Messi, Luis Suarez, Sergio Busquets and Jordi Alba.

Inter Miami lost 2-0 at Vancouver April 24 in the first leg of the Concacaf Champions Cup semifinal; lost 4-3 at home April 27 to FC Dallas in a regular-season match; lost 3-1 to Vancouver in the second leg April 30; and won 4-1 at home May 3 against the New York Red Bulls before dropping the Minnesota game.

Inter Miami is fourth in MLS’ Eastern Conference with 21 points from six wins, two losses and three draws this season, trailing FC Cincinnati (25), Columbus Crew (25) and the Philadelphia Union (23).

Overall, Inter Miami ranks sixth in MLS – also behind Vancouver (27) and Minnesota (22) – in the Supporters’ Shield standings. The club won the Supporters’ Shield with a record 74 points in 2024 under former coach Tata Martino, who resigned after Inter Miami’s first-round playoff loss to the Atlanta United during the postseason.

Inter Miami arrived in Northern California on Sunday to prepare for the San Jose Earthquakes match Wednesday at 10:30 p.m. ET.

Inter Miami has five regular-season matches remaining in May before they play in the opening match of the FIFA Club World Cup against Al Ahly June 14 in Miami. 

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee is accusing Democrats of lying about President Donald Trump’s ‘big, beautiful bill.’

Chairman Brett Guthrie, R-Ky., told Fox News Digital on Monday he believed Democrats had been waging a ‘fear campaign to scare Americans’ ever since Republicans began discussions about the budget reconciliation process.

‘Now, Democrats are pedaling incorrect reports that include policies that aren’t even in the bill,’ Guthrie said. 

‘This bill refocuses Medicaid on mothers, children, people with disabilities, and the elderly – not illegal immigrants and capable adults who choose not to work.’

The Kentucky Republican was specifically referring to his panel’s portion of Trump’s bill, the text of which was released late on Sunday night.

The Energy and Commerce Committee, which has broad jurisdiction, including over federal health programs, telecommunications and energy, was tasked with finding at least $880 billion in spending cuts to pay for other priorities in the bill.

It’s the largest share of any of the 11 committees involved in the reconciliation process – some of which have been given additional funding to enact Trump’s priorities on tax cuts, defense, immigration and the border.

The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO), however, said on Monday the legislation would likely achieve even more savings than its $880 billion benchmark.

Guthrie himself told Republicans on a lawmaker-only call on Sunday night that the committee found ‘north of $900 billion’ in savings, a source told Fox News Digital.

Democrats immediately seized on the legislation as what they saw as a smoking gun of Republican plans to cut Medicaid.

But the details released on Sunday night appear to show House GOP leaders veered away from the much more severe cuts to the low-income healthcare program that some conservative lawmakers were pushing.

The legislation would put a new 80-hour-per-month work requirement on certain able-bodied adults receiving Medicaid, aged 19 through 64.

It would also put guardrails on states spending funds on their expanded Medicaid populations. The Affordable Care Act (ACA) allowed states to expand Medicaid coverage to adults who make up to 138% of the poverty level.

More specifically, states that provide Medicaid coverage to illegal immigrants could see their federal Medicaid reimbursement dollars diminished, putting more of that cost on the state itself.

The bill would also require states with expanded Medicaid populations to perform eligibility checks every six months to ensure the system is not being abused.

State Medicaid plans would be affected by a moratorium on any new state provider taxes, while freezing current rates where they are. State provider taxes are state-imposed fees on healthcare providers that help those states get more federal funding for Medicaid.

New Jersey Rep. Frank Pallone, the top Democrat on the committee, released a CBO projection requested by his own party that said at least 13.7 million people would lose health insurance based on a draft of Republicans’ Medicaid proposals.

‘Let’s be clear, Republican leadership released this bill under cover of night because they don’t want people to know their true intentions,’ Pallone said.

‘This is not trimming fat from around the edges, it’s cutting to the bone. The overwhelming majority of the savings in this bill will come from taking healthcare away from millions of Americans. Nowhere in the bill are they cutting ‘waste, fraud, and abuse’ – they’re cutting people’s healthcare and using that money to give tax breaks to billionaires.’

Guthrie dismissed the calculations in the Democrats’ press release.

‘It is reckless that my colleagues on the other side of the aisle claimed an artificially high number in alleged coverage loss just so they can fearmonger and score political points,’ he told Fox News Digital.

‘This reconciliation is a win for Americans in every part of the country, and it’s a shame Democrats are intentionally reflexively opposing commonsense policies to strengthen the program.’

Republicans are expected to advance the Energy and Commerce portion of the bill on Tuesday afternoon. If it passes through committee, it will be added to the final bill, which Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., hopes to pass the House by Memorial Day.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

WASHINGTON — They all took off the St. Louis Cardinals uniform for the final time a few years before he was born in 2001. Yet Victor Scott II keeps their legacies close at hand.

Scott, one of the major leagues’ fastest players, harkens back to an even more distant era, when artificial turf covered original Busch Stadium, contact hitters would shoot the gaps and run until tomorrow, and walks became almost automatic doubles.

“As I studied the game more,” Scott told USA TODAY Sports on Sunday, “past Cardinals – Willie McGee, Vince Coleman, Ozzie Smith, Lou Brock – those are all guys I started studying as I came up through the organization.

“Those guys put in a ton of work and left a remarkable path for guys with my playing style, to be able to come up through and learn about. Those guys left a remarkable impression on the organization.

“I only hope to leave that kind of impact, as well.”

Scott, the Cardinals’ 24-year-old center fielder, is helping lead a St. Louis retooling that is probably going better than the club anticipated to start the season: They’ve now won eight games in a row, putting them firmly above .500 at 22-19 and, as the season passes the one-quarter mark, well within contention, perched one game out of first place in the National League Central.

It’s an odd time: The club moved on from former MVP Paul Goldschmidt, tried in vain to trade slugging third baseman Nolan Arenado and, with each passing year, the powerful legacy left by two-time World Series champion Albert Pujols fades further away.

Yet as Scott begins to emerge, the Cardinals as a whole are coalescing. 

They did next to nothing during the offseason and their aggressive shopping of Arenado – who rejected a trade to the Houston Astros – signaled a drawing down, financially if not competitively.

Yet guess who’s just a game behind the front-running Brewers?

“We’re excited to come to the ballpark,” says Arenado, who slammed his fourth home run Sunday and whose .778 OPS is higher than each of his past two seasons. “I think that’s the first time in a couple years it feels like we’re coming to the ballpark ready to win a ballgame instead of coming to the ballpark hoping something good happens.

“It’s just a different vibe, for sure.”

It is improvement by increments at its finest – a large and versatile group of players each getting just a little bit better – some by leaps and bounds.  

Enter Scott.

‘He was dialed in’

Scott has paired his elite sprint speed – at 30 feet per second, he trails only Byron Buxton and Bobby Witt Jr. among big leaguers – with key mechanical and approach adjustments at the plate.

He’s batting .290 with a pair of home runs and a .357 on-base percentage, numbers that in a vacuum don’t scream impact. It is when they are paired with Scott’s speed that this hint of offensive viability can create explosive results for the Cardinals.

Scott’s now 11-for-12 in stolen bases and can be counted on for a more than occasional game-breaking feat, such as when he scored from first on a single in a win over Pittsburgh last week.

Yet those feats of footspeed are no good unless paired with a sound offensive approach. And so it’s moments like an at-bat on Saturday when Scott fell into an 0-2 hole, only to work the count full and rip a rally-keying double that are even more crucial.

They crystallize just how far Scott came from last season, when he broke camp with the club, then proceeded to bat .085 (5 for 59) before getting dispatched to the minors. He spent the final two months with the big club, faring a little better (.244 with a .278 OBP), but it was clear a different guy needed to show up to Jupiter, Fla. come winter.

Scott made it happen.

“He was dialed in coming into spring training,” says Cardinals manager Oliver Marmol. “He was on a mission and you could tell there was a difference in not just how he approached the game but his work.

“He was very detailed in his preparation and you knew it would carry over at some point – thankfully sooner than later.”

For Scott, it was simply a matter of learning that locking in comes just as much in November and January as it does when he steps in the batter’s box.

‘I didn’t want to repeat that’

Though it might not yet rival the big three of California, Texas and Florida, Georgia has become perhaps as efficient in churning out – and nurturing – big leaguers. And so when Scott returned home to Powder Springs after his first, failed attempt to stick in the major leagues, he had a readymade working group at his disposal.

Mornings were spent at Champfit Grindhouse, a facility where several big league speed demons also got their work in. Tampa Bay Rays rookie Chandler Simpson, veteran Taylor Trammell and Athletics slugger Lawrence Butler spent their mornings there under the staff’s tutelage.

Yet for Scott, it was time in the lab that was important: From 8 to 10 a.m. on weekdays he’d study film and learn his swing inside out, then jump in the cage and aim to implement more efficient moves to the ball or tweaks to his set-up.

His father would then accompany him to a nearby football or baseball field – “Anywhere to have room to run,” says Scott – for speed and defensive work.

“He’d hit balls off the tee, no matter the weather, because we knew we had to prepare for different elements. We trained for all those things,” he says.

If a taste of the big leagues taught Scott anything, it’s that comfort is perhaps as important as preparation. Scott reported to the Cardinals’ Jupiter, Florida, spring training site on Jan. 10, the better to acclimate.

In a spring training with several moving roster parts and roles up for grabs – with the man who didn’t move, Arenado, commanding much of the attention – Scott won the center field job.

“After the season ended last year, I knew I didn’t want to repeat that,” says Scott. “I wanted to learn as much as I could about the game and be able to implement those things in the offseason in my training.

“Just being very direct in what I was looking for out of my training. And coming into spring training I got there earlier, to become comfortable with the environment and work with the staff that was here to implement those things I wanted to work on.”

The results have been tough to miss. Defensively, his six outs above average are tied for fifth among all major leaguers and tied for second among center fielders.

At the plate, Scott has more than doubled his walk rate, to 10.1%, and increased his line drive percentage from 21.9 to 29.7.

“There’s a big difference in how he’s coming in and preparing for a game and how he’s making adjustments based on the results,” says Marmol. “The biggest difference with Victor compared to when he first got here and didn’t have success when he broke camp with us last year is he understands what the league is trying to do to him.

“And he’s actually answering back.”

The ceiling is the proof

It’s a little hard to tell what all this means for 2025. Sunday, veterans Arenado, Lars Nootbar and Willson Contreras homered in a 6-1 victory that capped a three-game sweep of the Washington Nationals.

 The Cardinals’ much-ballyhooed “organizational reset” is still ongoing. Longtime baseball operations head John Mozeliak is stepping aside after this season, making way for former Red Sox GM Chaim Bloom.

Yet the mix of versatile mid-career pieces, veteran stalwarts and emerging players such as Scott and shortstop Masyn Winn are melding. The pitching staff’s ERA, 19th in the majors, might portend unluckier days ahead.

For his part, Scott is getting his feet down in the foundation. He was teammates at West Virginia with infielder J.J. Wetherholt, whom the Cardinals selected seventh overall last season; Wetherholt, now at Class AA, is off to a strong start in his first 50 professional games, with a .403 career OBP.

He and Scott would represent a very athletic future core of the club, one that might recall, just a bit, those hit-and-run Cardinals of the 1980s, and those red-coated St. Louis hall of famers Scott calls to mind so easily.

And even those guys – Coleman stole 110 bases as a 23-year-old rookie – didn’t have the liberal base-stealing rules of today’s big leagues. Scott actually has a higher major league success rate on steals – 16 for 18, 89% – as he did at West Virginia (62 for 72, 86%).

“They help out my game a lot,” he says of MLB’s new rules. “So I appreciate them.”

And the Cardinals are gaining a greater appreciation for Scott, leading the way into a new era – even as this current one is going better than almost any imaginable reset.

“That’s the exciting part of the team – we don’t exactly know what the ceiling is,” says Nootbar.

Says Arenado: “We know what we have. We’re getting some guys playing really good baseball. It’s not something we didn’t expect; we just needed them to do it, right?

“We needed Victor Scott – he’s playing better than we thought.”

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The defending Super Bowl champion Philadelphia Eagles will officially kick off the 2025 NFL regular season on Sept. 4 at Lincoln Financial Field against the Dallas Cowboys.

The matchup for the traditional season-opening Thursday night game on NBC was revealed Monday morning on NBC’s TODAY show.

It’s the first time in a quarter century that the two NFC East rivals have played each other in Week 1. The full 2025 NFL schedule will be released on Wednesday.

The Eagles routed the Kansas City Chiefs 40-22 in New Orleans to win Super Bowl 59 and deny the Chiefs a third consecutive Super Bowl title.

Jalen Hurts, Saquon Barkley and Co. will likely open as the preseason favorite to win Super Bowl 60, which will be held at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, California.

The Cowboys, meanwhile, will be looking for their first Super Bowl championship in 30 years.

Dallas will have a much different look from last year’s team that finished with a 7-10 record. Head coach Mike McCarthy and the Cowboys parted ways at the conclusion of the season and replaced by offensive coordinator Brian Schottenheimer.

Last season, the Eagles rolled over the Cowboys in their two meetings by a combined score of 75-13. 

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

It may seem weird to ask about the legacy of someone like quarterback Derek Carr, who recently retired. Carr was never one of the elite pass throwers. He’s not one of those quarterbacks where words like ‘legacy’ are normally used. That word is normally reserved for someone like Joe Montana. Not Derek Carr.

Yet Carr does have a legacy. It’s the legacy of the luck of the draw. In Carr’s case, bad luck. Like so many other quarterbacks before him, you have to wonder what his career would have been like had he not played for such problematic franchises.

It’s likely Tom Brady would be Tom Brady in any of the multiverses, but what if Brady had played for six head coaches in his career as Carr did instead of one? Do we know he’d be Brady with that kind of constant upheaval? If he played for bad coaches? For organizations that were inept?

Many of the players who start at quarterback in the league are like Carr. They aren’t elite talents. They are the NFL’s workhorses. They don’t have the skill of Peyton Manning or the athleticism of John Elway. They’re the middle class. In many instances, they are also unlucky. That partly was Carr.

Carr’s story is universal in the NFL. It will be the story of quarterbacks from this past draft like Cam Ward, Shedeur Sanders or Jaxson Dart. Their success will depend on numerous circumstances beyond their control.

It’s easy to be critical of Carr’s career. I have been in the past. Never liked how he’d throw teammates under multiple busses. But on the field he’s been far better than people think despite some absolutely brutal circumstances. As ESPN notes, Carr played for a staggering six head coaches in his nine years with the Raiders. Two of those coaches were interim. There were five different playcallers. He also had a new coordinator in each of his two seasons with the Saints.

It’s difficult to overstate how unbelievably bad those circumstances are. Few quarterbacks would be able to prosper with that kind of turnover. Yet Carr somehow did. He made Pro Bowls and was as tough as they come. Carr would get annihilated behind some bad offensive lines with both the Raiders and the Saints. Yet he’d get hit and get right back up. He played in 15 or more games, ESPN says, in each of his first 10 NFL seasons.

Carr was genuinely a highly courageous player, especially with the Raiders.

Carr was far from perfect, of course. He would make some of the most inexplicable interceptions you’d ever see. Just head scratching stuff. Carr was once blasted by a former teammate who ranted that the quarterback was an inaccurate thrower.

Carr also had just one career playoff appearance (a loss in an AFC wild-card game in 2022 while with the Raiders). He was good, at times even top 10 at his position, but not good enough to put bad franchises on his back and win postseason contests.

For someone of his stature (an NFL quarterback) Carr could also be remarkable thin skinned. He’d go on blocking sprees on Twitter (now X) after even mild criticism. It became almost a running joke. There were two types of Twitter users: those blocked by Carr and those who would be. He blocked me years ago. I also just checked. I’m still blocked.

Carr was once asked why he puts so much effort into blocking people.

“You probably said something silly,” Carr replied. “You probably said something crazy. I mute and block people all the time. You maybe didn’t even say it about me, you maybe said it about one of my best friends, man. And so I’m sorry that it’s come to this. If you wanna go have lunch, we can have lunch, man. From six feet distance, with masks on. All the protocols. You know, I’m not tryin’ to get in trouble in the city again, you know?

“So we can do that. But I block, man. Some of you all probably got blocked on here, too. But we’re still friends. You know? I just don’t want to read the negativity, man. I don’t want someone to tweet it or come at. I don’t wanna see it. So it’s nothin’ personal, man. That’s social media. I’m still me in person, you know?”

It was an honest answer. I’ll give him that.

So what is Carr’s legacy? He was a solid player who made the best of his limited talent while playing on (mostly) bad teams. No, it’s not a Brady-type legacy.

But it’s not bad, either.

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