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The “crazy sports parents,” Skye Eddy says, have ruined the experience for everyone.

You know them. They live vicariously through their child. They have unrealistic expectations for him or her as an athlete. Or they are simply so unreasonable that there’s little we can do to help them understand us better.

“As a coach, I’ve had an irrational parent on my team, and it has made my season miserable,” says Eddy, a former USWNT hopeful turned sports parent advocate. “They’ve been taking way too much of my time and energy from the children by asking too many questions. And so as coaches, when we’ve been in those experiences, we say, ‘OK, well, we’re just gonna avoid all parents, because that was a really difficult season.’ ”

Even Eddy, a one-time defensive MVP of the NCAA women’s soccer Final Four for George Mason who later coached on the staff at the University of Richmond, found herself labeled as one of them.

She saw a veil come over the organization’s executive director when she wanted to chat. To him, she was “a crazy parent, complaining about my daughter … I’m like, ‘Oh no, no, no, I’m just here to help,” she says.

Then the door shut. It was the ignition that launched her passion project, soccerparenting.com, which today has about 43,000 members nationwide. It offers advice, training and encouragement for coaches and parents and youth sports leaders with a goal of helping us understand each other a little better.

From Eddy’s experience and research, the vast majority of parents are not “crazy,” but level-headed folks who are just stressed.

“Parenting is stressful these days, like society’s stressful,” says Eddy, 53, a mother of two kids put through the athletic wringer. “You add on a sports experience, and there is a lot.”

Eddy spoke with us about how our soccer parenting, and sports parenting, can improve when we take a more introspective look at ourselves. From the discussion, USA TODAY Sports came with ways we can soothe our stress around our kids’ games and improve the environment in which they are playing.

Your child’s sports journey is unique from your own. Maybe you need to care less about it.

Eddy, a former goalie, reached as high as U.S. women’s soccer player could go in the 1990s, barring making the national team. She played professionally in Italy. She pushes back at the notion that she was living out her own athletic experiences when her daughter, Cali, also became an elite soccer player in high school.

“I loved my athletic career,” Eddy says. “I just didn’t know what to say to her to help her, because our mindsets are so different.

“She was like, ‘I want to play D-I, I want to play D-1,’ and she was getting D-1 interest, but she wasn’t pursuing it. She would not pick up a phone and call the coach. She was struggling with her self-esteem, her confidence around herself as an athlete, and so she really needed coaches calling her. She needed to be built up like that.”

Eddy was seeing things from her own point of view, and what she would have done. In more recent years, she came across a term (“Decoupling”) that would have helped her.

It is associated with a romantic relationship, where two people pull back from their emotional connection but remain friends. It can also apply to teenagers growing into their own identities as athletes.

“It’s sort of like not feeling things so deeply, letting our children dictate the path and us really being OK with it,” she says. “That is the learning, the making the mistakes: Not calling the coach, not eating the right food, or going to the sleepover the night before and playing really badly.

“And I think that because as parents, it’s so easy to feel like the stakes are so high, we try to interject too much.”

But how do we redirect ourselves? The process can start with our actions on the sidelines, and often when our kids are very young.

Your sideline behavior may be relieving your stress but stunting your child’s progress

You may not admit you’re stressed at your kids’ games. But perhaps unintentionally, you are projecting it onto them.

You cheer loudly. You jump up and down on the bleachers. You call to them. You interfere.

“That’s stress,” Eddy says.

Soccer Parenting’s Sideline Project, which helps condition parents on game day, identifies three types of sideline behaviors:

We’re “supportive” when we sit in attentive silence, cheer after positive outcomes for our child and his or her teammates, and perhaps even a good play from the other team.

We’re “hostile” when we yell at referees, yell at our child, or even other players. (Keep reading.)

We may not realize when we’re being “distracting.” This means we’re offering specific instructions to a child. Go to the ball! Get rid of it! Run!

“Distracting behavior serves one primary purpose: To alleviate our stress as parents and coaches,” Eddy says in her Sideline Project online course. “Players should be hearing their teammates and reasonable information from their coach, not their parents.”

In the video, she demonstrates the Stroop Effect, named after an American psychologist who measured selective attention, processing speed and how interference affects performance.

She has an interactive exercise using colors to illustrate how your children feel when they are concentrating in a game and adults interrupt them. I hitched when I did it.

“There’s a lag,” Eddy says. “This moment of interruption. That is how your child feels when they are playing, concentrating on the technical skill and what their decision is going to be, and they hear your voice telling them to shoot or pass.’

Instead, a good youth coach won’t distract, but give a subtle cue – a nod, a whistle, a finger point or a closed fist – to trigger something they worked on in practice.

“Whatever it is that we’re screaming, we’re taking away their learning opportunity,” Eddy says.

‘Do you realize I’m 13?’ If we focus on being less distracting, the truly hostile parents stand out

Cali was a tough defender. So tough, apparently, that she once came home from road club soccer tournament and reported: “Another parent from the other team was sitting on the sideline, flicking me off. She just sat there, giving me the finger, staring right at me.

“I said, ‘You do realize I’m 13 and you’re a grown adult, right?” she told her mom.

Eddy estimates that 2% of the youth sports ecosystem, perhaps one parent per team, are these hostile ones. Many of us are merely distracting, a quality we can correct.

Report the abusers and get them thrown out. They are not part of our experience.

I like to sit with the opposing team’s fans when my sons are pitching in their baseball games. While I get a different video angle, I meet new people and feel and hear their emotions. Sometimes I just listen to them. It helps remind me why we are all in this.

‘We care so much about sport because of the connection,’ Eddy says.

We can communicate easier with coaches if both sides respect boundaries

Cali quit soccer for short time when she was eight. She was bored.  

Players were standing in lines. They did the same warmup at every practice. They weren’t even given adequate instruction, Eddy thought. It was labeled as an advanced development program.

When she asked other parents what they thought of the environment, they were fine with it.

“It struck me that until parents understand what a good learning environment looks like, to lead to player inspiration and joy and really giving kids a connection to sport, then we’re really going to be missing a big part of the solution when it comes to improving youth sports,” she says.

‘The last thing we want to do is be perceived as one of these irrational parents, so we’re not curious, we don’t ask questions, we don’t listen to our instincts, we don’t follow up when we when we probably should, because we don’t want to be perceived to care too much when there’s a big difference between being irrational and caring.’

When she tried to speak up and was rebuffed, she became a youth coach. And soccerparenting.com was born.

One of its foundational principles is to encourage coach and parent interaction, with clear and appropriate boundaries.

Some suggested parameters a coach can use:

The door is open to chat … When your kid comes home from practice in a bad mood or doesn’t want to go the next day; if he or she is having trouble playing a particular position; if you don’t fully understand the scoring system or rules of the sport.

The door is closed to chat … If you have a complaint about another player that doesn’t involve a safety issue; if you’re wondering why the coach made a tactical decision; if you don’t respect a coach’s time and want to have a long conversation after practice. (You can schedule one instead.)

“We see the correlation between parents having more understanding and the children’s experience getting better, and then therefore clubs and coaches having to get better,’ Eddy says.

Coach Steve: Three steps to dealing with a ‘bad’ coach

Be proactive, and intentional, about the way you handle stress

Even when we feel we have things under control during games, sometimes we don’t. Eddy laughs about once walking across the field with a plan in her head of what she would say to Cali. It didn’t involve the game. Instead, in the heat of the moment, she said: “You really need to work on your left foot.”

‘Where did that come from?’ she says. ‘I had zero intention of saying that. It just poured right out of me.’

When I posed a question on social media about how we can be better soccer parents, Palmer Neill, of Dallas, told me: “Basically, when you feel like doing something at a game or practice other than cheer or clap … just don’t do it. Let the coach be the coach and let the ref, ref. You don’t have (a) role. Life gets a lot easier when you realize this.’

But we can also recognize that sometimes we slip, too, and take precautions. When Neill barks to his 10-year-old son to get onsides, or about an opponent’s hand ball, he sits back in his chair and doesn’t get up. He tries to stay seated during the game.

‘It seems to give me one extra second to think before I sit up (or stand-up) and yell,’ he says.

Our own education and reflection, Eddy says, can relieve stress.

Know the rules (and recent modifications to them). Know your kid’s goals in sports. Be curious, not upset, when other kids have more skills than yours.

Perhaps it’s the Relative Age Effect, where young athletes born earliest among their age grouping are faster and stronger. Or that those kids move better because they play other sports or have more free play outside with friends and have better functional movement skills.

We can put our own sports paths into better context, too.

Coach Steve: MLS NEXT youth soccer rankings emphasize development over wins

Remember they are still kids, even when they’re creeping toward adulthood. There is satisfaction in watching who they are becoming.

What did you do when you were eight? Twelve? Sixteen?

When Eddy thinks about it, she liked to socialize at the local skating rink.

She only trained twice a week with her soccer team. On off days, she rode to a local park and kicked the ball into a piece of plywood against a fence. She would dive at the rebounds.

She used to wonder if Cali, who came back to soccer on her own terms, was getting enough reps on her own.

“What would I have been doing if I was in intense practices for an hour and a half four days a week, plus traveling to a lot in the games?” Eddy says. “Would I still have been doing that? Likely not.”

In today’s world, it feels like kids sports matter a lot more. Maybe they do when we have more opportunities to play in front of college coaches. Maybe they don’t when we play rec soccer, like Eddy’s son, Davis, did, and parents screamed when he missed a shot.

Davis, now a junior in college, had a better experience playing at a small high school.

“Having that outlet for sport was really important to his development, just as a person, and getting some space and, kind of way to blow off some steam as a student,” she says.

Cali decided to work at a sleepaway camp in Maine during the summer before her junior year, a crucial one for college recruiting. She became a Division III All-American and now works for the Columbus Crew.

“I remember thinking, ‘Oh my gosh, it’s so hard for you,’ but not saying that out loud,’ Eddy says. ‘That was a really important capstone to a really important thing in our life. Yet, she really missed a lot of opportunities, and there were consequences of that. We just need to make sure that it’s our child’s voice that we’re hearing.’

We are when we let them lead the way, to choose friends over sports when they wish, and to have those sleepovers. Well, maybe not the sleepovers.

Steve Borelli, aka Coach Steve, has been an editor and writer with USA TODAY since 1999. He spent 10 years coaching his two sons’ baseball and basketball teams. He and his wife, Colleen, are now sports parents for two high schoolers. His column is posted weekly. For his past columns, click here.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

With collegiate conference play entering the home stretch and high school playoffs underway or shortly commencing in most states, the window has narrowed for top prospects aiming to improve their position for July’s Major League Baseball draft.

This spring season has largely confirmed the feelings of evaluators on the large pool of players aiming to get chosen in the first round, although there has been significant movement within that group. Once again, this draft feels light on potential franchise players but is plenty deep on difference makers – and features a nearly surefire first-round troika from what could be considered the greatest high school team of all time.

With roughly a month of ball remaining for the majority of players and nearly two months out from the July 13 selection party in Atlanta, USA TODAY Sports throws some darts and takes aim at a mock draft for the first round:

1. Washington Nationals: Ethan Holliday, INF, Stillwater (Okla.) HS

It will be a fascinating home stretch for Holliday, the Nationals and a handful of pitchers bullying their way to the top of draft boards. Washington GM Mike Rizzo’s pitching-first chops will be challenged by the everyday excellence Holliday – bigger and with more projectable power than 2022 1/1 and older brother Jackson – can provide.

2. Los Angeles Angels: Jamie Arnold, LHP, Florida State

The Angels’ ever-dire need for pitching and GM Perry Minasian’s penchant for quick-to-the-majors guys intersects with Arnold, a 6-foot-1 lefty who has dominated ACC competition with a WHIP of less than 1.00 and just three homers allowed in 55 innings. Not your prototypical top five power pitcher, but a lefty who can pitch off his fastball and has the profile of a rotation anchor.

3. Seattle Mariners: Aiva Arquette, SS, Oregon State

This might already be too far for monster prep right-hander Seth Hernandez to fall, but the Mariners have made their bones drafting and promptly developing college pitchers. This time, they roll with Arquette, a 6-foot-5 shortstop with considerable power (16 homers, 1.173 OPS) and discipline. Recently inspired an opponent to play a four-man outfield against him.

4. Colorado Rockies: Seth Hernandez, RHP, Corona (Calif.) HS

Will Hernandez make history and become the first prep right-hander chosen No. 1 overall? It seems unlikely, but the Vanderbilt commit couldn’t have done much more to balloon his stock – and ensure he’s the first of the Corona lads to come off the board. Hernandez gave up one earned run in 42 ⅓ innings, struck out 88, and walked just three. The Rockies will wager that his 98 mph fastball and excellent changeup can tame Coors Field.

5. St. Louis Cardinals: Billy Carlson, SS, Corona (Calif.) HS

Make it back-to-back Panthers as the Cardinals add another impact middle infielder after stealing J.J. Wetherholt with the seventh overall pick last year. Carlson has enviable tools – he hits the mid-90s with his fastball on the mound – and banged out 30 hits this season, 11 going for extra bases. Signed with Tennessee but not likely to get to Knoxville.

6. Pittsburgh Pirates: Eli Willits, SS, Fort Cobb-Broxton (Okla.) HS

7. Miami Marlins: Kruz Schoolcraft, LHP, Sunset (Ore.) HS

The 2024 draft lasted eight picks before a high schooler was selected, an unprecedented run of collegians. This year, the teenagers take the power back. Schoolcraft just turned 18 last month and at 6-8, can touch 97 mph on his fastball. He’s an excellent two-way player but his projectability on the mound is obvious and the Marlins swing big here.

8. Toronto Blue Jays: Jace LaViolette, OF, Texas A&M

LaViolette started the year as 1A to Holliday, but a less than overwhelming SEC campaign has dampened the ceiling a bit. He’s hitting .276 with 48 strikeouts in 47 games – a 21.4% K rate – but has smacked 15 homers and reached base at a .437 clip. That’s all down from a sophomore year where he hit 29 homers, with six multi-homer games, and posted a .449 OBP. But the overall track record for the 6-foot-6 lefty slugger.

9. Cincinnati Reds: Liam Doyle, LHP, Tennessee

The parade of SEC talent continues. Doyle is second in the nation with 15.3 strikeouts per nine innings, thanks to an “invisiball” four-seamer that has helped him punch out 115 in 67 ⅔ innings. The former Coastal Carolina and Ole Miss hurler will need to refine his secondary offerings at the next level, but his fastball is a rare weapon, especially coming from the left hand.

10. Chicago White Sox: Kade Anderson, LHP, LSU

Just a tick behind Doyle statistically – he’s fourth in the nation with 14.5 strikeouts per nine – and could be joined at the hip with his SEC rival on draft day. Anderson is a draft-eligible sophomore – he turns 21 in July – whose polished repertoire could make him a fast mover, giving Chicago a solid pitching foundation on the heels of 2024 first-rounder Hagen Smith.

11. Athletics: Marek Houston, SS, Wake Forest

Make it back-to-back first-round Demon Deacons for the Athletics and Houston could join slugger Nick Kurtz (No. 4 overall in 2024) in Yolo County well before the club’s decampment to Las Vegas. Houston is terrific defensively and has grown stronger with the bat each season, finally pairing elite contact skills with some slug. A middle-infield combo of Houston and Rookie of the Year candidate Jacob Wilson is worth dreaming on.

12. Texas Rangers: Kyson Witherspoon, RHP, Oklahoma

He breaks up the parade of lefties with a fastball that touches 98 mph and sets the stage for his 100 punchouts in 72 innings this season. A 0.89 WHIP – seventh in the nation – against SEC hitters is startling.

13. San Francisco Giants: Daniel Pierce, SS, Mill Creek (Ga.) HS

Pierce, a Georgia commit, fits the profile of the new Giants regime – toolsy but also excelling at attention to detail and the so-called little things. He’s gradually added more slug to his game, although he’s slightly old – turning 19 in August – for his graduating class.

14. Tampa Bay Rays: JoJo Parker, SS, Purvis (Miss.) HS

Perhaps the Rays can draft twin brother Jacob, as well, to keep both away from Mississippi State. Parker brings a physical presence to the middle infield and, if Jacob is any indication, could blossom into further power as he ages.

15. Boston Red Sox: Kayson Cunningham, SS, Johnson (Texas) HS

His 5-9, 175-pound frame produces an excellent hitting profile, both from a bat-to-ball and surprising pop standpoint. Will figure in the middle of the diamond somewhere professionally.

16. Minnesota Twins: Tyler Bremner, RHP, UC Santa Barbara

Like LaViolette, Bremner was in the early spring convo as a top four pick but his first year as a full-time starter has been uneven, with a 4.08 ERA in 12 starts for the Big West Conference school. Still, with a fastball that touches the upper 90s, he’s a moldable talent in the proper pitching program.

17. Chicago Cubs: Wehiwa Aloy, SS, Arkansas

He’s looking remarkably comfortable in his second season in the SEC, ranking second with 17 home runs, fifth with a 1.182 OPS and fourth in average (.376).  At 6-foot-2, 200 pounds, he should stick on shortstop and fits the Cubs’ draft pattern of selecting polished collegians.

18. Arizona Diamondbacks: Steele Hall, SS, Hewitt-Trussville (Ala.) HS

Remarkably fast and incredibly young, Hall reclassified for 2025, his 5-foot-11, 165-pound frame offering plenty of room to grow, given he’ll stil be 17 on draft day. Hall has excellent bat-to-ball skills, and could rise higher in the first round if evaluators trust those skills will translate from three years of Alabama prep ball to the professional ranks.

19. Baltimore Orioles: Ethan Conrad, OF, Wake Forest

The sky is blue, rain is wet, an ACC or SEC lefty-swinging outfielder is headed to Baltimore. Enter Conrad. He underwent season-ending shoulder surgery after an outfield dive yet has been coming on strongly from his sophomore year at Marist to the Cape Cod League to a seven-homer, .372 21-game burst before he got hurt.

20. Milwaukee Brewers: Dean Curley, INF, Tennessee

Will need a little more polish, as the Volunteers moved him from shortstop to third base in his second year in Knoxville. But he has excellent strike zone control and at 6-4, the frame to add more power to an offensive profile that’s produced 11 homers and a .420 OBP.

21. Houston Astros: Sean Gamble, INF-OF, IMG (Fla.) Academy

An extremely versatile player with a strong baseball IQ, Gamble could eventually man one of three infield spots or take his skill set to center field. At 6-1 and 190 pounds, the Vanderbilt signee and Iowa native should add strength and power.

22. Atlanta Braves: Jack Bauer, LHP, Lincoln-Way East (Ill.) HS

Atlanta loves going the pitching route and Bauer gives them plenty to work with: His fastball topped out beyond 100 mph in this, his senior year. Though perhaps it’s destiny he’s chosen at … 24.

23. Kansas City Royals: Cam Cannarella, OF, Clemson

His game fits snugly into Kauffman Stadium, with gap-to-gap power, superior defensive ability and excellent speed; he’s 24-of-29 on steals this year and sports a .462 OBP.

24. Detroit Tigers: Xavier Neyens, INF, Mount Vernon (Wash.) HS

A 6-foot-4 frame that already offers elite power from the left side, and athleticism that produced 24 stolen bases in his team’s first 18 games. Oh, Neyens won’t be a speed merchant on the pro level, but if the team drafting him can cut down on his swing-and-miss, it should unlock significant thump from his bat.

25. San Diego Padres: Quentin Young, 3B/OF, Oaks Christian (Calif.) HS

The nephew of Dmitri and Delmon might be a reach here, but Young, an LSU commit, offers significant raw power and an outstanding arm. Perhaps a longer-term project but with significant upside.

26. Philadelphia Phillies: Luke Stevenson, C, North Carolina

The best catcher available falls here, though Stevenson’s throwing ability is his biggest carrying tool at the moment. Can join Cal Raleigh, Patrick Bailey and Ryan Jeffers as big league backstops grown in the Tar Heel State.

27. Cleveland Guardians: Max Belyeu, OF, Texas

A thumb fracture ended his regular season after 22 games, but Belyeu was putting together a strong junior season – hitting .358 with a 1.107 OPS when he went down at the end of March. But teams certainly saw enough of his hit tool – he produced 18 homers a year ago – and a return in the postseason for the No. 1 team in the land could produce some helium prior to draft day.

28. Kansas City Royals*: Riley Quick, RHP, Alabama

With two picks in six slots, the Royals can roll the dice on some volatility and Quick fills that bill. At 6-6, 255, he offers a massive frame to build upon but also not much of a track record after undergoing Tommy John surgery early in 2024. His results after a relatively short turnaround are fine, averaging more than a strikeout an inning in 11 starts this season.

29. Arizona Diamondbacks**: INF Brady Ebel, Corona (Calif.) HS

The last of the Corona kids will hit the 10 eastbound to Phoenix. Ebel, son of Dodgers third base coach Dino Ebel, has the baseball instincts to match the lineage and a 6-3, 190-pound frame that will likely translate to a future at the hot corner.

30. Baltimore Orioles**: OF Brendan Summerhill, Arizona

More of a “flat-out hit” kind of guy, Summerhill has just 11 homers in 84 games the past two seasons, yet is slashing .414/.504/.697 this year. His ability to play all three outfield positions and the promise of developing power are a nice profile.

31. Baltimore Orioles**: INF Gavin Kilen, Tennessee

A hamstring injury put him out of sight, though he’s never too far out of mind for evaluators. A former shortstop who profiles better defensively at second base, Kilen has nearly as many home runs (11) as strikeouts (14) in 162 plate appearances this season.

32. Milwaukee Brewers**: Gavin Fien, 3B, Great Oak (Calif.) HS

A Texas commit whose 6-3, 200-pound frame portends potentially greater power down the road, Fien has decent athleticism and offers defensive versatility at the next level.

*- Prospect promotion incentive pick

**-Free agent compensation pick

Note: The Dodgers, Mets and Yankees each received a 10-pick penalty on their first picks for exceeding the second threshold of the Competitive Balance Tax, meaning their first picks will occur in Competitive Balance Round A.

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Inter Milan advanced to the 2025 UEFA Champions League final, eliminating Barcelona with a 7-6 aggregate victory in one of the wildest ties in recent history.

Entering the second leg tied 3-3, Inter Milan scored twice in the first half to push their aggregate advantage to 5-3 by halftime. Barcelona responded quickly after the break, scoring two goals in seven minutes to even the tie again. In the 87th minute, Barcelona’s Raphinha scored the go-ahead goal and it looked like the Spanish giants would go through with a 6-5 aggregate win – but Francesco Acerbi tied it up in stoppage time to force an extra 30 minutes.

Davide Frattesi’s goal less than 10 minutes into extra time restored Milan’s lead and Inter managed to hold on for the 7-6 aggregate victory.

Inter Milan is in the Champions League final for the second time in three years after losing to Manchester City in 2023. The Italian club will face Arsenal or Paris Saint-Germain in the final in Munich on May 31.

Here’s how the match unfolded:

Inter Milan vs. Barcelona highlights

When is the Champions League final?

The 2025 Champions League final is scheduled for Saturday, May 31 at the Allianz Arena in Munich.

Davide Frattesi goal! Inter Milan on top in extra time

Nine minutes into extra time, Inter Milan’s Davide Frattesi scored past Szczęsny, giving his team 7-6 aggregate lead. It’s been a stunning turn of events at the San Siro.

Inter Milan goal! Acerbi scores to force extra time vs. Barcelona

Just when it looked like Barcelona had secured their place in the final with a go-ahead goal in 87th minute, defender Francesco Acerbi found the back of the net in the 93rd minute to make it 6-6 on aggregate and force the semifinal to extra time.

Raphina goal! Barcelona leads in final minutes

In the 87th minute, Barcelona’s Raphina got his own rebound and fired a rocket to beat Yann Sommer at his far post, completing the comeback by giving the Spanish giants a 6-5 aggregate lead.

Inter Milan led 2-0 in the first leg (3-3 draw) and 2-0 on Tuesday. coughing up three Barcelona goals in the second half to cough up the advantage they needed to just hold for 45 minutes.

Champions League extra time rules

Barcelona and Inter Milan are tied 5-5 on aggregate in the 80th minute, and if things stay all square after 90 minutes, the match goes into 30 minutes of extra-time with two 15-minute halves.

If the match is still tied after 120 minutes, a penalty shootout will decide which team advances to the Champions League final.

Dani Olmo goal! Inter Milan 5, Barcelona 5 on aggregate

This thrilling Champions League semifinal is all tied up again, with Barcelona’s Dani Olmo scoring a header in the 60th minute, erasing Inter Milan’s two-goal lead in just seven minutes. Olmo got on the end of an absolutely perfect cross from Gerard Martín, who had assisted on Barcelona’s first goal.

Eric Garcia goal! Barcelona cuts Milan lead to 5-4

Barcelona defender Eric Garcia was an unlikely goalscorer in the 54th minute, smashing home a volley to cut Inter Milan’s two-goal advantage in half. Minutes later, Inter Milan goalkeeper Yann Sommer made a stunning save on a Barcelona counterattack, denying Garcia a second goal with on an opportunity the right back should have converted.

Hakan Çalhanoglu goal! Inter Milan leads 5-3 on aggregate

After VAR awarded a penalty to Inter Milan right before halftime, Hakan Çalhanoglu stepped up and sent Barcelona goalkeeper the wrong way Wojciech Szczęsny with a perfect spot kick – giving the Italians a two-goal advantage to hold for the last 45 minutes.

Lautaro Martínez goal! Inter Milan up 1-0 (4-3 on aggregate)

With a nice assist from Denzel Dumfries, Inter’s Lautaro Martínez scored the game’s opening goal in the 21st minute.

Champions League semifinal underway in Milan

Entering the second leg tied 3-3 on aggregate, Barcelona and Inter Milan have gotten started at the San Siro, with 90 minutes (plus extra time) separating one of the teams from the 2025 Champions League final.

Barcelona lineup today vs. Inter Milan: Starting 11

Barcelona: Szczęsny; Martin, Iñigo, Cubarsí, Eric; Pedri, De Jong, Olmo; Raphinha, Ferran, Lamine.

Inter Milan lineup vs. Barcelona tonight: Starting 11

Inter Milan: Sommer; Bisseck, Acerbi, Bastoni; Dumfries, Barella, Çalhanoğlu, Mkhitaryan, Dimarco; L. Martínez, Thuram

Inter Milan vs. Barcelona first leg highlights

Real Madrid vs. Barcelona: El Clasico coming up

Real Madrid coach Carlo Ancelotti promised his team will put up a good fight against LaLiga leaders Barcelona at the ‘El Clasico’ next Sunday, as the defending champions look to reduce a four-point gap with their arch-rivals.

Defending champions Real secured a 3-2 win over Celta Vigo on Sunday to keep their title dream alive going into the last four matches in the campaign. Barcelona are unbeaten in their last 15 league games, and beat Real 3-2 after extra time to win the Copa del Rey last weekend.

‘We’re going to prepare well, we’re going to put up a good fight,’ Ancelotti said in a post-match press conference. ‘It’s not going to be decisive but it’s almost there.’

– Reuters

Lamine Yamal causes headaches for Inter Milan

Inter Milan’s Alessandro Bastoni called on his team to pull out all the stops in their bid to contain Barcelona’s Lamine Yamal. The prodigious 17-year-old Yamal wowed the crowd at Montjuic with a sublime goal and a bold performance, helping Barcelona twice fight back to secure a gripping 3-3 draw in the first leg.

Bastoni, the 25-year-old centre back, who faced Yamal during last year’s European Championship where Spain beat Italy 1-0, expressed admiration for the teenager’s rapid progression.

‘I had already faced him with Spain and he was not yet at this level,’ Bastoni told a press conference on Monday. ‘I was impressed by the level he reached, for his age and ability to create incredible things on the pitch, I think he is among the best in the world right now. We’ll have to double, maybe triple (mark) him like we did at times in the first leg, but without exaggerating, otherwise we would create too many spaces. Barcelona is not just Yamal.’

– Reuters

Robert Lewandowski injury update: Barca on bench vs. Inter Milan

Barcelona striker Robert Lewandowski has been declared fit to return from a hamstring injury but is set to start on the bench in their Champions League semi-final second leg at Inter Milan on Tuesday, manager Hansi Flick confirmed.

The 36-year-old Polish striker, who has netted 40 goals for Barcelona in all competitions this season, had been sidelined for his club’s last four games.

After sustaining the injury during Barca’s 4-3 victory against Celta Vigo on April 19, he missed their Copa del Rey final victory over rivals Real Madrid and the first leg of the Champions League semi against Inter.

– Reuters

Champions League schedule

Semifinals

First leg:

PSG 1, Arsenal 0
Barcelona 3, Inter Milan 3

Second leg:

Inter Milan vs. Barcelona, 3 p.m. ET on Tuesday, May 6
PSG vs. Arsenal, 3 p.m. on Wednesday, March 7

When is the Champions League final?

May 31 in Munich, Germany

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Secretary of State Marco Rubio is planning to merge the responsibilities of the Palestinian Affairs Office into the U.S. Embassy in Jerusalem in an effort to continue a diplomatic mission in Israel’s capital that was put in place by President Donald Trump during his first term in office.

State Department spokesperson Tammy Bruce announced Rubio’s decision during a press briefing Tuesday.

‘Secretary Rubio has decided to merge the responsibilities of the office of the Palestinian Affairs Office fully into other sections of the United States Embassy in Jerusalem,’ Bruce said. ‘This decision will restore the first Trump-term framework of a unified U.S. diplomatic mission in Israel’s capital that reports to the U.S. ambassador to Israel.’

She added that U.S. Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee will begin to make the necessary changes to implement the merger over the coming weeks.

‘The United States remains committed to its historic relationship with Israel, bolstering Israel’s security and securing peace to create a better life for the entire region,’ Bruce said.

The Biden administration established the U.S. Office of Palestinian Affairs in 2022 after reversing Trump’s closure of the consulate to the Palestinians in Jerusalem during his first administration.

Biden’s move was viewed by some as rewarding the Palestinian leadership after a wave of terrorism during which two Palestinians wielding an ax and knife murdered three Israelis in the town of Elad in May 2022.

The first Trump administration helped to negotiate groundbreaking agreements, called the Abraham Accords, in 2020 to normalize diplomatic relations between Israel and the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Sudan and Morocco.

The Israeli government vehemently opposed a reopening of the Palestinian consulate in Jerusalem because it would undercut the holy city as the undivided capital of Israel.

The U.S. Jerusalem Embassy Act of 1995 recognizes Jerusalem as the capital of Israel and calls for it to remain an undivided city. 

Trump, in 2017, recognized Jerusalem as Israel’s capital in 2017 and moved the U.S. Embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem the following year.

Fox News’ Benjamin Weinthal contributed to this report.

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Here we are, strolling down the road of accountability, and as fate would have it, hypocrisy comes slithering by. 

Michigan and Sherrone Moore. Florida and Santa Ono. 

I know this is going to shock you (that’s sarcasm), but they’re all connected in a little thing called win at all cost. 

Follow along and connect the sordid dots, everyone. A microcosm of the chaotic, unlawful state of college football.

Ready? Let’s do this. 

First up, we have Moore, Michigan’s second-year coach who is on the verge of serving his second suspension from the NCAA for cheating — this time, for his role in the Connor Stalions advanced scouting scheme during the 2023 season.

You remember 2023? Michigan’s national championship season, the Wolverines forging their way through an unbeaten season of big wins and … NCAA violations. 

Cheating, to be specific. 

Caught and exposed in the middle of the 2023 season, mere weeks after Michigan – with the NCAA sheriff bearing down – self-imposed a three-game suspension of coach Jim Harbaugh and a one-game suspension of Moore (Harbaugh’s offensive coordinator) for rules violations during the pandemic season of 2020.

I swear I’m not making this up. 

But instead of taking the high road in 2023 and realizing the enormity of a second NCAA investigation of the football program in less than four years, Michigan doubled down.

Hot team, championship run. Nothing is stopping this train.

This is where Ono, Michigan’s dynamic, sports-friendly president, enters the chat. Instead of suspending Harbaugh for the remainder of the season after Stalions’ scheme was uncovered, Ono led the university – I can’t believe I’m writing this – in an unprecedented public fight with the NCAA and Big Ten.

A fight so blatantly obnoxious, the Big Ten couldn’t back down — for fear of a mutiny among its members. A fight so ludicrous in its lack of merit, new Big Ten commissioner Tony Petitti (not even a year on the job) had to do what Michigan wouldn’t do and what the NCAA takes forever to do. 

He suspended Harbaugh for three games, two of which were critical November rivalries against Penn State and Ohio State. But Michigan kept winning (under Moore as the interim coach), and eventually rolled to a national championship — because, of course, two-time defending national champion Georgia somehow fell out of the College Football Playoff poll after losing by three points in a championship game (but that’s another story for another time).

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After the season, Harbaugh left for the NFL’s Los Angeles Chargers, and days later, Ono hired Moore – a then two-time NCAA cheater – to lead the storied program that holds itself higher than all others because We’re Michigan, And You’re Not.

Now the bill is coming due, and Michigan has decided to avoid fighting this time around — because, you know, no national title on the line. Now the university will self-impose a two-game suspension on Moore for his part in Stalions’ scheme. 

And by part, I mean reportedly deleting 52 text messages between he and Stalions the day the scheme was exposed. On that alone, Moore shouldn’t have been hired by Ono. 

But this is the same president who saw the overwhelming evidence in the Stalions scheme, and didn’t suspend Harbaugh. Who knew that the megalomaniacal Harbaugh would never let anything infect his program without his knowledge, and backed him, anyway.

Who knew that in 2020, Harbaugh was on a Big Ten coaches conference call and accused Ohio State of illegal contact when the league had shut down football operations. The very allegation the NCAA later slapped on Michigan, and then proved — despite Harbaugh refusing to cooperate with NCAA investigators.

Those allegations led Michigan to self-impose the first three-game suspension of Harbaugh in 2023 (he was suspended for a total of six games), and Moore and another assistant coach for one game. Knowing all of this, Ono decided to later hire Moore as head coach of holier than thou Michigan.

A year later, the school is self-imposing a two-game suspension on Moore for part in the Stalions scheme. 

Now you may be wondering where Florida fits in with all of this Michigan madness. Well, we’re just getting started. 

So after Ono’s unique handling of Harbaugh and Moore, and of the 2023 championship season, he moved out of the spotlight of sorts when Michigan’s football team did, too, in 2024. But just last weekend, the search committee for a new president at Florida came up with one — and only one — finalist for the job.

Santa Ono. 

The same Florida that hasn’t won a conference championship in football since 2008, and hasn’t played in the BCS national championship game or the CFP since that 2008 national championship season. Sound familiar, diehard Michigan fans?

The same Florida that has gone all-in with embattled coach Billy Napier, whose struggles on the field have overshadowed a significant issue off it: Napier is named in a multimillion dollar breach of contract NIL lawsuit by former signee Jaden Rashada.

Attorneys for Napier and two others named in the suit asked last summer that the suit be thrown out, and the presiding judge denied the motion and said the case would continue ― possibly into this fall. The very time when Florida, if quarterback DJ Lagway remains healthy, could be making a surprising run for the College Football Playoff.

It’s not that difficult to connect the irony dots here.

If Ono can navigate the NCAA and Big Ten, and steer the Big Blue ship home to its first national title since 1997, surely he can help the Gators return to the elite for the first time in 17 years. Or at least lead them from nearly two lost decades of football.

And by lead, I mean win at all cost. 

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

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The two-time Olympic gold medalist and all-time leader in World Cup wins in Alpine skiing is now part of the ownership group for the NWSL’s expansion team in Denver. The team, still to be named, begins play next season.

‘I’m beyond thrilled to join the ownership group of Denver NWSL and support something so meaningful in the community I call home,” Shiffrin, who is from Vail, Colorado, said in a statement. “The sport culture in Colorado is rich and deep, and — most notably — the growth of women’s sports is one of the most exciting movements in our culture today.’

The Denver team is primarily owned by Rob Cohen. It has already announced plans for its own stadium, the second built specifically for a women’s team after the Kansas City Current’s CPKC Stadium. The team is also building a training facility in suburban Centennial, where it will play games until the permanent stadium is done.

Shiffrin is the latest high-profile athlete to invest in an NWSL team. Tennis players Naomi Osaka and Ons Jabeur are part-owners in the Carolina Courage, while Kevin Durant, Eli Manning and Sue Bird are investors in Gotham FC.

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The Cleveland Browns rookie quarterback will sport jersey No. 12, the team announced Tuesday.

The number, of course, was famously worn by future Hall of Fame quarterback Tom Brady, who served as a mentor to Sanders. The New England Patriots retired Brady’s jersey number when he was enshrined into the Patriots Hall of Fame in 2024.

In Cleveland, the jersey number was open for the taking. Former Browns players who’ve donned No. 12 include quarterbacks Vinny Testaverde, Colt McCoy, Jeff Driskel and wide receiver Josh Gordon.

Browns rookie third-round pick quarterback Dillon Gabriel will wear No. 5.

Sanders fell to the fifth round of the 2025 NFL Draft. His fall became the story of this year’s draft. USA TODAY Sports explored why Sanders dropped to a day-three pick.

The Colorado product is set to compete with Joe Flacco, Kenny Pickett and Gabriel for the Browns starting quarterback job. Deshaun Watson, who started seven games behind center last year, is expected to miss the entire 2025 season due to an Achilles injury.

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The Oklahoma City Thunder’s remarkable rise to the top of the NBA standings helped define the past two regular seasons, and the way in which the franchise returned to prominence in recent years was formally acknowledged Tuesday.

But the Thunder have been even better this season. They had the NBA’s best record (68-14) and set a league record for scoring differential. Presti and Oklahoma City added free agent center Isaiah Hartenstein season and traded former top-10 pick Josh Giddey for defensive ace Alex Caruso last offseason to better support MVP candidate Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and homegrown draft picks like Chet Holmgren, Jalen Williams and Cason Wallace.

The organization is also still armed with at least seven first-round picks over the next three years thanks to Presti’s creative deal-making over the years.

This award for Presti was revealed, coincidentally, about 12 hours after the Thunder fell victim to a late shot by Aaron Gordon in a Game 1 loss to start their NBA playoffs series against the Denver Nuggets Monday. Though the Thunder suddenly face a 1-0 series deficit and an uphill battle in the Western Conference semifinals, they’re still the favorite win the 2025 NBA championship.

Presti, who was named Thunder general manager in 2007, received the most first-place votes (10) in executive of the year voting and appeared on 22 of the 30 overall ballots to finish with the most points (74). Each candidate received five points for a first-place vote, three points for a second-place vote and one point for a third-place vote. The voting panel consisted of one executive from each NBA team.

Cleveland Cavaliers President of Basketball Operations Koby Altman was the runner-up in voting with six first-place votes and 52 points overall. Detroit Pistons President of Basketball Operations Trajan Langdon also got six first-place votes and finished in third place overall.

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The 2025 NBA playoffs continue with an Eastern Conference semifinals showdown between the Boston Celtics and the New York Knicks. The Celtics’ fate hangs in the balance as they await the status of their key player, Kristaps Porzingis, whose potential absence could significantly alter the series.

Porzingis played for 13 minutes in the 108-105 overtime loss to the Knicks in Game 1, recording four rebounds and one assist. However, his absence at the start of the second half was noticeable, and his return to the locker room without rejoining the game has raised concerns about his availability for Game 2.

Porzingis status remains uncertain for Game 2 on Wednesday, as he is currently listed as questionable due to an illness, which has been disclosed as not being COVID-related.

NBA injury report: Kristaps Porzingis for Game 2

Porzingis is listed as doubtful for Game 2 against the New York Knicks on Tuesday. Porzingis is considered a game-time decision after exciting Game 1.

Who will replace Kristaps Porzingis in starting lineup?

In Game 1 against the New York Knicks, veteran Al Horford came in to replace Porzingis in the second half.

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Chaos has enveloped the NBA playoffs, striking the top seeds in stunning fashion.

The second-seeded Houston Rockets were eliminated in the first round, the top-seeded Cleveland Cavaliers lost Game 1 of their Eastern Conference semifinals series against the Indiana Pacers, and the second-seeded Boston Celtics lost Game 1 of their Eastern Conference semifinals series against the New York Knicks.

Late Monday, the fourth-seeded Denver Nuggets, behind a massive offensive performance from All-Star center Nikola Jokic, defeated the top-seeded Oklahoma City Thunder 121-119 in Game 1 of their Western Conference semifinals series.

The Nuggets finished the game on a 19-6 run, capped by Aaron Gordon’s game-winning 3-pointer with 3.6 seconds left.

Game 2 is Wednesday in Oklahoma City (9:30 p.m. ET, TNT).

Nuggets vs. Thunder, Game 2

Here are winners and losers from Game 1:

Nuggets vs. Thunder Game 1 winners

Nikola Jokic

The Nuggets’ three-time MVP Nikola Jokic, who is again a finalist for the award, had 42 points, 22 rebounds and six assists. He scored 18 points in the fourth quarter and was 15-for-29 from the field and 10-for-13 on free throws.

It was the fifth time he has scored at least 40 points in a playoff game and the first time he has had a 40-20 playoff game.

If he plays like that for the entire series, and he has proven he can, the Nuggets, who won the title two seasons ago, have a shot at returning to the conference finals.

Denver’s balanced scoring attack

Jamal Murray had 21 points, six rebounds and six assists, Gordon generated 22 points and 14 rebounds, Christian Braun delivered 11 points and 13 rebounds and Russell Westbrook had 18 points.

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander

MVPs aren’t decided in the playoffs. Votes were due before the playoffs began. However, Oklahoma City guard Shai-Gilgeous Alexnder once again showed why he’s a finalist for the award. He had 33 points (12-for-26 shooting), 10 rebounds and eight assists.

Aaron Gordon game-winners

Gordon had a game-winning dunk at the buzzer in Denver’s Game 4 victory against the Los Angeles Clippers and then added a game-winning 3 in Game 1 against Oklahoma City.

Alex Caruso

Caruso, the Thunder reserve, had 20 points, six assists, five steals and two blocks, and Oklahoma City outscored Denver by 13 points in Caruso’s 26 minutes on the court. He was 7-for-12 from the field, including 5-for-9 on 3-pointers. There’s a reason the Thunder acquired Caruso in the offseason from Chicago for Josh Giddey, and the Thunder signed him to a four-year, $81 million extension in December.

Nuggets vs. Thunder Game 1 losers

Oklahoma City’s fouling and clock management

With the Thunder leading 117-114 late in the fourth quarter, they played the foul game in an attempt to prevent Denver from tying the score with a 3-pointer.

The Thunder fouled Jokic with 12.9 seconds left and Gordon with 10.7 seconds left. They made all four free throws, and with Oklahoma City ahead 119-118, Thunder big man Chet Holmgren missed two free throws with 9.5 seconds remaining, setting up Gordon’s game-winner.

Ultimately, the decision extended the game and allowed Denver to stay within a possession of taking the lead. Thunder coach Mark Daigneault defended the strategy, saying it’s worked for Oklahoma City previously.

3-point shooting

Early in the second quarter, Denver and Oklahoma City were a combined 3-for-23 on 3-pointers, and Denver ended up 2-for-15 on 3s in the first half. Both teams found more success from that range in the second half but were still a combined 25-for-75 on 3s.

Rest

Having swept Memphis and not played since April 25, the Thunder faced the rest vs. rust question. Well, the Thunder showed rust especially down the stretch of a game in which they led by 11 points with 4:31 left.

Denver’s minutes

Two days after playing in a Game 7, four Nuggets players logged at least 39 minutes, including a game-high 44 minutes by Murray and 42 minutes by Jokic.

We will see how the minutes weigh on Denver throughout the series, but to win this game showed the Nuggets are more than ready for the challenge.

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