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Moore will miss Week 3-4 of the college football season against Central Michigan and Nebraska and will be unable to participate in team activities in the week’s leadup to the game. The suspension being for Weeks 3 and 4 allows him to coach the Wolverines’ season opener against New Mexico, before traveling for one of the top nonconference matchups of 2025 when they face Oklahoma on the road in Week 2.

The second-year head coach will also receive additional recruiting penalties, according to the report. The NCAA could still issue more punishments, however, and a final resolution of the matter is expected before the end of the season.

Moore was the offensive coordinator at Michigan under then-head coach Jim Harbaugh in 2023 when allegations of illegal scouting led by Connor Stalions arose. Stalions, who’s no longer with the program and then served in a support staff role, received video from friends and family of opponents’ signs during games.

Moore allegedly deleted 52 text messages with Stalions at the time of the uncovering, which notes his tie to the sign-stealing scandal. In a 2024 Notice of Allegations from the NCAA, Michigan received 11 violations, six of those being the highest levied by the NCAA at Level 1.

ESPN reported the texts were discovered from ‘device imaging’ and Moore subsequently ‘produced them to enforcement staff.’ He is accused of a Level 2 violation, according to the report.

Harbaugh served a three-game suspension in 2023, the year Michigan won the national championship, as part of the sign-steal scandal. He was able to coach in practice before the games, however, whereas Moore can’t.

Moore served a one-game suspension as part of separate NCAA violations in Michigan’s 2023 season opener against East Carolina. He also served as interim head coach in 2023 during Harbaugh’s suspension, leading the Wolverines to wins over Penn State, Maryland and Ohio State.

Moore will still have the chance to coach against his alma mater, Oklahoma, in Norman next season, despite the suspension.

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More often than not, a surprise team will seduce and then disappoint fans the next season, its breakout success something of a mirage.

Yet what the Detroit Tigers are building seems very, very real.

The Tigers aren’t just building upon their surprise playoff spot, wild-card upset and trip to the Division Series. No, that would be selling the best team in the American League a little too short. Detroit is off to a 22-13 start, best in the AL, and their plus-63 run differential is tops in the major leagues.

With that, they’ve zoomed to fourth in USA TODAY Sports’ power rankings, likely their highest position since a couple fellows named Max and Justin were pitching for them.

This prosperity is built on some compelling turnarounds: Former No. 1 overall picks Casey Mize and Spencer Torkelson are playing up to their potential, with Mize – No. 1 overall in 2018 – posting a 2.70 ERA and winning five of his six starts. Torkelson, their 1/1 in 2020, has already equaled his 10-homer output from 2024 and has an .889 OPS.

Meanwhile, veteran Javy Baez, whose $140 million contract looked like dead weight, is having a fine rebirth as a center fielder, batting .309 with an .829 OPS and equaling defensive stalwarts like Byron Buxton and Tyrone Taylor with three outs above average in center.

While the expected three-team race in the AL Central looks like a reality, the Tigers’ pace-setting creates an early expectation that for the second consecutive year, multiple playoff berths will come out of the once-moribund division.

A look at our updated rankings:

1. Los Angeles Dodgers (-)

First career win for Rōki Sasaki, who’s suddenly their No. 2 starter.

2. New York Mets (-)

Injuries starting to accrue: A.J. Minter out several months, Jesse Winker hurts an oblique.

3. San Diego Padres (+2)

On a five-game streak just in time for Jackson Merrill’s return.

4. Detroit Tigers (+3)

Will take AL’s best record into Denver for three against historically bad Rockies.

5. San Francisco Giants (-2)

Wilmer Flores’ 31 RBI tied for second in NL.

6. Chicago Cubs (-)

They’ve scored 25 more runs than any other team, which is kinda the point of this thing.

7. New York Yankees (-3)

Carlos Carrasco and Will Warren went from rotation depth to regulars, with predictable results.

8. Seattle Mariners (+2)

Can this suddenly productive offense camouflage loss of Logan Gilbert to flexor strain?

9. Philadelphia Phillies (-)

Ranger Suárez gives up seven earned runs in season debut.

10. Cleveland Guardians (+2)

Only club in our top 10 with a negative run differential.

11. Boston Red Sox (-3)

Just brutal to lose Triston Casas for the season with gruesome patella injury.

12. Cincinnati Reds (+1)

Reliever Alexis Díaz, a 2023 All-Star, sent to minor leagues.

13. Houston Astros (+1)

Lance McCullers Jr., making first start since 2022 World Series, ‘pretty proud of myself getting back.’

14. Texas Rangers (-3)

Swoon results in firing of ‘offensive coordinator’ Donnie Ecker. Is Mike McCarthy hiring?

15. Arizona Diamondbacks (-)

Eesh: Corbin Burnes to miss a start with shoulder inflammation.

16. Kansas City Royals (+3)

Hit two weeks’ worth of home runs in one afternoon.

17. Tampa Bay Rays (-)

Until further notice, this is a Chandler Simpson appreciation space.

18. Toronto Blue Jays (-2)

Have hit the fewest home runs (23) in majors.

19. Milwaukee Brewers (-1)

Will this be remembered as the weekend the Cubs left them behind for good?

20. Atlanta Braves (-)

Have lost 11 of 16 against clubs with winning records.

21. Washington Nationals (-)

James Wood pushes OPS to .926.

22. St. Louis Cardinals (-)

Alec Burleson hits first home run since Aug. 17.

23. Baltimore Orioles (-)

Kyle Gibson giving up nearly a home run per inning through two starts.

24. Athletics (+1)

They return to Yolo County three games over .500 after 4-2 trip.

25. Minnesota Twins (+1)

Won their second series at Fenway Park since 2014.

26. Los Angeles Angels (-2)

That’s 15 losses in 19 games and it’s once again time to prepare for the draft and trade deadline.

27. Miami Marlins (-)

Kyle Stowers’ .928 OPS trails only Tucker (.976), Schwarber (.955) in OPS by Kyles.

28. Pittsburgh Pirates (-)

A grim start from Paul Skenes, followed by a workmanlike sweep by the Padres.

29. Chicago White Sox (-)

They’ve now won two whole series this year after taking a pair from Houston.

30. Colorado Rockies (-)

Current pace: 127 losses, with Tigers coming to town.

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In case you missed it during all of the hoopla that was last weekend’s draft, the NFL announced that the 2025 schedule would be released on May 14.

Soon, you’ll know your weekly appointment viewing of ‘Thursday Night Football’ games, ‘Sunday Night Football’ games, ‘Monday Night Football’ games and good old-fashioned Sunday afternoon games.

Here’s what we know …

As defending Super Bowl champions, the Philadelphia Eagles will host the NFL Kickoff Game on Thursday, Sept. 4.
There will be three games on Thanksgiving Day. As per tradition, the Detroit Lions and Dallas Cowboys will host games.
There will be one game on Black Friday.
There will be three games on Christmas Day. Two will air on Netflix, and the night game on Amazon.
There will be a record seven International Series games: Three in London (the Cleveland Browns, Jacksonville Jaguars and New York Jets are the designated home teams), one game in Berlin (the Indianapolis Colts are the designated home team), one game in São Paulo, Brazil (the Los Angeles Chargers are the designated home team), one game in Madrid, Spain (the Miami Dolphins are the designated home team) and one game in Dublin, Ireland (the Pittsburgh Steelers are the designated home team).
The playoffs will start on Saturday, Jan. 10, 2026.
Super Bowl 60 will be held on Sunday, Feb. 8, 2026 at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, California.

The ideal opponent for the Eagles’ season-opening game is a popular topic of discussion at this time of year, and Michael Middlehurst-Schwartz ranked the candidates:

5. Denver Broncos: Denver showed in last season’s wild-card flameout against the Buffalo Bills that it’s not ready to run with the league’s top contenders just yet.

2. Los Angeles Rams: A rematch of last season’s NFC divisional playoff tilt feels like the first legitimate contender for the opener slot on this list.

1. Detroit Lions: Pitting these teams against one another to kick off 2025 would be a fitting way to show fans what they missed when the Lions were knocked out in the divisional round last season.

NFL news, notes and analysis

2027 NFL Draft to D.C.: A formal announcement is expected Monday.

Power rankings: How did the draft impact the league’s hierarchy? Take a look!

Phil Simms won’t let Abdul Carter wear No. 11: The Giants’ Super Bowl-winning quarterback was ‘outvoted by family,’ meaning the team’s first-round pick now has been rebuffed by two team legends.

Commanders announce deal for new stadium in DC: The team formally announced its intentions to build a new stadium on the site of old RFK Stadium in the District of Columbia.

Jordan Travis retires due to leg injury: Travis’ decision comes after he spent his rookie season recovering from a catastrophic left leg injury he suffered during his final college game at Florida State.

What is going on with Bill Belichick? When Belichick was coaching the New England Patriots, he was one of the game’s most controlling people (‘We’re on to Cincinnati.’). Now? This Belichick is almost recognizable.

Belichick’s girlfriend, Jordon Hudson | Belichick through the years

Vibes check

Justin Jefferson: F1 driver Oscar Piastri hit the griddy after winning Sunday’s Miami Grand Prix, keeping his word after meeting the Minnesota Vikings’ star receiver.

Jalen Ramsey: Could the seven-time Pro Bowl cornerback be in store for a reunion with the Rams?

Rookie minicamps: Most NFL teams will host draft choices and undrafted free agents later this week, including getting a first look at No. 1 pick Cam Ward in a Tennessee Titans uniform.

Jordon Hudson: Bill Belichick’s girlfriend is just the latest in a long line of significant others, parents, siblings, friends and hangers on who’ve had outsized roles and influence in the careers of sports figures. Even Charles Barkley is concerned.

NFL classics: Straight from the YouTube algorithm

This is where we reprise some NFL lore and recall classic, memorable moments from yesteryear.

Last weekend, Cam Ward became the 37th quarterback to be taken with the No. 1 overall selection in the NFL draft. Some – John Elway, Troy Aikman, Peyton Manning – have become among the greatest to ever play the position. Others – JaMarcus Russell, Terry Baker – were total busts in the NFL.

Then there’s Jeff George.

35 years ago, the Indianapolis Colts selected George with the No. 1 pick in the 1990 draft. He might be one of the most polarizing players ever selected atop the draft. He played for five different teams over 12 NFL seasons, throwing for a career-high 4,143 yards in 1995 and leading the league (3,917 yards) in 1997. His 27,602 career passing yards ranks just behind Joe Namath (27,602), and ahead of notable Hall of Famers such as Bob Griese, Bart Starr, Norm Van Brocklin and Roger Staubach (of course, it should be noted each of whom played in a less passer-friendly era than George).

The quarterback with a rocket arm had moments of brilliance and moments of buffoonery.

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The Los Angeles Rams quarterback agreed to a new deal at the NFL combine that would keep him in the City of Angels, but terms were never finalized.

On Monday, those details started to come to light.

Stafford inked a deal that will keep him with the Rams next season and beyond, putting an end to all the trade talk that dominated the conversation earlier in the offseason. The trade interest appeared to come mainly from the Las Vegas Raiders and New York Giants.

During the combine, it was reported that Tom Brady, part-owner of the Raiders, was recruiting Stafford to join the silver-and-black.

Stafford was reportedly seeking $50 million a year, according to NFL Network’s Peter Schrager, but ultimately settled for less.

The Rams have largely rebuilt their roster by hitting on their limited draft picks in the post-Super Bowl 56-winning years. They came within a few plays of knocking off the eventual Super Bowl champion Eagles in the divisional round on a snowy day in Philadelphia.

Now they keep Stafford in the fold to make another run in 2025. Here’s how much it’ll cost the Rams to keep the quarterback in town.

Matthew Stafford contract details

Stafford agreed to a two-year, $84 million deal, according to NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport. It represents an increase from the two-year, $58 million he had left on the previous contract.

The quarterback is set to earn $44 million this season. He’s already been paid $4 million and the remaining $40 million is fully guaranteed.

Stafford would earn $40 million next season if he remains on the Rams’ roster at the start of free agency.

With the new deal, Stafford is the NFL’s 15th highest-paid quarterback in terms of average annual value (AAV), according to OverTheCap.

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LAUSANNE, Switzerland — Multiple Olympic swimming champion Gary Hall Jr. received replicas of his 10 Olympic medals on Monday after the originals were destroyed during the Los Angeles wildfires in January.

The medals were presented to him by International Olympic Committee President Thomas Bach during a ceremony at the Games ruling body’s headquarters in Lausanne.

‘Thank you for the medals,’ Hall Jr. said in a brief speech. ‘Never before have 10 Olympic medals been replaced. Probably because no one has lost 10 medals before. I will do a better job at taking care of these.

‘The realization through this process that outweighs any sense of loss is this word of solidarity and what it means which cannot be taken away.’

Hall represented the United States at the 1996, 2000 and 2004 Olympics, winning five gold, three silver and two bronze medals in Atlanta, Sydney and Athens.

The 50-year-old was forced to leave the medals behind at his Pacific Palisades home during the fires which tore through the Los Angeles area.

‘When we were reading your tragic story of losing your house and all your possessions and all your worldly properties, this was going straight to our heart,’ Bach said.

Coach Steve: What the brash ex-swimmer learned about his career when he lost everything

The wildfires killed at least 29 people and destroyed large sections of the Altadena and Pacific Palisades neighbourhoods in Los Angeles, displacing tens of thousands of people.

It is estimated to be the most expensive natural disaster in U.S. history.

Los Angeles will host the next summer Olympics in 2028.

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Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth announced on Monday that the U.S. military will soon be seeing a dramatic reduction in the number of general officers across all branches. 

He called the reduction a ‘historic’ move to fulfill President Donald Trump’s commitment to ‘achieving peace through strength.’ 

‘We’re going to shift resources from bloated headquarters elements to our warfighters,’ said Hegseth. 

According to Hegseth, there are currently 44 4-star and flag officers across the military, making for a ratio of one general to 1,400 troops, compared to the ratio during World War II of one general to 6,000 troops. 

Hegseth, who has pledged to transform the military into a ‘leaner, more lethal force,’ issued a memo to senior Pentagon personnel on Monday in which he ordered the reductions to be carried out in two phases. 

In the first phase, Hegseth ordered a ‘minimum’ 20 percent reduction of four-star generals and flag officers in the active-duty component as well as a 20 percent reduction in the National Guard. 

In phase two, the secretary is ordering an additional 10 percent reduction in general and flag officers across the military. 

The secretary called the reductions part of his ‘less generals, more GIs policy.’ 

In a video announcing the change, he said the reductions will be done ‘carefully, but its going to be done expeditiously.’ 

He noted that ‘this is not a slash and burn exercise meant to punish high-ranking officers’ but rather a ‘deliberative process, working with the joint chiefs with one goal: maximizing strategic readiness and operational effectiveness by making prudent reductions.’ 

‘We got to be lean and mean. And in this case, it means general officer reductions,’ said Hegseth. 

Congress sets the number of general officers allowed in the military. The total number of active-duty general or flag officers is capped at 219 for the Army, 150 for the Navy, 171 for the Air Force, 64 for the Marine Corps, and 21 for the Space Force.

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House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries slammed President Donald Trump while discussing the recent chaos at Newark Liberty International Airport, saying he had ‘decimated the FAA.’

During a press conference on Monday, Jeffries took a reporter’s question about the recent delays at Newark Airport.

‘Well, it’s certainly something that I think we’re all invested in looking into, as it relates to the ability of the American people to be able to travel in an efficient way,’ the Democrat began, before turning his attention to Trump.

‘We do know that the Trump administration has decimated the FAA in a variety of different ways, and they’ve been doing this from the very beginning,’ he added. ‘They are breaking the federal government.’

Jeffries added that the Trump administration is ‘breaking the FAA.’

‘And whether the specific situation at Newark Airport has anything to do with that remains to be seen,’ he continued.

‘But it’s my expectation that the Transportation and Infrastructure Committee will look into this situation, and we should get some answers to figure out how to get it turned around.’

The conference came days after the massive delays and cancellations at the New Jersey airport began.

On Thursday, more than 500 flights in and out of Newark were delayed and at least 200 others were canceled, and chaos followed throughout the weekend. As of Monday afternoon, 172 flights have been delayed and 76 have been canceled on Monday.

Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy blamed the situation on poor technology in an X post on Friday.

‘The technology that we are using is old. That’s what is causing the outages and delays we are seeing at Newark,’ Duffy wrote.

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The House Rules Committee has advanced a bill to permanently rename the Gulf of America.

Formerly the Gulf of Mexico, President Donald Trump signed an executive order that upended that as part of his America First agenda.

But without congressional action, the name could be reverted by a future administration – which spurred Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., to introduce a bill enshrining the name in federal law.

The measure advanced through the House Rules Committee in a party-line vote on Monday evening, teeing it up for a chamber-wide vote sometime this week. The House Rules Committee acts as the final gatekeeper for most bills before they hit the House floor.

Democrats had attempted to derail the measure with several protest amendments, including one that would have limited oil and gas drilling permissions in the area. 

None of those passed along with the final bill, however, as expected. 

Democrats ripped the legislation as a meaningless attempt to score political points with Trump.

Republicans, however, called it a ‘historic’ move for America First and an  ‘important symbol of that effort and a step in the right direction.’

‘Throughout our country’s history, presidents have changed the names of America’s lands and waters. The change we are discussing today signals to the world that America is standing tall, and that we are proud of our country,’ Rep. Harriet Hageman, R-Wyo., said in support of the bill.

‘It is nearly impossible to overstate the Gulf of America’s critical role in achieving not only American energy independence, but dominance. President Trump has made it a priority of his administration to reassert America’s role as a global leader in energy production, and the Gulf of America is a critical part of that agenda.’

She pointed back to Republicans’ 2024 electoral sweep, ‘The American people support these policies, and we must deliver on the promises that we have made.’

Rep. Mary Gay Scanlon, D-Pa., a member of the House Rules Committee, said during her opening statement during the panel’s debate on the measure, ‘Ever since the beginning of Trump’s term, House Republicans have been tripping over themselves to find new and more embarrassing ways to suck up to the president and indulge his peculiar obsessions.’

‘This bill to rename the Gulf of Mexico is a stupid, unserious waste of time and taxpayer dollars. It’s an embarrassment to the nation that it was ever introduced, let alone that it’s being brought to the floor for a vote,’ Scanlon said.

Fox News Digital is told a House-wide vote on the bill is expected Thursday morning.

White House spokeswoman Anna Kelly told Fox News Digital of the Democrats lodging protest amendments to the bill, ‘Democrats are so overtaken with Trump Derangement Syndrome and obsessed with obstructing the President’s agenda that they will always put America Last. As President Trump said, the Gulf of America has long been an integral asset to our nation. All future generations should be able to recognize this beautiful body of water as a sign of American greatness.’

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The White House is going after Democratic lawmakers looking to upend House GOP plans to make President Donald Trump’s Gulf of America name change permanent.

The House Rules Committee, the final gatekeeper before most legislation gets a House-wide vote, is considering a bill to codify Trump’s decision to cease calling the body of water on the U.S. Southeast ‘the Gulf of Mexico.’

‘Democrats are so overtaken with Trump Derangement Syndrome and obsessed with obstructing the President’s agenda that they will always put America last,’ White House spokeswoman Anna Kelly told Fox News Digital.

‘As President Trump said, the Gulf of America has long been an integral asset to our nation. All future generations should be able to recognize this beautiful body of water as a sign of American greatness.’

Four Democrats have submitted amendments in a bid to upend the legislation — though none are likely to pass, given the committee’s Republican majority.

The first measure, led by Rep. Jared Huffman, D-Calif., would revert a similar Trump decision to rename Mt. McKinley in Alaska. The highest peak in North America, former President Barack Obama stripped his assassinated predecessor’s name from the mountain in favor of Mt. Denali, the name originally given by the indigenous peoples who lived in the area.

Trump signed an executive order restoring McKinley as its name on his first day in office this year.

A second amendment by Rep. Darren Soto, D-Fla., is aimed at limiting Trump’s ability to issue oil and gas drilling leases in the Gulf region.

Rep. Maxine Dexter, D-Ore., meanwhile, submitted an amendment that, if passed, would block the Trump administration from ‘retribution’ against news organizations that refer to the area as the Gulf of Mexico.

The White House had blocked access for an Associated Press journalist earlier this year after the organization continued to refer to the gulf’s former name even after Trump’s executive order. A federal judge ordered the White House to reverse that last month.

The fourth amendment submitted by Democrats, led by Rep. Luz Rivas, D-Calif., would prevent the formal name change from taking effect until the Department of Interior carried out an assessment on whether it would benefit the economy.

Rivas told Fox News Digital that the Gulf of America rename is a ‘vanity project’ that ‘accomplishes nothing’ in response to the White House statement.

‘Millions of Americans are struggling because of President Trump’s economic policies, and Republicans in Congress have yet to put forth a legislative proposal that lowers the costs of groceries, protects healthcare, or lowers housing costs,’ Rivas said.

The bill itself is expected to get a vote sometime this week.

It’s one of several pieces of legislation House Republicans are advancing aimed at making Trump’s executive actions permanent.

Trump’s executive order renaming the gulf was one of the first actions he took in his second term.

The remaining three Democratic offices who Fox News Digital reached for comment did not get back by press time.

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A pro-Trump legal group founded by White House aide Stephen Miller is suing Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts — a long-shot move as Trump allies fight court rulings blocking key actions from the Oval Office.

The lawsuit was filed by the America First Legal Foundation against Roberts in his capacity as the official head of the U.S. Judicial Conference and Robert J. Conrad, who serves as the director of the Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts. 

The complaint accuses both the U.S. Judicial Conference and the Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts of performing certain regulatory actions that go beyond the scope of resolving cases or controversies, or administratively supporting those actions, which they argue are the ‘core functions’ of the judiciary.

It also argues that records held by the Roberts-led U.S. Judicial Conference should therefore be subject to the Freedom of Information Act requests, or FOIA requests, as a result.

AFL cited in its lawsuit recent actions taken by both the Judicial Conference and Administrative Office in 2023 to ‘accommodate’ requests from Congress to investigate allegations of ethical improprieties by Justices Thomas and Alito, and subsequently to create or adopt an ‘ethics code’ for justices on the high court.

‘Under our constitutional tradition, accommodations with Congress are the province of the executive branch,’ AFL said, adding: ‘The Judicial Conference and the Administrative Office are therefore executive agencies,’ and must therefore be overseen by the president, not the courts.

The U.S. Judicial Conference is the national policymaking body for the courts. It is overseen by the Supreme Court’s chief justice, and tasked with making twice-yearly recommendations to Congress as needed.

The Administrative Office for the U.S. Courts, meanwhile, operates under the guidance and supervision of the Judicial Conference. Its role is to provide administrative support to the federal courts on certain administrative issues and for day-to-day logistics, including setting budgets and organizing data, among other things.

Plaintiffs for AFL, led by attorney Will Scolinos, argued in their lawsuit that the Judicial Conference’s duties are ‘executive functions,’ and functions they allege must be supervised by executive officers ‘who are appointed and accountable to other executive officers.’ 

Further, AFL argued, ‘Courts definitively do not create agencies to exercise functions beyond resolving cases or controversies or administratively supporting those functions.’  

In their view, this is also sufficient to put the Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts — as it is overseen by the Judicial Conference — under the executive branch as well. 

Scolinos argued that AFL’s proposed framework ‘preserves the separation of powers but also keeps the courts out of politics.’

U.S. District Judge Trevor N. McFadden, a Trump appointee, has been assigned to preside over the case. 

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