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MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. — Kimi Antonelli, the 18-year-old rookie driver for Mercedes, has made Formula One history at the 2025 Miami Grand Prix.

Antonelli, whose birthday is Aug. 25, 2006, won pole position for the Miami Grand Prix Sprint race, becoming the youngest pole sitter in any race format in Formula One history. 

Antonelli finished with a lap time of 1:26.482 during sprint qualifying, marking the fastest lap ever in four years of the Miami Grand Prix race. 

“It was a very tense qualifying. I felt really good since this morning and I felt confident going into qualifying. That was the mindset. I put basically everything together. … I’m really happy to get the first pole,” Antonelli said in a post-qualifying interview.

“Tomorrow’s gonna be nice to start (in) the front row. It’s gonna be a piece of a different ceiling. But I really gonna wait for tomorrow and to see how we can do in the Sprint and then in the qualifying, as well.”

Antonelli and McLaren’s Oscar Piastri, the current points leader in the F1 Drivers’ standings with 99 points, will start on the front row. 

McLaren’s Lando Norris, the 2024 Miami GP winner, will start the Sprint race in third, ahead of Red Bull’s Max Verstappen, who won the 2022 and 2023 Miami GPs. 

Mercedes’ George Russell will start fifth, while Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc and Lewis Hamilton will start from P6 and P7, respectively. 

Williams driver Alex Albon will start in P8, Racing Bulls’ Isack Hadjar is in P9, and Aston Martin’s Fernando Alonso rounds out the top 10. 

The Miami Grand Prix Sprint Race begins on May 3 at noon ET on ESPN, and qualifying for the Grand Prix will follow at 4 p.m. on ESPN. 

The Miami Grand Prix is at 4 p.m. ET on May 4 (ABC and ESPN). 

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Popovich has spent 30-plus years with the franchise, including 28-plus consecutive seasons as head coach, and helped turn the Spurs into a model team that others tried to emulate.

Popovich has not coached a game since the Spurs beat Utah on Oct. 31. The Spurs later announced he suffered a stroke on Nov. 2, and the 76-year-old did not return to the sideline as the team finished with a 34-48 record under interim coach Mitch Johnson.

‘While my love and passion for the game remain, I’ve decided it’s time to step away as head coach,” Popovich said in a statement. “I’m forever grateful to the wonderful players, coaches, staff and fans who allowed me to serve them as the Spurs head coach and am excited for the opportunity to continue to support the organization, community and city that are so meaningful to me.”

Popovich spent 28-plus seasons with the Spurs as head coach, taking over for Bob Hill in 1996. The Spurs finished 17-47 and won the draft lottery. They selected Tim Duncan with the No. 1 overall pick, pairing him with David Robinson and setting a course for NBA titles in 1999, 2003, 2005, 2007 and 2014.

The hallmark of Popovich’s championship-caliber teams included quality defense, crisp offense reliant on two of the game’s all-time great big men and supreme roster building, which included drafting Tony Parker with the No. 28 pick in the 2001 draft and Manu Ginobili with the 57th pick in the second round of the 1999 draft. Drafting Kawhi Leonard with the No. 15 pick in 2011 helped the Spurs to the title in 2014.

Popovich, who also served as the franchise’s president of basketball operations, earned NBA Coach of the Year three times (2003, 2012, 2014) and is one of five coaches to win at least five NBA championships. He was inducted into the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame in in 2023. His 1,422 regular season wins are the most in NBA history and he also coached the U.S. to a gold medal at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics.

Born in East Chicago, Indiana in 1949, Popovich played basketball at Air Force and graduated with a degree in Soviet studies in 1970. In his senior season at Air Force, he averaged 14.3 points and was team captain. He served his five-year military commitment touring Eastern Europe, including the Soviet Union, as a member of the U.S. Armed Forces basketball team.

Popovich returned to the Air Force in 1973, coaching Air Force Academy Prep School and then serving as an assistant coach for the Air Force. He became the head coach at Pomona-Pitzer College in 1979 and left for the NBA in 1988, joining Larry Brown’s Spurs staff as an assistant from 1988-1992 and then becoming an assistant for Don Nelson with the Golden State Warriors in 1992.

He was named the Spurs’ general manager and vice president of basketball operations in 1994.

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He told reporters not to believe the chatter about possibilities he won’t be back, instead saying only he and general manager Julien BriseBois and team owners have the answer.

‘The talk should be whatever comes from Julien and I or ownership,’ Cooper, 57, said. ‘Tampa has been home for my kids, it’s all they really remember. For me it’s hard to see myself anywhere else.’

Cooper has led the Lightning since March 2013 and has a 572-306-83 (.638) record in the regular season, and the team intends for him to add to those numbers.

‘Coop will be back next year,’ BriseBois said.

His contract is believed to run through next season, with BriseBois saying he’d like Cooper to sign an extension.

Cooper is the longest-tenured coach in the NHL and won back-to-back Stanley Cup championships in 2020 and 2021. The Lightning have made the playoffs 11 times under Cooper, who has an 88-67 record (.568) in the postseason.

The Florida Panthers eliminated the Lightning in the first round of this season’s playoffs in five games.

Also Friday, BriseBois called it ‘unlikely’ that the Lightning will sign Isaac Howard, whom they selected No. 31 overall in 2022. He won the Hobey Baker Award as the best NCAA men’s player in Division I last month while playing forMichigan State.

Speaking last month on the Spittin’ Chiclets podcast, Howard said he didn’t see the Bolts in his future, making it sound like a foregone conclusion he’d play elsewhere.

‘I just feel like with me and Tampa, we didn’t see eye to eye the same way I thought we would,’ he said. ‘It wasn’t a situation where I was demanding to step right into the NHL, it wasn’t anything like that. It just didn’t necessarily work.’

He will become a free agent next year if he does not sign with Tampa Bay.

‘He values the opportunity to choose the club that he believes is the best fit for him,’ BriseBois said.

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A new report warns that NATO is unprepared for modern digital warfare. Without stronger leadership, especially from the U.S., the alliance could face serious security risks.

The Center for European Policy Analysis (CEPA) released a study showing that many NATO members are failing to modernize their military data systems.

Although NATO leaders talk about the importance of secure and shared cloud infrastructure, most countries still store critical military information in local servers that are vulnerable to cyberattacks.

The report calls data the ‘currency of warfare’ and urges NATO to improve how it stores and shares military information.

At the moment, most NATO countries are building separate national cloud systems. France uses Thales, Germany uses Arvato, and Italy is working with Leonardo to develop sovereign defense cloud services, according to the CEPA report Defend in the Cloud: Boost NATO Data Resilience.

The U.S. has its own approach, using Amazon, Google, Microsoft and Oracle to build a sovereign cloud for the Department of Defense, as noted in the same CEPA report.

This fragmented setup is creating major problems. The CEPA report explains that many of these national systems are not interoperable, which makes it difficult for NATO allies to share intelligence or respond rapidly in times of crisis.

Although 22 NATO members have pledged to build shared cloud capabilities, progress has been slow. CEPA describes a gap between what leaders promise and what is actually getting done, and the process remains slow and overly bureaucratic.

Some of the hesitation stems from political tensions. 

Since returning to office, President Donald Trump has reinforced his long-standing position that NATO members must meet their defense spending commitments. 

In early 2025, Trump proposed raising the target above the current 2% benchmark and stated publicly that the U.S. would only defend NATO allies who meet what he considers their ‘fair share’ of the burden.

At the same time, Trump has taken credit for strengthening the alliance by pushing European governments to boost their defense budgets. 

In March, he pointed to what he called ‘hundreds of billions of dollars’ in new allied defense spending as proof that his pressure was effective. His administration continues to engage in high-level NATO meetings and has publicly affirmed support for the alliance’s core mission.

Secretary of State Marco Rubio has worked to reassure European partners. During an April meeting with NATO foreign ministers in Brussels, he stated that the U.S. is ‘as active in NATO as it has ever been,’ pushing back on claims that the administration is disengaging.

According to statements published by the State Department and reported by Reuters, Rubio emphasized that Trump is not opposed to NATO itself, but to an alliance that is under-prepared or underfunded.

Rubio is also playing a central role in U.S. efforts to broker peace in Ukraine. In early 2025, he led direct talks with Russian officials in Saudi Arabia and presented Trump’s terms for a possible ceasefire, according to official State Department readouts and contemporaneous reporting by Reuters and other outlets.

Rubio has emphasized that Ukraine and European allies will remain closely involved in the process. After a pause in U.S. aid earlier this year, he announced that military support would resume once Kyiv signaled agreement with the proposed framework for peace.

Meanwhile, NATO continues to provide assistance to Ukraine through a trust fund valued at nearly $1 billion. This figure is based on NATO’s own reporting on its Comprehensive Assistance Package, as cited in CEPA’s April report.

The alliance is also coordinating training and equipment donations, but the CEPA report makes it clear that efforts are being slowed by a lack of secure data sharing.

The report points to Estonia as a model for digital resilience. Estonia backs up its government data in Luxembourg through a ‘data embassy’ system, ensuring it remains protected even if local systems are attacked. NATO, according to CEPA, should encourage similar strategies across the alliance.

According to CEPA, the U.S. is best positioned to lead the way, with Trump and Rubio already taking the necessary steps to push NATO in the right direction.

The White House did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.

CEPA’s report can be reviewed here.

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U.S. Olympic sprinter Fred Kerley was arrested for misdemeanor battery Thursday after allegedly striking a woman with a closed fist at a hotel ahead of this weekend’s Grand Slam Track event in Miami.

Kerley, the reigning Olympic bronze medalist in the men’s 100-meter dash, was booked into Broward County jail after allegedly encountering the woman, who told police she is Kerley’s ex-girlfriend, at the hotel. According to a police report obtained Friday by USA TODAY Sports, Kerley grew aggressive and stated that he was ‘going to (expletive) everyone up in here.’

‘(The woman) then advised that Kerley struck her one time in the facial area, causing her nose to bleed,’ the police report states.

USA TODAY Sports does not identify the victims of alleged acts of domestic violence without their permission.

Grand Slam Track confirmed in a statement that Kerley, who was scheduled to compete in the 100-meter dash on Saturday and the 200-meter dash on Sunday, would no longer compete at this weekend’s event and declined further comment.

Richard L. Cooper, an attorney for Kerley, told USA TODAY Sports in an email that he is ‘confident that the case lacks merit and will be dismissed in short order.’

‘Fred looks forward to going back to what he does best: Winning races and inspiring millions of young athletes,’ Cooper said.

Thursday’s arrest came about four months after Kerley was arrested for battery upon a law enforcement officer after a confrontation with police, during which the 29-year-old was wrestled to the ground, struck repeatedly and then subdued with a stun gun. Kerley was then also charged with domestic battery in an unrelated case from 2024. He has pleaded not guilty in both cases.

Kerley is one of the most well-known sprinters in the U.S. after winning Olympic medals in the 100-meter dash at each of the past two editions of the Summer Games. Originally a 400-meter runner, Kerley switched to the 100 ahead of the 2021 Tokyo Olympics, where he won a surprising silver. He then won the 100-meter world title in 2022, followed by Olympic bronze in the event at the Paris Games last summer.

Contact Tom Schad at tschad@usatoday.com or on social media @tomschad.bsky.social.

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Sooner or later, this will all catch up to the New York Knicks. Unless they adjust. Now.

New York needed an 11-1 run and a Jalen Brunson game-winning 3 in the final minutes of Game 6 Thursday — nearly two weeks after it needed a 21-0 run in the fourth quarter of Game 1 — to close out the Detroit Pistons 116-113. Yet what should concern New York is that its other essential player, center Karl-Anthony Towns, was relegated to watching Brunson’s heroics from the bench, having fouled out.

The Knicks will face the No. 2 seed Boston Celtics, the defending NBA champions, a team with length and shooters all over the floor that will test New York in new ways. And it’s difficult to picture the Knicks pulling off the upset if this is the Towns they will get.

The Pistons exposed serious flaws in New York’s operation. For one, the Knicks lack depth and rely far too much on the starting unit. On Thursday night, the Pistons bench outscored New York’s by a margin of 31-6, and that tally in the series overall was 184-69.

That lack of depth, in turn, has made the minutes when Brunson is on the bench precarious. But even the minutes when Brunson returns to the floor have been spotty, with New York sometimes slow to recapture its rhythm.

This is precisely the time for Towns to take over, to ease the pressure to shorten Brunson’s minutes off the floor.

For another, the Knicks have had brutal stretches when turnovers and ball watching on offense degrade shot selection. Often, that has been coming out of halftime. Before Thursday, the Knicks had been outscored in each third quarter in the first round.

The Knicks, however, used Detroit’s aggressive tendencies against its own players; New York went at the Pistons coming out of halftime, baiting them into early foul trouble. By the eight-minute mark in the period, the Knicks were already in the bonus. In the third quarter alone, the Knicks attempted 16 free throws, making 11.

That slowed the game, preventing Detroit from breaking out into transition. The Knicks won the quarter, 37-24.

But in the fourth, New York reverted to sloppy play, committing four turnovers in the first six minutes. At stretches, the Knicks appeared tired, and the Pistons went on a 25-9 extended run to open a seven-point lead with 2:35 left.

Brunson, the NBA’s Clutch Player of the Year, took over in the final minutes, scoring eight of the team’s last 11 points, including the game-winning crossover 3-pointer over Ausar Thompson.

That means that New York needed to come from behind in the fourth quarter in three of its four victories this series. It’s also worth noting that officials determined that a foul should’ve been called on Detroit’s attempt at a game-winning 3 in Game 4.

“It’s all about us staying poised and having our composure,” Brunson said of New York’s ability to come from behind. “Obviously we want to have it throughout the game but it’s most important at the end.”

This is also why the Knicks need a lot more out of Towns.

He finished with 10 points on 4-of-10 shooting Thursday, ranking fourth on the team in shot attempts. He was a force on the glass, collecting 15 rebounds. But Towns scored three points in the second half and attempted just four shots; Brunson, by comparison, put up 20 shots after intermission and scored half of his 40 points.

Towns is a supremely gifted 7-footer with elite range and spacing ability. He was instrumental in the fourth quarter of Game 4, hitting a pair of difficult shots to give New York the late lead.

Boston won’t be nearly as forgiving. The Celtics have their own stretch big in Kristaps Porziņģis, who can knock down 30-foot 3-pointers but also can protect the rim. Having Towns be effective from the perimeter will be crucial in keeping Porziņģis out of the paint.

“Every series is different, but we can learn from our experiences as we go on,” Brunson said. “We’re playing against the defending champs next time, so it’s going to be a lot different. Playing this team that we just played — I’m not discrediting them at all — but the Celtics have experience. Playing these guys, they were just physical. They brought the fight to us and we had to respond. And then we did.

“… You have to respect each opponent you play and then you have to go from there and make adjustments. Everything is going to be different.”

Game 1 is Monday in Boston.

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Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., is hosting an in-person town hall in Jackson Heights, Queens, on Friday night amid speculation she is considering a 2028 presidential run. 

After speaking at a May Day protest in New York City on Thursday, rejecting Trump’s agenda and warning protesters that Republicans ‘are going after Medicaid next,’ Ocasio-Cortez is returning home to New York’s 14th congressional district to ‘share updates on her work in D.C., provide important constituent updates, and take questions from the audience.’

Ocasio-Cortez has been jet-setting across the United States with Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., on his ‘Fighting Oligarchy’ tour. The campaign confirmed to Fox News Digital that Friday night’s town hall was originally scheduled for the April congressional recess, but had to be rescheduled because Ocasio-Cortez was sick. She posted an Instagram story two weeks ago apologizing for canceling. 

Earlier this week, Ocasio-Cortez did not rule out 2028 presidential aspirations when asked by Fox News Digital about the viral video that had pundits guessing whether she were soft-launching her campaign. 

‘I think what people should be most concerned about is the fact that Republicans are trying to cut Medicaid right now, and people’s healthcare is in danger. That’s really what my central focus is,’ the New York Democrat said when asked whether she is considering a run for president, despite President Donald Trump’s assurances that he wouldn’t cut Medicaid. 

‘This moment isn’t about campaigns, or elections, or about politics. It’s about making sure people are protected, and we’ve got people that are getting locked up for exercising their First Amendment rights. We’re getting two-year-olds that are getting deported into cells in Honduras. We’re getting people that are about to get kicked off of Medicaid. That, to me, is most important,’ Ocasio-Cortez said on Capitol Hill on Trump’s 100th day in office. 

Ocasio-Cortez’s campaign account posted a video on X last week that invigorated those rumors as the four-term Democrat from New York City and a progressive leader proclaimed, ‘We are one.’

‘I’m a girl from the Bronx,’ Ocasio-Cortez said on a campaign-style stage in Idaho. ‘To be welcomed here in this state, all of us together, seeing our common cause, this is what this country is all about.’

Americans reposted Ocasio-Cortez’s video across X, pointing to the video as proof of her 2028 presidential ambitions. ‘Get ready America. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez will almost undoubtedly run for president in 2028,’ political reporter Eric Daugherty said in response to the video. 

As rumors swirl over Ocasio-Cortez’s ambition for higher office, back at home in New York, a Siena College poll found that Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer’s favorability is down, at 39% among New York state voters questioned in the poll, which was conducted April 14 through 16. Meanwhile, Ocasio-Cortez’s favorability soared to 47%.

The longtime senator from New York faced pushback from the Democratic Party in March for supporting the Republican budget bill backed by Trump that averted a government shutdown and stirred up outrage among congressional Democrats who planned to boycott the bill.

That growing disapproval among Democrats was reflected in the poll, and the shifting perception comes as DNC vice chair David Hogg, through his political arm, Leaders We Deserve, faced blowback from the DNC for investing $20 million into electing younger Democrats to safe House Democrat seats.

Ocasio-Cortez raked in a massive $9.6 million over the past three months. The record-breaking fundraising haul was one of the biggest ever for any House lawmaker. Ocasio-Cortez’s team highlighted that the fundraising came from 266,000 individual donors, with an average contribution of just $21.

‘I cannot convey enough how grateful I am to the millions of people supporting us with your time, resources, & energy. Your support has allowed us to rally people together at record scale to organize their communities,’ Ocasio-Cortez emphasized in a social media post.

Ocasio-Cortez’s campaign did not respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment about the 2028 presidential speculation. 

Fox News Digital’s Paul Steinhauser contributed to this report.

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Germany’s domestic intelligence agency, the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution or BfV, on Friday classified the country’s popular Alternative for Germany (AfD) party as ‘extremist.’

‘Central to our assessment is the ethnically and ancestrally defined concept of the people that shapes the AfD, which devalues entire segments of the population in Germany and violates their human dignity,’ the BfV said, explaining its decision. ‘This concept is reflected in the party’s overall anti-migrant and anti-Muslim stance.’ 

The AfD slammed the decision, calling it a ‘blow against democracy,’ claiming it was ‘clearly politically motivated,’ which the BfV denied.

The U.S. also criticized the designation, with Secretary of State Marco Rubio claiming it is ‘tyranny in disguise.’

‘Germany just gave its spy agency new powers to surveil the opposition,’ Rubio posted on X. ‘That’s not democracy—it’s tyranny in disguise. What is truly extremist is not the popular AfD—which took second in the recent election—but rather the establishment’s deadly open border immigration policies that the AfD opposes. Germany should reverse course.’

Elon Musk wrote on X: ‘Banning the centrist AfD, Germany’s, most popular party, would be an extreme attack on democracy.’ 

AfD leaders Alice Weidel and Tino Chrupalla said, ‘The AfD will continue to take legal action against these defamatory attacks that endanger democracy.’ 

Vice President JD Vance met with Weidel before the election and said that free speech was under attack in Europe. 

The BfV also classifies the neo-Nazi National Democratic Party (NDP), the Islamic State and other Islamist groups, and the far-left Marxist-Leninist Party of Germany as ‘extremist.’

The classification allows the intelligence agency to closely surveil the AfD, which came in second in Germany’s February elections, winning a record number of seats in parliament.

Germany’s intelligence agency is more legally constrained than other European countries in its ability to surveil political parties, which requires the ‘extremist’ designation, because of its history under Nazi and Communist rule. 

The designation also allows the intelligence service to intercept party communications.

The ‘extremist’ designation followed a 1,100-page report by the intelligence agency, and a court case loss for AfD in challenging the BfV’s previous classification of the political party as one suspected of extremism. 

Conservative leader Friedrich Merz, who heads theChristian Democratic Union (CDU), will be confirmed as chancellor next week following the elections in a coalition government with the center-left Social Democrats. 

Both Merz and the Social Democrats ruled out governing with the AfD. 

CDU, along with its Bavarian sister party the Christian Social Union (CSU), won Germany’s elections in February after garnering 28.6% of the vote, according to Germany’s international broadcaster Deutsche Welle (DW). 

The AfD secured 20.8% of the vote. Meanwhile, outgoing Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s Social Democratic Party (SPD) won just 16.4% of the vote, its worst result since World War II.

Fox News Digital’s Rachel Wolf and Reuters contributed to this report.

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President Trump announced his first judicial nominee of his second term, kicking off what will be a historic next four years as he continues to build on the most consequential accomplishment of his first term by appointing even more bold and fearless judges. The stakes could not be higher as Democrat activist judges are actively sabotaging American voters, the presidency, our Constitution, and our country.   

Trump nominated Whitney Hermandorfer to a Tennessee-based seat on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit. She is a brilliant legal mind and committed constitutionalist who has litigated critical First Amendment issues. Trump’s first nomination stands in stark contrast to the Obama- and Biden-appointed Democrat activist judges who have repeatedly attempted to sabotage the president’s core Article II executive powers during these first months of Trump’s historic second term. These anti-American judges, who side with Hamas supporters, MS-13 gang members, and no-show federal bureaucrats leeching on the taxpayer, need to be countered. Trump’s nominees promise a return to the original vision of a judiciary grounded in constitutionalism and judicial restraint.

During his 2016 campaign, Trump boldly and brilliantly ran on the issue of judicial nominations in an unprecedented way. He released a list of potential Supreme Court candidates from which he would choose to fill the vacancy arising from Justice Antonin Scalia’s death. This list of nominees set him apart from his rival at the time, Hillary Clinton. Had Clinton won, we would have been subjected to leftist judicial tyranny for at least a generation. Fortunately for the Constitution and the American people, Trump prevailed, and the country was rewarded with Justice Neil Gorsuch instead of Justice Merrick Garland. Given his horrendous and truly shameful service as attorney general, Garland would have been an unmitigated disaster had he received a lifetime appointment to the Supreme Court.

Trump did not stop after the confirmation of Gorsuch. Justice Brett Kavanaugh’s confirmation shifted the balance of the Court in 2018, as he replaced Anthony Kennedy, the pivotal justice in countless landmark cases. The coup de gras came in 2020, when Trump replaced liberal lion Ruth Bader Ginsburg with the more conservative Amy Coney Barrett. This dramatic shift paid dividends in short order and in many consequential ways.

In 2022, the Court overruled Roe v. Wade (1973) in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization and restored the issue of abortion to its rightful place: the states. The justices also strengthened the Second Amendment in New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruen, ruling that the Second Amendment requires ‘shall-issue’ concealed-carry permits. No longer can states have foggy standards where bureaucrats whimsically decide whether to allow citizens to carry concealed weapons. States must set forth standards, and citizens who satisfy those standards will be able to carry such firearms.

The next year, the Court put a stop to the practice of race-based college admissions policies in two cases involving Harvard and the University of North Carolina. Thanks to the rulings in Students for Fair Admissions, students must be evaluated based on merit. Conservatives had been trying for decades to eliminate affirmative action, just as they had abortion. Trump made these dreams come true. Last year, the Court struck a giant blow against the administrative state in Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo, a decision that overturned the requirement that courts defer to administrative agencies when a statute is ambiguous.

He will look beyond the garden-variety Federalist Society choices and install a new generation of judicial titans who will change the landscape for generations to come in line with our Founders’ intent.

Just days after Loper Bright, the justices strengthened the presidency in Trump v. United States. There, the Court held that presidents are absolutely immune when exercising core Article II powers like pardons and at least presumptively immune for acts done within the outer perimeters of their official duties. This ruling enormously aided Trump against the lawfare perpetrated by the Biden Justice Department.

Trump’s judicial impact extended beyond the Supreme Court. He appointed 54 circuit judges in his first term, second only to President Jimmy Carter’s 56 in a single term. Carter benefited enormously from the Democrat-controlled Congress’s creation of 35 new circuit judgeships during his term. Congress created none for Trump. More importantly, Carter did not appoint any Supreme Court justices. Trump’s impact on the judiciary dwarfs Carter’s by any reasonable metric. Trump appointed only one fewer circuit judge in one term than did President Obama in two, and several of Obama’s appointees were to the Federal Circuit, a court with comparatively less impact than the other circuits on crucial issues. More importantly, Obama’s two Supreme Court appointments did not shift the balance of the Court; he replaced two leftist justices with two others. Trump also has an excellent chance to surpass President Ronald Reagan’s record for circuit confirmations of 83.

The accomplishments of Trump’s first term were excellent, but there is still work to be done. At times, the Supreme Court has been frustrating with rulings, mainly on the emergency docket with respect to Trump’s policies and the leftist inferior court judges who have enjoined them. Thanks to the Republican-controlled Senate—and a wider majority than existed in the first two years of his first term—Trump will select even more bold and fearless nominees. He will look beyond the garden-variety Federalist Society choices and install a new generation of judicial titans who will change the landscape for generations to come in line with our Founders’ intent.

Trump has assembled an excellent judicial nominations team in Attorney General Pam Bondi, White House chief of staff Susie Wiles, White House counsel Dave Warrington, and his deputy Steve Kenny to help him identify, vet, and nominate bold and fearless judges. The Article III Project, which I founded, is proud to support and assist their efforts and these excellent nominees, who will uphold the law and Constitution without fear or political consideration. We will continue to dedicate our resources and expertise to ensure only the most bold and fearless judges are nominated and confirmed to the bench.

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It’s the end of an era for the San Antonio Spurs and the entire NBA.

The team announced Friday, May 2, that Gregg Popovich is stepping down as coach after 28-plus seasons in that position and transitioning to the role of president of basketball operations. Popovich missed most of the 2024-25 NBA season after suffering a stroke on Nov. 2. Mitch Johnson, who served as interim head coach as the Spurs finished with a 34-48 record, has been promoted to be Popovich’s permanent replacement as coach.

Though Popovich will remain a crucial part of the franchise, the decision to work exclusively in the front office will deprive the NBA of a Hall of Fame coach and make one of the league’s fascinating characters less visible than he has been over the past four decades. Popovich could be prickly or playful with a microphone in front of him, but his quick wit often made his sideline interviews, news conferences and public interactions as entertaining as the games themselves.

Here’s a look at some of Popovich’s memorable moments and quotes over his 30-year career with the San Antonio Spurs:

Gregg Popovich’s best quotes as Spurs coach

‘Nobody’s happy.’

The yin and yang of Popovich’s persona is probably best on display during his in-game sideline interviews, which became much-anticipated events over the course of his career because of how much he seemingly despised doing them. It often led to terse exchanges and answers that lasted but a few words.

Sometimes, he could be downright ornery. Even then, though, they were enthralling. Like when former TNT reporter David Aldridge asked Popovich if he was happy with his team’s shot selectionduringa game in 2012.

‘Happy? Happy’s not a word that we think about in a game. Think of something different. Happy? I don’t know how to judge happy. We’re in the middle of a contest. Nobody’s happy.’

‘This is the first time I’ve enjoyed doing this ridiculous interview.’

Popovich’s most notable sideline interviews usually occurred with late TNT reporter Craig Sager, whose colorful outfits were the subject of lighthearted banter (‘How can you be that professional in a suit that looks like that?’)

But Popovich was at his heartwarming best once Sager, who died in 2016, was diagnosed with leukemia. It led to a memorable exchange between the two when Sager returned to the sidelines in December 2015 for a game.

‘I got to honestly tell you this is the first time I’ve enjoyed doing this ridiculous interview we’re required to do. It’s because you’re here and you’re back with us. Welcome back, baby. … Now ask me a couple of inane questions.’

‘I’ve been waiting for this a long time. I’m not done.’

Popovich was inducted into the Pro Basketball Hall of Fame in 2023 and his induction speech featured his greatest Spurs players — David Robinson, Tim Duncan, Manu Ginobili and Tony Parker — seated on stage behind him. At one point, when he went to shake their hands, emcee Ahmad Rashad thought that was the end of Popovich’s speech. Only it wasn’t, and Popovich reacted by shooing Rashad off stage.

‘I want some nasty!’

Popovich had colorful quotes and a sometimes-tough disposition with reporters. His players saw those sides of him, too. A Popovich classic is this line, captured by TNT during a Spurs timeout during a 2012 NBA playoffs series with the Oklahoma City Thunder.

‘He’s pathetic. He’s small. He’s a whiner. … He’s a damaged man.’

Popovich has been an outspoken critic of President Donald Trump and the Republican Party since Trump first took office in 2016, and used many of his regular interactions with reporters during the NBA season to express his political views. That included a Spurs news conference about a week before he suffered a stroke on Nov. 2, in which he spoke out against Trump for more than two minutes ahead of the 2024 Presidential election.

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