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Abad Viquez first set eyes on Derrick Rose as a second grader in Chicago. The Bulls’ then-No. 1 overall draft pick was captured in posters on his teacher’s wall.

It was one of those childhood moments that become etched in our minds. For Viquez, it was the one that set him along a narrative that would push against everything that tried to hold him back.

“I have a disability,” says Viquez, 23, now known as Shorty’A to the tens of thousands he reaches on social media. “It was hard for me to fit in, which is why I looked up to Derrick Rose. Everyone was talking about him, and I didn’t even know who he was. So just watching the game and learning about it helped me connect with my peers and many people down the road.”

Two years later, at 22, Rose was named the youngest MVP in NBA history for the 2010-12 season. He had soared to heights Bulls fans hadn’t seen since … well, you know.

But the rest of Rose’s story, filled with pain but also perseverance, is what led ‘Shorty’A’ to share sound bites, opinions and other tidbits of a life spent overcoming his own obstacles.

“I fell in love with him, and now basketball is a passion,” Viquez tells USA TODAY Sports. “It helped me get to a place that I didn’t think I was gonna make it to.”

Viquez, who was born without a tailbone, has a rare medical condition known as Sacral Agenesis that has affected his growth.

“Doctors told my parents I had less than six months to live,” he says.

Today, you might see him post to his 50,000-plus followers on TikTok as his Bulls try to make it out of the NBA Play-In-Tournament. One of his videos won an AT&T contest and connected him with NBA superstars at the All-Star Game in February.

His is still chasing his ultimate goal.

“I can’t think of anyone in the NBA that has a disability that’s a broadcaster, so I hope to be one of the first ones,” he says. “I want to be able to inspire the next generation of kids and let them know that anything is possible despite their disability.”

He spoke with us about how sports can spur big dreams and why we don’t have to be accomplished athletes to go after a career in them.

‘Show the entire world what you can give them’

“Every time I went to the doctor, he told me that Abad was not going to make it,” his mother, Rebeca Viquez, told the Chicago Sun-Times Times in 2019. “And he’s like, ‘It will be a miracle if he does.’”

She has been there with him, her son says, through every exhilarating high and excruciating low: the first steps and words at age 4, the first shots on the hoop at 8, the 23 surgeries he has endured in his life and the ruthless way some kids have treated him.

At one point, he says, he didn’t have the confidence to tell his mom everything that was going on at school.

“My mom was always stressed out,” he says. “In fifth grade, there was an incident that happened, and it changed my perspective in life. That was the time where I was going through suicidal thoughts, and I really didn’t even tell my mom about it until that one incident that happened. So I ended up telling my mom, and from there, we built a bond and a relationship, and we just connected in so many different ways.”

Rebeca Viquez, a Spanish teacher who knew how cruel kids can be at school, told her son he could cry and feel sorry for himself, “or you just show the entire world what you can give them.”

Live for the moment, not the result

The healing traces back to Rose, too. He tore his ACL in his first game of the 2012 NBA playoffs. He missed the next season and endured what seemed like an endless array of injuries that would dog his career.

Many would say Rose didn’t live up to his potential. But a young fan in Chicago saw him come back, time after time, to drive hard down the lane, be tough at the rim and take the game-winning shot.

“I went through a lot of bullying,” Abad Viquez says, “and on top of (that) having to go to school, having to go to a surgery, and then having to go to physical therapy. So it was just a lot for me mentally and physically.

“Just seeing Derrick Rose just inspired me to keep on going and motivate myself. Just looking at the videos of him training and getting back into shape and gaining all the strength back that he lost, it just motivated me to do the same.”

Basketball became his therapy as he shot on his backyard court, or he watched his Rose. Rose even sunk one to beat the Cleveland Cavaliers and his sister’s favorite player. Frida Viquez, 21, loves LeBron James.

“I never really liked LeBron growing up, because my sister and I always argued,” he says. “I mean, we’ve seen it how many times he’s been to the Finals, how many times he beat the Bulls. So I got tired of him just winning, winning, winning. I’m still stressing over the Chicago Bulls.’

But sitting in front of a mountain of team memorabilia during our Zoom call, he smiled at the thought of Rose’s career.

“Unfortunately,” he said, “I don’t have the hops like him.’

The birth of ‘Shorty’A’

Viquez could move fast, though, in his power wheelchair. When he got to high school, kids started calling him names like, “Speedy,” “Speedy Gonzalez” and “Turbo.’ He liked them.

“But it was just so many different nicknames,” he says. “And I was like, ‘What is one nickname that I could go by?’”

His mind drifted back to elementary school, when kids would make fun of his height.

‘I was always the shortest one in the room,’ he says. ‘So I was like, ‘Back then, it used to bother me, but not much anymore.’ ‘

Viquez put ‘Shorty’A’ on his Instagram account, which he started in 2019 to post his his trick shots. His first video was reposted by Overtime Sports, and it went viral.

The next year, he says, Overtime posted a video of him on TikTok, and it got more than 4 million views.

“I didn’t have TikTok because I thought it was only just for dancing,” he says. “So I then downloaded TikTok and started posting all of my trick shots videos and people were recognizing me from the video that Overtime reposted. From there I was posting consistently and my followers and views were growing and growing.

‘Heading into college, I didn’t tell anyone about my nickname, but as soon as they followed me, they were like, ‘Oh my God, you’re Shorty’A.’ ‘

It’s a lesson he learned from Rose: Keep putting yourself out there.

COACH STEVE: WNBA stars Sabrina Ionescu, A’ja Wilson show everyone can use a mentor

How a round ball can create a new life

Viquez graduated in 2024 with a major in journalism and minor in sports communication from Columbia College in Chicago.

While he looks for a job, he helps design and sell merchandise — hoodies, shirts, pins, phone cases, bags — through his own brand, YDDDY (‘Your Disability Doesn’t Define You’). He donates proceeds to a charity called Free Wheelchair Mission.

He’s filling up TikTok with clips, which include his broadcasting highlights.

He reached out to SeatGeek when he hit 30,000 followers, and the ticket sales website started sponsoring his commercials.

He submitted a prize-winning entry for AT&T’s NBA Dreams experience contest and invited his mom, sister and a cousin to sit with him at the All-Star festivities in San Francisco. When they arrived at Chase Center, they received an invitation to watch courtside from MVP favorite Shai Gilgeous-Alexander.

‘I showed my sister that email, and I was like, ‘I think I just won,” he says. ‘And she was like, ‘Nah, this gotta be fake.’ And then I was looking at the people that were CCed into the email, and their email literally ends with AT&T.com. So I reached back out, and the rest is history.’

Along the way, Gilgeous-Alexander learned of his goal to become a sportscaster.

‘Sports play such an important role in connecting people,’ he said in a statement to USA TODAY Sports. ‘I’m glad we could make it happen.’

It was likely a close No. 2 to the January day Viquez walked into a pop-up “flower shop” in downtown Chicago. He was freezing, having waited in line for four hours in 20-degree weather.

Then he saw Rose standing in front of him. A Chicago native, he was giving away free flowers to fans as part of a farewell celebration to end his career. It lasted 15 years.

‘I almost cried in front of him,’ Viquez says. ‘When I met him, I just started to thank him for everything that he’s done for me.’

Viquez asked for a signed jersey.

‘He said he wasn’t allowed to autograph stuff for his fans, but he would do it just for me,’ he says. ‘Once I got in the car, I just started to break down and I was crying.’

He had never seen Michael Jordan play, or the Bulls reach the NBA Finals. But he had seen Rose. That was more than enough.

‘A round ball helped me in many different ways,’ he says. ‘I never thought that I would have over 50,000 followers on TikTok, and it’s all to thanks to Derrick Rose.

‘He changed my life.’

(This story was updated to add new information.)

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

There was an injury to a star player, a 20-point deficit erased and a masterclass fourth quarter from Stephen Curry.

The Golden State Warriors outlasted the Memphis Grizzlies on Tuesday night in the 2025 NBA Play-In Tournament to secure the No. 7 seed and a date with the No. 2 Houston Rockets in the first round of the postseason.

In the 121-116 victory, newly-acquired Warriors forward Jimmy Butler led all players with 38 points, though Curry wasn’t far behind, pouring in 15 of his 37 points in the final period. Grizzlies point guard Ja Morant suffered a tweaked ankle midway through the third quarter but returned, scoring 22 points on 9-of-18 shooting.

On Friday, in the final game of the play-in, Memphis will face the winner of Wednesday’s Kings-Mavericks game to determine the No. 8 seed in the West.

In Tuesday’s other game, the Magic rolled over the Hawks.

Here are three takeaways from Tuesday night’s Warriors-Grizzlies play-in game:

‘Playoff’ Jimmy Butler affirms Warriors’ decision to make deal

When the Warriors traded for Jimmy Butler, they were 11th in the Western Conference. Now, they have clinched the No. 7 seed, gone 24-8 since making the deal and look like a team that could be a threat to upset Houston.

What the Rockets lack in experience, the Warriors have in abundance. And though Curry scored 15 of Golden State’s final 19 points in the game, including a trio of dagger 3 pointers, it was Butler who took on ball handling and distribution late in the game. And it was Butler who helped spark massive runs during the minutes when Curry was on the bench.

Butler has helped the Warriors improve in most major metrics, and his ability to attack and get to the free throw line — he was 12-of-18 Tuesday night — is essential in the playoffs.

And, if there’s one player who understands how to will a team to massive postseason upsets, it’s Butler, who carried the Heat two seasons ago from a Play-In eight seed to an NBA Finals appearance.

Yes, Jimmy Butler and Stephen Curry are stars, but role players need to step up

The good news for Golden State is that all eight players not named Curry and Butler scored. The bad news is they didn’t do it very much. The team’s third-leading scorer Tuesday was backup point guard Gary Payton II, whom the Grizzlies were essentially daring to shoot.

He would finish with 12 points, and backup center Quinten Post would add 11. But Draymond Green, Brandin Podziemski — a pair of starters — Buddy Hield, Kevon Looney and Gui Santon each converted just one field goal apiece, combining to go 5-for-21 (23.8%) from the floor.

Curry and Butler are the stars. That’s undeniable. But it’s also unsustainable and, frankly, foolish to expect Golden State to make a run while depending so heavily on two players. It also begs the question of why coach Steve Kerr has essentially removed forward Jonathan Kuminga, a gifted if inconsistent scorer who averaged 15.3 points per game this season, from the rotation; Kuminga did not record a single minute Tuesday or in Golden State’s overtime season finale loss against the Los Angeles Clippers.

Turnovers remain fatal for Grizzlies

Memphis started hot, building a quick nine-point lead minutes into the game. Then, the primary issue that has faced the Grizzlies all season — turnovers — spoiled their offensive rhythm. The Warriors launched a crushing, 29-7 run midway through the first quarter that was fed by seven Memphis giveaways.

Things snowballed from there, as Golden State found comfort and confidence, lacing nine of its first 20 attempted 3s (45%) through 20 minutes of play.

The Grizzlies committed 19 turnovers overall, leading to a 27-12 Warriors advantage in points off giveaways. None was more consequential than a sloppy Morant pass that came with Memphis down 111-109 with just more than two minutes left: Morant tried to find a streaking Zach Edey in the paint, and the turnover led to a Curry triple on the other end, a potential five-point swing.

The Grizzlies have plenty of talent to top the winner of the Kings-Mavericks play-in game Friday night. That would set up a showdown against the best defensive team in the NBA, the No. 1 seeded Oklahoma City Thunder — a team that led the NBA in turnovers forced per game (17).

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

It apparently pays to lead the resistance.

Progressive lawmakers in Congress who have been among the most vocal in pushing back against President Donald Trump’s aggressive and controversial second-term agenda are seeing a surge in fundraising.

Sen. Bernie Sanders, the longtime progressive champion, hauled in $11.5 million in the January-March first quarter of 2025 fundraising, according to Federal Election Commission filings this week.

The Vermont independent and two-time Democratic presidential primary runner-up also reports more than $19 million in his campaign coffers at the start of this month.

Sanders has been drawing tens of thousands of people to his ‘Fighting Oligarchy’ rallies across the country over the past six weeks. Co-headling those rallies is Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, another rock star on the political left.

The four-term Democrat from New York City raked in a massive $9.6 million 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.

Another Democrat in Congress who has been very visible in leading the resistance to Trump is Sen. Chris Murphy of Connecticut.

Murphy, who won re-election last November and doesn’t have to run again until 2030, hauled in $8 million over the past three months, his biggest quarterly fundraising ever.

‘The people are sending Democrats a message about the direction they would like to see,’ top Sanders advisor Faiz Shakir said in a social media post.

Longtime Democratic operative and strategist Joe Caiazzo, a veteran of the Sanders 2016 and 2020 presidential campaigns, told Fox News that ‘there’s a direct correlation between fundraising and action… this is an indication of the yearning for action over inaction… that is what Democratic voters and Democratic activists want.’

And Caiazzo warned that ‘the stale ways of Washington have been rejected by the voters, and we need to understand that going into the next cycle.’

While not bringing in similar eye-popping numbers, House Republicans are touting their first-quarter fundraising, as they prepare to defend their razor-thin majority in the chamber in next year’s midterm elections.

Seven GOP lawmakers in competitive districts who are being targeted by the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee each raised seven figures over the past three months.

Leading the way was Rep. Mike Lawler of the 17th Congressional District of New York, who hauled in nearly $1.5 million during the first quarter. Lawler is mulling a statewide bid for New York governor in 2026. Also on the list are Reps. Juan Ciscomani of Arizona’s 6th District, Young Kim and Ken Calvert, of California’s 40th and 41st Districts, respectively, Mariannette Miller-Meeks of Iowa’s 1st District, Jen Kiggans of Virginia’s 2nd District, and Derrick Van Orden of Wisconsin’s 3rd District

The National Republican Congressional Committee (NRCC) highlighted that House GOP lawmakers in competitive districts enjoy a large fundraising advantage over Democrats in competitive seats.

And the NRCC emphasized that this is ‘a huge difference’ from the first fundraising quarter during the 2024 election cycle, when the Democrats held a campaign cash advantage. 

‘House Republicans aren’t just winning the fundraising game against vulnerable Democrats – they’re running laps around them,’ NRCC spokesman Mike Marinella argued.

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While American taxpayers are familiar with the annual rigmarole of filing their federal taxes and realizing just how much of their hard-earned money Uncle Sam is taking away, several House Republicans are pushing a proposal to take some things away from the Internal Revenue Service: Guns and ammunition.

The ‘Why Does the IRS Need Guns Act’ would disarm the federal agency, prohibiting the commissioner of internal revenue from using funds to buy, receive or store firearms and ammo, and requiring the transfer of IRS firearms and ammunition to the Administrator of General Services. 

The guns would then be sold or auctioned to licensed dealers and the ammo would be auctioned to the public. 

Proceeds would go to ‘the general fund of the Treasury for the sole purpose of deficit reduction,’ the measure stipulates.

The bill states that ‘there are transferred to the Department of Justice the authorities, functions, personnel, and assets of the Criminal Investigation Division of the Internal Revenue Service, which shall be maintained as a distinct entity within the Criminal Division of the Department of Justice, including the related functions of the Secretary of the Treasury.’

Rep. Barry Moore, R-Ala., introduced the measure, which is backed by three original cosponsors: GOP Reps. Harriet Hageman of Wyoming, Mary Miller of Illinois, and Clay Higgins of Louisiana. 

The IRS says on its website that its ‘mission is to provide America’s taxpayers top quality service by helping them understand and meet their tax responsibilities and to enforce the law with integrity and fairness to all.’

But Moore claimed that the federal agency has regularly been ‘weaponized.’

‘The IRS has consistently been weaponized against American citizens, targeted religious organizations, journalists, gun owners, and everyday Americans,’ Moore asserted, according to a press release. 

‘Arming these agents does not make the American public safer. My legislation, the Why Does the IRS Need Guns Act, would disarm these agents, auction off their guns to Federal Firearms License Owners, and sell their ammunition to the public. The only thing IRS agents should be armed with are calculators.’

In an April 15 post on X Moore noted, ‘Tax Day is a great reminder that it’s time for the IRS to stop wasting our taxpayer dollars stockpiling guns and ammo.’

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NEW HAVEN, Conn. – Rep. Ro Khanna, the California Democrat who likely harbors national ambitions in 2028, is turning up the volume in his broadsides against Vice President JD Vance, the heir apparent to President Donald Trump.

In two high-profile speeches this week – in the vice president’s home state of Ohio on Monday and Tuesday at Yale Law School, where both politicians earned their legal degrees – Khanna trained his verbal fire on Vance.

Khanna accused Vance of working to ‘win public adulation by stoking anger and treating legal limits as nuisances to be ignored.’ 

While Vance has not called on Trump to ignore Supreme Court rulings, the vice president, in a closely watched social media post two months ago, criticized moves by federal judges to block the Trump administration’s controversial efforts to dramatically downsize the federal workforce. Vance argued that the judges were trying to ‘control the executive’s legitimate power.’ 

‘Vance says the president, elected by the people, should tell the court what the Constitution means, and if the court disagrees, let them try to enforce their ruling — that the president, as a co-equal, may simply ignore the court’s judgment of the law,’ Khanna argued in his Tuesday speech.

Khanna – spotlighting the controversial case of a Salvadoran citizen (who the Trump administration alleges was an MS-13 gang member) who had lived in Maryland for about 15 years that the Justice Department said was deported to El Salvador due to an ‘administrative error’ – highlighted Vance’s response.

‘Let me say this as clearly as I can: JD Vance, your cold indifference to the lives of vulnerable immigrants betrays every principle that this law school was built to uphold,’ Khanna charged. ‘Your affiliation with this law school is now a stain on the degree of every Yale graduate.’

Vance’s political team did not appear to be too concerned about Khanna’s repeated verbal attacks.

‘Yawn,’ a top political adviser to Vance told Fox News when asked about Khanna’s comments. The adviser described Khanna as an ‘ankle biter,’ which is slang for a relatively minor or irritating person or problem.

Khanna’s speech in New Haven was followed by a day an economic address at the City Club of Cleveland, where the congressman contrasted his vision for America’s ‘new economic patriotism’ with the future of the GOP with Vance at the helm. 

Responding to the visit, Ohio Republican Party Chairman Alex Triantafilou told Fox News Digital that ‘Khanna is a far-left socialist from one of the wealthiest and wokest congressional districts in America. He served as an official surrogate for both Joe Biden and Kamala Harris. This speech is nothing but another desperate plea for attention from another elitist politician wholly out-of-touch with Middle Class voters like those in Ohio.’

Plenty of Democratic Party leaders have turned up the volume in their pushback against Trump’s sweeping and controversial actions to upend the federal government and policy. Also in the Democrats’ crosshairs is the president’s most visible White House adviser – billionaire Elon Musk – who, through his role steering the so-called Department of Government Efficiency, has taken a sledgehammer to the federal work.

However, Khanna is taking the lead among Democrats in shaping Vance – who at this extremely early stage in the 2028 race is viewed as the GOP nomination front-runner – as the Republican bogeyman.

When asked if he was trolling Vance, Khanna said in a Fox News Digital interview ahead of his speech at Yale that the vice president is ‘trolling all of us. He’s the one who has made the argument that the court should not be listened to,’ before adding a litany of other examples. Additionally, Khanna pointed to what he described as Vance’s ‘dangerous attacks on universities, the Supreme Court and the rule of law.’

Noting rising economic uncertainties and the recent massive stock market sell-off triggered by the initial implementation of Trump’s tariffs on nations across the globe, Khanna suggested that Vance may not have the 2028 Republican nomination to himself.

‘Well, after the markets and the economy and the tariffs, I’m not sure he’s going to get the nomination. I think that others may emerge,’ Khanna predicted.

He stressed that the vice president ‘is the one person who is trying to give most argument to MAGA philosophy. He’s the one who’s called the university’s the enemy. He’s the only one who said the Supreme Court should be defied. He’s the one who’s been defending this high tariff policy. And so we need to take on his arguments and offer a counter to defeat them.’

However, when asked if his attacks on Vance were an early 2028 positioning move, Khanna responded that ‘what I’m doing is providing an intellectual foundation for the Democratic Party.’

Khanna emphasized that ‘we have to have a whole rebrand of the Democratic Party with a coherent platform and a future-oriented platform, and many leaders need to do that. New leaders, not the old guard. And I hope to be part of that.’

Khanna has been crisscrossing the country the past couple of months, taking a lead in amplifying the Democrats’ message in resisting Trump.

When asked if Democratic Party leaders need to be more vocal, Khanna quickly said yes.

‘We need more from our leadership. And you know, if you’re not willing to speak up about someone being snatched away from their home and deported without due process, you probably shouldn’t be in elective office as a Democrat right now,’ he said. ‘We need Democrats speaking out, not just on the economy. We need them speaking out on civil liberties, on the rights of immigrants and on the rights of universities.’

Khanna also praised the recent record-breaking marathon Senate floor speech by Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey, and the large rallies across the country being co-headlined by Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York.

Looking ahead to next year’s midterm elections, when House Democrats aim to topple the GOP’s razor-thin majority in the chamber, Khanna said he will continue his brisk pace on the campaign trail.

‘I’m already going out to more red districts. We did three red districts in California. I’m headed out to Pennsylvania. Was invited to go out to Nebraska, to Nevada, down south to South Carolina,’ he said. ‘So we will be campaigning in red districts. 1000s of people are showing up. I’m very, very confident that we’re going to succeed.’

In Khanna’s home state of California, Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom is term-limited, and former Vice President Kamala Harris is mulling a 2026 gubernatorial run. 

‘I think she would do well in California. She was attorney general. She was a district attorney. A lot of people care about public safety in California, we have to tackle building housing,’ Khanna said of Harris. ‘So she would have a lot of support if she does it. Of course, it’s her decision.’

Fox News’ Deirdre Heavey and Emma Woodhead contributed to this report

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The Trump administration is mulling a proposal that would slash the State Department budget by $27 billion – nearly in half – and shutter smaller embassies and consulates across the globe. 

The proposal calls for the elimination of funding for more than 20 international organizations, including the United Nations, NATO and the Organization of American States, a diplomatic source in possession of the document told Fox News Digital. 

The U.S. contributed around $13 billion to the United Nations in 2023 and around $3.5 billion to NATO. The proposed budget calls for allocating $2 billion for ‘America First’ priorities. Those coffers could be used for ‘specific partners’ like India and Jordan, according to the document, or broader priorities, like the South Pacific Tuna Treaty. 

However, a State Department spokesperson said Tuesday, ‘there is no final plan, final budget.’ 

The proposal is an early draft and has to pass layers of approval within the administration before it even gets to Congress. Congress can then take it as an outline but ultimately draw up its own budget figures. 

The foreign service travel budget and benefits would be scaled back, and the Fulbright scholarship program would be eliminated.

The document calls for a 2% reduction in diplomatic security, cuts to the inspector general’s office and the closure of smaller embassies in countries such as the Maldives, Malta, Luxembourg and the Central African Republic.

It also proposes a 54% cut to global public health funding, with carve-outs for malaria, HIV, and tuberculosis, and a complete elimination of international peacekeeping funds.

When asked about the budget plan during a State Department briefing, spokesperson Tammy Bruce said, ‘Throughout the history of the United States, everyone has a budget plan and everyone has ideas for budgets. And every president has a budget plan and sends it to Congress. And then Congress either accepts it or they have their own ideas, which happens more often than not.’

‘There is no final plan, final budget,’ she emphasized. 

The Trump administration has moved quickly to dismantle foreign aid, eliminating nearly 90% of USAID projects and merging the agency with the State Department and defunding ‘soft power’ institutions like Voice of America, Radio Free Europe, Radio Free Asia and Middle East Broadcasting networks. 

The White House budget is set to be transferred to Congress next month before the Republican-led House and Senate get to work on passing appropriations bills for each agency of government. 

Meanwhile, agencies are expected to present their own plans for reorganization to the White House this week, outlining what cuts they believe are necessary to further shrink the federal government. The State Department has not yet publicly detailed its plans for downsizing. 

As reports of the cuts emerged, Democrats warned that U.S. adversaries would fill the vacuum left by America around the world. 

The cuts ‘would leave our country alone and exposed and allow China and Russia to fill the vacuum made vacant by this administration,’ according to Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, N.H., top Democrat on the Foreign Relations Committee. 

‘Why in the world would we cut funding for NATO at a moment when war is raging in Europe and security threats on the continent grow?’ she added.

It is not clear whether Secretary of State Marco Rubio endorses the initial proposal. ‘I want to hear from Secretary Rubio directly,’ said Sen. Brian Schatz, Hawaii, top Democrat on the Senate Appropriations subcommittee that handles State funding, calling the reports ‘deeply troubling.’

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Epic things are coming to Orlando.

In a little more than a month, Universal will officially open the doors of its newest theme park, the first major theme park in the Florida area in 25 years, spurring a major shift in Orlando’s tourism industry.

Epic Universe is the largest of all Universal properties at 750 acres and features five themed worlds: The Wizarding World of Harry Potter — The Ministry of Magic, Super Nintendo World, How to Train Your Dragon — The Isle of Berk, Celestial Park and Dark Universe.

It will join Universal Studios and Walt Disney World in theme park mecca Orlando.

Tourism has long been the leading sector in central Florida, drawing both domestic and international visitors. More than 74 million people journeyed to Orlando in 2023, contributing around 50% of the total sales tax collected in Orange County.

Epic Universe is not only expected to bolster theme park revenues for Universal, as well as its rival just down the highway, Disney, but also bring in billions of dollars to the local economy.

“This is the first major, entirely new theme park in the U.S. in 25 years. This is a compelling reason to visit Orlando,” said Casandra Matej, CEO of Visit Orlando, a tourism trade association. “So, when you see a major milestone project such as Epic Universe, you know it’s going to have definitely a domino effect of economic benefits for our community.”

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

Just as they were getting hot, the Memphis Grizzlies suffered what could be a massive setback.

With 4:25 left to play in the third quarter of Tuesday night’s Play-In Tournament game against the Golden State Warriors, star point guard Ja Morant landed awkwardly on the foot of Warriors guard Buddy Hield, forcing Morant’s right foot to tweak.

While he later returned in the 121-116 loss, his status for Friday’s win-or-go-home game is unclear.

Morant lay on the court for several minutes as medical staff tended to the injured ankle. Morant, who made the shot attempt he took when he sustained the injury, appeared to be in clear discomfort. He would hobble to the bench where trainers continued to look at the injured ankle.

Morant would eventually limp to the line and sink the free throw that resulted from the foul called on Warriors center Quinten Post.

If an injured player is not able to shoot a free throw, he must be removed from the game.

Trainers would continue to look at Morant’s ankle for several minutes. He had scored a team-high 18 points on 7-of-14 shooting before sustaining the injury. He finished with 22.

The Grizzlies had been steadily erasing a 20-point Warriors lead before Morant got hurt. Memphis continued to respond in his absence; the Warriors held a 94-91 lead at the end of the quarter.

With 9:26 left in the game and the score tied at 96, Morant returned, notably favoring the ankle. He wasted no time continuing to impact the game, sinking his first attempt, a mid-range shot from the left elbow.

Morant has made headlines recently for his on-court celebrations. The NBA fined him after he held his hand up in a finger-gun gesture, and during the next game he pretended to throw a grenade after scoring.

The NBA fined Morant $75,000 for his finger-gun gesture, which the league called ‘inappropriate,’ in an April 3 game against the Miami Heat after the two-time All-Star had been warned for using the same gesture in a contest against the Warriors.

(This story was updated to include new details).

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

NEW YORK — Juan Soto isn’t off to a blazing-hot start with the New York Mets, but if he’s feeling out of sorts – well, Aaron Judge has a friendly tip.

“He can look at what I did last April, for kind of an example of (how) he just needs to keep being himself,’’ said the New York Yankees’ captain of his sluggish 2024 start. “He’s going to be just fine.

Soto is still getting on base at a .400 clip, though his production numbers – two homers, six RBI – have drawn notice through 16 games after signing a $765 million free-agent deal with the Mets.

Last year, his lone pinstriped season, Soto finished third in the AL MVP award voting, batting directly ahead of Judge, the league’s MVP.

Speaking with the New York Post’s Mike Puma, Soto said “it’s definitely different’’ the way he’s been pitched so far in 2025.

‘I had the best hitter in baseball hitting behind me. I was getting more attacked and more pitches in the strike zone, less intentional walks and things like that,’ Soto said.

Made aware of Soto’s comments to the Post, Judge referenced Pete Alonso’s start, batting .345 with a 1.137 OPS while hitting right after Soto.

“He’s got probably one of the best hitters in the game behind him right now with what Alonso is doing. It’s been fun to watch,’’ said Judge. “He’s hitting close to .400 and driving the ball all over the field, driving guys in. So, they’re going to be just fine.’’

That’s how it turned out for Judge in 2024, after taking a .197 batting average and .725 OPS into May, with just six homers and 18 RBI over his first 33 games.

Entering Tuesday night’s game against the Royals, Judge was batting .367 with six homers, 20 RBI, and a 1.212 OPS in his first 16 games.

These days, Judge finds himself mostly batting between the hot-hitting Ben Rice and the accomplished Cody Bellinger, part of an offense that led the majors in home runs (32) and OPS (.844) so far.

“You can’t replace a guy like Soto. He’s one of one. That’s why he signed the deal he did,’’ said Judge, who then praised the rapid gains made by Rice and the acquisitions of Bellinger and Paul Goldschmidt as key developments in the Yanks’ Soto-less 2025 lineup.

“This is a big year for a lot of our young guys to step up and do something big and kind of help carry this team,’’ said Judge, adding that, “we’ve just got a really, really complete team right now.’’

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The first domino in the 2025 NBA Play-In Tournament fell, and the Orlando Magic are through to the postseason.

The Magic topped the Hawks on Tuesday night, 120-95, to clinch their spot as the seventh seed in the Eastern Conference, setting up a showdown in the first round of the playoffs against the No. 2 Boston Celtics ‒ the reigning champions.

Paolo Banchero struggled from the floor and was Orlando’s third-leading scorer with 17 points on 4-of-13 shooting. Hawks guard Trae Young poured in 28 points and six assists, but was ejected late in the fourth after he became frustrated with Orlando’s physicality.

Atlanta will face the winner of Wednesday night’s game between the No. 9 Chicago Bulls and No. 10 Miami Heat to determine the eighth seed in the East.

The Golden State Warriors edged the Memphis Grizzlies 121-116 in Tuesday’s nightcap to decide the No. 7 seed in the West. Memphis star guard Ja Morant hurt his right ankle in the third quarter, but returned. His status for Friday’s matchup is unclear.

Here are three takeaways from Tuesday night’s Magic-Hawks play-in game:

The Magic can grind opponents down. They won’t outscore the Celtics.

Tuesday was a perfect encapsulation of this Orlando team. Its defensive length can deflect passes, clog lanes and swat shots. The Magic slow even the quickest teams in transition; the Hawks, who ranked third in the NBA in pace, scored just two fast break points in the first half and four overall.

Orlando, however, is a poor shooting team, particularly from 3-point range. In the regular season, the Magic ranked last in made 3s (11.2 per game) and percentage (31.8%). Against Atlanta, when the Hawks doubled Banchero in the first half, he found teammates for six dimes, five of which came in the first quarter. When those teammates went cold in the third, the Hawks crept back in the game.

Against an ignitable Celtics team that ranked second in the league in points per 100 possessions (119.5), that simply won’t be good enough.

Orlando’s bench was essential. Is its play sustainable?

Led by backup point guard Cole Anthony (26 points), the Magic bench erupted for 57 points Tuesday night. Orlando’s starters combined to shoot 3-of-22 (13.6%) from beyond the arc. Orlando’s bench players combined to go 8-of-17 (47.1%). During a game when Banchero and forward Franz Wagner combined to score just 30 points, Orlando’s bench play was crucial. Against Boston, the Magic will need more scoring from Banchero and Wagner, regardless. But for Orlando to have any shot against Boston, it will need Anthony or Anthony Black (16 points) or Jonathan Isaac (six points and eight rebounds) to contribute.

The Hawks will need much more from No. 1 overall rookie Zaccharie Risacher.

In games No. 1 overall rookie Zaccharie Risacher has played since the beginning of March, he’s averaging 9.9 points in Atlanta’s nine losses. In the team’s 13 victories over that span, Risacher is averaging 18.4 points. Tuesday night, he scored just seven points on 2-of-9 shooting, including just 1-of-5 from 3. Otherwise, he contributed just a pair of rebounds.

Simply put: the Hawks needed more from Risacher on Tuesday, and they’ll need more from him Friday night against the Bulls or Heat. That’s only magnified when Atlanta plays a team that can frustrate Young, who was ejected late.

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