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Ole Miss athletic director Keith Carter appeared to confirm the news by posting a picture to social media of him and Beard with the caption, ‘why stop now?’ shortly after the reports surfaced.

Beard, who was most notably connected to the opening at Texas A&M left by Buzz Williams, appears to be sticking around at Ole Miss after leading it to its first ever Sweet 16 appearance this season. He has a 44-24 record in two seasons with the Rebels.

The 52-year-old coach has won at every spot in his Division I head coaching career, leading Arkansas-Little Rock to a first-round win in the 2016 NCAA Tournament before taking the job at Texas Tech, which he led to a national championship in 2019 before falling to Virginia. He has a 280-121 career record as a Division I head coach.

Controversy struck when Beard was hired by Texas in 2021, however, as he was arrested for alleged domestic violence against his then-fiancé. He was suspended for nearly a month in late 2022 before being fired midway through his second season in 2023. The charge was eventually dismissed as his fiancé didn’t wish to prosecute him.

Beard has taken quite the path to being a college head coach, starting his career as a graduate assistant at Texas from 1991-95 before serving as an assistant at Incarnate Word, Abilene Christian and North Texas, all schools in Texas.

He then coached at junior colleges Fort Scott and Seminole State before becoming an assistant at Texas Tech, a job he held from 2001-11. Before becoming a Division I head coach for the first time at Arkansas-Little Rock, he served as the head coach of the South Carolina Warriors, a semi-pro team, and as a Division III and Division II head coach at McMurry and Angelo State, respectively.

After two seasons at Little Rock, he was then hired by Texas Tech, where he spent 2016-21 before leaving for Texas, where he was fired midway through his second season in 2023. Beard took the Ole Miss job ahead of the 2023-24 season.

With Ole Miss committing more resources to its basketball program, Beard looks to keep the momentum rolling in Oxford.

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After only five games in the major leagues, the Boston Red Sox have agreed to a long-term contract with top prospect Kristian Campbell.

The deal, which includes a signing bonus of $2 million, is for $60 million over eight years from 2025 to 2032 − with a pair of team options in 2033 and 2034 that could raise the value to as much as $96 million, according to a person with direct knowledge of the situation.

The person spoke to USA TODAY Sports on the condition of anonymity because the deal hadn’t yet been announced.

Campbell, 22, made the Red Sox’s opening day roster this season after starting the 2024 season at High-A. His rapid rise to the majors came after he destroyed three levels of minor-league pitching a year ago to a combined .330/.439/.558 slash line with 20 home runs and 24 stolen bases − a performance that earned him USA TODAY Minor League Player of the Year honors.

‘I think the sky’s the limit for him,’ said Red Sox third baseman Alex Bregman.

A fourth-round draft pick in 2023, Campbell has shown considerable versatility in his limited time as a professional, playing primarily at second base or shortstop, but also seeing time at all three outfield positions. That may have been one of the reasons he made the major league roster this spring, despite hitting just .167 in 48 at-bats.

In five games so far this season with Boston, Campbell is hitting .375/.500/.688 with a home run, two doubles and four walks in 20 plate appearances. He’s played four games at second base and one in left field.

It’s the second extension the Red Sox have handed out this week. On Monday, pitcher Garrett Crochet and the Red Sox agreed on a six-year, $170 million contract extension. Heading into the season, the Red Sox current payroll ranks 12th in the majors at $193.6 million, according to figures compiled by USA TODAY.

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The person requested anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly about Taylor’s plans.

This paves the way for Alex Rodriguez and Marc Lore and investors Eric Schmidt and Mike Bloomberg to become 100% owners of the NBA and WNBA franchises in the state.

The arbitration ruling stated that Rodriguez and Lore, who agreed to buy the team for $1.5 billion in 2021, did not violate terms of the purchase agreement, which Taylor alleged. The Timberwolves/Lynx have been valued at just above $3 billion by Forbes and Sportico.

The NBA needs to approve the sale, and at All-Star Weekend in February NBA commissioner Adam Silver said, “I will say standing here today, I don’t see any reason why it won’t be approved, but again, we need to follow the process.”

Rodriguez, the former MLB star, and Lore, a billionaire entrepreneur, had already been approved as partial owners.

It was an unusual purchase agreement.  Rodriguez and Lore planned to buy the team in three installments – 20%, 20% and another 40% last spring to become majority owners while Taylor helped guide them as owners and stewards of the franchises until the deal was completed.

A year ago, Taylor called off the sale, saying in a statement: “the closing was required to occur within 90 days following the exercise notice issued by Lore and Rodriguez. That 90-day period expired on March 27, 2024. Under certain circumstances, the buyer could have been entitled to a limited extension. However, those circumstances did not occur. … The Timberwolves and Lynx are no longer for sale.’

Rodriguez and Lore claimed Taylor had seller’s remorse. Taylor agreed to sell 80% of the team to Rodriguez and Lore at a $1.5 billion valuation. The insinuation from the Rodriguez-Lore camp: Taylor could make millions more by selling at the higher valuation.

Taylor bought the Timberwolves in 1994 for approximately $94 million and later added the Lynx.

As part of the purchase agreement, both sides agreed to arbitration in a dispute that sometimes turned petty.

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Memphis Grizzlies guard Ja Morant is under scrutiny for a gesture he made at the Golden State Warriors bench that could be construed as a person mimicking the shooting of a gun, late in the Warriors’ 134-125 victory Tuesday.

The gesture is also very similar to one several NBA players do after making a 3-point shot. However, neither Morant nor the Grizzlies had just made a shot. Golden State’s Jimmy Butler had just made the second of two free throws giving the Warriors a 132-125 lead with 20.8 seconds left, and Memphis called timeout. As both teams headed to their respective benches, Morant made the gesture at Golden State’s bench.

Golden State’s Buddy Hield made a similar gesture from the bench just before Butler made the second free throw. Hield and Morant were both given technical fouls, and NBA executive Vice President and head of Basketball Operations Joe Dumars and his staff are likely to review the interaction.

Atlanta’s Dyson Daniels does a similar gesture after making 3-pointers and was not fined for making the gesture toward New Orleans’ bench during a game earlier this season. Other players have been fined for mimicking gun gestures, including Gerald Green and Josh Jackson.

Morant’s involvement draws closer scrutiny because he has been suspended twice by the league for showing a handgun on social media.

Morant was suspended 25 games without pay for conduct detrimental to the league in 2023. “Morant posed with a firearm in a car during a live-streamed video on May 13, less than two months after he was suspended eight games without pay for the live streaming of a video on March 4 in which he displayed a firearm while in an intoxicated state at a Denver area nightclub,” the league said in a statement on June 16, 2023.

NBA commissioner Adam Silver said at the time: “Ja Morant’s decision to once again wield a firearm on social media is alarming and disconcerting given his similar conduct in March for which he was already suspended eight games. The potential for other young people to emulate Ja’s conduct is particularly concerning.  Under these circumstances, we believe a suspension of 25 games is appropriate and makes clear that engaging in reckless and irresponsible behavior with guns will not be tolerated.”

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John Vella, an offensive lineman who played eight seasons in the NFL and won a Super Bowl with the Oakland Raiders, has died at the age of 74.

The Raiders announced his passing on social media. No cause of death was given.

‘The Raiders Family mourns the passing of John Vella, a standout on the dominant Raider offensive lines of the 1970s and a starter on Oakland’s Super Bowl XI Championship team,’ the team said in a statement. ‘The prayers of the entire Raider Nation are with the Vella family at this time.’

The Raiders selected Vella in the second round of the 1972 draft out of Southern California. He played in 92 career games (48 starts), all but eight of those games coming with the Raiders. He finished out his career in Minnesota in 1980.

Vella started 14 games at right tackle during the 1976 season, culminating with three starts in the postseason as the Raiders defeated the Vikings 32-14 in Super Bowl XI.

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President Donald Trump announced sweeping tariffs on U.S. trading partners throughout the world Wednesday, saying the U.S. would add a 10% minimum baseline tax on all products coming in.

The Trump administration has identified what it has called the ‘Dirty 15’ as the 15 nations with the largest trade deficit with the U.S., meaning the trade partnerships by which Washington imports more from countries than those nations import from the U.S.

But the White House has also flagged what it describes as other ‘unfair’ trading practices, chiefly implemented through tariffs on U.S. goods. 

CHINA

Washington and Beijing have been in a trade war since the first Trump administration when the first-term president imposed 25% tariffs on $50 billion in Chinese goods starting in April 2018.

Beijing responded the next day by slapping reciprocal tariffs on 106 U.S. products worth $50 billion, mostly targeting U.S. agricultural products worth some $16.5 billion.

The tariff war would continue with repeated back-and-forth escalating tariffs before some tariff relief was agreed upon beginning in January 2020.

By January 2021, the U.S.-China Business Council (USCBC) found that the U.S. had lost nearly a quarter of a million jobs.

The Biden administration and China largely maintained the status quo established during Trump’s initial trade war. 

But Trump threatened to hit Beijing with 60% tariffs on the campaign trail and, by February 2025, just weeks after his inauguration, he slapped China with a blanket 20% tariff on all Chinese imports.

Beijing again responded with up to 15% tariffs on more than $33 billion in U.S. agricultural products, including U.S.-grown chicken, wheat, corn and cotton.

China’s trade deficit with the U.S. is $295.4 billion. 

EUROPEAN UNION

The European Union, which is no stranger to Trump’s tariff war, is bracing for a much bigger battle this time around after enduring metal trade spats during his first term. 

Trump has already announced a 25% tariff on steel and aluminum imports, which directly hits the European Union, the U.S.’s largest trading partner, along with a 25% tariff on imported cars, which will affect nations like Germany. 

The EU said it could impose retaliatory tariffs on the U.S. of up to $28 billion. 

The U.S. had a trade deficit of $235.6 billion with the European Union in 2024, which Trump has called ‘an atrocity.’

But it is not only the difference in trade agreements that has irked the president.

Last month, the White House said specific levies charged by various trading partners are making it ‘virtually impossible’ for U.S. products to be exported, including a 50% tax on American dairy products sold by EU nations. 

But expert Andrew Hale, a senior policy analyst in trade policy with the Heritage Foundation, explained that the dairy industry in particular has massive barriers stopping Europe from being able to lower prices to match American products.

‘They have a very, very protected agricultural market,’ Hale said, highlighting Europe’s strict husbandry practices. ‘Europeans would not be able to compete.’

Hale explained that norms like overcrowding and poor conditions frequently found in the U.S.’s poultry, dairy and pork industries in mass farming are barred in Europe. 

Animal spacing regulations and bans related to hormone injections have required a completely different type of farming that favors quality treatment of the animals versus mass production, which makes European meats and dairy products more expensive than American products and makes it unlikely that the EU drops this tax.

CANADA

The White House has also taken aim at Canada, which is expected to see more tariffs fired at it Wednesday and said it has a 300% tariff on American butter and cheese.

Hale explained that while this is technically true, it is a tariff rate-quota that was negotiated during the first Trump administration under the revised NAFTA agreement, which became the United States Mexico Canada (USMCA), and one which has never been implemented.

The massive tariff would only be used if U.S. exports exceed negotiated tariff rate quotas. Otherwise, daily sales to Canada face no tariffs under the USMCA.

Canada and the U.S. in recent weeks have entered into a tariff war after Trump announced a blanket 25% tariff on 25% on Canadian goods and 10% on its energy.

Ottawa, in return, imposed 25% reciprocal tariffs on $30 billion in U.S. goods, mostly targeting the agriculture sector. 

It has threatened to hit the U.S. with tariffs on $95 billion in U.S. imports if Trump imposes more taxes on the country’s northern neighbor.

HOW IT ENDS

‘Everyone needs to do what Israel has just done, bring down zero tariffs against the U.S. And then we can have absolute free trade,’ Hale said. ‘That’s fair, and we can all have market access.

‘When you have stupid tariffs, like tariffing stuff you don’t grow and make, that’s just basically being unfair.’

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The Supreme Court appeared divided Wednesday over whether a state can block Medicaid funding for Planned Parenthood clinics, in a technical interpretation over healthcare choices that has become a larger political fight over abortion access.

In nearly two hours of oral arguments, the court’s conservative majority offered measured support for South Carolina’s position.

The specific issue is whether low-income Medicaid patients can sue in order to choose their own qualified healthcare provider. The federal-state program has shared responsibility for funding and administering it, through private healthcare providers.

Federal law bans taxpayer money from going to fund almost all abortions, but Planned Parenthood also provides a range of other medical services with and without Medicaid subsidies, including gynecological care and cancer screenings.

Blocking the provider from Medicaid networks could effectively defund it. Given the divisive underlying issue of abortion, groups on both sides rallied outside the high court ahead of the arguments. 

The state’s governor in 2018 signed an executive order blocking Medicaid funding for the state’s two Planned Parenthood clinics, saying it amounted to taxpayers subsidizing abortions. 

Courts have put that order on hold, leading to the current case. 

South Carolina now bans abortion around six weeks of pregnancy, or when cardiac activity is detected, with limited exceptions. 

The key provision in the 1965 Medicaid Act guarantees patients a ‘free choice of provider’ that is willing and qualified. 

Much of the court session dealt with whether Planned Parenthood was a ‘qualified provider’ under the Medicaid law, and whether individual patients have an unambiguous ‘right’ to sue to see their provider of choice, under its specific language.

‘It seems a little bit odd to think that a problem that motivated Congress to pass this provision was that states were limiting the choices people had,’ said Justice Sonia Sotomayor. ‘It seems hard to understand that states didn’t understand that they had to give individuals the right to choose a provider.’

‘The state has an obligation to ensure that a person… has a right to choose their doctor,’ added Justice Elena Kagan. ‘It’s impossible to even say the thing without using the word ‘right.”

But some conservative justices questioned how to interpret a provision that does not contain the word ‘right.’

‘One can imagine a statute written as an individual benefit that’s mandatory on the states but isn’t right-creating’ for the patient, said Justice Neil Gorsuch. ‘I mean, that’s an imaginable scenario.’ 

Justice Samuel Alito added it was ‘something that’s quite extraordinary’ to give individuals that right to sue under the Constitution’s spending clause. 

The votes of Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Amy Coney Barrett could be key: They asked tough questions of both sides.

Barrett offered a hypothetical of the right of a patient to go to court over their doctor accused of medical malpractice. ‘Does it make sense in that circumstance for Congress to want plaintiffs to be able to sue?’ she asked.

Planned Parenthood says its future is at stake, noting nearly $700 million – about a third of its overall nationwide revenue – originates from Medicaid reimbursements, and government grants and contracts.

But the group notes just $90,000 in Medicaid funding goes to Planned Parenthood facilities every year in South Carolina, which is comparatively small to the state’s total Medicaid spending.

Julie Edwards, a South Carolina resident, sued along with Planned Parenthood South Atlantic, which operates two clinics in Columbia and Charleston. She has type-1 diabetes and associated medical complications and wanted to choose the Columbia clinic for its range of services, including reproductive care. 

A federal appeals court ruled against the state in 2024, concluding the ‘free choice of provider’ provision ‘specifies an entitlement given to each Medicaid beneficiary: to choose one’s preferred qualified provider without state interference.’

In a 2023 Supreme Court opinion involving care for nursing home residents, the justices concluded that a different law from Medicaid gives individuals the right to sue. 

A year earlier, the high court overturned its Roe v. Wade precedent of a nationwide right to abortion.

Several states – including Texas, Missouri and Arkansas – have already done what South Carolina wants to do by cutting Medicaid funding to Planned Parenthood and more could follow if South Carolina prevails. 

‘The people in this state do not want their tax money to go to that organization,’ said Republican South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster, who attended the oral argument. ‘I believe the decision of this court will be that the people of South Carolina have the right to make this decision for themselves, for our state. Other states may make a different decision, but not ours. South Carolina stands for the right to life, and we’ll do whatever is necessary to protect that.’

The Trump Justice Department is supporting the state, and abortion rights groups say the issue is about patient choice.

‘Our health centers serve an irreplaceable role in the state’s healthcare system, providing birth control and cancer screenings to people who can’t afford those services anywhere else,’ said Paige Johnson, interim president and CEO of Planned Parenthood South Atlantic. ‘Government officials should never block people from getting healthcare or be able to decide which doctor you can or cannot see.’ 

One concern raised by healthcare advocates is finding gynecological and family planning services in states with limited facilities. Low-income women often have greater difficulty traveling long distances to get such quality care, a requirement for Medicaid providers.

Justice Brett Kavanaugh said he would make it his mission to bring as much clarity over when patients can go to court, which he called a 45-year ‘odyssey.’

Much of the public arguments dealt with whether a ‘right’ to sue was a magic word to automatically decide the matter.

‘I’m not allergic to magic words, because magic words – if they represent the principle – will provide the clarity that will avoid the litigation that is a huge waste of resources for states, courts, providers, beneficiaries.’

The case is Medina (SC DOH) v. Planned Parenthood South Atlantic (23-1275). A ruling is likely by early summer.

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Tesla reported 336,000 vehicle deliveries in the first quarter of 2025, a 13% decline from a year ago, two days after the electric vehicle company’s stock wrapped up its worst quarter since 2022.

Here are the key numbers:

Investors were expecting Tesla to report deliveries of between 360,000 and 370,000 vehicles, according to StreetAccount. Tesla’s investor relations team sends a company-compiled consensus to select analysts, and said the average estimate was for around 377,590 deliveries. Prediction market company Kalshi on Tuesday released a forecast for Tesla deliveries of 352,000.

In the first quarter of 2024, Tesla reported 386,810 deliveries, and production of 433,371 vehicles.

Deliveries are the closest approximation of vehicle sales reported by Tesla but are not precisely defined in the company’s shareholder communications.

Tesla doesn’t break out sales and production by model or region. However, the company said that it produced 345,454 of its most popular Model 3 and Model Y cars and delivered 323,800 of them in the three months ending March 31.

The company reported 12,881 deliveries of its other models, including its angular steel Cybertruck.

During the quarter, Tesla faced planned, partial shutdowns in some of its factories that allowed the company to upgrade manufacturing lines to start producing a redesigned version of its popular Model Y SUV.

CEO Elon Musk recently said during an all-hands session with Tesla employees that he expects the Model Y to be the “best-selling car on Earth again this year.” 

But Tesla has to contend with an onslaught of EV competition and reputational damage. In the first quarter, the company was hit with waves of protests, boycotts and some criminal activity that targeted Tesla vehicles and facilities in response to Musk’s political rhetoric and his work as part of President Donald Trump’s second administration.

After spending $290 million to help return President Donald Trump to the White House, Musk is leading the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), where he’s slashing costs, eliminating regulations and cutting tens of thousands of federal jobs.

Musk, the world’s wealthiest person, has also involved himself in European politics, promoting the anti-immigrant AfD party in Germany in February’s elections. Tesla’s business on the continent is struggling.

Across 15 European countries, Tesla’s market share declined to 9.3% in the first quarter from 17.9% in the same period a year earlier, according to data tracked by EU-EVs.com. In Germany, Tesla’s market share in battery electric vehicles plummeted to 4% from about 16% over that stretch.

Sales of Tesla’s electric vehicles made in China came in at 78,828 in March, slumping 11.5% year-on-year, according to data from the China Passenger Car Association released Wednesday. The company is facing rising competition in the region from EV makers such as BYD.

Tesla shares sank 36% in the first quarter, their steepest drop since the fourth quarter of 2022 and third-biggest decline in the company’s 15 years on the public market. The drop wiped out $460 billion in market cap.

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During the show, all of the monitors viewers at home can see of the Bristol, Connecticut studio are filled with graphics – specific to show or teams and topics being discussed. On Wednesday, every monitor will be filled by collages of Madden’s drawings.

“No matter what you’re seeing on the air, his drawings will be in the background,” “NFL Live” director Tim Farrell told USA TODAY Sports.

A topic of discussion will obviously be the upcoming draft. A New York Giants logo will be imposed over Madden’s work, for example.

“There won’t be one graphic in the entire studio that is what we would normally use on our show,” Farrell said.

The idea came about last year after Farrell saw Orlovsky post one of Madden’s creations based on a “Toy Story” scene featuring Woody and Buzz Lightyear, a comic-strip-esque series of drawings. Orlovsky remembers Madden showing it to him while he was playing catch with his two other sons, Hunter and Noah, whom along with Madden form 13-year-old triplets of Orlovsky boys.

In Orlovsky’s social media post, he overlayed it with the audio from the scene Madden recreated.

“I was like ‘Holy smokes, Madden, this is sick,’” Orlovsky told USA TODAY Sports.

Madden, 13, was diagnosed with autism more than a decade ago. It wasn’t long after Orlovsky and his wife Tiffany realized Madden’s passion for drawing. Art is an outlet for him, Tiffany said, because although he is verbal, he’s not overly talkative.

“He expresses himself that way,” Tiffany told USA TODAY Sports. “Also, we get to see some more interests that we might not have known he had and that will spark conversations. Sometimes, even his emotions are shown in it. He’s very creative with his characters’ facial expressions, so that’s neat to see, how intuitive he is with emotions and other people’s emotions. Honestly, it just creates a conversation or a starter for us to kind of relate to him.” 

Farrell approached Orlovsky with the idea in the second half of the 2024 NFL season with the goal of doing it sometime in April, which is Autism Awareness Month.

“I lost it,” Orlovsky recalled. “I looked at him – I didn’t even know him that well – and I looked at him like ‘You have no concept of what you just did’ in an unbelievably kind way.”

Characters from Disney movies or Nickelodeon shows are Madden’s favorite subject to draw. And he’s always working on something. The boxes of drawings in the Orlovsky family’s basement are the Madden archives.

“Probably every day, there’s at least three new drawings or cartoons,” Tiffany said.

Farrell sent Orlovsky home with a drawing pad from Staples. Madden opted for his own canvas – sheets of printer paper – but judging by the amount of drawings Farrell received, he took the assignment seriously. Some drawings unfortunately couldn’t make the air because of intellectual property rights, Farrell said.

“My office at home is filled with all of these papers,” said Farrell, who picked out ones for use on the show.

Madden began drawing his father a lot. Tiffany requested drawings of “Uncle Swagu” (Marcus Spears) or “Miss Laura” (Laura Rutledge), Orlovksy’s “NFL Live” teammates. Mina Kimes, another fellow analyst, sent him a watercolor paint set and pad along with a drawing of her own.

Orlovsky brought Madden – not named after John Madden or the video game, even though he loves video games and is an elite Mario Kart player – to work Wednesday and Madden left school early. (The Orlovskys chose to live in Westport, Connecticut for the school district’s services and approach; Madden excels in school.)

“The way I tell people, if you spend 15 minutes with him, you’re like ‘Oh he’s a goofball,’” Orlovsky said. “He’s got, like, the sweetest heart in the world.”

That doesn’t make having a child with autism easy or any less frustrating.

“He can’t control it. It’s part of that lifestyle,” said Orlovsky, who was a backup NFL quarterback for 12 years before becoming one of the sport’s most celebrated analysts. “I always say to him, ‘Dude, when you’re happy, everyone’s happy.’

“When he’s on, there’s nothing better, because he just has these special powers to make people feel good.”

The Orlovskys don’t always broadcast Madden’s diagnosis because they want to see it as a “superpower” rather than a disability. His brothers and sister, Lennon, 9, are supportive.

Aging has also made him see differences between himself and his brothers and peers.

“That’s hard for him because he’ll ask questions ‘Am I weird?’ ‘Why am I so weird?’ And that’s tough,” Tiffany said.  

But Madden’s parents remind him that he’s special and different and that there’s nothing wrong with the way he is.

Tiffany wants parents of children with autism to know not to give up and every child is different. Giving kids the freedom to be who they are and not putting them in a box – exhibiting patience – is important.

“You’re not alone,” Tiffany said. “There are so many people out there that will support your child and support you. And don’t be ashamed. Because they really are so special and cool.”

And come Wednesday, Madden’s passion will receive the ESPN treatment.

“It’s going to be an awesome day. It’ll be an emotional day,” Orlovsky said. “I’m an emotional person, so at some point I’ll lose it on TV like a complete idiot.”

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There was always a chance Miles would return to school. WNBA front offices have a cornucopia of information available to them. So, it’s very likely Miles’ seemingly stunning decision to forgo the draft and continue playing college basketball wasn’t as head-turning as it appeared.

MARCH MADNESS: Women’s March Madness Final Four bracket breakdown: Best players

Perhaps it was timing ― the news broke in the middle of a March Madness UConn vs. USC matchup ― that added to the gravity of the decision. Or maybe it was one mind-boggling detail: Miles intends to enter the transfer portal. Either way, her decision sent reverberations through the women’s basketball landscape.

Among the many questions that inevitably arise, is one that more people should consider with the WNBA draft less than two weeks away: Which draft prospects will receive a boost in stock with no Miles in the 2025 class?

Here are nine players whose WNBA draft stock increases without Olivia Miles on the board:

1. LSU Tigers forward Aneesah Morrow

LSU forward Aneesah Morrow had a spectacular season with the Tigers. She led the country in rebounds, averaged a double-double and ended her career by rewriting the NCAA history books. Morrow also had standout performances during March Madness, including 30 points and 19 rebounds against NC State, that potentially helped elevate her stock and ability to reset the 2025 WNBA Draft board.

With Olivia Miles no longer an option and ESPN‘s Kevin Pelton reporting the Seattle Storm are ‘extremely high’ on France’s Dominique Malonga, there is a real possibility that the Mystics could draft Morrow at No. 3. That’s a massive win for the LSU forward, and something to keep an eye on.

2. Notre Dame Fighting Irish guard Sonia Citron

Perhaps no other guard in the draft benefits more from Olivia Miles not being an option than Miles’ teammate Sonia Citron. Citron had a criminally underrated season, and without her on-court partner in the mix, Citron’s stock likely goes up on league draft boards.

While she isn’t a true point guard, she is a reliable wing player who can light up the hardwood on both ends of the floor. Citron has a knack for finding the basketball, cutting lanes and getting deflections, which creates transition points.

3. USC Trojans forward Kiki Iriafen

USC Trojans forward Kiki Iriafen has been making an excellent case to be drafted within the Top 5 since the Big Ten tournament. Iriafen is a dominant force in the paint and one of the draft’s top rim protectors. As the tournament went on, the production of the senior forward rose, and that momentum carried into March Madness.

Once teammate JuJu Watkins exited the NCAA tournament with an unfortunate ACL injury, Irifafen stepped up with several dynamic performances, including a 36-points, nine-rebounds outing against the Mississippi State Bulldogs. Without Miles on the board, Iriafen’s stock also goes up, and she could be locked in as a Top-5 pick.

4. Five other WNBA draft prospects, including TCU’s Hailey Van Lith

With one of the top guards in the class of 2025 now off the board, several other players could benefit from the opening. Maryland’s Shyanne Sellers, NC State’s Saniya Rivers and Aziaha James, Te-Hina Paopao of South Carolina, Kansas State guard Serena Sundell and Hailey Van Lith of TCU are names to watch.

In particular, Van Lith has played very well throughout the season and the Horned Frogs’ NCAA tournament run. It wouldn’t be shocking to see a team like the Los Angeles Sparks or Chicago Sky pick up the TCU star.

2025 WNBA Draft order

Dallas Wings
Seattle Storm (from Los Angele Sparks)
Washington Mystics (from Chicago Sky)
Washington Mystics
Golden State Valkyries
Washington Mystics (from Atlanta Dream)
Connecticut Sun (from NY Liberty)
Connecticut Sun (from Indiana Fever)
Los Angeles Sparks (from Seattle Storm)
Chicago Sky (from Connecticut Sun)
Minnesota Lynx
Dallas Wings (from NY Liberty)

This post appeared first on USA TODAY