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A champion will be crowned in the 2025 women’s NCAA Tournament on April 6. A little more than a week later, some of the college basketball stars of March Madness will turn the page and start the next phase of their career at the 2025 WNBA draft.

Dawn Staley has been on this path before. Before Staley was the head coach of South Carolina women’s basketball, she was a star athlete for the Virginia Cavaliers. She parlayed her collegiate success into a lengthy WNBA career and three Olympic gold medals with the U.S. women’s team. Staley’s experience at winning at all levels has translated to her coaching, helping South Carolina win three national championships in seven years, including the most recent one in 2024.

Staley is not the only coach in the 2025 women’s March Madness field who has WNBA experience. From Staley to Duke’s Kara Lawson, here’s a list of former WNBA players coaching in the 2025 NCAA Tournament:

WOMEN’S MARCH MADNESS: Bracket predictions and expert picks for 2025 NCAA Tournament

Dawn Staley, South Carolina

College: Virginia (1988–1992)
WNBA: Charlotte Sting (1999–2005), Houston Comets (2005–06)

Staley led the Virginia Cavaliers to four NCAA tournaments, three Final Fours (1990-92) and one national championship game (1991) during her collegiate career. She was named the 1991 NCAA Tournament’s Most Outstanding Player – despite her team losing the national title to Pat Summitt and the Tennessee Volunteers – and the Naismith College Player of the Year for two consecutive years (1991, 1992).

Staley was drafted by the Charlotte Sting with the ninth overall pick of the 1999 WNBA draft. She earned six All-Star nods during her eight-year career and was later named to the WNBA’s 10th and 15th Anniversary Teams in 2006 and 2011, respectively. Staley also won three Olympic gold medals with the Team USA (1996, 2000, 2004).

Staley began her head coaching career at Temple in 2000, while she was still playing in the WNBA and remained there for eight seasons, taking the Owls to the NCAA Tournament six times. She took over as the head coach of the South Carolina Gamecoks in 2008 and has led the Gamecocks to three national titles (2017, 2022, 2024).

Kara Lawson, Duke

College: Tennessee (1999–2003)
WNBA: Sacramento Monarchs (2003–09), Connecticut Sun (2010–13), Washington Mystics (2014–15)

Lawson played for legendary head coach Pat Summitt at Tennessee and went to one Sweet Sixteen (2001), one Final Four (2002) and two national championship games with the Lady Volunteers, although Tennessee dropped both title games to UConn.

Lawson was selected by the Detroit Shock with the fifth overall pick in 2003 and was immediately traded to the Sacramento Monarchs, where she was key member in the team’s 2005 WNBA championship run. She earned an All-Star nod in 2007 and won gold with Team USA at the 2008 Beijing Olympics, where she had a team-high 15 points in the gold-medal game against Australia.

Lawson was an assistant coach for the Boston Celtics (2019-2020), before taking over as the head coach of the Duke Blue Devils in 2020.

Niele Ivey, Notre Dame

College: Notre Dame (1996–2001)
WNBA: Indiana Fever (2001–04), Phoenix Mercury (2005), Detroit Shock (2005)

Ivey has been to college basketball’s promised land. She led the Fighting Irish to their first NCAA women’s national championship in 2001 as a player under then-head coach Muffet McGraw and was named to the All-Tournament team. Ivey was then selected by Indiana Fever in the second round of the 2001 WNBA draft with the 19th overall pick.

Ivey spent five years in the league before transitioning into coaching. She got her coaching career started at Xavier as an assistant (2005-07) and returned to her alma mater as an assistant under McGraw (2007–19). Ivey took over as head coach in 2020 after McGraw retired.

Fun Fact: Ivey is the mother of son Jaden Ivey, who was drafted fifth overall by the Detroit Pistons in 2022.

Brooke Wyckoff, Florida State

College: Florida State (1997–2001)
WNBA: Orlando Miracle (2001–02), Connecticut Sun (2003-05), Chicago Sky (2006–09)

Wyckoff is another player who returned to coach at their alma mater. Wyckoff was a star forward at Florida State, picking up ACC All-Defensive Team honors in 2000 and 2001.

She was drafted with the 26th overall pick of the 2001 WNBA draft by the Orlando Miracle and spent time with the Connecticut Sun (after the team move from Orlando) and Chicago Sky during her eight-year career. She notably hit a 3-pointer with two seconds left in Game 2 of the 2005 WNBA Finals between the Sun and the Monarchs to send the game to overtime. The Sun went on to win the game, but lost the championship series, 3-1.

Wyckoff retired in 2009 after tearing her ACL and went into coaching. She joined her alma mater as an assistant coach under her former head coach, Sue Semrau. Wyckoff was named interim head coach of the Florida State women’s basketball team during the 2020-21 season when Semrau had to take a leave of absence. She became the Seminoles full-time head coach in 2022 when Semrau retired.

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The Washington Spirit and CVS Health will announce Friday a three-year partnership renewal that is among the most valuable deals in the National Women’s Soccer League, according to a statement from the club.

Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed aside from it being a ‘multimillion-dollar investment in the club and women’s sports.’

As part of the deal, the Spirit, who lost in the 2024 NWSL playoff championship, will continue to wear the CVS Health logo on both their home and away uniforms. The announcement comes ahead of the Spirit’s first home game of the 2025 NWSL season at 7:30 p.m. ET Saturday against the Kansas City Current.

‘Our partnership renewal with CVS Health goes beyond a business deal — it is a validation of where our team, league and women’s sports as a whole are headed,” Washington Spirit Owner Michele Kang said in a statement obtained by USA TODAY. ‘When you have influential, national brands like CVS Health recognizing the trajectory of our club and wanting to be an integral part of our growth, it is a testament to the sport’s increasing relevance in both business and American culture.’ 

CVS Health has been a kit sponsor of the Spirit since 2020. The new 2025 kit ‘Shockwave’ was made by Nike and has two new shades of green added to the signature neon yellow.

The partnership includes CVS Health committing to ‘support community programs that empower women and improve community health,’ according to the statement. The stadium will host ‘CVS Health Day’ Oct. 18, which will include ‘health-related initiatives and programming emphasizing women’s health.’

‘We think it’s the right place to be, and the right team to support,’ Melissa Schulman, senior vice president of government and public affairs for CVS Health, told USA TODAY. ‘We don’t necessarily think about it (as), ‘What’s the ROI on the jersey?”

Instead, Schulman said they entered the partnership with ‘eyes wide open’ years ago, viewing it somewhat as a startup investment that would pay dividends in the future and was a good fit for the company’s goals of helping adults and children make healthy choices. And, ‘it just felt right,’ she said.

Recognition of the Spirit’s stadium and operations teams, along with local CVS store employees, will continue. One stadium employee will also be honored for their commitment and customer service during a ceremony before each home game.

The Spirit say the partnership will also include player panels with CVS branding inside and outside Audi Field, along with in-game Field LEDs displaying the CVS Health logo and tagline message, ‘Healthier Happens Together.’

‘From the beginning, our partnership with CVS Health has been rooted in community impact,’ Spirit CEO Kim Stone said in the statement, ‘and setting a new standard for what’s possible through women’s sports.’

USA TODAY reporter Jason Anderson contributed to this report.

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Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., declared that U.S. Food and Drug Administration approval for COVID-19 vaccines should be yanked, asserting that the jabs ‘are causing permanent harm and deaths.’

‘FDA approval for COVID-19 vaccines needs to be pulled and they need taken off the childhood vaccine schedule ASAP,’ she said Thursday in a post on X. ‘I’ve been saying this ever since they were created and my personal Twitter account was permanently banned for my outspoken stance against the vaccines until Elon Musk bought Twitter, changed it to X, and restored my account along with thousands of people who were censored and silenced.’

The child and adolescent immunization schedule on the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention website includes COVID-19 vaccine recommendations for children 6 months old and above.

Greene contends that the jabs should never have been approved in the first place.

‘COVID-19 vaccines should have never received approval and they’ve known the entire time how bad the side effects are and deaths caused by them. It’s time to do the right thing. Stop the COVID-19 vaccines,’ she declared in her post.

But the CDC notes, ‘COVID-19 vaccination is recommended for everyone ages 6 months and older in the United States for the prevention of COVID-19. There is currently no FDA-approved or FDA-authorized COVID-19 vaccine for children younger than age 6 months. CDC recommends that people stay up to date with COVID-19 vaccination.’

‘Cases of myocarditis and pericarditis have rarely been observed following receipt of COVID-19 vaccines used in the United States,’ the CDC indicates.

‘Evidence from multiple monitoring systems support a causal association for mRNA COVID-19 vaccines (Moderna or Pfizer-BioNTech) and myocarditis and pericarditis. Cases have occurred most frequently in adolescent and young adult males within 7 days after receiving the second dose of an mRNA COVID-19 vaccine (Moderna and Pfizer-BioNTech); however, cases have also been observed in females and after other doses.’

Rep. Thomas Massie has also expressed the view that the FDA should nix approval for the COVID-19 vaccines. 

‘FDA should immediately revoke approval of these shots,’ he tweeted last month.

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Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York and Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont – champions of the left – repeatedly targeted President Donald Trump and his billionaire ally Elon Musk as they kicked off a three-day swing through three electorally important western states.

But Sanders, and especially Ocasio-Cortez, also trained some of their fire on the Democratic Party, with the best-known member of the so-called ‘Squad’ of diverse and progressive House members urging her own party to have ‘the courage to brawl’ against Republicans.

Trump has been on a tear since returning to the White House two months ago, flexing his political muscles to expand presidential powers as he’s upended longstanding government policy and made major cuts to the federal workforce through a flurry of executive orders and actions. 

And Sanders and Cortez took to the stage at their first stop in Las Vegas, Nevada, while Trump signed an executive order to begin the longstanding conservative goal of demolishing the Department of Education at a White House ceremony.

Ocasio-Cortez accused Trump and his GOP allies of ‘lying to and screwing over working and middle-class Americans so that they can steal our health care, social security and veterans benefits in order to pay for their tax cuts for the billionaires and bailouts for their crypto friends.’

And Sanders charged that ‘every day Trump is trying to take power away from Congress. He is trying to take power away from the judiciary.’

‘We have a message for Mr. Trump and that is, we will not allow you to move this country into an oligarchy,’ Sanders emphasized.’We’re not going to allow you and your friend Mr. Musk and the other billionaires to wreak havoc on this country.’

But the inability of Democrats in Congress, who are out of power in the White House as well as the House and Senate, to stop the majority Republicans is causing tensions within the party amid increasing calls for leaders to come up with a stronger strategy to resist Trump.

‘This isn’t just about Republicans,’ Ocasio-Cortez told the crowd in Arizona. ‘We need a Democratic Party that fights harder for us. That means each and every one of us choosing and voting for Democrats and elected officials who know how to stand for the working class…I want you to look at every level of office around and support Democrats who fight, because those are the ones who can actually win against Republicans.’

The Sanders-Ocasio-Cortez stops are drawing large crowds. The fire marshal in Tempe, Arizona said 11,300 packed the Mullett Arena on the campus of Arizona State University, with thousands in an overflow section outside the arena. 

The tour, dubbed by Sanders as ‘Fighting Oligarchy,’ continues Friday in Denver and Greeley, Colorado and concludes Saturday with a rally in Tucson, Arizona.

It comes as Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, the top Democrat in the chamber, is facing increasing fire from his own party for his support last week for a Republican-crafted federal funding bill that averted a government shutdown.

Neither Ocasio-Cortez nor Sanders mentioned Schumer during their speeches in Las Vegas or Tempe. 

And Sanders, an independent who has long caucused with the Democrats and who is part of Schumer’s leadership team in the Senate, declined in an interview with Fox News Digital ahead of the Tempe rally, to answer whether he agreed with calls for Schumer to step down from his leadership position.

‘That’s kind of inside the Beltway stuff,’ Sanders said.

But it was on the minds of some of those attending the rallies.

There were chants of ‘primary Chuck’ directed at Ocasio-Cortez at the Las Vegas rally.

And in Tempe, Cindy Garman and Pat Robinson, both of Prescott, Arizona, told Fox News that they were ‘really disappointed’ with Schumer’s move. 

And Amanda Ratloff of Gilbert, Arizona, said Schumer ‘is not the leader we need right now. We need somebody that will actually fight back and fight for the American people and not just give in to Elon Musk and Donald Trump.’

Sanders, in his speech, vowed to fight.

‘We are going to fight Trump and his oligarchy friends,’ he emphasized. ‘From the bottom of my heart I am convinced that they can be defeated.’

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President Donald Trump sent a warning late Thursday night to those who have been involved in recent attacks on Tesla vehicles, dealerships and factories nationwide since CEO Elon Musk became a part of the Trump administration.

‘People that get caught sabotaging Teslas will stand a very good chance of going to jail for up to twenty years, and that includes the funders,’ the president wrote on Truth Social. ‘WE ARE LOOKING FOR YOU!!!’

Musk has taken a lot of heat for heading the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) under Trump, and his closeness with the president has made Tesla vehicles and properties the target of dozens of protests and vandalism, and even a couple of shootings.

 

Trump’s warning comes after Attorney General Pam Bondi announced federal charges on Thursday against three people who used Molotov cocktails to attack Tesla properties in South Carolina, Oregon and Colorado in separate instances. Bondi described their actions as acts of ‘domestic terrorism.’

‘The days of committing crimes without consequence have ended,’ Bondi said. ‘Let this be a warning: if you join this wave of domestic terrorism against Tesla properties, the Department of Justice will put you behind bars.’ 

All three suspects face a minimum of five years and a maximum of 20 years in prison if convicted.

 

Bondi told Will Cain on his show Wednesday, ‘They’re targeting Elon Musk who is out there trying to save our country and it will not be tolerated. We are coming after you.’

This week alone, attacks were reported in Las Vegas and Kansas City, Missouri. 

Investigators in Kansas City were looking into a suspected arson case after two Cybertrucks caught on fire at a dealership on Monday, while authorities in Sin City reported at least five vehicles were damaged and two were set on fire at a Tesla collision and sales center on Tuesday.

A website called ‘DOGEQUEST’ was also activated this week and claims to have a list of Tesla owners, their addresses, phone numbers and email addresses in an apparent effort to dox them.

The site also contains a map of Tesla dealerships and charging stations.

Fox News Digital’s Peter D’Abrosca and Sarah Rumpf-Whitten contributed to this report.

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Over the last four years at the United Nations, the international community has witnessed an alarming trend of closer collaboration between Russia and China that poses a significant threat to the ‘rules-based order’ the United States helped design back in 1945.  

This increased and renewed level of cooperation presents an unprecedented dilemma for the United States and like-minded partners: how to maintain the existing order, warts and all, when two permanent members of the UN Security Council are now working feverishly to subvert it. 

To many UN observers, China and Russia have now come to the shared conclusion that the UN has become a tool Washington and its allies regularly use to destabilize their regimes and diminish their global influence. Consequently, the United Nations has become a critical battleground in the current era of ‘Great Power’ competition.  

During my two-plus years as the U.S. ambassador responsible for UN Security Council matters, I have seen first-hand at the UN how these two authoritarian powers repeatedly and energetically spread falsehoods alleging: 

The UN’s bureaucracy is beholden to the ‘West’;
That the U.S. and Europe continue to exploit countries of the global South in ‘colonial’ fashion;
That the U.S. uses unilateral sanctions to impose its will on the rest of the world;
And that the Western-led international financial system continues to subjugate the global have-nots.

By propagating these false storylines, Russia and China hope to persuade developing nations that the UN and its associated mechanisms don’t represent their views and values and that a fundamental overhaul of the multilateral system is urgently needed.  

It’s not as if there haven’t been warning signs. Since Russia’s unprovoked war of aggression against Ukraine in early 2022 — and the robust international condemnation of it — Moscow has been determined to dispose of the current order, even going so far as to claim there is no such thing as a rules-based order.

It flagrantly violates UN General Assembly resolutions on Ukraine, defying repeated calls from UN member states to withdraw its troops from the country. Almost daily, it uses inflamed rhetoric and nuclear saber-rattling in the UN Security Council to threaten and intimidate nations that express opposition to its war on Ukraine, its illegal military cooperation with North Korea, its blatant interference in democratic elections, and its support for authoritarian regimes committing horrific atrocities against their own people.  

While this type of menacing Russian behavior is not new, when viewed in the context of its ‘no-limits partnership’ with China, a burgeoning authoritarian superpower, the world needs to take serious notice.  

Since 2016, Beijing has been on a relentless campaign to remake the UN in its own authoritarian image. It has worked zealously to insert into official UN documents language promoting its own domestic ideological and political priorities, such as the Belt and Road Initiative and the Global Security Initiative.  

It has prioritized funding the placement of young Chinese nationals in the UN’s Junior Professional Officers program, which trains and develops future UN civil servants. Through this program, the primary goal of Beijing is not simply to develop a cadre of Chinese nationals with UN expertise, but to seed the multilateral system with apparatchiks focused solely on promoting the interests of the Chinese Communist Party.  

Playing the long game, China, like Russia, also seeks to devalue the importance of human rights, individual freedoms, and the role of civil society in the UN writ large, quietly chipping away at international standards and norms the United States and the vast majority of UN member states want to preserve. Instead of withdrawing from UN institutions like UNESCO and the WHO, the new administration should double down on its engagement in these bodies to prevent China from dominating critical areas such as AI and responses to future pandemics.  

In public and closed-door Security Council meetings, I had many verbal clashes with Russian and Chinese diplomats to firmly contest their propaganda and false narratives which, if repeated often enough, begin to resonate with states not completely familiar with the history and facts related to a given issue.  

To woo the Global South, Russia and China typically point to growing economic inequality, the war in Gaza, allegedly unfair restrictions on access to leading technologies, and what they claim is the instability of democracies as proof the rules-based order is failing and that the authoritarian model is the wave of the future.  

While most countries of the Global South do not subscribe to these views, it would be incorrect to say there isn’t some growing support for this line of thinking. The Biden administration’s call for UN Security Council reform, and UN Secretary General Guterres’s ‘Pact for the Future,’ a blueprint for taking the UN forward, have tried to address some of the demands for change expressed by developing countries.  

But, should Russian and Chinese propaganda become mainstream in Global South discourse on the UN, demands for a fundamental overhaul of the rules-based order will certainly grow louder and could severely weaken support for the UN as we know it.  

Friends of the United States also warn that current political divisions in Washington and between Washington and its allies are giving Russia and China the upper hand in this struggle. To effectively meet the moment in this evolving, competitive strategic landscape, the Trump administration needs to abandon anti-UN posturing and instead urgently deploy America’s unique convening power to renew and strengthen alliances at the UN.  

Chinese and Russian diplomats privately acknowledge that one comparative advantage the U.S. has over their countries is our historic, values-based alliances. However, as important as alliances are, they cannot be a one-way street.  

The U.S. has a right to expect that partners will not work to undermine its critical security interests. Nations should not expect to continually vote against American policy priorities at the UN without being held to account. It is important that each side understands the other’s expectations. 

Since 2016, Beijing has been on a relentless campaign to remake the UN in its own authoritarian image.

The U.S. also needs to actively engage the UN press corps. This was something I undertook religiously at UN headquarters, making sure as best I could the U.S. point of view was factored into media reporting. This needs to be a priority. If we don’t consistently push out the U.S. narrative, our adversaries will fill the void and define that narrative in ways that damage our global standing and interests. 

Over the last 79 years, the United States has invested substantially in building out the UN and broader international system. Let’s not waste this enormous investment. Let’s make the UN fit for purpose, ensure it continues to live up to its charter’s foundational principles – protecting human rights, saving future generations from the scourge of war, promoting a more just world. We should work with like-minded nations, organizations and peoples to help it survive and thrive in what will undoubtedly be an intense era of strategic competition. 

We don’t have a moment to spare. 

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A liberal Canadian member of Parliament claimed the Trump administration has committed an ‘act of war’ over President Donald Trump repeatedly referring to Canada as the U.S.’ ’51st state’ and for leveling tariffs on the nation. 

‘Well, I think Marco Rubio probably needs to be sent back to school because when you say that someone doesn’t have a right to have a country, that’s an act of war. When you rip up, arbitrarily, trade agreements and threaten and say you’re going to break a country, that’s an act of war. And Canadians have responded in kind,’ Canadian MP Charlie Angus, who is a member of the country’s liberal New Democratic Party, said Monday during an interview with the MeidasTouch Network. 

Angus was reacting to a clip of Secretary of State Marco Rubio speaking with reporters during his recent trip to Canada for the G7 Foreign Ministers’ Meeting. Rubio was repeatedly asked by the press to weigh in on Trump referring to Canada as the U.S.’ ’51st state.’ 

‘The president has made his argument as to why he thinks Canada would be better off joining the United States… for economic purposes,’ Rubio said on March 14 when asked about Trump’s ’51st state’ comments, explaining the issue was not addressed during the G7 meeting. ‘There’s a disagreement between the president’s position and the position of the Canadian government. I don’t think that’s a mystery coming in, and it wasn’t a topic of conversation, because that’s not what this summit was about.’

Rubio further explained that the origin of the ’51st state’ rhetoric was born during a meeting between Trump and former Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau. Trump began using the ’51st state’ title for Canada in November 2024, following his election win. 

Trump was meeting with Trudeau, ‘and Trudeau basically says that if the U.S. imposes tariffs on Canada, Canada couldn’t survive as a nation-state, at which point the president said, ‘Well, then you should become a state.’ And that’s where this began,’ Rubio recounted of the Trump–Trudeau meeting. ‘He made an argument for why Canada would be better off joining the United States from an economic perspective and the like. He’s made that argument repeatedly, and I think it stands for itself.’

Trudeau announced his resignation as the country’s prime minister in January after nine years in the position. Mark Carney was sworn-in as the nation’s next prime minister on March 14 after he was elected the new leader of Canada’s Liberal Party earlier in the month.  

During his interview, Angus said that Canada’s boycott of U.S. products over tariffs leveled on the nation would be ‘punishing’ to the U.S.

‘The boycott that Canada has launched against the United States is punishing. We were told in January a 10% drop in Canadian travel to the United States would cost 140,000 jobs,’ he continued. 

Trump leveled a 25% tariff on all imports of steel and aluminum from other nations on March 12, while Canada specifically is set to face a 25% tax on all imported goods beginning April 2. The tariffs have sparked boycotts of U.S. goods. 

Trump joined Fox News’ Laura Ingraham on Tuesday, where he railed against how the U.S. has subsidized ‘Canada by $200 billion a year.’

‘Here’s my problem with Canada,’ Trump said on Fox News. ‘Canada was meant to be the 51st state because we subsidize Canada by $200 billion a year. We don’t need their cars, we don’t need their lumber, we have a lot of lumber. … We don’t need their energy, we don’t need anything, we certainly don’t want their automobiles… millions of automobiles are sent in, I’d rather have them made in Michigan, I’d rather have them made in South Carolina.’

Fox News Digital’s Charles Creitz contributed to this report. 

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A former special envoy to Haiti blames what he views as former President Joe Biden’s absentee approach to decision-making for the current woes afflicting the Caribbean nation.

Daniel Foote served as special envoy to Haiti in 2021 but resigned in protest over what he said was the administration’s failed approach of supporting unpopular and unelected leaders.

‘All of the governments that the U.S. has backed or anointed or imposed in the last 110 years have not represented the Haitian people,’ Foote said. He said the Biden administration backed the then-unelected Prime Minister Ariel Henry solely for his unwavering loyalty despite lingering questions about how Henry rose to power.

Foote has been involved with Haiti since the devastating 2010 earthquake that killed more than 200,000 people. He now believes the country has descended into near-total collapse.

‘It’s a thousand times worse now because we broke whatever weak social contract there was between the people and the government. And there has been no government since basically 2012. It’s a failed state.’

A recent U.N. report revealed that more than 1 million people have been displaced due to gang violence in Haiti, nearly 10% of the population. Another report indicated that 85% of Haiti’s capital, Port-au-Prince, is under gang control.

Foote said he never met Biden while serving as envoy, claiming that by then, Biden had ‘deteriorated to the point that they didn’t want him to see a lot of people.’ Instead, he said, Victoria Nuland, undersecretary of state for political affairs, and U.S. Ambassador to Haiti Michele Sison devised the plan to support Henry.

Foote said he recalled a remark that Biden allegedly made as a senator in 1994: ‘If Haiti just quietly sunk into the Caribbean, or rose up 300 feet, it wouldn’t matter a whole lot in terms of our interests.’

‘That explains Joe Biden’s approach to Haiti,’ Foote said.

Biden’s spokesperson and Sison did not respond to a Fox News Digital request for comment.

Nuland rejected Foote’s accusations, calling them ‘completely false’ and referred Fox News Digital to former Assistant Secretary of State for Western Hemisphere Affairs Brian Nichols.

‘What I observed that there was intense coordination, and there was not one person or two people who would make a significant decision on the policy,’ Nichols said, noting that he got the job roughly a week before Foote resigned on Sept. 21 and so was not involved in earlier decisions. ‘All issues were debated extensively internally at multiple levels, all the way up to the principals, that’s the Cabinet secretary level.’

Foote said that in the past he felt no need for security while walking around Haiti because Americans were widely welcomed. Things are not the same anymore.

‘Now the Haitians are looking at China, looking at Russia,’ he said. ‘They’re like, ‘Somebody help us. The Americans just keep screwing us over,’ yet they still want the Americans to help them.’

The Biden administration committed around $600 million to fund an international security force, known as the multinational security support mission (MSS), composed of personnel from countries like Bangladesh, Kenya, Chad and Guyana. But Foote said he sees the MSS strategy as a waste of taxpayer money.

‘They don’t have the security backbone to take on the gangs,’ he said. ‘They need help. And that help is not 5,000 random police officers from a mishmash of 10 different developing countries led by the Kenyans, who have never led a security mission in history.’

Nichols defended the MSS, declaring their efforts ‘incredibly heroic.’

‘Having seen them on the ground in Haiti, it’s an extremely professional force, extremely courageous and one committed to the mission,’ he said.

Foote recommends that President Donald Trump send 60 U.S. special forces personnel to train an elite anti-gang unit in Haiti and reestablish a signals intelligence program to monitor gang communication. Without such action, he said, the consequences would extend far beyond Haiti’s borders.

‘It’s just going to continue to create chaos right off the U.S. shores and create a massive surge in migration,’ he said. ‘Because if you walk down the street in Port-au-Prince, you look around and think, ‘I can understand why people leave. Humans can’t live in these conditions.”

Jack Brewer, who played in the NFL before founding a global foundation that has been in Haiti since the devastating 2010 earthquakes, echoed Foote’s assessment.

‘People are being burned alive, police officers are getting their heads bashed into the pavement – bloody, torturous deaths,’ Brewer said. ‘One of my doctors had five of his close friends and relatives murdered. This all just happened this week.’

Brewer said that any real change can come only from within Haiti.

‘I’m talking about a culture that doesn’t accept stealing and doesn’t accept corruption,’ he said. ‘Right now, culturally, it’s acceptable to steal, and that has to change. Until you fix the moral fabric of a nation and reinstate law and order, it doesn’t matter what America does.’

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The 2025 women’s NCAA tournament officially kicked off Wednesday with the first pair of First Four games, with Iowa State and Southern punching their tickets to March Madness. Columbia and William & Mary followed suit.

Columbia (23-6) completed a double-digit comeback to defeat Washington (19-13) 63-60 in a matchup of No. 11 seeds in the First Four Thursday at Carmichael Arena in Chapel Hill, North Carolina. It was the Lions’ first victory in the NCAA Tournament in program history, and Columbia now advances to the first round to face No. 6 West Virginia. 

The last First Four matchup saw No. 16 William & Mary (15-18) hold off No. 16 High Point (21-11) to win 69-63 at Moody Center in Austin, Texas. The Tribe alse earned their first ever NCAA Tournament win and will face No. 1 seed Texas next.

Final: William & Mary 69, High Point 63

William & Mary’s Cinderella story continues. The Tribe defeated High Point 69-63 in the First Four on Thursday to secure its first NCAA Tournament win. William & Mary will advance to face No. 1 Texas in the first round.

Bella Nascimento led the way with 24 points and five rebounds. Natalie Fox added a double-double with 12 points and 12 rebounds. The Tribe collectively had 15 steals in the contest and turned 16 High Point turnovers into 18 points. William & Mary also outrebounded High Point 45-31. 

End of 3Q: William & Mary 47, High Point 46

High Point trailed by as many as nine points in the first half, but are within one point of William & Mary heading into the fourth quarter. The Panthers went on an 11-4 run in the third quarter to briefly take the lead. The Panthers’ run was fueled by their defense. William & Mary has coughed up the ball 12 times, leading to 11 points for High Point. The Panthers have 11 steals, surpassing their average of 9.7 steals per game. 

Bella Nascimento leads the Tribe with 20 points and five rebounds, while Aaliyah Collins has 16 points and four steals for the Panthers. 

Halftime: William & Mary 34, High Point 28

The William & Mary women’s basketball team may be making its NCAA Tournament debut, but the Tribe is not letting any nerves show. William & Mary stormed to a 34-28 halftime lead over High Point, thanks in part to Bella Nascimento, who is up to a game-high 11 points and four rebounds through two quarters. The Tribe is shooting 41.4% from the field and 6-of-9 from three. Monet Dance is a perfect 3-of-3 from beyond the arc.

High Point, on the other hand, is one-of-nine from three, but shooting 41.9% from the field. Despite struggling from the 3-point line, the Panthers have an advantage in the paint and are outscoring the Tribe 22-8. High Point has scored seven points off eight turnovers from William & Mary. Aaliyah Collins leads the Panthers with 10 points and three steals. 

William & Mary makes first NCAA Tournament appearance

William & Mary never had a basketball team — men’s or women’s — compete in the NCAA Tournament until 2025, and the school has senior guard Bella Nascimento to thank. 

After losing eight of their last nine regular-season games and struggling in conference play, Nascimento made a bus-ride speech to her teammates, asking them, ‘Is this who we are?!’ 

Eight days later, No. 9 seed William & Mary, a team with a losing record (15-18, 8-10), was crowned the unlikely CAA champion. Now, they’re making school history, taking on High Point in the First Four of March Madness.

Read the full story from Jenna Ortiz.

End of 1Q: William & Mary 17, High Point 15

The Panthers and Tribe exchanged blows in the first quarter, but William & Mary temporarily landed on top with a 17-15 lead after the first quarter. 

The Tribe is shooting an impressive 3-of-4 from beyond the arc. Bella Nascimento leads William & Mary with seven points. 

Aaliyah Collins has 10 points for the Panthers. High Point is dominating the paint, outscoring the Tribe 12-4, but the Panthers are 0-of-5 from three. 

Final: Columbia 63, Washington 60

The Columbia Lions have a date to dance against No. 6 West Virginia in the first round of the 2025 women’s NCAA Tournament after defeating Washington 63-60 in the First Four on Thursday. 

Washington led by 13 points at halftime, but Columbia outscored the Huskies 42-26 in the second half to secure the Lions’ first March Madness win in program history. 

Riley Weiss led the charge with a game-high 24 points, with 19 of those points coming in the second half. Cecelia Collins added 12 points, while Kitty Henderson had 11 points, seven rebounds and four steals. 

The game game down to the final seconds. Columbia had a four-point lead with 18 seconds remaining, when Washington’s Elle Ladine knocked down a three to come within one point of Columbia, 60-61. Weiss was fouled and hit both free throws to put Columbia up 63-60 with 12 seconds remaining. The score would hold for the win.

Columbia has first lead over Washington

Columbia’s Riley Weiss is heating up. Weiss knocked down a 3-pointer to give Columbia its first lead of the game, 47-45 with 7:29 remaining. Washington’s Sayvia Sellers responded with a layup to tie it up, but then Weiss knocked down another big shot. She hit her fifth three of the night to take a 50-47 lead with 7:04 remaining in the game. Weiss has a team-high 20 points, shooting 7-of-17 from the field and 5-of-11 from three. She’s scored 15 points in the second half so far.

End of 3Q: Washington 45, Columbia 40

We have a new ball game. Columbia looked completely disjointed in the first half, scoring only 21 points. However, the Lions came out with renewed energy in the third quarter and scored 19 points, nearly surpassing their first half total. Columbia’s Kitty Henderson, the Ivy League’s Defensive Player of the Year, showed off her defensive prowess and came up with back-to-back steals to bring the Lions within one possession of Washington, 43-40, with one minute remaining. She’s up to 11 points. Washington’s Sayvia Sellers ended Columbia’s 6-0 run with a layup, simultaneously ending the Huskies’ three-minute scoring drought. Washington has a 45-40 lead heading into the fourth quarter. 

Columbia cuts into Washington’s lead

Columbia went on a 11-4 run in the third quarter and cut Washington’s double-digit lead to six points with 5:43 remaining in the quarter following Kitty Henderson’s layup. Washington answered back with a shot from Dalayah Daniels to go back up by eight points, 42-34. Daniels is up to 17 points and 10 rebounds and is now drawing a double team from Columbia.  

Halftime: Washington 34, Columbia 21

Washington heads to the locker room with a 13-point lead over Columbia, tying its largest lead of the game. The Huskies have been able to get whatever they want so far and have a size advantage over the Lions. Washington has outscored Columbia 30-12 in the paint, with the main beneficiary being Huskies forward Dalayah Daniels, who already has a double-double with 11 points and 10 rebounds in the first half. Sayvia Sellers has a team-high 12 points, while Elle Ladine has eight points. 

The Lions finally knocked down a 3-pointer in the second quarter. After going 0-of-9 from beyond the arc, Columbia’s Riley Weiss hit the first three of the game for the Lions with 7:00 remaining in the first half. Although shots are starting to fall for the Lions, they are still 2-of-15 from three and shooting 30% (9-of-30) from the field. Weiss leads Columbia with five points. 

End of Q1: Washington 21, Columbia 10

The Huskies closed the first quarter on a 13-4 run to take a 21-10 lead over the Lions into the second quarter. Everything appeared to go right for Washington, which shot 62.5% from the field (10-of-16). Starters Dalayah Daniels, Sayvia Sellers and Elle Ladine each have six points. Meanwhile, Columbia is still looking to settle into the First Four matchup. The Lions are only shooting 33.3% (5-of-15) from the field and are 0-of-9 from three. They were held scoreless for over four minutes in the quarter and trailed by as many as 13 points. 

Washington jumps to 14-6 lead over Columbia

The Washington Huskies went on a 6-0 run to take a 14-6 lead over the Columbia Lions with 4:20 remaining in the first quarter. The Huskies are shooting an impressive 87.5% from the field (7-of-8) to open the game and are outscoring the Lions 14-4 in the paint. Washington’s Elle Ladine leads the team with six points. Meanwhile, Columbia is struggling to find any kind of offensive rhythm. The Lions are shooting 30% from the field and have yet to knock down a three, going 0-of-7 from the 3-point line. Columbia’s Cecelia Collins has four points.

What time are the Women’s March Madness First Four games today?

March Madness continues with a second night of women’s First Four action. No. 11 Washington takes on No. 11 Columbia at 7 p.m. ET, followed by No. 16 William & Mary vs. No. 16 High Point. The second game has an approximate start time of 9 p.m. ET.

How to watch First Four Thursday: TV, streaming coverage 

TV channels: ESPN2
Live stream: Fubo, which offers a free trial subscription for new users.

Watch Women’s March Madness and First Four with Fubo

Women’s March Madness First Four odds

March Madness First Four odds, according to BetMGM.

Odds as of Wednesday, March 19

Washington vs. Columbia

Spread: Washington (-3.5)
Moneyline: Washington (-160); Columbia (+135)
Total: 137.5

William and Mary vs. High Point

Spread: High Point (-5.5)
Moneyline: High Point (-235); Texas (+195)
Total: 126.5

Washington vs. Columbia predictions

Sportskeeda: Huskies to win

Alexander O’Reilly cites the Huskies’ experience if facing tougher competition as a reason Washington gets this pivotal win on Thursday.

Bleacher Nation: Columbia 68, Washington 67

The site’s computation cites the following: ‘Columbia is outscoring opponents by 14.8 points per game with a +432 scoring differential overall. It puts up 73.4 points per game (57th in college basketball) and allows 58.6 per contest (57th in college basketball).’

William and Mary vs. High Point prediction

USA TODAY: High Point 65, William & Mary 60

Ehsan Kassim writes, ‘High Point pulls off a close victory but is not enough to cover the spread, as William & Mary sticks around until the end.’

First Four scores: Results from Women’s March Madness games

Wednesday, March 19

First Four games

No. 11 Iowa State def. No. 11 Princeton, 68-63
No 16 Southern University def. UC San Diego, 68-56

Women’s March Madness bracket predictions

Nancy Armour, USA TODAY: Don’t be surprised by upsets

Armour writes: ‘Will all four No. 1s make the Final Four? Highly unlikely.

‘There was a time when you could predict the Final Four before the season began and likely be right. But the caliber of play has improved so much that the women’s tournament is now ripe for the upsets that make the men’s tournament so enjoyable. … Don’t be surprised if Duke and Ohio State blow up some brackets.’

Sabreena Merchant, The Athletic: UConn to win it all

Merchant writes, ‘(Paige) Bueckers and (Sarah) Strong both average fewer than 30 minutes per game. Think about how much better the Huskies could be if they played an additional five or six minutes. UConn already put together an outstanding regular season, punctuated by its 29-point demolition of the Gamecocks in South Carolina. With how tough this season has been in the power conferences, the Huskies have been biding their time. If they can unlock an extra level in the postseason, this is their chance to end the UConn title drought.’

Elizabeth Swinton, Sports Illustrated: All four No. 1 seeds to reach Final Four

As the tournament approaches Swinton believes all four No. 1 seeds − UCLA, South Carolina, Texas and USC − will reach the Final Four. Picking No. 1 seeds to reach the Final Four isn’t a bad strategy at all in the women’s tournament. Across the 42 years of women’s March Madness, there have been 168 No. 1 seeds and 94 of them (56%) have reached the Final Four. While you may not get your entire Final Four correct with this strategy, you are more than likely to have a few correct names.

Nicole Auerbach, NBC Sports: USC wins national championship

Auerbach is going against the grain with her pick. She writes, ‘JuJu [Watkins] has great pieces around her, but ultimately this history-making moment for the Trojans will come down to her. And she’ll be more than ready for it. The Trojans will win their first national championship in four decades.’

Women’s March Madness printable bracket

Click here to print your 2025 NCAA women’s tournament printable bracket

Women’s March Madness schedule

All times Eastern.

Wednesday, March 19 (First Four)

No. 11 Iowa State 68, 11 Princeton 63
No. 16 Southern U. 68, No. 16 UC San Diego 56

Thursday, March 20 (First Four)

No. 11 Columbia vs. No. 11 Washington 7 p.m. | ESPN2
No. 16 UC San Diego vs. No. 16 Southern U., 9 p.m. | ESPNU

Friday, March 21 (First Round/Round of 64)

No. 6 Michigan vs. No. 11 Iowa State, 11:30 a.m. | ESPN2
No. 4 Kentucky vs. No. 13 Liberty, 12 p.m. | ESPN
No. 8 Utah vs. No. 9 Indiana, 1:30 p.m. | ESPN2
No. 3 Notre Dame vs. No. 14 Stephen F. Austin, 2 p.m. | ESPN
No. 5 Kansas State vs. No. 12 Fairfield, 2:30 p.m. | ESPNews
No. 4 Baylor vs. No. 13 Grand Canyon, 3:30 p.m. | ESPNU
No. 2 TCU vs. No. 15 FDU, 3:30 p.m. | ESPN2
No. 1 South Carolina vs. No. 16 Tennessee Tech, 4 p.m. | ESPN
No. 7 Vanderbilt vs. No. 10 Oregon, 5:30 p.m. | ESPNews
No. 4 Ohio State vs. No. 13 Montana State, 5:30 p.m. | ESPN2
No. 5 Ole Miss vs. No. 12 Ball State, 6 p.m. | ESPNU
No. 7 Louisville vs. No. 10 Nebraska, 6 p.m. | ESPN
No. 8 Richmond vs. No. 9 Georgia Tech, 7:30 p.m.  | ESPNews
No. 2 Duke vs. No. 15 Lehigh, 8 p.m. | ESPNU
No. 5 Tennessee vs. No. 12 South Florida, 8 p.m. | ESPN
No. 1 UCLA vs. No. 16 Southern U., 10 p.m. | ESPN

Saturday, March 22 (First Round/Round of 64)

No. 6 Iowa vs. No. 11 Murray State, 12 p.m.| ESPN
No. 2 UConn vs. No. 15 Arkansas State, 1 p.m. | ABC
No. 5 Alabama vs. No. 12 Green Bay, 1:30 p.m. | ESPN2
No. 2 NC State vs. No. 15 Vermont, 2 p.m. | ESPN
No. 6 West Virginia vs. No. 11 Columbia/Washington, 2 p.m. | ESPNews
No. 3 Oklahoma vs. No. 14 FGCU, 2:30 p.m. | ESPNU
No. 1 Southern California vs. No. 16 UNC Greensboro, 3 p.m. | ABC
No. 7 Oklahoma State vs. No. 10 South Dakota State, 3:30 p.m. | ESPN2
No. 4 Maryland vs. No. 13 Norfolk State, 4 p.m. | ESPN
No. 3 North Carolina vs. No. 14 Oregon State, 4:30 p.m. | ESPNU
No. 7 Michigan State vs. No. 10 Harvard, 4:30 p.m. | ESPNews
No. 8 California vs. No. 9 Mississippi State, 5:30 p.m. | ESPN2
No. 8 Illinois vs. No. 9 Creighton, 7:15 p.m. | ESPNews
No. 6 Florida State vs. No. 11 George Mason, 7:45 p.m. | ESPN2
No. 1 Texas vs. No. 16 High Point/William & Mary, 9:45 p.m. | ESPN2
No. 3 LSU vs. No. 14 San Diego State, 10:15 p.m. | ESPN

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Under first-year head coach Ben McCollum, Drake has made it difficult for opponents to score, giving up an average of 58.4 points per game. However, the first-round matchup against Missouri was its stiffest test yet. Missouri averaged 84.5 points per game − ninth-best in Division I − and was sixth in KenPom offensive rating.

But the Bulldogs made Missouri play their style of basketball; a slow, grind-it-out game with nearly every possession ending as the shot clock expired. The Tigers couldn’t get a rhythm going.

Missouri took a brief lead in the first five minutes of the game, but Drake jumped ahead and the struggles began for the Tigers. Mizzou only made seven field goals in the first half and had nine turnovers. While the Tigers couldn’t buy a bucket, Missouri Valley player of the year Bennett Stirtz got Drake going. The iron man of college basketball as the nation’s leader in minutes per game, he scored 12 of Drake’s first 18 points and finished with a game-high 21 points.

Missouri trailed by seven at the break, and it only got worse from there. It missed its first eight shots and committed four turnovers, allowing the Bulldogs to jump out to a game-high 15-point lead with less than 13 minutes to go.

The Tigers’ offense woke up midway through the second half and cut the deficit to one point with four and a half minutes left. Drake didn’t crack, and Missouri’s shooting struggles continued; it finished the game 2-for-6 from the field in the final six minutes. The 55 points were the second-lowest total Missouri scored this season.

The win adds to McCollum’s impressive record in his first season coaching Division I. He won four Division II national championships at Northwest Missouri State from 2017-22 and was hired after Darian DeVries left Drake to become the head coach at West Virginia.

Tasked to replace a 28-win NCAA Tournament team that had mostly transferred out, McCollum brought four players from Northwest Missouri State, including Stirtz. The Bulldogs won the Missouri Valley Conference tournament for the third straight year and set the school record for wins at 30.

Thursday’s win was Drake’s first NCAA Tournament victory since 2021’s First Four game, and it’s the first in the first round since the tournament expanded in 1985. The previous win was in the 1971 25-team NCAA Tournament.

Meanwhile, first-round struggles continue for Mizzou. The loss marked the sixth time in the last seven appearances it lost in the first round and the second straight tournament game the Tigers lost to a double-digit seed as a single-digit seed. As a No. 7 seed in 2023, the Tigers lost to 15th-seeded Princeton in the second round.

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