Archive

2025

Browsing
NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

An extraordinary episode in the two centuries of Mexican-American relations unfolded on Feb. 27, as aircraft of the Mexican state flew northward to various locations across the United States. They carried within them 29 of the most-wanted Mexican-cartel leaders hitherto held in their own country, and now remanded to the justice of the Americans. 

Most meaningfully for the receiving nation, the aging Rafa Caro Quintero stepped off a plane to the welcome of the DEA and DOJ personnel whose colleague, Enrique ‘Kiki’ Camarena, he murdered 40 years before. Arraigned the next day in a U.S. federal courtroom, Caro Quintero was shackled with Camarena’s own handcuffs. 

The United States has waited a long time for him, and for the many other cartel lords and killers who now come into its hands. 

The questions are why it has waited, and why it no longer waits, if only in these specific cases. Caro Quintero and the other 28 cartel leaders had been prisoners of Mexico for years, and the United States had been requesting their extradition for years. In 2022, the Biden regime even gave the Mexican government a list of desired extraditions, including Caro Quintero – but the previous year, 2021, had seen the lowest level of Mexican extraditions to the U.S. in 15 years, and things would not improve so long as Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador remained president.

The source of AMLO’s delay was no mystery: he and his ruling Morena coalition, which has nearly transformed Mexico into a leftist one-party state, have long-standing ties with narco leaders, most notably within the Sinaloa Cartel. This Mexican state-cartel synthesis, referenced directly by the White House as ‘an intolerable alliance,’ effectively precluded meaningful and strategic cooperation between the two nations against its criminal cartels. 

What has changed? In a word: Donald Trump. The American president, who was among those who rationally believed that a workable deal could be struck with AMLO and his regime at its outset, now possesses an accurate assessment of the Mexican state’s basic nature, and is making policy accordingly. 

The well-known threatened tariffs, across-the-board implementation of which are now delayed for a second month to April 2, are one element and the most public-facing of the tools he has directed his administration to wield. The mere threat of them has manifestly exerted tremendous effect upon Mexican officialdom’s thinking. 

Despite much discussion in Mexico that the country will simply turn to China if American trade relations are disrupted, the reality is that the country’s economy will be plunged into disarray long before any Chinese remedy takes effect. 

Though the Mexican regime does not particularly care about the welfare of its people – having presided over an internal war that has seen the slaughter of hundreds of thousands of ordinary Mexicans by its own cartel allies and sometimes its own armed forces – it does care for its own position and privileges, and so an economic collapse alarms it in ways that death and cruelty among its own people does not. 

The other major tool wielded by the president against the Mexican state-cartel alliance has been alluded to, but never made explicit, in public. It is the threat of unilateral American military action within Mexico, and as reporting from the Wall Street Journal reveals, it was made explicit in a Jan. 31 conversation between Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth and unnamed senior Mexican-military leadership, in which the latter were informed ‘that if Mexico didn’t deal with the collusion between the country’s government and drug cartels, the U.S. military was prepared to take unilateral action.’ The Mexicans were reportedly astonished and indignant. 

Their astonishment is their own fault: many observers have told them for years that American patience with their cartel partnerships would eventually run out. That it had no effect is partially indicative of the ideological fever dream in which the Morena regime operates. It is also, to a larger part, rational, because no American president has ever before brought real consequences to bear. 

Their indignation, by contrast, has no defense except by reference to the perennial Mexican civic narrative that its sovereignty is forever menaced by the United States. 

Yet the Mexican state routinely fails to give the respect to its neighbor that it loudly demands for itself. It partners with trafficking organizations that directly attack American sovereignty and citizenry with illegal mass migration, deadly fentanyl, and more. It establishes Morena party cells within the United States and activates them when desired.

It interferes, however ineptly, in American elections. Its armed forces in uniform are routinely encountered within the United States, often protecting trafficking cartel shipments and occasionally taking an American soldier prisoner. Its cartel partners frequently kill American citizens in Mexico, and menace Americans in the United States. It is a deeply rooted victim mentality that receives a well-earned warning from the U.S. secretary of defense and responds with wounded pride. Yet so it is. 

Need it be said, a regime genuinely interested in the defense of its own national sovereignty would not surrender 30% to 40% of its national territory to cartel governance. Yet it has. A Mexican state determined to defend its territorial integrity would not back down again and again versus cartel challenges. Yet it has. It is useless to ask why: everyone in Mexico knows why. Those on the lower rungs of the social ladder risk death, and those on the upper rungs get rich. 

Unlike every previous American president of the modern era, Donald Trump understands this, and via his secretaries of defense and state, and others, he is delivering the message to the Mexican regime: we will respect your sovereignty as much as you respect ours. In fact, we will respect it as much as you respect yours. 

This, then, is the key to understanding why the Mexican state under President Claudia Sheinbaum is abruptly disgorging its prisoners into the hands of the Americans, and why it is furthermore making a show of going after cartel operations in various parts of the country. Mexican officialdom – the state and its elites – is betraying its criminal-sector partners in the hopes that it will satisfy the United States, lest the Americans go after them. 

It is furthermore shutting down, temporarily, the great cartel-controlled influx of trafficked persons that has numbered in the millions across the past decade. These efforts are having a real effect on cartel operations in the short run, although as the New York Times writes, they don’t expect it to last: ‘Cartel members said the only reason the government hadn’t really fought them until recently was because they’d bought off enough officials,’ and they expect that status quo ante will return. 

They are probably right. Mexican grand strategy, never a robust corpus of thought, has always had as a major pillar the imperative to keep the Americans out. In the past half-century a second pillar has been erected, which is the imperative to profit from the Americans. There is a tension between the two, especially when the second conflicts with the first by virtue of cartel and trafficking operations. 

Eventually the superstructure of multibillion-dollar illegal trade and the political-powerholder buyoffs that render it useful to nearly the whole apparatus of governance will reassert itself. The intent now, on the Mexican side, is simply to buy time until the Americans, believing they have secured a political win, move on to the next crisis. In that light, the sacrifice of the great mass of expendable bosses, lab men and sicarios is the price of business. There are rumors that a corrupt state governor may even be offered to placate the United States. 

Then, Mexican officialdom will make the case that all this cooperation is so valuable, the Americans dare not risk it by, say, imposing tariffs or attacking cartels or indicting former Mexican presidents – in short, by doing anything that imperils the Mexican governing elites themselves. This is a potent line of argument, according to some reports with purchase in the White House itself – although not, in any reporting, with the American president himself. This author has heard it directly from U.S. government personnel in Mexico City, and has also heard it from Mexican-government personnel, expressive of an operational logic reminiscent of criminal extortion. 

The test for American policymaking now is whether it makes the mistake of believing the Mexican narrative. It ought not. 

The Mexican state has done several things right since Jan. 20, 2025, but we must understand that it did so under extraordinary duress. The president had to threaten tariffs, and the secretary of defense had to threaten U.S. military intervention for the first time in a century, to compel the Mexican government to execute on the most-basic tasks of any state: control its territory and deliver criminals to justice. 

That duress is amplified by threats from its erstwhile cartel partners as well: Ismael ‘El Mayo’ Zambada, for example, now in U.S. custody, has threatened to ‘collapse’ U.S.-Mexican relations by telling all he knows if the Mexicans fail to secure his return to Mexico. 

President Trump, offering the carrot as well as the stick, has been effusive in his praise – as is diplomatically prudent – for the Mexican president in her efforts to date. His administration has simultaneously signaled that Mexican politicians are coming into American view as proper targets of justice. 

What the Morena regime in Mexico now wishes to do is navigate these straits with its own powerholders and eminences essentially untouched. Chief among them is Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, whose long-rumored ties to the Sinaloa Cartel would likely not withstand renewed scrutiny from the U.S. Department of Justice. 

If it is allowed to do so, then America will simply face a greater crisis later, when Morena has completed its openly stated transformation of Mexican society into a Venezuelan-model left-populist autocracy, cartel and trafficking operations have resumed with different narcos in partnership with the same elites, and Mexican-government solicitation of offshore balancers in China and Russia has matured into effective operational partnership. 

Bad as the Mexican crisis has been for both ordinary Mexicans and Americans across the past two decades, it pales versus what will come to pass when the Morena ambition is fulfilled. We have already seen Chinese and Russian soldiers marching in review before the Mexican president in independence-day celebrations, and we have already seen that same Mexican president declare that he would have his armed forces defend the cartels against American action. These are warnings of worse to come, and we must pay attention, because they are not expressions of sentiment alone: they are programmatic. 

Put differently, this is a regime that, by its nature, is not amenable to a long-term partnership with the United States. 

The bad news is that every previous American administration would have been satisfied with the Mexican offer on hand now. The good news is that this administration will likely not be. 

President Trump has taken an accurate measure of the Mexican regime. What remains is to put his vision into action. Policy takes time to unfold, but we know what success looks like: neither narcos nor their friends in Mexican governance, from alcaldes to generals to presidents, are safe any longer inside Mexico. They are not safe from the long reach of the American neighbor whose citizens they have killed, whose border they have violated, and whose sovereignty they have disregarded for so very long. 

Mexico’s regime wants a cooperative agreement. But America wants justice. 

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Russian President Vladimir Putin agreed on Tuesday to stop attacking Ukraine’s energy infrastructure, but the 30-day ceasefire still leaves many significant issues unresolved. 

The temporary truce did not include any protections for troops fighting on the front lines or for Ukrainian civilians who continue to live through Russia’s constant aerial bombardments. 

Putin’s preliminary agreement came after a 90-minute phone conversation with President Donald Trump, who took to social media afterward and described it as ‘very good’ and ‘productive.’

‘We agreed to an immediate Ceasefire on all Energy and Infrastructure, with an understanding that we will be working quickly to have a Complete Ceasefire and, ultimately, an END to this very horrible War between Russia and Ukraine,’ he said. ‘That process is now in full force and effect, and we will, hopefully, for the sake of Humanity, get the job done!’

Trump later told Fox News’ Laura Ingraham on the ‘Ingraham Angle’ that pushing Putin further in a ceasefire ‘would have been tough. Russia has the advantage.’

Speaking to Sean Hannity on Tuesday, Special Envoy Steve Witkoff said National Security Advisor Mike Waltz and Secretary of State Marco Rubio will travel to Saudi Arabia on Sunday to discuss the details of Tuesday’s agreement between the two leaders.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s office did not respond to Fox News Digital’s questions, but in a message posted to X he said, ‘Putin effectively rejected the proposal for a full ceasefire.’

‘It would be right for the world to respond by rejecting any attempts by Putin to prolong the war,’ he continued, highlighting Russia’s continued attacks on Ukrainian civilians, including on Tuesday when a Russia-fired Shahed drone hit a hospital in Ukraine’s Sumy region.

‘Sanctions against Russia. Assistance to Ukraine. ‘Strengthening allies in the free world and working toward security guarantees,’ Zelenskyy listed as steps the Western world can take to counter Putin. ‘Only a real cessation of strikes on civilian infrastructure by Russia, as proof of its willingness to end this war, can bring peace closer.’

The Trump administration has argued that true negotiations can only begin once a ceasefire has been secured, though it remains unclear how negotiations will proceed with no truce that includes civilian protections from Russia’s aerial attacks.

Neither the State Department nor the White House responded to Fox News Digital’s questions on why the president believes Putin ‘wants to make peace’ — which Trump accused Zelenskyy of not being ‘serious’ about when he attempted to negotiate security guarantees for Ukraine last month.

Officials from NATO and the EU were also tight-lipped following the call between Trump and Putin.

Ukraine agreed to a ceasefire last week following an hours-long meeting with Secretary of State Marco Rubio and national security advisor Mike Waltz, which the pair said they would then ‘take to the Russians.’

While Washington was short on the details of the negotiations agreed to by Kyiv, Zelenskyy said the U.S. had pushed for a full ceasefire along the front lines, in the air and on the Black Sea — a push Trump was apparently unable to secure in his Tuesday discussions with Putin.

Zelenskyy said his delegation had also discussed the ‘release of prisoners of war and detainees — both military and civilian — and the return of Ukrainian children who were forcibly transferred to Russia.’

While the Kremlin on Tuesday said Putin had agreed to a 175-prisoner swap with Ukraine, there was no mention of the 20,000 Ukrainian children Kyiv has reported to have been forcibly abducted, largely from Luhansk and Donetsk, and then funneled through adoption schemes in Russia.

There are a litany of issues that still need to be negotiated between Ukraine and Russia, which the U.S. has said Europe will also be a part of.

Putin has already made clear Ukraine should not be allowed to join NATO — which the Trump administration has also backed over concerns it could not only perpetuate but escalate the nature of Russia’s war.

European leaders and Zelenskyy have argued that peacekeeping troops should then be placed in Ukraine to prevent Russia from launching a future invasion — but Moscow has also already signaled this will be viewed as a threat to Russia.

Issues over Western arms supplies, international observance of Russian occupied lands, Ukraine’s future security, Ukrainian troops in Kursk and Russia’s continued aerial campaigns over civilian populations all remain major issues that need to be negotiated. 

‘Putin doesn’t share Trump’s abhorrence of war,’ former CIA Moscow Station Chief Dan Hoffman told Fox News Digital. ‘At this point there’s no indication that he’s going to do anything else but negotiate with an eye towards ensuring Ukraine can’t deter future Russian attacks.’

Hoffman also argued that the Trump administration needs to be careful about finding itself in a situation where Washington wants a ceasefire more than Moscow.

‘The strategic objective is still to destroy Ukraine,’ Hoffman said. ‘The question is, Putin has not agreed to a ceasefire, so what are you going to do about?’ 

‘Define success by what serves U.S. national security interests. A bad deal would not serve our interests,’ he added. 

‘Let them go negotiate,’ Hoffman said.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

The Associated Press, not exactly a White House favorite, has shot itself in the foot.

The following retraction is nothing short of humiliating:

‘The Associated Press has withdrawn its story about U.S. Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard saying President Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin ‘are very good friends.’ Gabbard was talking about Trump and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi. The AP will publish a corrected version of the story.’

Whoa! How do you run that piece in the first place without having it nailed down?

The wire service, you may recall, is suing the Trump administration for ousting its reporters from the White House pool over its refusal to refer to ‘Gulf of America.’ So, this unforced error puts the White House in I-told-you-so mode.

On Monday, when Trump was at the Kennedy Center, an NBC reporter tried to ask a question, Trump asked, ‘Who are you with?’

After the journalist identified himself, the president said: ‘I don’t want to talk to NBC anymore. I think you’re so discredited.’ 

The Trump team later posted the exchange with ‘mic drop’ emojis.

The point is that Trump dominates the news no matter what he does. And, as I’ve been saying for the 35 years I’ve known him, even a torrent of negative publicity helps him because his media detractors are playing on his turf.

While Trump was visiting the Kennedy Center, he ‘floated’ the idea of personally hosting the annual awards show. And who’s going to stop him, since he’s purged the Democratic board members?

The ratings, he said, would skyrocket. And he’s right about that.

As the New York Times notes, a younger Trump dreamed of becoming a Broadway producer. He now says the Kennedy Center will concentrate on producing ‘Broadway hits.’

And by the way, Trump released 80,000 pages of JFK assassination files yesterday and has asked for no redactions.

The president can make news on the slightest whim, just by posting on Truth Social.

He just went after Judge James Boasberg, who ordered the deportations of mostly Venezuelan gang members to be stopped while planes were still in the air:   

‘This judge, like many of the Crooked Judges’ I am forced to appear before, should be IMPEACHED!!!’ WE DON’T WANT VICIOUS, VIOLENT, AND DEMENTED CRIMINALS, MANY OF THEM DERANGED MURDERERS, IN OUR COUNTRY.’

The posting drew a rare rebuke from Chief Justice John Roberts:

‘For more than two centuries, it has been established that impeachment is not an appropriate response to disagreement concerning a judicial decision. The normal appellate review process exists for that purpose.’

The president is also renewing his habit of going after journalists personally. Ashley Parker had a highly successful career at the New York Times and Washington Post–she’s also an MSNBC analyst–who recently joined the Atlantic.

She asked Trump for an interview. 

After dismissing the liberal Atlantic as a ‘Third Rate Magazine,’ Trump posted:

‘Ashley Parker is not capable of doing a fair and unbiased interview. She is a Radical Left Lunatic, and has been as terrible as is possible for as long as I have known her. To this date, she doesn’t even know that I won the Presidency THREE times. If you have some other reporter, let us know, but Ashley is not capable or competent enough to understand the intricacies of High Level politics.’

Parker is restrained, not radical, and in bringing up the 2020 election, Trump is asking her to accept something that has never been proven in court or by his own attorney general.

A magazine spokesperson said, ‘Atlantic reporters are diligent and fair and continue to pursue stories of importance to the public.’

And then there is, you know, the actual job of the presidency. Trump reported yesterday on his 90-minute phone call with Vladimir Putin.

They ‘stressed the need for improved bilateral relations between the United States and Russia’ – no surprise there.

‘The leaders agreed that the movement to peace will begin with an energy and infrastructure ceasefire, as well as technical negotiations on implementation of a maritime ceasefire in the Black Sea, full ceasefire and permanent peace…. 

‘They further discussed the need to stop proliferation of strategic weapons and will engage with others to ensure the broadest possible application. The two leaders shared the view that Iran should never be in a position to destroy Israel.’

And: ‘The two leaders agreed that a future with an improved bilateral relationship between the United States and Russia has huge upside,’ including ‘enormous economic deals and geopolitical stability.’

It seems to me that Trump got next to nothing. A 30-day pause in attacks on energy plants and infrastructure, that’s about it. Everything else is subject to negotiations, which gives the Kremlin more time to keep attacking Ukraine and lock in further territorial gains. A real cease-fire seems a long way off.

But whether Trump is on the attack or being attacked, he is driving the news every day, even inserting himself into culture and sports topics. Keep that in mind when the ratings-driven president hosts the Kennedy Center honors.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Danette Colbert, whom police call a ‘career criminal’ and is accused of stealing from TV reporter Adan Manzano while he was in New Orleans to cover the Super Bowl, now faces second-degree murder charges in his death, authorities said Tuesday.

Kenner Police Chief Keith Conley said during a press conference that 48-year-old Colbert was booked on those charges and that an accomplice was also arrested in connection with the case.

Conley said Rickey White, who has no fixed address, was arrested at a La Quinta Inn in Hollywood, Florida, March 14 by U.S. Marshals and the Hollywood Police Department and is currently in the Broward County Jail in Fort Lauderdale, waiting extradition to Louisiana. White is charged with simple robbery, access device fraud, illegal transmission of monetary funds, bank fraud, and computer fraud.

Colbert also faces the same charges, has open charges in two other Louisiana parishes, and remains jailed at the Jefferson Parish Correctional Center.

Conley said correspondence between Colbert and White suggested the two were working ‘hand in hand in concert.’

A coroner also said Manzano, a Telemundo reporter who was based in Kansas City, died from the combined toxic effects of Xanax and alcohol intoxication, along with positional asphyxia, and the manner of death is undetermined.

Jefferson Parish coroner Gerald Cvitanovich said Manzano was found face down on a pillow and that his blood alcohol level was .232, almost three times the legal amount in the state of Louisiana.

‘We don’t want Ms. Colbert to see the light of day again,’ Conley said, adding that different agencies are currently in the process of revoking any probation Colbert has obtained. ‘I committed to leaving no stone unturned in the pursuit of justice for Adan Manzano’s family and friends.’

During Colbert’s bond hearing on Feb. 25, a detective testified that Manzano had Xanax, an anti-anxiety drug, in his system, according to a preliminary toxicology report. Manzano did not have a prescription for the drug, which was also found at Colbert’s home during a search.

Investigation timeline

Last month, police arrested Colbert after she was seen on video at the Kenner Comfort Suites hotel with Manzano at around 5 a.m. the day of his death on Feb. 5 and was seen leaving the room alone later in the morning.

During the investigation, Manzano’s cellphone and credit card were found during a search of Colbert’s residence in Slidell, and the credit card was used fraudulently at several New Orleans area stores. Colbert also faces a state felony charge of possession of a stolen firearm that was also found during that search, but authorities have said they didn’t think it relates to Manzano’s case.

Colbert was arrested twice in 2022 in Las Vegas on charges of grand larceny and administering a drug to aid in a felony crime, court records show. Men had alleged that Colbert drugged them in their Las Vegas Strip hotel rooms and stole from them. One victim said that $50,000 in cash, $11,000 in poker chips, a phone, a designer bag and a Rolex watch were taken from him.

Both cases were dismissed after the victims declined to testify against Colbert.

New Orleans police said they were familiar with Colbert as she has an extensive record for fraud and robbery schemes, having been arrested at least four times in the past decade for crimes such as bank fraud, second-degree battery and theft.

She received a five-year suspended sentence and five years of probation in 2019 after pleading guilty to access to device fraud, after a man said he lost a credit card during his time at a Bourbon Street strip club.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Tuesday’s men’s First Four games ran the gamut for the NCAA Tournament, resulting in a heart-racing buzzer-beater and a good, old-fashioned beatdown.

The first of Tuesday’s games pit 16 seeds Alabama State and Saint Francis, who engaged in a back-and-forth battle between the SWAC and NEC champions. With the game tied at 68-68 with just seconds remaining on the clock, the Hornets completed a Hail Mary-style inbounds pass and managed to get the go-ahead bucket with less than a second remaining for the 70-68 win.

The win was Alabama State’s first in NCAA Tournament history, giving them an opportunity to play No. 1 overall seed Auburn in Thursday’s first round. It will also be a reunion for Hornets coach Tony Madlock, who was an Auburn assistant from 2010-2014.

The presumed headliner of Tuesday’s doubleheader turned out to be a snoozer, as Hubert Davis’ North Carolina team manhandled San Diego State 95-68 — an emphatic response to critics who wondered whether the last team in was truly deserving of making the 68-team field. UNC basketball will now advance to play No. 6 seed Ole Miss on Thursday.

Check out all the updates, scores and highlights from Tuesday’s First Four games:

First Four score updates

Final: North Carolina 95, San Diego State 68

UNC proves it belongs with a dominant win over SDSU

Coming into the First Four, there were questions of whether North Carolina belonged in the NCAA Tournament. Those questions will no longer be asked after the Tar Heels pulled off a 95-68 win over San Diego State on Tuesday.

The Tar Heels led by as many as 40 points multiple times. RJ Davis had 26 points in the victory and Seth Trimble added 16 points. Seven different players scored at least six points and 10 different players scored at least two points.

North Carolina cruising to victory

We have arrived at the final media timeout and there isn’t much mystery of who will win. UNC leads 87-52 with 3:32 left in the game.

RJ Davis pushes UNC lead to 40 points

RJ Davis continues to push the UNC lead to 40 points at 82-42 with a pull-up 3-pointer in transition. Davis is up to 26 points on 8-of-12 shooting and has made all six of his 3-point attempts.

North Carolina pushes lead to 30 over San Diego State

North Carolina continues to dominate San Diego State. The lead has ballooned 30 at 69-39 at the under-12 media timeout. UNC is still on fire from 3-point range, up to 10 of 15 shooting from beyond the arc,

UNC continues to dominant in second half

North Carolina has not slowed down and continues to build on its lead in the second half. With 15:53 left in the game, the Tar Heels are leading San Diego State 57-30. San Deigo State is down to 27.8% shooting from the field.

End of first half: North Carolina 47, San Diego State 23

RJ Davis hits 3-pointer to end half as UNC dominates

RJ Davis hits a 3-pointer right before the end of the half to stretch the North Carolina lead to 47-23. The Tar Heels finished the half 7 of 9 from beyond the arc. Davis leads all scorers with 11 points. Seth Trimble has 10 points.

Magoon Gwath leads the Aztecs with eight points. San Diego State finished the first half shooting 8 of 30 from the field and 4 of 16 from 3-point range.

UNC opens up 21-point lead over San Diego State

Entering the final media timeout of the half, UNC holds a 37-16 lead over San Diego State with 3:49 left. The Aztecs had a stretch of over four minutes without a field goal. UNC capitalized with a 20-2 run and has begun running away with it.

Seth Trimble leads the way with eight points for the Tar Heels. Elliot Cadeau has added seven points. Seven of the eight Tar Heels who have entered have scored a point.

North Carolina in control midway through first half

North Carolina is on a 14-2 run over the last 3:06 and the Tar Heels have opened up a 27-13 lead with 9:17 left in the first half. UNC is 5 for 5 from 3-point range. Jae’Lyn Withers has two 3-pointers.

Meanwhile, San Diego State continues to struggle from the field, shooting 5 of 17.

UNC starts hot from 3-point range

North Carolina is shooting 4 for 4 from 3-point range early and holds a 16-11 lead with 11:43 left in the first half. Four different players have hit a triple for the Tar Heels. UNC has turned the ball over six times, keeping the Aztecs alive.

UNC holds lead at first media timeout

North Carolina holds a 10-6 lead at the game’s first media timeout. The Tar Heels have hit four of their five shots, while the Aztecs are shooting 2 of 7 and 1 of 6 from 3-point range.

Starting lineups for the second First Four game between UNC and SDSU:

North Carolina

G: Elliot Cadeau
G: RJ Davis
G: Drake Powell
F: Ven-Allen Lubin
F: Jae’Lyn Withers

San Diego State

G: Nick Boyd
G: BJ Davis
G: Miles Byrd
F: Magoon Gwath
F: Jared Coleman-Jones

Final: Alabama State 70, Saint Francis 68

Alabama State shocks Saint Francis with clutch layup

Alabama State is moving on to the first round of the NCAA Tournament with a 70-68 win over Saint Francis. The game-winning basket for the Hornets comes on a Hail Mary pass from one side of the court to the basket from Micah Simpson. Amarr Knox caught the ball on a ricochet and scored the game-winning basket.

Alabama State takes lead on late layup

Micah Simpson fires a Hail Mary to Amarr Knox, who hits the layup to give Alabama State a 70-68 lead with one second left.

Saint Francis ties game at 68-68

Chris Moncrief hits a 3-pointer for Saint Francis to tie the game at 68-68 with just under 40 seconds left. Alabama State calls a timeout with 31.6 seconds left. The Hornets have 21 seconds left on the shot clock.

Alabama State pushes lead to four with under 2 minutes left

After Saint Francis tied the game at 62-62, Alabama State scores back-to-back baskets, including a dunk by Micah Octave to give the Hornets a 66-62 lead with 1:36 left. Saint Francis calls a timeout.

Alabama State takes lead at final media timeout

A 3-pointer from CJ Hines gives Alabama State its first lead since the 15:07 mark in the first half. It’s 62-60 with 3:46 remaining. The Hornets shot their first free throw when TJ Madlock was fouled and scored on an and-one.

Alabama State will shoot their second and third free throws with a chance to push the lead coming out of the timeout.

Saint Francis holds a three-point lead

Saint Francis continues to lead with 7:06 left in the game. At the under-8 media timeout, it’s 57-54 Red Flash. Alabama State has been within one point multiple times but cannot tie the game or take the lead yet.

The Hornets are still without a free throw.

Alabama State within one of Saint Francis

Just like that, it’s a one-point game, with Saint Francis holding a slim 50-49 lead. Amarr Knox is up to 12 points for the Hornets. Micah Simpson hit a 3-pointer to cut the lead to one.

Valentino Pinedo continues to lead all scorers with 17 points. However, the Red Flash have gone scoreless in the last 2:14 and has made just one their last seven shots.

Saint Francis grows lead to start second half

Saint Francis leads Alabama State 46-40 at the first media timeout of the second half with 15:48 left. The Red Flash grows their lead by a point. After hitting six 3-pointers in the first half, Saint Francis is 1 of 2 in the second half.

Over 24 minutes into this one, the Hornets have yet to shoot a free throw.

End of first half: Saint Francis 39, Alabama State 34

Saint Francis leads Alabama State by five in First Four game

Saint Francis led for the majority of the first half and enters halftime with a 39-34 lead over Alabama State. Juan Cranford Jr. leads all scorers with 13 points and four 3-pointers for the Red Flash. Valentino Pinedo has 11. D’Ante Bass has eight points to lead all scorers for the Hornets.

The Red Flash shot 13 of 22 from the field and 6 of 12 from 3-point range. The six turnovers prevented a bigger lead. The Hornets did not shoot a free throw in the first half and shot 42% from the field.

Saint Francis leads Alabama State late in first half of First Four

Saint Francis leads at the final media timeout of the half, 32-26 with 3:26 left. The Hornets have gone cold from the field with a scoring drought spanning 2:44 and shooting 1 for their last seven from the field.

Saint Francis continues to lead at under-8 media timeout

We’ve arrived at the under-8-minute media timeout, and Saint Francis continues to lead, 26-23, with 7:12 left in the first half. The Red Flash is shooting 9 of 14 from the field but has turned it over six times. Alabama State has 12 of its 23 points off turnovers.

Right before the media timeout, the Hornets picked up their seventh team foul of the half. Saint Francis will shoot free throws if fouled again for the rest of the half.

Saint Francis, Alabama State heating up

Saint Francis and Alabama State are beginning to find the basket after a sluggish offensive start for both teams. The Red Flash is on a 10-2 run heading into the second media timeout and leads 17-12 with 11:46 left in the half. Valentino Pinedo leads all scorers with seven points for Saint Francis. CJ Hines has five points to lead Alabama State.

Saint Francis holds early lead

Heading into the first media timeout, Saint Francis holds a slim 6-4 lead with 15:40 left in the first half. The Red Flash is shooting 50% from the field but already has two turnovers. Alabama State is shooting 2 for 7 to start.

Pregame

NET Rankings for Alabama State-Saint Francis

Much has been made of NET rankings and who is in the NCAA Tournament and who isn’t. Alabama State enters the First Four with a NET ranking of 274, while Saint Francis has a NET ranking of 297. The Hornets won the SWAC tournament, while the Red Flash won the NEC. Read here to learn more about NET rankings.

Starting lineups for Alabama State-Saint Francis

With the tipoff of the 2025 men’s NCAA Tournament closing in, here’s a look at the starters for Alabama State-Saint Francis in tonight’s First Four game:

Alabama State:

G: Amarr Knox
G: CJ Hines
G: Micah Octave
G: TJ Madlock
F: Jasteven Walker

Saint Francis:

G: Chris Moncrief
G: Juan Cranford Jr.
G: Riley Parker
F: Daemar Kelly
F: Valentino Pinedo

What channel are the First Four games on? What to know of truTV

First Four times today

Game 1: (16) Alabama State vs. (16) Saint Francis | 6:40 p.m. ET
Game 2: (11) San Diego State vs. (11) North Carolina, 9:10 p.m. ET
Location: UD Arena (Dayton, Ohio)

Tuesday’s First Four games are scheduled to tip off at 6:40 p.m. ET between 16 seeds Alabama State and Saint Francis. The second game of the night, between 11 seeds San Diego State and North Carolina, is scheduled to tip off at 9:10 p.m. ET, though it could be pushed back depending on how late the first game runs.

The entirety of the men’s First Four will take place at UD Arena on the campus of the University of Dayton in Ohio.

Watch First Four games live with truTV

What channel are First Four games on today?

TV channel: truTV
Streaming: March Madness Live | Sling TV

Both of Tuesday’s First Four games will air live on truTV. Streaming options for both games include March Madness Live, which requires a valid cable login. Another option is Sling TV, which carries truTV and the TBS family of networks.

Alabama State vs Saint Francis history

Series record: N/A

This will be Alabama State and Saint Francis’ first meeting in both programs’ respective histories.

North Carolina vs San Diego State history

Series record: North Carolina leads 2-0
North Carolina’s last win: Nov. 24, 1990 (99-63)
San Diego State’s last win: N/A

This will be the Tar Heels and Aztecs’ third all-time meeting, with UNC winning both prior matchups, according to a North Carolina preview of the game. North Carolina first beat San Diego State on Dec. 29, 1988 by a score of 103-92 in San Diego. Two years later, UNC beat the Aztecs 99-63 in Chapel Hill on Nov. 24, 1990.

Curiously, North Carolina coach Hubert Davis played in both games for the Tar Heels.

First Four predictions

Alabama State vs. Saint Francis

Emilee Smarr, The Tuscaloosa News: Alabama State
Gentry Estes, The Tennessean: Saint Francis
Jeremy Cluff, Arizona Republic: Alabama State 71, Saint Francis 69

North Carolina vs. San Diego State

Rodd Baxley, Fayetteville Observer: North Carolina 75, San Diego State 69
Emilee Smarr, The Tuscaloosa News: San Diego State
Gentry Estes, The Tennessean: San Diego State
Jeremy Cluff, Arizona Republic: North Carolina 77, San Diego State 70

First Four injury updates

Alabama State: N/A
Saint Francis: N/A
North Carolina: N/A
San Diego State: Magoon Gwath (knee)

The only notable player injury update for Tuesday’s First Four games is Magoon Gwath of San Diego State, who is set to return from an injury suffered in late February.

The 7-foot center both the Mountain West’s freshman and defensive player of the year in 2024-25, averaging 8.5 points, 5.2 rebounds and 2.6 blocks per game. He leads the Aztecs in both rebounds and blocks per game, despite not playing since Feb. 22.

Alabama State basketball schedule 2024-25

Below are the five most recent results for Alabama State. To see the Hornets’ full schedule, click here.

Thursday, March 6: at Southern (W, 66-65)
Saturday, March 8: at Grambling (W, 59-47)
Thursday, March 13: vs. Texas Southern (W, 84-79) (SWAC tournament)
Friday, March 14: vs. Grambling (W, 64-62) (SWAC tournament)
Saturday, March 15: vs. Jackson State (W, 60-56) (SWAC tournament)

Saint Francis basketball schedule 2024-25

Below are the five most recent results for Alabama State. To see the Red Flash’s full schedule, click here.

Saturday, Feb. 22: vs. Fairleigh Dickinson (W, 85-80)
Saturday, March 1: vs. Chicago State (W, 80-71)
Wednesday, March 5: vs. Wagner (W, 58-55) (NEC tournament)
Saturday, March 8: vs. LIU (W, 71-68) (NEC tournament)
Tuesday, March 11: vs. CCSU (W, 46-43) (NEC tournament)

North Carolina basketball schedule 2024-25

Below are the five most recent results for Alabama State. To see the Tar Heels’ full schedule, click here.

Tuesday, March 4: at Virginia Tech (W, 91-59)
Saturday, March 8: vs. Duke (L, 82-69)
Wednesday, March 12: vs. Notre Dame (W, 76-56)
Thursday, March 13: vs. Wake Forest (W, 68-59)
Friday, March 14: vs. Duke (L, 74-71)

San Diego State basketball schedule 2024-25

Below are the five most recent results for Alabama State. To see the Aztecs’ full schedule, click here.

Tuesday, Feb. 25: vs. New Mexico (W, 73-65)
Saturday, March 1: at Wyoming (W, 72-69)
Tuesday, March 4: at UNLV (L, 74-67)
Saturday, March 8: vs. Nevada (W, 80-61) (MWC tournament)
Thursday, March 13: vs. Boise State (L, 62-52) (MWC tournament)

First Four news

NCAA Tournament winners and losers: North Carolina, Michigan lead March Madness list
March Madness First Four bracket odds for men’s NCAA Tournament
North Carolina’s arrival to March Madness First Four delayed by ‘travel issues’

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Over the past few months, Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow has been the best salesman in the world. Burrow’s goal: to make sure his wide receivers, Ja’Marr Chase and Tee Higgins, were on the team for the long term. His motto: ABC — Always Be Closing.

For months, Burrow told anyone who would listen that the Bengals needed to keep both players. They were invaluable. They were the key. You can’t spell championship party without Ja’MarrTee.

‘Those discussions are ongoing,’ Burrow said in December. ‘I’m confident that I think we’re going to be able to do what it takes to bring Tee back. And I know that I’m gonna do what it takes to get him back and so is he. We’ve had those talks. So, those are going to be offseason discussions. But I think we’re excited about that opportunity.’

‘Whenever a great player leaves, you wish you could have found a way to keep him,’ Burrow also said. ‘You don’t want to make a living out of letting great players leave the building. And I think that’s why you gotta do everything you can to get those deals done early.’

‘We have several guys like (Chase) who have stepped up for us and deserved to be paid,’ Burrow told ESPN at the Pro Bowl Games in January. ‘And deserve to be paid what they’re worth.’

During Super Bowl week, Burrow was again pounding the table for his receiver teammates. He talked about restructuring his contract to help pay for their contracts. He spoke about the salary cap. He was the QB1/GM1.

‘Keeping everybody we had last year is obviously ideal,’ Burrow said. ‘I think we can do it. I know we all want to stay together, and we all want to make it happen.’

Burrow is right to want to keep his receivers. Of course. And they are outstanding players. Especially Chase. Together, they are devastating. You also keep your good players. This is all true.

Yes, Burrow got what he wanted. Bengals management blinked.

Good luck with that, Joe.

All the players and the plays: Sign up for USA TODAY’s Sports newsletter.

The problem is the way the Bengals are building their team isn’t the way the best franchises do it. The Philadelphia Eagles didn’t build a Super Bowl champion through the receiver position. They built it through the offensive line.

Kansas City has won Super Bowls primarily because of Patrick Mahomes but also because it invested heavily in defensive pieces. The team trading Tyreek Hill to Miami helped fortify the franchise’s championship runs with a bevy of picks and salary cap flexibility.

“We took a step back and figured, ‘How are we going to get better on both sides?’ And that’s why we decided it was best for us and best for Tyreek,” Brett Veach, the team’s general manager, said at the time. “It was kind of a best-case scenario for us and for him.”

Generally, franchises that build top heavy on offense at the expense of other positions don’t win Super Bowls.

Bengals management was in a tough spot. Burrow engaged in a public campaign of pressure on his ownership (which is notoriously cheap). They had to listen to their quarterback or risk his ire.

But now the team is in a box.

Chase reportedly will get a four-year, $161 million deal. For Higgins, reportedly, it’s a four-year, $115 million deal. That’s a lot of money eating into the team’s salary cap for just two receivers. No matter how good they are.

The team may be able to keep defensive star Trey Hendrickson, but last year the Bengals allowed the seventh-most points per game (25.5) and the third-highest red zone touchdown rate (67.9%). That was with Hendrickson playing like Reggie White. 

This all puts the front office in a position where it must have a series of consecutive, excellent defensive drafts. Not sure I have confidence in the Bengals doing that. Wait. Checks notes. I’m positive I don’t have the confidence in the Bengals doing that.

What’s more likely is that the Bengals are going to have to win games 31-30. They’ll win some like that. Maybe more than most like that. But a Super Bowl?

Burrow was brilliant during the team’s 2021 Super Bowl season, but running back Joe Mixon was almost as much of a star that year. In a game against the Steelers he rushed 28 times for 165 yards and two touchdowns. He finished that season with a career-high 1,205 rushing yards and 13 rushing touchdowns. Mixon’s power running covered up other blemishes on the team.

Maybe Burrow, Chase and Higgins can be so overwhelming, defense won’t matter. That doesn’t seem likely.

The thing about the good teams, the really good teams, is that they can beat opponents in diverse ways. This is why the Eagles are so formidable. Last season they had the fewest number of pass attempts in the league at 448. The offense passed so few times because it didn’t need to pass more. They had an Avenger at running back and a devastating defense.

So, yes, Burrow got what he wanted. Burrow kept his guys.

Now comes the really hard part. 

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The Professional Tennis Players Association (PTPA) has filed lawsuits against major tennis organizations, including the ATP and WTA, alleging antitrust violations and exploitation of players.
The PTPA, which claims support from over 250 players, argues that these organizations act as a ‘cartel’ to limit player earnings and control the tennis schedule.
The lawsuit specifically criticizes the organizations for capping prize money, restricting off-court earning opportunities, and implementing a demanding tournament schedule that jeopardizes player health.
The PTPA also accuses the International Tennis Integrity Agency (ITIA) of employing overly aggressive and intrusive investigative tactics, including excessive drug testing and invasive searches.

The Professional Tennis Players Association sued several organizations, including the ATP, WTA and International Tennis Federation, likening them to a ‘cartel,’ alleging several antitrust violations, systemic abuse, collusion to reduce competition, exploiting players financially, and forcing athletes to play an unsustainable schedule.

Court documents filed in New York City, London and Brussels and obtained by USA TODAY Sports, name 22 players, including Vasek Pospisil, Nick Kyrgios, Sorana Cirstea and Reilly Opelka as plaintiffs, who demand a jury trial.

‘Tennis is broken,’ Ahmad Nassar, executive director of the PTPA, said in a statement. ‘Behind the glamorous veneer that the Defendants promote, players are trapped in an unfair system that exploits their talent, suppresses their earnings, and jeopardizes their health and safety. We have exhausted all options for reform through dialogue, and the governing bodies have left us no choice but to seek accountability through the courts.’

The Professional Tennis Players Association, which was co-founded by 24-time Grand Slam champion Novak Djokovic and Pospisil in 2019, says their mandate is to unite and mobilize ‘tennis players to foster transparency and fairness in professional tennis.’

The 162-page lawsuit filed Wednesday details some of those complaints and the PTPA says they are backed by more than 250 players, many of whom are ranked in the top 20.

‘Defendants do so by capping the prize money tournaments award and limiting players’ ability to earn money off the court,’ the lawsuit says. ‘Rather than being determined by market forces, players’ earnings are instead subject to limitations agreed upon by the defendants and their co-conspirators.’

Another grievance in the lawsuit is the tour schedule, which the lawsuit says the men’s tour, the ATP, ‘schedules an annual slate of over 60 tournaments in which male players play,’ leaving little time to rest and recover.

‘Defendants do so by capping the prize money tournaments award and limiting players’ ability to earn money off the court. Rather than being determined by market forces, players’ earnings are instead subject to limitations agreed upon by the defendants and their co-conspirators.’

The lawsuit says that four Grand Slam tournaments, the Australian Open, French Open, Wimbledon and U.S. Open, are co-conspirators with the defendants who use the tournaments ‘to enrich themselves at the players’ expense, to the detriment of fans and the game.’

The International Tennis Integrity Agency, which says it tries to safeguard tennis to make sure the sport is free from corruption and doping, is also a defendant in the case.

‘The ITIA’s aggressive, unrelenting, and, at times, illegal investigative processes subject players to dozens of drug tests (both blood and urine), invasive searches of their personal cell phones, hours-long interrogations without counsel, and harassment by unaccountable and ill-trained investigators,’ the lawsuit says.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The MLB season may have officially started this morning, but it appears the offseason still has some crumbs left over. There are still several free agents ripe for the picking if any MLB organization wants to sign them.

Most notably, Alex Verdugo remains unsigned. Just a season ago, Verdugo was the everyday left fielder for a New York Yankees that reached the World Series. He wasn’t bad in the World Series either, recording five RBI and a home run in the series, even though the Yankees lost. Yet, despite that success, MLB teams seem mostly uninterested in signing him.

The disinterest in Verdugo is interesting to say the least. According to the report, many of Verdugo’s former Yankees teammates spoke highly of him, including Aaron Judge, Anthony Volpe, Marcus Stroman and Trent Grisham. So, what is keeping teams from picking him up?

Has Verdugo received any interest?

Although Verdugo has supposedly received interest from teams this offseason, most notably the Pittsburgh Pirates, Los Angeles Angels and Houston Astros, none have given him an official offer.

Each of those teams opted for other outfield options instead, with the Pirates brining on Tommy Pham via a one-year, $4.05 million deal, about half as much per year as Verdugo likely would’ve cost them. Houston signed Ben Gamel to a one-year, $1.2 million deal. The Angels are the only team that didn’t make such a move, but it appears they never followed up on their initial interest.

Did Verdugo have a bad 2024?

In 2024, Verdugo posted a suboptimal 83 OPS+, the first time he’d dropped below 100 since 2018. It was far and away his worst season of the 2020s, with his OPS dropping nearly 100 points between 2023 and 2024 (.745 to .647).

Still, despite Verdugo’s struggles, he still has a lot going for him. For one, he’s still more than a year away from his 30th birthday. He’s in the middle of his prime and could certainly bounce back.

Second, he’s still a great fielder. While probably not an option in center field, as a corner outfielder, Verdugo ranked in the 77th percentile among major leaguers in range. He was among the top ten percent in both arm value and arm strength as well, per Baseball Savant.

Third, he’s healthy. Verdugo hasn’t played in fewer than 140 games since 2019. Sure, he’s experienced minor injuries that have kept him out for short stints, but he’s been a pretty reliable player in terms of actually being available. That, combined with his solid defense should be more than enough to get him a deal.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Deion Sanders has a good idea. He often does. This idea isn’t original but it’s extremely interesting. It’s also currently against NCAA rules. Let me explain.

Sanders said on Monday he wants the NCAA to consider utilizing the NFL preseason model, and allow programs to practice and scrimmage against another team during the spring.

‘I would actually like to play the spring game against another team, in the spring,’ Sanders said. ‘That’s what I’m trying to do right now.’

‘I would like to style it like the pros,’ he said. ‘I’d like to go against someone (in practice) for a few days, and then you have the spring game. I think the public would be satisfied with that tremendously. I think it’s a tremendous idea. I’ve told those personnel, who should understand that, that it’s a tremendous idea.’

It really is a tremendous idea. But is it even allowed?

It’s not.

‘Under current NCAA Bylaws,’ an NCAA spokesman told USA TODAY Sports, ‘teams cannot play another school in the spring.’

So, for now at least, the entire thing is a pipe dream. That could of course change but likely not soon.

As for the merits of the idea, it’s a smart one. NFL teams will conduct joint practices with another team for several days during training camp. Conversely, college teams practice against themselves leading to a scrimmage.

Most starters in the NFL don’t play in preseason games but many of them take part in these practices.

So Sanders’ idea makes sense but it comes with risks.

In fact, one of the ironies of Sanders’ idea is that some NFL teams, while utilizing joint practices, are cutting back on the number of days teams participate in these practices, because in too many instances they turn into all-out brawls.

On the NFL level, the summer practices between the two teams are often extremely intense. In the summer of 2024, multiple fights happened during a joint practice between the Lions and Giants. The fights were so problematic that the NFL fined both franchises $200,000 each.

“Man, look, that’s who we are,” Lions linebacker Derrick Barnes told MLive at the time. “I mean we don’t take no (expletive). That’s, like I said, who we are. That’s what we do. It’s not like you go back and look it, and it’s us starting stuff. We just finished stuff, you know what I’m saying? We finished what was going on out there. That’s how you compete. When you compete at a high level, obviously we want to keep everyone healthy, everyone has a season to go play, but however the intensity is, we’re going to be higher than that.”

Yeah, things get crazy at these practices.

The Associated Press reported that in 2023 about 80 percent of joint practices lasted two days. Last year, some two-thirds of the sessions lasted just one day.

“Every time I’ve ever had a joint practice, the first day will be a little rough and then the second one ends in a fight,” Packers running back Josh Jacobs said last year.

The NFL last summer sent out a memo to teams saying fights and unprofessional conduct at joint practices wouldn’t be tolerated, according to the Associated Press. Packers coach Matt LaFleur once noted that “sometimes it becomes a wrestling match out there or an MMA fight” when joint practices go beyond one day.

That is the type of mentality you can expect at a joint college practice, too. It could get wild. It doesn’t matter that these would be college players.

Overall, NFL coaches like joint practices because they’re a break from the monotony of camp, and offer their team a test against an unfamiliar opponent. It’s likely college coaches would feel the same, as Sanders notes.

But also, like in college, these scrimmages are extremely popular with fans.

This is likely what Sanders is going for. The crowds for something like this would be remarkable.

‘The way the trend is going, is you never know if this is going to be the last spring game,’ said Sanders. ‘Now, I don’t believe in that, and I don’t really want to condone that…To have it competitive, and to play against your own guys, it can get kind of monotonous, and you really can’t tell the level of your guys.’

Will it happen?

The NCAA will likely take its sweet time before making any type of change to its rules that’s this big. So, again, it’s just talk.

Smart talk. But just talk.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Washington Capitals star Alex Ovechkin continues to stay on pace to pass Wayne Gretzky’s NHL career goal record before season’s end.

Ovechkin, 39, entered this season needing 42 goals to break Gretzky’s record of 894 career goals, which has stood since 1999. The Washington captain has 34 goals this season and needs eight more with 14 games left to become the NHL’s all-time leader.

Ovechkin scored 15 times in his first 18 games before suffering a fractured left fibula during a Nov. 18 game against the Utah Hockey Club. He has scored 19 times in 33 games since he returned on Dec. 28.

This season, he moved into second place with 20 consecutive 20-goal seasons and set a record for number of goalies scored against in his career. He tied records for game-winning goals and most franchises against which he has a hat trick. And he became the first player to score 200 goals in three different decades.

If he doesn’t reach Gretzky’s goal record this season, he has one more season left on his contract.

Here’s where Ovechkin stands in his chase of Gretzky’s goal record (stats through March 15):

OVECHKIN VS. GRETZKY: Comparing the two greats

CAPITALS SCHEDULE: How Ovechkin has fared vs. remaining teams

How many goals does Alex Ovechkin have?

Ovechkin has 887 career goals.

How many goals does Alex Ovechkin need to pass Wayne Gretzky?

Ovechkin needs eight goals to break Gretzky’s record.

Can Alex Ovechkin break Wayne Gretzky’s record this season?

Ovechkin has 34 goals and 22 assists in 52 games. Factoring in the 16 games he missed, that is a 43-goal pace, giving him a chance to reach the 42 goals he needs to break the record this season. As of Tuesday, Ovechkin has played in nine fewer career games than Gretzky.

What did Alex Ovechkin do in his last game?

Ovechkin didn’t score but had a primary assist in Washington’s 4-1 win Tuesday over the Detroit Red Wings.

When is Alex Ovechkin’s next game?

The Capitals play Thursday, March 20 at home against Philadelphia. Ovechkin has 51 goals in 77 career games against the Flyers.

Alex Ovechkin vs. Wayne Gretzky stats

Games: Gretzky 1,487 | Ovechkin 1,478

Goals: Gretzky 894 | Ovechkin 887

Assists: Gretzky 1,963 | Ovechkin 719

Points: Gretzky 2,857 | Ovechkin 1,606

Alex Ovechkin goals in 2024-25

Oct. 19: 1 vs. New Jersey
Oct. 23: 1 vs. Philadelphia
Oct. 29: 2 vs. N.Y. Rangers
Oct. 31: 1 vs. Montreal
Nov. 2: 1 vs. Columbus
Nov. 3: 1 vs. Carolina
Nov. 6: 1 vs. Nashville
Nov. 9: 2 vs. St. Louis
Nov. 17: 3 vs. Vegas
Nov. 18: 2 vs. Utah
Dec. 28: 1 vs. Toronto
Dec. 29: 1 vs. Detroit
Jan. 2: 1 vs. Minnesota
Jan. 4: 1 vs. N.Y. Rangers
Jan. 11: 1 vs. Nashville
Jan. 16: 1 vs. Ottawa
Jan. 23: 1 vs. Seattle
Jan. 30: 1 vs. Ottawa
Feb 1: 1 vs. Winnipeg
Feb. 4: 1 vs. Florida
Feb. 6: 1 vs. Philadelphia
Feb. 23: 3 vs. Edmonton
Feb. 25: 1 vs. Calgary
March 1: 1 vs. Tampa Bay
March 5: 1 vs. N.Y. Rangers
March 9: 1 vs. Seattle
March 15: 1 vs. San Jose

Alex Ovechkin career goals breakdown

Even strength: 561, third overall

Power play: 321, a record

Short-handed: 5

Empty net: 65, a record

Game winners: 135, tied for first with Jaromir Jagr

Overtime goals: 27, a record

Multi-goal games: 178, second overall

Goalies scored against: 182, a record

Hat tricks: 32, tied for fifth overall. Ovechkin has hat tricks against 20 franchises, tying Brett Hull’s record.

20-goal seasons: 20, tied for second

30-goal seasons: 19, a record

40-goal seasons: 13, a record

Alex Ovechkin empty-net goals

Ovechkin has a record 65 empty-net goals, but Gretzky is up there, too, with 56. Ovechkin passed Gretzky in that category last season.

Alex Ovechkin goals per season

Season: Goals, career total

2005-06: 52, 52
2006-07: 46, 98
2007-08: 65*, 163
2008-09: 56*, 219
2009-10: 50, 269
2010-11: 32, 301
2011-12: 38, 339
2012-13: 32*, 371
2013-14: 51*, 422
2014-15: 53*, 475
2015-16: 50*, 525
2016-17: 33, 558
2017-18: 49*, 607
2018-19: 51*, 658
2019-20: 48*, 706
2020-21: 24, 730
2021-22: 50, 780
2022-23: 42, 822
2023-24: 31, 853
2024-25: 34, 887

*-led league in goals that season

NHL all-time goal scorers

The top 21 NHL all-time goal scorers all have 600 or more goals. All of the players are in the Hockey Hall of Fame, except Ovechkin, Sidney Crosby and Jagr, who are still playing.

1. Wayne Gretzky, 894 goals in 1,487 games

2. Alex Ovechkin, 887 goals in 1,478 games

3. Gordie Howe, 801 goals in 1,767 games

4. Jaromir Jagr, 766 goals in 1,733 games

5. Brett Hull, 741 goals in 1,269 games

6. Marcel Dionne, 731 in 1,348 games

7. Phil Esposito, 717 goals in 1,282 games

8. Mike Gartner, 708 goals in 1,432 games

9. Mark Messier, 694 goals in 1,756 games

10. Steve Yzerman, 692 goals in 1,514 games

11. Mario Lemieux, 690 goals in 915 games

12. Teemu Selanne, 684 goals in 1,451 games

13. Luc Robitaille, 668 goals in 1,431 games

14. Brendan Shanahan, 656 goals in 1,524 games

15. Dave Andreychuk, 640 goals in 1,639 games

16. Jarome Iginla, 625 goals in 1,554 games

17. Joe Sakic, 625 goals in 1,378 games

18. Sidney Crosby, 616 goals in 1,340 games

19. Bobby Hull, 610 goals in 1,063 games

20. Dino Ciccarelli, 608 goals in 1,232 games

21. Jari Kurri, 601 goals in 1,251 games

This post appeared first on USA TODAY