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Leaders from both Greenland and Panama issued messages Wednesday fervently rejecting the comments made by President Donald Trump during his address to Congress in which he again reiterated his ambitions to grab hold of the strategically important areas.

Trump has made clear he intends to ‘acquire’ both Greenland and the Panama Canal, and previously refused to rule out military intervention to achieve his expansionist goals.

In his joint address to Congress, the president said his administration had already taken steps to ‘take back’ the Panama Canal and reiterated his push to acquire Greenland, which is currently a territory of Denmark.

TRUMP LOOKS EAST

Trump spoke directly to Greenland in his address Tuesday night and said, ‘We strongly support your right to determine your own future, and if you choose, we welcome you into the United States of America.’

‘We will keep you safe. We will make you rich. And together we will take Greenland to heights like you have never thought possible before,’ he added.

Trump then said his administration was ‘working with everybody involved to try to get it.’

‘We need it really for international world security. And I think we’re going to get it,’ he continued. ‘One way or the other, we’re going to get it.’

GREENLAND’S RESPONSE

Greenland’s Prime Minister Mute Egede on Wednesday made clear he is neither interested in American or Danish ownership.

‘We do not want to be Americans, nor Danes, we are Kalaallit (Greenlanders). The Americans and their leader must understand that,’ Egede said in a post on Facebook translated by Reuters. 

‘We are not for sale and cannot be taken. Our future is determined by us in Greenland,’ he added.

TRUMP LOOKS SOUTH

Trump’s comments regarding the Panama Canal Tuesday night were just as direct when he said, ‘My administration will be reclaiming the Panama Canal.’

‘We’ve already started doing it,’ he added.

Trump has claimed China has taken over the important waterway as a Hong Kong-based company operates ports on either end of the canal — which the administration has claimed could cut off the U.S. from the canal if Beijing directed it to. 

However, Panama has repeatedly rejected the claim that China runs the canal.

‘Just today, a large American company announced they are buying both ports around the Panama Canal and lots of other things having to do with the Panama Canal and a couple of other canals,’ Trump said.

Trump’s comments were in reference to a $23 billion BlackRock Inc.- TiL Consortium deal made with Hutchison Port Holdings, the Hong Kong conglomerate, announced on Tuesday.

The consortium, made up of BlackRock Inc., Global Infrastructure Partners and Terminal Investment Limited, would acquire ‘90% interests in Panama Ports Company (the ‘PPC Transaction’), which owns and operates the ports of Balboa and Cristobal in Panama,’ according to a Tuesday press release.

PANAMA’S RESPONSE

But Panama’s president took issue with Trump’s comments saying in part, ‘Once again, President Trump, is lying.’

‘The Panama Canal is not in the process of being restored, and this is certainly not the task that was even discussed in our conversations with [Secretary of State] Rubio or anyone else,’ Panama President José Raúl Mulino said in a post on X. ‘I reject, on behalf of Panama and all Panamanians, this new affront to the truth and to our dignity as a nation. 

‘It has nothing to do with the ‘recovery of the Canal’ or with tarnishing our national sovereignty,’ he added.  ‘The Canal is Panamanian and will continue to be Panamanian!’

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President Donald Trump’s pick to be the next Director of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), Dr. Jay Bhattacharya, spent much of his confirmation hearing Wednesday defending the president’s decision to put a 15% cap on indirect research costs dispersed by the NIH. 

Bhattacharya, a physician, Stanford professor of medicine and senior fellow at the university’s Institute for Economic Policy Research, would not explicitly say he disagreed with the cuts, or that, if confirmed, he would step in to stop them. Rather, he said he would ‘follow the law,’ while also investigating the impact of the cuts and ensuring every NIH researcher doing work that advances the health outcomes of Americans has the resources necessary to do their work.

Bhattacharya also laid out a new, decentralized vision for future research at NIH that he said will be aimed at embracing dissenting ideas and transparency, while focusing on research topics that have the best chance at directly benefiting health outcomes of Americans. Bhattacharya added that he wants to rid the agency’s research portfolio of other ‘frivolous’ efforts, that he says do little to directly benefit health outcomes.

‘There’s a lot of distrust about where the money goes because the trust in the public health establishment has collapsed since the pandemic,’ Bhattacharya said. ‘I think transparency regarding indirect costs is absolutely worthwhile. It’s something that universities can fix by working together to make sure that where that money goes is made clear.’  

Democratic Sens. Angela Alsobrooks of Maryland and Ed Markey of Massachusetts both pressed Bhattacharya specifically about research that looks into health issues that impact minorities — an area Democrats worry could be undermined at the NIH due to Trump’s campaign against the Left’s views on diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI). 

‘The health needs of minority populations in this country are a vital priority for me … I want to make sure the research that the NIH does addresses those health needs, and I don’t see anything in the president’s orders that contradicts that, in fact, quite to the contrary,’ Bhattacharya said. ‘What I’ve heard from [Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.] and from the president is ‘Let’s make America Healthy,’ meaning all Americans.’

When Alsobrooks cited a project Bhattacharya worked on related to Alzheimer’s disease, which included mentoring ‘diverse’ professionals, he said that his understanding of that part of the project meant mentoring researchers with a diverse set of ideas, not a diverse set of skin colors. 

‘I think fundamentally what matters is: Do scientists have an idea that advances the scientific field they’re in?’ Bhattacharya replied. ‘Do they have an idea that ends up addressing the health needs of Americans?’

Bhattacharya acknowledged that ‘identifying’ health disparities among minority groups is important, but emphasized the need for research that drives meaningful outcomes.

Bhattacharya also challenged the premise of a similar line of questioning from Markey, who argued Trump was utilizing ideological flashpoints to ‘slow’ life-saving research.

‘I don’t agree with you, senator, that President Trump is opposed to [speeding up research]. In fact, quite the opposite, he is quite in favor of making America healthy,’ Bhattacharya told Markey. ‘I don’t believe that ideology ought to determine whether one gets research or not.’

In addition to addressing numerous questions from Democrats about Trump’s funding cuts, Bhattacharya also outlined his plans to reform the NIH’s research portfolio during his Wednesday confirmation hearing.

Trump’s NIH nominee said he hopes to focus on cutting-edge research and other ‘big ideas’ as opposed to continuing to put all the federal government’s money into research that doesn’t involve the same ambitious goals. He also briefly spoke about improving the frequency of ‘validation research’ and increasing the number of NIH applications funded for younger investigators.

Concerns from Republicans during the hearing included whether Bhattacharya would continue supporting research investigating the link between vaccines and autism, something Sen. Bill Cassidy, R-La., said has been proven over and over again to have no link, and whether he will permit the continued use of aborted fetal tissue in NIH-funded research.

Bhattacharya agreed with Cassidy that the linkage between autism and vaccines is clear — there isn’t one. However, he acknowledged that others may disagree with him. In line with his commitment to embracing dissenting ideas and promoting free speech in medical research, he suggested that commissioning studies could help the public gain a clearer understanding that no link exists.

On the issue of halting the use of aborted fetal tissue, during Trump’s first term, he banned its use, and Bhattacharya said he would follow the president’s lead on the issue.

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House Republicans are hoping to affirm that they are on the same page as Elon Musk and his Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) during a closed-door meeting on Wednesday night.

Musk is huddling with Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., and other members of the House GOP Conference around 7 p.m. ET on Capitol Hill, according to an invitation obtained by Fox News Digital.

‘Specifics, you know, on what DOGE has been doing, and how they’ve accomplished it. And then moving forward, how will that look like?’ Rep. Scott Fitzgerald, R-Wis., told Fox News Digital when asked what he hoped to get out of the meeting. ‘I think the more they can articulate to the members of the House, we can do a better job delivering the message of what DOGE and President Trump are up to on that front.’

Fitzgerald added that he anticipated some ‘tough questions about the specifics’ of how much DOGE is saving.

Musk has descended on Capitol Hill at a time when his work with the federal government is drawing somewhat mixed reviews from Republican lawmakers.

The vast majority of Republicans are backing Musk’s DOGE effort, and virtually all have agreed on the need to cut wasteful government spending.

‘He’s found a lot of waste, fraud, and abuse. He thinks it’ll be upwards of $1 trillion next year,’ House GOP Policy Chair Kevin Hern, R-Okla., the No. 5 House GOP leader, told Fox News Digital. ‘He’s going to talk to all of us as members, and answer any questions, talk about it.’

But some GOP lawmakers have been frustrated at feeling like they’ve been left out of the loop on White House and DOGE activities. Meanwhile, several Republicans have had to contend with particularly aggressive anti-DOGE protests in their home districts.

Rep. Stephanie Bice, R-Okla., a leading pragmatic Republican, said she wanted to ‘better understand what his strategy is.’

Bice commended Musk’s efforts to enact change but acknowledged concerns about the mass layoffs of federal workers across the country.

‘What the American people want to see is change. And I think that Elon is taking a hammer to agencies and then building them back in a way that is more efficient and more functional and less bureaucratic,’ Bice said.

‘But I want to know kind of what that looks like moving forward. I know there’s apprehension for people that may be in that probationary one-year period of having a federal job. We’ve already seen some layoffs, but we’re $36 trillion in debt, and we can’t continue doing the same things over.’

Freshman Rep. Derek Schmidt, R-Kan., said he hoped for a productive dialogue.

‘I think that it’s important that Mr. Musk remind folks of why he is doing what he’s doing. It’s part of the president’s agenda that the American people voted for in November, getting a more accountable… more modernized government,’ Schmidt told Fox News Digital.

‘I think it’s also important [that] communication flow the other way, and that any particular concerns that have a solid basis be relayed back so they can decide to make some adjustments.’

Musk met with Senate Republicans on Wednesday afternoon just before his huddle with the House GOP.

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White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt defended U.S. efforts to negotiate with Hamas to release American hostages during a briefing on Wednesday.

There are currently five hostages with U.S. citizenship in Gaza, though most are feared dead. 

During the news conference, Fox News senior White House correspondent Peter Doocy asked Leavitt how the plans to negotiate fall in line with the long-standing policy not to negotiate with terrorists.

‘If the U.S. has a long-standing policy that we do not negotiate with terrorists, then why is the U.S. now negotiating directly and for the first time ever with Hamas?’ Doocy asked.

‘Well, when it comes to the negotiations that you’re referring to, first of all, the special envoy who’s engaged in these negotiations does have the authority to talk to anyone,’ Leavitt responded.

She added that Israel was ‘consulted on this matter,’ and that President Donald Trump believes in putting forth ‘good faith effort[s] to do what’s right for the American people.’

‘Is it just about the hostages, or are they also talking about the president’s plan to take over?’ Doocy asked.

‘These are ongoing talks and discussions. I’m not going to detail them here,’ Leavitt said. ‘There are American lives at stake. I would refer you to the Department of State, for further details, but I’m not going to get into those talks here at this point.’

In response to Leavitt’s statement, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office released a statement reading: ‘In talks with the United States, Israel expressed its view on direct talks with Hamas.’

The latest comments come as the next stage of the ceasefire between Israel and Hamas appears uncertain.  The White House has signaled support for the Israeli government’s criticism of Hamas officials, including recently backing the decision to block aid to Gaza until Hamas leaders agree to a ceasefire extension. 

In a statement obtained by Fox News on Sunday, National Security Council spokesman Brian Hughes said Israel has ‘negotiated in good faith since the beginning of this administration to ensure the release of hostages held captive by Hamas terrorists.’

‘We will support their decision on next steps given Hamas has indicated it’s no longer interested in a negotiated ceasefire,’ Hughes added.

Fox News’ Yonat Friling contributed to this report.

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U.S. women’s national team and Portland Thorns forward Sophia Wilson and Arizona Cardinals receiver Michael Wilson announced they are expecting their first child.

The couple revealed the news Wednesday on Instagram.

 ‘Life just keeps getting sweeter,’ said the shared post of the two with ultrasound photos.

The athletic couple first met when they were both freshmen at Stanford in 2018 and have been together since. They got married in January.

WOMEN’S SPORTS: The latest news and insider insights from USA TODAY Studio IX.

‘My career, it has to stop for a period of time when I am pregnant so that’s not something we can just let happen at any moment,’ she said.

The news comes as the Thorns are set to kick off the 2025 NWSL season on March 15, meaning Wilson will likely miss the majority of the season. The team posted a congratulatory message on social media and said it is ‘proud to support her through this incredible new chapter.’

Wilson has been a star on the pitch ever since she was a highly-rated prospect in high school. She won an NCAA championship with Stanford in 2019 and was the No. 1 pick at the 2020 NWSL draft. She was named the league MVP in 2022 as she led Portland to its third league title.

In addition to her college and club success, Wilson has been a star for the USWNT. She was named US Soccer Female Player of the Year in 2022 at the age of 21 and was a critical member of the gold medal winning team at the 2024 Paris Olympics. She is part of the ‘Triple Espresso’ attack with Trinity Rodman and Mallory Swanson.

Michael Wilson was drafted by the Cardinals in the third round of the 2023 NFL draft and is coming off a solid second-year in the NFL. He played in 16 games in 2024 with 13 starts, and caught 47 catches for 548 receiving yards and four touchdowns, second-most on the team.

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A coin toss went South Carolina’s way. Just about everything else is coming up Texas. Vic Schaefer’s Longhorns are among national title frontrunners.
Texas earned a share of SEC regular-season title in first year in the conference.
As SEC Tournament arrives, Texas remains in hot pursuit of what would be the program’s first national championship since 1986.

The coin on the back of Greg Sankey’s hand said South Carolina received the No. 1 seed in the SEC women’s basketball tournament, but the net around Vic Schaefer’s neck – cut down after the Longhorns’ 29th victory in 31 games – told a different story.

Schaefer’s Texas Longhorns are SEC champions, too.

And no coin flip would erase the smile from Taylor Jones’ face as she slid through burnt orange and white confetti on the court at Moody Center after No. 1 Texas smashed Florid 72-46 on Sunday to secure a share of the SEC’s regular-season title in the Longhorns’ first season in the conference.

“We worked hard to get to where we’re at now,” Jones said afterward, “and I don’t think that will stop, either way the coin landed.”

Texas and South Carolina tied atop the SEC standings with just a single conference loss. The teams played each other twice and split those games. So, a commissioner’s coin toss determined the No. 1 seed for this week’s SEC tournament.

WOMEN’S SPORTS: The latest news and insider insights from USA TODAY Studio IX.

The toss went South Carolina’s way. Just about everything else is coming up Longhorns.

Texas rides a 13-game win streak with a team built to contend for a national title. No clearcut front-runner exists for the national championship. Southern California, UCLA, South Carolina, Notre Dame and Connecticut join Texas among the favorites.

“I’m not trading my team for anybody,” Schaefer told me last week. “I love my team, I love my kids, and I’ve seen my kids do some really special things this year.”

This is the sort of team and season Schaefer envisioned when he accepted the Texas job in 2020.

Texas has long ranked as a strong program – it’s an NCAA women’s tournament regular – but it last won a national championship in 1986, when Jody Conradt’s team went 34-0.

Schaefer previously coached Mississippi State to two national runner-up finishes, and when he left that job for Texas, he declared that he was coming to make Texas great, not good.

Now, he works just a couple of blocks away from the address of a since-demolished hospital where he was born in Austin.

“I’m a Texas boy,” said Schaefer, who grew up in Houston and graduated from Texas A&M, “and, in my industry, I felt like the University of Texas was the best job in the country. I felt like coming here, this was a place where you could win multiple (conference) championships and have a chance to win a national championship.”

Texas shows versatility during climb to No. 1 in country

These Longhorns, who are ranked No. 1 in the USA TODAY Sports women’s basketball poll for the first time, win in a variety of ways.

Last week, they gutted out a 57-26 win against Georgia by limiting the Bulldogs to 30.6% shooting. Six days later, they received 32 points from their bench while dominating Florida in the paint.

Texas and UConn are the nation’s only teams that rank in the top 20 in both scoring offense and scoring defense.

They force bundles of turnovers that jumpstart their transition attack.

Madison Booker, one of the nation’s best players as a sophomore, teams up with Jones, a sixth-year senior, to provide Texas with a formidable frontcourt. Senior point guard Rori Harmon stirs the drink on offense and provides dogged defense.

Schaefer considers this the best shooting team of his career, but the Longhorns also defend the way their coach likes, helping them survive the occasional off shooting night.

“I believe in my team,” Schaefer said. “I’ve seen them fight for some gritty, gritty victories. They’ve shown me a level of toughness that I’m convinced on any given night, they can compete with anybody in the country.”

‘Job’s not done,’ as Longhorns enter SEC Tournament

Schaefer won a national championship as an associate coach at Texas A&M under Gary Blair, before he elevated Mississippi State to its best run of success in program history. His Bulldogs snapped UConn’s 111-game winning streak in the 2017 Final Four. Schaefer looks back fondly on his years coaching the Bulldogs and says no other job could have pulled him out of Starkville except for Texas.

Schaefer remembers a meeting with Texas’ other head coaches in 2022 after his team had reached the Elite Eight in his second season. As Schaefer scanned the room, he realized the coaches of 10 Texas teams either won the national championship or finished as the national runner-up during that athletic season.

“My team went to the Elite Eight, and we weren’t even good enough to finish in the top half of the room,” Schaefer said. “That’s how elite this place is. … The standard here is championships.”

This veteran-laden squad embraces that mentality. And even as the Longhorns soaked up a moment of enjoyment Sunday while they reflected on their regular-season achievements, Texas’ floor general made a declaration.

“The job’s not done,” Harmon said.

Blake Toppmeyer is a columnist for the USA TODAY Network. Email him at BToppmeyer@gannett.com and follow him on X @btoppmeyer. Subscribe to read all of his columns.

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NASCAR sued 23XI Racing and Front Row Motorsports, stating in court documents that the two companies “willfully” violated antitrust laws by essentially trying to ‘blow up’ the Charter system to obtain their financial goals.

Teams that have charters are guaranteed 36 spots each race weekend.

The lawsuit, filed Wednesday in the Western District of North Carolina and obtained by USA TODAY Sports, also names Curtis Polk, who is Jordan’s agent, as a defendant. 23XI Racing is co-owned by Jordan, Polk and driver Denny Hamlin. Front Row is owned by Bob Jenkins, who made his fortune as a restaurant franchisee.

The countersuit from stock car racing’s biggest division follows 23XI Racing and Front Row Motorsports, suing NASCAR in October, calling them ‘monopolistic bullies,’ accusing the organization of restraining fair competition and violating the Sherman Antitrust Act, preventing teams from competing ‘without accepting the anticompetitive terms’ it dictates.

The recent charter agreement was presented to teams in September, just days before the start of the NASCAR playoffs. 23XI and Front Row Motorsports were the only two teams who did not sign it.

Takeaways from new lawsuit involving Jordan, Front Row and NASCAR

In the lawsuit, NASCAR said the two teams ‘willfully violated the antitrust laws by orchestrating anticompetitive collective conduct in connection with the terms of the 2025 Charter Agreements, alleging that the two teams are unhappy with the commercial terms of the current deal

“This is not the first time that 23XI and FRM have sought to impose their viewpoints, and those of their counsel, on the racing teams writ large,” the lawsuit said. “And it is truly ironic that in trying to blow-up the Charter system, 23XI and FRM have sought to weaponize the antitrust laws to achieve their goals.”

NASCAR says that Polk conspired to undermine business through shady negotiating and that his schemes date back to June 2022, alleging Polk violated the Sherman Antitrust Act, which outlaws monopolistic business practices. The organization also said that Polk made boycott threats when it came time to negotiate the new charters, likening his team to an ‘illegal cartel, who used ‘active threats and coercive behavior,’ to maintain their status.

‘Curtis Polk knowingly and actively orchestrated and participated in this illegal conspiracy, while working as a member of the TNC on behalf of the (Race Team Alliance) and aiding 23XI’s and Front Row’s participation in the scheme, also constituting a violation of Section 1 of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1,’ the lawsuit said.

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FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. — Lionel Messi’s next match with Inter Miami will be against a team on the rise from Jamaica.

Inter Miami and its collection of former FC Barcelona stars will host Jamaican Premier League champion Cavalier FC at Chase Stadium on Thursday night at 8 p.m. ET. It’ll be the first of two matches in the round of 16 of the Concacaf Champions Cup tournament.

The match is among the most significant matches any soccer team from Jamaica or the Caribbean has played because of Messi. The World Cup champion’s presence alone makes this feel like a David vs. Goliath matchup.

‘That’s actually my favorite Bible story,” Cavalier FC coach and sporting director Rudolph Speid said during a news conference Wednesday.

Speid was in a lighthearted – or an irie mood – before the matchup.

Asked about how Messi could perform after resting and not playing Inter Miami’s last match Sunday in Houston, the coach said with a smile: “I know he rested because he wanted to be his best to play us.”

How to watch Inter Miami vs. Cavalier FC match on TV?

The match will be available on FS2 in English and ViX in Spanish.

Is Messi playing against Cavalier FC?

Inter Miami said Messi is expected to play when they announced he did not travel for the 4-1 win against the Houston Dynamo. But coach Javier Mascherano was coy about Messi’s status for the match.

“He’s training. He trained (Tuesday). He trained (Wednesday). But we’ll see,” Mascherano said. “He’s in good health, but we’ll see what’s best for us. That’s the reality.”

Cavalier FC excited about opportunity to play Inter Miami

Cavalier FC is playing in the Champions Cup tournament for the second time in as many years. They qualified directly into the round of 16 by winning the Concacaf Caribbean Cup in December.

As they watched Inter Miami dispatch Sporting Kansas City in the first round last month, Speid said the team wanted face Inter Miami all along. He personally attended Inter Miami’s home match against Sporting KC Feb. 25, when Messi scored a goal in a 3-1 win and Inter Miami advanced 4-1 on aggregate score.

‘Oh, we were cheering for them. We wanted Inter Miami to come through so we could play them,” Speid said. “All the persons in Jamaica were telling us, ‘Let’s hope it’s Inter Miami.’”

The matchup against Inter Miami will be the second time Cavalier has faced MLS competition: They lost to FC Cincinnati by scores of 2-0 and 4-0 in the first round of the tournament last year.

Inter Miami’s Sergio Busquets – one of five former Barcelona standouts on the squad, including Messi, Luis Suarez, Jordi Alba and Mascherano – said Cavalier ‘may not be so well known to us, but we know that if they are in this competition, it is on their own merits.’

‘They will be eager to face us and make it difficult for us,” Busquets added.

Cavalier knows it needs to make some noise in Thursday’s match, because they want Messi to play in the second leg March 13 at National Stadium in Kingston, Jamaica. They have already announced a sellout of 35,000 tickets for the match.

“We have to take something home, especially to force Leo to come home and for Jamaicans to see him,” Cavalier FC defender Jeovanni Laing, 23, said.

Added Speid: “We’re really looking forward to doing well. I think it will inspire a generation of players in Jamaica itself, just because of what will happen. We’ll play them here. Everybody will be watching on TV. And, also in the return leg where we expect a packed stadium, and everybody just talking about the game. That inspiration is much more for the country than just our team.”

Cavalier is the reigning Jamaican Premier League champion. They’ve won the league twice in the last four years thanks to a focus on cultivating young players across the country capable of playing on Jamaica’s youth national teams, Speid said.

‘We have two 16-year-olds, two 17-year-olds, two 18-year-olds, one 19-year-old, five 20-year-olds,” Speid said. ‘They are really talented players. They just need an opportunity.”

Speid believes five years from now, the players on his team will be among the best in the country.

On Thursday, they could face the best player in the world.

‘This is like a dream come true for us as players, Jamaica as a country and as a whole for the Caribbean. But we can’t get starstruck,” Laing said of facing Messi and Inter Miami. “We have to play and perform well.

‘This is an opportunity to show our talents on the bigger stage, because millions will be watching. It’s a good thing. It’s a good opportunity.”

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Tennis star Emma Raducanu opened up Tuesday about the mental anguish she experienced at the Dubai Tennis Championships last month when she was targeted by a stalker.

‘I was obviously very distraught,’ Raducanu told reporters in Indian Wells, California, as she returns to action for the first time since the ordeal, which resulted in the man being escorted out of the arena by security personnel.

‘I saw him in the first game of the match and I was like, ‘I don’t know how I’m going to finish.’

‘I literally couldn’t see the ball through tears. I could barely breathe. I was like, ‘I need to just take a breather.”

The 2021 U.S. Open champion said the same man had previously approached her twice off the court in Dubai and was also present during her matches in Singapore, Abu Dhabi and Doha.

The man has since been banned from all WTA tournaments. He was also detained by Dubai police, but Raducanu later decided to drop the charges against him.

‘It was a very emotional time,’ said Raducanu, who took a week off before returning to the tour.

‘After the match I did break down in tears, but not necessarily because I lost. There was just so much emotion in the last few weeks of the events happening, and I just needed that week off to take a breather and come here.

‘I feel a lot better.’

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There aren’t many weaknesses with Auburn this season. The Tigers have been near the top of the rankings all season and seemed destined to earn a No. 1 seed in the NCAA Tournament.

But if you listen to Auburn head coach Bruce Pearl, things aren’t all peachy, as was the case when the top-ranked Tigers strolled into College Station to face Texas A&M on Tuesday night.

The result was a wire-to-wire 83-72 victory for the Aggies, handing Auburn just its third loss of the season.

‘They physically manhandled us,’ Pearl said. ‘And if this team is going to continue to win, we’re going to run up against teams like Texas A&M or like Florida or like Duke that are big and physical.’

The Tigers were outrebounded 41-25, and 24 offensive rebounds led to 29 second-chance points for A&M.

‘We have no excuses to allow those guys to get 24 offensive rebounds,’ Pearl said. ‘I give Texas A&M all the credit. Our guys were physically dominated. So no, I don’t excuse our guys at all. We’re better than that, but not tonight.’

Auburn’s Player of the Year candidate Johni Broome had just eight points, his second straight game scoring under double figures.

Auburn (27-3, 15-2 SEC) concludes its regular season on Saturday against Alabama and the Aggies (21-9, 10-7) hit the road to take on LSU before the conference tournament starts next week in Nashville.

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