Archive

2025

Browsing

The Supreme Court on Wednesday denied the Trump administration’s request to block a lower court’s order for the administration to pay nearly $2 billion in foreign aid money, delivering a near-term reprieve to international aid groups and contractors seeking payment for previously completed projects.

In a 5-4 ruling, the justices said that the Feb. 26 deadline imposed by a lower court for the Trump administration to pay the funds had already expired, and directed the case back to the district court to clarify any additional details on payment.

‘Given that the deadline in the challenged order has now passed, and in light of the ongoing preliminary injunction proceedings, the District Court should clarify what obligations the Government must fulfill to ensure compliance with the temporary restraining order, with due regard for the feasibility of any compliance timelines,’ the Court said.

Justices Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh dissented.

‘Does a single district-court judge who likely lacks jurisdiction have the unchecked power to compel the Government of the United States to pay out (and probably lose forever) 2 billion taxpayer dollars? The answer to that question should be an emphatic ‘No,’ but a majority of this Court apparently thinks otherwise,’ Alito wrote. ‘I am stunned.’

Chief Justice John Roberts had agreed last Wednesday to temporarily pause a lower court’s decision requiring the Trump administration to pay by 11:59 p.m. all outstanding invoices to foreign aid groups, an amount totaling roughly $1.9 billion – a timeline the Justice Department had argued was ‘impossible’ to comply with. Roberts did not give a reason for agreeing to pause the order issued by U.S. District Judge Amir Ali, a Biden appointee, though the chief justice had widely been expected to refer the matter to the full court for review. 

Importantly, the pause prevented foreign aid groups from filing a motion of civil contempt against the Trump administration— a legal maneuver that employees from the affected groups said in interviews this week could have expedited their process to claw back the unpaid debt.

At issue is how quickly the Trump administration needs to pay the nearly $2 billion owed to aid groups and contractors for completed projects funded by the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), at a time when the administration has issued a blanket freeze on all foreign spending in the name of government ‘efficiency’ and eliminating waste.

In a new court filing Monday, Acting U.S. Solicitor General Sarah Harris said that while the plaintiffs’ claims were likely ‘legitimate,’ the time U.S. District Judge Amir Ali gave them to pay the outstanding invoices was ‘not logistically or technically feasible.’

Harris also argued Monday that the order could be a violation of executive branch authorities granted by the Constitution to an elected president.

Ordering the Trump administration to make payments on a timeline of the lower court’s choosing, and ‘without regard to whether the requests are legitimate, or even due yet,’ Harris said, ‘intrudes on the president’s foreign affairs powers’ and executive branch oversight when it comes to distributing foreign aid.

Plaintiffs, for their part, rejected that notion in full. They argued in their own Supreme Court filing that the lower court judge had ordered the Trump administration to begin making the owed foreign aid payments more than two weeks ago – a deadline they said the government simply failed to meet, or to even take steps to meet – indicating that the administration had no plans to make good on fulfilling that request.

The Trump administration ‘never took steps towards compliance’ with Judge Ali’s order requiring the administration to unfreeze the federal funds to pay the $1.9 billion in owed project payments, attorneys for plaintiffs argued in their own Supreme Court filing. 

They also rejected the administration’s assertion in court last week that it would need ‘multiple weeks’ to restart the payment system.

Rather, they said, the Trump administration had moved too quickly to dismantle the systems required to send payments to foreign aid groups in the first place— and to purge the many USAID staffers who could have facilitated a smoother, faster repayment process.

‘All of these invoices have already been approved by the front-line managers at USAID, and it’s really these payment bottlenecks that the government has itself created’ that have caused the problems with repayment, one individual with knowledge of the USAID payments and contractors affected told Fox News Digital in an interview.

The high court challenge comes as many of the foreign aid groups who sued the administration earlier this year have already been stripped of the bulk of their funding. This aligns with President Donald Trump’s stated plans to cut some 90% of USAID foreign aid contracts, and to slash an additional $60 billion in foreign aid spending.

The White House has not yet released a list of which contracts and grants were scheduled for elimination or those to be continued. But critics have argued that the abrupt withdrawal of U.S. investment and presence around the world risks economic harm, reputational damage, and new security risks, both at home and abroad.

Scott Greytak, a director at the group U.S. Transparency International, said in a statement that cutting such a large amount of U.S. foreign aid carries significant economic and security risks. The elimination of U.S. funding for certain projects, especially in countries with higher risks for corruption, could ‘open the door for increased cross-border corruption, fraud, and other crimes,’ he said. 

This could create new obstacles for U.S. businesses seeking to open or expand into foreign markets, said Greytak, whose group has active chapters in more than 100 countries globally, and could serve ‘as an invitation for U.S. competitors, especially China, to fill the vacuum created by the absence of U.S. engagement.’

This is a breaking news story. Check back soon for updates.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

A resolution by Rep. Troy Nehls, R-TX, is being circulated among Republican lawmakers on Wednesday to punish the House Democrat who was thrown out of President Donald Trump’s speech for protesting.

Nehls is leading the censure resolution against Rep. Al Green, D-TX, and is expected to make it public sometime today, a source with knowledge of the document told Fox News Digital.

It accuses Green of having ‘willfully disrupted the joint session, remained defiant,’ and ‘brought disrepute to the United States Congress,’ according to a draft text viewed by Fox News Digital.

The 77-year-old Democrat was removed from Trump’s joint address to Congress on Tuesday night after repeatedly disrupting the beginning of the president’s speech.

He shouted, ‘You have no mandate,’ at Trump as he touted Republican victories in the House, Senate and White House.

House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-LA, had Green removed by the U.S. Sergeant-At-Arms.

Green remained defiant when he stopped to speak with the White House press pool on the first floor of the U.S. Capitol after being thrown out of the second floor House chamber, where Trump was speaking.

‘I’m willing to suffer whatever punishment is available to me. I didn’t say to anyone, don’t punish me. I’ve said I’ll accept the punishment,’ Green said, according to the White House press pool report.

‘But it’s worth it to let people know that there are some of us who are going to stand up against this president’s desire to cut Medicaid, Medicare and Social Security.’

Republicans, meanwhile, responded to Green and other Democratic attempts to disrupt the speech with fury.

The House Freedom Caucus announced on Wednesday morning that it would be filing its own censure resolution against Green.

‘What they’ve shown is ridiculous to the American people,’ House GOP Policy Committee Chair Kevin Hern, R-OK, told Fox News Digital on Tuesday night. ‘I can’t see how any American would think that’s right.’

Rep. Buddy Carter, R-GA, told Fox News Digital, ‘The Democrats’ behavior last night was disappointing. There must be consequences for Rep. Al Green’s outburst, which displayed a clear lack of decorum and respect for the Office of the Presidency.’

House Majority Leader Steve Scalise, R-LA, told Fox News Digital that leadership would be ‘looking at’ whether to punish Green.

Johnson signaled to reporters on Tuesday night that such a move would have his support.

Fox News Digital reached out to Green’s office for a response but did not immediately hear back.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

: Elon Musk’s PAC is going live on the national airwaves for the first time with a $1 million spot thanking President Donald Trump for delivering on his campaign promises, such as deporting illegal immigrants and ‘draining the swamp’ with the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), which Musk himself was tapped to lead. 

This is the first-ever television ad buy from Musk’s PAC. 

‘After four long years of humiliation, of failure at home and embarrassment abroad, our long national nightmare is finally over,’ the ad from America PAC says while displaying past viral footage of former President Joe Biden, such as him tripping on the stairs of Air Force One. 

‘Strength is back. Common sense is back. AMERICA IS BACK,’ it continues. 

Trump led his joint address to Congress on Tuesday night, echoing this. ‘Members of the United States Congress, thank you very much. And to my fellow citizens, America is back,’ the president said, and was immediately met with a chorus of Republican cheers. 

‘Thank you, President Trump, for saving the American Dream,’ the ad from America PAC concludes. 

The 60-second ad is airing in Washington, D.C., and throughout the country during the week after Trump’s address. It is backed by a $1 million television ad purchase. 

The spot goes through various areas of accomplishments for the new president in his first several weeks, during which Trump’s team has debuted countless executive orders and hit the ground running on key policy items.

The group was founded by Musk last year in order to back candidates who support conservative agenda items, like lower spending, secure borders and free speech.

Musk is notably the owner of X, as well as the CEO of Tesla and SpaceX. More recently, he became a special government employee as he continues to guide DOGE through aggressive auditing of federal entities. 

He was recognized by Trump during the Tuesday joint address for his assistance in taking on the federal bureaucracy and spending. ‘I have created the brand new Department of Government Efficiency, DOGE, perhaps you’ve heard of it — perhaps — which is headed by Elon Musk, who is in the gallery tonight. Thank you, Elon. You’re working very hard.’

The billionaire Trump ally and DOGE head has quickly earned the ire of Democrats for his unapologetic and aggressive approach to slashing spending and transforming the executive branch and its agencies. In fact, Musk’s image was featured in demonstrations against Trump during his address on Tuesday, with Democratic lawmakers holding signs that read ‘Musk steals.’ 

He was even mentioned in the Democrats’ rebuttal to Trump’s address, delivered by Sen. Elissa Slotkin, D-Mich.

‘Is there anyone in America who is comfortable with him and his gang of 20-year-olds using their own computer servers to poke through your tax returns, your health information, and your bank accounts? No oversight, no protections against cyberattack, no guardrails on what they do with your private data,’ she said. 

‘We need a more efficient government. You want to cut waste? I’ll help you do it. But change doesn’t need to be chaotic or make us less safe.’ 

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

The race for NBA Rookie of the Year may be coming down to two players.

While a number of first-year players have made their marks this season, the two constants have been Stephon Castle of the San Antonio Spurs — who starred in the Rising Stars Challenge during the league’s All-Star weekend — and Jaylen Wells of the Memphis Grizzlies.

If Castle were to win, it would mark only the third time a team has won the award in consecutive seasons, joining the Timberwolves (2015-16 with Andrew Wiggins and Karl-Anthony Towns) and the Buffalo Braves (1973-74 with Bob McAdoo and Ernie DiGregorio).

Still, the race is wide open, with the No. 1 overall selection, Zaccharie Risacher, coming on recently as one of Atlanta’s primary weapons.

The latest edition of the USA TODAY Sports’ rookie power rankings, with stats through Monday’s games:

5. Kel’el Ware, Miami Heat center

His case has been bolstered the last month-and-a-half, when he has seen an uptick in minutes and had started Miami’s past 18 games before a knee injury sidelined him from Monday’s game against the Wizards. Ware has infused an immediate inside presence in the Heat offense as a lob threat and low-post option. He also has been a solid rim protector, though his defensive numbers do suffer when Bam Adebayo also isn’t on the floor.

4. Zach Edey, Memphis Grizzlies center

He can sometimes go through lulls in his scoring output, but Edey has been a steady presence for Memphis, particularly on the glass. Some of Edey’s contributions don’t manifest on the box score, though; in Monday’s two-point loss against the Hawks, Edey altered two consecutive Trae Young drives inside the final minute before Desmond Bane’s turnover in the final seconds led to Caris LeVert’s game-winning layup.

3. Zaccharie Risacher, Atlanta Hawks forward

Risacher, the No.1 pick, has shown flashes of what he can become. He missed seven of eight games with a strained left adductor in the final two weeks of January and has played well since his return. In his past 14 games, the 6-8 Risacher is averaging 15.0 points, 3.7 rebounds, 1.5 assists and nearly 1.0 steal and is shooting 53.8% from the field and 50.8% on 3-pointers. On Tuesday, he was named Eastern Conference rookie of the month for February. He scored 27 points on 11-for-13 shooting in a victory against Memphis on March 3. The Hawks’ offense has flourished with Risacher on the court, scoring 119.86 points per 100 possessions, and ninth-place Atlanta is in the postseason hunt with a chance to finish in seventh place in the East.

2. Stephon Castle, San Antonio Spurs guard

Even with the addition of De’Aaron Fox at the trade deadline, Castle continues to get valuable minutes on a rebuilding team that has gone through a difficult season with head coach Gregg Popovich’s stroke and 2024 Rookie of the Year Victor Wembanyama’s season-ending deep vein thrombosis diagnosis. Castle is the second-leading rookie scorer at 13.2 points per game and averages 3.5 assists and 3.1 rebounds. He has had two 30-point games in the past four weeks, including 32 points, eight rebounds and three assists in a loss to Oklahoma City on March 2 and 24 points, seven assists and three rebounds in a victory against Memphis on March 1. His shooting efficiency needs attention in the offseason — he’s at 41.9% from the field and 28.4% on 3-pointers.

1. Jaylen Wells, Memphis Grizzlies forward

For the most part, Wells has avoided the dreaded rookie wall. A long season can exact punishment on a rookie not used to 82 games with back-to-backs, four games in a week and travel. Wells, who hasn’t missed a game this season, had five consecutive games without hitting double figures in points right before the All-Star break. The break helped, and he has scored 12 or more points in six of eight games since. Well had 19 points and five rebounds in a victory against Phoenix on Feb. 25 and 18 points in a loss against San Antonio on March 1. He is fifth in scoring among rookies with 11.4 points per game, and he is shooting 45% from the field and 38% on 3-pointers. Wells, the No. 39 overall pick, is trying to become just the second second-round draft pick in the modern era (post-1970) to win rookie of the year, and he’s doing it for a team that is in fourth place in the Western Conference.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

South Dakota Sheriff Pat West told Fox News Digital he is already feeling the impact of Trump’s crackdown on border security ahead of President Donald Trump’s address to a joint session of Congress on Tuesday night.

West, the Meade County sheriff and a guest of Rep. Dusty Johnson, R-S.D. for Trump’s speech, said the supply of drugs crossing the southern border is no longer meeting the high demand for drugs like methamphetamine and fentanyl in South Dakota, which he said proves ‘the impact that’s already taking place with that secure border.’

‘We are seeing a big impact on the border. Methamphetamine and fentanyl [are] our biggest problems that we’ve had in the past, and it’s been running rampant. The shutdown of the border recently has already made an impact on us up north in South Dakota,’ West said. 

Johnson touted Trump’s progress in his first six weeks in office to secure the border. 

‘I know that people think that the federal government never gets its work done, but we have seen illegal border crossings down 95% just in the last 40 days of the Trump administration. That has been the White House and Congress working together. Great law enforcement officers like Sheriff West are seeing those impact in South Dakota communities,’ Johnson said. 

Border Patrol Chief Mike Banks told CBS News last month that illegal crossings at the southern border are down 94% from the same period last year. Trump’s border czar, Tom Homan, echoed that statistic in a speech at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC), saying known ‘gotaways’ are down 95% at the southern border. 

‘Overall our drug problem is connected to a lot of our other crimes that we have in the community. By controlling the border, it eliminates the amount of unnecessary methamphetamine and fentanyl that is coming across the border and then ultimately getting to South Dakota,’ West added. 

West said he hopes Trump continues to fund border security ‘because that’s extremely important for our home front.’

‘The other thing is to continue to support law enforcement and military. I’ve got two boys in the United States Marine Corps, so that gets pretty close to me. But he’s putting the right people in the right positions to support the military and keep us secure.’

West solved a sex trafficking case in South Dakota last year when he found a missing 13-year-old girl who had been abducted by a 33-year-old male sex offender. He also arrested a man who was in possession of approximately 2 grams of methamphetamine and 20 grams of fentanyl, which is about 200 pills. 

‘Illicit drugs, especially fentanyl and methamphetamine, continue to be a scourge on our communities. The devastation these drugs cause can’t be measured. We will continue to do all we can to get this poison off the streets in Meade County and hold those who bring this poison here accountable,’ West said in a statement following the arrest. 

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

‘Squad’ member Rep. Rashida Tlaib, D-Mich., used a whiteboard to deliver real-time responses to President Donald Trump’s address to a joint session of Congress on Tuesday. While other Democrats held up pre-printed signs, Tlaib scribbled several messages throughout the evening.

As President Trump delivered his 100-minute-long speech, Tlaib scribbled several messages on a mini-whiteboard, including, ‘No king!,’ ‘What about the immigrants that worked for you?,’ and ‘That’s a lie!’ Tlaib’s actions seemed to be against House Democrat leadership’s wishes, as several reports say that party members were urged to not use pops and to show proper decorum.

The ‘Squad’ member’s whiteboard and keffiyeh-like jacket garnered a slew of reactions. Rep. Nancy Mace, R-Sc., called Tlaib the ‘poster child’ of Trump derangement syndrome (TDS), a term coined online that refers to those who automatically reject anything that comes from Trump. 

Additionally, Rep. Mace tweeted an apparently photoshopped image of Tlaib with a blank sign and encouraged her followers to ‘fill in the blank.’ Unsurprisingly, this became a pattern with several social media users posting memes of Tlaib and her whiteboard with various phrases poking fun at the congresswoman and Democrats.

Some criticized Tlaib for wearing a keffiyeh-like jacket, pointing out that one of the guests attending the joint session was Noa Argamani, who was taken captive by Hamas on Oct. 7, 2023, and was rescued by Israeli troops in June 2024.

Tlaib was not the first Democrat to disrupt or protest the president’s speech. The first protest sign of the night was held up before Trump even reached the front of the chamber. As Trump walked into the room and lawmakers flocked to the aisle to greet him, Rep. Melanie Stansbury, D-Nm., held up a sign reading ‘this is not normal.’ 

While Rep. Stansbury held her sign in silent protest, the first real interruption occurred when Rep. Al Green, D-Tx., began heckling President Trump less than 10 minutes into the address. Rep. Green objected to President Trump saying he was given a ‘mandate’ after winning the popular vote and the Electoral College.

Democrats were widely panned for their behavior over the course of the evening, with many calling them out for not applauding several of the guests Trump highlighted in his speech. This included DJ, a young brain cancer survivor who dreams of being a police officer, and the mothers of Laken Riley and Jocelyn Nungaray, both of whom were killed by alleged illegal immigrants.

Meghan McCain said she was ‘disgusted’ and that the lawmakers needed to ‘get a grip.’

Meanwhile, Fox News Channel contributor Ari Fleischer said the Democrats were ’embarrassing themselves’ with the displays.

In addition to the signs and lack of cheers, multiple Democrats walked out of the address, some wearing political shirts. One of them was Rep. Maxwell Frost, D-Fl., who wore a shirt with ‘No kings live here’ written on the back. Others held up paddles throughout the speech that were reminiscent of the one Tlaib used to protest Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Messages on the paddles included ‘Musk steals,’ ‘Save Medicaid’ and ‘False.’

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

“Tag.”

The one-word post on X was tantamount to Cincinnati Bengals WR Tee Higgins admitting defeat Monday for the second straight offseason in the contractual NFL game so many pending free agents hate to play. Higgins will again be enriched, at minimum, but not for as much or as long as he’d like.

But at least for (almost) everyone else, it’s game over.

Tuesday afternoon served as the NFL’s final concrete deadline ahead of its new league year – which begins concurrently with the official start of free agency on March 12 – 4 p.m. ET today the point by which each team had its last chance to apply the franchise or transition tag in a bid to retain (or maybe subsequently trade) one of its pending free agents.

Only Higgins and Kansas City Chiefs G Trey Smith were tagged this year after eight players were franchised in 2024. Both received the non-exclusive tender – meaning they are actually eligible to negotiate with other clubs yet also have until July 15 to sign an extension with their present employers in order to avoid the risk and uncertainty of playing on the one-year tag. In reality, it’s extremely rare for franchised players to move (barring a negotiated trade settlement) given it costs an outside team both contractually and a compensation package of two first-round draft picks to pry a player loose if his original team is unwilling to match an offer sheet.

NFL STATS CENTRAL: The latest NFL scores, schedules, odds, stats and more.

With those parameters in mind, here are the winners and losers of the 2025 franchise tag deadline:

FREE AGENCY: Top 25* players available after franchise tag deadline passes

WINNERS

NFL players

In general, they hate tags. Sure, they’re lucrative windfalls, but they also tend to prevent stars (sometimes quasi-stars) from finding the top of their markets or realizing the security of a long-term arrangement. Most of this year’s free agents will be, well, free to pursue precisely those aims.

Joe Burrow and Ja’Marr Chase

Higgins’ tag means the Bengals’ deadly three-man offensive band will presumably remain intact for 2025 – much to the delight of its quarterback, Burrow, who’s been openly campaigning for that outcome. And with Higgins now effectively tied down, Chase – demonstrably the league’s top receiver in 2024 – can dig in on his own negotiations now that Cincinnati’s director of player personnel, Duke Tobin, publicly vowed at the scouting combine to make Chase “the No. 1 paid non-quarterback in the league. We’re there. Let’s get it done.’

Free agent wideouts

Higgins’ tag also could mean a more favorable financial landscape for the likes of unsigned veteran pass catchers such as Davante Adams, Chris Godwin, Amari Cooper, Stefon Diggs, Keenan Allen and DeAndre Hopkins. Higgins, 26, clearly would have been the cream of this crop had he been able to reach unfettered free agency. But since he won’t – and in a year when the draft-eligible wideouts aren’t all that impressive (is it even Travis Hunter’s primary position?) – the graybeards could see a little more action and maybe a few extra greenbacks.

Trey Smith

He doubtless would have also preferred the immediate comfort of a multi-year pact. But for a 2021 sixth-rounder whose annual salary has averaged roughly $900,000 over his first four seasons, a fully guaranteed $23.4 million lottery – left tackle money – for 2025 is a pretty nice reward. And still a decent chance the Chiefs get Smith locked up ahead of July’s deadline.

Dallas Cowboys

After infamously sitting out free agency in 2024 and waiting until the last minute to grant extensions to WR CeeDee Lamb and QB Dak Prescott that were at or near the apex of their respective positional pay scales, “America’s Team” got a four-year, $80 million deal (with $58 million guaranteed, per reports) done with DT Osa Odighizuwa on Tuesday rather than franchising him for more than $25 million. Who said you can’t teach an old dog new tricks? (That was not a Jerry Jones reference. Maybe.) And spreading out Odighizuwa’s payday should also help grease the skids for a well-deserved extension for LB Micah Parsons. Lamb’s agreement to restructure his deal Tuesday – that freed up another $20 million for 2025 – provides his team further flexibility.

Alaric Jackson

In tandem with QB Matthew Stafford’s successful renegotiation last week, Jackson, the Los Angeles Rams’ left tackle the past two seasons, inked a three-year, $57 million extension rather than face the possibility of a tag. He might have gotten a bit more if released to the market, but this seems like a sensible compromise for both sides.

Sam Darnold?

He was set free, the Minnesota Vikings allowing their 2024 Pro Bowl quarterback to fully assess his value rather than mess around with a $40.2 million tag or the notion that there was sufficient upside to go the tag-and-trade route with the 27-year-old passer. Darnold is now free to pursue something perhaps on the order of the three-year, $100 million bump Baker Mayfield, his 2018 draftmate, landed with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers last year.

LOSERS

Sam Darnold?

But it doesn’t appear Darnold can have his mead with the Vikes and drink it, too. Though the door appears open for at least a temporary return to Minnesota, which kickstarted his career in Year 7, it would be at the club’s price point and with the ubiquitous shadow of 2024 first-round pick J.J. McCarthy, who missed his rookie year with a knee injury. Yet if Darnold feels compelled to cash in – and no guarantee this opportunity arises again – hard to believe the ride will be as smooth in a place like Las Vegas or Cleveland or maybe Tennessee in 2025.

Aaron Rodgers

With Darnold seemingly in the wind, the four-time league MVP and soon-to-be-ex-New-York-Jets quarterback may have to wait a minute before he breezes into his next NFL destination … assuming there is one.

Tee Higgins

Consecutive tags mean he gets a 20% raise in 2025 to $26.2 million – ranking Chase’s understudy at 10th league-wide among receivers in terms of average salary this year. But Higgins, who’s only played a full season twice in his five-year career, is something of a poster boy for players fearful of the tag – and how an untimely injury could preclude ever getting that nine-figure extension. The Bengals announced Monday that they’re moving forward with Higgins “with the intent of continuing to work toward a long-term deal in Cincinnati.” But given he’ll almost certainly have to wait for Chase’s ship to come in and maybe even All-Pro DE Trey Hendrickson’s …

Alex Cappa and Sheldon Rankins

Both are now former Bengals, their recent releases helping Cincinnati to clear nearly $18 million in cap room as Tobin tries to amass the necessary funds to mollify his stars.

NFL players?

As generally liberating as this year’s deadline was, the fact that only Higgins and Smith were tagged is a very strong indication of how clubs feel about the 2025 free agent class. At a time when the salary cap has ballooned to a record $279.2 million per team, it wouldn’t be completely unjustifiable for owners to be a bit tight-fisted in the coming weeks – which is exactly what they want to be.

All NFL news on and off the field. Sign up for USA TODAY’s 4th and Monday newsletter.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The SEC on Tuesday once again showed off its depth of quality teams — at the expense of its top team.

Bruce Pearl, Johni Broome and No. 1 Auburn (27-3, 15-2 in SEC play) entered Tuesday’s game vs. Texas A&M already in possession of the SEC regular-season championship and a strong claim for the No. 1 overall seed in the NCAA Tournament. That mattered to Buzz Williams and his 21st-ranked Aggies (21-9, 10-7 SEC), who handed the Tigers an 83-72 defeat at College Station’s Reed Arena — their worst loss all year.

Texas A&M, which is also looking to improve its own seeding ahead of the NCAA Tournament, jumped out to a 7-0 lead over the visiting Tigers and never looked back. The Aggies never trailed in the home win over Auburn, with the Tigers only getting within one possession of Texas A&M.

Texas A&M had five players score in the double digits in the win, led by Zhuric Phelps’ 19 points off the bench. Andersson Garcia also turned in a monster double-double performance with 11 points, 11 rebounds, five assists, two steals and a block in the victory.

Conversely, Broome, a national player of the year candidate, finished with eight points on 4-of-9 shooting, adding seven rebounds and two assists in the defeat. Chad Baker-Mazara and Tahaad Pettiford finished with 15 and 19 points in the loss, respectively.

Auburn had only 10 points off the bench, compared to 36 for the Aggies. While Auburn out-shot Texas A&M from the field (50% to 43.1%) and 3-point range (40.9% to 36.0%), the Aggies had two key advantages. The first was in rebounds (41-25), including a 24-9 advantage in offensive boards. The Aggies also made more plays off Auburn’s 13 turnovers, scoring 18 points off turnovers to the Tigers’ 11.

‘The things that they do bother us a little bit,’ Pearl said after the game.

He added that Texas A&M ‘physically dominated us.’

The loss marks only the third defeat all season for Pearl and Auburn, which lost on the road at what was then a No. 9-ranked Duke team and at home vs. No. 6 Florida. This is the Tigers’ first defeat by a team outside the top 10 all season, and the first by double-digit points.

Though it likely will matter little for March Madness seeding — and not at all for the men’s SEC tournament seeding — the loss comes as a stark reminder to Auburn and objective observers alike that anyone can beat anyone in March.

Even the top team in the country.

This story was updated with new information.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

INDIANAPOLIS – NFL teams awash in disposable income now have a better idea of how to earmark their funds later this month.

“Free agency is a great roster-building tool,” Arizona Cardinals GM Monti Ossenfort said at the annual scouting combine last week. “We’re right here on the cusp of the two biggest roster-building opportunities for us in free agency followed by the draft.

“We’re going to be active in both of them,” continued Ossenfort, who is projected to have something close to an $80 million bankroll, among the league’s largest this offseason, to lure veteran players.

“We’re going to make smart decisions and things that we think are the right fit for our team, both the person – (their) makeup – and then also schematically, who can help us the most.’

Ossenfort and his peers across the league have less than a week before they can officially begin recruiting that help in earnest. NFL free agents cannot begin signing contracts with new teams until 4 p.m. ET on March 12, though they can engage in negotiations with outside clubs starting next Monday. The passage of Tuesday afternoon’s deadline to apply franchise and transition tags has brought some measure of clarity to the market, Cincinnati Bengals WR Tee Higgins and Kansas City Chiefs G Trey Smith – both likely to be among the top five players available this year if they’d been unrestricted – effectively taken off the shelf after both were franchised.

NFL STATS CENTRAL: The latest NFL scores, schedules, odds, stats and more.

Though Higgins and/or Smith could still be traded down the line, their tags effectively dilute what was already a fairly thin crop of highly desirable veterans. With franchised players excluded, here is USA TODAY Sports’ updated list of the top 25* free agents available in 2025:

WINNERS AND LOSERS: Of NFL’s 2025 franchise tag deadline

1. QB Sam Darnold

Does he bring an element of concern given the arc of his career, despite its 2024 spike? Surely. But is there anyone else on the market with the potential to have such a franchise-changing impact? Good luck finding one. Last season had a suboptimal ending for Darnold and the Minnesota Vikings with convincing losses to the Detroit Lions and Los Angeles Rams in Week 18 and the playoffs, respectively. Prior to that, Darnold, 27, was something of a belated revelation six years after he was drafted third overall by the New York Jets – driving the Vikes to the cusp of the NFC’s No. 1 seed during a 14-3 campaign that earned him Pro Bowl recognition for the first time as he passed for 4,319 yards, 35 touchdowns and a 102.5 rating, all easily career bests. And now, with Matthew Stafford no longer unofficially available after redoing his deal with the Rams, Darnold could also be the financial beneficiary of a thin class of quarterbacks in the draft at a time when at least a half-dozen teams seem solidly in the market for an answer behind center – which isn’t to say Minnesota might not lure him back once all is said and done … the Vikings just weren’t willing to do it for $40 million.

2. OLB Josh Sweat

At 6-5, 265 pounds, he’s built to man the edge, whether as a base end or stand-up linebacker. Just 27, Sweat has averaged better than eight sacks and 26 pressures over the last four seasons since he was named a Pro Bowler for the Philadelphia Eagles in 2021. And, unlike Darnold, Sweat, who already mans a highly coveted post, should get a postseason premium attached to his negotiations as a guy who’s played in two Super Bowls over the past three seasons. All he did in the Super Bowl 59 rollover of the Chiefs was generate 2½ sacks and seven pressures (per Pro Football Focus) of QB Patrick Mahomes – an MVP-caliber performance on the NFL’s grandest stage that could especially make prospective contenders salivate.

3. LB Zack Baun

Relegated to special teams and spot defensive duty during four seasons with the New Orleans Saints, he found a home at off-ball linebacker with Philadelphia in 2024 and absolutely flourished. Rated No. 1 by PFF at his position – if merely the underappreciated defensive version of running back – Baun, 28, blossomed not only into an All-Pro but a Defensive Player of the Year finalist. A tackling machine who managed 3½ sacks for a unit that rarely blitzed while forcing five fumbles in the regular season, he was truly dastardly in coverage – his interception of Mahomes right before halftime of the Super Bowl arguably the final nail in Kansas City’s coffin. Not every team is willing to invest at Baun’s position – even the Eagles had no idea what they were truly getting on a one-year deal that hit the lottery for them. But he could score something in the $20 million-per-year range from those that value his skill set – and that does include Philly EVP/GM Howie Roseman, who seems most interested in retaining Baun among his band of free agents.

4. CB Byron Murphy Jr.

He erupted for the Vikings in 2024, named a Pro Bowler for the first time after recording career highs for interceptions (6), passes defensed (14) and tackles (81) – all while often working on an island given Minnesota’s propensity to blitz. Quarterbacks only managed an 80.5 rating when targeting him. Murphy, 27, should be especially valuable given he’s comfortable lining up wide or playing in the slot.

5. DT Milton Williams

Yet another Philly player in line for a Lombardi bump, Williams excelled in 2024, when he played a career-high 501 snaps and responded with a personal best five sacks to go along with 28 hurries (per PFF). A third-round pick in 2021, the 25-year-old has started 17 times over the past two seasons but appears to be in line for a front-liner’s playing time – and a starter’s money. Given the Eagles’ depth on the D-line, he’s not likely to get that in Philly. But Williams had to be smiling Tuesday, when the Dallas Cowboys rewarded fellow DT Osa Odighizuwa with a four-year, $80 million extension in order to keep him off the market.

6. LT Ronnie Stanley

The two-time Pro Bowler is definitely the most talented blind side protector on the market and just played a full season for the first time in his nine-year career, attributes that should fetch him a fat bag. Stanley is also almost 31 … and just played a full season for the first time in his nine-year career, attributes that may give several teams pause. Still, his value likely got a further bump after the Rams recently took LT Alaric Jackson out of play by extending him for three years.

7. S Jevon Holland

On the plus side, he’ll be 25 at the start of next season and – when on top of his game – is an impact player, whether as a pass rusher or ball hawk, Holland responsible for nine takeaways in his four seasons to go along with five forced fumbles. But consistency has been an issue at times, and he’s missed seven games over the past two seasons. Regardless, good bet Holland lands financially at the summit of the safety market currently topped by Antoine Winfield ($21 million per season).

8. CB D.J. Reed

Still only 28, he also mans a position where demand always outstrips supply. Reed has averaged double-digit passes defensed over the past four seasons even if he’s not necessarily an interception machine (four total over that stretch). But he’s durable and a willing tackler, a trait that distinguishes him from many of his peers. However penalties have been an issue in recent years with the Jets, and he has had the benefit of playing opposite of Sauce Gardner the past three seasons.

9. WR Chris Godwin

He was having a monster season for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in 2024 – and on pace for a career year – with 50 catches for 576 yards and five TDs in seven games. But Godwin, who just turned 29, suffered a dislocated ankle in October that obviously required surgery and relegated him to injured reserve. Such a setback is concerning for a middle-aged (by NFL standards) wideout. Yet perhaps it will be offset not only by the fact Godwin can line up anywhere and is tough as nails, but also because he could command more suitors (and money) with Higgins spoken for and this year’s draft not nearly as stocked with high-end wideouts as 2024’s was.

10. LT Cam Robinson

Stanley is more gifted when it comes to safeguarding quarterbacks. But Robinson, 29, is slightly younger and generally more likely to remain in the lineup – though he was suspended four games at the start of the 2024 campaign, while in Jacksonville, for violating the performance-enhancing substances policy before later being dealt to Minnesota. Jackson’s deal, which averages $19 million annually, should also boost Robinson’s market.

11. S Justin Reid

He posted one of his best seasons in years in 2024. Reid, who turned 28 last month, is an extremely bright player, a reliable tackler and has literally been the last line of defense for Chiefs coordinator Steve Spagnuolo, who has counted on him with confidence the past three years. Yet Reid typically doesn’t make a ton of splash plays – i.e., generating turnovers or as a blitzer – so it’s little surprise that K.C. prioritized Smith, especially given the need to safeguard Mahomes.

12. C Drew Dalman

Looking for a highly reliable snapper to anchor your line who’s only 26 and has Stanford smarts? Then Dalman might be your guy, though he did miss eight games last season for the Atlanta Falcons with an ankle injury. Doesn’t mean he shouldn’t get a deal that pays him at least $15 million annually.

*QB Aaron Rodgers

Technically, he’s not a free agent – yet – but he is effectively, permitted to speak with potential employers after the Jets signaled their intention to end their two-year relationship with the four-time league MVP prematurely. Rodgers’ age (41) is just one red flag on what’s a sterling résumé from a football standpoint. Yet despite the off-field baggage he lugs into a locker room, he’s also a quarterbacking savant and a tough one – starting all 17 games despite a litany of injuries to his lower body in 2024. Yet over his final nine starts with the NYJ, Rodgers passed for 218 yards per game with 14 touchdowns and just three interceptions (95.1 QB rating). It wasn’t on par with his Green Bay heyday, but those modestly impressive figures should certainly be sufficient to get him a starting job in 2025 … maybe even with a contender like Pittsburgh given the mutual man crush coach Mike Tomlin and Rodgers seem to have.

13. CB Carlton Davis

A solid player who’s just 28 and has 17 takeaways in seven NFL years. However Davis tends to get banged up, having never played a full season – a broken jaw cutting his 2024 stint with Detroit short at 13 games.

14. WR Davante Adams

Released by the Jets on Tuesday, he’s 32 and two years removed from his most recent All-Pro season. In fairness to Adams, he’s played on two bad teams (Las Vegas Raiders, NYJ) and more than a half-dozen quarterbacks during that period, yet seemed to be recapturing his deadly form in the second half of 2024 after getting reacquainted with Rodgers. Even after a bumpy assimilation following his trade to New York last October, Adams’ numbers projected over 17 games with the Jets would have translated to 104 receptions for 1,320 yards and 11 TDs … which seems like a typical campaign during his peak. His market might actually be more limited by choosing to remain hitched to Rodgers – if that, in fact, transpires – than his ability to, at minimum, perform at a 1A wideout level.

15. S Talanoa Hufanga

Two years ago, he looked (literally) like the next Troy Polamalu, earning All-Pro honors for the San Francisco 49ers while wreaking havoc all over the field. Hufanga has yet to regain that form since suffering a torn ACL late in the 2023 season, but this might be the right time to invest in a guy who recently turned 26.

16. CB Charvarius Ward

Like Hufanga, Ward, 28, is coming off a disappointing season with the Niners. However given he was dealing with a knee injury and, more importantly, the death of his 1-year-old daughter, Ward’s struggles were more than understandable. He was a dominant player in previous seasons and very well could be again.

17. QB Russell Wilson

If you want a Super Bowl-proven quarterback with a different set of issues than Rodgers’, then Mr. Unlimited might be your guy. Wilson was named a Pro Bowler for the 10th time this season … though only after enough AFC quarterbacks declined the invitation. Overall, his passing numbers in 2024 (63.7% completion rate, 2,482 yards, 16 TDs, 5 INTs, 95.6 rating), his first in Pittsburgh, were generally in line with his career norms on a per-game basis. But the 36-year-old’s late-season decline (which bookended a training camp calf injury that cost him six regular-season starts) also mirrored the downfall of the Steelers, who lost their final five games and weren’t even competitive in most of those. He’s basically no longer a threat with his legs, either, which can amplify his tendency to struggle from the pocket. Still, Wilson might still find an opportunity to start – a reunion with Pete Carroll in Las Vegas? – even if those days appear decidedly numbered.

18. QB Justin Fields

If you want a younger passer with scads of talent – and a far more pronounced ability to make plays with his legs than Darnold – rather than a veteran, then Fields, who turns 26 on Wednesday, might be your guy. Though Wilson initially justified Tomlin’s decision to bench Fields, many never understood the logic given how well he played while winning four of his six starts to begin the 2024 campaign. And Fields showed noticeable improvement along the way, earning his teammates’ trust while adding what seemed an ideal dimension to OC Arthur Smith’s offense given his dynamic ability to make plays outside the pocket. Seems like there’s a much stronger chance Pittsburgh would choose to run it back with Fields in 2025 than Wilson.

19. DE Chase Young

Despite the outlandish pre-draft comparisons in 2020, he’ll never become the next Lawrence Taylor. But the Saints may have hit on something, solely using Young as a situational pass rusher in 2024. He responded with 5½ sacks and a career-best (by far) 34 pressures. Young, still only 25, may not break the bank, but he should do better than having to settle for another one-year deal.

20. RB Rico Dowdle

Is he the next Saquon Barkley? Hardly. But Dowdle, 26, did explode for a career-best 1,328 yards from scrimmage (on 274 touches) when Dallas finally gave him a chance to play in 2024 – and the Cowboys almost certainly would have been better off had they given him more reps rather than force Ezekiel Elliott into the rotation early in the season. Newly promoted head coach Brian Schottenheimer has already expressed his hope that Dowdle, who ran with maximum effort after finally getting his NFL opportunity, returns. But he might fetch more money – whether as a starter or change-of-pace back – elsewhere … and might be especially attractive given his relative lack of usage (387 career touches) since the Cowboys signed him as an undrafted free agent in 2020.

21. RB Najee Harris

22. LB Nick Bolton

He’s unlikely to sniff whatever Baun rakes in. But Bolton has been a staple in K.C. the past four seasons, his touchdown in Super Bowl 57 the turning point of that contest. And for anyone looking to steal a little Chiefs magic, why not poach a productive backer who will celebrate his 25th birthday Monday?

23. OLB Khalil Mack

His age (34) will almost certainly suppress what’s left of his earning power. Nevertheless, he has been a Pro Bowler in nine of his 11 NFL season – and the league’s Defensive Player of the Year in 2016 – and was ranked by PFF as the fifth-best player on the edge in 2024. Mack has always been stout against the run, however his 2023 sack total (17) plummeted to six last season while his 22 pressures were barely half the previous year (36). He should certainly be an asset to a contender, but it’s a stretch to ask him to anchor a defense at this juncture.

24. G/T Mekhi Becton

The 11th overall pick of the 2020 draft, he rarely came close to fulfilling his potential with the Jets, who expected Becton, 25, to be their long-term left tackle. But, not all that surprisingly, his career was revived in Philadelphia by O-line guru Jeff Stoutland, who shifted the massive (6-7, 363) blocker inside to guard. Becton might have priced himself out of Philly, but he will do much better financially after earning $2.75 million during his year with the Eagles – maybe far better if another team wants to give him another shot at the blind side.

25. OLB Haason Reddick

Between 2020 and ’23, he averaged better than 12½ sacks and nearly 36 pressures per season, eye-popping numbers for teams looking for pass-rush enhancement – and precisely why the Jets traded for Reddick last year. However his obstinate holdout in 2024 didn’t shed him in the best light, and that was exacerbated by his complete lack of production (1 sack and 7 pressures in 10 games after he reported to the team). Reddick will be 31 in September, and his relative age and low snap count last season might create a better market for him than, say, Mack’s. But hard to believe there won’t be a buyer-beware label Reddick will have to overcome.

All NFL news on and off the field. Sign up for USA TODAY’s 4th and Monday newsletter.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Things have not been going well for the Phoenix Suns. An interaction between star Kevin Durant and coach Mike Budenholzer probably won’t lower the temperature in the desert anytime soon.

Durant was captured by TNT’s broadcast ripping his arm away from Budenholzer after the coach had grabbed it as Durant came to the bench after a first-half timeout during Tuesday night’s game against the Los Angeles Cippers. Durant then turned back toward the coach and he and Budenholzer continued to converse.

Footage shared by Cameron Cox of NBC 12 showed that later in the timeout Durant approached Budenholzer to talk further in an exchange that appeared far more cordial.

TNT’s broadcast indicated their discussion was related to a miscommunication Phoenix had during an offensive set.

The Suns actually led 30-24 after the first quarter, but things unraveled for them in the second frame as the Clippers outscored them 41-19. Phoenix did the dominating in the fourth quarter, though. After falling behind by 23 points, the Suns roared back. They outscored the Clippers 43-22 in the final 12 minutes to win 119-117. Durant finished with a team-high 34 points.

All things Suns: Latest Phoenix Suns news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

Budenholzer, who won a championship in 2021 as head coach of the Milwaukee Bucks, is in his first season in Phoenix. Despite Tuesday’s historic win, it’s been a disappointing campaign. The Suns are 29-33 and sit outside of a play-in spot, three games behind the 10th-place Dallas Mavericks.

Can the Suns chase down the Mavs, who will now be without Kyrie Irving? Even if they do, hard feelings may linger between Durant and the team — the Suns reportedly explored trading Durant ahead of last month’s deadline. (A potential deal with the Golden State Warriors fell apart late in the proceedings.)

All that’s to say, the situation seems … volatile.

What they said after the game

Budenholzer downplayed the incident after the game and credited Durant’s energy and leadership for helping spur the comeback.

‘He wanted something, I wanted something. That’s the beauty of basketball,’ Budenholzer said of the incident.

Budenholzer said from that moment on Durant’s ‘voice, him talking — feedback, ideas, suggestions — was really a big part of the night.’

Durant hit back at the ‘narrative’ that he and his coach have issues.

‘That’s what usually happens when you don’t know the dynamics of a relationship, you know? You catch something on TV, you get a quote and now you’re pushing that narrative as if me and Bud don’t do (stuff) all the time,’ Durant said. ‘We’re competitive as two individuals who want to see things done the right way. Sometimes my way ain’t the way that Bud want to do it, and vice versa. He allows me as a player on the team, a veteran on the team, to voice my opinion. If we both didn’t care, we would never have stuff like that. You know what I’m saying?’

‘I’m glad that the win is going to sweep all of that stupid stuff under the rug because people couldn’t wait — even some people in Phoenix, in here, couldn’t wait to run with that,’ Durant added. ‘You know, say ‘Oh, this is the reason why the team ain’t playing well because of that specific thing.’ But come on, man. That shows that me and Bud really care about trying to right the ship, trying to win basketball games.

‘He understands where I’m coming from, I understand exactly where he’s coming from. It’s just the people on the outside don’t know the dynamics of the relationship. In order for them to get some attention they’re going to run with stuff like that.’

This story has been updated with new information.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY