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The countdown is on with Alex Ovechkin just 13 goals from overtaking Wayne Gretzky as the NHL’s career goal leader – a mark that once seemed unsurmountable and earned Gretzky the nickname The Great One.

The Great Eight, as the Washington Capital is sometimes called, began the season 41 goals behind Gretzky’s 894. But, perhaps, numbers fall short of conveying how dominant the two players’ careers have been.

From goals to points, our series of charts below — based on NHL and Hockey Reference data — show the gulf that Gretzky and Ovechkin have created between themselves and their contemporaries as they solidified their positions as two of the league’s greats.

Three NHL players scored more than 800 goals in their careers

It’s interesting to note in the chart below, how one player has stood out from others of their generations since the 1950s when Maurice Richard became the NHL’s first 400-goal scorer — and later first 500-goal scorer. A couple decades later Gordie Howe finished his 33-year career with 801 goals.

Unable to view our graphics? Click here to see them.

So how did Gretzky and Ovechkin get there?

Combine consistent all-star play with health and longevity, and their career milestones became more plausible. Gretzky lost a large portion of his 1992-93 season to a back injury, while Ovechkin lost 16 games this year to a broken leg. Otherwise, both stayed on the ice during the prime of their careers.

How many goals does Ovechkin have in his career

Both Ovechkin and Gretzky averaged about 49 goals per season, but some might say Ovechkin is still in the prime of his career, considering the relatively consistent trajectory of his scoring.

So who is better, Gretzky or Ovechkin? Here are a few more points to help you decide.

Whether it’s Jordan vs. LeBron or Brady vs. Mahomes, comparisons between great players of different eras can often be a fool’s errand. That said, a couple key differences in the eras:

Goalies’ gear covers more of the goal today

Only a few years separate Ovechkin and Gretzky, but like any other sport, hockey equipment evolved during these four-plus decades. Consider how different goalies’ pads and mitts were, below, during Gretzky’s and Ovechkin’s first seasons. To be fair, goalies wore more modern-day uniforms in Gretzky’s final seasons, and two years before Ovechkin entered the NHL, the length of goalie pads was limited to 38 inches.

NHL scoring at its highest levels in Gretzky era

Some will argue that Ovechkin is a greater goal scorer because scoring has become more challenging. Gretzky’s early years were played when the NHL averaged the highest average points per game. Of 25 players who scored 65 goals or more in a season, 19 were in Gretzky’s era. That includes four seasons where Gretzky scored 71 or more. Ovechkin tallied 65 once.

Gretzky has conceded that he may soon lose his scoring title in the coming months.

‘It’s just a matter of time, whether it’s late this year, early next year, whenever,’ Gretzky said about his record this past fall, according to the NHL. ‘I mean, he’s a great player. He’s a great goal scorer.’

But the measure of a great hockey player isn’t only how many goals they rack up. Consider how Ovechkin compares to his contemporaries on career points – goals and assists added together.

How many career points has Ovechkin earned

In his 20 years in the NHL, Gretzky’s play contributed to more goals for his teams than any player by far. In addition to leading the league in goals five times, he led the NHL in assists 16 times, leading to a career points record that may never be eclipsed.

The Pittsburgh Penguins’ Sidney Crosby joined the NHL in the 2005-06 season with Ovechkin. Crosby has assisted on nearly 50% more goals than Ovechkin has, putting him dozens of points ahead. Below, the top 50 players in career points. Only four have played this season:

How old is Alex Ovechkin and other milestones

Should Ovechkin run out of regular-season games this year, he’ll turn 40 in September with one more year on his current Capitals’ contract. In addition to the career goal record, he’ll have more chances to pile up career statistics. A couple of them:

Points: Ovechkin overtook Phil Esposito’s career points mark of 1,590 in early February, putting him 11th (1,593) in the category. Joe Sakic, 10th in points at 1,641, could be within reach next season.

Goalies scored on: Ovechkin already leads in this category with 179 goalies in his 20 years. Less than 9% of those who have played in the league have even scored 179 or more goals.

How many goals does Ovechkin have this year

How many empty net goals has Ovechkin made

After returning from his broken leg in late December, Ovechkin scored his 17th goal of the season in his first game back, collecting his 62nd empty-net goal of his career. He scored his 64th empty-netter Sunday.

Empty-net goals are a perk of playing for one of the top teams in the NHL for several years, and Ovechkin has taken advantage of empty nets more often than any player in league history, according to Statmuse. He topped Gretzky’s 56 empty netters last season when he tallied three.

Rounding the top five of empty-net goal scorers, according to Statmuse: Marian Hossa, 40, Brad Marchand, 38, and Sidney Crosby, 36.

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March Madness is rapidly approaching, which means the 2025 WNBA draft is around the corner.

This year’s draft has been hailed as the Paige Bueckers sweepstakes, the UConn Huskies guard presumed to be the No. 1 overall pick. But Notre Dame guard Olivia Miles has played herself into the conversation for the top spot, as well.

Let’s take a look at how the first round could shake out as the women’s college basketball season heads toward the postseason.

It’s worth noting that UCLA’s Lauren Betts and UConn’s Azzi Fudd will not be included in this mock draft as both players are expected to return to college. Fudd has another year of eligibility after missing nearly the entire 2023-24 season due to an ACL injury, while Betts is expected to return and team up with younger sister Sienna Betts, who is committed to play at UCLA next season.

The Las Vegas Aces don’t have a 2025 first-round draft pick after their pick was rescinded by the WNBA for violating league rules regarding player benefits. All stats entering play Saturday.

2025 WNBA mock draft

1. Dallas Wings: G Paige Bueckers (UConn)

After the Wings landed the 2025 No. 1 overall pick in the draft lottery, Dallas All-Star guard Arike Ogunbowale posted on social media, ‘I just fell to my knees. THANK YOU LORD!’ She has good reason to celebrate. It’s no surprise that Bueckers, considered a generational talent, is the first player off our board. She will bring her shot-making and playmaking abilities to the Wings. Bueckers is averaging 18.6 points, shooting 41% from 3, 4.5 rebounds and 4.6 assists this season.

2. Seattle Storm: G Olivia Miles (Notre Dame)

Goodbye Jewell Loyd, hello Olivia Miles. The Storm parted with Loyd in a three-team trade with the Las Vegas Aces and Los Angeles Sparks, but acquired the second overall pick from the Sparks and snag arguably the best playmaker and passer in the draft. Miles returned from a season-ending knee injury and didn’t miss a step, teaming up with Hannah Hidalgo to form the best backcourt duo in the country. Miles is averaging a career-high 16.6 points per game, 6.1 rebounds and 6.2 assists.

3. Chicago Sky: G Sonia Citron (Notre Dame)

Back-to-back Fighting Irish are off the board with Citron’s selection. The Sky are in need of a guard after losing last season’s top scorer with the departure of Chennedy Carter. Chicago added former Sky alum Courtney Vandersloot and Kia Nurse in free agency, but the Sky prioritize depth by drafting Citron, an efficient scorer and lockdown defender. Citron is averaging 13.8 points, 5.6 rebounds and 2.1 steals in 24 games this season.

4. Washington Mystics: F/C Dominique Malonga (France)

The French takeover doesn’t just apply to the NBA. Dominique Malonga will follow in the footsteps of fellow countryman Victor Wembanyama and be drafted to the pros. The 6-foot-6 center is the ultimate athlete that can do it all with her speed, length and explosiveness. She’s averaging 15.6 points, shooting 41.7% from 3, 9.4 rebounds and 1.6 blocks for France’s Lyon ASVEL Feminin. Did we mention that she’s only 19? The Mystics have been quiet in free agency, but new general manager Jamila Wideman and head coach Sydney Johnson will take a step toward building their future with Malonga.

5. Golden State Valkyries: G Aneesah Morrow (LSU)

Valkyries head coach Natalie Nakase told USA TODAY Sports she’s looking for an ‘ultra competitive,’ ‘high character,’ ‘never satisfied’ player that will help build the team’s culture in its inaugural season. Morrow checks all those boxes. She’s averaging 18.1 points, a league-high 14.4 rebounds and 2.5 steals, all while leading the NCAA in double-doubles with 24 in 27 games. Morrow’s versatility, rebounding abilities and relentless attitude will translate well to the league and she’d be a foundational piece for the establishing Valkyries.

6. Washington Mystics: F Kiki Iriafen (USC)

The Mystics are on the board again. Iriafen, a 6-foot-3 forward, would make an immediate impact in Washington. She’s averaging 18 points, shooting 50.6% from the field, 8.3 rebounds and 1.8 assists. When she’s not backing up opponents in the paint or cleaning up the glass with her physicality and explosiveness, Iriafen is a midrange master. The Mystics hope that Iriafen can help turn things around after missing the playoffs last season.

7. New York Liberty: G Georgia Amoore (Kentucky)

The defending champion Liberty are returning their entire starting lineup Breanna Stewart, Sabrina Ionescu, Jonquel Jones, Leonie Fiebich and Betnijah Laney-Hamilton. Although the Liberty have no urgent needs, they look to replace guard Courtney Vandersloot by drafting Georgia Amoore. Although undersized at 5-foot-6, Amoore is an elite facilitator and leads the SEC in assists per game (7.1). She’s averaging a career-high 19 points, shooting a career-high 43% from the field.

8.Connecticut Sun: F Ajša Sivka (Slovenia)

The Sun have had a rough offseason so far. Not only did Connecticut lose head coach Stephanie White, it also lost Alyssa Thomas, DeWanna Bonner, Dijonai Carrington, Tyasha Harris and Brionna Jones — its entire playoff starting lineup. (Marina Mabrey also requested a trade.) It’s not clear what direction the Sun are going as they begin their rebuild under new head coach Rachid Meziane, but Slovenian forward Ajsa Sivka is a solid draft-and-stash option who could benefit the Sun in the long run. The versatile wing is averaging 11 points, 3.1 rebounds, 2.9 assists, 2 steals, while shooting 42.2% from beyond the arc for Tarbes Gespe Bigorre.

9. Los Angeles Sparks: G Shyanne Sellers (Maryland)

The Sparks kicked off free agency by landing two-time WNBA champion Kelsey Plum, who will join Cameron Brinks, Rickea Jackson and Dearica Hamby in Los Angeles. The Sparks add another guard to the mix with Shyanne Sellers, who fits new coach Lynne Roberts’ up-tempo style of play, particularly from 3. Sellers is averaging 13.9 points per game, shooting 47.9% from the field and a career-high 42.9% from beyond the arc, 4.1 rebounds and 4.3 assists. Sellers is the first player in Maryland history to reach 1,500 points, 500 rebounds and 500 assists, highlighting her ability to do it all.

10. Chicago Sky: G Te-Hina Paopao (South Carolina)

The Sky are back on the board again in the first round. This time Chicago selects Te-Hina Paopao, reuniting her with former South Carolina teammate Kamilla Cardoso. Paopao can not only create a shot for her teammates and herself, she’s developed as a defender. Paopao is averaging 10.4 points, 2.6 rebounds and 2.8 assists, while shooting 47.1% from the field and 38.7% from 3.

11. Minnesota Lynx: C Sedona Prince (TCU)

The Lynx fell just short of the 2024 WNBA championship after losing a winner-take-all Game 5 to the New York Liberty in overtime. They add depth to their roster with 6-foot-7 center Sedona Prince. Prince is averaging 17.8 points, shooting a Big 12-leading 61.3% from the field, 9.1 rebounds and 3.1 blocks. Prince’s stellar on-court play, however, has been overshadowed by multiple abuse and sexual assault allegations, which many affect her draft stock.

12. Dallas Wings: G Saniya Rivers (NC State) 

The Wings already landed Paige Bueckers with the first overall pick and go for the best player on the board with the 12th pick. Rivers is averaging 12.2 points, 6.1 rebounds, 3.2 assists, 1.7 steals and 1.3 blocks this season and will bring her defensive edge to the Wings, who ranked dead-last in defensive rating last year.

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Philadelphia 76ers star Joel Embiid was benched for the final quarter of Saturday’s last-second loss to the Brooklyn Nets, with coach Nick Nurse admitting the former NBA MVP is ‘not himself.’

The Sixers rallied from a 17-point deficit, only to lose their seventh game in a row, 105-103 on a buzzer-beating tip-in by Brooklyn’s Nic Claxton.

Nurse defended his decision to keep Embiid on the bench after the two-time league scoring champion had tallied just 14 points in 31 minutes of action and missed all six of his 3-point attempts.

‘That group was just playing so well together and had good feel for the game at that point, and just wanted to let them roll with it,’ Nurse told reporters.

Embiid, who has been nagged by injuries all season, declined to comment after the game.

All things Sixers: Latest Philadelphia 76ers news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

After signing a three-year, $193 million contract extension in September, Embiid said last week that his left knee is still bothering him a full year after undergoing surgery for a torn meniscus.

‘The way I was playing a year ago is not the way I’m playing right now,’ Embiid said last week after a loss to the Celtics. ‘I probably need to fix the problem, and then I’ll be back at that level.’

Saturday’s benching provided even further evidence.

‘He’s not himself, we all know that,’ Nurse said. ‘He’s not certainly the guy we’re used to seeing play at a super high level. But I commend him for giving us what he can.’

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The continuing surge in cap space has coincided with the accelerated growth at the top of the market for several premium positions, including quarterback, wide receiver and edge rusher. With the arrival of the NFL offseason, several more stars in key spots could be in line to cash in with sizable new agreements. And while some of those market-moving deals could materialize in the coming weeks as teams try to create more short-term flexibility by backloading deals to lower their 2025 cap hits, others might not materialize until much closer to the start of the season.

Here are the top candidates to receive a hefty extension this offseason, with all cap figures via Over The Cap:

QB Brock Purdy, San Francisco 49ers

San Francisco has been setting the table for a massive payout for the former Mr. Irrelevant, carrying over approximately $50 million in unused cap space from last season to provide needed flexibility. And despite a trying season in which the 49ers missed the playoffs and Purdy’s passer rating dipped nearly 17 points to 96.1, owner Jed York said earlier in February that the team would ‘do everything’ to nail down an extension. Determining the exact structure and financial terms will no doubt be complicated, but with the salary cap on a trajectory of making substantial annual leaps, any deal should put Purdy in the neighborhood of Dallas Cowboys quarterback Dak Prescott as the NFL’s highest-paid player at $60 million per year. The timeline will also prove critical, as both sides seem eager for the 49ers to break from their established pattern of waiting out extension talks for star players. San Francisco could gain much-needed clarity if the team is able to handle the matter soon.

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

QB Geno Smith, Seattle Seahawks

One year after he first stirred speculation about his commitment to Smith upon his arrival, coach Mike Macdonald has affirmed that the 12-year veteran is ‘our quarterback’ – and one he’s confident can contend for a Super Bowl, even as the team pivots to a rushing-led attack. But with Smith carrying a $44.5 million cap hit for the final year of his contract – the ninth-highest figure for any player at his position – Seattle has plenty of incentive to smooth things out. Another mid-tier, short-term contract extension for the 34-year-old could serve both sides well, with Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterback Baker Mayfield’s three-year, $100 million deal signed last year standing as a potential yardstick.

RB James Cook, Buffalo Bills

Josh Allen is due to have his contract reworked after his MVP campaign, as his $43 million average annual value has been dwarfed by a number of other quarterback deals that have landed in the last three years. With four years left on his deal, however, it’s not clear exactly what shape the reformatting will take. Cook, his backfield mate, also appears due for a raise after his second consecutive Pro Bowl season. But with the three-year veteran indicating he’s seeking $15 million per year – which would trail only 49ers star Christian McCaffrey in going rates for running backs and be nearly triple his upcoming base salary of $5.14 million – finding mutually agreeable terms might not be easy.

WR Ja’Marr Chase, Cincinnati Bengals

Joe Burrow has openly lobbied for his team to keep its core together this offseason. But a Cincinnati team that has been infamously stingy in locking in cap money will have its approach put to the test with its top two targets both seeking massive paydays. A decision on Tee Higgins must come first, as he is widely seen as the top potential free agent if he is not extended or given a second consecutive franchise tag. Chase, meanwhile, did not receive the extension he sought last year and responded with career highs of 127 catches, 1,708 receiving yards and 17 touchdowns – all of which led the NFL. With one year left on his deal, he now looks in line to shatter former LSU teammate Justin Jefferson’s mark as the top-paid receiver at $35 million per year. The guaranteed money, however, could be a sticking point, as the Bengals have refused to keep up with market trends in committing money down the line.

WR Courtland Sutton, Denver Broncos

After skipping the voluntary portion of the offseason program last year, Sutton reported for mandatory workouts once the team agreed to terms on a restructured contract that featured a short-term pay bump. Now, he likely wants more out of Denver given he’s due just $14 million next season, a relatively modest sum for a player who single-handedly powered the receiving corps with 81 catches, 1,081 receiving yards and eight touchdowns. An extension could shrink his $20.2 million cap hit for 2025 and ensure that Bo Nix’s top target will remain in place while the Broncos try to build up the roster’s skill-position talent.

WR Garrett Wilson, New York Jets

Unlike many other stars on this list, Wilson seems ambivalent about staying on with his current team, saying in December that he ‘can’t be worrying about all that’ despite noting an extension ‘would be a blessing.’ While first-year coach Aaron Glenn and general manager Darren Mougey might want a closer look at the star target, capitalizing early as his extension window opens this offseason could pay off in several respects. With Aaron Rodgers no longer part of the franchise’s plan, Wilson might be eager to start over after the quarterback and receiver struggled to establish a consistent connection. Establishing him as one of the building blocks for a franchise short on them could be a good starting point for the new regime. And the Jets might be wise to get out in front of a deal for a player who has posted three 1,000-yard seasons despite arguably the league’s worst quarterback play during that span.

WR Terry McLaurin, Washington Commanders

As a trusted team leader, two-time Pro Bowler and Jayden Daniels’ top weapon, McLaurin seems like a sure thing to get an extension this offseason. While McLaurin turns 30 in September, he’s as vital as any non-quarterback figure on the team. Between the need to address the lack of any guaranteed money on the final year of his current deal and the benefit to Washington of reducing his $25.5 million cap hit, there’s ample motivation to reach an agreement. Doing so quickly would help the Commanders get out ahead of a receiver market that only seems to be growing exponentially.

TE Trey McBride, Arizona Cardinals

In a season in which many expected Marvin Harrison Jr. to seize the spotlight in the desert, it was actually McBride who enjoyed a full star turn for the Cardinals. The third-year pass catcher ranked second at the position in receiving yards (1,146), and his 111 catches nearly doubled that of the next closest teammate in Harrison (62). Currently set to earn just $5.22 million in base salary for the final year of the pact, the 25-year-old could help push the tight end market forward.

TE George Kittle, 49ers

Plenty of changes could be underway in the Bay Area, with wide receiver Deebo Samuel among the established veterans seemingly on the way out. Yet Kittle seems to be on solid ground after a year in which he posted 78 catches and 1,106 receiving yards, his highest totals since 2019. Lowering his $22.09 million cap hit for next season should be a priority for general manager John Lynch, and San Francisco likely could do so without overextending itself too much.

OT Rashawn Slater, Los Angeles Chargers

Like many of his peers, Slater was revitalized by the arrival of Jim Harbaugh and the system he and offensive coordinator Greg Roman implemented, as the 2021 first-round pick displayed a dominant form and earned his second Pro Bowl nod. His timing is impeccable, as a fifth-year option worth $19.04 million is all that remains on his rookie deal. With All-Pro Tristan Wirfs having set a new high for offensive tackles with last offseason’s five-year, $140.63 million extension, Slater and the Bolts have a pricey new reference point in any talks.

DE Trey Hendrickson, Bengals

One year after his trade request led nowhere, Hendrickson is ramping up the pressure on the Bengals, telling ‘The Pat McAfee Show’ during Super Bowl week, ‘I want to help win a Super Bowl for Cincinnati, whether I’m there or not.’ As the NFL’s reigning sack king (17½), he is highly valuable to a defense lacking for playmakers elsewhere – as well as a franchise that seems committed to return to contention after missing the playoffs the last two seasons. But paying top dollar to a 30-year-old pass rusher could be tricky, and so too could be fielding a favorable return for him on the trade market.

DE Greg Rousseau, Bills

As Buffalo’s lone legitimate threat off the edge, Rousseau might have an argument to be ahead of Cook in the pecking order for an extension. Yet it could be tricky to slot a 6-foot-6, 266-pound edge rusher who has shown immense talent but has yet to crack through to the elite tier at his position, who all typically command at least $24 million per year. Meanwhile, cornerback Christian Benford and linebacker Terrel Bernard could also be on the radar for new agreements.

LB Micah Parsons, Dallas Cowboys

Next to Purdy, his deal might be the most anticipated of the offseason, as Parsons appears primed to push Nick Bosa for the title of the NFL’s highest-paid defensive player at $34 million per year. But could this be another Jerry Jones negotiation that takes plenty of time to play out? The Cowboys didn’t come to terms with CeeDee Lamb until late August last year, and the record pact for Prescott landed just hours before the 2024 season opener. While Parsons recently told the Cowboys’ official website there had been ‘no progress yet’ on contract talks, he maintained ‘there’s definitely a plan in place.’

OLB T.J. Watt, Pittsburgh Steelers

Whatever plans the steady Steelers have to shake up their roster after yet another early postseason ouster don’t appear to include moving Watt. Team president Art Rooney II set aside the notion of trading the 2021 NFL Defensive Player of the Year ahead of the final year of his contract, saying instead that Watt is ‘the kind of guy we want to have in the locker room going forward.’ After being held without a sack in the final four games of the season, Watt vowed to make changes to his game in the offseason. But even after the seven-time Pro Bowler turned 30 in October and posted his lowest sack total (11½) in a full campaign since his rookie year in 2017, the Steelers appear to be confident enough in Watt’s trajectory to keep paying him a handsome sum.

CB Derek Stingley Jr., Houston Texans

The No. 3 pick in the 2022 NFL draft has enjoyed a steady ascent, with last season serving as his official arrival to the tier of the league’s elite defensive players. He notched five interceptions – and two more in the playoffs – and 18 passes defensed en route to All-Pro honors. Though the Texans could exercise his fifth-year option to leave the team with two more years left on his deal, an extension in the near future would be entirely reasonable. Whenever he gets his next contract, expect it to challenge the Denver Broncos’ Pat Surtain II for the top pay at cornerback (four years, $96 million).

S Kyle Hamilton, Baltimore Ravens

Re-upping seems like a no-brainer for both Hamilton and the Ravens, whose midseason decision to move the do-everything defensive back to a more traditional deep safety role helped spark a massive turnaround. But the two-time Pro Bowler doesn’t seem to be in any rush to complete a deal, telling the Baltimore Sun this week that his offseason focus is on training rather than negotiating. Baltimore also might not feel much urgency to lock in anything right away given Antoine Winfield Jr.’s place atop the safety market at $21 million per year is unlikely to be challenged by anyone other than Hamilton in the near future. But there’s little question Hamilton will leap to the top spot at some point.

S Kerby Joseph, Detroit Lions

Despite leading the NFL with nine interceptions, Joseph was snubbed for the Pro Bowl, though he was an All-Pro selection. But there’s no questioning the perception of him within Detroit’s front office. ‘He fits our culture,’ general manager Brad Holmes said of Joseph in his season-ending news conference. ‘It’s hard to find ballhawk guys that will tackle like how he does, and I think that’s what makes him unique. … We haven’t had any intense dialogue about that yet, but obviously we want to keep the good players here.’

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Major League Soccer officially welcomes San Diego FC as the league’s newest franchise Sunday. The club will face a stiff challenge in its inaugural match.

San Diego FC will visit the reigning MLS Cup champion L.A. Galaxy at 7 p.m. ET (4 p.m. PT) on MLS Season Pass and Apple TV+ in the league’s first ‘Sunday Night Soccer’ showcase.

As MLS begins its 30th season, San Diego FC begins play as the 30th team in the league.

San Diego FC features U.S. national team standout Luca de la Torre and Mexican international Hirving ‘Chucky’ Lozano. Head coach Mikey Varas hopes to implement an aggressive style of play to help the club compete immediately in the MLS Western Conference.

San Diego FC plans to honor the local community, which showed massive support at a recent fan event at the club’s new home, Snapdragon Stadium.

“It’s important we bring a product to the community here that can be a reflection of them,” Varas said. “San Diego is a creative place, and a vibrant city, vibrant people and also very hard-working people, and very competitive community.”

De La Torre – a San Diego native who got his start at youth clubs like San Diego Nomads and San Diego Surf – says he’s living a dream playing for the new MLS club.

“I hope that we can play a style of football that attracts people, and we can win,” said De La Torre, who has played professionally at Fulham in the English Premier League, Heracles Almelo in the Netherlands, and Celta de Vigo in Spain’s La Liga.

“At the end of the day, it’s our job to fill the stadium and create those moments people want to be part of, and create emotions in people.”

Mohamed Mansour, 77, is the majority owner and chairman of San Diego FC. He is the chairman of Mansour Group, and founder and chairman of Man Capital. He also owns the Right to Dream network of youth academies in Ghana, Egypt, Denmark and San Diego. Forbes estimates Mansour’s net worth to be $3.3 billion.

San Diego FC went 1-2 in exhibition games earlier this month during the Coachella Valley Invitational. They fell 3-1 to New York City FC on Feb. 8, lost 3-0 to the Portland Timbers on Feb. 12, and beat the MLS Cup runner-up New York Red Bulls 6-0 on Feb. 15.

“We improved a lot as the friendlies went on, and obviously the last match was really good,” De La Torre said. “I think the coaches have been introducing useful ideas that the guys have been taking on well. And the fitness has been growing. Now, we’re in a good place. … We’re ready to start the season.”

After San Diego FC’s inaugural match, it will play its home opener March 1 against St. Louis City SC at Snapdragon Stadium.

Only one of the six previous MLS expansion teams won its inaugural match. St. Louis was the last to do so in 2023.

“It’s just an exciting time, and we can’t wait for the club to officially start league play,” Varas said.

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President Donald Trump celebrated on Sunday after German conservative opposition leader Friedrich Merz claimed victory in a national election, ousting Social Democrat incumbent Chancellor Olaf Scholz.

‘LOOKS LIKE THE CONSERVATIVE PARTY IN GERMANY HAS WON THE VERY BIG AND HIGHLY ANTICIPATED ELECTION,’ Trump wrote in a post on Truth Social. ‘MUCH LIKE THE USA, THE PEOPLE OF GERMANY GOT TIRED OF THE NO COMMON SENSE AGENDA, ESPECIALLY ON ENERGY AND IMMIGRATION, THAT HAS PREVAILED FOR SO MANY YEARS.

‘THIS IS A GREAT DAY FOR GERMANY, AND FOR THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA UNDER THE LEADERSHIP OF A GENTLEMAN NAMED DONALD J. TRUMP,’ he added. ‘CONGRATULATIONS TO ALL — MANY MORE VICTORIES TO FOLLOW!!!’

Germany’s center-right Christian Democratic Union (CDU) won Sunday’s national election, with the right-wing Alternative for Germany (AfD) finishing a strong second, according to exit polls.

The snap election came as the European nation grapples with illegal immigration and a souring economy. CDU leader Merz is expected to take a harder line than Scholz on immigration, though not as much as AfD supporters have called for.

Merz, whose party got about 29% of the vote, must form a coalition with one or more of the other parties, but has said he will not do so with AfD.

Merz has said he will execute a 15-point plan to tackle immigration, including tightening the borders and deporting rejected asylum seekers. AfD wants to deport migrants en masse.

While the AfD may be frozen out of the incoming coalition, it doubled its vote total from the last election.

Endorsed by Trump and Elon Musk, and led by Alice Weidel and Tino Chrupalla, the party believes it has built momentum for the next election, expected in 2029.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

President Donald Trump is set to have another busy week meeting with foreign leaders in the nation’s capital as administration leaders continue working out a potential peace deal between Russia and Ukraine. 

Trump will meet with U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer and French President Emmanuel Macron in his fifth week back in the Oval Office, national security advisor Mike Waltz said on Fox News’ ‘America Reports.’ The announcement follows Macron calling for an emergency meeting of world leaders after the Trump administration excluded Europe from sitting at the negotiating table to settle the war between Ukraine and Russia.

‘Just a few months ago, everyone was talking about this war as though it would never end,’ Waltz said on ‘America Reports’ after confirming Starmer and Macron will visit Washington, D.C. ‘In just a very short amount of time, President Trump has us, everyone – the Ukrainians, the Russians, the Europeans – talking about it now and debating.… Only President Trump could drive that shift in conversation. And we have to acknowledge that that’s happened.’

Waltz, Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Special Envoy to the Middle East Steve Witkoff met in Riyadh last week with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and President Vladimir Putin’s foreign affairs advisor Yuri Ushakov to hash out ways to end the conflict. Ukraine was absent from the negotiations in Saudi Arabia. 

Ukraine’s lack of involvement sparked President Vlodomyr Zelenskyy to double down on the stance that his nation will not accept a peace deal unless they are a part of the negotiation process. 

Zelenskyy told reporters Tuesday in Turkey that ‘nobody decides anything behind our back,’ after stressing in recent days that Kyiv will not agree to a peace negotiation without Ukraine’s input.

Trump amplified his rhetoric against Zelenskyy last week, including arguing Zelenskyy is a poor negotiator and that he’s ‘sick of it.’ 

‘I’ve been watching this man for years now as his cities get demolished, as his people get killed, as his soldiers get decimated,’ Trump told Fox News’ Brian Kilmeade last week. ‘I’ve been watching him negotiate with no cards. He has no cards, and you get sick of it,’ he continued. ‘You just get sick of it, and I’ve had it.’

‘I get tired of listening to it,’ Trump responded. ‘I’ve seen it enough, and then he complains that he’s not at a meeting that we’re having with Saudi Arabia trying to intermediate peace. Well, he’s been at meetings for three years with a… president who didn’t know what the hell he was doing. He’s been at the meetings for three years and nothing got done, so I don’t think he’s very important to be at meetings, to be honest with you. He’s been there for three years. He’s he makes it very hard to make deals.’

Trump added on Friday that Macron and Starmer ‘haven’t done anything’ since 2022 to end the war between Russia and Ukraine. 

Trump’s recent remarks on Zelenskyy have apparently alarmed European leaders who have backed Ukraine throughout the war. Macron previewed in remarks on Thursday that he will reportedly take a tough tone with Trump during their meeting. 

‘Trump, I know him. I respect him and I believe he respects me,’ Macron, who will meet with Trump on Monday, said during a question-and-answer session on social media. ‘I will tell him: deep down you cannot be weak in the face of President (Vladimir Putin). It’s not you, it’s not what you’re made of, and it’s not in your interests.’

Starmer, who is slated to meet with Trump on Thursday, said on Sunday in Scotland that there cannot be peace talks without Ukraine’s input. 

‘Nobody wants the bloodshed to continue. Nobody, least of all the Ukrainians,’ he said Sunday, according to Reuters. 

‘But after everything that they have suffered, after everything that they have fought for, there could be no discussion about Ukraine without Ukraine, and the people of Ukraine must have a long-term secure future.’ 

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt spoke to members of the media on Saturday following CPAC, saying a peace deal could be reached as soon as this week. 

‘The president, his team are very much focused on continuing negotiations with both sides of this war to end the conflict, and the president is very confident we can get it done this week,’ she said. 

Fox News Digital’s Bailee Hill, Morgan Phillips and Diana Stancy contributed to this report. 

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Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu displayed images of Shiri Bibas and her two young sons, Ariel and Kfir, during an address at a combat officers’ graduation ceremony on Sunday, delivering a solemn message.

‘I want to show you something. I want to show you this picture of Shiri Bibas and her tender children, Ariel and Kfir Bivas. This picture says it all; I ask that you engrave it on the board of your hearts, so that you will always remember what we are fighting for and against whom we are fighting,’ Netanyahu told the graduates, according to Fox News’ translation of the Hebrew speech. ‘We are fighting to secure our existence against man-monsters who have risen to annihilate us.’ 

‘Already in the first days of the war, they murdered Shiri and her children in cold blood; they strangled the tender children with their own hands,’ Netanyahu said, holding up a photo of the Bibas family. ‘And if they could, they would have killed us all with the same cruelty, until our very last man. Against this we fight, and these monsters we must and can defeat – and defeat them we will. This is our mission, and this is your mission!’ 

‘As the defenders of our homeland, each of you is imbued with purpose, wielding sword and shield,’ he added. ‘We have high expectations of you, but I know that above all, you have expectations of yourselves.’ 

Hamas handed over the bodies of the two young brothers on Thursday, but initially returned the wrong remains for Shiri in what Netanyahu had decried as a ‘brazen violation of their agreement.’ The Israeli mother’s actual remains were handed over on Saturday and identified by Israeli forensic authorities to be Shiri following a standoff with the terrorist group. Also returned was the body of Oded Lifshitz, a fellow resident of Kibbutz Nir Oz kidnapped by Hamas on Oct. 7, 2023, and who Israel says was murdered in captivity. The Israel Defense Forces said the boys’ bodies proved they were ‘murdered by terrorists in cold blood,’ despite Hamas previously claiming the brothers were killed in an airstrike.

In his speech Sunday, Netanyahu said President Donald Trump ‘sees eye to eye with us on everything related to Gaza.’ 

‘We support President Trump’s groundbreaking plan to allow free exit for Gazans, and to create a different Gaza,’ Netanyahu told the graduating combat officers. 

‘I thank President Trump for his directive to supply Israel with vital weapons,’ Netanyahu said. ‘The new defensive and offensive arms will greatly aid us in achieving absolute victory. At the same time, we have approved enormous budgets for the domestic development of weapon systems – systems that will enhance our ability to stand up to our enemies on our own.’ 

The prime minister also laid out his government’s objectives. Netanyahu said Israeli forces ‘have eliminated most of Hamas’s organized strength’in Gaza. 

‘But let there be no doubt: we will complete the war objectives, including this one, to the very end,’ he said. ‘It can be achieved through negotiation, and it can also be achieved by other means. From the start of the war, the conditions we set for its conclusion were clear – and they remain clear. All of our abductees, without exception, will return home. Hamas will not govern Gaza. Gaza will be purged, and its combat capability will be dismantled.’ 
 

Trump’s envoy to the Middle East, Steve Witkoff, said he plans to return to the region on Wednesday to negotiate an ‘extension’ of Phase One of the ceasefire and hostage release deal between Israel and Hamas. 

Phase Two, Witkoff noted, includes ensuring Hamas will never return to government leadership in Gaza, which he predicts will not be a safe living environment for another 15 to 20 years and will require a lengthy reconstruction plan. 

Fox News’ Yael Rotem-Kuriel contributed to this report.

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San Antonio Spurs head coach Gregg Popovich ‘is not expected to return this season, and his NBA future is uncertain,’ ESPN reported Saturday.

In November, Popovich had a mild stroke that’s kept him away from his day-to-day duties as coach and out of the public spotlight. He is the NBA’s all-time winningest coach.

He made his first public comments in a statement released on Dec. 16, stating his desire to return to coaching.

“No one is more excited to see me return to the bench than the talented individuals who have been leading my rehabilitation process,” Popovich said. “They’ve quickly learned that I’m less than coachable.”

Here’s the latest regarding Popovich’s future.

All things Spurs: Latest San Antonio Spurs news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

When will Gregg Popovich return?

According to ESPN’s Shams Charania, Popovich is not expected to return to his full-time coaching role this season.

The five-time champion coach suffered a mild stroke during the season. Charania said Popovich has continued to progress and get stronger through rehab.

The 76-year-old has served as the Spurs’ head coach for 29 seasons.

Who is filling in as Spurs’ interim head coach?

Mitch Johnson is serving as the acting coach in San Antonio during Popovich’s absence.

The 38-year-old joined the Spurs as an assistant coach in 2019. He won a G League championship in 2018 while working as an assistant with the Austin Spurs.

The Spurs are 24-30 overall and 12th in the Western Conference.

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The next time you’re driving your son or daughter to their game, and you see them engrossed in their phone, Larissa Mills wants you to remember something.

“The brain takes 22 minutes to go back to refocusing,” she tells USA TODAY Sports. “We’ve wasted an inning, a period, a half on poor decision-making skills. So why did you bother? Don’t even go on the ice, as far as I’m concerned.”

We focus so much on getting our kids ready to play through relentless practice and personal training outside the team. But do we underestimate the power of developing what’s inside of them?

Mills directs the London, Ontario-based Mental Game Academy. She holds degrees in sociology, psychology and education. She’s also a mother of three who has mined the mental side of thousands of athletes from the youth through professional levels in the United States and Canada.

And she has kept a close eye on you.

“Our children are on a phone from four to eight to 12 hours a day,” she says. “When are they learning their psychological skills? They’re not, and parents are on their phones for four to nine hours a day. So, when are parents connecting? When are children learning their self-identity? When are they learning how to cope and not get angry and pummel people?

“I just watched a hockey dad get off the ice and hit two refs, kids, 14 years old. And I just saw a fight in an arena two weeks ago.”

The Mental Game Academy helps athletes develop emotional and social awareness while getting us to understand how much of a stake we have in that process.

“Phones are one problem,” she says. “Parents not teaching mental skills is the other problem.”

“Mental game” can give anyone an edge, regardless of your age or athletic level. In some cases, it can propel you to the heights of collegiate and professional achievement. For younger athletes, it can unlock your full potential.

“People say kids have changed,” Mills says. “No, kids have not changed. We’ve lowered our standards. Let’s acknowledge that when we reduce behavioral issues, we raise the level of performance.”

She offers five ways we can help our kid athletes develop a powerful psychological game:

‘Dopamine makes us dopey’

Create phone routines to help calm our nervous system and make us confident.

Dopamine is a neurotransmitter that acts as a chemical messenger between the nerve cells and the rest of your brain. According to the Cleveland Clinic, high amounts of dopamine are released through experiences your body finds pleasurable. They can also stimulate addictive habits.

“Dopamine makes us dopey and slower, makes our brain feel like it’s in oil,” Mills says.

Phone use, she says, can surge dopamine and cortisol, a hormone released by our adrenal glands, resulting in lower confidence and sluggish decision-making.

Mills compares looking at your phone before a game to eating poutine, the heavy Canadian delicacy of French fries, cheese curds and brown gravy.

“That’s the same thing you’re doing when you tell your brain negative things, or you watch a phone before a game or practice,” she says. “You’re destroying your nervous system. … The symptoms from phone addiction are almost identical to those of anxiety.”

Children touch a phone, Mills has determined through American, Canadian, British and Australian resources, about 176 times per day.

We can’t entirely stop using our phones, which are our line of communication with our kids. Instead, choose a few times a day where, in short bursts of time, you return calls and answer your text messages.

For at least one hour a day, put your phones away and interact with your kids: Share a meal or take it outside.

‘I want you to control your phone,’ Mills says. ‘Don’t let the phone control you. The brain, if it gets zapped 176 times a day, this is where we get burnout from.

“Kids need to be bored and go play. Our brains are simply not designed to be on tech. They’re designed to talk and walk, so psychologically, we’re kind of stunting the development.”

Coach Steve: American kids got a D- in physical activity. What can we do about it?

Teach youth athletes: social media ‘tanks’ performance

Mills prohibits athletes under her care from using their phones two hours before a game or practice and one hour before bedtime.

How do phones and social media impact performance?

“It just tanks it,” she says.

Within 30 seconds of scrolling, Mills says, our brains can automatically rewire what we think is an enjoyable experience to one that is negative.

“Social media makes us compare ourselves to everyone else online,” she says. “This is an automatic. It’s called a defense mechanism. So then all of a sudden we’re like, ‘I’m not fast enough, I’m not good enough, I’m not smart enough, my stats aren’t good enough. Why is his reel getting more likes than mine?’ It just starts this spiraling-out-of-control emotion that kids don’t have the stoppers for.”

She hears from athletes who tell her decreasing their phone time to less than two hours a day helps them train harder but also helps them be more social. School is also easier.

“Of course it is, because your cognitive processing is moving three times faster than it was last week,” Mills says. “A volleyball coach called me yesterday and said, ‘Larissa, I don’t know what you did, but they’re all really aggressive now.’

“When we increase confidence, aggression and fearlessness take over.”

‘I am power’: Teach youth athletes effective self-talk

Staying mentally strong gets trickier when we’re all alone on a golf course or sitting in a dugout. What goes through our minds before we take our next stroke or throw our next pitch can fuel our performance.

Use the time to plan your attack. Remember when you sunk that same putt in practice. Visualize yourself poking an outside pitch to right field for a hit or driving an inside one to the left-center field gap.

See yourself throwing all of your pitches to the exact locations you want them.

“Once they’re ready, these kids are killing that,” Mills says. “The kids that are on their phones in the dugout, they’ll just come right back out and make a mistake. Their brain will be very, very unsettled.”

We know even the slightest amount of success can elevate kids’ confidence. Mills has her athletes create personal mantras we can repeat to ourselves that elevate it: I am power, I am speed, I am impactful.

Have your younger kids, or your Little League team, say them out loud in practice. With repetition, it can become your cognitive flow while playing.

‘No one can get in my head’

In order for athletes to perform, they must stop negative self-talk. It starts with what they hear from parents on the sidelines.

When we sense negative thoughts creeping in – from a teammate trying to get an edge during tryouts or an opponent trying to rattle us in a game – we are the ones responsible for fending off those thoughts. Be intentional and forceful to yourself about it.

“No one can get in my head,” we can tell ourselves. “You guys stay the hell out of my head.”

Social media can manufacture negativity, even in NHL players.

“Why are you looking online after your games?” Mills sometimes has to tell her higher-level athletes. “You make $10 million a year. Don’t compare yourselves. And all these idiots out there that want to be you are judging you, and they have no place to judge you. The only person who should be looking at you for feedback is you and your coach. That’s it. The rest of the world does not matter.”

But what if our parents are the voice of those thoughts? About 60% of the kids that come to see Mills and her associates say their parents negatively impact their sport.

“I cannot believe the amount of parents coaching from the sidelines and have ruined their kids’ experience,” she says. “They can’t hear you, and if they do hear you, what you actually do is sabotage them.

“It makes them play much worse, because now their brain is in yellow in their traffic light, and they’re like, ‘Oh crap, mom and dad are really concerned if I perform.’ Our instincts to pass the ball, kick the ball, shoot the ball, if we follow (them), we’re more likely to perform better than if we think about what a coach or a parent wants us to do.”

When we yell at them, they shut down even further. Instead, stick to confidence boosts.

“Once parents hear this conversation, the relationship usually gets better between parent and child,” Mills says.

Coach Steve: Ranking the worst behaved youth sports parents

Mastering performance means mastering control of your emotions

Mills specializes in untethering and empowering teens who have spent more than 18,000 hours on their phones by age 16.

“More kids today are just not able to be coached because they have the attention span of six seconds,” she says. “They don’t know how to track, they don’t know how to get feedback. They think criticism and feedback are yelling. They are not. And coaches are having a problem. They can’t use the D-word or the C-word, which is discipline or consequences.”

Adopting a phone regime for your kid is the first step. Then, we need to encourage them to converse with others in real time. Have them talk to the center and forwards they may not know very well but line up next to on the ice. Have them shake the hand of an opponent or referee and strike up a conversation.  

Have them accept constructive criticism from the coach, even if you loudly disagree with it from the bleachers.

“There are always weaknesses in teams,” says Mills, who coaches volleyball. “Who are you going to get to go offline, or who you’re going to get to horse collar? Don’t give into baiting. You have to be mentally strong and be able to do and see all that. But many kids just get baited, and they don’t think about the team. And so, they get called on the penalty.”

As Mills says, we need to be aggressive as athletes, but we naturally are when we’re more calm.

When we control ourselves, we not only help our teammates, but we set personal boundaries that can carry us throughout life.

Jeff Nelligan, a father of three sons and author of a book on sports parenting who has been a guest on Mills’ podcast, says this is perhaps her most poignant lesson.

“She is like an evangelist in talking about developing youths who are steadfast in following through on anything,” he says, “ones who are courteous and respectful, who are leaders.”

(This story was updated to add new information.)

Steve Borelli, aka Coach Steve, has been an editor and writer with USA TODAY since 1999. He spent 10 years coaching his two sons’ baseball and basketball teams. He and his wife, Colleen, are now sports parents for two high schoolers. His column is posted weekly. For his past columns, click here.

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