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The 2025-26 Premier League season is nearly here, with the world’s most daunting soccer league readying to kick off a nine-month season in the near future.

Liverpool will enter the season hoping to repeat as champions after outlasting Arsenal and Manchester City last season. The title holders have spent big to bolster their squad, parting with a reported €220 million to sign midfielder Florian Wirtz and striker Hugo Ekitiké. Arsenal will hope some improved consistency is the key to taking the next step, while Man City is banking on key midfielder Rodri’s return from a torn ACL to carry them back to the top of the heap.

Chelsea is another club to watch, as the free-spending Blues used this summer to win the expanded Club World Cup. Manchester United, meanwhile, will simply be hoping for a more coherent, sturdy season after some big stumbles left their huge fanbase frustrated throughout the 2024-25 season.

Here’s what to know about the 2025-26 Premier League season, including start date, format, and how to watch every game:

Premier League 2025-26: When does season start?

The 2025-26 Premier League season will begin with defending champions Liverpool hosting Bournemouth on Friday, Aug. 15. Kickoff is scheduled for 3 p.m. ET at Anfield.

Saturday, Aug. 16 will feature five matches across the league, while three more will be played Sunday, Aug. 17. The first round of fixtures of the campaign will conclude with Leeds United hosting Everton on Monday, Aug. 18.

Premier League season format

For 2025-26, the Premier League has stuck to one of the most easy-to-understand formats in all of sports. There are 20 teams in the league, and a given team plays the other 19 once at home and once on the road. After everyone plays 38 games, the team with the most points (three for a win, one for a tie, zero for a loss) is crowned the champion. That’s it!

It gets a little more complicated when the subject moves to qualifying for European club competitions or relegation. Currently, the top four earn places in the 2026-27 UEFA Champions League, while fifth place qualifies for next season’s Europa League.

However, that is subject to change. If one of the top five teams in the standings also win the FA Cup (a knockout tournament that involves teams from all levels of English soccer) or the EFL Cup (a separate knockout tournament for teams from the top four professional divisions), the sixth-place finisher in the league will get into European competition.

This year is a perfect example of how things can change. Last year’s Europa League winner, Tottenham Hotspur, was granted a spot in this season’s Champions League, while UEFA granted England an extra place due to its coefficient rating (essentially, a measure of which league is the strongest).

As such, there are six Premier League teams in this year’s Champions League, which is the highest number of teams from one league to ever make it into what is widely seen as the world’s strongest club competition.

As for relegation, that’s more straightforward: If you finish in the bottom three, your team has to drop down into the second-tier Championship, which will send three teams up for the 2026-27 season.

How to watch Premier League 2025-26: TV channel, streaming

The entire Premier League schedule during the 2025-26 season will be available on the NBC family of networks.

While the exact broadcast schedule for the full season has not been settled, NBC will generally broadcast at least one game per weekend, while USA Network will usually carry two or more. The majority of the action throughout the season will be streamed on Peacock.

Watch the 2025-26 Premier League season on Peacock

USA TODAY Sports’ 48-page special edition commemorates 30 years of Major League Soccer, from its best players to key milestones and championship dynasties to what exciting steps are next with the World Cup ahead. Order your copy today!

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They’re that Toyota Prius in a parking lot full of Bentleys and Rolls-Royces.

They’re that ground chuck burger on a menu with tomahawk steaks and lobster tails.

They are the unwanted, the discarded, and the castoffs of Major League Baseball.

They are the Milwaukee Brewers.

“The island,’ Brewers reliever Grant Anderson tells USA TODAY Sports, “of misfit toys.’’

It was the moniker Brewers pitching coach Chris Hook placed on his staff, with Brewers manager Pat Murphy chiming in, saying his entire team, is “Just a bunch of average Joes.’

Well, these anonymous castoffs just may be the best darn team in all of baseball, tied with the Chicago Cubs for baseball’s best record, 60-41, while winning 35 of their last 48 games, including 11 of their last 12.

Yes, the Brewers, whose $124 million payroll is the seventh-smallest in baseball, and less than what the Los Angeles Dodgers are projected to pay in luxury tax penalties this year.

Yes, the Brewers, who don’t have a single player hitting .300, who has 20 homers, or whose WAR ranks higher than 60th in MLB.

Yes, the Brewers, who have only two players earning more than $10 million this season.

“No one knows who we are,’ Murphy says, “but we do. It’s like I told the reporters in LA. No disrespect to the great fans of Japan baseball, but they can’t name five players in our lineup.”

Well, hate to break the news to Murphy, but baseball fans right here in the good ol’ USA can’t name five Brewers players, either.

Sure, go ahead and try.

There’s former MVP and two-time batting champion Christian Yelich. There’s 21-year-old center field sensation Jackson Chourio. There’s two-time All-Star catcher William Contreras. There’s uh, well, that kid who throws 101mph on every pitch, what’s his name, Miz something?

Anyone else?

“We don’t get recognized anywhere,’ Brewers left fielder Isaac Collins says. “I mean, even in town, I think I’ve only been recognized once or twice. No one knows who we are.’

Well, considering they’re on pace to reach the postseason for the seventh time in the last eight years, with four NL Central Division titles, it’s about time everyone finds out.

“We’re going to start wearing ‘Power of Friendship’ T-shirts,’ All-Star closer Trevor Megill says, “then people can start recognizing who we are. I mean, people were freaking out last year when we won 93 games. Maybe they didn’t think we could do it again.’

The Brewers are reminding folks that even if you don’t wear Armani suits, Gucci shoes and David Yurman gold chains, all you need is a comfortable pair of spikes, a broken-in glove, the right bat, and the unselfish desire to play the game the right way to make the rich and famous wallowing in jealousy.

The Brewers have no power but, oh, do they play the game hard, they play it right, and they will beat your brains in playing small ball.

“We’re the little engine that could,’ Murphy says. “We have no pop. We have no slug. We don’t have a lot of things. But we have a lot of heart

“These guys are hungry.

“And it’s hard to be hungry when you’re full.’

The Brewers make up for their power deficit by putting the ball in play. They rarely strike out. They bunt. They hit-and-run. They play defense. They attack. Simply, they’re relentless.

“It’s nice for America to see that our brand of baseball works,’ Collins says. “You don’t have to live and die by the long ball. You just have to do all of the little things right.

“That’s all we’re doing, just being ourselves.’

And, poking a little of fun at themselves in the process.

When the Brewers signed a backup player for $1.35 million during the winter, Murphy sent Andrew Friedman, Dodgers president of baseball operations a note: ‘Hey Andy, sorry, but when you were signing Shohei Ohtani, [Yoshinobu] Yamamoto and Blake Snell, we stole this guy from you. Sorry about that.’

When players are traded to Milwaukee, GM Matt Arnold cracks, “You don’t get traded to the big leagues. You get traded to Milwaukee JUCO.’

And when you enter the Brewers clubhouse, you feel as if you’re walking into a movie set or a comedy club, with Murphy being called “Patches O’Houlihan,’ from the 2004 movie “Dodgeball.’

“That’s what we do here,’’ Murphy says. “We dodge, duck, dip, dive and dodge. We need to get those T-shirts made.’

This also is the place where you can be released, designated for assignment, traded or dumped, and come resurrect your career.

The Brewers will take your sick, your hungry, your weary, and even your ex-Colorado Rockies. The Brewers acquired reliever Nick Mears from the Rockies for two minor leaguers last July, and picked up Collins from the Rockies in 2022 in the Triple-A phase of the Rule 5 Draft.

Mears has since become one of their most reliable relievers, yielding a .200 batting average this season with a 0.86 WHIP – sixth among all relievers. Collins won the starting left field job and is hitting .269 with a .777 OPS.

“It seems like half the guys here have been DFA’d or come over in a trade,’ Mears says, “but once you get over here, you buy into the culture. There’s a hunger to win, especially coming from a bad team. You want to prove to yourself that you’re more than just a DFA guy.

Just imagine how first baseman Andrew Vaughn was feeling. The former first-round pick couldn’t even stick with the Chicago Sox. He was demoted and sent back to the minors for the first time since 2019. He was still languishing in the minors when Brewers veteran Aaron Civale asked to be traded, upset he was being taken out of the rotation for rookie sensation Jacob Misiorowski.

In less than 24 hours, Arnold was sending Civale to the White Sox for Vaughn. Vaughn returned to the minors but when first baseman Rhys Hoskins sprained a thumb ligament two weeks ago, he was summoned. Vaughn hit a three-run homer in his first at-bat with the Brewers, and never stopped, hitting .333 with two doubles, two homers, 12 RBI and a 1.071 OPS during an 11-game winning streak.

“It’s pretty special being here,’ Vaughn says. “You can see why they have so much success.’

There is starter Quinn Priester, given up by the Pittsburgh Pirates after being a first-round draft pick in 2019, and then the Boston Red Sox, who traded him April 7 to the Brewers. The Red Sox didn’t think he could help them, but the Brewers believed in his pedigree, and with a little tinkering of his arsenal, could be a force. You think the Red Sox could use him now?

Priester, who added a cut-fastball to his arsenal, is 8-2 with a 3.33 ERA. He pitched six shutout innings, yielding just three hits and striking out 10 without a walk in his last outing against the Dodgers.

“I remember as soon as I got traded here,’ Priester says, “I had a bunch of guys text me telling me how good this team is developing pitchers in the system, and they do such a great job. You look at how many of us came from different organizations and got better here.

“We’re not here to prove people wrong, but to just enjoy the camaraderie, with everyone buying in to do whatever it takes to win.’

There is Caleb Durbin, a Division III player at Washington University in St. Louis, who was traded twice in two years without spending a day in the big leagues. The Brewers scouts loved his fiery demeanor, playing almost with a chip on his shoulder, knowing his style perfectly fit Murphy’s mold. So, when the Brewers traded All Star closer Devin Williams to the Yankees, they made sure Durbin was in the deal along with veteran starter Nestor Cortes.

“I know we’re a small market team,’ Durbin says, “but we’re still a big-league team. We still have good baseball players. It’s just we’re overlooked because of our makeup.

“That’s OK. We know how good we are. If you’re not ready to scrap nine innings with us, at the end of the game, you’re going to be on the wrong end of it.’

Infielder Joey Ortiz came over from Baltimore in the Corbin Burnes trade along with pitcher DL Hall. He was their starting third baseman last season, is now a Gold Glove candidate at shortstop, reminding Arnold of former defensive whizzes Walt Weiss or Rey Ordonez.

Megill was an original Padre. Then a Cub. Then a Twin. And two years later, after being acquired by the Brewers for a player to be named later, Megill is now an All Star. He has 44 saves the last two years and became the Brewers’ full-time closer when the Brewers traded Williams.

“When we told him he made the All Star team,’ Arnold says, “he gave me a big hug. It was like hugging a Sequoia tree. He’s just a big moose. We thought he could handle the job, and he’s been great.’

Williams sensed he was gone last year after giving up that game-winning homer to Mets first baseman Pete Alonso in the Division series. It was a gut-wrenching end to the Brewers’ season, the last game beloved Hall of Fame broadcaster Bob Uecker called.

“That was as tough a loss as I’ve ever been part of,’ Arnold says. “But nobody said, ‘That’s it.’  We’ve been knocked down a lot of times here. We always get up.

“We have a standard here that we tried to hold ourselves to. We’re never going to make excuses where we are in the world being the smallest market in baseball. We believe in ourselves, but we just have to do it differently, try to be creative, and have guys that nobody heard of step up.’

It was really no different when the Brewers opened the season losing their first four games of the season by a combined score of 47-15, the biggest run differential in MLB history. They still were four games under .500 (21-25) six weeks into the season.

Then, a funny thing happened. The pitching staff, which opened the season with 11 of their top 16 pitchers injured, began to get healthy. Those cast-offs started gelling. And then, on May 25, they rallied from a 5-3 deficit in the eighth inning against the Pirates to win, 6-5.

They have since been baseball’s hottest team.

“We don’t have guys making $20 million a year,’ says Anderson, who’s on his third team after being designated for assignment last December by the Rangers, “like we did when I was in Texas. We don’t have four MVPs in the lineup like the Dodgers. We don’t have a lot of things.

“But we believe in each other. We know how to win games. And we have a lot of confidence.’

It’s proven to be quite the lethal combination

So, you may want to hurry up and get to know these Brewers’ names.

Come October, it could be quite handy.

The USA TODAY app gets you to the heart of the news — fastDownload for award-winning coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, the eNewspaper and more.

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At long last, Spain has a win over Germany in women’s soccer, with the defending World Cup champions advancing to the final of Euro 2025 after a 1-0 victory thanks to star Aitana Bonmatí’s extra-time goal.

A tense battle required 120 minutes, with Germany pouring every last bit of energy into defending against a Spanish side that controlled the ball for long spells. Despite coming into the game with multiple defenders injured or suspended, Germany seemed like they might have just enough to spring an upset over an opponent that has strolled through Euro 2025 without being seriously tested.

However, Bonmatí — who was hospitalized before the tournament with a case of viral meningitis — conjured up the game’s only goal in the 113th minute, producing a stunning turn before firing an angled shot that caught goalkeeper Ann-Katrin Berger by surprise.

‘We deserve it,’ Bonmatí told reporters after the game, per Reuters. ‘We’ve had a brutal championship. But we’ve also had a great tournament so far until today.’

Berger, who has been one of the best players at Euro 2025, took responsibility for the goal that ended Germany’s run.

‘The near post had to be covered, that’s clear, and that’s why I’m even more disappointed in myself,’ said the NJ/NY Gotham FC star. ‘I can make as many saves as I want, but that goal should have simply been mine, and that’s why I feel incredibly sorry, not even for myself, but for the team, because they really gave everything.’

Spain’s prize for winning is a trip to Sunday’s final in Basel, where England awaits in a rematch of the 2023 World Cup final.

Spain vs. Germany Euro 2025 highlights

Spain vs. Germany: Spain advances to Euro 2025 final

Don’t let the lack of goals fool you: that was one of the best games of Euro 2025, with Spain finally finding the solution against a remarkably dogged defensive performance from Germany.

Aitana Bonmatí’s clever goal on the turn in the 113th minute gave Spain a 1-0 win, with Germany simply not having any gas left in the tank to push for a comeback. Germany would have been favorites had it gone to penalties, but ultimately Spain did enough to deserve their place in Sunday’s final.

Speaking of: that game will be a rematch of the 2023 World Cup final, with Spain taking on England at St-Jakob Park in Basel. Kickoff is set for 12 p.m. ET, with Fox broadcasting the match.

Goal Spain! Aitana Bonmati strikes

Spain finally has the breakthrough, and it’s the multi-time Ballon d’Or winner Aitana Bonmatí breaking the deadlock in the 113th minute.

Bonmatí produced a stunning turn to surprise the German backline, but it looked for all the world like she would only have a chance to blindly fizz a low cross into the goalmouth and hope for someone to get a touch. However, the Barcelona superstar may have seen the tiniest opening at the near post, zipping what turned out to be a surprise shot past Ann-Katrin Berger.

Berger has been arguably the best player at Euro 2025, but being beaten near post is going to haunt her unless Germany can find a late goal.

Spain vs. Germany: 0-0 at halftime in extra time

Germany is hanging on by their collective fingertips, but they found just enough in the tank to keep Spain at bay through the first 15 minutes of extra time. Germany did have one attacking chance in the early seconds of this extra time period, but simply didn’t have enough energy to execute correctly.

Since then, it’s been all Spain, and head coach Christian Wück only has one substitution window left after being forced to remove Sophia Kleinherne due to what looked like two separate injuries incurred making a single tackle.

Spain vs. Germany: 0-0 at full time, extra time has begun

Spain and Germany are producing a classic in terms of tension, with the latter very nearly stealing a win in the final seconds of regulation. Cata Coll’s late reaction to a deflected shot was followed by an excellent save on the rebound, keeping Spain alive just before the full-time whistle.

The goalkeepers have made the biggest plays in this game, which despite a lack of goals has been played at a very high level. We’re looking at 30 more minutes of play.

Spain vs. Germany: Euro 2025 semifinal back underway

Germany has kicked off against Spain as the second half begins.

Neither team has made a substitution, though it looks like a few Germany players are putting their shinguards in to prepare for a serious warm-up. Given that Spain has had so much of the ball, it would make sense that German starters might start to run out of gas.

Spain vs. Germany: Euro 2025 semifinal scoreless at halftime

The first half of this semifinal has been poised on a knife edge, but Spain and Germany walk off with the score 0-0 at Stadion Letzigrund.

Spain has dominated the ball to an almost comical degree, seeing 78% possession, but Germany knew from kickoff that they would be playing to frustrate the World Cup champions before hitting back on the counter. Despite being short-handed at the back and seeing multiple players need treatment during the first half, Germany has created some really good looks, capitalizing on some lackluster spacing from Spain.

That said, Spain has created most of the danger, and Ann-Katrin Berger has once again had to perform at the absolute top of her game. La Roja have fired 12 shots, forcing Berger into five saves and seeing one Irene Paredes header slap off the post. None of Berger’s stops were better than a 21st-minute robbery of her NWSL teammate Esther González.

Spain vs. Germany: Euro 2025 semifinal kicks off

Spain gets this massive game going, with Germany immediately setting up in a compact 4-2-3-1 formation. Based on Germany’s defensive absences, we might see a lot of that dynamic as long as this game stays scoreless.

Spain vs. Germany time: Euro 2025 semifinal

The Euro 2025 semifinal between Spain and Germany kicks off at 3 p.m. ET on Wednesday.

How to watch Spain vs. Germany: TV channel, live stream

TV channel: Fox
Streaming: Fubo

Watch Spain vs. Germany on Fubo

Spain lineup

Spain is nearly at full strength, but they have had to replace defender Laia Alexandri (suspension) with María Méndez.

Elsewhere, look out for arguably the two players putting the best bids to claim the Player of the Tournament award, with NJ/NY Gotham FC’s Esther González leading the Golden Boot race and playmaker Alexia Putellas showing her best form in years.

Germany lineup

Germany is facing a difficult situation at the back, where injuries and suspensions have depleted head coach Christian Wück’s options. The good news is that Carlotta Wamser, who was suspended for Germany’s dramatic win over France, is back and has been reinserted into a starting role.

The bad news? Sarai Linder (ankle) is the latest player to succumb to injury, joining captain Giulia Gwinn (knee) on the sidelines. Meanwhile, center back Kathrin Hendrich and the versatile Sjoeke Nüsken are both suspended, leaving Germany with a makeshift defense against what is arguably the world’s most formidable attack.

Spain vs. Germany odds: Women’s Euro 2025

Odds via BetMGM

Regular time result: Germany +425 // Draw +350 // Spain -190
To advance: Germany +250 // Spain -375

Germany’s comeback win vs. France provides gameplan

Germany’s gritty win over France has given the team a template for how they should play for the rest of the tournament, defender Rebecca Knaak told reporters on Tuesday ahead of her side’s Women’s Euro semi-final against Spain in Zurich.

The Germans had a player sent off and conceded a penalty early on against the French, but recovered to draw 1-1 after extra time and win the quarter-final shootout, pitting the eight-times champions against Spain on Wednesday.

‘Really, it’s the perfect example for passion, strength, mental strength, all these things that are characteristics that we possess,’ defender Rebecca Knaak told a press conference.

‘Of course, on a tactical basis, we are prepared by the coach and the team, but the basic, fundamental characteristic has been built for the Spanish (game) in the French match.’ – Reuters

Spain ready to finally beat Germany

‘I think they are also another team, they have another coach, but Germany is Germany and they have eight European Championships,’ Spain coach Montse Tome said. ‘Their essence is the same, regardless of who is in charge, and we are very clear about the game we want to play tomorrow, how we want to condition it and where we want to take it.’

Spain won their three group stage games by a combined score of 14-3 before defeating a spirited Swiss side 2-0 in the quarter-finals.

‘My feelings are good, full confidence in what we are creating, in the mentality we have, in the game we have played throughout the European Championship,’ Spain midfielder Alexia Putellas said. ‘It will be a very tough game, like any semi-final of a major tournament, but with maximum enthusiasm and maximum motivation to move forward and make history once again.’ – Reuters

UEFA Women’s Euro champions

2022: England
2017: Netherlands
2013: Germany
2009: Germany
2005: Germany
2001: Germany
1997: Germany
1995: Germany
1993: Norway
1991: Germany
1989: West Germany
1987: Norway
1984: Sweden

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A House panel Wednesday voted in favor of subpoenaing former President Bill Clinton and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.

Rep. Scott Perry, R-Pa., offered a motion during a House Oversight Committee subcommittee hearing to call on Committee Chairman James Comer, R-Ky., to subpoena people with possible links to Ghislaine Maxwell, the imprisoned former associate of late pedophile Jeffrey Epstein.

‘I have a motion to subpoena the following individuals to expand the full committees investigation into Miss Maxwell – and the list reads as follows: William Jefferson Clinton, Hillary Diane Rodham Clinton, James Brian Comey, Loretta Elizabeth Lynch, Eric Hampton Holder, Jr., Merrick Brian Garland, Robert Swan Mueller III, William Pelham Barr, Jefferson Beauregard Sessions the third, and Alberto Gonzales. That’s the full list, Mr. Chairman. And that’s the motion,’ Perry said.

The motion passed by voice vote, meaning there was not an individual roll call.

The subpoenas would actually need to be issued by Comer to be active.

A House Oversight Committee aide told Fox News Digital, ‘The subpoenas will be issued in the near future.’

It comes after Rep. Summer Lee, D-Pa., a member of the progressive ‘Squad,’ pushed for a vote on her own motion to subpoena any files related to Epstein.

That motion passed in an 8-to-2 vote, also directing Comer to issue that subpoena.

Republican lawmakers have dealt with a barrage of media scrutiny on Epstein’s case over the last two weeks. It’s a side effect of the fallout over a recent Department of Justice (DOJ) memo effectively declaring the matter closed.

Figures on the far-right have hammered Trump officials like Attorney General Pam Bondi, accusing them of going back on earlier vows of transparency.

At Trump’s direction, the DOJ is moving to have grand jury files related to Epstein’s case unsealed. Bondi is looking into whether imprisoned former Epstein associate Ghislaine Maxwell will speak with federal authorities as well.

A House GOP-led motion directing Comer to subpoena Maxwell passed the House Oversight Committee unanimously on Tuesday, and Comer issued the subpoena the following day.

But Democrats have nonetheless seized on the Republican discord with newfound calls of their own for transparency in Epstein’s case. 

Wednesday’s hearing by the Oversight Committee’s subcommittee on federal law enforcement was unrelated to Epstein — but it’s part of a pattern of Democratic lawmakers in the House using any opportunity to force Republicans into an uncomfortable political position on the issue.

Rep. Andy Biggs, R-Ariz., another member of the subcommittee, successfully got Lee’s amendment altered to also call for the release of Biden administration communications related to Epstein.

Fox News Digital reached out to the Clinton Foundation for comment but did not immediately hear back.

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Corporations are continuing to spend on business travel, but are being strategic about how they allocate those dollars amid ongoing trade uncertainties, according to new reports from the travel and expense platform Navan and the Global Business Travel Association.

Corporate travel spending activity increased 15% year over year in the second quarter of 2025, according to a business travel index published Tuesday from Navan.

Navan’s index, backed by Nasdaq, is derived from millions of corporate business transactions on its platform. It examines the amount spent and number of transactions relating to airline travel, hotel reservations and expense transactions from corporate cards.

Amy Butte, Navan’s CFO, said during an interview that from talking with other chief financial officers over the past few months, she never got the sense that corporate leaders would stop spending on business travel altogether. Instead, they are in “wait and see” mode.

“If you’re making choices about where you’re being cautious, we’re not seeing people be cautious in the area of relationship building, either with their customers or with their teammates. We’re still seeing the spend allocated towards travel as a key component of any business strategy,” Butte said.

But while global business travel is expected to reach a new high of $1.57 trillion in 2025, according to a Monday report by the Global Business Travel Association, that total represents 6.6% year-over-year growth, which is less than the 10.4% increase that was previously predicted. GBTA cited trade tensions, policy uncertainty and economic pressures as the reasons for the more moderate growth.

A string of sentiment polls by GBTA also shows that corporate travel optimism for the rest of 2025 appears muted. The percentage of respondents who said they were optimistic about the overall outlook for the business travel industry in 2025 dropped sharply from 67% in November 2024 to 31% in April and declined slightly again this month to 28%.

The findings from both reports, grouped together with commentary from airline CEOs last week, show C-suite leaders are still largely left in wait-and-see mode amid President Donald Trump’s fluid tariff policies, but companies appear now to have a better read on how they will manage the uncertainty.

“Historically, corporate travel has been the first thing, one of the easiest things, to minimize if you’re a company,” Delta Air Lines CEO Ed Bastian said during the company’s earnings call this month, adding that corporate travel on the airline has been flat on a year-over-year basis.

But Butte said that Navan has not seen a drop-off in business travel. Instead, businesses are shifting how they are spending.

For example, Butte said businesses are continuing to commit to individual, face-to-face meetings, rather than spending on large group outings. The Navan index shows that spending on personal meals, meaning one-on-one meetings held over a meal, was up 9.8% from last year, while spending on team events and meals was the only category in the report that declined.

Navan did see some compression earlier in the year in the share of higher-priced airline tickets purchased that were first class or business class, Butte said, but she added that the platform has since seen an acceleration as uncertainty has lessened.

Airfare prices have also declined so far this year, which means business and consumers alike are spending less on plane tickets. Airfare fell 3.5% in June from a year earlier while inflation overall rose, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

GBTA CEO Suzanne Neufang said during an interview that CFOs have not cut travel spending off entirely, but are looking for efficient ways to get employees on the road. This may look like booking multicity trips, scheduling multiple meetings per trip or booking fewer trips per month, she said.

Neufang said the business travel industry has been focused over the past five years on making sure every trip has a purpose and delivers a return on investment.

“Gone are the days when there’s really frivolous business traveling,” Neufang said.

The new findings on business travel spending also come as airlines are reporting their quarterly earnings.

When Delta reported earnings on July 10, Bastian said he expects both consumer and corporate confidence to improve in the second half of the year, creating an environment for travel demand to accelerate.

Delta and other airlines saw travel demand come in weaker than expected at the beginning of the year, especially from price-sensitive customers traveling domestically. Bastian said back in April that Trump’s trade policies were hurting bookings.

Bastian took a more positive tone this month, telling CNBC that corporate travel has stabilized as businesses have more clarity and confidence than they did earlier this year. But he said corporate travel is in line with last year, not the 5% to 10% growth Delta expected at the start of the year.

Meanwhile, Delta President Glen Hauenstein said on an earnings call this month that corporate travel trends are “choppy” and overall corporate volumes are expected to be “flattish” over last year.

United Airlines reported earnings last week. CEO Scott Kirby said during the company’s call with analysts that so far this month, the airline has seen a double-digit acceleration in business demand as uncertainty has declined.

Andrew Nocella, United’s executive vice president and chief commercial officer, added that the business traffic growth is “across the board” and not restricted to any singular hub or vertical, which he said reflects lessening macroeconomic uncertainty.

Southwest Airlines, Alaska Airlines and American Airlines are scheduled to report their quarterly results this week.

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WASHINGTON — Bleach maker Clorox said Tuesday that it has sued information technology provider Cognizant over a devastating 2023 cyberattack, alleging that the hackers pulled off the intrusion simply by asking the tech company’s staff for employees’ passwords.

Clorox was one of several major companies hit in August 2023 by the hacking group dubbed Scattered Spider, which specializes in tricking IT help desks into handing over credentials and then using that access to lock them up for ransom. The group is often described as unusually sophisticated and persistent, but in a case filed in California state court on Tuesday, Clorox said one of Scattered Spider’s hackers was able to repeatedly steal employees’ passwords simply by asking for them.

“Cognizant was not duped by any elaborate ploy or sophisticated hacking techniques,” according to a copy of the lawsuit reviewed by Reuters. “The cybercriminal just called the Cognizant Service Desk, asked for credentials to access Clorox’s network, and Cognizant handed the credentials right over.”

Cognizant did not immediately return a message seeking comment on the suit, which was not immediately visible on the public docket of the Superior Court of Alameda County. Clorox provided Reuters with a receipt for the lawsuit from the court.

Three partial transcripts included in the lawsuit allegedly show conversations between the hacker and Cognizant support staff in which the intruder asks to have passwords reset and the support staff complies without verifying who they are talking to, for example by quizzing them on their employee identification number or their manager’s name.

“I don’t have a password, so I can’t connect,” the hacker says in one call. The agent replies, “Oh, ok. Ok. So let me provide the password to you ok?”

The 2023 hack caused $380 million in damages, Clorox said in the suit, about $50 million of which were tied to remedial costs and the rest of which were attributable to Clorox’s inability to ship products to retailers in the wake of the hack.

Clorox said the clean-up was hampered by other failures by Cognizant’s staff, including failure to de-activate certain accounts or properly restore data.

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The biggest star in Major League Soccer won’t play in the All-Star Game.

Lionel Messi will skip the festivities for the second straight year. Messi and Inter Miami’s Jordi Alba did not travel to Austin, Texas, with MLS releasing an updated All-Star roster before the match.

The 2025 MLS All-Star Game will be played Wednesday, July 23 at 9 p.m. ET (MLS Season Pass on Apple TV), with the MLS All-Stars facing off against standouts from Mexico’s LIGA MX at Q2 Stadium in Austin, Texas.

It’s unclear whether Messi or Alba would miss Inter Miami’s next match against first-place FC Cincinnati on Saturday, July 26, due to a MLS rule that stipulates players who miss the All-Star Game must sit in their next match. That decision could come later this week.

MLS commissioner Don Garber will address the media during a press conference before the match, where he will likely be asked about Messi’s absence.

“Messi has been such an incredible part of the MLS story the last couple of years and playing so well. It’s just been a gift to have the best player in the world in Major League Soccer,” MLS commissioner Garber told USA TODAY Sports on Friday, July 11.

Messi, 38, is the reigning MLS MVP and the oldest player named to the MLS All-Star roster. But his considerable workload this season certainly warrants some time off.

Since April 2, Messi has played every minute in 22 of 23 matches for Inter Miami across all competitions – the MLS regular season, the Concacaf Champions Cup tournament and the FIFA Club World Cup. The Argentine World Cup champion has logged well over 2,000 minutes during that span. His last match off was April 30 when Inter Miami lost 4-3 at home to FC Dallas.

Messi has also been dynamic during a recent stretch of matches: He has scored two goals in six of his last seven MLS regular-season games, including a five-game streak to set an MLS record. Messi scored two goals with two assists (one of the hockey variety), in his last match against the New York Red Bulls on July 19.

Jordi Alba, who was also named an All-Star for the second straight season and played in the exhibition last year, has started the last six matches for Inter Miami. He was substituted off in the 85th minute against the Red Bulls.

“The players are called up, I would like them to be able to rest but that is not my decision,” Inter Miami coach Javier Mascherano said of Messi and Alba before the Red Bulls match. “I know how important the All Star [Game] is, and as far as I know there is no decision from the club, everything is as normal.”

Along with Messi’s recent scoring stretch, he helped Inter Miami make history at the Club World Cup before being eliminated by Champions League winners Paris Saint-Germain in the Round of 16.

Messi’s free-kick goal against Portuguese side FC Porto delivered the first win for a North American team against a European club in a major international competition. Inter Miami finished as a runner-up in their group, while LAFC and Seattle Sounders were eliminated before the knockout stage.

Messi and Inter Miami return to regular-season action on Saturday at home against FC Cincinnati, which beat them 3-0 on July 16. After the match, MLS and LIGA MX clubs will begin the 2025 Leagues Cup tournament.

Inter Miami will host Atlas FC on July 30, Club Necaxa on Aug. 2 and Pumas UNAM on Aug. 6 in the first phase of Leagues Cup, which they won in 2023. Messi missed the 2024 MLS All-Star Game in Columbus, Ohio due to his Copa America ankle injury, which caused him to miss two months after the tournament.

USA TODAY Sports’ 48-page special edition commemorates 30 years of Major League Soccer, from its best players to key milestones and championship dynasties to what exciting steps are next with the World Cup ahead. Order your copy today!

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Two U.S. House of Representatives committees on Wednesday, July 23 advanced a bill that would establish a variety of national rules concerning how college sports operate, making this the most comprehensive measure connected to the industry set to reach the chamber’s floor in decades.

After considering nearly a dozen amendments, the Energy and Commerce Committee ultimately voted 30-23 to send the bill to the House floor. It was a straight party line vote in which one vote was not recorded.

The Education and Workforce Committee also signed off on the bill later in the afternoon by a narrower margin of 18-17, with Rep. Michael Baumgartner, R-Wash., joining all of the Democrats in opposition. In a brief moment of drama, the tally was deadlocked at 17 for several seconds before Rep. Michael Rulli, R-Ohio, cast the deciding vote.

Barring last-minute intervention from another committee, the bill could receive a vote in September, perhaps within the first two weeks after the House is scheduled to return Sept. 2 from a summer recess that is expected to begin at the close of business July 23.

‘Hopefully between now and in September we can work to get some more Democrat support,’ said Rep. Brett Guthrie, R-Kentucky, who chairs the Energy and Commerce Committee. ‘… We feel like we have reached out and we have put their positions in and I’m not sure why we can’t quite get their support. But I hope people are going to go home, and I’m sure the universities who support this measure are going to talk to them.’

Guthrie said the Southeastern Conference and Big Ten have ‘always put big pressure to try to move this forward’ and expressed hope that schools from those conferences could help convince Democrats to get on board.

If the bill moves to the Senate, its future will remain uncertain, as 60 votes will be needed to prevent a filibuster. So, even if all 53 Republican members back the measure — which so far has received bipartisan support and opposition in the House — seven Democrats also will have to approve.

‘From the partners that I’ve talked to, this is not going to have a future in the Senate’ without changes, Rep. Lori Trahan, D-Mass., told USA TODAY Sports while walking to her office Wednesday for what she said was a meeting with NCAA president Charlie Baker.

Dubbed the SCORE Act (Student Compensation And Opportunity Through Rights and Endorsements), the bill includes antitrust-exemption language that specifically would allow the NCAA, and potentially the new College Sports Commission, to make operational rules affecting schools and athletes in areas that have come into legal dispute in recent years. That would include rules about transfers and the number of seasons for which athletes can compete.

It also would prevent college athletes from being employees of their schools, conferences or an athletic association. The employment issue is the subject of an ongoing lawsuit in a federal district court in Pennsylvania.

In addition, the bill also would codify college athletes’ name-image-and-likeness activities, basically following the terms of the recent settlement of three athlete-compensation antitrust cases against the NCAA and the Power Five conferences. And it would require most Division I schools to provide a series of health and educational benefits for athletes that are currently called for under NCAA and some conferences’ rules, but do not have the force of federal law.

While proponents of the bill have argued that it will help put important guardrails in place for college sports, critics have expressed concern that the legislation hands too much power to the NCAA.

‘We’re not giving everything away to commissioners and to the NCAA, with nothing in exchange for athletes,’ said Trahan, a former college athlete who has been critical of the bill.

There have also been long-standing concerns about what the bill could mean for women’s sports and Title IX, the federal law that prohibits discrimination based on sex.

The revised version of the bill passed by the Education and Workforce Committee added a brief reference to Title IX, but it did not go far enough for lawmakers like Rep. Baumgartner. He said he supports federal regulation of college sports but believes a system that pays male and female athletes differently, based on television revenue, ‘is just not in the public good.’

‘If you do not specifically address Title IX in this bill, it will not resolve the underlying issues,’ he said. ‘Not only will this system exacerbate this slide towards a second NFL, but it will continue to be in the courts.’

Without further changes in the bill, Senate approval seems unlikely. House Democrats have mostly opposed the bill and longstanding negotiations between Ted Cruz, R-Texas, a college-sports bill proponent who now chairs the Senate Commerce Committee, and Democratic senators, including Cory Booker, N.J., and Richard Blumenthal, Conn., remain stalled.

However, as approved on July 23, the bill included a number of changes from the version that was advanced by a House Energy and Commerce subcommittee by a 12-11, party-line vote on July 15. The changes appeared designed to make the bill more attractive to Democrats.

Among those are:

Mandates that would apply to NCAA’s — and potentially the College Sports Commission’s — governance structures. It includes requirements concerning the involvement of athletes and schools outside the Power Four conferences.

It also would require the NCAA, and potentially the CSC, to “establish a council to serve as the primary deliberative body” that is “composed of individuals who represent each conference that is a member” of the association. No such group currently exists within the NCAA, which comprises three competitive divisions. And changes to Division I’s governance setup that are being discussed by those schools aim to reduce the size of its Board of Directors and a secondary policy-making group.

Requiring future studies on several college sports topics by the schools, the Federal Trade Commission and the U.S. Comptroller General. These would seem to combine to cover ground contemplated by a college sports commission President Donald Trump had been considering.

The schools would be required to report within 180 days of enactment and then, every two years, on issues relating to compliance with the SCORE Act and “recommendations to improve the health, safety and educational opportunities of student athletes.”

The FTC would have to study the possibility of establishing an independent entity to address certification and regulation of agents who represent college athletes. The Comptroller General would have to conduct a study within two years of enactment covering the impact of the SCORE Act on schools’ Olympic sports programs, “including the funding of Olympic Sports” and to ‘develop recommendations for support of Olympic Sports, given the unique nature of Olympic Sports and intercollegiate athletics’ in the U.S. It also have to analyze “trends with respect to roster sizes for Olympic Sports,” especially at Power Four schools.

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Tight end Jimmy Graham will officially retire from the NFL as a member of the New Orleans Saints.

The five-time Pro Bowler announced his official retirement via the Saints’ team website on Tuesday.

‘During the season at some point I’m going to be in New Orleans to retire, to do that the right way, in front of the people I love and the people I care about,’ Graham said Tuesday via the Saints.

Graham, 38, played one more year for the Saints – the team that originally drafted him in 2010 – in 2023 after previously sitting out the 2022 season. He also did not play in 2024.

Graham was one of two notable Saints veterans to announce his retirement Tuesday. Safety Tyrann Mathieu, who played the last three seasons of his 12-year career in New Orleans, also said he was calling it a career.

All told, Graham played 13 seasons in the NFL for four teams: five initial years with the Saints, three with the Seahawks, two with the Packers, two with the Bears, then one more with the Saints. Along with his five Pro Bowl appearances, Graham was named to the All-Pro first team in 2013, the year he led the NFL in receiving touchdowns (16).

Shortly before officially announcing his retirement, Graham completed a 10-day rowing journey across the span of the Arctic Ocean – a trip of more than 670 miles (and 580 nautical miles). With their official time of 10 days and five hours, Graham and his three fellow crewmembers broke the record for the ‘Arctic Challenge’ by more than five days, according to the challenge website.

Jimmy Graham stats

Graham played 13 seasons in the NFL, the first five of which he played as one of the best tight ends in the league.

Here are the stats from his career:

Games played: 197 (134 starts)
Receptions: 719
Receiving yards: 8,545
Yards per reception: 11.9
Receiving touchdowns: 89

Jimmy Graham contract

Graham hasn’t played in the NFL since 2023, but here are the details for his last NFL contract from that season:

Length: One year
Value: $1.32 million

Jimmy Graham net worth

While there aren’t reputable sources available for Graham’s total net worth, Spotrac has details on the tight end’s career earnings in 13 seasons as a player.

Total earnings: $82,871,200 (Average: 6,374,708 per year)

Earnings from New Orleans Saints (six years): $17,570,640 ($2.93 million per year)
Earnings from Seattle Seahawks (three years): $27,011,031 ($9.00 million per year)
Earnings from Green Bay Packers (two years): $22,250,000 ($11.13 million per year)
Earnings from Chicago Bears (two years): $16,039,529 ($8.02 million per year)

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LAS VEGAS — The Big Ten and SEC control the future of the College Football Playoff. 

The Big Ten and the SEC can’t agree on anything.

Which tracks about just how you think it would in Sin City, driving directly into the theater of the absurd.

“I’m not going to put any deadline on it,” Big Ten commissioner Tony Petitti said Tuesday of negotiations for the new CFP format, while opening Big Ten Media Days at Mandalay Bay Resort. 

I know this is going to shock you, but SEC commissioner Greg Sankey made it clear last week during SEC Media Days that, “We have a deadline of Dec. 1.”

Just when you thought the great College Football Playoff format debate couldn’t devolve to more ridiculous levels, Indiana coach Curt Cignetti entered the chat and changed everything. 

Forget about the Big Ten and its desired 16-team format that focuses on automatic qualifiers (four each for the Big Ten and SEC) and the need for CFP play-in games during championship week. 

Forget about the SEC and its desire for 11 at-large selections of the 16, based heavily on strength of schedule.

Cignetti wants everyone to know that the CFP selection committee has too much power in the process. The very committee that last year selected his 11-win team – with one win against a team with a winning record – to the exclusive party.  

The same guy who, when asked Tuesday about Indiana dropping a non-conference game against big, bad Virginia for a Championship Subdivision directional school, responded with, “We figured we’d just adopt the SEC scheduling philosophy.”   

I swear I’m not making this up.

SCHEDULE DEBATE: Indiana coach fires hot at SEC after dropping Virginia

But at this point, nothing should be surprising in this ever-more-absurd cock walk. Each ego-driven, billion dollar conference trying to exert power over the other, in a blatantly awkward swinging dictator contest.  

The Big Ten doesn’t want to be seen as the SEC’s little brother. The SEC doesn’t want to be pushed into a corner, and bend the knee to the conference it has dominated on the field for decades. 

Sankey touted the SEC’s historical strength of schedule in defense of 11 at-large selections. Winning 14 national titles since 2000 doesn’t hurt, either.

Petitti responded by declaring the Big Ten played in eight of the 11 CFP games in 2024, had the four most viewed television games on the season and seven of the top 10. 

Then he dropped the ultimate ‘scoreboard’ hammer: “We just stand by what we do in the Big Ten. I think the national results have shown the last couple of seasons.”

Translation: the Big Ten has won the last two national titles. The SEC has done … what exactly?

There’s nothing logical about this public spat, nothing tangible that can be easily negotiated with clear minds or paid off with more money — which a 16-team CFP most certainly brings. This is about superiority and inferiority, and where the SEC and Big Ten fit. 

No matter the collateral damage. 

Imagine you’re Rich Clark, executive director of the College Football Playoff. A distinguished 38-year career in the Air Force, retired as a Lieutenant General — the second-highest general officer rank. 

You’re minding your own business at Big Ten media days, sitting quietly in the back of the large ballroom when some newbie who just picked up his first power conference coaching job starts throwing darts at your committee.

A committee the SEC and Big Ten played a critical role in creating and developing, and growing into the singular, insular monster it has become.

So I asked this titan of service to his country, and frankly, to the Big Ten and SEC and every other college football conference, what it was like to watch Cignetti kneecap his committee. Was it difficult to watch?

“Yeah,” Clark said, smiling wide — and then he stopped himself. Because like all military personnel, he knows there’s oder and there’s consequences for going outside it. 

“The committee selected Indiana,” Clark continued, “And I think it was the right decision, too.”

Would you look at that, a lesson in swallowing ego and pride for the greater good. 

No swinging dictators necessary. 

Matt Hayes is the senior national college football writer for USA TODAY Sports Network. Follow him on X at @MattHayesCFB.

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