Archive

2025

Browsing

ATLANTA – It can be a dizzying climb: Star amateur player to draft day to prospect list and, just like that, the major leagues.

For the dozens of participants in Major League Baseball’s Futures Game, a weekend spent immersed with fellow elite prospects can offer a moment’s perspective on how far they’ve come.

Yet for those who have climbed to Class AA or AAA, who have reached the “just a phone call away” of the developmental program, it brings the whirlwind right back – and the promise of what may be around the corner.

“I’m surrounded by and playing with the best minor league players in every organization right now,” Toronto Blue Jays Class AAA right-hander Trey Yesavage tells USA TODAY Sports on July 12.

“It goes to show I’m just as close as every one of these guys and it’s great to be here.”

With the second half looming and both pennant races and the trade deadline tempting teams to scuttle best-laid plans and bring the minors’ best to the big leagues, USA TODAY Sports checks in with four rising stars on the doorstep to the big leagues:

JJ Wetherholt, infielder, St. Louis Cardinals: A speedy rise

It’s been just a year since Wetherholt donned a Western fit and shook commissioner Rob Manfred’s hand as the seventh overall pick in the 2024 draft, and just a week since he got promoted from Class AA Springfield to AAA Memphis.

Yet there are multiple forces that make Wetherholt an intriguing candidate for a St. Louis summons: He’s tearing up the minor leagues, is unstoppable on the basepaths – and the Cardinals have defied all expectations of what 2025 would look like by hanging in the playoff race.

While Wetherholt is a shortstop by trade and the Cardinals have Masyn Winn entrenched there, he could easily slide to second or third base. And, above all, his speed brings an element any contender could use.

While Wetherholt has just 16 steals in his 94-game pro career, he’s only been caught twice, an elite 88.9% success rate. That’s even better than his college exploits at West Virginia University, where he stole 57 bags in 73 tries.

“Really, it just comes down to trusting my legs,” says Wetherholt. “It’s going to come down to the pitcher’s time and the catcher’s time. If I see the catcher’s pop time and the pitcher’s time (delivering to home) is something that makes me realize I can get a good jump and steal, I’m all over it. I’m going to trust it.

“If I play the calculations right, I should be safe every time.”

He’s in the right organization, from a heritage standpoint. The Cardinals have long thrived on speed, from current center fielder Victor Scott all the way back to their go-go teams from the 1980s, many of whom have befriended Wetherholt.

Hall of Famer Ozzie Smith has struck up a particular friendship.

“They keep you humble, because you got to see what they do and you see how humble they are, it’s just ridiculous,” says Wetherholt.

“Ozzie Smith is the nicest dude ever. He was so excited to meet me and I was like, ‘Dude, I’m shaking right now.’ It’s awesome.”

Wetherholt may not follow directly in Ozzie’s footsteps and to that point, he’s willing to embrace the versatility that’s both a hallmark of the current Cardinals roster and an increasing necessity in today’s game.

Whatever gets him from Memphis to St. Louis.

“Obviously, my focus has been the middle of the infield. That’s where they see me long term,” he says. “For me, I’m a competitor. A lot of people talk about my bat and I hope that excels. Defensively, I’m going to work my butt off to be good wherever that may be.

“But I’m definitely open to anything.”

Harry Ford, catcher, Seattle Mariners: Third time’s the charm?

At least Harry Ford has home-field advantage this time.

The Futures Game is typically both rite of passage and waystation, but Ford is playing in the midsummer mini-classic for a third time, for a couple of reasons.

First, he was a very precocious prospect once the Mariners drafted him 12th overall in 2021. And now, he’s blocked from a big league job by perhaps the greatest story in baseball this year: Cal Raleigh.

Yet Ford, 22, is staying sanguine about it. Born in Atlanta, he attended high school at North Cobb, about 20 miles from Truist Park. He secured 22 Futures Game tickets for friends and family.

His big league time will come, the clock ticking only a bit faster when the Mariners summoned him to Texas last month for a night on the taxi squad, in case backup Mitch Garver couldn’t go.

The debut wasn’t to be, and with Raleigh slugging an otherworldly 38 home runs before the All-Star break, a full-time job isn’t in the offing. But Ford is strafing Class AAA pitching. His time is coming, even if it requires a trade from Seattle if they see a greater need to fill to maintain their positioning, one-half game out of a playoff spot.

“I try my best to stay where I’m at,” says Ford. “You know, something that I lean on the most is a proverb, and it says the king’s heart is in the hand of Lord, he guides it like a stream of water. He guides it wherever he pleases.

“And so I’m just like, you know what? My career in God’s hands and I just let it let it be where he decides it to go.”

Right now, it’s running roughshod over the Pacific Coast League. Ford is slashing .292/.409/.446 at Tacoma, his .854 OPS 109 points better than his Class AA mark. Ford is doing just fine.

“I’m only 22. I’ve got a lot of time to grow. Just continue to grow, continue to get wisdom,” he says.

“I mean, it’s not too many 22-year-olds at AAA. So sometimes, it’s nice to take a step back and see that. Proud of what I’ve been so far.”

Carson Whisenhunt, left-hander, San Francisco Giants: Bustin’ loose

The biggest jolt from baseball’s first half was felt all the way in Sacramento, a couple hours east from where Rafael Devers touched down as a San Francisco Giant in a blockbuster trade with the Boston Red Sox.

Headed east in that deal: Kyle Harrison, a valued young lefty who’d flashed potential in bouncing from Class AAA and the Giants. And suddenly, Carson Whisenhunt found him a little closer to the front of the line.

“We all were kind of stunned on that one,” says Whisenhunt, a second-round pick in 2022 out of East Carolina. “Nobody really knew what to expect once that happened, but everything happens for a reason and we got Devers out of it. And hopefully he helps the team up there and we go from there.”

It might not be long before Whisenhunt’s that guy helping the big club.

He impressed in big league spring training and, for now, is sporting a 4.50 ERA – a quality start, essentially – at Sacramento while hoping to follow the example of two of his close friends.

Landen Roupp and Hayden Birdsong have graduated to San Francisco, mainstays in the Giants rotation and, in Roupp’s case, an indispensable cog with a 3.39 ERA in 18 starts. Birdsong has not met as much success, but has very high-end stuff.

Whisenhunt has been taking notes, learning and listening.

“It’s a great path to follow,” says Whisenhunt. “They’re both throwing really well. Roupp’s had a great year. Birdy’s struggled a little bit but he has great stuff; nobody’s worried about what he can do on the field.

“I’m close with Birdy and Roupp. I pick their brains on what’s going on, what’s working and not working, take little bits and pieces of it and apply to myself.”

That usually starts with featuring his changeup, a beguiling offering that lands in the low 80s and plays nicely off a fastball that touches the mid-90s. Above all Whisenhunt is developing a better feel for his pitches, a development he credits to changes made by new club president Buster Posey loosening the reins just a bit on the young starters.

“It’s definitely different this year, especially with Posey overtaking everything,” says Whisenhunt. “Last year we were on a restriction of how many innings, how many pitches per outing. This year, there’s still a limit, but the limit is a lot higher.

“It’s trying to get us extended – the guys that do get called up ready to  compete once their name’s called.”

That time draws increasingly nearer for Whisenhunt.

Trey Yesavage, right-hander, Toronto Blue Jays: Full-time gig

It’s not that Trey Yesavage did not take his academic pursuits seriously at East Carolina University. It’s just that, one year since Toronto plucked him out of Greenville with the 20th overall pick a year ago, he’s feeling a nice boost when his first and only job is baseball.

“I’ve definitely gotten stronger, I’ll tell you that,” says Yesavage. “I’ve built a good foundation and my body’s feeling amazing because of it.”

He’s getting a pretty good workout from the figurative steps he’s climbing: Seven starts at Class A Dunedin, four more at high-A Vancouver and now five more at AA New Hampshire. Yesavage dominated the younger competition in Florida, striking out 55 in just three innings, and posted a WHIP of less than 1 in both of his A ball outposts.

The going has gotten more challenging at Class AA – he has 23 strikeouts and 11 walks in 17 innings over five starts – but the growth is real.

“I can say that I’ve become more of a pitchability guy, throwing pitches in any count I want, and it’s been a big help for my career,” says Yesavage. “Not having distractions but being able to focus on one task and hone in on that.”

Yesavage’s employers have been the hottest team in the AL East for more than a month, and lead the division by 2 ½ games. Yesavage’s steps would have to become leaps to earn a summons for the playoff push, but he’s methodically passed every other hurdle so far.

“You’re obviously going to have that main goal of making it to the big leagues and having a long career there. You also have to remember the milestones along the way, what’s going to help you get there,” he says. “If you’re worried about two months in advance, the game in front of you is not going to go good and that’s going to set you back from your main goal.”

Brody Hopkins, right-hander, Tampa Bay Rays: A new home

For many of the Futures Games participants, it was easy to get star-struck by members of their coaching staff, a Braves-centric group featuring Hall of Famer Chipper Jones and Fred McGriff, among others.

For Brody Hopkins, it was a little startling to see the company he can now call peers.

“I would say it feels a little more real, and I would say coming here makes it feel even more realer, if that’s a word,” says Hopkins, a Tampa Bay Rays right-hander. “Being here, looking around, it’s crazy. I couldn’t have told you two years ago that this was where I’d be. I’m just trying to soak it all in, take as many pictures as I can, talk to as many people as I can.

“You only get this moment once.”

This is just Hopkins’ second season as a full-time pitcher, as he dabbled in the outfield both at Winthrop and in the Seattle and Tampa Bay organizations.

But his career took a turn when he was a key piece of the trade that sent All-Star outfielder Randy Arozarena from Tampa Bay to Seattle, one year after the Mariners selected him in the sixth round.

“They just instill confidence in me, tell me to be an athlete and let my athleticism take over,” says Hopkins of Tampa Bay. “Kind of just tell me to trust my stuff, throw everything down the middle, make it presentable and let my (pitch) shapes do what they do.

“I was traded early, but I feel like the Rays are my home.”

They’re doing pretty well so far. Hopkins has struck out 98 in 80 innings at Class AA Montgomery, his 3.35 ERA not much worse than the 3.05 mark he posted at two A ball stops in 2024.

His fastball sits in the mid-90s and he possesses a slider that’s a wipeout offering to right-handers. Hopkins still profiles as a starter, but that two-pitch arsenal alone could make him an attractive option for an earlier trip to Tampa Bay, with the Rays once again in playoff position.

“I’m not going to say I’m going to get there tomorrow,” says Thorpe. “I’m not going to say I’ll be there in two years.

“But it could be somewhere in between there and when that day happens, it’s going to be pretty exciting.”

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Attorney General Pam Bondi, FBI Director Kash Patel and Deputy FBI Director Dan Bongino all called for Jeffrey Epstein’s sex-trafficking secrets to be made public long before the DOJ’s stunning about-face last week.

‘This systemic review revealed no incriminating ‘client list,’’ read a joint memo leaked to Axios a week ago. ‘There was also no credible evidence found that Epstein blackmailed prominent individuals as part of his actions. We did not uncover evidence that could predicate an investigation against uncharged third parties.’ 

The revelation shocked many MAGA Republicans and Trump supporters, who had for years believed that Epstein was at the heart of a child sex trafficking ring that involved blackmailing prominent movers and shakers worldwide. Many also doubt the government’s finding that Epstein died by his own hand in New York’s Metropolitan Correctional Center in 2019.

Trump has since brushed off the Epstein investigation as old news, slamming a reporter who asked about Epstein during a Cabinet meeting last week, and posting a Truth Social message on Saturday defending Bondi for her leadership over the case and claiming that Epstein is ‘somebody that nobody cares about.’

‘LET PAM BONDI DO HER JOB — SHE’S GREAT! The 2020 Election was Rigged and Stolen, and they tried to do the same thing in 2024 — That’s what she is looking into as AG, and much more,’ Trump wrote in a lengthy Truth Social post defending Bondi. ‘One year ago our Country was DEAD, now it’s the ‘HOTTEST’ Country anywhere in the World. Let’s keep it that way, and not waste Time and Energy on Jeffrey Epstein, somebody that nobody cares about.’

As MAGA supporters continue calling for details on Epstein’s crimes and alleged ties to the world’s elite, Fox News Digital took a look back at what Bondi, Patel and Bongino had to say about Epstein before the anticlimactic memo dropped. 

AG PAM BONDI 

Just a couple of weeks after Bondi was sworn in as the nation’s 87th attorney general on Feb. 5, she joined Fox News Channel and touted her mission of transparency, most notably on Epstein, and the assassinations of former President John F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King Jr. 

‘The DOJ may be releasing the list of Jeffrey Epstein’s clients. Will that really happen?’ Fox News’ John Roberts asked Bondi in an interview on Feb. 21. 

‘It is sitting on my desk right now to review. That’s been a directive by President Trump. I’m reviewing that. I’m reviewing the JFK files, the MLK files. That is all in the process of being reviewed because that was done at the directive of the president from all these agencies,’ Bondi responded. 

‘Have you seen anything that you said, ‘Oh, my gosh?’’ Roberts asked.

‘Not yet,’ Bondi responded. 

Bondi released an initial batch of files on Epstein to a handful of social media personalities in late February, but the packets did not contain new evidence. However, Bondi once again vowed to come through on Trump’s message of transparency on Epstein’s ‘disgusting actions.’

‘This Department of Justice is following through on President Trump’s commitment to transparency and lifting the veil on the disgusting actions of Jeffrey Epstein and his co-conspirators,’ Bondi said in press release. ‘The first phase of files released today sheds light on Epstein’s extensive network and begins to provide the public with long overdue accountability.’ 

The next month, in March, Bondi joined Fox News’ Sean Hannity and said she ordered the FBI to deliver evidence related to Epstein under a firm deadline, claiming a local field office in New York initially withheld evidence on Epstein. 

‘I gave [the FBI] a deadline of Friday at 8 a.m. to get us everything,’ Bondi said. ‘And a source had told me where the documents were being kept, Southern District of New York, shock. So we got them all by Friday at 8 a.m.’

‘Thousands of pages of documents. I have the FBI going through them… and Director Patel is going to get us a detailed report as to why the FBI withheld all of those documents,’ she continued at the time. 

Bondi again in May fanned the flames of a potential Epstein bombshell when she stated there were no files missing from her investigation and that the DOJ had uncovered tens of thousands of videos showing Epstein with ‘children and child porn.’

‘No, the FBI, they’re reviewing tens of thousands of videos of Epstein with children or child porn,’ Bondi told the media in May when asked about the Epstein files. 

‘There are hundreds of victims,’ she added. ‘… The FBI is diligently going through that.’

Bondi was confronted about her February comments on the Epstein files during a Cabinet meeting on Tuesday, where she defended her remarks to Fox News regarding claims that the Epstein files were on her desk and ready for review. 

‘I was asked a question about the client list, and my response was, ‘it’s sitting on my desk to be reviewed,’ meaning the file along with the JFK, MLK files as well,’ Bondi responded. 

‘That’s what I meant by that. Also, to the tens of thousands of video, they turned out to be child porn downloaded by that disgusting Jeffrey Epstein,’ she continued, saying no such videos would be released or ‘see the light of day.’ 

DIRECTOR PATEL

Long before Patel was floated and named as Trump’s FBI chief, the longtime opponent of the ‘Deep State’ claimed the FBI was in control of Epstein’s reported client list and said it could be released on Trump’s first day in office via a subpoena. 

‘That’s under direct control of the director of the FBI,’ Patel said in 2023 during an interview with BlazeTV’s Glenn Beck. ‘That’s a thing I think President Trump should run on. On day one, roll out the black book.’ 

Patel added in an interview with conservative social media personality Benny Johnson that same year that the FBI was keeping the list private due to the high-profile names in Epstein’s orbit. 

‘Put on your big boy pants and let us know who the pedophiles are,’ Patel said, aiming his remarks at Republican lawmakers. 

He continued that ‘one subpoena to the FBI’ would have forced the release of the alleged list during the same interview with Johnson. 

Patel, who was seen as one of Trump’s more controversial Cabinet picks, earned the praise of key senators for his public calls to uncover details on Epstein ahead of his confirmation hearings. Sen. Marsha Blackburn, R-Tenn., for example, promoted Patel’s nomination as FBI director as he would reveal details on Epstein. 

‘I look forward to working with Kash Patel as FBI Director to release Epstein’s flight logs and black book,’ Blackburn posted to X following Patel’s nomination in November. ‘Under the Trump administration, the American people are going to get answers.’

Fast-forward to his confirmation hearing in January, Patel vowed he would work to uncover Epstein’s alleged vast web of crimes and connections to high-profile individuals. 

‘I want to talk to you about the Epstein case,’ Blackburn told Epstein in January during his confirmation hearing. ‘I have worked on this for years, trying to get those records of who flew on Epstein’s plane and who helped him build this international human trafficking, sex trafficking ring. Now earlier I urged then Chairman Durbin to subpoena those records and I ended up being blocked by Senator Durbin and Christopher Wray. They stonewalled on this and I know that breaking up these trafficking rings is important to President Trump. So will you work with me on this issue so we know who worked with Jeffrey Epstein in building the sex trafficking rings?’

‘Absolutely, Senator,’ Patel responded. ‘Child sex trafficking has no place in the United States of America. And I will do everything, if confirmed as FBI director, to make sure the American public knows the full weight of what happened in the past and how we are going to counterman missing children and exploited children going forward.’

Patel again vowed in February that he would let no stone go unturned as Bondi demanded more documents from the FBI related to Epstein. 

‘The FBI is entering a new era – one that will be defined by integrity, accountability, and the unwavering pursuit of justice. There will be no cover-ups, no missing documents, and no stone left unturned – and anyone from the prior or current Bureau who undermines this will be swiftly pursued. If there are gaps, we will find them. If records have been hidden, we will uncover them. And we will bring everything we find to the DOJ to be fully assessed and transparently disseminated to the American people as it should be. The oath we take is to the Constitution, and under my leadership, that promise will be upheld without compromise,’ he posted to X a the time. 

Patel and Bongino joined Fox News’ Maria Bartiromo in May and defended that evidence showed Epstein killed himself in his New York City jail cell in 2019 – a death many speculated was not suicide, but a cover-up to allegedly protect elites wrapped up in Epstein’s crime – which sparked outrage among conservatives for their handling of the case. 

‘As someone who has worked as a public defender, as a prosecutor who’s been in that prison system, who’s been in the Metropolitan Detention Center, who’s been in segregated housing, you know a suicide when you see one, and that’s what that was,’ Patel said when questioned about Epstein’s death during the interview. 

As Trump supporters spoke out against the FBI and DOJ memo determining there was no Epstein bombshell, reports circulated that a rift at DOJ could lead to Patel resigning. The FBI chief denied such claims on X while also adding that ‘the conspiracy theories just aren’t true.’ 

‘The conspiracy theories just aren’t true, never have been. It’s an honor to serve the President of the United States @realDonaldTrump – and I’ll continue to do so for as long as he calls on me,’ he posted to X. 

DEPUTY DIRECTOR BONGINO 

Back when Deputy FBI Director Dan Bongino hosted a popular national podcast, he urged Americans to keep their eyes peeled on details related to Epstein because it’s a ‘big deal.’

‘That Jeffrey Epstein story is a big deal. Please do not let that story go. Keep your eye on it,’ he told his audience in May 2023. 

In January 2024, Bongino again claimed to his audience that details surrounding Epstein were shocking and that he heard from trusted sources that there were multiple videos showing Epstein with associates abusing children. 

‘Ladies and gentlemen, it has been speculated by many people who are extremely credible,’ Bongino said on a podcast in 2024, ‘including multiple sources to others and to me – one I spoke to directly – that there are a multitude of tapes.’

‘This is where I get really upset at the media,’ he said later in the podcast, adding that journalists had ‘done almost like no – maybe because I was an investigator before, it’s like, I’m amazed at how few people are putting two and two together.’

Following Patel and Bongino reporting to the public that evidence showed Epstein committed suicide, Bongino posted to X that he was not asking Americans to ‘believe me, or not,’ but was telling them the facts surrounding ‘what exists, and what doesn’t.’

‘I was asked about some of the details surrounding the Jeffrey Epstein case. I have reviewed the case. Jeffrey Epstein killed himself. There’s no evidence in the case file indicating otherwise,’ Bongino posted on the social platform X after the interview. ‘I’m not asking you to believe me, or not. I’m telling you what exists, and what doesn’t. If new evidence surfaces I’m happy to reevaluate.’

Reports spread over the weekend that Bongino clashed with Bondi over the Epstein files, including allegedly raising his voice at White House chief of staff Susie Wiles before abruptly leaving a meeting. Bongino was said to be irate over Bondi’s ‘lack of transparency from the start’ over the handling of the files. Bongino is considering resigning over the matter, but no decision has been made publicly known. 

Trump, meanwhile, threw his support behind Bondi in the Saturday Truth Social post while underscoring members of his administration are all on the same team. 

‘What’s going on with my ‘boys’ and, in some cases, ‘gals?’ They’re all going after Attorney General Pam Bondi, who is doing a FANTASTIC JOB,’ Trump wrote in a lengthy post on Truth Social on Saturday. ‘We’re on one Team, MAGA, and I don’t like what’s happening.’ 

‘For years, it’s Epstein, over and over again,’ Trump continued while pinning blaming for the files on Democrats. ‘Why are we giving publicity to Files written by Obama, Crooked Hillary, Comey, Brennan, and the Losers and Criminals of the Biden administration.’

‘They created the Epstein Files, just like they created the FAKE Hillary Clinton/Christopher Steele Dossier that they used on me, and now my so-called ‘friends’ are playing right into their hands,’ Trump wrote. ‘Why didn’t these Radical Left Lunatics release the Epstein Files? If there was ANYTHING in there that could have hurt the MAGA Movement, why didn’t they use it?’

Trump, who said from the campaign trail he was open to releasing such Epstein files if re-elected, slammed a reporter on Tuesday for inquiring about the files, calling Epstein a ‘creep’ who was old news in comparison to national tragedies such as the floods that gripped Texas this month. 

‘This guy’s been talked about for years. You’re asking.… We have Texas, we have this, we have all of the things. And are people are still talking about this guy, this creep?’ Trump asked. ‘That is unbelievable.’

‘I mean, I can’t believe you’re asking a question on Jeffrey Epstein,’ Trump added. ‘At a time like this, where we’re having some of the greatest success and also tragedy with what happened in Texas. It just seems like a desecration. But you go ahead.’ 

The DOJ and White House did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s requests for comment on the previous remarks from DOJ leadership ahead of the memo determining Epstein did not have a client list. 

Fox News Digital’s Ashley Oliver, Brooke Signman, and Brie Stimson contributed to this report. 

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Per the Florida criminal code, Judkins faces a charge of battery, in which a person ‘actually and intentionally touches or strikes another person against the will of the other’ — typically a first-degree misdemeanor that carries a penalty of a ‘definite term of imprisonment not exceeding one year’ and a $1,000 fine.

Selected with the 36th overall pick in the second round of the 2025 NFL Draft by the Browns, Judkins was one of 14 Ohio State players drafted back in April.

A Browns spokesperson told the Akron Beacon Journal, part of the USA TODAY Network, that the team was ‘aware and gathering information’ about Judkins’ arrest.

In his lone season at Ohio State, Judkins was part of a one-two punch running back group with TreVeyon Henderson, helping lead the Buckeyes to their first College Football Playoff national championship since 2014 with a 34-23 win over Notre Dame.

In 16 games this past season for the Buckeyes, Judkins ran for 1,060 yards and 14 rushing touchdowns on 194 carries, adding 161 receiving yards and two receiving touchdowns on 22 receptions. He ran for 100 yards and two touchdowns in the national championship game.

Across his three seasons at Ole Miss and Ohio State, Judkins ran for a combined 3,785 yards and 45 touchdowns. Judkins is scheduled to report to his first NFL training camp on Friday, July 18 with the rest of the Browns’ rookies, per NFL.com.

This story has been republished with new information.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

LONDON/NEW YORK, July 11 (Reuters) – Suppliers to Walmart WMT.N have delayed or put on hold some orders from garment manufacturers in Bangladesh, according to three factory owners and correspondence from a supplier seen by Reuters, as U.S. President Donald Trump’s threat of a 35% tariff on the textile hub disrupts business.

Bangladesh is the third-largest exporter of apparel to the United States, and it relies on the garment sector for 80% of its export earnings and 10% of its GDP. The factory owners all said they expected orders to fall if the August 1 tariffs go into effect, as they are unable to absorb that 35% rate.

Iqbal Hossain, managing director of garment manufacturer Patriot Eco Apparel Ltd, told Reuters an order for nearly 1 million swim shorts for Walmart was put on hold on Thursday due to the tariff threat.

“As we discussed please hold all below Spring season orders we are discussing here due to heavy Tariff % imposed for USA imports,” Faruk Saikat, assistant merchandising manager at Classic Fashion, wrote in an email to Hossain and others seen by Reuters. Classic Fashion is a supplier and buying agent that places orders for retailers.

“As per our management instruction we are holding Bangladesh production for time being and IN case Tariff issues settled then we will continue as we planned here.”

The hold was not decided by Walmart, Saikat told Reuters, but by Classic Fashion itself.

Walmart did not respond to a request for comment.

Bangladesh is currently in talks with the United States in Washington to try to negotiate a lower tariff. Trump in recent days has revived threats of higher levies on numerous nations.

“If the 35% tariff remains for Bangladesh, that will be very tough to sustain, honestly speaking, and there will not be as many orders as we have now,” said Mohiuddin Rubel, managing director at jeans manufacturer Denim Expert Ltd in Dhaka.

Rubel, whose company produces jeans for H&M HMb.ST and other retailers, said he expects clients will ask him to absorb part of the tariff, but added this would not be possible financially. Manufacturers have already absorbed part of the blanket 10% tariff imposed by the U.S. on April 2.

“Only probably the big, big companies can a little bit sustain (tariffs) but not the small and medium companies,” he said.

Retailers have front-loaded orders since Trump returned to the White House, anticipating higher tariffs. Jeans maker Levi’s LEVI.N, which imports from Bangladesh, said on Thursday it has 60% of the inventory it needs for the rest of 2025.

U.S. clothing imports from Bangladesh totaled $3.38 billion in the first five months of 2025, up 21% from the year-earlier period, according to U.S. International Trade Commission data.

Another Dhaka-based garment factory owner said an importer with whom he was negotiating a spring 2026 order of trousers for Walmart asked him on Thursday to wait a week before the order would be confirmed due to the tariff risk.

Hossain said he may look for more orders from European clients to make up for lost orders if the U.S. 35% tariff gets implemented, even if he has to cut prices to stimulate demand.

(Reuters reporting by Helen Reid in London and Siddharth Cavale in New York; Editing by David Gaffen and Matthew Lewis)

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

MAGA supporters are nor pleased with President Donald Trump following his full-throated defense of Attorney General Pam Bondi, whose Department of Justice denied the existence of a Jeffrey Epstein client list after years of Trump surrogates vowing to reveal the disgraced financier’s secrets. 

Longtime conservatives and supporters of Trump sounded off on social media this weekend, as well as in person during a convention in Florida, with various messages pledging that the Epstein scandal will not ‘go away.’ The DOJ determined that Epstein committed suicide in 2019 and that there is no list detailing the names of the world’s elite who allegedly took part in Epstein’s history of sexual deviancy. 

‘.@realDonaldTrump please understand the EPSTEIN AFFAIR is not going away,’ retired Lt. Gen. Mike Flynn, Trump’s national security advisor from his first administration, posted to X on Saturday. ‘If the administration doesn’t address the massive number of unanswered questions about Epstein, especially the ABUSE OF CHILDREN BY ELITES (it is very clear that abuse occurred), then moving forward on so many other monumental challenges our nation is facing becomes much harder.’

The DOJ and FBI said in a joint memo obtained by Fox News last week that the two agencies had no further information to share with the public about Epstein’s case and death. That led to FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino clashing with Bondi over ‘lack of transparency’ and threatening to resign over the matter, Fox News reported. 

Epstein was a notorious predator who pleaded guilty to procuring underage girls for prostitution in 2008, before he was arrested in 2019 on new federal charges of sex trafficking minors and conspiracy to engage in sex trafficking of minors. Epstein, who had rubbed elbows with the world’s elites stretching from Bill Gates to being photographed with Trump long before his presidency, was found dead in his New York City jail cell in August 2019 by apparent suicide. 

Many MAGA supporters, however, have claimed Epstein did not hang himself, and the death was allegedly part of a bigger cover-up protecting elites allegedly involved in his sexual abuse of minors.  

Trump took to Truth Social on Saturday evening and offered a strong endorsement of Bondi as conservatives demanded answers over the long-running scandal. 

‘What’s going on with my ‘boys’ and, in some cases, ‘gals?’ They’re all going after Attorney General Pam Bondi, who is doing a FANTASTIC JOB,’ Trump wrote in a lengthy post on Truth Social on Saturday. ‘We’re on one Team, MAGA, and I don’t like what’s happening.’ 

He referred to Epstein as the ‘guy who never dies,’ adding, ‘For years, it’s Epstein, over and over again.’

Trump questioned why people were ‘giving publicity to Files written by Obama, Crooked Hillary, Comey, Brennan, and the Losers and Criminals of the Biden administration.’  

‘They created the Epstein Files, just like they created the FAKE Hillary Clinton/Christopher Steele Dossier that they used on me, and now my so-called ‘friends’ are playing right into their hands,’ Trump wrote. ‘Why didn’t these Radical Left Lunatics release the Epstein Files? If there was ANYTHING in there that could have hurt the MAGA Movement, why didn’t they use it?’

‘LET PAM BONDI DO HER JOB – SHE’S GREAT! The 2020 Election was Rigged and Stolen, and they tried to do the same thing in 2024 – That’s what she is looking into as AG, and much more,’ he wrote. ‘One year ago our Country was DEAD, now it’s the ‘HOTTEST’ Country anywhere in the World. Let’s keep it that way, and not waste Time and Energy on Jeffrey Epstein, somebody that nobody cares about.’

Trump supporters repeatedly posted on X that the Epstein scandal will not simply dissipate after years of high-profile Trump allies, including Bondi, Bongino and FBI Director Kash Patel, previously vowing to expose the corruption surrounding Epstein, his alleged client list and the alleged crimes that played out on his notorious island, Little Saint James. 

‘We cannot allow pedophiles to get away. I don’t personally care who they are or what elite or powerful position they hold. They must be exposed and held accountable!!!’ Flynn continued in his X post. 

Activist and Trump ally Laura Loomer also slammed Bondi over her leadership, while taking a swipe at the president as well. 

‘President Trump says he thinks Blondi is ‘doing a Fantastic job’ as AG in a post he posted on Truth Social today….’ Loomer posted to X on Saturday, accompanied by screenshots of his Truth Social post praising Bondi. 

‘People make their own choices and decisions, but mark my word, the lack of actual results at the DOJ and lack of transparency that translates into incompetence will cost the GOP House and Senate seats. Don’t say I didn’t warn you,’ she added in a follow-up post on Saturday. 

Robby Starbuck, another longtime Trump supporter and conservative social media personality, railed online that the ‘age of secrets’ must come to an end – beginning with Epstein. 

‘People want truth, they want the rapists exposed and brought to justice, they want to break the deep state, they want the 100 year storm of lies from government to end and they want to end the two tiered system of justice. People want peace, safety, justice and sanity,’ Starbuck posted in a lengthy message on Saturday. 

‘They want their country back. This case became a symbol for all of that. Fair or unfair, that’s the truth. President Trump rarely loses touch with what’s happening among the base but he’s missing the pulse on this one. Saying so doesn’t mean disloyalty or hatred, it means that this matters so much that we must remind him why it matters so much. We want President Trump to succeed on EVERYTHING he ran on. To do so requires disclosure and transparency on every issue. We need to end the age of secrets,’ he continued. 

Amid the fallout surrounding the DOJ’s Epstein findings, Turning Point USA is holding its Student Action Summit in Tampa Bay, Florida, where some conservative allies spoke out against the DOJ and Trump over the lack of answers regarding Epstein. 

‘I think that these people – and I don’t know, for whatever reason, there could be reasons – but I don’t think they’re telling us the truth about Epstein,’ podcaster Brandon Tatum said during the convention. ‘I think that that guy was involved in something nefarious that implicates a whole lot of people. And my guess is that the whole lot of people may have, may happen to be some of our allies and some people that we don’t want to have a bad relationship with.’

‘Trump is losing his touch,’ former Republican Florida state Rep. Anthony Sabatini said, according to NBC. ‘Bad personnel are undermining him left and right. We need a full reset.’

The lack of additional details on Epstein has also spurred liberals to call on the Trump administration to release the files surrounding Epstein. 

‘Dear Donald Trump and Pam Bondi: Release the Epstein files. What ever happened to ‘Promises Made, Promises Kept?’’ Democratic New York Rep. Ritchie Torres posted to X. 

Officials in Trump’s orbit, including those who ultimately rose to high-level positions within the administration, had vowed to uncover alleged details and corruption that had not yet been made public or confirmed both before and after the high-stakes 2024 election. 

Patel told conservative social media personality Benny Johnson in 2023, before he became FBI director under Trump’s second administration, that Republicans at the time could easily obtain Epstein’s alleged client list with subpoena, while adding in another interview that year that Trump should ‘roll out the black book’ containing Epstein’s alleged client list on ‘day one.’ 

Patel also doubled down during his Senate confirmation hearing that he would assist lawmakers in investigating Epstein’s alleged web of the world’s elite involved in his sex crimes. 

‘Child sex trafficking has no place in the United States of America,’ Patel told Tennessee Sen. Marsha Blackburn when asked about investigating Epstein during his Senate confirmation hearing this year. ‘And I will do everything, if confirmed as FBI director, to make sure the American public knows the full weight of what happened in the past and how we are going to counterman missing children and exploited children going forward.’

Patel on Saturday posted to X that the ‘conspiracy theories’ weren’t and have never been true, but it was unclear if he was referring to Epstein or reports that he intended to step down if Bongino did. 

‘The conspiracy theories just aren’t true, never have been. It’s an honor to serve the President of the United States @realDonaldTrump – and I’ll continue to do so for as long as he calls on me,’ he posted. 

Bondi has landed in hot water over her comments during a February Fox News interview when she was asked about the Epstein files, and said it was ‘sitting on her desk.’ The Epstein investigation came as the DOJ also readied to release files on former President John F. Kennedy’s assassination and Martin Luther King Jr.’s assassination. 

‘It’s sitting on my desk right now to review,’ Bondi told ‘America Reports’ in February when asked about Epstein’s alleged client list. ‘That’s been a directive by President Trump.’

Bondi argued during a Cabinet meeting this month that she was referring to files on Epstein, ‘along with the JFK, MLK files’ when she told Fox News that ‘it’s sitting on my desk.’

Trump slammed a reporter for asking about Epstein during the Cabinet meeting, calling Epstein a ‘creep’ who should not take media attention away from other tragic news stories, such as the devastating flooding that rocked Texas’ low country this month. 

‘Are you still talking about Jeffrey Epstein?’ Trump said to a reporter on July 8. 

‘This guy’s been talked about for years. You’re asking.… We have Texas, we have this, we have all of the things. And are people are still talking about this guy, this creep?’ Trump asked. ‘That is unbelievable.’

Fox News Digital reached out to the White House, DOJ and FBI on Sunday morning regarding some MAGA allies criticizing the administration over the handling of the Epstein case but did not immediately receive responses. 

Fox News Digital’s Brie Stimson and Amanda Macias contributed to this report. 

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Ndamukong Suh announced his retirement on Saturday. Some of you will know that name. Some of you will not. Everyone who follows the NFL and appreciates its history should have a deep appreciation of who Suh was. What he represented. All of him. The good, the bad, the really ugly. So here it is.

Suh was in many ways a representative of the NFL before it became the league we see now. He was an old-school football dude in a 21st-century era. If there was a player today who embodied the clotheslining, cheap-shotting, step-on-a-player’s leg while they’re down era of the 1970s, it was Suh. In fact, Suh actually did step on a player’s leg while he was down. He did it to Aaron Rodgers.

Suh was dirty. That’s not an opinion. That’s who Suh was. Don’t take my word for it. His peers said the same. The Sporting News in 2012 asked 103 players who was the dirtiest in the NFL and Suh was at the top of the list. He earned that position.

‘There’s not many guys in this league like that guy,’ former Patriots running back LeGarrette Blount said in 2017. ‘He’s a dirty player. He’s always been a dirty player. There’s no room in the game for that. At some point in time, guys have to defend themselves when he’s doing the things that he does.’

Suh was fined hundreds of thousands of dollars for various late hits, dirty plays and on-field illegalities. In fact, by 2023, he had racked up a staggering $420,669 in fines. Part of that unreal total was a $100,000 fine for a low block against Minnesota’s John Sullivan in the 2013 season opener.

This is who Suh was. But there is another part of him.

I was a massive critic of Suh, but I always appreciated how he was unapologetic about who he was, and I believe Suh saw football for what it really is: at times, and perhaps most of the time, a brutal sport played by tough people. That’s it. That’s all. Not the game that the league and networks sell. The beautified game. The flashy game. That’s not who Suh was.

It’s hard to put into words just how offenses feared Suh. Quarterbacks were terrified of him for legitimate reasons. But also, teams feared him because he was physically devastating, not just a cheap shot guy.

Busted knees, a fractured throat: Don’t forget harsh price NFL players pay

Suh was the second overall pick in the 2010 draft and the league’s defensive rookie of the year. He dominated in Detroit and then signed a deal with Miami that, at the time, made him the highest-paid defensive player in NFL history. After the Dolphins, he played for the Rams and Buccaneers before ending his career in Philadelphia.

The point is, besides the dirtiness, he was really good. Like, historically good. Suh played in Super Bowls for each of his last three teams, something that almost never happens in NFL history. According to Pro Football Talk, the short list of players who have played in Super Bowls for three different franchises includes Rod Woodson (Steelers, Ravens, Raiders), Bill Romanowski (49ers, Broncos, Raiders), Preston Pearson (Colts, Steelers, Cowboys), Harry Swayne (Chargers, Broncos, Ravens) and Joe Jurevicius (Giants, Buccaneers, Seahawks).

To me, he is a Hall of Famer.

And no, the cheap shot stuff shouldn’t keep him out. It should be noted, and debated, but he was, without question, one of the great defensive players of his era. That’s the bottom line in making that type of decision.

I have to tell you something else about Suh. Just one last thing.

You can see some of what these people who spoke to me meant when reading Suh’s thoughtful and heartfelt retirement post, which starts by noting he was retiring on the same day, a year later, that his father died.

“It’s the day I said goodbye to my father, the man who raised me, shaped me, challenged me, and believed in me before I believed in myself,” Suh wrote. “He wasn’t just a dad. He was my idol, my coach, and my anchor. He taught me what it meant to be disciplined, focused, and relentless in everything I do. Every snap I took in football carried his fingerprint. Every time I lined up across from someone, I could hear his voice pushing me, reminding me that I wasn’t just representing myself. I was representing him, my family, my name. Before he passed, he gave me one final piece of advice, ‘It’s time to let football go. You’ve done everything you set out to do. Now it’s time for the next chapter.’”

That next chapter should include a trip to Canton.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

ATLANTA — As Major League Baseball’s All-Star Game loses just a shimmer of star power, the league made sure to let the world know Tuesday night’s pitching matchup will be top-notch.

For the second consecutive season, fireballing Pittsburgh Pirates right-hander Paul Skenes will start for the National League, opposed by Tarik Skubal, the reigning American League Cy Young Award winner and the undisputed best pitcher in baseball at the moment.

Pitting Skenes against the Detroit Tigers ace takes some sting out of losing a minivan’s worth of stars declining to participate in the game, led perhaps most notably by Zack Wheeler, Philadelphia’s 35-year-old ace who opted to rest instead of take part in his fourth Midsummer Classic.

Had Wheeler, who pitched Saturday night against the San Diego Padres, opted to participate, it would have created a tough decision for MLB and NL manager Dave Roberts. Wheeler has likely had the objectively superior first half – though not by much – leaving the league to decide between Wheeler and the buzzier, if you will, Skenes.

That won’t be a problem come Tuesday, as Skenes, who has a 4-8 record despite 4.8 WAR and a 2.01 ERA, will throw the first pitch at Truist Park against the AL All-Stars. Skenes will be first out the chute for the AL, thanks to his 2.23 ERA and a staggering 153 strikeouts in 121 innings.

Other stars who have opted out or been replaced due to the timing of their final first-half starts include Seattle Mariners outfielder Julio Rodriguez, Cleveland Guardians third baseman Jose Ramirez and Texas right-hander Jacob de Grom. Others, like Atlanta lefty Chris Sale and Boston Red Sox third baseman Alex Bregman, are either injured or returned very recently from injury and won’t play.

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

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

A massive injury may alter all of WWE.

Seth Rollins appeared to suffer a legitimate injury during Saturday Night’s Main Event, putting the immediate future of one of the company’s biggest stars in jeopardy.

The injury occurred during a match against LA Knight. Rollins was on the attack and had attempted a moonsault in the ring when his knee buckled. Rollins immediately went down and grabbed at his right knee. He backed into the corner of the ring and talked to the referee and Paul Heyman. LA Knight tried to attack Rollins but the referee stopped anything from happening.

A ringside doctor eventually came and checked in on Rollins. ‘The Visionary’ briefly spoke with the WWE staffer before he got to his feet. LA Knight hit the BFT and got the pin for the win in what seemed like a quick adjustment to the ending.

After the match, people inside Atlanta’s State Farm Arena took photos of medical personnel checking on Rollins. A video of Rollins circulating on social media showed his clear frustration, the wrestler barking expletives and requiring help to leave the ring. 

While the extent of Rollins’ injury is currently unknown, it could be catastrophic and potentially means some big changes to storylines. Rollins is Mr. Money in the Bank, able to cash it in for a championship opportunity at any time, and there was speculation he would do it at Saturday Night’s Main Event.

With Heyman, Bronson Reed and Bron Breakker part of his stable, Rollins was also on a hot streak ever since his WrestleMania 41 win in April. The group has become one of the most menacing in WWE.

Seth Rollins update

Seth Rollins injury history: Knee injuries have plagued career

The apparent knee injury on July 12 is just the latest one for Rollins. Knee injuries have put him on the shelf several times in the past.

In November 2015, Rollins tore the anterior cruciate ligament (ACL), medial collateral ligament (MCL) and meniscus in his right knee during a live event in Ireland. He was the WWE World Heavyweight Champion and had to relinquish the title as he required surgery. He was out for seven months. Rollins then re-tore the MCL in the same knee in January 2017. Despite requiring another surgery, he didn’t miss much time.

He tore his meniscus again in January 2024, but this time in his left knee. Even though he was injured, Rollins still appeared in WWE in the build-up to WrestleMania 40. He wrestled both nights of the event with the torn meniscus, and was instrumental in the Cody Rhodes vs. The Rock and Roman Reigns storyline. He missed two months of action following the event.

While knee injuries have been a constant problem for Rollins, he has also dealt with back issues throughout his career.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The New York Yankees All-Star outfielder became the fastest player ever to hit 350 career home runs, setting the mark with a two-run blast in the ninth inning off Chicago Cubs reliever Brad Keller. Judge took a 97-mph four-seam fastball on an 0-2 count, supplanting the ball into right center field to get the Yankees on the board.

New York lost the game 5-2. The home run was Judge’s 35th of the season, and it was his 1,088th game in the majors. Mark McGwire had the previous record, hitting his 350th home run in his 1,280th game. The 33-year-old Judge was also the fastest to reach 250 and 300 career home runs, and McGwire is the fastest to 400 roundtrippers (1,412 games).

Judge, a two-time American League Most Valuable Player, is hitting .358 with 35 home runs and 81 RBI. Judge leads the majors in hits (125), OPS (1.204), slugging percentage (.739), and wins above replacement.

Aaron Judge blasts 350th home run

Here is a look at the historic home run.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Houston Rockets guard Fred VanVleet was elected the new president of the National Basketball Players Association during the Board of Player Representatives meeting on Saturday.

He will begin a four-year term immediately, succeeding CJ McCollum.

VanVleet recently signed a two-year, $50 million contract to stay in Houston. The veteran guard won an NBA championship with the Toronto Raptors in 2019 and was named an All-Star in 2022. He also set records for the highest-paid contract for an undrafted player.

McCollum, who was recently traded to the Washington Wizards, saw his term expire. He had served as NBPA president since August 2021. In 2023, McCollum led the players’ association in negotiations to complete a seven-year collective bargaining agreement.

He’s expected to stay involved in the NBPA, moving into an advisory role.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY