Archive

2025

Browsing

Rain was the big winner as the Australian Open tennis championships got underway Sunday in Melbourne.

Play on the outdoor courts ended after less than an hour in the morning and did not resume until the early evening, more than six hours later, forcing eight of the 32 scheduled singles matches to be postponed.

Matches continued, however, on the three indoor courts at Rod Laver Arena, where Aryna Sabalenka of Belarus began her bid for a third consecutive Australian Open title with a 6-3, 6-2 victory over Sloane Stephens.

With the weather clearing and the roof open, the women’s No. 1 seed dispatched the American and 2017 U.S. Open champion in little more than an hour.

‘It’s not like I played my best match, probably, but I was glad to close it out in straight sets,’ the 26-year-old Sabalenka said. ‘I love playing here, it feels like home.’

Olympic champion Zheng Qinwen, who lost to Sabalenka in last year’s final, reached the second round indoors, while men’s sixth seed Casper Ruud and former world No. 4 Kei Nishikori dodged the wet weather to secure five-set victories.

Men’s second seed Alexander Zverev made a dominant start to his bid for a first Grand Slam title as he closed out the evening with a 6-4, 6-4, 6-4 victory over 2019 semifinalist Lucas Pouille.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Four years after exiting bankruptcy, Chuck E. Cheese is making a comeback, thanks to a dramatic makeover to introduce its games and pizza to a new generation.

In June 2020, just as some states began lifting their pandemic lockdowns, Chuck E. Cheese’s parent company CEC Entertainment filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. It emerged from bankruptcy months later with new leadership and freed from about $705 million in debt.

Even when Covid subsided, the company faced another existential threat: figuring out how to entertain children — and their paying parents — in the age of iPads and smartphones. The company has spent more than $300 million in recent years tackling that challenge — and the investment has started to pay off.

CEC Entertainment, which also includes Pasqually’s Pizza & Wings and Peter Piper Pizza, has seen eight straight months of same-store sales growth and is no longer in debt, according to CEO Dave McKillips. The company isn’t publicly traded, but it discloses its financial results to its bond investors.

CEC Entertainment’s annual revenue grew from $912 million in 2019 to roughly $1.2 billion in 2023, according to Reuters. And that’s with fewer open Chuck E. Cheese locations. The chain has 470 U.S. locations currently, down from 537 in 2019.

Sustaining the growth won’t be easy. Like all restaurants, the chain has to win over consumers who are eating out less often as costs rise. Chuck E. Cheese also has to draw the attention of children and parents in a fragmented media market.

Since Atari founder Nolan Bushnell opened its first location in 1977 in San Jose, Chuck E. Cheese has grown to become a staple of many childhoods, known for its pizza, birthday parties and animatronic mouse mascot and band.

After exiting bankruptcy, Chuck E. Cheese and its stores underwent a makeover, giving today’s locations a very different look. Gone are the animatronics, SkyTube tunnels and physical tickets of yore. Instead, trampolines, a mobile app and floor-to-ceiling JumboTrons have replaced them.

Those changes came from McKillips, a former Six Flags executive. He joined the company in January 2020, just months before lockdowns would temporarily shutter all of its locations. By April 2021, the company raised $650 million in bonds, which it’s been spending on its restaurants.

“The company was capital-starved for many, many years. It had not been remodeled. It had not been touched,” he said.

Apollo Global Management took Chuck E. Cheese private in 2014. Five years later, CEC Entertainment tried to go public through a merger with a special purpose acquisition company. But the deal was scrapped without explanation.

The new cash prompted a frank look at the Chuck E. Cheese model — including its iconic animatronic band, featuring Charles Entertainment Cheese and his friends.

“We pulled out the animatronics. It was a hot debate for many legacy bands, but kids were consuming entertainment in such a different way, you know, growing up with screens and ever-changing bite-sized entertainment,” McKillips said.

The chain also redid its menu, upgrading to scratch-made pizzas. Kidz Bop became an official music partner. Other kid-friendly brands, like Paw Patrol, Marvel and Nickelodeon, became partners for its games.

And then came the trampolines.

“We found one glaring opportunity for us … active play,” McKillips said. He added that growth in the family entertainment category is largely coming from activity-based businesses, like trampoline parks and rock-climbing walls.

The company first tested the trampolines in Brooklyn and then in Miami, St. Louis and Orlando. As of December, 450 Chuck E. Cheese locations now have kid-sized trampolines. And unlike the SkyTubes or ball pits of the past, customers have to pay extra to use trampolines. (The ball pits disappeared from Chuck E. Cheese locations in 2011, while SkyTubes lasted roughly another decade.)

After the company spent $230 million to remodel Chuck E. Cheese locations, McKillips now says that process is finished.

“We needed to fix the product. The product is fixed,” he said.

Reintroducing customers to the brand — especially adults who only know the Chuck E. Cheese of their own childhoods — has been another focus.

“You come in around three years old, you leave around eight or nine and you don’t come back for 15 years. We had to go and speak to a whole new generation of kids, and we were off-air during Covid. We had to build all that,” McKillips said.

For example, Chuck E. Cheese’s birthday business, one of the company’s best marketing tools, struggled in the wake of the pandemic. Today, it’s back at pre-pandemic levels.

And as Chuck E. Cheese started seeing the pullback in consumer spending that hit many restaurants last year, from McDonald’s to Outback Steakhouse, the chain had to come up with a way to appeal to the value-oriented customer.

Over the summer, Chuck E. Cheese launched a two-month tiered subscription program that offered unlimited visits and discounts on food, drinks and games. The membership encouraged families to visit more often than the typical two or three annual visits. The subscription starts at $7.99 a month, with additional tiers at $11.99 and $29.99 that promise steeper discounts and more games played.

“In 2023, we sold 79,000 passes. This year, we sold close to 400,000 passes during the same time period,” McKillips said, referring to 2024. “This shows that the value consumer will seek and will spend if they’re getting great return on their spend.”

In the fall, the company followed up on the success of the passes with a 12-month membership and has already sold more than 100,000 of them.

McKillips’ biggest dreams for the chain and its mascots lie outside of the four walls of its restaurants.

“There’s another cute mouse down in Orlando that does this pretty well, so I see us in the same way, but we’re just getting started right now,” McKillips said.

In addition to 30 licensing deals for everything from frozen pizzas to apparel, Chuck E. Cheese is also exploring different entertainment partnerships that would make its mouse mascot a starring character, according to McKillips.

And that’s not all. The company has looked into the possibility of a game show. It has a prolific YouTube channel, with videos focused on its characters, not its pizza or games.

Plus, Chuck E. Cheese himself has six albums available on streaming platforms, and his band plays live, choreographed concerts.

“My dream would be to have a feature movie,” McKillips said.

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

McDonald’s will shutter three locations of its drinks-focused spinoff brand, CosMc’s.

To test the concept, the fast-food giant opened its first CosMc’s location more than a year ago in the Chicago suburb of Bolingbrook, followed by six more in Texas. McDonald’s has converted larger namesake restaurants into CosMc’s, in addition to building smaller prototype locations.

The smaller stores work better for the test, the company said Thursday. As a result, McDonald’s will close three of its larger format CosMc’s locations and open two more small Texas restaurants. The company didn’t disclose the locations for either the openings or closures, although CosMc’s website says a store is coming soon to Allen, Texas.

McDonald’s also shared other early learnings from the pilot on Thursday. Savory hash browns are the top-selling food — at any time of day — followed by McPops, the chain’s mini filled doughnuts. Best-selling drinks include the Island Pick Me Up Punch, Churro Cold Brew Frappe and the Sour Energy Burst.

The CosMc’s test will continue for the “foreseeable future,” according to the company.

McDonald’s created CosMc’s as its entry point into the growing “afternoon beverage pick-me-up occasion.”

While CosMc’s menu features some McDonald’s classics, it also offers a host of new items playing off other beverage and snacking trends, like its iced turmeric spiced lattes, tropical spiceade and pretzel bites. Starbucks, Dutch Bros. and bubble tea chain Kung Fu Tea have found success with younger consumers by offering customizable cold drinks.

The name for the new brand comes from CosMc, a McDonaldland mascot that appeared in advertisements in the late 1980s and early 1990s. CosMc is an alien from outer space who craves McDonald’s food.

While it’s unclear just how much McDonald’s plans to grow CosMc’s, it’s still a miniscule part of the burger giant’s overall U.S. footprint. The company has more than 13,500 U.S. restaurants. Still, McDonald’s is hoping to learn more about its CosMc’s customers; last year, it rolled out a loyalty program specific to CosMc’s.

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

Offensive coordinator Todd Monken and head coach John Harbaugh came under fire for abandoning the run despite trailing most of the game to Patrick Mahomes and the eventual Super Bowl champions. Quarterback Lamar Jackson rushed eight times for 54 yards, but with Gus Edwards as the No. 1 running back, Baltimore backs carried six times for 23 yards in the defeat. 

The reversal Saturday during the Ravens’ 28-14 victory over the Pittsburgh Steelers in the AFC wild-card playoff game couldn’t be starker. Signed this offseason in a suppressed running-back market, Derrick Henry carried 26 times for 186 yards and two touchdowns. The Ravens signed the former Tennessee Titan with a game like this in mind: cold (the kickoff temperature was 32 degrees with a wind chill of 23), against a physical opponent like Steelers. 

Baltimore ran on 24 of its first 32 plays. That wasn’t necessarily part of the plan, as Jackson scrambled on several pass plays, but “there’s a lot of people out there happy about it right now,” Harbaugh said after the game.

The Ravens head coach was adamant that the coaches and players are willing to do whatever it takes and that there is no one particular way to win. 

All things Ravens: Latest Baltimore Ravens news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

“We’re not like a West Coast system,” Harbaugh said. “We’re just the Ravens system.”

There was one person who definitely enjoyed the effort on the ground, Harbaugh said. 

“My dad’s proud,” he said, referencing longtime college coach Jack Harbaugh, who was known for his rushing attack at Western Kentucky. 

Jackson, of course, adds some “flavor” to it all, John Harbaugh said. He had 11 carries by halftime and finished with 81 rushing yards on 15 attempts, with a long of 20 yards.

Jackson went to the run early, carrying on five straight plays to jump-start the Ravens on a 95-yard touchdown drive on their first offensive possession. He took some hits early and said he didn’t expect to carry the ball that often in the early going but that’s how the game played out. At one point, he was kneed in the back but said he was OK and that the pain didn’t affect him, despite the broadcast catching him grimacing. Jackson wrapped it with a heat pad between drives. 

The effect of Henry on the Steelers’ defense is self-explanatory, Jackson said. After the game, he said he didn’t have the proper words before offering his perspective. 

“I believe everyone sees it. I just hand the balls off,” Jackson said while clapping to mimic him handing the ball off, “Ten yards, 20 yards, 30 yards, and I’m just chilling. Then they tackle him and I go and I’m just fresh. It makes my job a lot easier. We just piggyback off each other.” 

For Jackson, he might as well bring out the recliner and grab a box of popcorn after handing the ball off to Henry. 

“You ever watch ‘Cars’?” Jackson asked.

The two-time MVP – perhaps on the verge of winning his third – compared Henry to the movie’s main character, Lightning McQueen, zooming past the competition to describe his vantage point on the field while Henry is outrunning the 11 players on defense. 

“It looked like a movie, bro, I’m not going to lie to you,” Jackson said. “I’d rather be watching it than being on the other side.” 

Baltimore ran it on all 13 plays during a second-quarter touchdown drive. 

“As a fullback, to be able to run the ball like that, means we’re physically imposing our will on them,” Patrick Ricard said. 

He added: “It’s obviously a good feeling, it means we’re doing the right things – we’re moving the chain, eating up the clock, having our defense sit on the bench. I think it’s one of the hardest things to do, especially in the playoffs. … It’s something we can keep building on.’

Three of the Ravens’ four longest plays came on the ground – not totally unexpected with top wideout Zay Flowers sitting out with a knee injury. But the Steelers knew their AFC North rival was going to establish the run. There was simply nothing they could do to stop it. 

“It’s the best job in the world blocking for Derrick Henry and Lamar Jackson,” center Tyler Linderbaum said. “It’s our job to go out there and play as hard as we can. It’d be a disservice to go out there and not play hard with those guys in the backfield.” 

Wide receiver Steven Sims, pressed into action with Flowers on the bench, even carried once for 15 yards on a jet sweep. But watching the tandem of Henry and Jackson dominate was “special.” 

“It’s just like, whatever you can do to contribute to it, to help, to add to their greatness,” he told USA TODAY Sports. 

On first down, Henry ran 18 times for 148 yards. The Ravens converted on third down at a 66.7% (10-for-15) rate, and 16 of their 29 first downs came on runs. Meanwhile, the Steelers ran for 29 yards and 11 attempts. 

An early highlight was Henry taking a direct snap in the Wildcat formation while Jackson ran a fake sweep as a decoy. Henry barreled his way for 34 yards to set up the game’s first touchdown and delivered a vicious stiff-arm to Steelers safety Minkah Fitzpatrick in the process.

“He has that big-play ability,” Linderbaum said. “Any time a run’s called, it’s our job to block our assignments and let him do the rest.

“He’s a Hall of Fame back. The things he’s able to do, his size, his speed.” 

Of their 72 plays from scrimmage, Baltimore ran it 50 times for 299 yards on the ground.

“Having 300 yards rushing on you is worse than having 300 yards passing,” Steelers safety DeShon Elliott said. “They definitely put belt to butt today.” 

On Henry’s 44-yard touchdown run, which extended Baltimore’s lead to 28-7 in the third quarter, Jackson faked keeping the ball long enough to draw the linebackers toward him and opened up a massive lane through the middle of the Steelers’ defense. All Henry had to do was outrun everyone; at 260 pounds, he was a sight for his teammates to behold. 

“When you see ‘DH’ running at 260, outrunning all the (defensive backs), outrunning every angle they take, I mean, that’s just always insane,” tight end Isaiah Likely said.  

The chemistry in the backfield is what everyone else sees, Likely said, but he observes it every day in the relationship between the quarterback and running back. 

“They’re just a great duo to have, whether on the field or off the field,” he said. “Off the field, you always see them together, laughing, joking.” 

For Henry, who tied Hall of Fame running back Terrell Davis’ playoff record with four games of more than 150 rushing yards and set a new Ravens rushing high, it’s one win on the way to a larger goal. 

“We’re not going to get too ahead of ourselves and go off the walls about how great we are,” Henry said. “We’re going to stay level-headed.” 

On Saturday, it was the Steelers who were leveled by Henry and Jackson.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

With his team down 21-0 at halftime, the Pittsburgh Steelers was asked about containing the two-time MVP. 

“It’s Lamar, man,” Tomlin told Amazon’s Kaylee Hartung at halftime. 

That’s “Mr. Jackson” to you, Mr. Tomlin. 

The Ravens steamrolled the Steelers 28-14 Saturday at M&T Bank Stadium in the AFC wild-card matchup between the two division rivals. The Ravens will have to wait until the conclusion of Sunday’s Denver Broncos-Buffalo Bills tilt to determine their divisional-round opponent, while the Steelers finished the season on a five-game losing streak in which they never held a lead. 

All things Ravens: Latest Baltimore Ravens news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

Baltimore’s defense sacked Steelers quarterback Russell Wilson four times, and Wilson finished 20-for-29 with 270 passing yards and two touchdowns in his fifth playoff loss in his last six postseason games dating back to his time with the Seattle Seahawks.

Derrick Henry scored two touchdowns and rushed for a postseason franchise-record 186 yards on 26 carries. Making his Ravens postseason debut, Henry tied Hall of Fame running back Terrell Davis for most playoff games with more than 150 rushing yards (four). He set the tone on the first scoring drive by stiff-arming Steelers safety Minkah Fitzpatrick on a 34-yard dash toward the end zone following a direct snap from the Wildcat formation. 

Jackson, named an Associated Press first-team All-Pro Friday, showed why he could win his second straight MVP and third one overall, and his postseason record as a starter now stands at 3-4. The first “MVP!” chants from the crowd came with 4:45 left in the first quarter after he found Rashod Bateman in the back of the end zone for the game’s first touchdown on a third-and-13 from the Pittsburgh 15-yard line.

By end of the Ravens’ second touchdown drive, both Henry and Jackson had rushed 11 times, for 92 and 64 yards, respectively. The Ravens had 14 first downs before the Steelers picked up their second. Pittsburgh possessed the ball for 9:33 in the first half.

The Ravens went 90 yards in 1:51 at the end of the first half, as Jackson somehow evaded a sack, held the ball for 6.97 seconds and found running back Justice Hill for a walk-in touchdown with two seconds remaining on the clock. He finished the half 13-of-15 passing with 144 yards and two touchdowns. 

Baltimore outgained the Steelers 308-59 in the first half.

For the Ravens, it was no Zay Flowers, no problem. Baltimore’s leading wide receiver was out with a knee injury, but with the way Henry ran over the Steelers and Jackson ran around them, the Ravens simply didn’t have to. 

Wideout George Pickens (five catches, 87 yards) led the Steelers offensively but had a costly offensive pass interference penalty in the first half. His 36-yard touchdown catch in the third quarter made it 28-14.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The Houston Texans broke out of their funk midway through Saturday’s NFL wild-card playoff game, and all it took was a broken play to spark a 99-yard touchdown drive.

Down 6-0 in the second quarter against the Los Angeles Chargers, the Texans took over with the ball on their own 1-yard line after their first five drives yielded just 54 yards. But C.J. Stroud saved the team from further calamity after a fumbled shotgun snap, as the second-year quarterback recovered the ball and found wide receiver Xavier Hutchinson on the move for a 34-yard gain.

That 13-play series was capped by Stroud finding Nico Collins for a 13-yard touchdown, which would ignite a stretch of 23 unanswered points for the Texans in their 32-12 win over the Chargers.

Houston’s defense also keyed in on Chargers quarterback Justin Herbert with four interceptions. A 38-yard pick-six by Texans safety Eric Murray in the final minute of the third quarter put Los Angeles in a hole from which it would not emerge.

The Chargers cut into the lead in the fourth quarter with Ladd McConkey’s 86-yard catch-and-run for a touchdown. But Cameron Dicker’s ensuing extra-point attempt was blocked and then returned by D’Angelo Ross for two points, keeping it a two-possession game.

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

The Texans sapped the clock on the ensuing drive, which was punctuated by a 17-yard Joe Mixon touchdown run to put the game out of reach. Herbert was then picked off a fourth time, surpassing his total from the entire regular season.

The outcome served as a crash-landing for Jim Harbaugh in his first season with the Chargers, who were searching for their first postseason win since the 2018 season.

The Texans will face either the Kansas City Chiefs or the Baltimore Ravens, pending the outcome of Saturday’s final AFC wild-card game between the Buffalo Bills and Denver Broncos.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Fourteen teams earned a playoff berth and had a chance to win a Lombardi Trophy.

The road to New Orleans for Super Bowl 59 isn’t permitted for all clubs. Some teams get closer than others. The playoffs are filled with twists, bumps, turns and many emotions as squads battle for a Super Bowl title. However, the offseason is the next destination when a team’s postseason journey is over.

The offseason brings new possibilities and optimism. That time has arrived for the Los Angeles Chargers following their 32-12 loss to the Texans in the wild-card round. What’s next for the Chargers as they prepare for the 2025 season? USA TODAY Sports explores.

Chargers key 2025 free agents

Khalil Mack, OLB

Mack is on an expiring deal and the team could save over $25 million if they cut Joey Bosa, per Over The Cap. The two edge rushers restructured their contracts to remain with the Chargers this season. Mack and Bosa could each agree to team-friendly deals to run it back. Even though Mack turns 34 in February, he’s the Chargers’ best, most consistent and most durable pass rusher. He has earned Pro Bowl honors in his three seasons in Los Angeles. The Chargers would likely prefer to bring the defensive leader back on a short-term deal.

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

J.K. Dobbins, RB

Excluding Justin Herbert, Dobbins was the Chargers best offensive player this season. The running back was earning Comeback Player of the Year consideration before the Chargers placed him on injured reserve. Injuries have plagued his entire NFL career, yet he consistently produces when on the field. He averaged 4.6 yards a carry and rushed for a career single-season high 905 yards in 13 games this year.  

Poona Ford, DT

Ford was a revelation for the Chargers. The interior defensive lineman was disruptive as he compiled 39 tackles and tied career-highs in sacks (3) and tackles for loss (8). The Chargers are thin at defensive tackle, but the team’s need at the position wasn’t glaring because Ford started all 17 regular-season games.  

Chargers three moves to make

Wide receiver

Defensive line

The Chargers’ top three defensive linemen Poona Ford, Morgan Fox, and Teair Tart are headed toward free agency. Ford scored an 85.1 overall grade from Pro Football Focus, ranking fifth among qualifying defensive linemen. The Chargers will likely attempt to retain at least two of the three interior defensive linemen, but they’ll have to bolster the unit.

Interior offensive line

Per ESPN, rookie right tackle Joe Alt had a 94% pass block win rate, which is the fourth-best mark in the NFL. Left tackle Rashawn Slater allowed three sacks all season. The interior of the Chargers offensive line caused a majority of the team’s 124 pressures allowed.

Chargers draft needs

Wide receiver, interior offensive line and tight end.

Los Angeles currently has eight total picks in the 2025 NFL Draft. Compensatory picks won’t be announced until the offseason.

The Chargers have picks in the following rounds:

1st round
2nd round
3rd round
4th round
5th round
6th round
6th round (from New England)
7th round (from Cleveland)

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

At the start of the postseason, 14 franchises earned a playoff berth and a shot to win a Lombardi Trophy.

However, every team’s road to New Orleans for Super Bowl 59 isn’t clear. Some teams get closer than others, but the playoffs are filled with twists, bumps, turns, and plenty of emotions as squads battle for a Super Bowl championship. The offseason is the next destination when a team’s postseason journey is over.

The offseason brings new possibilities and optimism. That time has arrived for the Pittsburgh Steelers following their 28-14 loss to the Ravens in the wild-card round. What’s next for the Steelers as they prepare for the 2025 season? USA TODAY Sports explores.

Steelers key 2025 free agents

Russell Wilson + Justin Fields

Both Steelers quarterbacks are scheduled to become free agents. Fields started the first six games and Wilson started the final 11. Neither quarterback elicited great confidence for next season.

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

Fields averaged a minuscule 110 passing yards per game. Wilson produced 225 passing yards per game. Fields made strides as a passer, but Mike Tomlin was still comfortable replacing him with Wilson. Wilson struggled to complete intermediate throws throughout the season. Nevertheless, the Steelers don’t have adequate QB options behind them.

Donte Jackson

Jackson had a career-best five interceptions and allowed a 59% completion rate when targeted in 15 starts. He proved to be a nice complement to Joey Porter Jr. on the opposite side.

Najee Harris

Harris is the third player in the last 20 seasons to have 1,000-plus rush yards in each of his first four seasons, per NFL Research. His career 3.9 yards per carry isn’t anything to write home about, but are the Steelers genuinely ready to begin a new era at running back? He’ll be 27 years old at the start of next season.

Steelers three moves to make

Quarterback

The Steelers are in the same division as perennial MVP candidates Lamar Jackson and Joe Burrow. Therefore, it’s paramount for Pittsburgh to make a move at quarterback, whether it’s by re-signing Wilson or Fields or finding another answer under center.  

The Steelers ranked 23rd in total offense, the lowest-ranked offense to qualify for the postseason. If Fields can live up to his potential as a passer, his ceiling will be higher than Wilson’s.

Offensive line

Four offensive linemen ended the season on injured reserve for Pittsburgh, including rookie first-round pick tackle Troy Fautanu. Zach Frazier was a plus at center. However, the Steelers need continuity along the O-line.

Wide receiver

The Steelers don’t have a reliable wide receiver outside of George Pickens. Pickens was the only wideout with over 36 receptions. The team was over-reliant on Pickens and tight end Pat Freiermuth.

Steelers draft needs

Wide receiver, offensive line, and defensive line.

The Steelers currently have eight picks in the 2025 draft. Compensatory picks won’t be announced until the offseason.

The Steelers have picks in the following rounds:

Round 1
Round 2
Round 3
Round 4 (Conditional to CHI)
Round 5 (from LAR)
Round 6 (from HOU)
Round 7 (from ATL, DEN, NO, or PHI)
Round 7 (from ATL, DEN, NO, or PHI)

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

After President-elect Trump mused about using ‘economic force’ to acquire Canada as the 51st state during his Mar-a-Lago news conference on Tuesday, outgoing Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau responded on social media that ‘there isn’t a snowball’s chance in hell that Canada would become part of the United States.’

However, as Trudeau announced on Monday his plan to resign as prime minister once the Liberal Party that he leads chooses his successor, the biggest pushback to Trump’s pitch to annex Canada – and his planned 25% tariffs on exports from the country – has come from the premier of Canada’s most populous province, Ontario.

Doug Ford, a former businessman and conservative like Trump who has served as Ontario’s 26th premier since 2018, told Fox News Digital in an interview that the president-elect’s targeting Canada is both ‘crazy’ and ‘ridiculous.’

He said the bilateral focus should be on ‘strengthening’ what the Canadian government calls a nearly trillion-dollar two-way trade relationship to ‘make the U.S. and Canada the richest and most prosperous jurisdiction in the world.’

At a Toronto news conference on Monday following Trudeau’s resignation announcement, Ford chided Trump with a ‘counteroffer’ to his Canada-as-a-51st state idea. 

‘How about if we buy Alaska and throw in Minnesota?’ the premier said at Queen’s Park, Ontario’s legislature.

Ford jokingly told Fox News Digital that he heard from Canadians after making those remarks that he should have chosen ‘somewhere warmer, like Florida or California.’

‘California never votes for him anyway,’ he added.

At his Monday news conference, Ontario’s premier said that ‘under my watch,’ annexing Canada ‘will never, ever happen.’  

Ford is also taking Trump’s tariff threat seriously.

Last month, his Progressive Conservative government launched a multimillion-dollar U.S. ad campaign on television and streaming apps touting Ontario as an ‘ally’ to generate ‘more workers, more trade, more prosperity, more security.’

‘You can rely on Ontario for energy to power your growing economy, and for the critical minerals crucial to new technologies,’ says the 60-second ad.

Ford said the 25% tariff against Canada, which Trump plans to implement on his first day in office on Jan. 20, would hurt millions of American and Canadian workers.

‘Nine million Americans produce products for Ontario alone every single day,’ he said. ‘The problem is China shipping goods into Mexico and Mexico slapping a made-in-Mexico sticker.’

Ontario is ready to take retaliatory measures ‘that will really send a message to the U.S.’ in response to the imposition of U.S. tariffs, said Ford, who was involved in the renegotiation of the North American Free Trade Agreement during the first Trump administration, but would now like Canada to have separate deals with the U.S. and Mexico.

‘It’s unfortunate because retaliation is not good for either country,’ he offered, noting that Ontario is the top exporter to 17 states and the second largest to 11 others. 

‘The last thing I want to do is hurt those people,’ said Ford. ‘I want to create more jobs in the U.S., more jobs in Canada. And we can do that by making sure that we toughen up and put tariffs on places like China.’

By way of example, he said that ‘someone in Texas who purchased a GM pickup truck made in Oshawa, [Ontario] might have paid between $50,000 and $60,000,’ and with a tariff, ‘would be paying 70 some-odd thousand.’

‘It just doesn’t make sense whatsoever,’ Ford said. 

He would like to have a face-to-face meeting with Trump and said he has reached out to U.S. senators and governors to make that happen. A sit-down with SpaceX and Tesla CEO Elon Musk – whom Trump appointed to co-lead, with former Republican presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy, the proposed ‘Department of Government Efficiency’ – is also on Ford’s wish-list.

Ford said Trump ‘doesn’t realize’ that Ontario is the U.S.’s third-largest trading partner, amounting to about US$344 billion in 2023, ‘split equally down the center.’

Ontario’s premier said he wants to ship more electricity and critical minerals to the U.S., which ‘needs us like we need them.’ 

In 2012, the premier and his late brother, Rob, who was mayor of Toronto at the time, met Trump, along with his daughter, Ivanka, when they were in the city to open the former Trump International Hotel and Tower, now unaffiliated with The Trump Organization and known as The St. Regis Toronto.

Ford, who ran a Toronto-based family business, Deco Labels & Flexible Packaging, before entering municipal politics as a city councilor in 2010, considers Trump ‘a shrewd operator’ and ‘a smart businessperson.’

The incoming president ‘knows about Ontario,’ the premier said.

‘Not one senator, not one governor, not one congressperson or businessperson, has said that Canada is a problem,’ said Ford, who opened a Deco branch in Chicago in 1999.

He said Trump has not set his sights on such other U.S. allies as the United Kingdom and France, but ‘wants to target’ the U.S.’s ‘closest friend,’ Canada. 

‘I’m not too sure if it’s personal against Trudeau, but Trudeau is on his way out, so hopefully we’ll have a better conversation,’ said Ontario’s premier, who added that he would consider taking a run at federal politics in the future.

On Monday, Trump posted on Truth Social that ‘the United States can no longer suffer the massive Trade Deficits and Subsidies that Canada needs to stay afloat.’ 

‘Justin Trudeau knows this, and resigned,’ said the next, and 47th, U.S. president.

But Trudeau is still the prime minister, and Ford and the premiers of the other nine provinces and three territories will meet with him next Wednesday in Ottawa to address the Trump tariff issue.

Despite his departure as prime minister sometime over the next two months when the next Liberal leader is expected to be chosen, Trudeau should not think ‘he’s off the hook’ and Canadian premiers ‘will hold his feet to the fire’ in ensuring that Canada is ready to respond to the Trump administration’s imminent and punitive trade measure, said Ford.

He chairs the Council of the Federation – a gathering of Canada’s premiers, which has kept Canada-U.S. relations top of mind and has made avoiding U.S. tariffs ‘a priority,’ according to a statement issued last month.

‘Canada and the U.S. form one of the largest integrated markets in the world, with more than C$3.5 billion [about US$2.4 billion] worth of goods and services crossing the border each day. The U.S. sells more goods and services to Canada than it sells to China, Japan and Germany combined.’

To help assuage Trump’s concerns over border security, Ford’s government launched on Tuesday ‘Operation Deterrence,’ to crack down on illegal crossings, and drugs and guns – 90% of which are entering Ontario from the U.S., the premier told Fox News Digital.

On drugs, he said his government is also collaborating with the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) to identify the source of fentanyl ingredients – and whether they originated in ‘China or Mexico or the U.S.’

Last month, the Trudeau government announced its own border-security plan.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Kirk Herbstreit hasn’t made many friends with his takes over the last couple years, even if he was right on this night.

The Baltimore Ravens smacked around their bitter rivals, the Pittsburgh Steelers, in the first half Saturday night to the tune of a 21-0 halftime lead. It wasn’t particularly close either, with Baltimore dominating. They owned the ball for over 20 of the opening 30 minutes, ran 23 more plays and were out-gaining Pittsburgh 308-59.

Herbstreit, who is coming in off a Cotton Bowl broadcast that saw Ohio State defeat Texas, wasn’t feeling the intensity of the NFL playoffs.

‘If I were a Steelers fan the thing that would concern me just watching this first half, you’re in the postseason,’ Herbstreit said. ‘You’re getting dominated. I don’t see any fight. I don’t see any pushback.’

He wasn’t done, clearly irritated at the lack of fight from this once-proud franchise.

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

‘It’s one thing to lose X, O’s against a really talented offense, but where the hell is the fight?’ Herbstreit added. ‘This is the Pittsburgh Steelers. There’s nothing. They’re just going through the motions.’

Herbstreit suggested giving Justin Fields a look in the second half. The former Ohio State signal-caller made a few cameos in the opening 30 minutes, but Russell Wilson continued to get the majority of snaps.

The broadcaster also added that Pittsburgh’s defense needed to step up after a dismal half.

Pittsburgh did show more fight in the second half — and Herbstreit was complimentary of that — but it proved to be too little, too late as Baltimore won 28-14.

There will be plenty of questions for the Steelers heading into the offseason. Those might start with Mike Tomlin, as the head coach hasn’t led his team to a playoff win since January 2017, dropping six straight postseason games.

Pittsburgh was shut out in the first half for the first time in a playoff game under Tomlin.

On the bright side for Herbstreit, his NFL season in the broadcast booth has come to an end. Next up for him is the college football national championship before heading into the offseason.

So, maybe things aren’t all that bad.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY