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This year’s participants are not yet official, but a handful of stars are already voicing their desire to swing for the fences. While we should expect some veterans in the field like two-time winner Pete Alonso, the Home Run Derby can be a showcase for the game’s up-and-coming young hitters.

There was a stretch in the 21st century where a lot of top players would shy away from taking part, largely due to a long-running fear of the ‘Home Run Derby Curse’ and the notion that the contest can negatively impact your swing long-term. The data is still out that on that.

But that’s changed in recent years, with young players eager to put on a show – even if they aren’t pure home run hitters.

Here’s a look at five rising sluggers we want to see make their Home Run Derby debuts in Atlanta:

Cal Raleigh, Seattle Mariners

Could ‘The Big Dumper’ become the first catcher to win the Home Run Derby?

Leading the majors with 32 homers, Raleigh should smash Salvador Perez’s single-season record for catchers and is on pace to top Aaron Judge’s American League record 62 homers. Seattle’s 28-year-old backstop already counts Johnny Bench among his biggest fans and told USA TODAY Sports he’d jump at the chance to participate in the Derby if he were invited: ‘Why wouldn’t you want to do something like that?’

As of June 24, the Mariners still have 19 games left before the All-Star break and Raleigh has a chance to become just the seventh player in history to reach 35 in the first half.

James Wood, Washington Nationals

One of the tallest players in baseball at 6-foot-7, Washington’s 22-year-old slugger is tied for third in baseball with 12 ‘no-doubters’ – homers that would be gone in all 30 stadiums according to Baseball Savant. Wood is averaging 415 feet per home run, second among all players with at least 13 homers entering play on June 23.

“I mean, it’s been brought up,” Wood told reporters about his potential participation. “But I mean, I don’t know. We’ll see. That’d be cool if I’m invited. So let’s try to get that first.”

Said Wood: “I’ve heard all of it. Like, ‘It’ll mess up your swing.’ But I’m sure there’s a whole lot of stuff it’s good for. … You’re taking as many swings as you can in, like, 2½ minutes. That’s a lot.”

Elly De La Cruz, Cincinnati Reds

Cincinnati’s unicorn shortstop has declined to participate the past two years, but hinted in 2024 that his time would come eventually.

“It’s not my time to do it yet,” De La Cruz told reporters last season. “It’s too many swings, and I want to rest on those days,” he said, having talked with other Dominican players who participated in the past.

The 23-year-old has 18 home runs in 79 games, on track to blow past the 25 he hit as a first-time All-Star last year.

Said De La Cruz’s agent Scott Boras in 2024: “I guess it’ll happen someday. … Elly is an athlete. The Home Run Derby requires a visceral strength to repeat something which is very different than being an elite baseball player.

“Like Pete Alonso (of the Mets) and those kind of guys with those kind of bodies and strength, you can understand why they can endure a home run contest.”

Andy Pages, Los Angeles Dodgers

In his second year, Los Angeles’ 24-year-old outfielder overcame a slow start and has hit .330 with 14 homers and 47 RBIs in 55 games from April 22-June 22. His 16 home runs are second on the Dodgers behind Shohei Ohtani and he’s playing his way into consideration for a spot on the All-Star team – managed by Los Angeles skipper Dave Roberts.

Junior Caminero, Tampa Bay Rays

Tampa Bay’s 21-year-old third baseman has found his power stroke in his first full season, clubbing 19 homers through 73 games in 2025, quickly becoming one of the top young hitters in the game.

He’s also totally down for the Derby, which has never been won by a Rays player.

‘If I get selected, and they give me the opportunity, yes,’ Caminero said in an appearance on Foul Territory. ‘I’m not going to say that I’m going to win, but I’m going to put on a great show for the fans, and it’s going to be entertaining.’

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Julio Rodriguez had a double, a home run and four RBIs, Cal Raleigh hit his league-leading 32nd home run, and the Seattle Mariners pulled away for an 11-2 win over the Minnesota Twins on Monday, June 23 in Minneapolis.

Luke Raley added a three-run homer for Seattle, which won the series opener and improved to 3-1 on its road trip. Dominic Canzone added a solo shot.

Carlos Correa and Trevor Larnach each hit a solo home run for the Twins. Minnesota lost for the 10th time in 11 games.

Mariners right-hander Bryan Woo (7-4) allowed two runs on six hits in six innings. He walked one and struck out nine as he earned his 20th career victory.

Twins right-hander Bailey Ober (4-5) gave up seven runs on seven hits, including three of the home runs, in seven innings. He walked none and struck out seven.

Mariners relievers Eduard Bazardo and Zach Pop combined for three scoreless innings to seal the win.

Seattle pounced on Ober for six runs in the top of the third.

J.P. Crawford started the scoring with a sacrifice fly to center field to drive in Ben Williamson. Rodriguez followed in the next at-bat with a 442-foot, two-run home run to left-center to make it 3-0.

Four batters later, Raley capped the big inning with a 436-foot, three-run blast to center. It marked his third homer of the season and his first since April 17 against the Cincinnati Reds.

The Mariners increased their lead to 7-0 on Canzone’s solo homer in the sixth. He pulled a curveball over the wall in right-center field.

Larnach and Correa led off the bottom of the sixth with back-to-back blasts. The sequence marked Larnach’s 11th homer and Correa’s sixth.

Rodriguez made it 9-2 with a two-run double to left-center in the ninth. Raleigh — nicknamed ‘Dig Dumper’ — stepped to the plate in the next at-bat and hit a towering, two-run shot over the wall in left to finish the scoring.

Watch: Cal Raleigh hits his 32nd home run this season

Who are MLB’s home run leaders?

Cal Raleigh, Seattle Mariners — 32
Aaron Judge, New York Yankees — 28
Shohei Ohtani, Los Angeles Dodgers — 26
Eugenio Saurez, Arizona Diamondbacks — 25
Kyle Schwarber, Philadelphia Phillies — 24

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This story has been updated with new information.

The Boston Celtics are trading Jrue Holiday to the Portland Trail Blazers for Anfernee Simons, a person with direct knowledge of the deal confirmed to USA TODAY Sports.

The person spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly about the news.

ESPN’s Shams Charania was the first to report the trade, which also sends two second-round picks to the Celtics.

Holiday goes to the team that he was initially traded to in a three-team deal in September 2023 between the Milwaukee Bucks, Phoenix Suns and Trail Blazers in order for the Bucks to acquire Damian Lillard. Shortly thereafter, Holiday was traded by the Trail Blazers to the Celtics. Now the two-time All-Star and two-time NBA champion returns to Portland.

In two seasons with the Celtics, Holiday averaged 11.8 points and helped Boston win the 2024 NBA title.

Holiday is the second major NBA player to be dealt in as many days after the Suns traded Kevin Durant to the Houston Rockets on Sunday, June 22. Holiday signed a four-year, $134.4 million extension with the Celtics late in the 2023-24 season and has three seasons remaining on the deal, though he has a player option on 2027-28 and can become a free agent in the summer of 2027. Holiday, 35, remains one of the top defensive guards in the league and will help Portland rebuild in the short term and possibly longer

The Celtics are looking to reduce their luxury tax bill and create roster flexibility. They will look to make more moves through the draft and free agency.

Simons, a first-round pick by the Trail Blazers in 2018, has averaged 15 points during his seven-year NBA career, which had been spent in Portland. He is entering the final season of a four-year, $100 million contract and is due $27.6 million in 2025-26. Simons will be an unrestricted free agent after next season.

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MIAMI GARDENS, FL — Lionel Messi could only look down and shake his head in disappointment after the game-tying goal was scored against Inter Miami.

Several minutes later, Messi stood near midfield after the final whistle — shirtless after exchanging his sought-after, game-worn, No. 10 jersey — hoping for a simple moment to himself.

Messi briefly glanced at the jumbotron, and saw opposing fans celebrating in the stands before he was interrupted. He quickly smiled, greeted his opponents like the sportsman he’s renowned to be, and headed to the locker room.

Inter Miami’s match in the FIFA Club World Cup didn’t end the way it should have on Monday, June 23. The club was on the verge of its second historic victory in the last week. They nearly won their group at the tournament, which would have been another landmark accolade in Major League Soccer’s 30-year history — especially for the five-year-old club co-owned by Jorge and Jose Mas, and soon-to-be Sir David Beckham.

Inter Miami jumped out to a 2-0 lead behind goals by Tadeo Allende (16’) and Luis Suarez (65’), but settled for a 2-2 draw against Brazilian side Palmeiras at Hard Rock Stadium. Paulinho scored in the 80th minute, and Mauricio tied the match in the 87th minute for Palmeiras — the result as disappointing as it was heartbreaking, the night before Messi’s 38th birthday.

However, Inter Miami still advances to the Club World Cup Round of 16.

They were so close. Still, there’s plenty to celebrate.

“It’s bittersweet,” Inter Miami defender Noah Allen said after the match.

Inter Miami’s next matchup is a potential nightmare, just as much as it’s an accomplishment. They will face Messi’s last team Paris Saint-Germain — the reigning UEFA Champions League winners — on June 29 in Atlanta.

Messi will face the French club he left two years ago — shortly after leading Argentina past France for his crowning achievement at the Qatar World Cup — to join MLS and play the twilight of his career in the United States.

Inter Miami and Paris Saint-Germain would never meet on the same pitch in any circumstance, unless for a one-off friendly — before the Club World Cup.

It’s a dream matchup for MLS and FIFA. MLS commissioner Don Garber will celebrate Inter Miami’s chance to face the European champions. FIFA president Gianni Infantino will proudly boast about the Club World Cup’s ability to present this kind of quirky fantasy that soccer has never seen.

The stage is set.

“Let’s see how far we can go,” Inter Miami left back Jordi Alba said. “Obviously, we’re going to compete, we’re going to fight to win the game, knowing how difficult it is to play against a team of this caliber. And why not dream? It’s 90 minutes. These days, any team can beat you, and we’re going to fight.”

Messi continues another streak that speaks to his greatness — he’s never been eliminated in group stage of any tournament his career. He was held scoreless for two of the three group stage matches, but his free kick goal in a 2-1 win against Portuguese club FC Porto in Atlanta was the defining moment in Inter Miami’s Club World Cup run.

Inter Miami is the only MLS club to win a match at the tournament. They also became the first North American team to beat a European club when they defeated Porto — that alone, a landmark moment in MLS history. They also settled for a scoreless draw against Egyptian Premier League champions Al Ahly to open the tournament.

Inter Miami advanced to the knockout stage with two draws and a win in an international competition with 32 of the best clubs in the world, and they’ve put MLS on the map globally — on the field, just like Messi’s best-selling Inter Miami jerseys have worldwide.

Two months ago, Inter Miami appeared prime to be embarrassed on this stage. They were clinging to a top-five position in the MLS Eastern Conference winning just three times in 10 matches before the Club World Cup. Meanwhile, the Seattle Sounders and Los Angeles FC were both eliminated from the group stage. They have just one goal between them — Seattle scored it, while LAFC will play its final group-stage match Tuesday, June 24.

Inter Miami must quickly turn the page to focus on its next opponent, as much as they should relish the history they’re making in the moment.

“Before we started the tournament, if someone told me we would have this kind of performance against these kind of teams, I’d sign it,” Inter Miami coach Javier Mascherano said. “I appreciate our players. They gave more than 100 percent. I think it’s a historic night for MLS because we’re into the best 16 teams in the world. I think the whole MLS has to be proud of Inter Miami.”

Inter Miami would have faced Brazilian club Botafogo on Saturday in Philadelphia had they won Group A. In theory, Inter Miami would have a better chance in the next round against Botafogo than Paris Saint-Germain.

Botafogo delivered the first real upset at the Club World Cup, beating Paris Saint-Germain, 1-0, on June 19. While A plus B doesn’t always equal C in soccer, Inter Miami can look to Botafogo for inspiration.

Ten years after Messi, Suarez, Jordi Alba, Sergio Busquets and now-coach Javier Mascherano won the Champions League with Barcelona in 2015, they’ll face the team that’s in the same position now.

No one expected Inter Miami to come this far. Anything after this point is like playing with house money.

Before then, Inter Miami will playfully celebrate Messi’s birthday during a recovery day on Tuesday.

Soccer players, for some reason, celebrate birthdays with some tough love.

The Inter Miami players will line up like a tunnel for Messi to run through, so they can give him a tap on the back of his head and shoulders as he runs by.

Some of his old friends, like Alba and Suarez, might tap him the hardest.

Hey, that’s how soccer players celebrate birthdays.

“We’re going to have a tunnel for him tomorrow and slap him in the head,” Allen said. “Gently.”

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WWE star Liv Morgan will “miss several months of action” after she suffered a shoulder injury.

The announcement was made by commentator Corey Graves during Monday Night Raw on June 23. 

It was expected Morgan would miss significant time as a result of her injury, but the severity of it was unknown. Morgan is also one half of the WWE Women’s Tag Team Champions alongside Raquel Rodriguez. 

The plans on the titles haven’t been announced, as Rodriguez could either continue the reign alongside someone else or the titles could be vacated. There is a chance Rodriguez and Morgan could hold onto the championships until Morgan returns.

What happened to Liv Morgan?

Morgan suffered the injury in a match with Kairi Sane during Monday Night Raw on June 16. In the early stages of the contest, Sane dropped to her knees to perform a single-leg takedown. Morgan went face first on the mat and her right shoulder also hit the ground. Morgan immediately yelled in pain and rolled out of the ring as the referee prevented Sane from performing any other move.

Medical personnel came to check on Morgan outside of the ring, and the match was eventually called off as Morgan was escorted out of the arena. Sane was declared winner by forfeit.

Liv Morgan return: When could she come back?

While the severity of Morgan’s injury is unknown, Morgan won’t be appearing in WWE in the foreseeable future. Morgan was scheduled to attend Fanatics Fest in New York City on June 20-22, but was pulled from the event after her injury.

A shoulder dislocation can sideline athletes for months. The timeline of return depends on the severity of the injury and whether surgery is necessary. The Mayo Clinic says the shoulder would improve ‘over a few weeks’ if surgery is not needed, but if surgery is performed, full recovery can take five to six months.

Shoulder injuries have been an issue for the two-time Women’s World Champion. In 2023, Morgan missed six months of action after she dislocated her shoulder in a match with Rhea Ripley, which turned out to be a labrum tear and she required surgery.

Should Morgan miss around five months, she would return around the same time as Survivor Series on Nov. 29, or could possibly wait to return at Royal Rumble in January 2026, similar to how she did in 2024.

Morgan was in her fourth reign as WWE Women’s Tag Team Champion with Raquel Rodriguez, a record for the title. The duo won the titles at Raw After WrestleMania on April 21 and they lost them to Lyra Valkyria and Becky Lynch one day earlier at WrestleMania 41.

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Rep. Jasmine Crockett, D-Texas, has bowed out of the race to become the top Democrat on a key committee that is currently probing former President Joe Biden’s alleged mental decline.

Democratic firebrand Crockett was gunning to become the next ranking member, a title given to the senior member of the minority party, on the House Oversight Committee.

‘It was clear by the numbers that my style of leadership is not exactly what they were looking for, and so I didn’t think that it was fair for me to then push forward and try to rebuke that,’ Crockett told reporters.

House Democrats held the election during their weekly closed-door caucus meeting Tuesday morning.

However, in a smaller election by a key House Democratic panel on Monday night, Crockett and two others lost to Rep. Robert Garcia, D-Calif. Crockett signaled she came in last of the four, telling reporters on Tuesday, ‘They were clear that I was the one that made the least sense in their minds.

‘I accept that, and I think that you have to make sure that you are going to be able to work with leadership if you are going to go into a leadership position,’ she said. ‘I think the people may be disappointed, but at the end of the day, we’ve got to move forward in this country, we’ve got ot move forward for this world, and I don’t want to be an impediment.’

She promised to still be ‘loud and proud’ and a ‘team player’ for Democrats.

The House Oversight Committee, led by Chairman James Comer, R-Ky., played a marquee role in the last Congress as Republicans pursued an impeachment inquiry against the previous president.

Comer’s panel is back in the headlines now for another Biden-focused probe, this time looking into allegations that former senior White House aides covered up signs of the elderly leader’s cognitive decline.

The top Democrat on the House Oversight Committee is expected to act as a foil to Republicans’ anti-Biden pursuits.

In addition to those issues, however, the committee is also charged with overseeing the federal workforce and the U.S. government’s ownership and leases of federal buildings – both key matters as President Donald Trump and Republicans seek to cut government bloat.

Crockett is already a member of the committee and has been known to make headlines during its hearings. She infamously got into a spat with Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., during an oversight hearing last year after Greene mocked Crockett as having ‘fake eyelashes.’

Crockett retorted that Greene had a ‘bleach blonde, bad-built butch body.’

However, in her pitch to House Democrats, Crockett styled herself as a serious but potent messenger.

‘Our work cannot be solely reactive. We must also be strategic in laying the groundwork to win back the House majority,’ she wrote in a letter earlier this month. ‘Every hearing, every investigation, every public moment must serve the dual purpose of accountability and must demonstrate why a House Democratic majority is essential for America’s future.’

The previous ranking member on the House Oversight Committee, the late Rep. Gerry Connolly, D-Va., died late last month after battling esophageal cancer.

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The Trump administration’s successful surprise strikes on Iran on Saturday night were executed without issue after the National Security Council saw massive overhauls earlier in 2025, and the national security advisor was replaced by Secretary of State Marco Rubio to fulfill an additional job role that critics said would likely end in failure. 

President Donald Trump made a surprise announcement on Truth Social Saturday evening announcing the U.S. military carried out successful strikes on a trio of Iranian nuclear facilities as tensions and conflict heightened between Iran and Israel since June 12. 

‘A short time ago, the U.S. military carried out massive precision strikes on the three key nuclear facilities in the Iranian regime: Fordow, Natanz and Isfahan,’ Trump said from the White House in an address to the nation just hours after the Truth Social announcement. ‘Everybody heard those names for years as they built this horribly destructive enterprise. Our objective was the destruction of Iran’s nuclear enrichment capacity, and a stop to the nuclear threat posed by the world’s number one state sponsor of terror. Tonight, I can report to the world that the strikes were a spectacular military success.’ 

By Monday evening, Iran and Israel agreed to a ceasefire with Trump declaring the ’12 Day War’ was over following the U.S. strikes. 

The operation, which was also praised by Pentagon brass as a total success, was executed after the Trump administration slashed the National Security Council and replaced former national security advisor Mike Waltz with Rubio, who currently serves four different roles within the administration. 

Democratic lawmakers and former National Security Council staffers seethed against potential and finalized cuts to the council, alleging that Trump was politicizing and potentially crippling national security. 

The Trump administration and its supporters, however, viewed the overhauls as the president coming through on his campaign promise to strip Washington of the ‘deep state’ and streamline the office. 

The National Security Council operates within the White House to advise the president on foreign policy issues. 

It is chaired by the president, with other members including the vice president, the secretaries of state, treasury and defense, and the assistant to the president for national security affairs. Other staffers on the council include foreign policy experts who frequently join the team on loan from the Pentagon or State Department.

The Trump administration has made a handful of cuts to the National Security Council since Inauguration Day, most notably trimming roughly half of the National Security Council’s 350-person team in May, Fox Digital previously reported. Waltz, who served as Trump’s national security advisor for roughly 100 days, was removed from the post May 1 and named Trump’s nominee to serve as ambassador to the U.N. following a Signal chat leak with a journalist. 

Following Waltz’s departure, Trump named Rubio as his acting national security advisor, and he carried out a massive overhaul to the office, including trimming it of more than 100 staffers ahead of Memorial Day. 

‘The NSC is the ultimate Deep State. It’s Marco vs. the Deep State. We’re gutting the Deep State,’ a White House official told Axios in May as Rubio took a hatchet to the NSC staff. 

A White House official told Fox Digital on Monday that Rubio’s joint roles have allowed for ‘greater coordination between the State Department and White House,’ which they said has led to ‘more efficient execution of the president’s foreign policy agenda.’ 

Democrats, however, predicted that Rubio serving simultaneously as chief of the State Department and Trump’s national security advisor, would prove to be a failure. They argued that he would be unable to juggle the high-profiled roles, in addition to serving as acting archivist of the U.S., as well as acting administrator of the U.S. Agency for International Development.

‘There’s no way he can do that and do it well, especially since there’s such incompetence over at DOD with Pete Hegseth being secretary of defense and just the hollowing out of the top leadership,’ Illinois Democrat Sen. Tammy Duckworth said on CBS’ ‘Face the Nation’ last month. ‘There’s no way he can carry all that entire load on his own.’

‘I don’t know how anybody could do these two big jobs,’ Democrat Virginia Sen. Mark Warner said Sunday on CNN’s ‘State of the Union.’

Fast-forward less than two months; Trump and his national security team executed ‘Operation Midnight Hammer’ in Iran, which has received widespread support among Republicans and a handful of Democrats. Historic critics of the president, such as Democrat New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Republican Kentucky Rep. Thomas Massie, however, have railed against the operation as bypassing congressional authority. 

‘The success of Operation Midnight Hammer speaks to the unmatched capabilities of the United States military, as well as President Trump’s brilliant foreign policy strategy, which included working closely with his national security team to flawlessly execute this mission and obliterate Iran’s ability to possess a nuclear weapon,’ White House spokeswoman Anna Kelly told Fox Digital on Monday. 

‘As usual, Democrats and the legacy media were wrong – President Trump has rightfully placed immense trust in his top officials, including Secretary Rubio, Secretary Hegseth, and Director Gabbard, to help him make the world safer,’ she added. 

Trump repeatedly met with the National Security Council and other administration leaders between June 12 and last Saturday, when the strikes were ordered on Iran. 

Rubio, Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, and Vice President JD Vance were fixtures of the discussions, with photos showing them criss-crossing in and out of the White House last week as they reported to the Situation Room to meet with the president. The trio of U.S. officials flanked Trump as he addressed the nation about the operation Saturday night. 

‘For 40 years, Iran has been saying, ‘Death to America. Death to Israel.’ They have been killing our people, blowing off their arms, blowing off their legs with roadside bombs,’ Trump said in his address Saturday with the trio standing behind him. ‘That was their specialty. We lost over a thousand people, and hundreds of thousands throughout the Middle East and around the world have died as a direct result of their hate, in particular.’

‘Iran’s nuclear enrichment facilities have been completely and totally obliterated,’ Trump said. ‘And Iran, the bully of the Middle East, must now make peace. If they do not, future attacks would be far greater and a lot easier.’ 

The operation itself was cloaked in secrecy and took Iran and the world by surprise. Trump had said on Thursday – via comment from press secretary Karoline Leavitt – that he would make a decision on Iran within two weeks, which signaled a longer time frame than 48 hours for such a mission. 

There were no media leaks or speculation that such strikes were imminent, while earlier on Saturday, six B-2 stealth bombers from Whiteman Air Force Base in Missouri were spotted en route to a U.S. Air Force base in Guam, which signaled the U.S. was likely making moves on Iran, but not in just mere hours from when news broke of the stealth bombers. The bombers were later revealed to be decoys. 

Hegseth and Gen. Dan Caine, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, held a press conference Sunday from the Pentagon, where they celebrated that strategic deception and misdirection played a key role in the operation. 

‘At midnight Friday into Saturday morning, a large B-2 strike package comprised of bombers launched from the continental United States,’ Caine said on Sunday. ‘As part of the plan to maintain tactical surprise, part of the package proceeded to the west and into the Pacific as a decoy – a deception effort, known only to an extremely small number of planners and key leaders here in Washington and in Tampa.’ 

Hegseth said in his remarks before the media Sunday morning that the U.S. military had leveraged ‘misdirection’ and total secrecy, aside from top national security officials, to carry out the strikes ‘without the world knowing at all.’

‘It involved misdirection and the highest of operational security. Our B-2s went in and out of… these nuclear sites, in and out and back, without the world knowing at all,’ Hegseth said. ‘In that way, it was historic.’

It was the longest B-2 spirit bomber mission since 2001, the second-longest B-2 mission ever flown and the largest B-2 operational strike in U.S. history, Hegseth and Caine said during the Sunday press conference. 

Rubio spoke to the media on Sunday morning shows, telling ‘Sunday Morning Futures’ host Maria Bartiromo that the ‘most important thing’ Iran should realize following the strikes is ‘the game is up’ and it’s time for peace. 

‘They have played the world for 40-something years with these nuclear talks and delaying things… they’re not going to play President Trump, and they found out last night that when he says he’s going to do something, he’ll do it. And he doesn’t want to do it. It’s not his first choice, but it’s the only choice. That’s the choice the Iranian regime left us, because they play too many games,’ he said. 

Trump celebrated on Monday evening in another Truth Social post that Iran and Israel had reached a ceasefire deal and that the 12 Day War had ended.

‘On the assumption that everything works as it should, which it will, I would like to congratulate both Countries, Israel and Iran, on having the Stamina, Courage, and Intelligence to end, what should be called, ‘THE 12 DAY WAR.’ This is a War that could have gone on for years, and destroyed the entire Middle East, but it didn’t, and never will! God bless Israel, God bless Iran, God bless the Middle East, God bless the United States of America, and GOD BLESS THE WORLD!’ he wrote. 

Tensions are still flared in the Middle East, as both Israel and Iran accuse each other of violating the ceasefire on Tuesday morning, with Trump urging them to put down their weapons while triumphantly declaring Iran’s nuclear capabilities have been crippled. 

‘IRAN WILL NEVER REBUILD THEIR NUCLEAR FACILITIES!’ Trump posted on Tuesday morning while heading to a NATO summit at the Hague in the Netherlands.

Fox News Digital’s Morgan Phillips contributed to this report. 

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President Donald Trump, fresh off announcing a ceasefire between Israel and Iran, is off to The Hague, Netherlands for the yearly summit of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), a conference where he’s hoping to drum up another foreign policy win by pushing European leaders to increase defense spending.

The president is expected to land in the Netherlands on Tuesday and return to the White House on Wednesday. 

It’s Trump’s first NATO summit since becoming president for a second term. In the past, he’s railed against NATO members for ‘freeloading’ off U.S. military protection. This time, European allies are eager to prove him wrong. 

NATO reached an agreement for all nations to boost their defense spending to five percent of their gross domestic product, except Spain. 

Trump initially made the demand, which is expected to be finalized at the summit. 

‘This summit is really about NATO’s credibility, and we are urging all of our Allies to step up to the plate and pay their fair share for transatlantic security,’ U.S. NATO Ambassador Matthew Whitaker said.

Spain complicated the consensus when Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez demanded an exemption from the new spending target – which would be a sharp increase from the 2 percent target Spain has had trouble meeting. 

‘We fully respect the legitimate desire of other countries to increase their defence investment, but we are not going to do it,’ Sanchez said. 

Trump is expected to meet with Rutte and other world leaders and hold a press conference. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy is also expected to attend, continuing his push for Ukraine’s admission into the alliance and its collective defense pact.

NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte boasted that allies were ‘stepping up to equal sharing of responsibility for our shared security.’

Trump has said he does not think the U.S. needs to hit the 5% target. ‘I don’t think we should, but I think they should,’ he told reporters last week. 

The President’s time at the summit will be brief, spending approximately 24 hours on the ground. His meetings ‘will focus on issues of shared concern and reaffirm the United States strong ties with our allies and partners,’ according to an administration official.

But they come after Trump can boast of a ceasefire between Israel and Iran. 

‘It has been fully agreed by and between Israel and Iran that there will be a Complete and Total CEASEFIRE (in approximately 6 hours from now, when Israel and Iran have wound down and completed their in progress, final missions!), for 12 hours, at which point the War will be considered, ENDED!’ Trump wrote on Truth Social. 

Rutte has suggested NATO would stand behind the U.S. after Iran launched a counterstrike on its air base in Qatar, following American attacks on three Iranian nuclear sites.

‘My biggest fear would be for Iran to own and be able to use a nuclear weapon,’ Rutte told reporters ahead of the summit.

He defended the U.S. strikes on Iran after being asked about parallels between the U.S. and Russia when it invaded Ukraine in 2022. 

‘This is a consistent position of NATO: Iran should not have its hands on a nuclear weapon,’ he said. ‘I would not agree that this is against international law — what the U.S. did.’

Rutte had wanted the summit to be a show of NATO unity to Russian President Vladimir Putin amid the ongoing war in Ukraine. But conflict between the U.S., Israel and Iran makes the conference less predictable. 

The Iraq War in 2003 deeply divided NATO: France and Germany were opposed to the invasion while Britain and Spain joined the coalition forces. 

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Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, called the prospect of caucusing with Democrats an ‘interesting hypothetical,’ but she fell short of fully committing to doing so if the Democrats pick up three seats in the 2027 midterms. 

‘It’s an interesting hypothetical,’ Murkowski said on the ‘GD Politics’ podcast with Galen Druke. ‘You started off with the right hook here, is if this would help Alaskans.’ 

The senator is promoting her new book, a memoir titled, ‘Far From Home.’ She was repeatedly asked if she would caucus with Democrats if the party divide in the upper chamber of Congress becomes 50-50 after the next election. 

‘That’s why this book is kind of scary, because now people know what motivates me, and it’s this love for Alaska and what I can do,’ she said. ‘So, that’s my primary goal. I have to figure out how I can be most effective for the people that I serve.’

Murkowski said the ‘problem’ she had with Druke’s hypothetical was that ‘as challenged as we may be on the Republican side, I don’t see the Democrats being much better.’ 

She said the Democrats also have policies that she inherently disagrees with. 

‘I can’t be somebody that I’m not,’ Murkowski said, describing how she received pressure to run as a Libertarian after narrowly losing the GOP Senate primary in 2010. She went on to win as a write-in candidate in a historic victory, launching her Senate career. ‘I can’t now say that I want this job so much that I’m going to pretend to be somebody that I’m not. That’s not who I am.’  

Druke, arguing that Murkowski would not have to become a Democrat to caucus with them, asked, ‘Is there world in which by becoming unaligned or an independent that you could help Alaskans, you’d consider it?’  

‘There may be that possibility,’ she said, noting that the Alaska legislature currently features a coalition with members of both parties.

‘This is one of the things that I think is good and healthy for us, and this is one of the reasons people are not surprised that I don’t neatly toe the line with party initiatives, because we’ve kind of embraced a governing style that says if you’ve got good ideas, and you can work with her over there, it doesn’t make any difference if you’re a Republican or Democrat,’ Murkowski said. ‘We can govern together for the good of the state.’ 

‘If Democrats won three seats in the next election and offered you a way to pass bills that benefit Alaskans if you caucused with them, you’d consider it?’ Druke pressed. 

Murkowski said in response that a coalition is ‘not foreign to Alaskans,’ but it is at the federal level in the U.S. Senate.

‘I’m evading your answer, of course, because it is so, extremely hypothetical, but you can tell that the construct that we’re working with right now, I don’t think is the best construct,’ Murkowski said, adding: ‘Is it something that’s worthy of exploration?’ 

Murkowski joked that Druke was trying to ‘make news’ and said the rank-choice voting system in Alaska means candidates are more likely to get elected if they are not viewed as wholly partisan.

‘It is a different way of looking at addressing our problems rather than just saying it’s red and it’s blue,’ she added. 

Druke hammered the senator again, saying, ‘Was that a yes? There’s some openness to it?’ 

‘There’s some openness to exploring something different than the status quo,’ she said. 

Murkowski, one of seven Republican senators who voted to convict President Donald Trump during his second impeachment trial after the Jan. 6 riot, recently called the July 4 deadline that GOP leadership wants to pass Trump’s ‘big, beautiful bill’ by ‘arbitrary.’  

‘I don’t want us to be able to say we met the date, but our policies are less than we would want,’ Murkowski told Axios. ‘Why are we afraid of a conference? Oh my gosh.’ 

Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., and House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., are hesitant about going to conference with the upcoming debt ceiling ‘X date’ approaching and the party lines so tight. 

Murkowski, a critic of Trump’s foreign policy, particularly on Ukraine, told the Washington Post that she was in a ‘lonely position’ in the Senate, and sometimes feels ‘afraid’ to speak up among Republican colleagues out of fear of retaliation. 

‘We used to be called the world’s greatest deliberative body,’ she told the Post in a recent interview promoting her book. ‘I think we’re still called it, but now I wonder if it’s in air quotes.’

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The worst fears for the Indiana Pacers have come true.

Star point guard Tyrese Haliburton suffered a torn right Achilles tendon in the first quarter of Game 7 of the NBA Finals, the team announced on Monday, June 23. It said surgery was scheduled for later in the day at the Hospital for Special Surgery in New York.

ESPN was first to report the extent of Haliburton ‘s injury.

That means the Pacers must now prepare to be without Haliburton for an extended period of time, possibly even the entire 2025-26 season.

This season, Haliburton averaged 18.6 points, 3.5 rebounds and 9.2 assists – third-most in the NBA. He also led the league in assist-to-turnover ratio (5.61).

He generated one of the most clutch stretches of play in postseason history, hitting a game-winning or game-tying shot in each of Indiana’s four postseason series.

All of which now complicates Indiana’s quest to return to the NBA Finals.

It became apparent immediately after Haliburton sustained the injury that it could be serious. It was a non-contact injury, and after Haliburton fell to the court, his emotional reaction – Haliburton slapped the floor and appeared to shake his head and repeatedly shout ‘no’ – hinted at its severity.

Haliburton scored nine points in just 7:05 of play prior to his injury.

After getting medical attention for several moments, staffers helped Haliburton off the floor, with him not putting any weight on the injured leg. He went into the locker room with a towel draped over his head.

After the game, as players headed back into the Pacers locker room, Haliburton stood outside the room on crutches, greeting his teammates.

‘That’s who he is as a person, a teammate,’ backup point guard T.J. McConnell said after the game. ‘He put his ego aside constantly. He could have been in the locker room feeling sorry for himself after something like that happened, but he wasn’t. He was up greeting us. A lot of us were hurting from the loss and he was up there consoling us. That’s who Tyrese Haliburton is. He’s just the greatest, man.’

Haliburton had been dealing with a right calf strain that he sustained during Game 5, Monday, June 16. He had been listed as questionable heading into each of Games 6 and 7, but he managed to start each.

(This story has been updated with new information.)

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