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There was the discussion about things that could go wrong in the NFL in 2025, so it’s only fair to be more positive, because we are all laughs and giggles in these parts. So we need to discuss what we think will go right.

As is often the case with the NFL, there’s a lot, including the league doing what it does best: make a lot of money.

5. Quarterbacking

No, we’re not in the stratospheric time of Tom Brady and Peyton Manning. Those two were so historic, they form their own era.

So, it’s not that big, but this moment in NFL quarterback time is still really impressive. The depth of the great players at the position is near the best we’ve ever seen, if not at the tippy of that top. Start with Patrick Mahomes. Go to Lamar Jackson. Then Josh Allen. Throw in Joe Burrow. Look at those names. That first one will go into the Hall of Fame. The next one is well on his way. The other two aren’t far behind. We haven’t even talked about Jalen Hurts yet.

There’s Jayden Daniels from Washington and watch out for nuclear growth from Denver’s Bo Nix.

And I have shown massive disrespect to players like Jared Goff and Matthew Stafford by mentioning them so low.

But you get the point. We saw some great quarterback play last year and could see even better in 2025.

4. Ratings

There was a small dip in the ratings last season but who are we kidding. The NFL remains the biggest, baddest monster on the television block. It will likely be that way for years, if not decades. We are all NFL addicts.

3. The Eagles

I haven’t felt this confident (barring injury) about a team’s chances of repeating as Super Bowl champions (barring injury) since Jimmy Johnson’s Dallas Cowboys won their first one. So (barring injury) I love the Eagles’ chances.

Why? The main reason is that Hurts is a vastly underrated player. Not just quarterback. Player. Because Hurts has such a low-key demeanor (and many in the media demand their quarterbacks to be boisterous) he gets shorted.

Also, the ‘tush push’ is returning. It will still be unstoppable, maybe like the Eagles.

2. Sean Payton

This will sound crazy (not the first time) but it wouldn’t stun me if the Broncos made a serious Super Bowl run in 2025. Payton has his Drew Brees in Nix and when Payton has that, he is extremely formidable.

Told you this was crazy (not the second time, either). But the Broncos have many of the elements to make such a push. Most of all, they have Payton.

1. The 18-game season

Wait, there is no 18-game season in 2025, you goober.

No, but there’s a steady march to one, and this season will further push the league towards that goal. This season will again see tons of ratings and good play on the field. We’ll see it all and the desire for the NF$ to make even more cash will grow. The best way for the league to do that is go to 18 games. So that talk will continue.

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President Donald Trump reported to the West Wing’s Situation Room multiple times across the past week as the conflict in Iran came to a rolling boil and the president ordered strikes on a trio of Iranian nuclear facilities Saturday evening in a surprise operation that took the world by surprise. 

Trump returned to the Situation Room Saturday as the U.S. targeted Iran’s nuclear facilities, and was flanked by key officials such as Vice President JD Vance, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Dan Caine and CIA Director John Ratcliffe, according to photos from inside the room published late Saturday. Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard was also in the Situation Room, the White House confirmed to Fox Digital. 

Trump publicly announced the strikes in a Truth Social post Saturday evening, which came as a surprise to the world, as there were no media leaks or speculation such an attack was imminent. He then delivered an address to the nation on the strikes, lauding them as a ‘spectacular military success.’

‘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,’ he said. ‘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.’ 

‘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 continued. ‘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.’

Ahead of the strikes, Trump floated Wednesday he might order an attack on Iran as negotiations on its nuclear program fell apart and the president made repeated trips to the Situation Room.

‘Yes, I may do it. I may not do it. I mean, nobody knows what I’m going to do. I can tell you this that Iran’s got a lot of trouble, and they want to negotiate,’ Trump told reporters Wednesday on the U.S. potentially striking Iran as it continues trading deadly strikes with Israel. ‘And I said, why didn’t you negotiate with me before all this death and destruction? Why didn’t you go? I said to people, why didn’t you negotiate with me two weeks ago? You could have done fine. You would have had a country. It’s very sad to watch this.’

Fox News Digital spoke to previous presidential administration officials — Fox News host and former Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany, who served under the first Trump administration, and former National Security Advisor under the first Trump administration John Bolton, who also served as ambassador to the U.N. under President George W. Bush’s administration. They both conveyed the serious and historic tone the room and its meetings typically hold. 

The Situation Room is a high-tech 5,000-square-foot complex in the West Wing of the White House that includes multiple conference rooms. President John F. Kennedy commissioned the complex in 1961 following the failed Bay of Pigs invasion to overthrow the Castro regime in Cuba that same year, according to the National Archives. The complex was built in order to provide future presidents a dedicated area for crisis management, and was revamped in 2006 and renovated again in 2023. 

‘I often would sit there and think about the Osama bin Laden raid,’ McEnany told Fox News Digital in a phone interview Thursday morning. ‘This is where we saw our heroic Special Forces take out Osama bin Laden during the Obama administration. And I think we’re at another point where similar decisions are being made, and even bigger decisions that may change the course of history are happening right now in that room.’

Trump had spent hours in the Situation Room since June 16, including on Thursday morning, when he received an intelligence briefing with national security advisers, which followed a Situation Room meeting on Wednesday afternoon, another meeting on Tuesday afternoon with national security advisers and a Monday evening meeting upon his abrupt return from the G7 summit in Canada this week. 

Top national security officials, including  Hegseth, Gabbard, Vance, Rubio and Special Envoy to the Middle East Steve Witkoff, were among officials who joined Trump in the meetings as the administration weighs the spiraling conflict. 

Bolton explained to Fox Digital in a Thursday morning phone interview that two types of top-level meetings are held in the Situation Room. 

The first is known as a ‘principals meeting,’ he said, which includes Cabinet secretaries, such as the secretary of state and secretary of defense, and is chaired by the national security advisor — a role currently filled by Secretary of State Marco Rubio.

‘The principals committee usually meets to try and get everything sorted out so that they know what decisions the president is going to be confronted with,’ Bolton said. ‘They try and make sure all the information is pulled together so we can make an informed decision, set out the options they see, what the pros and cons are, and then have (the president) briefed.’ 

The second type of Situation Room meeting at the top level are official National Security Council meetings, which the president chairs. 

‘He chairs a full NSC meeting, and people review the information, update the situation, and the president can go back and forth with the advisors about asking questions, probing about the analysis, asking for more detail on something, kind of picking and choosing among the options, or suggesting new options,’ said Bolton, who served as Trump’s national security advisor between April 2018 and September 2019. 

‘And out of that could well come decisions,’ he added. 

McEnany served as the first Trump administration’s top spokeswoman at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, when the Coronavirus Task Force operated out of the Situation Room as COVID-19 swept across the nation. 

‘A lot of critical decisions were made during the pandemic,’ she said. ‘It’s a humbling encounter. Every time you go in, you leave your phone at the door. You go in, I think it’s like 5,000 square feet, you’re sitting there, there’s clocks up from every country around the world, the different time zones. And you’re just sitting there as critical decisions are made. And, in my case, it was regarding the pandemic, and there’s back and forth, there’s deliberation, and these decisions are made with the president there, obviously.’ 

She continued that during the pandemic, the task force would spend hours in the Situation Room on a daily basis as the team fielded an onslaught of updates from across the country. Trump frequently received the top lines from the meetings and joined the Situation Room during key decisions amid the spread of the virus. 

‘When he was in there, absolutely, there’s a deference,’ she said, referring to how the tone of the room would change upon Trump’s arrival. ‘Yet, you had key officials who spoke up, who were not afraid to give their point of view to him. But I think there’s a recognition he’s the commander in chief.’

Press secretaries typically do not attend high-profile National Security Council meetings in the Situation Room, but have security clearances and can call into the room if needed, and are given updates from senior officials. 

McEnany added that press secretaries wouldn’t typically want to be in the room for high-stakes talks because ‘you don’t want your head filled with these sensitive deliberations of classified information’ when speaking with the media.

Bolton explained that for an issue such as Iran, the Situation Room meetings were likely restrictive and included top national security officials, such as the secretary of defense, director of national intelligence and the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. 

‘Sometimes it includes many more people, the Secretary of Homeland Security, the Commerce Secretary, things like that,’ he said. ‘But in with this kind of decision, it could be very restrictive, so maybe just – well, there is no national security advisor – but, Secretary of State, Secretary of Defense, Director of National Intelligence, CIA Director, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, maybe the attorney general.’

Trump’s first national security advisor under the second administration, Mike Waltz, was removed from the role and nominated as the next U.S. ambassador to the UN in May, with Rubio taking on the additional role. The White House has also slashed NSC staffing since Trump took office, including after Rubio took the helm. 

Ahead of the surprise strikes on Saturday, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt held a press conference on Thursday — the first since Israel launched preemptive strikes on Iran June 12 — and said the next two weeks would be a critical time period as U.S. officials map out next steps. 

‘I have a message directly from the president, and I quote: ‘Based on the fact that there’s a substantial chance of negotiations that may or may not take place with Iran in the near future. I will make my decision whether or not to go within the next two weeks.’ That’s a quote directly from the president,’ she said Thursday. 

Israel launched pre-emptive strikes on Iran June 12 after months of attempted and stalled nuclear negotiations and subsequent heightened concern that Iran was advancing its nuclear program. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu declared soon afterward that the strikes were necessary to ‘roll back the Iranian threat to Israel’s very survival.’

He added that if Israel had not acted, ‘Iran could produce a nuclear weapon in a very short time.’ 

Dubbed ‘Operation Rising Lion,’ the strikes targeted Iran’s nuclear and missile infrastructure and killed a handful of senior Iranian military leaders.

Trump had repeatedly urged Iran to make a deal on its nuclear program, but the country pulled out of ongoing talks with the U.S. scheduled for Sunday in Oman. 

‘Iran should have signed the ‘deal’ I told them to sign,’ Trump posted to Truth Social Monday evening, when he abruptly left an ongoing G7 summit in Canada to better focus on the Israel–Iran conflict. ‘What a shame, and waste of human life. Simply stated, IRAN CAN NOT HAVE A NUCLEAR WEAPON. I said it over and over again! Everyone should immediately evacuate Tehran!’ 

Trump said during his address to the nation on Saturday evening following the strikes that Iran’s nuclear facilities had been ‘obliterated’ and that the country has been backed into a corner and ‘must now make peace.’

‘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.’ 

Leavitt added during Thursday’s briefing that Trump is the ‘peacemaker-in-chief,’ while noting that he is also not one to shy from flexing America’s strength. 

‘The president is always interested in a diplomatic solution to the problems in the global conflicts in this world. Again, he is a peacemaker in chief. He is the peace-through-strength president. And so, if there’s a chance for diplomacy, the president’s always going to grab it. But he’s not afraid to use strength as well,’ she said. 

Fox News Digital reached out to the White House for additional comment on the high-level talks but did not immediately receive a reply. 

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Rep. Thomas Massie is accusing President Donald Trump of falling short of his campaign pledges with his Saturday-night strikes on Iran.

‘I feel a bit misled,’ Massie told Fox News Digital in a Sunday afternoon interview. ‘I didn’t think he would let neocons determine his foreign policy and drag us into another war.’ 

‘Other people feel the same way, who supported Trump — I think the political danger to him is he induces a degree of apathy in the Republican base, and they fail to show up to keep us in the majority in the midterms.’

Massie, a conservative libertarian who has long been wary of foreign intervention by the U.S., has been one of the most vocal critics of the Trump administration’s recent operation.

U.S. stealth bombers struck three major nuclear enrichment facilities in Iran Saturday night. 

Trump and other GOP leaders hailed the operation as a victory, while even pro-Israel Democrats also offered rare praise.

‘Iran’s nuclear enrichment facilities have been completely and totally obliterated,’ Trump said Saturday night. ‘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.’ 

But progressives and the growing isolationist wing of the GOP blasted it as a needless escalation of tensions in the Middle East, at a time when Israel has been engaged in a weeklong conflict with Iran as well.

Top officials up to Trump himself have said the U.S. is not seeking war with Iran. 

Vice President JD Vance told NBC News’ ‘Meet The Press’ Sunday, ‘We’re not at war with Iran. We’re at war with Iran’s nuclear program.’

Massie told Fox News Digital those assurances were ‘ludicrous.’

‘He’s engaged in war. We are now a co-belligerent in a hot war between two countries,’ the Kentucky Republican said, arguing that conflict separates this action from Trump’s strikes that killed deceased Iranian General Qassem Soleimani.

‘You can’t say this isn’t an act of war, that it’s a strike outside of a war,’ he said. ‘This is inside, geographically and temporally, of a war.’

The Kentucky Republican notably has broken from Trump on several other occasions and has been one of the few GOP officials to openly clash with the president — particularly on government spending and foreign intervention.

He’s co-leading a resolution to prevent the ‘United States Armed Forces from unauthorized hostilities in the Islamic Republic of Iran’ alongside Rep. Ro Khanna, D-Calif., which they introduced days before the strikes. Sen. Tim Kaine, D-Va., is leading a Senate counterpart.

Massie noted that his team was looking at ways to get the resolution on the House floor — while conceding likely opposition from pro-Israel groups and congressional leaders.

‘We’re going to try to use the privileges of the House to get this to the floor,’ he said. 

‘People were saying, ‘Why did you introduce this resolution? The president’s not going to strike Iran.’ He has struck Iran. And now the naysayers said, ‘Oh, well, you don’t need this resolution.’

Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth said during a Sunday morning press conference that the administration had properly notified Congress about the strikes within existing statute — even as progressives and some conservatives accuse him of bypassing a co-equal branch of government.

‘They were notified after the planes were safely out,’ Hegseth said. ‘We complied with the notification requirements of the War Powers Act.’ 

But Massie noted that that law also requires Congress to vote on U.S. military intervention in foreign countries within 60 days, if the conflict continues.

‘Even if they’re able to circumvent a vote on the resolution that Ro Khanna and I have introduced, we’re going to have to vote at some point if this becomes a protracted engagement,’ he said.

War powers resolutions can be called up for a House vote after 15 days of inaction by the relevant committee, after the legislation is referred to that committee.

When reached for comment, the White House pointed Fox News Digital to Trump’s most recent Truth Social post calling Massie a ‘grandstander’ and threatening to recruit a primary challenger against him.

‘Congressman Thomas Massie of Kentucky is not MAGA, even though he likes to say he is,’ Trump wrote. ‘Actually, MAGA doesn’t want him, doesn’t know him, and doesn’t respect him. He is a negative force who almost always Votes ‘NO,’ no matter how good something may be.’ 

‘MAGA should drop this pathetic LOSER, Tom Massie, like the plague! The good news is that we will have a wonderful American Patriot running against him in the Republican Primary, and I’ll be out in Kentucky campaigning really hard. MAGA is not about lazy, grandstanding, nonproductive politicians, of which Thomas Massie is definitely one. Thank you to our incredible military for the AMAZING job they did last night. It was really SPECIAL!!!’

Fox News Digital also reached out to Speaker Mike Johnson’s office for comment.

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Vice President JD Vance said Sunday that America ‘is not at war with Iran,’ but rather is at war with the Iranian nuclear program, which was ‘substantially’ set back by U.S. strikes.

In an appearance on ABC’s ‘This Week,’ Vance praised President Donald Trump’s ‘decisive action to destroy the program’ and expressed an ‘incredible amount of gratitude’ to the U.S. troops, who, he says, flew thousands of miles on a 30-hour non-stop flight, ‘never touched down on the ground’ and dropped a 30,000-pound bomb ‘on a target about the size of a washing machine.’ 

‘No military in the world has the training, the skills, and the equipment to do what these guys did last night,’ Vance said. ‘I know the president and I are both very proud of them, and I think what they did was accomplish a very core American national objective. Iran cannot have a nuclear weapons program. The president’s been very clear about this, and thanks to the bravery and competence and skill of our great pilots and everybody who supported this mission, we took a major step forward for that national objective last night.’ 

Vance was hesitant to disclose too much sensitive information about the mission, which reportedly involved 125 aircraft. 

ABC’s Jonathan Karl asked the vice president, ‘Can you say definitively that Iran’s nuclear program has now been destroyed?’ 

‘I don’t want to get into sensitive intelligence here, but we know that we set the Iranian nuclear program back substantially last night. Whether it’s years or beyond that, we know it’s going to be a very long time before Iran can even build a nuclear weapon if they want to,’ Vance said. 

Pressed on the extent of the damage, the vice president again declined to disclose sensitive intelligence but added, ‘I feel extremely confident, and I can say to the American people with great confidence that they are much further away from a nuclear program today than they were 24 hours ago.’

‘That was the objective of the mission –  to destroy that Fordow nuclear site –  and, of course, do some damage to the other sites as well,’ he said. ‘But we feel very confident that the Fordow nuclear site was substantially set back and that was our goal.’ 

Vance separately told NBC’s ‘Meet The Press’ that the U.S. had engaged in a diplomatic process with the Iranians to no avail until around mid-May when Trump then ‘decided to issue some private ultimatums to the Iranians.’ 

‘My message to the Iranians is it would be the stupidest thing in the world,’ Vance said about potential retaliation after the U.S. strikes. ‘If you look at what happened last night, we had an incredibly targeted, precise surgical strike on the nuclear facilities that are the target of the American operation. Our national interest is for Iran to not get a nuclear weapon. Our strikes last night facilitated that national objective. If the Iranians want to enlarge this by attacking American troops, I think that would be a catastrophic mistake.’

Vance reiterated how Trump mentioned in his late Saturday night address from the White House that the United States wants Iran to give up their nuclear program peacefully – but allowing Iran to obtain a nuclear weapon remains off the table. 

‘There is no way that the United States is going to let Iran have a nuclear weapon. And so they really have to choose a pathway,’ Vance told ABC. ‘Are they going to go down the path of continued war, of funding terrorism, of seeking a nuclear weapons? Or are they going work with us to give up nuclear weapons permanently? If they’re willing to choose the smart path, they’re certainly going to find a willing partner in the United States to dismantle that nuclear weapons program.’ 

He also issued a warning.

‘But if they decide they’re going to attack our troops, if they decide they’re going to continue to try to build a nuclear weapon. Then we are going to respond to that with overwhelming force. So really, what happens next is up to the Iranians.’

Trump warned Saturday that ‘any retaliation by Iran against the United States of America will be met with force far greater than what was witnessed tonight.’ The U.S. military carried out ‘massive precision strikes’ on the three key nuclear facilities in the Iranian regime: Fordow, Natanz and Isfahan,’ which Trump said for years carried on a ‘horribly destructive enterprise’ and have now been ‘completely and totally obliterated.’ 

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Israeli President Isaac Herzog said that Israel is ‘not dragging’ the U.S. into its war with Iran, pushing back against growing fears of a broader regional conflict after Washington sent an overnight strike against three major Iranian nuclear facilities on Saturday.

Herzog made the statement during an appearance on CNN’s ‘State of the Union’ with host Kasie Hunt on Sunday, in response to President Donald Trump’s decision to deploy bunker-buster bombs and Tomahawk missiles against Iran’s key nuclear sites at Fordow, Natanz and Isfahan.

‘We made clear throughout that we are not dragging America into a war,’ Herzog said. ‘We are leaving it to the decision of the President of the United States and his team, because it had to do with America’s national security interests, period. We are not intending, and we don’t ask for America now to go to war because the Iranians are threatening Israel.’

The Israeli leader added that the American decision to attack Iran’s nuclear infrastructure was ‘the right step’ for the U.S., describing the Iranian nuclear program as a threat to American and global security. 

‘The decision was taken because the Iranian nuclear program was a clear and present danger to the security interests of all the free world, especially the leader of the free world,’ Herzog added. ‘America, as the leader of the free world, was actually at risk from this program, and that is why it was the right step to do.’

Despite Washington’s military involvement, Herzog stressed that now is ‘the moment where one thinks about diplomacy.’ He urged that any renewed talks with Iran must ‘be nuts and bolts and very clear,’ citing a history of previously failed negotiations due to what he described as Iranians ‘lying constantly.’

Secretary of State Marco Rubio also reiterated Herzog’s message during an appearance on Fox News’ ‘Sunday Morning Futures’ with host Maria Bartiromo, asserting that the U.S. is ‘not at war’ with Iran. 

Rubio added that regime change is ‘not the goal’ and that Washington is still offering a diplomatic path forward. 

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As the 2025 WNBA season continues to heat up, the Indiana Fever prepare to face off against the Las Vegas Aces at T-Mobile Arena on Sunday.

The Fever are aiming to recover from their recent 88-77 loss to the Golden State Valkyries. Despite the defeat, Aliyah Boston stood out by leading the Fever in scoring, contributing 17 points and 12 rebounds. Additionally, Kelsey Mitchell and Caitlin Clark combined for 27 points.

On the other side, the Aces are looking to break a three-game losing streak after losing 90-83 to the Seattle Storm. In that game, Jackie Young scored 22 points, and A’ja Wilson contributed 20 points and 14 rebounds, but their efforts fell short.

Here is how to watch Caitlin Clark and the Indiana Fever take on the Las Vegas Aces on Sunday, June 22.

What time is Indiana Fever vs. Las Vegas Aces?

The Indiana Fever will face off against the Las Vegas Aces at 3 p.m. ET on Sunday, June 22, at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas.

How to watch Indiana Fever vs. Las Vegas Aces: TV, stream

Time: 3 p.m. ET
Location: T-Mobile Arena (Las Vegas)
TV: ESPN
Live stream: ESPN+, Disney+

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

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Order takeout. Or fire up the grill. Grab your favorite beverage.

And settle in for Game 7 of the NBA Finals between the Oklahoma City Thunder and Indiana Pacers on Sunday, June 22 (8 p.m. ET, ABC) with legacies at stake.

It is the 20th Game 7 in NBA Finals history and the first since the Cleveland Cavaliers came back from a 3-1 deficit and defeated the Golden State Warriors in Game 7 in 2016. The home team is 15-4 in Game 7 of the Finals.

‘It’s a contest of wills,’ Thunder coach Mark Daigneault said. ‘I think the reason it swung between the two teams is because these are two teams that have leaned on that heavily to get to this point. It’s two teams where the whole is better than the sum of the parts. It’s two teams that are highly competitive. Two teams that play together. Two teams that kind of rely on the same stuff for their success that are squaring off against each other.’

Here’s what Pacers, Thunder are saying about Game 7:

Notable quotes on Game 7 of the NBA Finals

Thunder coach Mark Daigneault on pressure

‘I always feel a ton of pressure, but the pressure is not external. It’s not like a game circumstance. It’s not a situation. It’s the internal situation of doing right by the players, serving the team, putting the team in the best possible position to be successful. Especially this team. It’s a group of guys that I love coaching.

‘I feel a great sense of responsibility to them, a great sense of responsibility to the organization, the city. In every circumstance, though. That’s a fire that keeps on burning regardless of circumstance.’

Pacers coach Rick Carlisle on pressure

‘I love pressure. As you go on in your competitive life in sport, what you learn is that these moments are rare, and trying to duplicate this kind of situation is something that you look to do in everyday life. It’s not easy to do that. It’s not easy to do that.

‘So I’m very much looking forward to Game 7. The last time we’ve had one of these in the Finals, I think was ’16. I’ve seen some things about that. These are special moments certainly for both teams but for our league, for the game, for the worldwide interest in the game. It’s a time to celebrate.’

Mark Daigneault on what it will take to win Game 7

‘You want to be prepared. You certainly want to learn the lessons, get the game plan into the game, but not at the expense of aggressiveness, confidence, instincts. I think that has been a strength of ours this season. We certainly have to lean on that. We have to understand the work is done and we have to trust the work. The muscle is built. We have to flex that muscle. That’s what (Sunday) will come down to for us.’

Pacers guard Tyrese Haliburton

‘Just really focused on Game 7 and trying to take it just a moment at a time. Really enjoying what we’re doing. Understanding this is going to be one of the biggest, if not the biggest game most of us ever play in in our lives, and for our organization from a historical standpoint, as well. That’s something that you don’t take for granted and you enjoy as a competitor. So I’m really looking forward to it.’

Thunder guard Shai Gilgeous-Alexander

‘Through our experiences throughout the whole season and the postseason, no matter how big the moment or the game, it always comes down to the same things. When we go back and watch film or we go back and look at the numbers from the game, it always goes back to the things that we know we can control every night.

‘When we do those things, we look like a pretty good team. When we don’t do those things, we look like a bad team. I think learning that and understanding that throughout the season and in the postseason is going to help us (Sunday).’

Rick Carlisle

‘You never know how it’s going to go. I’d be lying if I said this has gone exactly as I expected because each playoff series, each game is a different thing. Each game takes on a different personality, has different characteristics. Different guys step up. Different situations happen, etc.

‘The truth is that nothing else previous to this matters at all now. We’re just down to one game and one opportunity. We’re really looking forward to it.’

Thunder forward Jalen Williams

‘I probably can’t appreciate it until I get the outcome I want. It’s cool, though. Somewhere down the line, win or lose, it will be cool to have your name etched in history regardless what’s going on. That’s cool. But right now, it’s very difficult to look into that.

‘But I’m also grateful for the opportunity. That’s one thing I can say is throughout the whole entire thing, you always have to remain grateful for where you are because there’s a lot of NBA players that will trade their spot with me right now. That’s how I look at it. But as far as history, I want to be on the good side of that, for sure.’

Pacers forward Pascal Siakam

‘Not taking anything for granted and also just knowing how hard it is to get here. I think for me just the fact that I can appreciate that makes me just go out there, not get too down on myself when things are going wrong and not getting too excited when things are going well. Just understanding that this is the game of basketball and it’s life. Sometimes you have good games and sometimes you have bad games.

‘I think that whole understanding for me just makes me relaxed and just go out there and do my job, because at the end of the day, that’s what it is. We’re playing basketball. Obviously all the other things make it look bigger than what it is. But it’s just ball.’

Pacers guard T.J. McConnell on his Finals performance

‘Honestly, not trying to think about it too much. You guys have all heard me say this a thousand times, I’m just trying to go out there and do my job and that’s really it. I’m not going out there listening to the external noise. I’m just doing whatever it takes to help our team win.’

Thunder guard Alex Caruso

‘I don’t think location matters for pressure’s sake. I think the pressure of the moment is that everything you’ve put into this year to grow through the regular season, training camp, postseason, the pressure might be just like not wanting to waste that.

‘But at the end of the day, like I said, you’re either going to win or lose. Like that’s the reality of the situation. So go out there and you play your best and you play as hard as you can and you let the chips fall where they may.’

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FORT LAUDERDALE, FL – Lionel Messi practiced with his Inter Miami teammates on Sunday, three days after experiencing some right leg discomfort during their historic win in the FIFA Club World Cup.

It’s unclear to what extent Messi practiced with Inter Miami – media was allowed to observe the first 15 minutes of the training session.

Still, it’s a positive development for Messi – who acknowledged the injury in his thigh/quadricep region has been a recurring one he has managed late in his career, particularly with Inter Miami.

Inter Miami can clinch a trip to the Club World Cup knockout stage on Monday, June 23 against Brazilian club Pameiras at 9 p.m. in Miami’s Hard Rock Stadium. The match will be available to watch on TBS/TruTV in English in the United States, and available to live stream for free on DAZN.

‘I’ve had a problem with that for a while now,’ Messi said in an interview with DSports after the club’s 2-1 match against FC Porto at Atlanta’s Mercedes-Benz Stadium on Thursday. ‘It did bother me a little bit, but it’s something I’ve had before, something I’ve been dealing with.’

Messi scored a dynamic free-kick goal in the 54th minute to propel Inter Miami to the first victory for a North American team over a European club against Porto, a Portuguese team. It was also the 50th goal he scored since joining Inter Miami in July 2023.

Shortly after, Messi made a run on a ball after an up-field pass by Benjamin Cremaschi in the 57th minute. He was seen touching his right thigh and stretching the muscle near midfield in a stoppage during the 59th and 60th minutes of the match.

An Inter Miami trainer also massaged Messi’s thigh above the knee on the pitch, while defender Marcelo Weigandt was treated for an injury in the 62nd minute.

Messi finished the Porto match, with Inter Miami coach Javier Mascherano acknowledging Messi’s will to play despite the discomfort.

Mascherano will have a pre-match press conference later Sunday evening before the Palmeiras match.

Inter Miami essential has one foot already into the knockout stage, but can’t afford to rest Messi in the final group-stage match.

If they manage to beat Palmeiras, they would win Group A. If they draw with Palmeiras, they would enter the round of 16 as a group runner-up. If they lose, they need Porto to beat Egyptian side Al Ahly to advance.

If Inter Miami loses and Al Ahly wins, Inter Miami would need to rely on goal difference or other tiebreakers if Al Ahly doesn’t win in blowout fashion.

‘I think the team is focused on winning, on doing the best they can,’ Inter Miami leftback Jordi Alba said before Sunday’s practice. ‘We’ve never gone into a game without the intention of winning, and that’s the mindset of everyone – to try to win, to play well like we did against Porto. And from there, hopefully that will be the case, and we can go through in first place.’

Messi has dealt with a thigh/adductor injury at least three times in the last two years.

Messi had a low-grade injury in his left adductor muscle earlier this season, revealed after an MRI following a March 16 match against Atlanta United at Mercedes-Benz Stadium. The injury caused him to miss two World Cup qualifying matches with Argentina during the month. He returned to action on March 29 and scored a goal in Inter Miami’s win against the Philadelphia Union.

Messi had his right groin/adductor area massaged by a trainer during Argentina’s second group-stage match during last summer’s Copa America on June 26, 2024. He rested in Argentina’s last group-stage match on June 29, 2024, because they had already secured a berth to the quarterfinals. He returned to action in the knockout stage on July 4, 2024. He played until Argentina reached the final against Colombia on July 14, 2024, where he suffered a severe right ankle injury that sidelined him until his return on Sept. 14, 2024.

Messi also experienced an adductor injury during Inter Miami’s international preseason tour before the 2024 season. Messi left an exhibition against Al-Hilal on Jan. 29, and briefly played with the injury against Al-Nassr on Feb. 1, 2024, when Inter Miami played in Saudi Arabia. He did not play during a friendly in Hong Kong on Feb. 4, 2024, but returned to action for a friendly in Japan on Feb. 7, 2024. He appeared fully healthy for a preseason match against his Argentine boyhood club Newell’s Old Boys on Feb. 15, 2024.

If Inter Miami advances to the Club World Cup round of 16 after the Palmeiras match, it would play on either June 28 in Philadelphia (if it wins Group A) or June 29 in Atlanta (if it is the group runner-up).

If Inter Miami is eliminated from the Club World Cup, its next match will be June 28 vs. Atlanta United at home in a return to the Major League Soccer regular season.

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All that’s at stake is legacy.

The victor of Game 7 of the NBA Finals between the Oklahoma City Thunder and Indiana Pacers will shape the narrative, the frame through which the winning team is remembered.

If it’s the Thunder…

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander will go down as having an all-time great season. He will have notched a regular season Most Valuable Player award — and probable Finals MVP — and will have led Oklahoma City, which tied for the fifth-most victories in a regular season (68), to its first NBA championship since moving to the city and the franchise’s first since 1979, when it was the Seattle SuperSonics.

Jalen Williams will emerge as a legitimate star whose Game 5 heroics in a 40-point masterpiece lifted the Thunder.

And Mark Daigneault, 40, will reinforce his position as one of the premier coaches in the NBA, leading the second-youngest team to win a Finals in NBA history — which implies OKC could be in position to repeat.

If it’s the Pacers…

Point guard Tyrese Haliburton will obliterate the “overrated” narrative that has unfairly followed him since The Athletic published a player poll that labeled him the most overrated player in the league. He will wrap an unprecedented run of clutch postseason play with a title.

Pascal Siakam will become a two-time champion and see his profile raised further.

Rick Carlisle will become just the fourth coach — joining Phil Jackson, Pat Riley and Alex Hannum — to win championships with two different teams. His status as an innovative and adaptable coach who entrusts his players will be unquestioned after leading the decided underdog Pacers to an NBA title, their first in franchise history.

Game 7s in the Finals are special, with this marking just the 20th in history. Just the very nature of the games — the magnified stakes, the drama — can define legacies.

“Respect isn’t something that we can just talk about and receive — it’s an earned thing,” Haliburton said in a Saturday, June 21 news conference. “No matter what happens, it’s still probably not going to be where necessarily it ‘should’ be or what we think it should be.

“It doesn’t really matter, though. I think from our standpoint — teams we compete against, they respect us. I think that’s the most important thing. … We are in a great, great point right now in our organization’s history and for our team specifically. You’ve got to be really excited about the chance to compete in one game to win a championship.”

It becomes a very different story with a loss — for both squads.

The Thunder suddenly will be framed as front-runners and Gilgeous-Alexander’s greatness and efficiency will likely be overshadowed. Detractors will get louder with their “foul merchant” critiques and almost certainly will say the Thunder got a favorable whistle and still couldn’t do anything with it.

Similarly, a defeat would likely only strengthen the barbs hurled at Haliburton. Indiana’s up-tempo, free-flowing offense may be discounted as a gimmick and an operation — despite Indy’s success this postseason — not suitable to win when it counts. Critics will likely say the Pacers still need a true star.

The reality, however, is that it serves teams no use to consider narrative and legacy before a Game 7.

While players and coaches certainly do reap future profits from championship runs, Game 7s are — in their most distilled terms — just another game. Forty-eight minutes for a team to top another. The glory cannot come without the actual victory.

The secret to success, therefore, likely requires some willful ignorance, some intentional blocking out of the context of the game.

“You try to make it as binary as possible,” Thunder guard Alex Caruso, a champion with the 2020 Lakers, said Saturday. “You’re either going to win or lose. That is literally what’s going to happen. The season is going to be over and you’re going to be champion, or you’re going to lose and start from square one. You might as well go out and put your best forward and compete your (butt) off and play hard for your teammates and try and win.”

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Looking for his first win on the PGA Tour, Tommy Fleetwood takes a three-shot lead into the final round of the Travelers Championship.

Fleetwood didn’t miss a single fairway on Saturday on his way to a 7-under 63 that vaulted him to the top of the leaderboard at 16 under. Keegan Bradley and Russell Henley begin the final round tied for second at 13 under.

Second-round co-leaders Scottie Scheffler and Justin Thomas both had third rounds to forget. Scheffler started with a triple bogey on the opening hole and finished with a 2-over 72. He begins the day nine shots behind Fleetwood. Thomas took a quadruple bogey on the par-5 13th on his way to a 3-over 73. He’s 10 shots back.

LIVE LEADERBOARD: 2025 Travelers Championship

How to watch 2025 Travelers Championship

Final round coverage of the Travelers Championship from TPC River Highlands in Cromwell, Connecticut, will be broadcast live on the Golf Channel and CBS Sports.

TV: Golf Channel (1-3 p.m. ET), CBS (3-6 p.m. ET)

Streaming: ESPN+ (featured groups), NBCSports.com (1-3 p.m. ET) Paramount+ (3-6 p.m. ET), Fubo

Travelers Championship purse, payouts

The total purse for the 2025 Travelers Championship is $20 million, with $3.6 million going to the winner. Here is the complete rundown on how much each position pays:

$3.6 million
$2.16 million
$1.36 million
$960,000
$800,000
$720,000
$670,000
$620,000
$580,000
$540,000
$500,000
$460,000
$420,000
$380,000
$360,000
$340,000
$320,000
$300,000
$280,000
$260,000
$240,000
$223,000
$207,500
$190,000
$175,000
$159,000
$152,500
$146,000
$140,000
$134,000
$128,500
$122,500
$116,500
$111,000
$106,500
$101,500
$96,500
$92,500
$88,500
$84,000
$80,000
$76,000
$72,000
$68,000
$64,000
$60,000
$56,000
$53,000
$50,000
$49,000
$48,000
$47,000
$46,000
$46,000
$45,500
$45,000
$44,500
$43,500
$43,000
$42,500
$41,500
$41,000
$40,500
$40,000
$39,500
$39,000
$38,000
$37,500
$38,000
$37,500
$37,000
$36,000

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