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The U.S. men’s national team ended a four-game losing streak in emphatic fashion on Sunday, June 15, cruising to a 5-0 win over Trinidad and Tobago in its Concacaf Gold Cup opener.

The USMNT — which is playing the tournament without a number of its key players, including Christian Pulisic — should get a sterner test from its next Gold Cup opponent: Saudi Arabia. Just two and a half years ago, Saudi Arabia pulled off a World Cup stunner, upsetting eventual champion Argentina in the tournament’s group stage in Qatar.

In Sunday’s win, Malik Tillman was a standout performer for the U.S., scoring two goals. Patrick Agyemang, Brenden Aaronson and Haji Wright also scored goals in the rout. Manager Mauricio Pochettino will be looking for the team to carry over the impressive form from its Gold Cup opener into its next game against Saudi Arabia.

Here’s what to know for Thursday night’s Concacaf Gold Cup match between the USMNT and Saudi Arabia:

What time is USMNT vs. Trinidad and Tobago at Concacaf Gold Cup?

The Concacaf Gold Cup group stage game pairing the USMNT with Saudi Arabia is set for 9:15 p.m. ET at Q2 Stadium in Austin, Texas. Q2 Stadium is the regular home of Austin FC of Major League Soccer.

How to watch USMNT vs. Saudi Arabia Gold Cup game: TV, stream

Time: 9:15 p.m. ET
Location: Q2 Stadium (Austin, Texas)
TV: FS1 (TUDN for Spanish-language broadcast)
Stream: Fubo

Watch USMNT vs. Saudi Arabia with a free trial of Fubo

USMNT schedule for the 2025 Gold Cup

Sunday, June 15: 5-0 win vs. Trinidad and Tobago
Thursday, June 19: vs. Saudi Arabia, 9:15 p.m. ET (FS1)
Sunday, June 22: vs. Haiti, 7 p.m. ET (FOX)

What is the Concacaf Gold Cup?

The Gold Cup is a biennial tournament for national teams in the North and Central American and Caribbean region associated with Concacaf. Mexico (nine times), the U.S. (seven times) and Canada (one time) are the only nations to have won the Gold Cup. Mexico won the last Gold Cup competition in 2023.

Which players are on the USMNT Gold Cup roster?

Goalkeepers (3): Chris Brady (Chicago Fire), Matt Freese (New York City FC), Matt Turner (Crystal Palace/England)

Defenders (9): Max Arfsten (Columbus Crew), Alex Freeman (Orlando City SC), Nathan Harriel (Philadelphia Union), Mark McKenzie (Toulouse/France), Tim Ream (Charlotte FC), Chris Richards (Crystal Palace/England), Miles Robinson (FC Cincinnati), John Tolkin (Holstein Kiel/Germany), Walker Zimmerman (Nashville SC)

Midfielders (9): Brenden Aaronson (Leeds United/England); Tyler Adams (Bournemouth/England), Sebastian Berhalter (Vancouver Whitecaps/Canada), Johnny Cardoso (Real Betis/Spain), Luca de la Torre (San Diego FC), Diego Luna (Real Salt Lake), Jack McGlynn (Houston Dynamo), Quinn Sullivan (Philadelphia Union), Malik Tillman (PSV Eindhoven/Netherlands)

Forwards (5): Paxten Aaronson (FC Utrecht/Netherlands), Patrick Agyemang (Charlotte FC), Damion Downs (FC Köln/Germany), Brian White (Vancouver Whitecaps/Canada), Haji Wright (Coventry City/England)

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Army Gen. Michael ‘Erik’ Kurilla is no stranger to conflict, especially in the Middle East. 

Two decades ago as a lieutenant colonel, he was at the front lines of combat fighting off insurgents in Mosul, Iraq, while leading the 1st Battalion, 24th Infantry Regiment. The battalion’s mission was to conduct security patrols and coordinate offensive attacks against anti-Iraqi insurgents targeting Iraqi security forces and Iraqi police stations. 

During Kurilla’s tenure leading the battalion, more than 150 soldiers earned the Purple Heart for injuries, and the battalion lost at least a dozen soldiers, The New York Times reported in August 2005. 

‘There will always be somebody willing (to) pick up an AK-47 and shoot Americans,’ Kurilla told The New York Times in August 2005. 

Kurilla did not complete that deployment unscathed. Later, in August 2005, Kurilla found himself caught in a Mosul, Iraq, firefight, where he sustained multiple gunshot wounds, earning him a Bronze Star with valor and one of his two Purple Heart awards. 

Now, Kurilla is facing another battle as the commander of U.S. Central Command, or CENTCOM, serving as the top military officer overseeing U.S. military forces based in the Middle East.

That means Kurilla, who attended the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, is at the forefront of military operations as President Donald Trump contemplates whether to engage in military strikes against Iran’s nuclear sites. 

CENTCOM is one of the U.S. military’s 11 combatant commands and encompasses 21 nations in the Middle East in its area of operations, including Iraq and Afghanistan. 

Those familiar with Kurilla claim he’s the perfect person for the job, and Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth described Kurilla as an uplifting leader. 

‘General Kurilla is a bold, dynamic, and inspiring leader who strikes fear into the hearts of America’s enemies,’ Hegseth said in a statement Thursday to Fox News Digital. ‘He’s a warrior through and through who always puts his country, mission, and troops first. It has been an honor to serve alongside him in defense of our great nation.’

Retired Army Gen. Mark Milley, the former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said in 2022 when Biden nominated Kurilla for the role that Kurilla is the ideal CENTCOM leader. 

‘If there ever was some way to feed into a machine the requirements for the perfect leader of CENTCOM — the character traits, the attributes, the experiences, the knowledge and the personality that would be ideal — that machine would spit out Erik Kurilla,’ Milley said in 2022, according to the Defense Department. ‘Erik’s got vast experience in combat (and) on staffs.

‘He’s a visionary, he’s a thinker and he’s a doer,’ Milley said. ‘He understands both the physical and human terrain and is able to identify root causes of problems and develop systems. He’s not at all a linear thinker. He’s actually a very gifted problem-solver.’

Retired Marine Corps Gen. Frank McKenzie, Kurilla’s CENTCOM predecessor, voiced similar sentiments. 

‘I can’t think of anybody better qualified to lead CENTCOM’s next chapter than Erik Kurilla,’ McKenzie said in 2022, according to the Pentagon. ‘He’s no stranger to the CENTCOM (area of operations). He’s no stranger to the headquarters.’

Notable figures who’ve previously filled the job leading CENTCOM include former defense secretaries, retired Gen. Jim Mattis, who served during Trump’s first term, and retired Gen. Lloyd Austin, who served during former President Joe Biden’s administration.

Fox News Digital reached out to CENTCOM, McKenzie and Milley for comment and did not get a response by the time of publication. 

The region is familiar territory for Kurilla. The general spent a decade between 2004 and 2014 overseeing conventional and special operations forces during consecutive tours in the Middle East that fell under the CENTCOM purview. 

Additionally, Kurilla has served in key CENTCOM staff and leadership positions, including serving as the command’s chief of staff from August 2018 to September 2019. Prior to leading CENTCOM, the general also commanded the 2nd Ranger Battalion, the 75th Ranger Regiment, the 82nd Airborne Division and the XVIII Airborne Corps, according to his official bio. 

In addition to deploying to Iraq as part of Operation Iraqi Freedom and Operation Inherent Resolve, he deployed to Afghanistan with Operation Enduring Freedom. Other awards he’s earned include the Combat Infantryman Badge, awarded to Army infantry or special forces officers who’ve encountered active ground combat. 

Kurilla, who the Senate confirmed to lead CENTCOM in February 2022 and will exit the role later in 2025, told lawmakers on the House Armed Services Committee June 10 that, since October 2023, when Hamas first attacked Israel, American service members have faced increased threats in the region. 

Specifically, he said, U.S. troops have come under direct fire by nearly 400 unmanned aerial systems, 350 rockets, 50 ballistic missiles and 30 cruise missiles launched by Iranian-backed groups. 

He said CENTCOM has encountered the ‘most highly kinetic period than at any other time in the past decade.’

‘We have been at the brink of regional war several times with the first state-on-state attacks between Iran and Israel in their history,’ Kurilla told lawmakers. ‘In the Red Sea, Houthi attempts to kill Americans operating in the Red Sea necessitated an aggressive response to protect our sailors and mariners and restore freedom of navigation. This is while Tehran is continuing to progress towards a nuclear weapons program — threatening catastrophic ramifications across the region and beyond.’ 

As a result, Kurilla said CENTCOM is prepared to use military force to prevent Iran from becoming a nuclear-armed state. Kurilla said he has provided Trump and Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth a host of options to employ to eliminate the threat of a nuclear Iran. 

Since Kurilla’s testimony, tensions have escalated even further in the Middle East after Israel kicked off massive airstrikes against Iran’s nuclear sites that Israel claims have killed several high-ranking military leaders. Likewise, Iran also launched strikes against Israel as the two ramp up military campaigns against one another.

Trump is still navigating whether the U.S. will conduct direct strikes against Iran. Trump told reporters he may order strikes targeting Iranian nuclear sites and that the ‘next week is going to be very big.’

‘Yes, I may do it. I may not do it. I mean, nobody knows what I’m going to do,’ Trump said. ‘I can tell you this, that Iran’s got a lot of trouble, and they want to negotiate.’ 

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

WASHINGTON – There are no silver linings to nine wins and 50 losses.

When you’re set to obliterate the record for most losses in a major league season – a record not even a year old – there’s nowhere to hide. When your manager gets fired, and the industry is mocking your organization, and there are no reinforcements coming to save you, 9-50 feels like a permanent condition.

Yet when you are the Colorado Rockies, and Major League Baseball dictates that you play 162 games, there is no choice but to continue showing up, if only to prove that 9-50 will not define you, and that whatever number the game assigns you at year’s end will not go in the game’s permanent records.

“I mean, that’s life. Life’s gonna hit you in the face a lot,” muses Warren Schaeffer, the Rockies’ 40-year-old interim manager elevated from third base coach and organizational lifer to replace the fired Bud Black on May 11, when the club was 7-33.

“You got to keep waking up and getting after it and really, there’s no way around it. You got to go straight through it.”

Yes, the Rockies are going through it.

It’s not yet summer, and the Rockies have already endured four eight-game losing streaks. The last of those skids dropped them to 9-50, which would be a 25-137 pace, which would make the 2024 Chicago White Sox’s record-setting 121 losses a year ago look like prosperity.

Yet, something happened after the Rockies took their expected sweep to the Mets in New York. They moved on to Miami and beat the Marlins to reach double-digit wins – on June 2.

Then, they beat the Marlins two more times, finished off the sweep and snapped their major league record streak of not winning a series at 22, 9-50 suddenly becoming 12-50.

At this point in the movie, you expect the music to swell and the montage to kick in, visions of decisive home runs and high fives dominating the screen. This is not that movie.

These are the 2025 Rockies, and they lost seven of their next eight games.

Once again, though, a mini-stand followed, as they avoided a sweep in Atlanta and took the first three of four games at Washington, scoring 10 runs twice in three games.

No, an 8-7 stretch in a year of almost runaway futility – Colorado is now 17-57 – isn’t necessarily a harbinger of anything. Yet for the Rockies, a mélange of promising but unpolished young players, third-chance veterans and platoon or bench players pressed into greater duty, it feels like progress.

“You don’t really have a choice. In life, not just baseball, you get tossed in some tough situations,” says Rockies outfielder Mickey Moniak, a former No. 1 overall pick now hoping to stick in his third organization.

“The season hasn’t gone the way we wanted to. But we play 162 games. If the first 60 or so weren’t how we wanted, we have a group in this clubhouse and a group of coaches who aren’t going to fold, and we’re gonna learn.

“We’re gonna grow.”

A star is born?

Funny thing about squads flirting with historic futility: The players bear almost all the public shame yet have only so much to do with the outcome.

These Rockies are a poorly put together team, ranking 30th in defensive runs saved (-41) and in the red in almost every key defensive metric. Three semi-regulars – Moniak, infielder Orlando Arcia and utilityman Tyler Freeman – were acquired between March 22 and May 28, reflecting the ad hoc nature of Rockies roster-building.

Amid the rubble of the early season, a star seemed to emerge.

Hunter Goodman, a fourth-round pick in 2021, leads major league catchers with 77 hits and NL catchers with 14 home runs, 11 of them away from Coors Field. He would be more than a perfunctory All-Star to ensure the Rockies are represented.

He’s proven so valuable to Colorado that Schaeffer has to closely monitor his usage, as Goodman has already caught more games – 47 – than he has in any pro season.

Goodman toggled between first, catcher and corner outfield in his first three pro seasons and appreciates being able to settle behind the dish. This season will be remembered as the one Goodman not only stuck in Denver but became a fixture.

Moniak saw it coming this spring when, before the Los Angeles Angels released him, when he watched from the opposing dugout while Goodman launched moonshots in the desert.

“Goody’s put together a helluva season,” says Moniak. “And I think the world is seeing that.”

Goodman was on the Albuquerque-Coors Field shuttle the past two seasons and has seen plenty of players come and go. He believes he’ll have permanent company soon.

“Seeing young guys come up, there’s going to be struggles, but watching guys learn and learn as we go through it and try to figure things out together and try and lean on each other has been really good,” says Goodman.

“Once you learn that every day is a new day, once you can figure out that routine of getting over the last game, and moving on to the next day, that helps a lot.”

It is perhaps the key to both team and individual survival. Michael Toglia, the 6-5, 225-pound first baseman, debuted in 2022 and mashed 25 home runs in 116 games last season, stoking expectations.

Yet he struck out a stunning 81 times in his first 54 games, a 39% strikeout rate. On May 31, with the Rockies at 9-49, the 26-year-old was optioned to Class AAA.

He missed the Rockies’ brief hot streak but was recalled June 16 – and now has three home runs in their past two games, both victories.

So, what changed when the Rockies played .153 ball through 59 games, and .533 ball in the past 15?

“I think before this month, there was a lot of hopeful baseball – kind of hoping things would go our way, playing not to lose,” says Toglia, 26. “Now I feel like everybody has the confidence that we can be a winning team here.”

Moniak agrees.

“We could’ve let the start of the season weigh on us and bring us down. I don’t think we’ve done that,” he says. “I think we’ve grown as a team. I think we’re starting to show up to the field and expect to win the game instead of try not to lose.”

‘We want to be better than that’

Chase Dollander admits he was emotional on April 6, when he made his major league debut in front of his family, his girlfriend and other supporting figures, less than two years after he was drafted ninth overall out of Tennessee.

On the other hand, it is nothing he never expected.

That’s the mentality of a pitcher who anticipates stardom, or at least a very long major league career. It is what the Rockies would like him to become – a rare Coors Field pitching success.

Dollander certainly has seen it already.

“I’ve been prepared for everything,” says Dollander. “I’ve envisioned everything. I do a lot of visualization stuff – envisioning not just the good but also the bad and how I’m going to prepare for that.

“You’re going to face adversity at some point in time and this year, I’ve faced a good bit of it. Things don’t fall your way and you just have to keep on going, keep on working and eventually it will start to land.”

Making your major league debut amid a season where your team lost 50 of its first 59 is, shall we say, suboptimal. And Dollander’s results have been uneven: He’s pitched to a 6.57 ERA and 1.54 WHIP in 11 starts, failing to reach the fourth inning in three of them.

Yet he does not shirk from what is expected, which is to succeed where myriad prospects and free agents have failed: Be an ace at Coors Field.

“You’re going to give up more homers,” he says. “ You’re going to give up more bloop hits. The hits that really make you mad are the ones that are less than 80 mph and they fall for a hit. The field’s so big, that’s just going to happen.

“And then on top of that, your stuff’s not going to move as much. So it’s how can you limit damage when those things happen.

“Because inevitably, that’s going to happen.”

Dollander says this not in a woe-is-me tone but rather with a heavy dose of pragmatism, knowing that his goal is not necessarily to win ERA titles. Rather, it’s to simply give the Rockies a rotation rock, whatever form that takes.

“No matter what the team’s record is, no matter what my record is or my stats are, staying in the moment is the big thing,” says Dollander.  “When I put my best version of myself on the mound, I’m giving my team all I have. And I hope they know that.

“Every time I go out there, for me, it’s a war. It’s either life or death. And I go out there with that mentality. I’m putting it all on the line.”

With a six-pitch mix that includes a fastball and sinker that both clock in at 96.5 mph, he may be well-suited to do just that at Coors.

“Every start he gets a little better and starts to figure things out a little more,” says Goodman. “Over the course of this year into next year, it’s going to be huge for him to keep getting his feet wet and learning.”

Moniak says the Rockies would be “doing ourselves a disservice” if they failed to grasp lessons forged in the misery of perpetual losing. This season will certainly be one to grow on, even if their stiffest competition may come from ghosts.

The Rockies entered the week tied with the 1932 Red Sox for the worst start through 72 games. They’ve since moved past them and heck, if they split the next 10 games, their winning percentage will climb over the ’24 White Sox.

Avoiding ignominy is in their grasp. But the Rockies want something more from this lost season that’s somehow not as dark as it once was.

“It’s a great opportunity,” says Schaefer, “for young guys and veterans alike to feel that it is not a good feeling to lose, and it’s not acceptable to lose over the long haul, and that we want to be better than that.

“I mean, everybody’s in this together, you know, it’s not young and old, it’s. It’s the Rockies.”

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Five years ago this month, NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell made an announcement that at the time was seen as the league making a dramatic shift in how it approached the topic of race.

The entire nation was still reeling from the murder of George Floyd which happened in May of 2020.

His killing triggered massive nationwide protests. There were also conversations. In the streets. In homes. In workplaces. There was introspection. There was pain but also hope. There was the feeling that things could get better. Do you remember that time? Remember how much we talked about unity and care and togetherness? It was all there.

That time feels so, so long ago. America looks different now. There are deepening pools of hate and xenophobia. Reversal of everything accomplished in the past five years. We’ve taken steps backward in ways few imagined, at a speed few knew possible.

Go back to 2020. Goodell and the league saw what was happening around the country, and knew the NFL needed to change. So, in early June, Goodell announced that the league would recognize June 19, or Juneteenth, as a company holiday.

‘This year, as we work together as a family and in our communities to combat the racial injustices that remain deeply rooted into the fabric of our society, the NFL will observe Juneteenth on Friday, June 19th as a recognized holiday and our league offices will be closed,’ Goodell said in a statement then. ‘It is a day to reflect on our past, but more importantly, consider how each one of us can continue to show up and band together to work toward a better future.’

This was no small thing. It was also part of a larger push by a league to change the views from some of its players who felt the NFL was uncaring, and even hostile toward, the protests led by Colin Kaepernick that started in 2016. After Floyd was killed, the league was forced to take a more empathetic stand, and that’s where observing the Juneteenth holiday came in.

Juneteenth is celebrated as the end of slavery in America. The Emancipation Proclamation was established on Jan. 1, 1863, but it wasn’t until two years later on June 19, following the end of the Civil War, that newly freed slaves in Texas were told of Abraham Lincoln’s directive.

One day after saying it would recognize Juneteenth, the NFL announced an increase in its financial backing of social justice causes to $250 million over 10 years in order to ‘combat systemic racism and support the battle against the ongoing and historic injustices faced by African Americans.’

‘The power of this historical feat in our country’s blemished history is felt each year, but there is no question that the magnitude of this event weighs even more heavily today in the current climate,’ Goodell also said in his statement. ‘Juneteenth not only marks the end of slavery in the United States, but it also symbolizes freedom − a freedom that was delayed, and brutally resisted; and though decades of progress followed, a freedom for which we must continue to fight.’

That was then. Look at the nation now.

There are governmental efforts to destroy anything that has to do with diversity. We are more militarized. We are more divided. And the NFL hasn’t been exempt from the pressures to abandon pluralism and diversity. Four years ago, it loudly proclaimed itself DEI advocates. Now, as USA TODAY’S Jarrett Bell wrote in May, the league has stopped its coaching accelerator program, saying it will come back in some reimagined form next year. In burying the program, it looked like the league was succumbing to outside pressure. The NFL vehemently disputes this.

“I realize that people are going to look at this and say, ‘These people are backing off,” Pittsburgh Steelers owner Art Rooney II, chair of the NFL’s diversity committee, told Bell. “That’s not going to happen. There’s nothing I can really do about that perception, except to say that we’re still not satisfied with where we are, and we recognize that we still have work to do.”

Hopefully Rooney is right.

Five years ago, the league embraced Juneteenth. An NFL spokesman told USA TODAY Sports it still is. The league office will be closed on the 19th, the spokesman said.

It may seem odd to say that something as simple as a closed NFL office on Juneteenth is some sort of progress. But in this country? Now? Unfortunately, it is.

All the NFL news on and off the field. Sign up for USA TODAY’s 4th and Monday newsletter.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

LSU earned its second win over the Razorbacks at the 2025 College World Series (the Tigers also beat Arkansas in the opening round of the tournament). Arkansas then fought through the loser’s bracket to reach the semifinals, and a win on Wednesday, June 18 would’ve forced a winner-take-all game to reach the national championship series on Thursday, June 19.

This will be LSU’s second national title appearance in three seasons; it won the national championship in 2023 over Florida. The Tigers will face No. 13 Coastal Carolina, which hasn’t lost this postseason and is on a 26-game win streak.

Here’s how Arkansas blew its 5-3 lead in the College World Series semifinals, and how LSU took the game to reach the national championship:

How LSU baseball came back vs. Arkansas in College World Series

Things didn’t start off ideal for LSU, as leadoff hitter John Pearson struck out to start the bottom of the ninth inning.

The Tigers were facing Arkansas left-hander Cole Gibler, who entered the game with 56 strikeouts in 28⅔ innings. Derek Curiel got the rally started for LSU in the next at-bat, however, reaching base on a single before advancing to second on an error by Reese Robinett, who made an errant throw as Gibler attempted to cover the base.

That’s when the game started to unravel for Arkansas, giving LSU life. Ethan Frey drew a walk to put runners on first and second base with one out, with 3-hole hitter Steven Milam coming up to the plate.

Milam hit a grounder, which was fielded by Arkansas star shortstop Wehiwa Aloy. However, Aloy didn’t attempt to turn a game-ending double play, instead throwing out Curiel, the lead runner, at third base.

Luis Hernandez came through with a giant hit in the next at-bat, hitting a two-run double to left field to tie the game at 5-5. Arkansas left fielder Charles Davalan dove for the line drive, but missed the ball, resulting in two runs.

LSU then had a runner on second with two outs for Jared Jones, who had tied the game at 3-3 with a solo home run in his last at-bat in the eighth inning. Jones stayed hot in the ninth, delivering a game-winning single to center field to score Hernandez, resulting in a 6-5 win.

LSU was able to capitalize on Arkansas’ mistakes, from the throwing error that resulted in Curiel reaching base with one out, to Aloy passing up a potential double play and Davalan missing a would-be game-ending diving catch in left field.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

ATLANTA – Maybe Aaron Glenn isn’t a short time away from his debut as a rookie NFL head coach if he didn’t follow through on some pertinent advice from Bill Parcells.

Be a scout.

That was not exactly what Glenn wanted to hear in 2012, four years after retiring from a stellar 15-year career as an NFL cornerback, when the bug hit him to try getting back in the league to pursue a coaching career.

“He told me that he wanted me to scout first, because I had a chance to be a head coach,” the New York Jets coach told USA TODAY Sports on Tuesday. “And to be a good head coach, you’ve got to understand personnel. So, listen, I did not want to do it at all. I wanted to go straight to coaching.

“But man, that was the best advice I could have gotten.”

And look at him now. Glenn, 52, worked as a scout for the Jets for two years before steadily climbing the NFL coaching ladder and bringing Parcells’ prediction to life. In personnel, which included scouting the NFL and colleges, Glenn learned the nuances of every position, which goes so far in handling the evaluation business of his new job.

Let Parcells, the Hall of Famer who coached Glenn with the Jets and later with the Dallas Cowboys, tell us why he thinks this is such a big deal.

“I want to tell you one thing about him that I think is interesting,” Parcells told USA TODAY Sports during a phone interview, shortly after Glenn was hired. “There are very few pro football players that when their football career is over, they’re willing to go to another profession and start at the lowest level. But Aaron did that because he was trying to get the proper foundation. That one thing showed me that he was serious about being a coach.”

Glenn was at the Ozzie Newsome GM Forum hosted by the Black College Football Hall of Fame and supported by the NFL, part of a roundtable discussion that also featured Tampa Bay Buccaneers coach Todd Bowles and Atlanta Falcons GM Terry Fontenot. That provided Glenn another reason to be nostalgic as he opened up to an audience that included several college coaches. Bowles was Glenn’s crafty position coach for a year with the Jets and two seasons with the Cowboys. Fontenot shared much insight when he worked in the New Orleans Saints personnel department during the five seasons Glenn was the team’s secondary coach.

It’s no wonder that Glenn, reflecting on his rise, emphasized not cutting corners.

“I try to tell a lot of people: ‘Don’t miss a step,’” Glenn said. “And that’s not just in your process of becoming a head coach, but in the scheme of things in general. I’ve had an opportunity to hit a number of different parts of the NFL that a lot of people don’t get a chance to. So, whatever it is as far as learning experience in this league, you’ve got to take it. Even though you might think it will slow you down from getting that next job, it’s really helping you in that next job because you’re getting valuable information.”

That mindset probably goes double as Glenn gets on with the task of trying to revitalize the franchise riding with the NFL’s longest playoff drought at 14 seasons. Of course, these jobs generally open up for a reason and with the Jets, the calling card is instability. Glenn marks the sixth Jets coach since 2009. But at least he has been a first-hand witness to a stark turnaround, having a key role as the Detroit Lions transformed from an essential doormat to one of the NFL’s most legitimate championship contenders over the past two seasons under coach Dan Campbell. It can indeed happen.

Perhaps he’s perfect for this. Parcells calls him “a tiger.” As a player, Glenn’s tenacity made up for his slight stature at 5-foot, 9-inches. As a coach, that same aggressive flow endears him to players who vouch for his ability to relate. Something that veteran defensive end Za’Darius Smith said about Glenn earlier this year, as the Lions ramped up for their (very short) playoff run, summed up widespread sentiment.

“For a coach to relate to players, and players to relate to a coach who played for 15 years, it’s like you want to listen,” Smith told USA TODAY Sports. “You have that trust.”

Although the Lions were upset in their playoff opener, nearly a year after their collapse in the NFC title game, Glenn’s stock rose on his ability to patch up an injury-ravaged unit to the point that Detroit earned the NFC’s No. 1 seed. Fixing the Jets, 5-12 in 2024, is an entirely different animal. To which Glenn doesn’t seem to even blink.

After all, he stepped into the NFL in 1994 as the Jets’ first-round pick (12th overall) from Texas A&M.

“This is my third time around the horn with the Jets,” he said. “It’s fate. I was meant to have that job. Even though there are some things to work out, there is no other job that fits.”

Glenn surely has some nerve, casting the Jets as a dream job. We’ll see. Glenn told reporters last week that 91% of players attended all of the offseason workout. Teamed with new general manager Darren Mougey, didn’t bother to try it with Aaron Rodgers, and instead is rolling with former Steeler Justin Fields. Fate (and the NFL schedule-makers) lined up Pittsburgh and Rodgers for Glenn’s debut on Sept. 7, so, no lack of interest.

But first things first. Training camp opens in five weeks.

As Justin Fields energizes Jets, we’ll know soon if Steelers goofed with Aaron Rodgers

“I’m going to approach it just like I always have,” Glenn said. “I want to be in the bunker with the players, meaning I want the players to know I’m in there with them. To me, that’s what training camp is all about. That’s when you’ll begin to really build a foundation as a team.”

If Glenn’s old school philosophy and desire for physicality is any indication, the Jets could be in for one of the NFL’s most demanding camps. Glenn knows. The Lions were noted for their physical camps under Campbell.

Detroit’s coach, who played with Glenn at A&M and coached with him on Sean Payton’s staff in New Orleans, also gets a lot of credit from Glenn for preparing him to transition to this new opportunity. Campbell saw to it that Glenn handled some of the head coaching tasks, such as setting the camp practice schedule. That couldn’t hurt. But…

“You know, when you become a head coach, it’s not exactly what you thought it was,” Parcells said. “I tell all the guys that I’ve worked with, when they start out, there are going to be five or six things that happen every day that you wish wouldn’t happen. If you can’t deal with that, then you need to find another business, because that’s the way professional athletics are. There are things that happen and you just have to be willing to persevere and cope. I’m not trying to sound like this is some courageous undertaking. You get quite a bit of adversity along the way. You have to be prepared to deal with it.”

Aaron Rodgers went to Mike Tomlin’s backyard cookout. There was chemistry (and good food)

That said, Parcells is excited about Glenn’s chances to ultimately succeed because he believes that he is well prepared. After all, a dozen years ago, he took Parcells’ career advice.

“When you’re coaching, you’re really teaching,” Parcells said. “Communication is vital. You’ve got to figure out how to do that with your pupils. Listen, this kid, all I can say is he’s prepared for the undertaking. Even with that, it never goes the way you think it’s going to go. The boat’s going to rock and there’s going to be sharks in the water. I know he understands that. Even with the preparation, you can’t expect the transition to be smooth. But I’m fired up for him.”

This is a sweet spot about now for Glenn. He hasn’t lost a game. He hasn’t been put on blast by the New York tabloids because of a controversial decision. He’s relaxed, grateful for all of his mentors and eager to share insights with younger coaches.

In a few weeks, though, the grind will arrive. He may be a rookie coach, but he’s been around the NFL long enough in other capacities to realize the pressure cooker that looms.

“I’m going to be around the players as much as possible,” Glenn said. “They’ll get to know me and I’ll get to know them. But I want to make sure at this point that I spend as much time with my wife and kids as I can.”

Which represents another good move.

Follow Jarrett Bell on social media: @JarrettBell

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As hostilities continue to rage between Israel and the Islamic Republic of Iran, U.S. Ambassador to the Jewish state Mike Huckabee has indicated work is underway to provide options for Americans who want to evacuate.

‘American Citizens wanting to evacuate Israel: Sign up at https://mytravel.state.gov/s/step to be on list. We’re working to get military, commercial, charter flights & cruise ships for evac. If you’re offered a seat, take it. Family in Israel? Tell them stay close to shelter & don’t ignore sirens!’ Huckabee noted in a post on X.

Like prior notices in recent days, the U.S. Embassy in Israel noted in a June 19 security alert it is directing all U.S. government employees and their families to keep sheltering in place.

‘We will alert the U.S. citizen community if there is additional information to share regarding departure options,’ the notice states. ‘If you are a U.S. citizen or Lawful Permanent Resident currently in Israel or the West Bank and seeking U.S. government assistance to depart, please complete this form so the Department of State can better assist you and provide you with timely updates: https://mytravel.state.gov/s/crisis-intake.’

The notice explained that, in the event the government provides assistance to Americans seeking to leave Israel, travelers would be expected to repay Uncle Sam but would not be required to pay up front before departing Israel. 

‘If the U.S. government provides departure assistance from Israel, options would most likely include travel to a nearby, safe country. We do not provide direct travel to the United States. You will be responsible for your onward travel after arriving in the nearby, safe country. Consular officers will be available to assist you on arrival with consular services, including a loan to repatriate to the United States if you wish to do so and qualify,’ the notice explains.

‘If the U.S. government provides departure assistance from Israel, you do not need to pay before you board, but you will be expected to sign a promissory note to repay the U.S. government. We will tell you the estimated amount you will be expected to repay before you travel. Pets cannot accompany you,’ it also notes.

Another security alert issued Thursday noted, ‘The Department of State is always planning for contingencies to assist with private U.S. citizens’ departure from crisis areas. We will alert the U.S. citizen community if there is additional information to share regarding departure options. U.S. citizens should enroll in the Smart Traveler Enrollment Program to receive the latest updates.’

President Donald Trump has not ruled out the possibility of American military intervention to help Israel stamp out Iranian efforts to develop nuclear weapons.

‘AMERICA FIRST means many GREAT things, including the fact that, IRAN CAN NOT HAVE A NUCLEAR WEAPON. MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!!!’ he declared in a Truth Social post Monday.

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Several Boeing 747s have been spotted on radar leaving China for Iran over the last week, according to reports, sparking concerns that the CCP is helping the Middle Eastern nation transport cargo or people out of the country as Israel continues to strike the country’s nuclear facilities. 

Starting on June 14th, FlightRadar24 shows that at least five flights traveled from China to Iran, and The Telegraph reported that the ‘mystery transport planes’ had flown westward along northern China before crossing into Kazakhstan, south through Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan, and then fell off radar as they approached Iran. 

Additionally, the report indicated that the flights had a final destination of Luxembourg but don’t appear to have ever crossed into European airspace.

Some experts have speculated that these types of planes are typically used for transport and could be evidence of China aiding its longtime ally Iran during the conflict with Israel, although Fox News Digital has not independently confirmed the nature of the flights. 

‘I think it’s important to remember what the relationship is, forty-three percent of China’s oil and gas comes from the Middle East, a large volume of that from Iran,’ Robert Greenway, director of the Heritage Foundation’s Center for National Defense, told ‘The Ingraham Angle’ on Wednesday night. 

‘It likes to buy sanctioned oil below market value, and that fuels the Chinese economy and also its military ambitions, and so, that’s the central relationship. They’ve been relatively quiet – in fact, extremely quiet – about the current conflict and coming to Iran’s assistance. We also know that a large fire in Bandar-Bas port was Chinese solid propellant for missiles that exploded and created a tremendous amount of damage just about a month ago. I think it’s unlikely to see Chinese arms shipments under the circumstances to Iran. It’s more likely that Iran may be removing material or personnel or regime valuables to safe haven in light of the conflict. I think that’s probably the extent to which China is willing to accept the risk associated with the current circumstances.’

In 2021, Fox News Digital reported that Tehran and Beijing signed a 25-year cooperation deal amidst great fanfare in the Iranian capital. University of Tehran Professor Mohammad Marandi, who is close to the regime, told Fox News that it is about much more than what’s on paper. 

‘This strategic partnership is important because it allows Iran and China to build a roadmap for long-term relations that will be much more fruitful,’ he said. ‘It’s also a signal being sent to the United States. The more the U.S. tries to isolate Iran and China, the more it causes countries like Iran and China to move more closely to each other.’

Some have cast doubt on the flights representing a nefarious connection between the two nations, including Atlantic Council fellow Tuvia Gering who posted on X that an aviation expert told him the flights are ‘nothing to write home about.’ 

‘There are regular cargo flights by the Luxembourg-based freight company from several locations in China to Europe, with a stopover in Turkmenistan (just a few dozen kilometers from the Iranian border),’ Gering wrote. 

‘Some flight tracking websites lose the tracking signal shortly before landing and continue to show a projected route that appears to enter Iranian airspace. The sites clearly indicate that this is an estimated path; checking the aircraft tail numbers shows they take off again from Turkmenistan a few hours later, and reviewing the flight history of these routes shows they always land in Ashgabat and do not continue into Iran. All this is before even considering the obvious logic that a major European cargo company is highly unlikely to be the channel through which China transfers its super-advanced, top-secret strategic weapons to Iran.’

Tensions between Iran and Israel have escalated significantly in recent days, with the United States contemplating whether it will get directly involved in striking Iran. President Donald Trump has repeatedly said that Iran cannot have a nuclear weapon, and he is expected to meet with national security and defense leaders again on Thursday. 

‘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 said Wednesday. 

‘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,’ the president added.

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U.S. troops based in the Middle East could face increased attacks in the coming days or weeks, should the U.S. decide to become involved in the growing conflict between Israel and Iran. 

White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said Thursday that President Donald Trump will make a decision in the next two weeks whether the U.S. will move forward and strike Iranian nuclear facilities. 

‘Yes, I may do it. I may not do it,’ Trump said Wednesday. ‘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.’ 

Meanwhile, Iran has issued a clear message: Doing so will come with consequences. Iran has cautioned that the U.S. will suffer if it chooses to become involved in the conflict, and previously issued retaliatory strikes against bases where U.S. troops were housed after the U.S. killed a top Iranian general in 2020. 

‘The Americans should know that any U.S. military intervention will undoubtedly be accompanied by irreparable damage,’ Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said Wednesday, according to state media. 

The Pentagon has bolstered its forces in the Middle East in light of the growing tensions, including sending the aircraft carrier Nimitz from the South China Sea to join the aircraft carrier Carl Vinson in the Middle East. 

The Pentagon referred Fox News Digital to Department of Defense spokesperson Sean Parnell’s Monday statement that American forces remain in a ‘defensive posture’ and Hegseth’s announcement Monday that more forces had been deployed to the Middle East. 

‘Protecting U.S. forces is our top priority and these deployments are intended to enhance our defensive posture in the region,’ Hegseth said Monday. 

Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., pressed Hegseth Wednesday for details regarding what contingency plans are in place from drones amid rising tensions in the Middle East. Three U.S. service members were killed in an unmanned drone attack in Jordan in January 2024 that was attributed to an Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps-backed militia. 

‘I have no assurance that we have the capacity to safeguard against a swarm of small, lightweight, slow-moving drones that are, in my view, our major vulnerability, and right now, if we engaged in the Iran conflict, would put us and U.S. personnel at risk there,’ Blumenthal said Wednesday. 

The U.S. currently has more than 40,000 U.S. troops and Defense Department civilians stationed in the Middle East. Here are some of the countries where U.S. military personnel are based and could face heightened threats:

Iraq 

Roughly 2,500 U.S. military personnel are stationed in Iraq as of September 2024, and are assigned to Combined Joint Task Force–Operation Inherent Resolve, according to the Department of Defense. Their role in Iraq involves advising and supporting partner forces in the region to defeat ISIS. 

Following the 2020 U.S. airstrike that killed Iranian Gen. Qassem Soleimani in Iraq, Iranian forces launched ballistic missile attacks at Erbil Air Base and Ain al-Asad Air Base in Iraq, where U.S. troops are stationed. 

Jordan

About 350 U.S. troops are deployed to Jordan at a remote military base known as Tower 22, according to the Department of Defense. 

In January 2024, three soldiers were killed and another 40 were injured when a one-way uncrewed aerial system struck Tower 22. 

In May, ten New York Army National Guard soldiers were awarded the Purple Heart for the injuries they suffered in the attack. The Pentagon blamed an Iranian-backed militia for the attack. 

Kuwait

The U.S. currently operates five bases in Kuwait: Camp Arifjan, Ali Al Salem Air Base, Camp Buehring, Camp Patriot and Camp Spearhead. 

As of January, approximately 13,500 U.S. troops are based there and primarily are focused on eliminating the threat of ISIS, according to the U.S. State Department. 

Qatar 

Qatar hosts U.S. Central Command’s forward headquarters at Al Udeid Air Base, home of the Air Force’s 379th Air Expeditionary Wing, which Air Forces Central Command has dubbed the ‘largest and most diverse wing’ within the command. The wing includes airlift, aerial refueling intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance, and aeromedical evacuation assets, according to Air Forces Central Command. 

Bahrain 

Naval Forces Central Command is based out of Manama, Bahrain, where it spearheads a coalition of regional and international partners that are focused on supporting task forces targeting counterterrorism, counter-piracy and maritime security in the region. 

The Navy first established a base in Bahrain in 1971, which has hosted Naval Forces Central Command since 1983. 

United Arab Emirates

Just 20 miles south of the United Arab Emirates capital of Abu Dhabi is Al Dhafra Air Base, home of the Air Force’s 380th Air Expeditionary Wing. 

The wing includes unmanned aircraft including the RQ-4 Global Hawk, a remotely piloted surveillance aircraft. 

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The Cleveland Browns’ fifth-round rookie quarterback was cited for speeding over 100 mph early Tuesday morning, according to public police records.

Sanders, 23, was caught driving 101 mph in a 60 mph speed limit zone in Strongsville, Ohio, a city in Cuyahoga County, around 12:30 a.m. on June 17.

Sanders may choose to fight the ticket in court. According to the citation, he has a court date set for July 3 should he wish to contest it. Otherwise, he may pay a $250 fine to waive the case, according to the Strongsville Mayor’s Court Online Docketing and Ticket Payment System.

The Browns have declined a request for comment.

Will the NFL suspend Shedeur Sanders?

No, the NFL will not suspend the rookie quarterback for a speeding ticket. The league has also not provided a statement.

Browns response to Shedeur Sanders speeding ticket

The Browns have not yet released a statement on Sanders’ Tuesday citation.

Shedeur Sanders’ response to speeding ticket

Sanders has not said anything publicly about his speeding ticket yet.

This story will be updated as more information becomes available.

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