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MILAN — The stunning performance from Alysa Liu that propelled her to victory in the women’s figure skating singles at the 2026 Winter Olympics will transcend the gold medal she won.

And the accolades.

And the fame.

So suggested Amber Glenn, one of Liu’s teammates.

‘This is going to make such a great impact on so many people’s attitude towards the sport,’ Glenn said after Liu triumphed Thursday, Feb. 19 at Milano Ice Skating Arena. Later Glenn added, ‘I think people will be able to see how she approaches the sport now versus before and see how much more successful it is now in a healthy way. And I’m hoping people can really learn from that.’

Liu, the 20-year-old American, became the youngest U.S. national champion at age 13. She finished sixth at the 2022 Winter Olympics at 16. Then, she walked away from skating.

The hiatus lasted two years.

The impact looks clear.

Repeatedly, Liu has said that winning an Olympic medal is not important.

What clearly is important is her relationship with figure skaters such as Glenn, who along with Liu and Isabeau Levito compromise the U.S. women’s figure skating team. On Tuesday, Feb. 17, Glenn appeared to be devastated after a subpar short program.

Liu comforted her.

‘She was in there … being so kind,’ Glenn said. ‘ … She is one of my closest friends. She’s one of the few people that knows what we’re going through, and Isabel as well.’

Glenn recovered Friday with a stirring performance in the free skate. And when Liu came off the ice after her own electric performance in the free skate, Glenn embraced her.

‘I was saying how proud …,’ Glenn said before stopping herself. ‘She was saying how proud of me she was.

‘She worked so hard and has such a great attitude about it. … I was just saying how this is going to make such a great impact on so many people’s attitude towards the sport.’

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Longtime Tennessee sports reporter Wes Rucker died Thursday, Feb. 19, the only fatality of a multi-vehicle crash on I-40 West in Knoxville, Tennessee.

He was 43 years old.

Rucker’s death was confirmed by his father-in-law, David Goldberg, in a Facebook post published late Feb. 19. According to a Feb. 20 news release by the Knoxville Police Department, police officers responded to a five-vehicle crash on I-40 West at 4:50 p.m. ET on Feb. 19, where Rucker — who was not named in the release — was pronounced dead at the scene.

Per Knoxville police, an investigation revealed a vehicle was stopped for traffic when it was rear-ended by another vehicle, resulting in ‘minor damage.’ However, another vehicle then struck the second vehicle and, seconds later, a large pickup truck ran into and on top of Rucker’s vehicle, fatally injuring him.

Rucker’s death has elicited an outpouring of tributes from to those knew him, whether they followed his career or worked with him professionally.

Who is Wes Rucker?

Rucker was an award-winning sports journalist who covered the Volunteers since 2000 for numerous outlets, most recently NBC affiliate WBIR-TV in Knoxville. As noted by Knox News, part of the USA TODAY Network, Rucker was an alum of the University of Tennessee, first covering Tennessee for the student newspaper, The Daily Beacon, in 2000. He also wrote for the Farragut Press Enterprise, the Daily Times (Maryville, Tennessee) and Chattanooga Times Free Press as a student.

Rucker later covered the Mocs before transitioning to cover Tennessee in 2007, including as a senior writer for 247Sports. He began working at WBIR-TV in 2025, and hosted radio shows and podcasts focused on the Volunteers and college sports throughout his career.

According to Knoxville CBS affiliate WVLT-TV, Rucker’s work earned him several statewide and national awards from the Associated Press Sports Editors. He also was a voter for both Heisman Trophy and Biletnikoff Trophy, as well as an AP football and basketball poll voter.

He is survived by his wife, Lauren, and son. Rucker announced on X (formerly Twitter) in late December that he and his wife were expecting their second child in May.

Friends, fans react to death of Wes Rucker

Here is a sampling of reactions from throughout Tennessee and the media world to Rucker’s death:

WBIR-TV

‘We are deeply saddened by the loss of Wes Rucker,’ WBIR president and general manager David Hunt shared in a statement on the TV station’s website. ‘During his time at WBIR and throughout his coverage of the University of Tennessee, Wes exemplified integrity, insight and a genuine love for this community. Our heartfelt condolences go out to his family and loved ones during this incredibly difficult time. He will be truly missed.’

Tennessee basketball coach Rick Barnes

Tennessee athletic director Danny White

‘Today is truly heartbreaking on Rocky Top as we come to terms with the tragic news about Wes,’ UT athletic director Danny White wrote on X. ‘Our hearts go out to his family and loved ones during this incredibly difficult time. We are keeping them in our thoughts and prayers.’

Here are more reactions from social media:

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Some Republicans are quietly cheering the Supreme Court’s decision blocking most of President Donald Trump’s tariffs on Friday, even as it deals a blow to a cornerstone of the commander-in-chief’s foreign policy and economic strategy.

One conservative House GOP lawmaker granted anonymity to speak freely, for example, said they were ‘relieved.’

‘It’s the right result,’ they said. ‘I am already seeing messages of relief and approval from other members of the Republican conference, as well. I expect that even more will express that relief. This helps to ensure Congress keeps its power over tariffs and preserves separation of power.’

Another Trump-aligned House Republican told Fox News Digital, ‘I think the Supreme Court rightfully decided that this was an Article I authority.’

‘Conservatives don’t like tariffs as a long-term strategy,’ the second House Republican said. ‘The president was right to use them as a tool, and he was right to use them to get outcomes on certain things. But in a long-term way…it’s a tax on consumers.’

The conservative-majority high court ruled on Friday that Trump did not have the authority to impose tariffs under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA). The White House’s interpretation of the 1977 law was used as the basis for sweeping ‘Liberation Day’ tariffs that Trump first unveiled last year.

But Chief Justice John Roberts argued that the law would have more expressly mentioned tariff authority if that is what it was meant for.

Roberts said ‘the president must ‘point to clear congressional authorization’ to justify his extraordinary assertion of the power to impose tariffs,’ which ‘he cannot.’

The ruling, and subsequent wave of relief, isn’t the first time Republicans have bucked Trump and his tariffs. The Senate on several occasions has voted against specific parts of the strategy, and the House voted last week to end Trump’s emergency declaration on Canada aimed at ending tariffs there.

‘Article One gives tariff authority to Congress. This was a common sense and straightforward ruling by the Supreme Court. I feel vindicated as I’ve been saying this for the last 12 months,’ Rep. Don Bacon, R-Neb., one of six House Republicans who voted against the Canada tariffs last week, told Fox News Digital. ‘Besides the Constitutional concerns I had on the Administration’s broad-based tariffs, I also do not think tariffs are smart economic policy. Broad-based tariffs are bad economics.’

One House GOP aide bluntly told Fox News Digital after the ruling, ‘Tariffs suck and are useless.’  

Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., one of the most vocal opponents of tariffs in the Senate, contended in a post on X shortly after the ruling that the Supreme Court ‘struck down using emergency powers to enact taxes.’

‘No future administration, including a socialist one, can use ‘emergency’ powers to get around Congress and tax by decree,’ Paul said in a statement to Fox News Digital.

But not every Republican was thrilled by the result, nor their colleagues’ attitude toward the hefty blow dealt to Trump’s agenda and the ripple effect it could have on his economic policies. One Republican source described the outpouring of relief or opposition as ’50/50.’

A GOP Senate source told Fox News Digital, ‘If this is a relief to any Republican, then they clearly don’t care about their president’s agenda.’ 

‘The administration will find a way around this, and should, but anyone who’s celebrating right now is probably missing a part of their brain,’ the source said. ‘I don’t understand how someone can see President Trump and the American people lose trillions of dollars and smile.’

Sen. Roger Marshall, R-Kan., told Fox News Digital that he was disappointed by the decision, but not surprised, and noted that the court was divided on the issue.

‘President Trump’s tariffs were delivering results — bringing our trading partners to the table, securing ten trade agreements, and driving supply chains and manufacturing back to the United States,’ Marshall said. ‘These tools were also advancing our national security interests, including pressuring countries like India to stop purchasing Russian oil.’ 

A third House Republican granted anonymity to speak candidly told Fox News Digital the Supreme Court decision was ‘a severe blow’ because the tariffs ‘were making progress that we finally have on fair trade.’

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President Donald Trump has reportedly reacted to the Supreme Court’s 6-3 decision that ruled he does not have the authority to levy sweeping tariffs under a specific emergency powers law.

A source outside the Trump administration told Fox News that an aide came into the closed-door White House breakfast with governors and handed Trump a note about the Supreme Court ruling.

The source said Trump ‘called it a disgrace, and then he went on with the remarks.’

The high court blocked Trump’s tariffs levied under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act in what amounts to a major test of executive branch authority. 

Some of the Supreme Court’s nine justices will likely be sitting in the audience when the president delivers the State of the Union address on Tuesday.

In the opinion, the high court declared, ‘Our task today is to decide only whether the power to ‘regulate… importation,’ as granted to the President in IEEPA, embraces the power to impose tariffs. It does not.’

Trump has made tariffs a key plank of his economic agenda since retaking the Oval Office last year, but his policies have not come without controversy.

Republican reaction to the ruling has been mixed.

Rep. Buddy Carter, R-Ga., slammed the high court’s decision.

‘The Supreme Court just undercut the President’s ability to defend American workers. President Donald Trump was elected to fight unfair trade and stop the United States from being ripped off. I’m outraged by this decision; it’s clearly judicial overreach,’ Carter asserted in a post on X.

But Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., welcomed the ruling.

‘In defense of our Republic, the Supreme Court struck down using emergency powers to enact taxes. This ruling will also prevent a future President such as AOC from using emergency powers to enact socialism,’ Paul noted in a post on X.

Rep. Don Bacon, R-Neb., also hailed the decision.

‘The Constitution’s checks and balances still work. Article One gives tariff authority to Congress. This was a common-sense and straightforward ruling by the Supreme Court. I feel vindicated as I’ve been saying this for the last 12 months. In the future, Congress should defend its own authorities and not rely on the Supreme Court. Besides the Constitutional concerns I had on the Administration’s broad-based tariffs, I also do not think tariffs are smart economic policy. Broad-based tariffs are bad economics,’ Bacon wrote in a post on X.

This is a developing story. Please check back for updates.

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Congressional Republicans are pushing back against Democratic claims that their marquee voter ID legislation would wreak havoc on elections in the country.

Congressional Democrats have panned the Safeguarding American Voter Eligibility (SAVE) America Act as a tool of voter suppression — saying it’s a bill that allows the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to monitor Americans’ voter information and create barriers for married women to vote, among several other claims.

Along with requiring photo ID to vote, the bill would require proof of citizenship to register to vote in federal elections, mandate states to actively verify and remove noncitizens from voter rolls, expand information sharing with federal agencies, including DHS, to verify citizenship, and create new criminal penalties for registering noncitizens to vote.

Trump has time and again pushed voter ID, calling the election reforms in the bill a ‘CAN’T MISS FOR RE-ELECTION IN THE MIDTERMS, AND BEYOND.’ 

Some of the bill’s strongest proponents fact-checked those claims in interviews with Fox News Digital.

‘If you look at what it actually says, rather than what Democrats aggressively and, I believe, disingenuously are arguing right now — they’re overlooking the requirements of the SAVE America Act — those requirements are actually really generous,’ Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, told Fox News Digital. ‘They’re really flexible.’

Here’s a closer look at some of the most common claims Democrats have made about the SAVE America Act — and how Republican supporters of the bill are responding.

Claim: ‘Federalizing voter suppression’

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., routinely has bashed the SAVE America Act as ‘Jim Crow 2.0’ — the segregationist laws of the Deep South largely done away with by the Civil Rights Act.

‘It has nothing to do with protecting our elections and everything to do with federalizing voter suppression,’ Schumer said earlier in February on the Senate floor.

But Republicans argued that Democrats were being ‘hypocritical’ in their voter suppression charge, particularly when it comes to voter ID.

Sen. Rick Scott, R-Fla., whose home state is one of 36 that either requests or requires a form of photo identification before voting, argued that voter ID laws across the country had no effect on turnout.

‘This idea that they’re saying that it’s going to suppress any vote — it’s never done that anywhere,’ Scott told Fox News Digital. ‘They said that when Georgia passed it, and they had record turnout. So it’s not true at all. I mean, how many people do you know who don’t have an ID?’

Claim: DHS will have access to legal voters’ data

House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., argued during a press conference that this iteration of the SAVE Act — with its new name — is ‘worse’ than the version that passed the House in April because it gave DHS access to Americans’ voter data.

He appeared to be referring to a provision that would allow DHS to begin potential deportation proceedings against a noncitizen found on a state’s voter rolls.

‘This version, as I understand it, would actually give DHS the power to get voting records from states across the country,’ Jeffries said earlier in February. ‘Why would these extremists think that’s a good idea? That we as Democrats are going to accept at this moment in time? We’d want DHS and ICE, who have been brutally, viciously and violently targeting everyday Americans, to have more data about the American people? It’s outrageous.’

Rep. Chip Roy, R-Texas, who led both the SAVE Act and SAVE America Act in the House, argued Democrats were ‘really reaching’ for criticism.

‘This actually allows and empowers states to be able to — as many of them want to do — check their voter rolls against the citizenship database that they’re currently prohibited from doing under a judicial interpretation of federal law,’ Roy said.

‘So, long-winded way of saying, no — the SAVE system exists, we have citizenship data, and we’re simply going to allow the checking of voter rolls against citizenship data.’

Claim: Suppresses married women’s right to vote

Another oft-repeated argument by Democrats is that the legislation would make it harder for American women to vote — specifically married women whose last names are now different from those on their birth certificates.

That’s because the bill would require proof of citizenship, like a birth certificate or a Real ID, to register to vote.

‘Republicans aren’t truly afraid of noncitizens voting, which we all know is already illegal, already grounds for deportation,’ House Minority Whip Katherine Clark, D-Mass., said earlier this month. ‘They’re afraid of women voting.’

Rep. Emilia Sykes, D-Ohio, said during the same press conference, ‘If your current name does not exactly fit and match the name on your birth certificate or citizenship papers, you could be blocked from registering to vote, even if you are a lifelong naturalized or American-born citizen.’

But Roy again said this was untrue.

‘This is absolute nonsense, and we specifically allow for a provision to make sure that no one can possibly be left behind,’ he said.

‘If a woman tried to register to vote with different names on her birth certificate and driver’s license,’ Roy said. ‘We literally put in the statute that all you have to do is sign an affidavit under penalty of perjury that, ‘I am that person. This is my birth certificate … and this is my driver’s license that is reflecting my married name.’’

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Slovakia beat the United States 3-2 in a shootout in the 2022 Olympics quarterfinals on its way to a bronze medal in Beijing.

Tournament MVP Juraj Slafkovsky, who scored in that game as a 17-year-old, is back with Slovakia, but Team USA is loaded with NHL players and Slovakia has only seven.

The United States has done well against teams with fewer NHL players, beating Latvia, Denmark and Germany by a combined score of 16-5. It also got past NHL-filled Sweden 2-1 in overtime. Slovakia is 3-1 in Milan and upset Finland in the opener.

Who will win Friday’s semifinal game and advance to the gold medal game? USA TODAY Network staffers weigh in:

Mike Brehm, USA TODAY

USA 3, Slovakia 2: Goalie Connor Hellebuyck has been one of the better goalies in the tournament. That alone should be enough to get the USA to the championship game. But the Americans also have been finding enough offense and have overcome any adversity that comes their way.

Jace Evans, USA TODAY

USA 5, Slovakia 2: The talent difference will again be on display in this one. While the USA got a scare in the quarterfinals, it came from a Sweden team that brought an equal number of NHL players to the Games. Slovakia has just seven NHL players in its lineup.

Helene St. James, Detroit Free Press

USA 4, Slovakia 2: The Americans faced their first real adversity in the quarterfinals, unable to score on Sweden the way the Americans had done in the round robin. They had to reset after losing a 1-0 lead with 91 seconds to play in regulation, and came out of it looking aces. Slovakia has had a great tournament, but the USA has superior depth. 

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After a successful first season, Miami-based Unrivaled made plans to elevate its footprint, including adding more players and playing games in additional markets. The league accomplished its vision for Year 2, expanding from six to eight teams and adding a player development pool, taking the number of players from 36 to 54.

Unrivaled also added a Philadelphia tour stop, reaching a city that won’t regularly see professional women’s basketball until 2030. The Philly experiment was a massive success. On Jan. 30, Unrivaled held a sold-out doubleheader in front of 21,490 fans at the Xfinity Mobile Arena in Philadelphia. The event set a record for the most attended regular-season professional women’s basketball game.

‘It just shows the interest and how women’s basketball is on the rise, Collier told USA TODAY Sports while promoting a partnership with Unrivaled and Icy Hot.

‘And just growing the game, going to places where people don’t have a traditional or any professional women’s basketball team. We’re in your city for a night. We’re hopefully bringing new fans. Hopefully, we converted people, [and] they saw our product, and they loved one person. Or they loved a team, or whatever it is, and now, we’ve piqued their interest, and they’ve become a fan, and they spread it.’

Following the record-breaking turnout in Philadelphia, Unrivaled announced its postseason semifinals would be played at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn on March 2. The league also announced it was increasing the championship prize pool to $600,000. (In 2025, the players on the championship team each received $50,000.)

News of the Brooklyn games came days after it announced the return of one of its biggest stars: Rose forward Angel Reese. After originally opting not to play in Season 2, Reese returns to Miami on Friday, Feb. 20, for a Hive-Rose matchup. It’s her first appearance in Unrivaled since winning Defensive Player of the Year and the league’s inaugural title with her Rose teammates in 2025.

‘Angel [Reese], she’s, obviously, a young player, a really well-known player and someone who did really well last year. Her team won.’ Collier said of Reese’s return. ‘To have her back on the Rose is awesome. She’s just been such a huge addition to Unrivaled, and so, even though it’s only the end of the season, we’re happy to have her.’

Reese and Rose BC have some work to do to win back-to-back titles. The team is 5-6 record and needs to climb back into the playoff race. Collier says she’s excited to see how Reese’s addition changes the teams in the league. Collier, who isn’t playing this season due to injuries, told USA TODAY Sports she appreciates the ‘backseat perspective’ she’s had this season.

Collier’s had a ‘bird’s eye view’ of the playground feel high-stakes play in Unrivaled, sharing her view with the audience via guest broadcasting duties. According to Collier, Unrivaled is ‘content-heavy,’ and player contracts were intentionally created with built-in activations, such as being a color analyst, so the league could help build players’ personal brands.

Over the course of the season, Collier, Paige Bueckers, Sabrina Ionescu, Aliyah Boston, Skylar Diggins, Allisha Gray and several other athletes have joined the Unrivaled broadcast to share their insights.

‘Unrivaled gets to have these players on the broadcast, where we get to look into a basketball player’s mind, because not always are commentators professional basketball players or ex-professional basketball players,’ Collier said.

‘You don’t have that happen very often and especially active ones, where they know exactly what people are thinking. They know exactly what players are thinking in different situations, how to guard certain people, because they just did it the night before. … Then from the player’s side, it also, one, lets you see how hard that job is because color commentary is not easy.’

Collier says the chance to dive into broadcasting also gives players a chance to check out post-basketball opportunities. Unrivaled essentially provides a pathway for athletes to discover more skills they can utilize when they retire.

‘[It] allows you to explore different things because we have mortality, a shelf life in basketball, and you have to prepare for what you’re going to do after,’ Collier said.

‘If you can dabble in broadcasting or TV work or whatever it is, then kind of see what you’re interested in or what you’re not interested in, that’s really helpful for us to be able to make plans for when we’re done playing.’

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Alysa Liu won the Olympic gold medal in women’s figure skating, ending a 20-year U.S. medal drought.
Liu’s career includes winning two national titles, retiring at 16, unretiring at 18, and now winning Olympic gold at 20.
She secured the victory with an error-free long program, finishing ahead of Japan’s Kaori Sakamoto and Ami Nakai.
Liu’s teammate, Amber Glenn, finished in fifth place after a strong long program performance.

MILAN — Alysa Liu arrived at the Olympic figure skating venue Thursday night hopping up and down, more excited for her teammate Amber Glenn than herself. She had watched Glenn’s stellar long program on the shuttle bus over to the Milano Ice Skating Arena and was cheering all the way. Now all she wanted to do was find Glenn and give her a hug.

Liu was an hour and a half away from skating her Olympic long program on what turned out to be the most important night of her life, but instead of worrying about that, she was thinking about someone else: A teammate and a dear friend.

It should then come as no surprise at all that when all was said and done, the most caring, carefree, selfless, happy and optimistic skater in the women’s competition just won the Olympic gold medal.

The Alysa Liu story is absolutely remarkable and utterly unprecedented in figure skating history: She won her first national title at 13. She won her second national title at 14. She retired at 16. She unretired at 18. She won the world championship at 19.

And she just won the Olympic gold medal at 20.

“I literally can’t process this,” Liu said, smiling, as soon as she realized that neither of the two Japanese skaters who came after her had passed her in the standings. ‘There’s no way.”

Liu did not just break the 20-year U.S. Olympic medal drought in women’s figure skating, she obliterated it. Skating with a freedom rarely seen at such an intense moment, especially in this year’s nerve-wracking Olympic skating competition, Liu performed an exquisitely delightful, smooth and error-free long program to Donna Summer’s ‘MacArthur Park,’ then sat back and watched Japan’s Kaori Sakamoto and Ami Nakai make just enough small mistakes to secure the first U.S. women’s gold medal in figure skating since Sarah Hughes won the 2002 Olympic title in Salt Lake City. It also was the first medal of any color for a U.S. woman since Sasha Cohen’s silver in the 2006 Games. 

Liu edged out Sakamoto, the three-time world champion and 2022 Olympic bronze medalist, 226.79 points to 224.90. The difference was Liu’s athleticism: her jumps and spins and other elements that gave her just enough of a lead to offset Sakamoto’s slight edge with the judges in artistry. Nakai, the 17-year-old who led the competition after the short program, won the bronze medal with 219.16 points. Glenn, 26, rose from 13th to fifth with 214.91 points. 

When Nakai’s score came up and Liu realized she won, she didn’t do what champions often do and stand alone in triumph. No, she spent her time hugging Nakai and then Sakamoto before finally standing alone just long enough for the cameras to put her on the big screen by herself, and the audience to roar in approval. 

Liu laughed and smiled in victory, and she laughed and smiled on her way to victory. It’s doubtful any figure skater has ever smiled more during their four-minute long program in the pressure cooker of the Olympic Games. It was stunning to see, but she had her reasons.

‘When I see other people smiling, I see them in the audience, I have to smile too,” she said afterward. ‘I have no poker face.” 

Asked if she was ever nervous, she thought for a moment and said this: “The feelings I felt out there were calm, happy and confident.”

All week, Liu had been saying she wasn’t thinking of winning a medal in the women’s event, didn’t need a medal and wasn’t focused on a medal. She stayed true to her word even as the gold medal was hanging around her neck.

“I don’t need this (medal) but what I needed was the stage. And I got that. So I was all good no matter what happened. If I fell on every jump I would still be wearing this dress, so it’s all good.”

Ah, the dress. She had definitely focused on that prior to the competition. And why not? It was new, shimmering and gold. 

“I have a new dress that I was very excited to share on the big stage,” she said. ‘Another unbelievable feeling, hearing the cheers, I felt so connected with the audience, and, ahhh, I want to be out there again.”

Then Liu laughed, and smiled, and laughed some more. 

The happiest figure skater on Earth was Olympic champion. 

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There was a time, earlier this season, when the Iowa women’s basketball team looked like it could make a deep run in the NCAA Tournament. It seemed as if the Hawkeyes had found a winning formula in the post-Caitlin Clark era and in coach Jan Jensen’s second season at the helm.

Iowa’s success depended on a few things: strong play in the post from Ava Heiden and Hannah Stuelke, superb point guard play from Chit-Chat Wright and timely 3-pointers and stout defense from Taylor McCabe. When all four players were at their best, the Hawkeyes were difficult to beat, as evidenced by their 9-0 start in Big Ten play and eight-game winning streak from Dec. 28 to Jan. 25. That surge was capped by three wins over ranked opponents: Michigan State, Maryland and Ohio State.

But on the first play of the win over the Buckeyes, McCabe was lost for the season after suffering a ACL and meniscus tears in her left knee. Part of the winning formula was missing for the Hawkeyes, who lost their next three games.

Since being upset by Minnesota on Feb. 5, Iowa has gotten back on track. The Hawkeyes beat a ranked Washington team, then got road victories at Nebraska and Purdue, winning each game by an average of 10.3 points.

The test to see if Iowa is really back — if the Hawkeyes can really hang with good teams without McCabe — comes Sunday, when they host Michigan (noon ET, Fox).

Michigan is in contention with Texas and Vanderbilt to grab the final No. 1 seed in the NCAA Tournament. The Wolverines have won 11 of their last 13 games and are 13-2 in Big Ten play. Michigan pushed national title contenders UConn and UCLA to the brink earlier this season, losing to the Huskies and Bruins by three points apiece.

An Iowa victory would show they’ve figured out how to win without McCabe. A road triumph for the Wolverines would further cement their status as real contenders.

Here’s the other games to watch in women’s college basketball over the next few days:

Game that could impact the top 16 seeds: Kentucky at Vanderbilt

Sunday, 4 p.m. ET (ESPN2)

Kentucky is trying to secure its spot in the top 16, while Vanderbilt is trying to live up to its projection as a No. 1 seed in the NCAA Tournament. In the first meeting between these two teams this season, Vandy won by a single point in Lexington as Aubrey Galvan put the game on ice with two free throws. Much is at stake in the second matchup between the Wildcats and Commodores.

Must-watch player matchup: Iowa State at TCU

Sunday, 4 p.m. ET (ESPN)

Iowa State’s Addy Brown missed 11 games after suffering a lower body injury in the Cyclones’ Jan. 4 loss to Baylor. Without her, Iowa State went 6-5 after starting the season 14-1. She returned to the court on Wednesday in the Cyclones’ double-digit win over Arizona State, tallying six points, seven rebounds and six assists in 20 minutes. Iowa State looks like a different team with Brown in the lineup. How much she elevates the Cyclones will be tested against the Big 12’s top-ranked team.

Mid-major matchup worth watching: Rice at East Carolina

Saturday, 1 p.m. ET (ESPN+)

Rice hasn’t lost since Nov. 28 and the Owls will put their 18-game win streak on the line in Greenville, North Carolina on Saturday when the top two teams in the American Conference face off. Rice has four players averaging in double figures in scoring this season, but their real strength is in their defense. The Owls rank first nationally in percentage of points allowed from the 3-point line: 16.8%. The Pirates also have four players scoring in double digits and are strong defensively too, ranking 17th nationally in turnovers forced with 21.5 per game.

Big stakes for a bubble team: Virginia at Louisville

Sunday, Noon ET (The CW)

This one is pretty simple for the Cavaliers. Either pick up a Quad 1 road win at Louisville and secure your spot in the NCAA Tournament, or lose and continue to live on the bubble.

Sickos game of the week: UCF at Cincinnati

Saturday, 2 p.m. ET (ESPN+)

UCF has lost 13 of its last 15 games and seem to be headed toward a head coaching change at season’s end. The Bearcats aren’t much better with a 10-17 record. Cincinnati guard Mya Perry and UCF guard Leah Harmon are fun to watch though. If they get into a shot-for-shot contest, this could be worth tuning in.

Also watch…

Ball State at Miami Ohio: Saturday, 1 p.m. ET (ESPN+)
Texas Tech at Colorado: Saturday, 9 p.m. ET (ESPN+)
Ole Miss at South Carolina: Sunday, 12 p.m. ET (ESPN)
Duke at Clemson: Sunday, 2 p.m. ET (ESPN2)
Michigan State at Minnesota: Sunday, 6 p.m. ET (FS1)

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President Donald Trump said Friday he is ‘considering’ a limited military strike on Iran to pressure its leaders into a deal over its nuclear program.

‘I guess I can say, I am considering that,’ Trump said at a breakfast with governors at the White House.

This is a developing story. Please check back for updates.
 

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