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A Minnesota fraud scandal is a ‘canary in the coal mine’ for how easily swindles can seep into government systems — including election administration — Republican election attorney Justin Riemer told Fox News Digital. 

‘What you’ve seen happen in Minnesota and now similar fraudulent schemes in other states, this should be very much a canary in the coal mine for other governmental processes,’ Riemer told Fox News Digital in a Zoom interview in January. ‘Which would include our voter registration and election processes. And it’s not somehow immune to the type of corruption that we’ve seen in Minnesota and in other places.’

Riemer leads Restoring Integrity and Trust in Elections (RITE), a legal nonprofit that fights court efforts from a ‘well-funded network of activists’ working to ‘undermine elections and democracy.’ He previewed that RITE is readying an investigation into Minnesota’s election system to see if it has potentially faced fraud similar to the sweeping multiyear, COVID-19-era schemes currently under scrutiny. 

Riemer framed Minnesota as an early test case for broader concerns he believes are building ahead of the 2026 midterm elections, particularly around noncitizen registration and voting safeguards. 

‘They’ve definitely opened up opportunities for noncitizens to register. And honestly, there’s times where noncitizens are being unwittingly registered,’ Riemer said, before pointing to an instance that unfolded in 2025 in the Last Frontier State — Alaska. 

 ‘It’s happened in Alaska, actually, where you have two noncitizens who, by no fault of their own, were registered through some sloppy state automatic voter registration process, which essentially sucks in anyone that goes to the DMV into the registration system without any sort of voluntary registration on the part of the noncitizen,’ he said. 

The election attorney argued that the fastest-moving battles are increasingly being fought in court — including disputes over voter roll maintenance, documentary proof of citizenship requirements and ballot deadlines.

‘Look at what the Supreme Court is reviewing right now,’ Riemer said, pointing to litigation challenging whether states can accept ballots that arrive after Election Day. He also cited ongoing legal fights involving state efforts to remove noncitizens from voter rolls and require documentary proof of citizenship.

‘There are also various cases winding their way through the courts on state efforts to remove noncitizens and to require documentary proof of citizenship,’ he continued. ‘So I think a lot of the action you’re going to see is going to be in the courts.’

RITE says its mission is to defend state election laws in court and prevent what it calls efforts to dilute the votes of eligible citizens.

Riemer told Fox Digital that Democratic-aligned legal groups are a major force opposing stricter election rules, describing them as heavily funded and aggressive in litigation.

‘The boogeyman is the left-wing lawyers and interest groups that are funded by basically unlimited amounts of money that sue a state for doing anything that increases the integrity of their elections,’ he said. ‘They claim that some of these laws disenfranchise or suppress the vote. But they have a very hard time proving that in court. But I would point to the left-wing lawyers and to the donors who fund them with essentially unlimited amounts of money to file ridiculous and frivolous lawsuits.’

RITE points to recent court wins it says strengthened election safeguards, including a federal ruling in Maryland requiring public access to certain voter-roll maintenance records under the National Voter Registration Act. The group also assisted in cases in Colorado and Pennsylvania that preserved mail-ballot authentication requirements, including signature verification and envelope-signature and dating rules.

‘RITE is out there fighting to stop these things from happening,’ he said. ‘We’re out there fighting in the courts to try and make sure that states, especially those who are unwilling, are being forced to perform more checks at the front end, because the registration process is really where it all begins. And states need to be doing more than they are.’ 

On the national level, President Donald Trump’s administration has made it easier for states to verify voter eligibility, notching some wins in the Republicans’ election integrity battle ahead of the midterms. 

‘The Trump administration has really emphasized election integrity as a priority,’ he said. ‘And one of the big things I would point to is what they have done to allow states to verify the citizenship of those who are registering to vote. They’ve opened up databases at the Department of Homeland Security that state election officials can use to determine whether or not voters on their registration lists are actually citizens or otherwise eligible to vote. That’s been key.’ 

The Minnesota fraud case unfolding in the Twin Cities has continued since December 2025, when it hit the nation’s radar in earnest that officials were uncovering hundreds of millions of dollars in state-administered funds allegedly lost to fraud that could exceed $9 billion. 

The investigations have been underscored by federal immigration law enforcement presence in the Twin Cities, which has led to violent protests and two fatal shootings of Americans by federal police officials. 

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Aaron Glenn’s New York Jets staff will see even more upheaval in 2026.

The Jets on Tuesday parted ways with offensive coordinator Tanner Engstrand, according to multiple reports.

The decision comes amid reports that Engstrand was unlikely to retain his play-calling role next season if he had remained with the team. After Glenn and Engstrand had multiple conversations about how and whether to proceed, the two sides instead opted to split, according to multiple reports.

The Jets last week fired quarterbacks coach Charles London, pass game coordinator Scott Turner, linebackers coach Aaron Curry, defensive line coach Eric Washington, assistant defensive backs coach Dre Bly, defensive assistant Alonso Escalante and defensive assistant Roosevelt Williams.

Glenn’s inaugural season at the helm proved far rockier than the coaching staff anticipated, with the team being the last in the NFL to notch a win after an 0-7 start. Quarterback Justin Fields drew significant scrutiny, including from owner and chairman Woody Johnson, before being benched in November.

New York finished ranked 29th in total yards and scoring.

Engstrand, 43, followed Glenn over from the Detroit Lions, where he served as the team’s passing game coordinator for the prior two seasons.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

As March Madness inches ever closer, we offer our latest attempt to project the men’s basketball NCAA tournament field. While four different conferences are still represented on the No.-1 seed line, the upper quadrant of the bracket skews heavily toward the Big Ten.

For now the top regional seeds are unchanged from our previous installment of bracketology. Arizona has the strongest case for the top overall seed, with Michigan, Connecticut and Duke still projected to lead the regionals. The Wolverines head a group of five Big Ten squads among our projected top 12, despite preseason league favorite Purdue slipping to a No. 3 seed. Red-hot Illinois has moved up to a No. 2 along with still undefeated Nebraska, and perennial tournament contender Michigan State is also on the third line.

It might be a case of quantity over quality for the SEC, which is still well represented with 10 teams in the field but none seeded higher than Florida and Vanderbilt at No. 4 for the moment. The league’s automatic qualifier based on the current standings would be Texas A&M, though the Aggies likely will need to improve their profile should they require at-large consideration.

Seton Hall has toppled out of the field for now, leaving the Big East with just three tournament squads. The Mountain West also has three spots, though a couple of them are dangerously close to the bubble.

Bracketology: NCAA tournament field projection

March Madness Last four in

TCU, UCLA, New Mexico, Miami (Fla.).

March Madness First four out

Virginia Tech, Indiana, Missouri, Seton Hall.

NCAA tournament bids conference breakdown

Multi-bid leagues: Big Ten (10), SEC (10), Big 12 (8), ACC (8) Big East (3), Mountain West (3), West Coast (2).

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Mikaela Shiffrin has achieved major career milestones since the 2022 Beijing Olympics, including her 100th World Cup win.
Shiffrin is grappling with the public’s intense focus on the Olympics compared to her consistent success in other competitions.
Despite her past Olympic success, she feels her overall body of work is a better reflection of her dedication than a single medal.
Shiffrin aims to approach the upcoming Milano Cortina Olympics with a focus on her performance and enjoyment, not just the outcome.

EDWARDS, Colorado — A month after the 2022 Beijing Olympics, Mikaela Shiffrin won her fourth overall title. A year after that, she broke Ingemar Stenmark’s long-standing record for most World Cup victories. Two years after that, she got her 100th World Cup win, establishing a mark that is certain to stand for decades, if not all time.

All this is to say that although the Olympics mean everything to the general public, they are only a piece of Shiffrin’s considerable legacy.

And she’s not quite sure how to square that.

“There’s this external factor that really heightens the importance of the Olympics. Each one that I’ve gone to, I feel like subconsciously I realized that. But was almost naïve to it. Or maybe blind to it a little bit,” Shiffrin, 30, told USA TODAY Sports.

“Now I think I consciously realize just how much people care for those two weeks every four years. And I don’t totally know what to do with that.”

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This is not because of what happened at the Beijing Olympics, where Shiffrin had a Groundhog Day-esque nightmare. Expected to medal in multiple events, she instead left empty-handed after uncharacteristic did-not-finishes in the slalom, giant slalom and the Alpine combined.

To put that in context, she’d had only two DNFs in the previous three seasons. She had three in 11 days in Beijing.

Shiffrin’s personal disappointment was compounded by the torrent of online abuse she received, with trolls flooding her social media accounts to berate and mock her. Some suggested the then-26-year-old should retire. Others said she shouldn’t return to the United States.

As cruel as that was, Shiffrin’s feelings about the Olympics had gotten complicated even before that.

She’s not alone.

Winter Olympians, in particular, race at World Cups week in and week out each season and have world championships each year. Many see those as a better gauge, even if they occur when most of the world isn’t watching.

‘Everyone here is so focused on the Olympics, but we also all have so many big careers outside of the Olympics,’ said Paula Moltzan, who has been on the podium four times this World Cup season. ‘And so for me, I would like to perform on the Olympic day. But if it doesn’t happen, there’s so many other races in which I can perform and show my best skiing.’

It’s not that the Olympics don’t mean a great deal to Shiffrin. They do. She, like pretty much every other athlete who will compete in Milano Cortina, grew up dreaming of the Olympics. And she’s had more success at the Winter Games than most.

Her first Olympic gold medal — in the slalom at the 2014 Sochi Olympics — announced her to the world as the next great American skier. Her second, in the giant slalom four years later, remains one of the highlights of her career.

She also has a silver from the individual combined in 2018, putting her one behind Julia Mancuso’s record for a U.S. woman.

But Shiffrin is driven by process, the tinkering and the tweaking and the training in the endless pursuit of perfection. The medals and titles are only a reflection of that. Consistency and longevity are her holy grails.

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To race for Olympic gold — or silver or bronze — or to have a body of work reduced to one race or one event is too simplistic.

“In a way, an Olympic medal is literally just about the Olympic medal,” Shiffrin said. “You want it to be a symbol that represents everything. It represents hard work for sure. It’s a symbol of years of dedication and sacrifice and all of these things.

“But at the end of the day, people talk about other records that I have, or globes that I have, synonymously with a lifetime of dedication and hard work and passion and just being relentless. Who I am as a human produced the ability to achieve these things,” she said. “And with the (Olympic) medals, it’s ‘Olympic gold medalist’ and that’s it. Just Olympic gold medalist.

“It’s funny because it’s harder to attach the meaning, that really wholesome meaning to an Olympic medal.”

She is determined to try, however. But not because she feels she has something to prove or that she owes those anonymous keyboard warriors anything. The people who matter most in her life — her fiancé, Norwegian skier Aleksander Aamodt Kilde; her mother; her brother and sister-in-law; her good friends — are there because of who she is, not what she does or how many medals she wins.

Something golfer Scottie Scheffler said last summer resonated with her, too.

Scheffler is the best golfer of his generation, a four-time major winner and Olympic champion before his 30th birthday. Yet he said at the 2024 British Open that he’s come to realize how fleeting the satisfaction is from a win. Even the very biggest ones.

“It’s such an amazing moment. Then it’s like, ‘OK, what are we going to eat for dinner?’ Life goes on,’ Scheffler said.

That’s the kind of attitude Shiffrin wants to channel in Milano Cortina, a place she loves and knows well: No matter what happens, good or bad, life will go on. Just like it did after Sochi, after Pyeongchang and even after Beijing. So Shiffrin might as well enjoy herself at her fourth Olympics, especially after injuries sidelined her for good portions of the last two seasons.

She’s earned her confidence through the work she’s put in and the way she’s been skiing this season — she’s looked effortlessly dominant in her most recent races — rather than paying mind to all those things she cannot control.

“You do what you do every day and have full trust in that. You make a decision to commit,” said Karin Harjo, Shiffrin’s head coach. “It sounds easy, but it’s actually very difficult to do, especially when you have the weight of the world and the pressure on you. But she’s getting better at that.”

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Shiffrin has won all but one slalom race on the World Cup circuit so far this season. The one she didn’t win? She took second. Her win on Jan. 25 secured her ninth season title, a record for a single discipline, despite there still being two races to come after the Olympics.

She leads the race for what would be her sixth overall title. She has extended her records of World Cup wins to 108 and podiums to 166, astounding numbers both.

And after struggling in giant slalom following the November 2024 crash that left her with a puncture wound in her obliques and PTSD, she made her first podium in the discipline in two years, finishing third in the final GS race before the Games.

Shiffrin will race the giant slalom, slalom and team combined in Milano Cortina.

“The moments of winning and triumph and getting a medal and whatever, that’s just such a small, small part of it. Even though you spend all this time working for that thing, the rest of it is what makes up the bulk of life,” Shiffrin said. “That’s what’s worth putting energy into.”

That doesn’t mean she won’t try to be the fastest down the mountain. Or that she won’t expend every ounce of energy and effort she has on making each turn as perfect as possible and carrying over what she’s done in training to her races.

If she does that, Shiffrin can be happy with her Olympic performance, medal or no medal.

“I’m just going to enjoy this. And I’m going to do the best I can,” she said. “I’m going to train hard and I’m going to focus on the skills I’ve built over a long period of time and I’m just going to stay true to me and focus and put it all on the mountain.”

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Quarterback Darian Mensah and Duke football announced a settlement on Tuesday, Jan. 27, allowing the standout passer to enter the transfer portal freely.

The news was announced by Young Money APAA Sports, Mensah’s representation, on social media. Mensah is expected to land at Miami, per multiple reports. The Hurricanes have yet to fill their quarterback position after Carson Beck exhausted his eligibility after the 2025 season.

‘We are pleased to announce that Darian Mensah, supported by our team of legal counsel and Young Money APAA Sports, has reached a settlement agreement with Duke University,’ the statement read. ‘Darian extends his sincere gratitude to Duke University for engaging in good-faith discussions and reaching this resolution. He wishes the Blue Devils, Coach Diaz, the staff, and the entire fan base continued success for the seasons ahead.’

Duke also issued a statement on the settlement.

‘We are committed to fulfilling all promises and obligations Duke makes to our student-athletes when we enter into contractual agreements with them, and we expect the same in return,’ Duke wrote. ‘Enforcing those agreements is a necessary element of ensuring predictability and structure for athletic programs. It is nonetheless a difficult choice to pursue legal action against a student and teammate; for this reason we sought to resolve the matter fairly and quickly.’

Mensah announced his intentions to enter the transfer portal on Jan. 16, the final day of the two-week window that opened Jan. 2. However, Duke sued Mensah on Jan. 20, claiming he breached his multi-year contract with the school that was reportedly paying him $4 million annually. The contract also gave his name, image and likeness (NIL) rights to Duke.

Mensah had originally announced his return to Duke in December after leading the program to an ACC Championship.

Duke landed a commitment from San Jose State quarterback Walker Eget on Jan. 26.

Darian Mensah lawsuit, timeline, explained

Mensah entered the transfer portal on Jan. 16, kicking off a series of events in an ongoing legal battle that ended with Jan. 27’s settlement announcement.

The second-team All-ACC quarterback was subsequently sued by Duke, as the school claimed he breached a multi-year contract he signed with the program after transferring from Tulane ahead of the 2025 season. Mensah was one of the highest-paid players in college football in 2025, reportedly making $4 million annually, per reports.

Duke was granted a temporary restraining order on Jan. 20, which barred Mensah from enrolling or playing football at another school. His original contract with the Blue Devils. He was still allowed to enter the transfer portal on Jan. 21, however, which Duke allowed.

Mensah was set to appear at a preliminary injunction hearing on Jan. 29.

Darian Mensah 247Sports ranking

Mensah is listed as the No. 18 player nationally and No. 6 quarterback in the transfer portal, according to 247Sports’ rankings. The former two-star high school prospect was also the No. 7-ranked quarterback in the 2025 class.

Darian Mensah stats

Here are Mensah’s year-by-year stats in college:

2023 (Tulane): Redshirt
2024 (Tulane): 189-of-287 passing for 2,723 yards with 22 touchdowns to six interceptions; 60 carries for 132 yards with a touchdown
2025 (Duke): 334-of-500 passing for 3,973 yards with 34 touchdowns to six interceptions

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After parting with one of the most established NFL coaches in Sean McDermott, the Bills are turning to an upstart to lead the organization past what owner Terry Pegula called ‘the proverbial playoff wall.’

The Bills on Tuesday agreed to a five-year deal to promote offensive coordinator Joe Brady to head coach, the team announced.

Brady ascends to his first head-coaching role after leading the Bills’ offense for the last two-and-a-half years. He helped quarterback Josh Allen become the NFL’s MVP in 2024, and Buffalo ranked fourth in both scoring and total yards this season.

At 36, Brady also becomes the NFL’s youngest active head coach, beating out the New Orleans Saints’ Kellen Moore, 37.

The Bills fired McDermott on Jan. 19 after a divisional-round loss to the Denver Broncos. McDermott went 98-50 during the regular season and made eight playoff appearances in his nine years in Buffalo, but he had just an 8-8 record in the postseason and never reached the Super Bowl.

Pegula cited the emotional fallout of the loss to the Broncos – particularly for Allen – as a driving factor in his decision to make a change. He noted that the reigning NFL MVP would be part of the group to choose the next head coach, with multiple reports indicating Allen had been involved in the team’s interviews with candidates.

Brady also interviewed with the Las Vegas Raiders for a second time on Monday night and spoke with several other teams regarding their head-coaching vacancies.

Among the other contenders for the Bills’ vacancy were former New York Giants head coach Brian Daboll, Broncos passing game coordinator Davis Webb, Los Angeles Rams passing game coordinator Nathan Scheelhaase and Jacksonville Jaguars offensive coordinator Grant Udinski.

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President Donald Trump credits Secretary of State Marco Rubio as the one for training him to become a diplomat, comments that come as Rubio has increasingly secured more responsibility and influence over the president during the second Trump administration. 

Trump described Rubio’s guidance as he described his relationship with Chinese President Xi Jinping and shared an anecdote about how Xi requested that Trump stop referring to COVID-19 virus as the ‘China virus.’ According to Trump, Xi requested that the president use a different name – an ask that Trump said he chose to respect.

‘I decided to do that because why should we have a problem over that?’ Trump said at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, Wednesday. 

‘You were a true diplomat, huh?’ said Børge Brende, the president and CEO of the World Economic Forum.

‘I became a diplomat for the first time. Well, you know, taught me that? Marco Rubio. He said, ‘Let me teach you about diplomacy,’’ Trump said. 

Trump has entrusted Rubio with a portfolio of responsibilities, and in addition to leading the State Department, Rubio also is serving as the national security advisor and head of the National Archives for the Trump administration. Rubio is the only person to oversee the White House’s National Security Council and lead the State Department since Henry Kissinger since the Nixon administration. 

‘He’s just really smart, really effective, and he’s succeeded at everything he’s done,’ Matthew Kroenig, a former Pentagon official and current vice president at the Atlantic Council think tank, told Fox News Digital. ‘He doesn’t see his job as containing Trump. He understands who the boss is and channels those instincts into constructive directions.’

Rubio, who is the son of Cuban immigrants and previously served as a U.S. Senator representing Florida, has emerged as a key architect steering the Trump administration’s foreign policy agenda – gaining even more visibility after the U.S. launched strikes in Venezuela and captured dictator Nicolás Maduro on Jan. 3. 

Rubio, who historically has espoused more hawkish foreign policy positions, had long supported overthrowing Maduro. The first Trump administration sought to oust the Venezuelan strongman by imposing sanctions on Venezuela and backing opposition leader Juan Guaidó. 

In 2019, Rubio predicted Maduro’s fall — even though he was uncertain about the timeline. 

‘He’s picked a battle he can’t win,’ Rubio said in an interview with The New York Times about Maduro. ‘It’s just a matter of time. The only thing we don’t know is how long it will take — and whether it will be peaceful or bloody.’

Following Maduro’s capture, Trump announced that the U.S. would ‘run’ Venezuela until a peaceful transition could occur. The move to ouster Maduro has attracted scrutiny, mostly from Democrats, who have called into question the legality of the operation in Venezuela, which was conducted without Congress’ approval. 

Even so, Rubio has said that Congressional approval was not required since the operation was not an ‘invasion.’ 

Trump speculated in Switzerland that Rubio would be remembered as ‘the best’ Secretary of State, and noted that every single member of the Senate voted to confirm Rubio for his post in January 2025.

 ‘Hey, any guy that gets approved by 100% of the votes – you think of it, he got liberal Democrats and radical right Republicans to approve him,’ Trump said Wednesday. ‘He’s the only one…At first I wasn’t happy about it. I said, ‘Wait a minute, I don’t like that.’ And now it turns out that the Democrats probably wish they didn’t do that. And Marco has been fantastic.’ 

Fox News Digital reached out to the White House and Rubio for comment. 

Fox News’ Morgan Phillips contributed to this report.

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A month ago, it was fair to question Georgia’s legitimacy in women’s college basketball this season.

While the Bulldogs finished non-conference play undefeated with a 14-0 mark, they played one of the easiest schedules in the country. If one were to measure non-conference strength of schedule by the NET of the opponents a team faced, Georgia ranked 338th out of the 363 teams that play Division I women’s college basketball. That’s the worst non-conference schedule in the SEC this season, and only three Power 4 teams played softer non-conference schedules: UCF, Arizona and Wake Forest.

But Katie Abrahamson-Henderson’s Bulldogs have proved their worth in SEC play. They’re 4-3 in arguably the toughest conference in the sport with two wins over ranked opponents, Ole Miss and Kentucky. With two Quad 1 wins and a NET of 32, Georgia is in position to make the NCAA Tournament.

And for the first time this season, the Bulldogs are ranked in the USA Today Sports women’s basketball coaches poll, breaking in at No. 25.

Georgia is one of 10 SEC squads ranked in the poll this week, which leads all conferences.

The SEC also had the two biggest movers this week.

Kentucky slid six spots to No. 18 after losing to Tennessee and Georgia. Since starter Teonni Key was sidelined with an elbow injury, the Wildcats have lost four of their last six games.

The largest riser in this week’s poll was Oklahoma, which improved five spots to No. 11 after taking down South Carolina and Auburn last week. So far this season, the Sooners have been powered by freshman phenom Aaliyah Chavez, and they’re 12-0 when she shoots 32% or better from the floor. Against the Gamecocks, she scored 26 points – 15 of them in overtime – and dished out a season-high eight assists.

Elsewhere in the poll, Maryland fell three spots to No. 16, and UCLA is the new No. 2 after leaping South Carolina. Iowa State dropped out, and Duke remained just on the outside, receiving one less vote than Georgia for the final spot in the top 25.

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U.S. women’s national team head coach Emma Hayes said she hasn’t addressed the recent unrest in Minnesota with her players during January camp.

Federal agents have killed two Americans this month amid a widespread immigration crackdown in the state. Alex Pretti, a 37-year-old nurse, became the second victim over the weekend.

Just hours after Pretti was killed on Saturday, Jan. 24, the USWNT played its first game of 2026, defeating Paraguay 6-0. There was no acknowledgement of the events in Minnesota before or during the game.

Ahead of the USWNT’s game against Chile in Santa Barbara, California on Tuesday, Jan. 27, Hayes fielded a question about the events in Minnesota.

“I mean, first of all, my condolences to all the family members for those victims,” Hayes said at her pre-game press conference. “Because it doesn’t matter — I can sit here and talk about the loss of tragic life everywhere.

“It’s not something that first of all, as a mother, I want to see. It’s upsetting on so many levels to see that happen and I think they’re in everybody’s minds.

“But I haven’t spoken about it with the squad, genuinely. I think the way we structure our camps, there’s not a lot of sit-down time. … But we haven’t spoken about it.’

The USWNT has developed a reputation for publicly tackling non-soccer issues, particularly in the team’s recent past when it featured outspoken players like Megan Rapinoe, Christen Press, Becky Sauerbrunn and Alex Morgan.

Several of the aforementioned players, who are all now retired, have spoken out about the events in Minnesota. The response from the current crop of players has been more muted, though there have been some acknowledgements on social media from Sam Coffey, Izzy Rodriguez, Mandy McGlynn and Tierna Davidson, among others.

According to Hayes, the relative lack of response from the current USWNT roster may be due to its lack of experience. Trinity Rodman is the most-capped player on the January squad with 48 international appearances, while Yazmeen Ryan is next with just 15.

‘Maybe that’s because they’re all reasonably new to camp and whether they’re unfamiliar with it or not, whether they’re comfortable talking about it or not, I don’t know, but it hasn’t been a topic of conversation this week in camp,’ Hayes said.

“Perhaps they’re having it amongst themselves but they’re definitely not having it in front of me. But I know that each and every one of them would feel equally empathetic and thoughtful about it and it’s not something that any of us enjoy seeing.”

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Four-time Olympic track gold medalist Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone is launching a campaign aimed at hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, a disease her father Willie battled for decades.
McLaughlin-Levrone said her dad’s heart transplant forced her to understand when to slow down on and off the track
McLaughlin-Levrone also addressed the possibility of attempting an event double in the 400 hurdles and 400 or 200 flat at the 2028 Olympics.

Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone is finally ready to press pause. 

In January, the four-time Olympic gold medalist announced that she is pregnant and expecting her first child with husband Andre Levrone Jr. this summer, which means a break from record chasing – for now. 

‘Track and field is taking the backseat in my life for the first time in a long time, which I’m really excited about,’ McLaughlin-Levrone said Tuesday, Jan. 26, in an interview with USA TODAY. 

She’ll continue to train while pregnant for as long as she safely can, though competing in the World Athletics Ultimate Championships in September is probably ‘not in the cards’ anymore, she said. Regardless, McLaughlin-Levrone said she is prioritizing a healthy pregnancy and time with her family before her attention turns to preparations for the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics. 

The shift also allows McLaughlin-Levrone to focus on launching a new campaign alongside her father, Willie McLaughlin, and Cytokinetics. ‘On Track with HCM’ aims to support patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM), a disease that Willie McLaughlin battled for decades until he received a heart transplant in 2021, months before McLaughlin-Levrone won two gold medals at the Tokyo Games.

‘You want to be there and be able to support and help where you can, and there’s only so much you can do,’ McLaughlin-Levrone said about supporting her dad while training for the Olympics. ‘But I think it was really just being there for him, being present, you know, making sure he knew that we were thinking about him, praying for him, and anything he needed not to hesitate to ask us, because we’re there as family.’

HCM, the most common form of inherited heart disease, is when the heart muscle becomes abnormally thick. The thickened muscle can make it difficult for the heart to pump blood, leading to complications that can cause heart failure or sudden cardiac arrest. It is treatable, but not curable. 

Willie McLaughlin was a three-time All-American track star at Manhattan College and a semifinalist in the 400-meter at the 1984 U.S. Olympic Trials. He had no idea he was living with HCM until he was 25 and no longer competing, when an echocardiogram revealed he had a non-obstructive form of HCM.

‘It was a shock, and it was kind of terrifying, to be honest with you, because it brought up a bunch of other issues,’ McLaughlin said. ‘It affects more than just physically: mentally, emotionally, socially, all the other things that go along with it. … Although I had no symptoms, but also it made me think about, what about having kids? What about getting married? How long will I live?’

McLaughlin experienced no symptoms of the disease until he was nearly 40, when shortness of breath, fatigue, arrhythmia and high blood pressure set in. By the time he was in his 50s, he struggled to walk up the subway station steps during his two-hour commute from New Jersey to New York City. When he was 57, he learned he needed a new heart. 

McLaughlin said it was challenging and isolating to square his identity as an elite athlete with having a debilitating disease. He didn’t want to worry his family, so he delayed in-depth conversations about his condition with Sydney and her three siblings until he was closer to his heart transplant. 

‘Especially being an athlete, you learn to adapt and get comfortable being uncomfortable and pushing through that,’ he said. ‘I kind of sheltered the kids when I probably should have, in hindsight, shared more with them.’

More than half of the 660,000 people living with HCM in the United States are undiagnosed. Some won’t have any symptoms of the disease, while others who are symptomatic may not understand that HCM is the cause. It can be diagnosed through tests such as echocardiograms, electrocardiograms and cardiac MRIs.

People whose family members have HCM are more likely to to have it themselves. McLaughlin-Levrone said she plans to get tested soon. 

Throughout her track career, McLaughlin-Levrone has continuously pushed herself outside of her comfort zone, including switching from her main event the 400-meter hurdles to the 400 flat last year. However, she said her father’s ordeal taught her that sometimes it’s also OK – and necessary – to slow down. 

‘There has to be a balance of both things,’ she said. ‘Some things just actually need attention and care and rest. And that’s something, whether it’s when my dad was going through things and he needed to just take some time and really recover and give his body what it needed, or even when it comes to the track. My coach tells me all the time, ‘As an athlete, you want to push through, but rest is not a bad word.’’

McLaughlin-Levrone’s quest for an Olympic double 

With that balance in mind, McLaughlin-Levrone is taking 2026 step-by-step until she can figure out a post-birth training plan for the next two years. 

She said she is still contemplating going for an Olympic double in Los Angeles, though the track and field competition schedule for the 2028 Games might limit her options. In order to attempt a historic sweep of the 400-meter hurdles and 400-meter flat, her top two events, McLaughlin-Levrone would have to run both events in the same day, twice, on July 18 and July 20. 

Her backup plan, a double in the 400 hurdles and the 200 flat, would be possible but difficult, requiring races on five consecutive days with the finals of both events scheduled for July 22. 

Nevertheless, McLaughlin-Levrone isn’t ruling anything out. 

‘I wouldn’t say it’s in the back of my mind. I think it’s always towards the front, to be honest,’ McLaughlin-Levrone said. ‘But yeah, I’m definitely looking ahead towards 2028. That’s definitely on my mind frequently. And you know, we’ll have to, first and foremost, see how pregnancy goes and recovery and coming back. And I’m hopeful that if all that goes well, and training through 2027 also goes well, that maybe there is a world for a double. So, like I said, one day at a time, and hopefully things progress in a positive manner, so that that’s definitely possible.’

McLaughlin-Levrone’s attempted double could give track and field the exposure and hype it so desperately seeks. Although the sport is popular at the Games, it struggles to attract audiences in non-Olympic years. Recently, numerous professional track and field startups have surfaced with varied successes. 

Grand Slam Track, a league started by Olympian Michael Johnson, filed for bankruptcy after its inaugural season in December and reportedly owes six-figure sums to multiple athletes including McLaughlin-Levrone. Athlos, a women’s track and field event, concluded its second year in October but is not yet profitable according to its founder. And in fall of 2026, World Athletics, the sport’s international governing body, will introduce a new global competition called the Ultimate Championships which is promoted as having a ‘fan-first format.’

It remains to be seen whether any of these ventures will secure a foothold with fans, or hit the right combination of marketability and profitability. 

McLaughlin-Levrone pointed to tennis, with its Grand Slam events featuring high-caliber competition and significant prize money, as a model for track and field to emulate. 

‘Obviously, I think the logistics of it, the finances of it, the structures of it, is what’s kind of to be determined, but I’m excited to see there be efforts put forward, especially heading into such a big Games,’ McLaughlin-Levrone said. ‘I think we have so many stars in our sport who want to just be put on display. It’s just a matter of putting the right puzzle pieces together. And we’ve seen efforts of that, and I appreciate that. I’m hopeful that there can be more athlete insight moving forward into how we can actually make these events both marketable for the sport, but also sport-centered, so that it is the stars in their events getting to shine, and that’s going to take some time.’

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