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Spurned by Alex Bregman, the Boston Red Sox pivoted to a different offseason plan, agreeing to terms with left-hander Ranger Suárez on a five-year, $130 million contract on Jan. 14.

A baseball official with direct knowledge of the deal confirmed to USA TODAY Sports that Suárez and the Red Sox are in agreement. They spoke on condition of anonymity because the deal has not yet been finalized.

Suárez, 30, was a clutch regular season and playoff performer for the Philadelphia Phillies, earning an All-Star nod in 2024 and posting a 3.38 career ERA while starting 119 career games.

Suárez played key roles in helping the wild card Phillies eliminate the division champion Atlanta Braves in both 2022 and 2023, and along with Framber Valdez was the most desirable left-handed starter on the market.

In Boston, he provides the No. 2 starter the club professed to desire since the start of winter, aligning behind fellow lefty and Cy Young Award runner-up Garrett Crochet and alongside trade acquisition Sonny Gray.

His signing pushes talented right-hander Brayan Bello to the No. 4 slot, though Gray’s pending free agency after this season ensures the Red Sox have strong pitching depth in coming years. The Red Sox also acquired right-hander Johan Oviedo from Pittsburgh last month, and he figures to get the first crack at the No. 5 starter job; additionally, the club saw encouraging signs from rookies Payton Tolle and Connelly Early after their debuts late last season.

They may need to be a pitching-centric squad in 2026; Bregman’s defection to the Chicago Cubs leaves the lineup, for now, minus a massive bat. The club is expected to continue pursuing help at both second and third base.

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An NCAA Tournament for women’s flag football is closer to becoming a reality.

In Washington, D.C., on Wednesday at the annual NCAA Convention, the Division I cabinet approved the addition of flag football to the Emerging Sports for Women program. This comes as several schools across the NCAA landscape have added flag football as a women’s varsity sport in recent years. The sport will make its Olympic debut in 2028.

The NCAA recommended adding flag football to its Emerging Sports for Women program last February. The program, which started in 1994, has had success in converting sports like rowing, ice hockey, water polo, bowling and beach volleyball into varsity women’s sports across the NCAA. Most recently, women’s wrestling was granted widespread varsity status and will hold the sport’s first sanctioned NCAA championship this year in Coralville, Iowa.

The Eastern College Athletic Conference (ECAC) announced it will launch a women’s flag football league with a $1 million investment from the Jets through the Betty Wold Johnson Foundation. The league will begin play in next month. 

A handful of Division I schools have launched or announced plans to start a varsity women’s flag football team. That group includes Alabama State, Long Island, Mercyhurst, Mount St. Mary’s, UT Arlington and Cal Poly. Many others in the Division II and III ranks also have varsity teams.

Last year, the Division III Atlantic East Conference held a full varsity season of women’s flag football capped by a conference championship, becoming the first NCAA league to do so. Jacqie McWilliams-Parker — commissioner of the CIAA, a Division II HBCU conference — said last year that she hopes to have flag football as a varsity sport in the league during the 2026-27 academic year. Division I commissioners like Sherika Montgomery of the Big South and Jim Phillips of the ACC have said on the record that they’re paying attention to the rise of women’s flag football.

While women’s flag football now has status in the Emerging Sports for Women program, there are still milestones the sport needs to meet before reaching championship status and an NCAA Tournament.

According to data published by the NCAA last year, about 65 schools had flag football teams at the varsity or club level. But to be considered for championship status at least 40 NCAA programs will need to sponsor women’s flag football as a varsity sport within 10 years. Those 40 teams would also have to meet minimums in games played and player participation.

The NFL has estimated about 20 million people across 100 countries are playing flag football or some variation of it. In the U.S., the National Sporting Goods Association said from 2022 to 2023, girls participating in flag football increased by 55% to 1.6 million.

Heading toward the 2028 Olympics in Los Angeles, the NFL is signaling it is heavily invested in seeing the sport grow. It ran commercials promoting flag football during the 2025 Super Bowl and has had an active hand in helping colleges start teams. The NFL has also pivoted to flag football at the Pro Bowl, with 4.7 million people tuning in to last year’s game, a figure that was in the same ballpark as the NBA All-Star Game.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Notable changes are coming to men’s and women’s college basketball.

The NCAA announced on Wednesday, Jan. 14 that the Division I Cabinet approved the immediate implementation of a 15-day transfer window in women’s and men’s basketball that will begin the day following both sports’ respective NCAA Tournament championship games.

The NCAA Women’s Tournament championship will take place on Sunday, April 5, while the men’s title game will take place on Monday, April 6, this season. Previously, the portal opened in March, during the men’s and women’s NCAA tournaments. The change in the transfer portal window was recommended in November by the Men’s and Women’s Basketball Oversight Committees.

There is also a change to the transfer window that opens for players following a head coaching change.

For players impacted by a head coaching change, they will be able to enter the transfer portal during a 15-day period that will open five days after the new head coach is hired or publicly announced. Should a hire not happen or be announced within 30 days of the previous head coach’s departure, a 15-day window will open then as well.

This is the second notable change to the transfer portal window for college athletics, as college football is in a new 15-day transfer window after the season. College football’s transfer window has a soft close on Friday, Jan. 16 — as it will remain open five additional days after the CFP Championship game for Indiana and Miami — after opening on Friday, Jan. 2.

The news release also mentioned that midyear transfers won’t be eligible to compete at a different school ‘if they enrolled at an NCAA school during the first academic term, regardless of whether they competed there.’

The other change announced on Wednesday came from the Division I Business Session and impacts the performance units and funds for college basketball with the NCAA Tournament. In other words, these are the financial rewards teams receive for their performances after reaching their respective Final Four.

‘As a conference which does not have the benefit of national football revenue but has had a school playing in either the Men’s or Women’s Final Four seven times in the last nine years that the tournament has been conducted, the Big East is very grateful for this change,’ Big East commissioner Val Ackerman said in a statement. ‘We’re very glad that every team that advances to the championship game from here on out will benefit from this logical adjustment to our national revenue distribution policy.’

Added NCAA senior vice president of basketball Dan Gavitt: ‘Today’s vote emphasizes the importance of rewarding schools who invest in the development of their basketball programs and reach not just the Final Four but ultimately achieve the pinnacle of success in this sport by competing for and winning the national championship.’

The units earned during the tournaments are paid out to conferences on a rolling basis, per the NCAA. For men’s basketball, units are distributed over six years, while in women’s basketball, which began implementing units last year, the units are distributed over three years.

‘The expansion of these funds also continues to increase financial support to members during this pivotal time in college sports in which student-athletes are receiving unprecedented benefits from their schools,’ Gavitt continued.

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Chicago Sky forward Angel Reese and Las Vegas Aces forward A’ja Wilson are taking their talents to the big screen.

Reese and Wilson will make cameos in the animated movie, ‘GOAT’, produced by NBA star Stephen Curry. The film features a star-studded cast, including the Golden State Warriors guard, ‘Stranger Things’ star Caleb McLaughlin, actress Gabrielle Union, musicians Jelly Roll and Jennifer Hudson and more.

‘GOAT’ follows the journey of a small goat, Will, played by McLaughlin, who has big sports dreams. The tiny animal gets an opportunity to play ‘roarball’ at the pro level, which has some of the fastest and fiercest players globally.

“It has something in there for every generation,” Curry told USA TODAY in November. “We’re bringing something that hopefully is inspiring, something that brings family together, and something that’s uplifting to a lot of different people in the audience that can find their best selves through one of the characters.”

‘GOAT’ hits theatres February 13.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Chicago Sky guard Courtney Vandersloot’s resume includes two WNBA championships, five All-Star selections and first-team All-WNBA nods. In the WNBA offseason, she’s adding actress to the list.

The 36-year-old guard will make a guest star appearance as herself on NBC’s ‘Chicago Med’ on a Wednesday, Jan. 21, episode titled ‘Frost on Fire,’ the show announced on social media Wednesday.

The medical drama’s X account shared four photos from the episode, including a shot of Vandersloot gifting her No. 22 Sky jersey to a young patient at the fictional Gaffney Chicago Medical Center. Another photo shows Vandersloot posing with Dr. Dean Archer (Steven Weber) and Dr. John Frost (Darren Barnet).

Chicago is a special place for Vandersloot. The Kent, Washington, native was drafted third overall out of Gonzaga by the Chicago Sky in the 2011 WNBA Draft. Vandersloot played 12 season in Chicago (2011-2022) and helped the franchise win a WNBA title in 2022, before picking up another championship in 2024 during her two-year stint with the New York Liberty (2023-24).

Vandersloot returned to the Sky in 2025, but was limited to seven games after tearing the ACL in her right knee.

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

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The odds of Mike Tomlin stepping down as head coach of the Pittsburgh Steelers Monday, Jan. 12 will remain unknown.

That’s because no one bothered to post any for an event widely regarded as a massive long shot.

But odds for who the Steelers will hire as Tomlin’s permanent successor are easier to find.

DraftKings on Wednesday posted odds for 22 potential candidates.

Notable names on the list include University of Indiana coach Curt Cignetti, whose team will play Miami in the College Football Playoff National Championship Game; Notre Dame coach Marcus Freeman, who guided the Fighting Irish to last year’s national championship game; and recently fired NFL head coaches John Harbaugh (canned by the Ravens), Mike McDaniels (ousted by the Dolphins) and Kevin Stefanski (dumped by the Browns).

None of those men are the favorite to replace Tomlin, according to DraftKings.

Steelers next head coach odds: The favorites

Chris Shula +190

According to Adam Schefter, the Steelers have already requested a chance to interview Shula, who’s in his second year as defensive coordinator with the Los Angeles Rams.

Shula certainly has the requisite genes. He is the grandson of the late Don Shula, who led the Miami Dolphins to two Super Bowl championships and a perfect season of 17-0 in 1972.

He’s only 39, but he’s earned a seat at the grownups’ table during seven years with the Los Angeles Rams. This season is his second as the team’s defensive coordinator.

Brian Flores +400

The Steelers are already acquainted with Flores.

He was head coach of the Miami Dolphins from 2019 to 2021, compiling a record of 24-25 before he got fired. Flores then joined the Steelers for the 2022 season, serving as a senior defensive assistant and linebacker coach. The following year, he joined the Minnesota Vikings and has served as defensive coordinator each of the past three seasons.

 Robert Saleh +700

Saleh flopped as head coach of the Jets, going 20-36 before getting fired five games into the 2024 season. But he has found his stride this season as defensive coordinator of the San Francisco 49ers. Last week, the Seahawks entered their playoff game against the 49ers, averaging 28.4 points, third best in the league. The 49ers were shut down in a 13-3 loss.

Other top contenders

Curt Cignetti +750

At times, Cignetti’s Hoosiers have resembled an NFL team. I mean, could a college squad have wiped out Alabama 38-3 in a CFP quarterfinal game this season?  Come to think of it, would the Steelers have been able to beat Indiana this year?

Jesse Minter +800

Minter followed Jim Harbaugh to the Los Angeles Chargers and has served as defensive coordinator in each of the past two seasons. He mostly has college experience on his resume, but notably coached under John Harbaugh with the Baltimore Ravens from 2017-2020. And, yes, he’s acutely aware of the rivalry between the Ravens and Steelers.

Vance Joseph +850

His two-year stint as head coach of the Denver Broncos was a failure. In 2017 and 2018, he went 11-21 before getting fired. But after four years with the Arizona Cardinals, Joseph returned to the Broncos under head coach Sean Payton and has performed admirably enough during three years as the team’s defensive coordinator.

Stranger things have happened

Mike McDaniel +1000
Klint Kubiak +1000
Kevin Stefanski +1000
John Harbaugh +1300

Better to be longshot than no shot

Grant Udinski +1600
Nate Scheelhaase +2000
Marcus Freeman +2000
Mike LaFleur +2500

Don’t call the moving van yet

Kliff Kingsbury +4000
Todd Monken +4000
Mike Kafka +4000
Matt Nagy +4000
Matt LaFleur +4000
Lou Anarumo +4000
Joe Brady +4000
Jeff Hafley +4000

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Several federal prosecutors in Minnesota were formally fired on Wednesday after they gave notice that they had resigned in the wake of internal disagreements over the Justice Department’s handling of a shooting investigation involving Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

The DOJ, at the direction of Attorney General Pam Bondi and Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche, terminated the employment of five prosecutors in the U.S. attorney’s office in Minnesota, including Joseph Thompson, the No. 2 official there,according to two sources familiar with the matter.

Their resignations and the internal disputes about the shooting probe first surfaced in the New York Times. The prosecutors were positioned to receive paid leave for months prior to their firings on Wednesday,according to the sources.

Thompson was spearheading a massive, high-profile investigation into welfare fraud in the state before he submitted his resignation. His exit came after he clashed with officials in Washington, D.C., over the investigation into the ICE shooting, which left 37-year-old Renee Good dead. Fox News Digital reached out to the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Minnesota in an effort to reach Thompson for comment.

Thompson had expressed during a call with DOJ and FBI officials last week that he was on board with investigating the ICE shooting as an assault on or obstruction of a law enforcement officer, a source familiar with the call told Fox News Digital.

Another one of the fired prosecutors, Melinda Williams, who was also involved in the fraud work, was on the call as well, the source said.

Thompson also indicated that he believed the shooting was justified, two sources said. Prior to the shooting, he had already been discussing the possibility of resigning, the sources said.

Videos of the shooting showed an ICE agent opening fire on Good at close range after she was seen accelerating toward the agent in her vehicle while he was standing in front of it. Critics have argued that the agent improperly used deadly force against Good and that she had turned the wheels of her vehicle away from the agent before accelerating.

The FBI is investigating the incident and has excluded Minnesota prosecutors from the probe, which the Trump administration has said is justified because the incident involved a federal officer. Minnesota leaders have denounced that decision and launched their own parallel investigation.

While supportive of conducting the investigation as an offensive against law enforcement — rather than a civil rights matter against the agent — Thompson had reservations during last week’s call about the DOJ’s plan to also investigate Good’s widow and other possible co-conspirators, the source familiar with the call said.

The FBI had developed evidence that suggested Good and her spouse had at some point been following ICE officers on the day of the shooting, the source said.

That revelation echoes Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem’s allegations during a recent press conference that Good had been ‘stalking and impeding’ ICE throughout the day of the shooting. Noem said Good ‘weaponized’ her vehicle and that the ICE agent who fired shots feared for his life.

In a statement to Minnesota Public Radio, Good’s spouse, Becca, said that on Jan. 7, the day of the shooting, she and Renee ‘stopped to support [their] neighbors.’

‘We had whistles. They had guns,’ Becca Good said.

Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey and other Democrats have lauded the prosecutors who resigned, framing their departures as a valiant boycott against DOJ.

‘These prosecutors are heroes, and the people pushing to prosecute Renee’s widow are monsters,’ Frey wrote on X.

At this stage, there is no sign that the DOJ is planning to bring charges against Becca Good, despite the DOJ and FBI pursuing an investigation into her as part of a broader probe into any conspiracies to hinder federal law enforcement operations.

Fox News Digital reached out to the DOJ for comment.

David Spunt contributed to this report.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi plans to dissolve Parliament’s powerful lower house as early as this month, setting up a snap election aimed at securing voter backing for her agenda while her approval ratings remain high, a senior party official said.

The Associated Press reported that the move would allow Takaichi to seek fresh support for her economic and security priorities at a time when her scandal-tainted party and a new coalition partner hold only a slim majority in Japan’s legislature.

Takaichi made history in October when she was elected as Japan’s first female prime minister.

Described by some Japanese and international media as an ultraconservative, hard-line figure, Takaichi has backed strengthening Japan’s defense posture, emerged as a vocal China hawk and supported constitutional revisions to expand the role of the Self-Defense Forces.

Calling a snap election could allow Takaichi to capitalize on approval ratings of about 70% and help her Liberal Democratic Party gain additional seats in Parliament.

Shunichi Suzuki, secretary general of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party, told reporters that Takaichi informed him and other senior officials of her intention to dissolve the lower house ‘soon’ after it convenes Jan. 23.

Suzuki said no date has been set for dissolving the chamber or holding a snap election, adding that Takaichi plans to outline her strategy at a news conference Monday.

Takaichi’s scandal-tainted LDP and its coalition hold only a narrow majority in the lower house, Parliament’s more powerful chamber, after losses in the 2024 election.

By calling an early vote, Takaichi appears to be aiming to expand her party’s share of seats and strengthen its position alongside a new junior coalition partner.

Opposition lawmakers criticized the plan as self-serving, saying it would delay urgent parliamentary debate over the national budget, which must be approved quickly.

Echoing Suzuki’s comments, media reports have said Takaichi plans to dissolve the lower house on Jan. 23, the opening day of this year’s ordinary parliamentary session, potentially setting the stage for a snap election as early as Feb. 8.

Takaichi is seeking voter backing for her agenda, including ‘proactive’ fiscal spending and an accelerated military buildup under a new coalition with the Japan Innovation Party, Suzuki said.

The conservative Japan Innovation Party joined the ruling bloc after the centrist Komeito party withdrew, citing disagreements over Takaichi’s ideological positions and her approach to anti-corruption reforms.

Takaichi met Wednesday with Suzuki and other coalition leaders after holding talks in Nara with South Korean President Lee Jae Myung at a summit aimed at strengthening bilateral ties. The meetings came as she faces rising trade and political tensions with China following remarks on Taiwan that angered Beijing days after she took office.

Winning a snap election would also make it easier for Takaichi and her governing bloc to pass a budget and advance other legislation.

Her Cabinet approved a record 122.3 trillion yen ($770 billion) budget in late December that must clear Parliament before the fiscal year begins in April. The plan includes measures to fight inflation, support low-income households and boost economic growth.

Known for her hawkish and nationalistic views and her ultra-conservative positions on social issues, including gender and sexual diversity, Takaichi is seeking to reclaim conservative voters drawn to emerging populist parties in recent elections.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Preparations for the 2028 Olympic Games in Los Angeles are ramping up, though not without a snag early in the process.

Multiple posts on Twitter indicate that fans have waited their turn in the queue and when it’s their turn to register for tickets, the link takes them not to the registration page, but back to the homepage where they’re forced to start from the back of the line all over again.

Some fans have indicated that they’ve gone through this loop multiple times. However, a spokesperson explained to USA TODAY that the date and time of registration would not affect priority.

‘It happened on the phone and laptop,’ @AndreaG114 tweeted on Wednesday morning. ‘Not cool @LA28.’

Other social media posts have said they waited for up to an hour before they were able to successfully register for the ticket draw.

‘Man registering for the draw for those Olympics tickets was crazy,’ tweeted sneakerhead account @TheWiseSole.

LA28 was unable to provide how many people successfully registered on Wednesday, but a spokesperson emphasized in a statement obtained by USA TODAY Sports that the ticket draw will be open for two more months and the timing of a fan’s registration would not impact their priority.

‘We’re seeing strong global excitement as fans begin registering for the LA28 Ticket Draw,’ the statement said. ‘Registration remains open through March 18 and the draw is random. Anyone who registers between now and March 18 will be included in the draw.

‘Currently, there are low to no wait times. If fans do experience wait times, they have the option to wait in the queue or check back anytime by March 18 to register.’

How do I get Olympics tickets?

As mentioned above, the registration period is open from Wednesday morning until March 18. From March 31-April 7, registered fans will receive an email notifying them whether they received a timeslot for either the designated drop or the presale, which is open to L.A. and Oklahoma City locals from April 2-6.

The first ticket drop is slated for April 9-19.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The U.S. State Department is indefinitely freezing immigrant visa processing for 75 countries.

The State Department has not released the full list of 75 countries, but the names reportedly include Somalia, Russia, Afghanistan, Brazil, Iran, Iraq, Egypt, Nigeria, Thailand, Yemen and others.

The freeze will only impact immigrant visas, which are for those who wish to live in the United States. It will not apply to short-term visas, which means that visitors for the 2026 World Cup won’t be impacted by the move.

‘The pause impacts dozens of countries – including Somalia, Haiti, Iran, and Eritrea – whose immigrants often become public charges on the United States upon arrival. We are working to ensure the generosity of the American people will no longer be abused.’

In November, FIFA and the White House introduced ‘FIFA PASS,’ an expedited visa interview process for World Cup ticket-holders visiting the United States.

The move came amid growing concerns that the Trump administration’s immigration crackdowns could reduce the amount of foreign visitors for the World Cup.

The U.S. will serve as co-host of the World Cup along with Mexico and Canada. The tournament will take place from June 11 to July 19.

According to the State Department, the freeze is targeted toward those who could become a ‘public charge’ – or someone who relies on government benefits for their basic needs.

‘The State Department will use its long-standing authority to deem ineligible potential immigrants who would become a public charge on the United States and exploit the generosity of the American people,’ State Department spokesperson Tommy Piggott said in a statement.

‘Immigration from these 75 countries will be paused while the State Department reassess immigration processing procedures to prevent the entry of foreign nationals who would take welfare and public benefits.’

This post appeared first on USA TODAY