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It was just one week ago that the Denver Nuggets suffered a massive injury scare when star center Nikola Jokić went down with a left knee injury.

Yet, already, the team is reportedly pleased with the pace of his recovery.

During the Amazon Prime Video broadcast of Denver’s five-point loss Jan. 2 against the Cleveland Cavaliers, sideline reporter Cassidy Hubbarth reported that the franchise has been pleasantly surprised with the progress Jokić has made; per Hubbarth, Jokić has been using an exercise bike and walking up and down stairs.

The Nuggets conducted imaging tests that revealed a diagnosis of a left knee hyperextension Tuesday, Dec. 30 and said the three-time NBA Most Valuable Player would be reevaluated in four weeks. Lately, however, the Nuggets have been listing Jokić as having a left knee bone bruise, which is a common byproduct of hyperextensions.

Here’s everything to know about Nikola Jokić’s status ahead of Monday night’s game against the Philadelphia 76ers:

Is Nikola Jokić playing tonight vs. 76ers?

No. The team has ruled Jokić out as he continues to recover from the injury. The report from the Amazon Prime Video broadcast did provide some much-needed optimism for a team struggling with various injuries, but the Nuggets are expected to be cautious with Jokić, Denver’s franchise player.

Still, it’s an incredibly frustrating stretch for the Nuggets, who are missing all five starters due to injury.

Jamal Murray (left ankle), Aaron Gordon (hamstring), Cameron Johnson (right knee) and Christian Braun (left ankle) are also out, as is backup center Jonas Valančiūnas.

This will mark the fourth game that Jokić will miss since suffering the injury.

Nikola Jokić stats

Over 32 games, Jokić is averaging a triple-double, with 29.6 points, 12.2 rebounds and 11.0 assists per game this season. Widely considered one of the favorites to compete for his fourth MVP, Jokić is shooting 60.5% from the field, 43.5% from 3-point range and 85.3% from the free-throw line.

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Lawyers for the Trump administration asked a federal judge for additional time this week to detail its plans to provide due process for nearly 150 Venezuelan migrants that it deported to the Salvadoran CECOT prison in March, citing the removal of Nicolás Maduro, the Venezuelan leader who was captured by U.S. troops during a surprise raid in Caracas. 

In the motion for an extension, submitted to U.S. District Judge James Boasberg, lawyers for the Justice Department cited the ‘substantial changes on the ground in Venezuela’ and the ‘fluid nature of the unfolding situation’ in the wake of the U.S. capture of Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores.

They requested an additional seven days to comply with the court’s order.

Boasberg, in response, told the Justice Department in a minute order that it had not complied with a local court rule requiring defendants in a civil case to first notify opposing counsel before asking the court for a delay – leaving the matter temporarily unresolved.

The update comes after months of tension-filled status hearings between lawyers for the Trump administration and lawyers for the 252 Venezuelan migrants who were deported to El Salvador’s CECOT prison in March under the Alien Enemies Act, a 1798 immigration law, despite an emergency court order that sought to block the administration from immediately using the law to quickly remove certain migrants. 

The status of the migrants, who were removed again to Venezuela from CECOT in July as part of a prisoner exchange, further complicated the case. 

The exchange and U.S. involvement appeared to indicate at least some level of constructive custody of the migrants, as the court observed, prompting additional status hearings in the case. It also made it more difficult for lawyers representing the plaintiffs to track down all 252 CECOT migrants, some of whom had fled Venezuela due to persecution in their home country, and who have since remained in hiding.

The Trump administration proceeded with the deportation flights, kicking off a complex legal fight over the status of the migrants, the U.S. ability to facilitate their return – or at least to provide the migrants with due process protections – and an ability to challenge their alleged gang member status. 

Trump officials had argued that the people deported to CECOT were members of the violent Venezuelan Tren de Aragua gang, though the evidence they used to justify their designations has been disputed in many cases, and in many cases determined to be lacking. 

Since March, Boasberg has attempted to determine the status of the hundreds of CECOT plaintiffs, what ability the U.S. has to facilitate their return, or to provide the class of migrants with due process and habeas protections, including the ability to challenge their alleged gang status.

Last month, Boasberg ordered the Trump administration to submit to the court in writing its plans to provide due process to a class of Venezuelan migrants deported to El Salvador. 

He said the Justice Department must submit to the court by Jan. 5 its plan to provide due process protections to the CECOT class – which he said the Trump administration could do by either returning the migrants to the U.S. to have their cases heard in person – or to otherwise facilitate hearings abroad with members of the class that ‘satisfy the requirements of due process.’

‘On the merits, the Court concludes that this class was denied their due-process rights and will thus require the Government to facilitate their ability to obtain such a hearing,’ Boasberg said at the time. ‘Our law requires no less.’

The Justice Department’s request for a seven-day extension did not challenge the underlying merits of the order. Instead, they cited only the changing circumstances on the ground in Venezuela, which they said necessitate the additional time.

‘Over the weekend, the United States apprehended Nicolás Maduro,’ lawyers for the Justice Department said in their request for additional time. ‘As a result, the situation on the ground in Venezuela has changed dramatically. Defendants thus need additional time to determine the feasibility of various proposals,’ they added. 

‘Defendants therefore request a 7-day extension to evaluate and determine what remedies are possible.’

Boasberg responded in a terse minute order, noting only that the Justice Department’s request ‘fails to comply’ with the local rule in question, which requires parties to first confer with opposing counsel. He ordered the DOJ to file the relevant notice to opposing counsel by the end of the day. 

The update further stalls an ongoing court inquiry that has been on ice for months as the result of appeals court rulings, efforts to shield certain information from the court for national security purposes, and a separate, but related, contempt inquiry.

The CECOT migrants were again moved in July from the Salvadoran prison to Venezuela, as part of a broader prisoner exchange that involved the return of at least 10 Americans detained in Venezuela. 

Their role in the prisoner exchange further complicated efforts to ascertain the status of the CECOT class plaintiffs, including some migrants who had fled Venezuela in the first place due to fears of persecution, including from gangs.

That has made it difficult to contact the migrants from the CECOT class and determine how many of them still wished to proceed with their due process cases, as ACLU attorney Lee Gelernt, the lawyer representing the plaintiffs, previously told Boasberg in court. 

Some of them remain in hiding, Gelernt said, further complicating efforts to make contact.

The ACLU lawyers told the court in December that, of the 252 Venezuelan migrants that were deported in March to CECOT, 137 still wish to move forward with their due process cases.

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Democratic Gov. Tim Walz announced on Monday he is scrapping his re-election campaign for another term amid a massive fraud scandal in the state, but Republican lawmakers in Minnesota are calling the move an empty one. 

‘Don’t mistake Gov. Walz’s retirement for accountability,’ Minnesota state Sen. Mark Koran said in a statement to Fox News Digital after Walz’s Monday announcement. 

‘It’s an attempt to avoid it. Republicans will keep holding ALL elected Democrats accountable for Minnesota’s fraud mess, spending every dollar of the $18 billion surplus, and raising taxes by $10 billion.’

Accountability for Walz, according to several Republican lawmakers, involves him resigning as governor, which many have called for in recent months. 

‘The Governor is taking the easy way out, but it’s not good enough,’ state Sen. Michael Holmstrom said in a statement. ‘Minnesotans deserve and demand an IMMEDIATE resignation.’

‘Governor Walz couldn’t take the FRAUD heat so he’s getting out of the kitchen, but I’m going to keep holding ALL Democrats accountable for Minnesota’s fraud mess, blowing through the entire $18 billion surplus, raising taxes by $10 billion, and making life less affordable for all Minnesotans while rejecting Republican efforts to stop fraud. I’ll keep exposing these failures and holding Democrats accountable for what they’ve done to Minnesotans.’

Walz launched his bid for a third four-year term as Minnesota governor in September, but in recent weeks has been facing a barrage of incoming political fire from President Donald Trump and Republicans, and some Democrats, over the large-scale theft in a state that has long prided itself on good governance.

More than 90 people — most from Minnesota’s large Somali community — have been charged since 2022 in what has been described as the nation’s largest COVID-era scheme. How much money has been stolen through alleged money laundering operations involving fraudulent meal and housing programs, daycare centers, and Medicaid services is still being tabulated. But the U.S. attorney in Minnesota said the scope of the fraud could exceed $1 billion and rise to as high as $9 billion.

GOP state Sen. Rich Draheim accused Walz in a statement of simply ‘passing the buck’ with his ‘retirement’ announcement while ‘blaming Republicans for his failures.’

Minnesota Republican Sen. Andrew Lang echoed the messaging from his state party in a statement concluding that ‘retirement isn’t accountability.’

‘It’s him trying to wipe his hands clean of the fraud mess. But ALL elected Democrats own this. They fought Republican efforts to stop the fraud, failed to hold Walz’s agencies accountable, and let Minnesotans’ tax dollars get siphoned off by fraudsters.’

Walz met Sunday with Democratic Sen. Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota to discuss his decision to drop his re-election bid, a source familiar confirmed to Fox News’ Alexis McAdams.

Word of their meeting comes amid speculation that Klobuchar, a former Hennepin County attorney who’s been elected and re-elected four times to the U.S. Senate, may now run to succeed Walz.

‘Make no mistake, I don’t want Tim Walz to be our governor,’ Minnesota Republican state Sen. Andrew Mathews said in a statement to Fox News Digital. ‘But rather than swapping Democrat governor candidates, I want to FIX the damage Gov. Walz has done: Blew through an $18 billion surplus, Raised taxes by $10 billion, Oversaw one of the largest fraud scandals in the country, Left Minnesota for months chasing a failed VP bid, Now decides to leave office.’

‘This isn’t accountability. It’s avoiding it.’

Fox News Digital’s Paul Steinhauser contributed to this report.

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President Donald Trump flipped the script on Democrats’ ‘no one is above the law’ mantra after years of hearing it aimed at him, invoking the phrase after news broke Minnesota Democratic Gov. Tim Walz would not seek re-election as a sweeping fraud scandal rocks his state.

‘Governor Walz has destroyed the State of Minnesota, but others, like Governor Gavin Newscum, JB Pritzker, and Kathy Hochul, have done, in my opinion, an even more dishonest and incompetent job. NO ONE IS ABOVE THE LAW!’ Trump posted to Truth Social Monday afternoon. 

The message followed Walz announcing Monday that he was withdrawing his re-election effort to continue serving as governor. Walz was first elected the state’s top leader in 2018 in a political career that also included him campaigning coast-to-coast in 2024 as former Vice President Kamala Harris’ running mate. 

‘As I reflected on this moment with my family and my team over the holidays, I came to the conclusion that I can’t give a political campaign my all,’ Walz wrote in a statement. ‘Every minute I spend defending my own political interests would be a minute I can’t spend defending the people of Minnesota against the criminals who prey on our generosity and the cynics who prey on our differences.’

Minnesota has come under fierce scrutiny in recent weeks as a sprawling fraud scandal that has led to dozens of arrests, mostly from the state’s large Somali community, since 2022 comes to light. Minnesota was allegedly home to a massive COVID-era scheme that allegedly involved money laundering operations related to fraudulent meal and housing programs, daycare centers and Medicaid services, according to investigators. 

The Minnesota fraud is still being tabulated, with local officials speculating it could exceed $1 billion and rise to as high as $9 billion.

Trump’s use of the phrase ‘no one is above the law’ follows years of Democrats employing the same rhetoric against him as he faced a barrage of charges and court cases in between his first and second administrations. 

‘No one is above the law,’ President Joe Biden said after Trump was found guilty on 34 counts of falsified business records in a Manhattan court in May 2024. 

Trump faced four criminal indictments, which resulted in accusations of ‘lawfare’ on the national stage as Trump maintained his innocence and slammed the cases as efforts by the Democratic Party to hurt his political chances for re-election in 2024. 

‘As I’ve said before, no one is above the law, including Donald Trump,’ then-Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said in 2023 after the Biden administration’s Department of Justice announced Trump had been indicted on 37 counts related to his alleged mishandling of classified documents.

Even during Trump’s first administration, Democrats championed the phrase as they combated MAGA Republicans and Trump policies. 

‘Everybody wants the president to be held accountable in the most serious way,’ House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said of Trump in 2019 amid a discussion at the Commonwealth Club in San Francisco, underscoring that Democrats believe ‘no one is above the law.’ ‘And everybody believes, now I’m talking on the Democratic side, that no one is above the law, especially the president of the United States.’

‘We must be clear: no one, not even the president, is above the law,’ Rep. Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y., said in a statement in 2019 when introducing articles of impeachment against Trump. 

Upon his victory over the Harris–Walz presidential ticket in 2024, Trump has taken a victory lap for allegedly snuffing out the weaponization of government. 

‘We have ended weaponized government, where, as an example, a sitting president is allowed to viciously prosecute his political opponent, like me. How did that work out?’ he said during his joint address to Congress in 2025. ‘Not too good. Not too good.’ 

Trump added in his Monday Truth Social post that ‘Minnesota’s Corrupt Governor will possibly leave office before his Term is up,’ and that he’s confident the fraud investigations ‘will reveal a seriously unscrupulous, and rich, group of ‘SLIMEBALLS.”

White House spokeswoman Abigail Jackson added in comment to Fox Digital on Monday afternoon when asked about the Truth Social post: ‘It shouldn’t take an education from the Quality Learing Center for Democrats to understand this: Tim Walz and his Somali friends have been caught ripping off hardworking Minnesota taxpayers and now they will face the consequences. President Trump is right, no one is above the law.’

Walz has taken ownership of correcting the fraud. He said his administration had been taking action to stop some suspected fraudulent payments over the summer and that his office referred some for prosecution. The governor, however, has said that multibillion figures were ‘sensationalized’ by Republicans.

‘This is on my watch, I am accountable for this and, more importantly, I am the one that will fix it,’ Walz told reporters in December. 

Fox Digital reached out to Walz’s office for a response to Trump’s Truth Social but did not immediately receive a reply. 

Fox News Digital’s Amanda Macias contributed to this report. 

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A Florida Republican is arguing that Democrats’ largely negative response to the U.S. government’s operation in Venezuela is the ‘definition of Trump Derangement Syndrome.’

Rep. Mike Haridopolos, R-Fla., represents a part of Florida that includes a significant chunk of the state’s central coastline.

‘It doesn’t take much research to find speech after speech of Democrat House members and Senate members who said that this guy is a bad guy, he should be taken out of power,’ Haridopolos told Fox News Digital.

‘Sometimes in politics, you’ve just got to say to the other side, politically, ‘Hey, we’re all Americans. This is in the best interest, clearly, of the United States.’ But they’re in a position where they’re so afraid of a Democrat primary that they will say anything to avoid having the extreme left attack them.’

He pointed out that it was the previous Democratic commander-in-chief, President Joe Biden, who raised the federal government’s bounty for Maduro’s capture to $25 million.

‘What did they expect was then going to happen? You think this guy was just going to voluntarily give up? He clearly was not. He was getting into bed with the Cubans, the Russians, the Chinese, the Iranians, even Hezbollah, as I understand. I mean, this guy was trying to create a group of enemies in an oil-rich state at our footstep,’ Haridopolos said.

Democrats and Republicans have been largely divided in their responses to the strikes in Venezuela.

Lawmakers on the left have mostly criticized the president and his officials, accusing them of illegal actions that ran afoul of the U.S. Constitution. Some progressives have even said Trump could be guilty of impeachable offenses.

The majority of GOP lawmakers praised Trump’s move as a necessary law enforcement action to get rid of a hostile actor threatening both the U.S. and the region writ large.

Haridopolos is no different, pointing out that the operation was carried out with no U.S. fatalities and relatively few among Maduro supporters in Venezuela.

He said his district is home to a number of Venezuelan refugees who were elated by President Donald Trump’s decision to strike Caracas and capture Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro.

‘I have a large population of Venezuelans within my community, and they are absolutely overjoyed,’ the congressman said. ‘They were in essence kicked out of their own country or fled through fear … because they lost their ability to make a living, or they were being terrorized by the government because they were anti-Maduro.’

Following the U.S. strikes, Maduro and his wife were both taken to New York City, where they will be prosecuted by the U.S. Attorney’s Office in the Southern District of New York.

Maduro pleaded not guilty during his first court appearance on Monday.

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Former President Joe Biden could be pulling in a hefty, taxpayer-funded pension — stemming from his expansive career as a federal employee, according to a new report. 

The National Taxpayer Union Foundation estimates that Biden could be collecting up to a $417,000 pension — more than he was making a year as president, and more than previous presidents — as a result of collecting pensions from several retirement programs he qualifies for after starting his career in Washington in the 1970s. 

‘It’s pretty unusual, historically unusual, to have such a large pension amount,’ National Taxpayer Union Foundation President Demian Brady told the New York Post. 

The estimate comes from Biden’s long-term career in politics, meaning he has the capability to receive benefits under the Former President’s Act of 1958, and retirement benefits from the Civil Service Retirement System for his time as a senator and vice president.

The Former President’s Act of 1958 stipulates that presidential pensions are equal to the salaries Cabinet secretaries receive, which is currently set at $250,600. Additionally, Biden could be eligible for up to $166,374 for his time as a senator and vice president under the Civil Service Retirement System, Brady told the Post. 

Still, it’s unclear if Biden will actually cash in on all of those benefits. A spokesperson for Biden did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Fox News Digital.

Biden launched his career as a U.S. senator in 1972, and served as former President Barack Obama’s vice president for eight years starting in 2009. He earned $400,000 a year annually while president. 

The National Taxpayer Union Foundation did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Fox News Digital. 

Meanwhile, efforts are underway in Congress to curb how much former presidents can rake in once they leave office. For example, Sen. Joni Ernst, R-Iowa, reintroduced the Presidential Allowance Modernization Act in 2025, whichwould cap presidential pensions at $200,000The legislation was referred to the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee. 

Past initiatives to rein in presidential pensions have failed. Obama ultimately vetoed a similar piece of legislation that Congress backed in 2016 just before he was set to leave the White House. 

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Sen. Tim Kaine, D-Va., wants Congress to take a more active role as a check on the Trump administration’s use of military force following the surprise weekend operation in Venezuela, and he plans to force a vote on legislation that would halt further military action in the country without lawmakers’ approval.

Kaine joined a chorus of congressional Democrats who were frustrated at President Donald Trump’s decision to strike Venezuela’s capital of Caracas, and subsequent capture of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro and his wife without oversight or approval from Congress.

Congressional Democrats have long been frustrated at Congress’ diminished role in decision-making since Trump took office last year, particularly over continued strikes in the Caribbean ahead of Operation Absolute Resolve on Saturday.

Kaine argued on a call with reporters that Congress has the constitutional authority to weigh in on military action and was frustrated throughout Trump’s second term that the check and balance was being bowled over.

‘It’s time for Congress to get its a– off the couch and do what the Constitution mandates that we do — the Constitution we take an oath to,’ Kaine said over the weekend. ‘We have to put this before the American people, not just in private settings, but in public hearings by the key oversight committees, Intelligence, Armed Services, Foreign Relations in both houses, and explore whether the United States should enter into yet another war with unforeseen consequences.’

Kaine again plans to bring a war powers resolution for a vote in the Senate, which is expected to come to the floor this week.

It’s not the first time he has tried to reassert Congress’ authority when it comes to the administration’s use of military action. Kaine earlier this year forced a vote on a war powers resolution following Trump’s strike on Iranian nuclear facilities. That resolution failed on a largely party-line vote, save for Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., who joined all Senate Democrats in support.

The Virginia Democrat’s latest effort would prevent further military action in Venezuela without congressional approval.

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., who is a co-sponsor on the latest war powers resolution along with Kaine and Paul, said he would ensure the measure would get ‘adequate floor time so we could debate and discuss this.’

Schumer is also pushing for hearings to investigate the strikes and capture of Maduro and noted that he spoke with top Democrats on several committees who contended their Republican colleagues ‘have expressed a lot of troublesome comments about what Trump is doing and the way he is doing it.’

‘We’re going to be pushing our Republican colleagues to stand up for the American people, to get this done,’ Schumer said. ‘Congress should not be sidelined as the Trump administration gets sucked into another nation-building quagmire, and we’re going to hold them accountable, protect American lives, to protect America’s interests.’

Another issue that many congressional Democrats have is that lawmakers weren’t notified of the strikes until after the fact. Secretary of State Marco Rubio argued over the weekend that it would have been risky to notify lawmakers in advance given the sensitive nature of the operation. Trump charged that Congress was kept in the dark because lawmakers leak. 

Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., who didn’t receive notification of the operation until afterward, said that he was ‘comfortable’ with the timing. 

‘They didn’t tell me ahead of time,’ Thune said. ‘But I think there’s a reason why, like I said, before notification of Congress in advance of really critical and hypersensitive missions, to me, seems ill-advised anyway.’

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The Cleveland Browns are firing Kevin Stefanski after a six-season stint as the team’s head coach.

The Browns announced the decision Jan. 5 in a statement from Browns owners Dee and Jimmy Haslam.

‘We have tremendous gratitude for Kevin’s leadership of the Cleveland Browns over the last six seasons,’ the statement read. ‘He is a good football coach and an even better person. We appreciate all his hard work and dedication to our organization but our results over the last two seasons have not been satisfactory, and we believe a change at the head coaching position is necessary. We wish Kevin, Michelle and the Stefanski family all the best in the future.’

The Browns also announced they would be keeping general manager Andrew Berry on and that he would lead the search to find Stefanski’s successor.

‘The entirety of our focus is on building a team that brings our fans the success they long deserve, and we will continue to work relentlessly towards that goal and invest whatever resources necessary to build a winning football program,’ the Haslams said. ‘Andrew will immediately begin our thorough process to find an outstanding new head coach and leader of our football team. We have an exciting young core to build upon, and Andrew and his team are intent on adding talent to this core and building out a roster that can achieve sustainable success.’

Stefanski’s dismissal comes after the Browns posted a 5-12 record during the 2025 NFL season. Cleveland notched a 20-18 win over the Cincinnati Bengals in Week 18, but it wasn’t enough to earn Stefanski another season with the team.

Stefanski posted a record of 45-56 across his six seasons with the Browns but oversaw what was, inarguably, the team’s most successful stretch of the 21st century.

Stefanski led the Browns to an 11-5 record in 2020, his first season with the team. Cleveland’s five-win improvement earned Stefanski the NFL’s Coach of the Year award while the Browns earned their first playoff win since 1994, a 48-37 wild-card victory over the Pittsburgh Steelers.

Stefanski achieved similar results in 2023, leading the Browns to an 11-6 record despite the team starting five different quarterbacks. Joe Flacco enjoyed a resurgence under Stefanski’s tutelage after being signed as a free agent near the end of the season, and that helped Stefanski once again earn the NFL’s Coach of the Year award.

Despite those high points, the Browns decided to move on from Stefanski after he posted a combined record of 8-26 over his final two seasons with the team. The Browns ranked ahead of only the Las Vegas Raiders in points per game during the 2025 NFL season (16.4) and were dead-last in offensive EPA per play in 2025, per the NFL’s Next Gen Stats.

Stefanski had largely been mum amid speculation about his future but was asked whether he wanted to continue coaching the Browns ahead of his team’s Week 18 matchup against the Cincinnati Bengals.

‘As you can imagine, my sole focus is on this game versus Cincinnati,’ Stefanski told reporters. ‘But I would also tell you, I’m privileged to have this job.’

Stefanski will no longer be in charge in Cleveland, but the 43-year-old may not be out of work long. NFL Media’s Ian Rapoport and Tom Pelissero noted in a Dec. 20 story Stefanski ‘would immediately become a top candidate elsewhere’ if the Browns did not retain him.

As such, Stefanski will begin exploring his other options while the Browns face a key decision about how to replace him and whether the team’s quarterback of the future is presently on the roster.

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DURHAM, N.C. — The second quarter had just started and Notre Dame guard Hannah Hidalgo called out to her teammates: “Lock down!”

What happened next against Duke wasn’t what the Fighting Irish star envisioned. Beginning with a steal and driving layup from Blue Devils sophomore Toby Fournier, the Blue Devils went on a 17-8 run to take an 18-point lead. Duke went on to their sixth consecutive victory, 82-68, over Notre Dame Sunday at Cameron Indoor Stadium.

All five starters scored in double figures in the signature victory for the Blue Devils.

“A big-time win for us,” Duke coach Kara Lawson said. “Our starting five, I thought they really answered the call, played with the right amount of competitiveness, and just made big plays throughout the game. And being able to play with a lead against a really good team is not an easy thing to do. Proud of how we finished.”

As conference play begins, Lawson’s Blue Devils look more like the team picked as preseason favorites to win the ACC and a lot less like the one that began the season 3-6 and was quickly booted out of the national rankings.

Sometimes, numbers can be deceiving. After the Blue Devils piled up defeats early in the season, many wrote them off. What the doubters ignored was Duke was losing to some pretty good competition. 

Lawson, now in her fifth season as coach, has never been one to schedule cupcakes. She seeks multiple Power 4 opponents and isn’t afraid to play on the road, even at strong mid-major programs. If one measures strength of schedule by the average NET rating of opponents, Duke has played the toughest schedule in the country with a mark of 16.7. The average win percentage of Duke’s opponents is 67.2, which is second nationally, according to HerHoopStats.

Duke endured some absolutely abysmal losses in November and December that had critics questioning whether Lawson was the right pick to lead Team USA into the 2026 FIBA World Cup and 2028 Olympics. The season began with an excusable loss in Paris, France, to Baylor.

Then the Blue Devils endured a historic defeat to West Virginia in which the Mountaineers played the entire second half with five players following ejections after a scuffle. Next, Duke lost at South Florida for the second straight season and followed up by looking less than competitive against South Carolina and UCLA in Las Vegas. Finally, the Blue Devils suffered the loss at home to LSU in the ACC-SEC Challenge.

Lawson always saw the bigger picture. She wanted her team tested early. She wanted them to face adversity. She wanted to figure out their strengths and weaknesses before ACC play began. She wanted to have time to make adjustments.

And she and Duke have done that. Lineups have shifted and players have accepted new roles. With that, wins have come.

“Results are a funny thing, because it can color your whole mindset. And what I’ve tried to stay focused on as a coach is, what am I actually seeing on the film? Where are the mistakes and how do we correct them? Win, lose, whatever it is, stay focused in that,” Lawson said. “Even in the midst of losing games, there were micro-growths that were happening with each player. … It kept me confident in it, even though, you know, from the outside, people will make you think the sky is falling.”

The first big change was inserting Riley Nelson into the starting lineup over Jadyn Donovan. That first happened in Duke’s ACC-opening win at Virginia Tech on Dec. 7. The Blue Devils haven’t lost since.

And Nelson — who played 16 games as a freshman at Maryland in the 2023-24 season before tearing her ACL, which forced her to miss all of last year — didn’t play all that well in Blacksburg, shooting 1-of-7 from the floor. But Lawson stuck with her. Since then, she’s scored in double figures in five straight games, averaging 14.8 points, 4.2 rebounds and 3.4 assists per game.

“You can see all the potential and you want it to happen overnight,” Lawson said of Nelson. “She has a chance to be a really good player in a Duke uniform, and she knows I’m going to push her to do that.

‘Riley is a critical piece for us, and you can see her coming on now. Her ability to knock down the three point shot is critical for our offense.”

Taina Mair has also emerged as Duke’s bus driver. The 5-foot-9 senior guard led Duke in assists the past two seasons and was an All-ACC selection at Boston college as a freshman, ranking eighth in the nation in assists per game. But this season, Lawson challenged Mair to take on more of a scorer’s mentality from the point guard position.

It’s a role she’s excelled at, scoring 15.2 points per game during this six-game winning streak for the Blue Devils. Against Notre Dame, she shot a career-best 4-of-4 from 3 and finished with 23 points, six rebounds and six assists.

Mair is still dishing the ball out, finding Fournier multiple times streaking down the lane for easy rim-running baskets. She’s averaging 5.2 assists per game this season, the most in her three years at Duke.

“That’s why sometimes just looking at someone’s stats and coming up with a conclusion about whether they had a down year or they took a step back — Mair never took a step back. She was doing what was necessary to win,” Lawson said. “Now, we don’t have as much depth on the wing. Now, we need her scoring. We need you to take double digit field goal attempts a game and go get it.’

One could argue the Blue Devils’ schedule got easier in mid-December. But of Duke’s six wins during this surge, four have come against ACC opponents, and the other two came against consistent mid-major powers in Belmont and South Dakota State, who combined for 56 wins last season. And half of Duke’s wins during this streak were in true road environments.

The Blue Devils’ comfortable victory over a ranked Notre Dame team could serve as proof of concept, signaling they are one of the top teams in the ACC.

Duke has adjusted, adapted and improved. Typically, that’s something for which coaches get earn credit. But Lawson deflects the praise and pushes it towards her players.

“I do feel like our team never lost their spirit, that we stayed really connected, and we will reap the benefits of that at some point,” she said. “Our focus has been good, our chemistry has been good. You wouldn’t know what our record was if you just walked into practice. And so when that’s right, I feel like the results will take care of themselves.”

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So, this is why they brought Aaron Rodgers to Pittsburgh.

Prayers. Karma. Magic.

Rodgers did everything he could with his 42-year-old body and soul to lift the Steelers to victory in the winner-take-all showdown on Sunday night. He threw 47 passes for a season-high 294 yards. He went tit for tat against Lamar Jackson during a classic fourth quarter. On Pittsburgh’s last two-minute drive, Rodgers was brilliant, capping it with a 26-yard touchdown strike to Calvin Austin III.

Then Rodgers could do nothing except watch.

The game was won – and lost – when Ravens rookie Tyler Loop’s 44-yard field goal try sailed wide right at Acrisure Stadium as time expired.

Just like that, on the last play of the NFL’s 18-week regular season, the would-be end of the season for Rodgers has morphed into his first trip to the NFL playoffs in four years.

Hold off the questions of whether the living legend will retire or come back next year.

Yes, miracles happen.

‘Chaos. Disbelief. Gratitude,’ Rodgers said during his postgame news conference when someone asked what he felt as Loop missed what was seemingly a made-to-order kick with the AFC North title at stake. “A lot of emotions.’

It should be mentioned that Loop’s kick came in the same end zone where a Catholic priest sprinkled Holy Water on the turf before the game.

See, in a place where one of the franchise’s most iconic moments is known as “The Immaculate Reception,” Rodgers apparently got a lot of favor.

‘I’m not going to ask any questions,” said Cam Heyward, the veteran defensive tackle and Steelers elder statesman. “The good Lord made a good decision, tonight.”

The Steelers, who were home underdogs on Sunday, may need some more divine intervention, if you will, in the AFC playoffs. They’ll open at home in the wild-card round next Monday night against the Houston Texans, who just happen to have the NFL’s longest winning streak, rolling with nine consecutive victories.

At least they’ll have Rodgers, with a chance to write a storybook script with a franchise that, for all its glory and tradition, hasn’t won a playoff game since 2016.

He mentioned, with a chuckle, that the Steelers would probably be considered a home underdog against the Texans. But it was no joke. Pittsburgh (10-7) barely got into the playoffs, having nearly blown what was once a seemingly insurmountable division lead a few weeks ago. And Sunday’s showing, which included Jackson blistering the Steelers for two long touchdown passes to Zay Flowers in that furious fourth quarter, exemplified the hit-or-miss nature of this season.

Then again, it’s a resilient bunch.

‘We had to get off the mat today,” Heyward said. “We shot ourselves in the foot a couple different times. We did not play a perfect game by any means, but in different moments, the offense, defense, special teams, stepped up.”

Hearing Heyward assess the effort brings to mind a couple other times he addressed the state and mission of his team. In October, after a loss against the Green Bay Packers, he sounded an alarm about urgency and maintained that his unit needed to do a better job of responding to adversity with quick adjustments – and fight – while in the midst of the game.

That happened on Sunday night.

During training camp, Heyward told me what needed to happen for the Steelers to avoid another late-season collapse. Remember, last season they were 10-3 before fading down the stretch and getting bounced from the playoffs by the Ravens. Besides health and freshness, he saw the ability to play complementary football as crucial. It didn’t need to be a case of one particular unit carrying the team.

‘So, you look for that balance,” Heyward said in July.

That, too, happened at various points on Sunday night.

Still, the addition of Rodgers – lured with a lengthy courtship by coach Mike Tomlin during the spring – came with the idea that putting the four-time NFL MVP in the mix could be the game-changer that hasn’t existed for the Steelers since Ben Roethlisberger retired.

No, as the final miss illustrated, it wasn’t all on Rodgers. Yet when they needed his veteran poise, savvy and sharp-shooting throws in crunch time, school was out, so to speak. Pittsburgh started its final offensive drive with 2:20 on the clock.

‘I’ve admired him from afar for a long time,” Tomlin said. “It’s good to do it with him.

‘This was the vision in the spring when we pursued him. That’s why you do business with a 41, 42-year-old guy. A been-there, done-that guy with a resume like his, he’s not only capable, man. He thrives in it.”

Rodgers would totally agree. He said that getting the ball with 2:20 left and needing a touchdown was exactly the scenario he wanted. He also thought part of his purpose on Sunday night was rather mystical, too, describing his desire to be a “magnetic force” to help his teammates stay confident and calm.

That mindset sure worked out when things got chaotic near the goal line as Rodgers stayed cool after he was unable to receive the radio communication from coordinator Arthur Smith in his helmet. Then, the radio in his replacement helmet didn’t work, either.

No sweat.

‘That’s part of it, being the old guy, having a lot of gray in your beard,” he said. “They expect things from you. It’s nice to be able to deliver.”

Sure enough, as Rodgers took over for his final drive, T.J. Watt stood on the sideline and expressed his confidence that they were in good hands. Watt called it “a weird, no-panic feeling.”

He added: “You see the ball in the hands of (No.) 8 there and it’s like, ‘He’s here for a reason. And this is why he’s here. This is the best dude in the NFL for this moment.’ To be able to see him deliver on a big stage like that was incredible to see.”

It’s striking that neither Rodgers nor Tomlin has made it back to a Super Bowl in 15 years, since the quarterback led Green Bay to a triumph against Pittsburgh in Super Bowl 45. Now they are joined at the hip in chasing such a possibility again – with the help of a zany ending.

‘It just takes a little belief at this point in the season,” Rodgers said.

He knows. If a team gets hot at the right time, it could lead to a special ending. First, it’s a matter of just getting into the playoffs. On several occasions since he arrived in Pittsburgh, Rodgers has talked about wanting the Steelers to position themselves among the typical handful of teams that will have a legitimate shot to win a championship.

Now they’re one of the 14 teams in the dance.  

It was fitting that Rodgers wistfully reflected on squeaking out a 10-3 win against the Bears in the 2010 regular-season finale that allowed the Packers to make the playoffs as a sixth seed. It set up a remarkable playoff run as Green Bay became just the second sixth seed to win a Super Bowl.

‘It gave us a little belief,” Rodgers recalled of that win against the Bears.

Then he used the word again in considering the latest triumph.

‘I think it’s going to give us some belief,” he said.

Belief. Faith. Intervention. Just pass the Holy Water.

Contact Jarrett Bell at jbell@usatoday.com or follow on X: @JarrettBell

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