Patriots WR Stefon Diggs cleared for training campNew Foto - Patriots WR Stefon Diggs cleared for training camp

Stefon Diggs enters training camp with no restrictions and was medically cleared to join the New England Patriots on the field for the start of practices this week. Diggs was deemed recovered from a torn ACL, which ended his 2024 season with the Houston Texans. Houston acquired Diggs from the Buffalo Bills before last season and he caught 47 passes in eight games before he was lost for the season Oct. 27 against the Indianapolis Colts. He caught six passes for 77 yards and a touchdown against the Patriots on Oct. 13. Diggs, 31, signed with the Patriots in March, landing a three-year, $69 million contract. New England knew his work well from Diggs' four highly productive seasons with the Buffalo Bills (2020-23), a run of consecutive Pro Bowl campaigns during which he caught at least 103 passes each year. --Field Level Media

Patriots WR Stefon Diggs cleared for training camp

Patriots WR Stefon Diggs cleared for training camp Stefon Diggs enters training camp with no restrictions and was medically cleared to join ...
Big 12 board rejects Memphis' $200 million, no strings bid to join conferenceNew Foto - Big 12 board rejects Memphis' $200 million, no strings bid to join conference

The Big 12 Conference has rejected a proposal to add a new school to its conference. According to the Commercial Appeal― part of the USA TODAY Network ―Memphis officials have acknowledgedthey put together a bid to join the Big 12 Conference in the latest college football realignment move. REQUIRED READING:Why College Football Playoff committee could be tested by these two SEC teams However, for the third time in a decade, the Big 12 has rejected the Tigers' request to join the conference. This time, Memphis reportedly made a bid worth $200 million to jump from the American Conference and into a Power 4 conference. "The University of Memphis is aware of the recent conversations regarding our potential inclusion in the Big 12," the university said in a statement. "While those discussions did not ultimately move in our favor, our university and Memphis athletics are stronger than ever, and we look forward to continuing to strengthen our position nationally." Memphis athletic director Ed Scott has stated his goal for the program is to join a major conference since he took over in June 2024. He laid out two potential conferences he'd like to join.Scott would earn a $250,000 bonusif Memphis joined the Big Ten, SEC, Big 12 or ACC. The Big 12, of course, recently added Colorado, Arizona, Utah, Arizona, andArizona Stateto join recently added members UCF, Cincinnati, and Houston. The latter three school all came from the American Conference. "There's really two options that everybody knows about: The Big 12 and the ACC," Scott said. With the rejection from the Big 12, an attempt to join the ACC could be on the horizon for the Tigers. Memphis turned down an invite to join the reforged Pac-12 last fall. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Memphis' $200 million bid to join Big 12 Conference rejected

Big 12 board rejects Memphis' $200 million, no strings bid to join conference

Big 12 board rejects Memphis' $200 million, no strings bid to join conference The Big 12 Conference has rejected a proposal to add a new...
Cutting edge: Jets unveil a renovated locker room that includes 92 new lockers and a barbershopNew Foto - Cutting edge: Jets unveil a renovated locker room that includes 92 new lockers and a barbershop

The new-lookNew York Jetsunderwent an Extreme Makeover: Locker Room Edition during the offseason. Players such as star wide receiver Garrett Wilson, cornerback Sauce Gardner and new quarterback Justin Fields reporting for the team's training camp Tuesday were arriving at the Jets' facility in Florham Park, New Jersey, to a fully renovated locker room with some state-of-the-art upgrades. Ina release on its website, which also includeda drone-footage tour, the team announced it added 92 customized lockers along with several other amenities, including a barbershop, a larger sauna and a brightly lit 2,000-pound 3D Jets ceiling logo in the middle of the locker room. The upgrades, which the team said had been in the works for a few years, came aftera players poll released by the NFL Players Associationin Februarygave the Jets a D-plus for their locker room, ranking 26th in the league. The team moved into its current facility in 2008. Woody Johnson received an F and was the lowest-ranked owner. The team received an overall ranking of 29th. "We take pride in having a first-class environment for the players," Robert Mastroddi, the Jets' senior vice president of security and facility operations, told the team's website. "These upgrades will certainly provide more comfort, but they also will help with wellness, efficiency and ultimately performance. There is a commitment to winning and that's where this all derived from." The Jets, who have the NFL's longest active playoff drought at 14 seasons, have a new general manager in Darren Mougey and head coach in Aaron Glenn. The two revamped the roster this offseason by infusing more youth —moves that included releasing veteranssuch as Aaron Rodgers, Davante Adams, C.J. Mosley, Greg Zuerlein and Thomas Morstead. The new lockers, designed by the Texas-based Longhorn Locker Company, have fully automated video screens — the Jets say they're the first pro or college team to have them — that include the players' headshots, names, hometowns and colleges. There also are three separate fans to dry their helmets, shoulder pads and cleats in an effort to reduce moisture and lower risks of staph infections. Mastroddi said the Jets are also the first team to have an on-site barbershop that includes two vintage barber chairs. "We want to make it comfortable, keep players in the building because they want to be there," Mastroddi said. "We're offering them all the amenities that they would have to go outside to get." ___ AP NFL:https://apnews.com/hub/nfl

Cutting edge: Jets unveil a renovated locker room that includes 92 new lockers and a barbershop

Cutting edge: Jets unveil a renovated locker room that includes 92 new lockers and a barbershop The new-lookNew York Jetsunderwent an Extrem...
Despite risks, Texas Republicans launch Trump-backed effort to redraw congressional linesNew Foto - Despite risks, Texas Republicans launch Trump-backed effort to redraw congressional lines

By Joseph Ax (Reuters) -Texas Republicans on Monday launched a high-risk, high-reward redrawing of the state's 38 congressional districts, a move championed by President Donald Trump to protect the party's narrow U.S. House majority in next year's midterm elections. Trump has told reporters he expects the effort to yield as many as five additional House Republicans. Republicans hold a narrow 220-212 majority in the House, with three Democratic-held seats vacant after members' deaths. But redistricting experts said the plan could backfire if Republicans try to squeeze too many seats out of what is already considered a significantly skewed map. "Redrawing the Texas map is a dangerous proposition for House Republicans and their incumbents," Suzan DelBene, a Democratic congresswoman from Washington State and chair of the party's congressional campaign arm, told reporters. "It's basic math. For them to try to break up Democratic-held districts, they will have to weaken Republican districts, who already are facing political headwinds." Under the current lines, Republicans control 25 seats, nearly two-thirds of the districts in a state that went for Trump last year by a 56% to 42% margin. States are required to redistrict every 10 years based on the U.S. Census but the Texas map was passed just four years ago by the Republican-dominated legislature. While mid-cycle redistricting occasionally takes place, it is usually prompted by a change in power at the legislature. "This is totally unprecedented for a party to redraw its own map," said Michael Li, a redistricting expert at New York University's Brennan Center for Justice. "I can't think of another situation where the party got what it wanted, did very well and then decided to redraw its own map." Texas Democrats expressed disapproval on the state Senate floor on Monday and criticized Republicans for pursuing redistricting during a special legislative session that will also address funding for flood prevention in the wake of the deadly July 4 flash flooding that killed more than 130. But they have little recourse in a legislature dominated by Republicans. "I think this is a tremendous waste of time," Senator Roland Gutierrez, a Democrat, said. Asked about Democratic criticisms, a spokesman for Governor Greg Abbott previously said the governor was "dedicated to delivering results on issues important to Texans" during the session, including flood relief and tax cuts. PACKING AND CRACKING Gerrymandering, the process of manipulating district boundaries to benefit one party, typically includes both "packing" and "cracking." Packing involves cramming as many opposition voters into a district as possible, making it easier to win the surrounding districts; cracking divides opposition voters into multiple districts, diluting their electoral power. When lawmakers push too far, however, they run the risk of creating a so-called "dummymander," in which the margins are thin enough that the other party ends up winning districts in a voting shift. Trump's Republicans already face vulnerabilities ahead of the 2026 elections. Only 41% of Americans approve of the job he is doing, according to Reuters/Ipsos polling, and the president's party historically underperforms during midterm elections. Democrats privately concede that Republicans could fairly easily draw a new map to oust two vulnerable Democrats, Henry Cuellar and Vicente Gonzalez, whose heavily Latino south Texas districts swung toward Trump in 2024. But gaining five seats is a tougher task. "This has dummymander written all over it," said New York University's Li. "When you gerrymander, you're making a bet that you know what the future of the state will look like. In some states, that's a safe bet; in Texas, it's very much not." Texas is one of the fastest growing states in the nation, adding more than 1,500 people a day from 2023 to 2024, according to the state demographer. Texas lawmakers need only look back a few years to see how a seemingly safe gerrymander can shift. In 2018, during Trump's first term, Democrats flipped two seats and came close to winning a handful of other previously solid Republican seats, as suburban voters swung away from Trump. Following the 2020 census, Texas Republicans responded by drawing a map designed to protect their incumbents. Only three of the state's 38 districts are seen as competitive under the current lines. In calling for the special session, Abbott cited a letter from Trump's Justice Department that alleged four majority-minority districts – all held by Democrats – were unconstitutional racial gerrymanders. Democrats and civil rights groups have warned that breaking up majority-minority districts will dilute the voting power for people of color. The existing map is already the subject of several lawsuits claiming that it intentionally discriminated against minority voters. Some Democrats have also suggested fighting fire with fire by redistricting in states they control. California Governor Gavin Newsom has floated the idea of sidestepping the state's redistricting commission to draw a new, more Democrat-friendly map. (Reporting by Joseph Ax; editing by Paul Thomasch and Lincoln Feast.)

Despite risks, Texas Republicans launch Trump-backed effort to redraw congressional lines

Despite risks, Texas Republicans launch Trump-backed effort to redraw congressional lines By Joseph Ax (Reuters) -Texas Republicans on Monda...
Trump withdraws U.S. from 'woke' UNESCO program againNew Foto - Trump withdraws U.S. from 'woke' UNESCO program again

The United States again is withdrawing from the United Nations' UNESCO program, which theTrumpadministration is now labeling "woke" afterpreviously rejectingit because of alleged anti-Israel bias. The move, which goes into effect at the end of 2026, continues Trump's efforts to pull the U.S. out of international institutions he has long criticized, something he also did in his first term. White House spokesperson Anna Kelly said UNESCO "supports woke, divisive cultural and social causes that are totally out-of-step with the commonsense policies that Americans voted for in November." UNESCO Director-General Audrey Azoulay said in a statement to USA TODAY that Trump's decision to withdraw is "regrettable" and "contradicts the fundamental principles of multilateralism." Azoulay said UNESCO had been anticipating and preparing for a loss of U.S. support and "is not considering any layoffs." The U.S. currently contributes about 8% of UNESCO's budget, Azoulay said. Paris-based UNESCO was founded after World War II to promote peace through international cooperation in education, science, and culture. One of UNESCO's core missions is the World Heritage program, which protects historic and cultural sites. It also runs a number of educational programs. Trump alsowithdrew the U.S. from UNESCO- which stands for U.N. Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization - during his first administration, citing concerns about its approach to Israel. He also withdrew the U.S. from the World Health Organization, the U.N. Human Rights Council, a global climate change accord and the Iran nuclear deal. Joe Bidenreversed those decisions after taking office in 2021,returning the U.S.to UNESCO, the WHO and the climate agreement. With Trump now back in the White House, the U.S. is onceagain pulling outof these global bodies. He has already decided to withdraw the U.S. from the WHO and halt funding to the Palestinian relief agency UNRWA as part of a review of the country's participation in UN agencies, due to be concluded in August. UNESCO has been a focal point of criticism for years. The U.S. stopped funding UNESCO after it voted to include Palestine as a member in 2011. The Reagan administration withdrew from the organization in 1984, but President George W. Bush brought the United States back into the group in 2002. There are1,248 UNESCO World Heritage sitesin 170 countries, including the pyramids in Egypt, Notre-Dame Cathedral in France and the Statue of Liberty in the U.S. Contributing: Reuters;Jim Michaels This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Trump withdraws U.S. from 'woke' UNESCO program – again

Trump withdraws U.S. from 'woke' UNESCO program again

Trump withdraws U.S. from 'woke' UNESCO program again The United States again is withdrawing from the United Nations' UNESCO pro...

 

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