Zakai Zeigler drops bid to play 5th college season, but his lawsuit against NCAA will continueNew Foto - Zakai Zeigler drops bid to play 5th college season, but his lawsuit against NCAA will continue

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Zakai Zeigler of Tennessee has dropped his bid for a federal judge to let him play a fifth season of Division I basketball in five years, but his lawsuit against the NCAA will continue, his attorneys said Tuesday. Last month,a judge denied Zeigler's requestfor a preliminary injunction that would allow him to return to the Volunteers. He appealed that ruling, but his attorneys voluntarily withdrew the appeal on Tuesday. "While we had hoped to see Zakai back in orange and white, he's embracing the next chapter of his basketball career with optimism and resolve," the law firm Litson PLLC said in a statement. "We remain committed to pressing his case forward in the trial court, where the core legal issues remain very much alive." The 5-foot-9 Zeigler was not selected in last week's NBA draft, but ESPN reported that the Detroit Pistons have signed him to their Summer League squad. Zeigler is one of several athletes suing the NCAA over its eligibility rules, arguing the ban on playing more than four seasons in a five-year window is a monopolistic practice that deprives athletes of the opportunity to earn name, image and likeness compensation. He argued in his lawsuit that he could earn between $2 million and as much as $4 million if he played another season at Tennessee. ___ AP college basketball:https://apnews.com/hub/college-basketball

Zakai Zeigler drops bid to play 5th college season, but his lawsuit against NCAA will continue

Zakai Zeigler drops bid to play 5th college season, but his lawsuit against NCAA will continue KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Zakai Zeigler of Tenn...
Real Madrid edge Juventus 1-0 at Club World Cup; Kylian Mbappe returnsNew Foto - Real Madrid edge Juventus 1-0 at Club World Cup; Kylian Mbappe returns

Gonzalo Garcia scored his third goal of the FIFA Club World Cup early in the second half, Kylian Mbappe made his first tournament appearance and Real Madrid reached the quarterfinals with a 1-0 victory over Juventus on Tuesday in Miami Gardens, Fla. Mbappe came on as Garcia's replacement for his first action under new manager Xabi Alonso after missing all three group stage games due to a gastrointestinal illness that led to a brief hospitalization. After scoring 31 times in La Liga and seven more in the UEFA Champions League, the star Frenchman's return should only boost Madrid's chances of securing a sixth Club World Cup title in this first expanded competition format. They'll face the winner of Tuesday's later second-round match between Borussia Dortmund and CF Monterrey on Saturday in East Rutherford, N.J. Michele Di Gregorio made 10 saves for Juventus, including denials of Arda Guler and Aurelien Tchouameni inside the final 20 minutes to keep his team's hopes alive. But his exceptional performance couldn't prevent a second consecutive defeat to a European foe after a 5-2 Juventus loss to Manchester City to close Group G play. Garcia broke through in the 54th minute. After an initial corner kick was partially cleared, Trent Alexander-Arnold gained possession and served an out-swinging early cross from the right. Garcia snuck in unmarked behind two teammates and their defenders to power in a header from 6 yards that left Di Gregorio no chance. Seven minutes later, Federico Valverde nearly scored one of the goals of the tournament, but Di Gregorio reacted excellently to deny his bicycle kick from close range at the left post. Juventus had the first quality chances. Randal Kolo Muani missed narrowly high on the run in the seventh minute. In the 23rd minute, Francisco Conceicao reached Andrea Cambiaso's cross, but saw his header saved comfortably by Thibaut Courtois. Madrid forced Di Gregorio into a pair of excellent stops later in the first half. In the 30th minute, he denied Jude Bellingham from close range on the right side of the 6-yard box after Valverde's pass played Bellingham in. A minute into first-half stoppage time, he dove to his left to push Valverde's excellent long-range effort around his left post. Madrid continued in the ascendancy after the break, with Bellingham and Dean Huijsen both forcing Di Gregorio into action again before Garcia broke through. --Field Level Media

Real Madrid edge Juventus 1-0 at Club World Cup; Kylian Mbappe returns

Real Madrid edge Juventus 1-0 at Club World Cup; Kylian Mbappe returns Gonzalo Garcia scored his third goal of the FIFA Club World Cup early...
2025 Nathan's Hot Dog Eating Contest odds: Joey Chestnut (-2500) is a massive favorite in his returnNew Foto - 2025 Nathan's Hot Dog Eating Contest odds: Joey Chestnut (-2500) is a massive favorite in his return

The 2025 Nathan's Hot Dog Eating Contest will take place at 12 p.m. ET Friday on ESPN2 andfeatures the return of 16-time champion Joey Chestnut. Chestnut was banned from the event last year as a result of his partnership with Impossible Foods, a rival brand. Chestnut and Nathan's seem to have resolved their differences, as he returns to the contest and is a massive favorite at sportsbooks. Chestnut opened as a -2500 favorite (bet $25 to win $1) atBetMGMto win this year's contest, with last year's champion, Patrick Bertoletti, owning the second-best odds all the way back at 16-1 (bet $1 to win $16). Bertoletti consumed 58 hot dogs last year, but will almost assuredly have to best that number by a good deal to compete with Chestnut. Chestnut's record is 76 hot dogs eaten back in 2021 and the over/under at BetMGM for total hot dogs eaten by Chestnut at the 2025 event is 71.5, with the over juiced to -140. For comparison, Perlotti's over/under is only 50.5 hot dogs. Bettors can also wager on Chestnut (-2500) or the field (+900) to win the contest or an adjusted hot dog over/under of 76.5 for Chestnut (over +250, under -350). The winner of the contest receives $10,000 and the coveted mustard yellow belt.

2025 Nathan's Hot Dog Eating Contest odds: Joey Chestnut (-2500) is a massive favorite in his return

2025 Nathan's Hot Dog Eating Contest odds: Joey Chestnut (-2500) is a massive favorite in his return The 2025 Nathan's Hot Dog Eatin...
Senate Republicans narrowly pass Trump megabill after marathon voting sessionNew Foto - Senate Republicans narrowly pass Trump megabill after marathon voting session

WASHINGTON — The Republican-controlled Senate narrowly passed President Donald Trump's sweeping domestic policy package Tuesday, bringing it one step closer to his desk. The vote was 51-50, with Vice President JD Vance breaking a tie after three Republicans joined all Democrats in opposing the legislation. In a marathon overnight session that spanned more than 24 hours, senators voted on dozens of proposed changes to the legislation and GOP leaders dragged out many of the votes as they frantically worked to win over holdouts. They ultimately secured enough votes with a catch-all amendment that was similarly approved by a vote of 51-50. Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, who had expressed concerns throughout the process about the bill's cuts to social safety net programs, was a key vote for Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., to win over. "I struggled mightily with the impact on the most vulnerable in this country, when you look to Medicaid and SNAP," Murkowski told reporters after the vote, adding that she didn't get "everything" she wanted but that "I had to look on balance." Voting against the final bill, alongside all 47 Democrats, were Republican Sens. Rand Paul of Kentucky, Thom Tillis of North Carolina and Susan Collins of Maine. Paul opposed the bill because it would add trillions of dollars to the deficit, while Tillis and Collins feared the cuts to Medicaid were too steep. "My difficulties with the bill go far beyond what they could resolve," Collins said after she cast her no vote. Tuesday's vote puts Trump on the cusp of a major legislative victory and hands Thune thebiggest winof his first six months on the job. Dubbed the "big, beautiful bill" by Trump, the revised legislation now heads back to the House, where Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., will be forced to scramble to pass it before Trump's July 4 deadline. "The House will work quickly to pass the One Big Beautiful Bill that enacts President Trump's full America First agenda by the Fourth of July," Johnson and his leadership team said in a joint statement Tuesday. "The American people gave us a clear mandate, and after four years of Democrat failure, we intend to deliver without delay." In a statement after the vote, Murkowski detailed the concessions for Alaska that she secured from leadership, which Paul ridiculed as "pork and subsidies" for her state. Murkowski said she won tribal exemptions for new work requirements for Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) recipients. She also helped secure a carveout for Alaska and a handful of other states that have high error rates in providing SNAP benefits, temporarily exempting them from SNAP cuts spelled out in the bill. But even though she voted for the bill, Murkowski called it an "awful process" and said she hopes the House makes changes to the Senate package. "We do not have a perfect bill by any stretch of the imagination," Murkowski said. "My hope is that House is going to look at this and recognize that we're not there yet." Thune and his team made several eleventh-hour changes to appease holdouts like Murkowski and get the package over the finish line. A special fund for rural hospitals, which faced cuts in the bill, was boosted to $50 billion, up from $25 billion. A provision to ban solar leasing for clean energy tax credits was stripped out, as was anexcise taxon wind and solar projects. Conservatives' aggressive push to slash federal funding for Medicaid expansion states ultimately did not make it in the final bill. The bill includes an extension of Trump's 2017 tax cuts and provisions to temporarily eliminate taxes on tips and overtime pay. It includes a surge of new funding for the military and Trump's immigration enforcement and mass deportation plans. It aims to pay for some of that with hundreds of billions of dollars in cuts to Medicaid, SNAP and clean energy funding. And it would raise the debt ceiling by $5 trillion. To pass their bill, Republicans voted along party lines to set an aggressive new precedent that will have a lasting impact on the Senate. They used a trick known as "current policy baseline"to obscure the cost of extending 2017 tax cuts, essentially lowering the sticker price by $3.8 trillion. That tactic, backed by all 53 Republicans, hasn't been used in the filibuster-proof process before, and it weakens the Senate's 60-vote threshold. "This is the nuclear option," said Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., warning that it will "cut both ways" when the majority flips. Before the final revisions, the Senate bill had been projected to increase the national debt by $3.3 trillion over a decade, according to the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office, which said it would reduce revenues by $4.5 trillion and cut spending by $1.2 trillion. In addition, 11.8 million people are projected to lose their health insurance by 2034 if it becomes law, the CBO said. The Senate's "vote-a-rama" session, in which members can offer an unlimited number of amendments to the legislation they are debating, dragged through the night into Tuesday morning. In total, senators cast votes on more than 45 amendments — a record. One of the more notable was a lopsided 99-1 vote to kill a provision — written by Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, the chair of the Commerce Committee — to establish a 10-year moratorium on state and local artificial intelligence regulations. GOP governors objected to the proposal, and Sen. Marsha Blackburn, R-Tenn., backed out of a compromise deal with Cruz on a five-year temporary ban on the regulations. Democrats, meanwhile, used the vote-a-rama to force a bevy of messaging votes to highlight how Republicans were protecting the superwealthy. They introduced four motions to let the 2017 tax cuts expire for people making $10 million, $100 million, $500 million and $1 billion a year, each of which failed by voice vote. "Americans will pay the price of this perfidy for generations," Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., told reporters after Tuesday's vote. "Republicans are taking away your health care to give a tax break to billionaires." Senators struggled to keep themselves occupied during the all-night session. Republicans noshed on pizza in their cloakroom just off the floor. Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, read a book on his Kindle. Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, did a Trump impression to GOP colleagues as he discussed Elon Musk'ssocial media postsbashing the bill. In the frigid chamber, Sen. Shelley Moore Capito, R-W.Va., wrapped herself in a blanket embroidered with the words "Wild Wonderful West Virginia." And Sen. Markwayne Mullin, R-Okla., recordedsocial media videosaround the Capitol of things youwon't seeon a normal tour. The legislation faces hurdles in the House, where Republicans can similarly spare only three votes. An earlier versionpassed by one vote, and the Senate changes have drawn criticism from some GOP lawmakers. They include the hard-right House Freedom Caucus, which is rebelling against the lack of spending cuts to pay for the bill. Rep. Nick LaLota, R-N.Y., came out against the scaled-back state and local tax (SALT) deduction cap in the bill, which would increase the limit to $40,000 for five years, then cut it back to $10,000. And Rep. David Valadao, R-Calif., who represents a swing district, slammed the Senate bill's more aggressive Medicaid funding cuts. "I've been clear from the start that I will not support a final reconciliation bill that makes harmful cuts to Medicaid, puts critical funding at risk, or threatens the stability of healthcare providers across CA-22," Valadaowrote on Xover the weekend. In aTruth Social post, Trump urged the House GOP to "ignores its occasional 'GRANDSTANDERS' (You know who you are!)" and pass the bill. "To my GOP friends in the House: Stay UNITED, have fun, and Vote "YAY." GOD BLESS YOU ALL!" he wrote.

Senate Republicans narrowly pass Trump megabill after marathon voting session

Senate Republicans narrowly pass Trump megabill after marathon voting session WASHINGTON — The Republican-controlled Senate narrowly passed ...
Trump says he won't extend July 9 trade deadline, expresses doubt on Japan dealNew Foto - Trump says he won't extend July 9 trade deadline, expresses doubt on Japan deal

WASHINGTON (Reuters) -President Donald Trump said on Tuesday he was not thinking of extending the July 9 deadline for countries to negotiate trade deals with the U.S., and continued to express doubt that an agreement could be reached with Japan. "We've dealt with Japan. I'm not sure we're going to make a deal. I doubt it," Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One as he returned to Washington from a trip to Florida. Trump suggested he could impose a tariff of "30% or 35% or whatever the number is that we determine" on imports from Japan - well above the 24% tariff rate he announced on April 2 and then later paused. (Reporting by Andrea Shalal)

Trump says he won't extend July 9 trade deadline, expresses doubt on Japan deal

Trump says he won't extend July 9 trade deadline, expresses doubt on Japan deal WASHINGTON (Reuters) -President Donald Trump said on Tue...

 

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