MLB players union elects Bruce Meyer as interim executive director

One day afterTony Clark's surprise resignation amid a reported inappropriate relationshipwith his sister-in-law, the Major League Baseball Players Associationelected Bruce Meyer as its interim executive director, the union announced Wednesday.

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The vote was reportedly unanimous for Meyer, who was previously serving as deputy executive director. Matt Nussbaum, the union's general counsel, was promoted to interim deputy executive director.

Meyer was the natural choice, as Clark's No. 2 and the union's lead negotiator with MLB.He spoke earlier Wednesday about the importance of the union remaining united in the wake of Clark's ouster.

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According to ESPN's Passan, Clark resigned on the heels ofan internal investigation that revealed an inappropriate relationship with his sister-in-law, who worked for the union beginning in 2023. The union held an emergency meeting Tuesday afternoon but did not vote on an executive director until Wednesday.

The news comes less than 10 months before the current CBA is set to expire on Dec. 1. The union and MLB owners are expected to engage in a furious labor battle ahead of a new CBA, which many expect could lead to a lockout extending into the 2027 MLB season. There is speculation that the owners will push hard for a salary cap, something the players have opposed for years.

Meyer joined the MLBPA in 2018 and played a central role in the previous CBA negotiation as well as the 2020 agreement to play baseball amid the COVID-19 pandemic. This election confirms he'll be at the table for the upcoming negotiation.

Clark also played a role in helping negotiate previous CBAs for the players. He reportedly took an active part in negotiations as a player before being hired by the MLBPA in 2010. He was initially a director of player relations before he was hired as the union's executive director in 2013. He oversaw negotiations ahead of the 2016 CBA and the contentious 2022 lockout, which resulted in Opening Day being postponed by a week as negotiations extended into March.

MLB players union elects Bruce Meyer as interim executive director

One day afterTony Clark's surprise resignation amid a reported inappropriate relationshipwith his sister-in-law,...
Jadin O'Brien's path: A track star gets a message, and winds up part of the US Olympic bobsled team

CORTINA D'AMPEZZO, Italy (AP) — Jadin O'Brien thought she was being scammed.

Associated Press United States' Elana Meyers Taylor, right, and her pusher Jadin O'Brien start for a two women bobsled training sessionat the 2026 Winter Olympics, in Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy, Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026. (AP Photo/Aijaz Rahi) United States' Elana Meyers Taylor, right, and her pusher Jadin O'Brien prepare to start for a two women bobsled training sessionat the 2026 Winter Olympics, in Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy, Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026. (AP Photo/Aijaz Rahi) United States' Elana Meyers Taylor, right, and her pusher Jadin O'Brien prepare to start for a two women bobsled training sessionat the 2026 Winter Olympics, in Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy, Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026. (AP Photo/Aijaz Rahi)

Milan Cortina Olympics Bobsled

TheMilan Cortina Olympics— and the sport ofbobsled, for that matter — were not anywhere near O'Brien's radar a couple years ago, when the Notre Dame track and field star saw that someone sent her a direct message on Instagram. The message was ignored.

Several months later, the same person slid into O'Brien's DMs again. "We would love to have you tryout for bobsled!!!" That was the entirety of the message.

O'Brien, finally, was intrigued. She replied and asked for information. A month and a half later, in mid-August of last year, she drove 12 1/2 hours from Notre Dame to Lake Placid, New York, to see what bobsled was all about.

And now, she's an Olympian.

It is a story perhaps like none other in these Olympics: A rookie, who has raced only twice in her career, is going to compete on the sport's biggest stage with a very real chance of finding her way to the Olympic medal stand. O'Brien will push forOlympic monobob gold medalistElana Meyers Taylor — the person who sent those DMs — on Friday and Saturday in the two-woman competition at Cortina.

"It has really been a roller-coaster of events," O'Brien said. "Everything's happened so fast, but ... I've kind of been conditioned to be able to handle new things very, very fast and then perform despite a lack of experience. So, it has been a whirlwind. I could never have predicted my life would turn out this way, but I'm incredibly grateful and I've loved every second of it."

The Olympics have been on her wish list for a while.

The Winter Olympics, not so much.

How she got here

The 23-year-old O'Brien was a star at Notre Dame — the 2023, 2024 and 2025 national champion in the indoor pentathlon, a five-time All-Atlantic Coast Conference first team pick, a 10-time All-American and a winner of at least a half-dozen All-Academic honors along the way. She was 12th in the Olympic heptathlon trials for the Tokyo Games in 2021 and seventh in the trials for the Paris Games in 2024.

Last summer, she was fifth at the U.S. championships. Two days later, she started training for bobsled. She wound up making that drive to Lake Placid, hit the push track and was pushing with — and in some cases, better than — the team's best in less than two weeks.

A star was born.

"It was insane," Meyers Taylor said. "Not to get too patriotic or whatever, but I think bobsled is one of those traditionally American stories, American dream kind of stories because you can come from nowhere and come in and make an Olympic team. You could come from whatever background and have an opportunity to live your Olympic moment. That's not true in a lot of sports."

Oh, O'Brien has a story. It was not always a fairytale. Far from it, actually.

Around the age of 5, the entire demeanor of a bubbly little girl — whose mother, a track coach, would set up makeshift hurdles in the basement of their Wisconsin home and watch Jadin leap over them with ease, clearly suggesting she had serious track potential — changed. And nobody knew why.

She couldn't run. She couldn't smile. She didn't want to be around other kids. Anxiety took over, her mind often drifted to the darkest possible places such as her own death or the deaths of those around her. Her family, devout believers in their Catholic faith, even enlisted the help of an exorcist from their Archdiocese. It took years to figure out the cause.

In time, she was diagnosed with Pediatric Autoimmune Neuropsychiatric Disorders Associated with Streptococcal Infections — a rare syndrome known as PANDAS. When she was 10, life started to get normal again.

"My story, with everything I've gone through, is one of resilience," O'Brien said. "I know I have the drive and the willpower to do some amazing things, and I try to glorify God while doing it."

There's been a lot of winning over O'Brien's life. But overcoming PANDAS doesn't mean the road has been easy. Her college career was marred by a series of injuries and challenges — badly torn quadricep muscles, hamstring issues, a stress fracture in her leg, a sprained hand (which isn't ideal for someone who needs to throw a shot put in competition), even food poisoning on the eve of an NCAA championship meet.

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And then, last month in St. Moritz, Switzerland, her bobsled career took its first very bad turn.

A bad crash nearly changes everything

O'Brien's first crash came in January, during a training run in St. Moritz. She and Meyers Taylor were a few days away from their World Cup race when their sled toppled. All bobsled crashes are severe, on some level.

This one was worse than most.

The front axle came off the sled, all control was lost and Meyers Taylor and O'Brien were being thrown around like crash test dummies. O'Brien remembers not being able to move for a few moments, wondering if she was critically injured. Her season — her Olympic shot — could have ended right there.

They raced four days later.

O'Brien isn't sure how; her back was still extremely sore, and the back is sort of important for a bobsled push athlete.

"It was not easy getting back on the line to race in St. Moritz after that," O'Brien said. "We were both very, very beat up. I decided to put my body on the line for E because I felt that I had the best chance of getting her a top-10 finish. And I said, 'You know what? Regardless of this helps or hurts me when it comes to Olympic decision-making, who's on the team, I'm not going to let a regret linger in my mind.' And so, I chose to compete."

A week later, the U.S. selection committee met to decide who would race in Cortina. The pilots — Meyers Taylor, Kaillie Humphries Armbruster and Kaysha Love — were all Olympic locks. A pair of push athletes — Jasmine Jones (who'll race with Humphries Armbruster) and Azaria Hill (who'll race with Love) — were pretty much considered to be locks as well. That left three women for one push spot, and O'Brien got the nod.

"I had no idea that I was going to be named to the team. I really didn't," O'Brien said. "And I remember sitting there and just praying, 'Lord, if this is your will, please let it happen.'"

Inside a conference room at an airport hotel in Munich, U.S. bobsled coach Chris Fogt announced the pairings. Humphries Armbruster and Jones were the first duo he revealed. Hill and Love were next. And then he said, "Elana and Jadin."

"My mouth, like, dropped," O'Brien said.

The track star with the U.S. flag on the wall of her apartment in South Bend, Indiana — someone who spent years dreaming of a Summer Games medal — was headed to the Winter Olympics.

The future

Whatever happens this weekend — a medal is absolutely within O'Brien's reach, especially with Meyers Taylorcoming off the monobob gold— the track star expects to go back to track, at some point.

She plans to continue in bobsled as well.

It's amazing how much things have changed for O'Brien in the span of about six months. From answering that DM from Meyers Taylor, to making the Olympic team, to watching her pilot win gold and now getting the chance to compete, it has truly been a whirlwind she never saw coming.

And now, she hopes, it's time to win.

"We have a job to do and so I think once the job is done, once we accomplish what we came here to do, then it'll sink in," O'Brien said. "I'm very much an advocate for not getting carried away with excitement and staying level. Once we finish our job, then I think it'll hit way more than it is now."

AP Winter Olympics:https://apnews.com/hub/milan-cortina-2026-winter-olympics

Jadin O'Brien's path: A track star gets a message, and winds up part of the US Olympic bobsled team

CORTINA D'AMPEZZO, Italy (AP) — Jadin O'Brien thought she was being scammed. Milan Cortina Olympics...
Nearly 60 years ago, Vera Wang was a figure skater not a fashion icon

MILAN –Vera Wangis best known as an iconic fashion designer. But she's at the2026 Winter Olympicsbecause of her love of something else.

USA TODAY Sports

Almost 60 years ago, Wang was at the height of her figure skating career, competing at the 1968 U.S. Figure Skating Championships in junior pairs with partner James Stuart, according to U.S. Figure Skating.

More:Vera Wang predicts US women's figure skating results, hopes Blade Angels skate free

Wang's fashion career began after she let go of her dream of competing in the Olympics, although she has not let go of figure skating.

"That probably is the love of my life, even more than fashion," Wang, who is in her mid-70s, told Brian Boitano of figure skating on the Milan Magic podcast. "I don't get to say that often, but that's the truth."

As a designer, Wang has worked with Olympic gold medalists such as Michelle Kwan, Madison Chock, Nathan Chen and Evan Lysacek.  She speaks with passion not only about the outfits she designed, but also her days as a competitive skater.

Not all of those days were as elegant as her fashion designs, according to Wang.

She shared a recollection of an incident she said took place at the Philadelphia Spectrum when she was practicing for a pairs competition and her partner dropped her onto the rink ice.

"We were going for a kick, cartwheel lift," Wang said. "I was in the air…at about 25 mph, and he tripped going forward. I fell, flew across the ice and landed on my left side, kicked my blade into my rear."

Wang said she was bleeding and blacked out before seeing coaches come on to the ice to get her.

(L-R) ISU President Kim Jae-yeol of South Korea and his wife Lee Seo-hyun, Vera Wang and her daughter Josephine Becker are seen attending the Men's Single Skating - Short Program at the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic games February 10, 2026 in Milan, Italy. (L-R) Josephine Becker, Vera Wang, ISU President Kim Jae-youl and Katarina Witt attend the Women's Single Skating - Short Program on day eleven of the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic games at Milano Ice Skating Arena on February 17, 2026 in Milan, Italy. (L-R) Vera Wang, ISU President Kim Jae-youl and Katarina Witt attend the Women's Single Skating - Short Program on day eleven of the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic games at Milano Ice Skating Arena on February 17, 2026 in Milan, Italy. Josephine Becker, Vera Wang and Katarina Witt attend the Pair Skating - Free Skating on day ten of the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic games at Milano Ice Skating Arena on February 16, 2026 in Milan, Italy. Vera Wang (C) attends the Pair Skating - Free Skating on day ten of the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic games at Milano Ice Skating Arena on February 16, 2026 in Milan, Italy. Josephine Becker and Vera Wang attend the Pair Skating - Free Skating on day ten of the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic games at Milano Ice Skating Arena on February 16, 2026 in Milan, Italy. Terry Lundgren, Vera Wang and her daughter Josephine Becker attend Figure Skating on day four of the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic games at Milano Ice Skating Arena on February 10, 2026 in Milan, Italy. (L-R) ISU President Kim Jae-yeol of South Korea and his wife Lee Seo-hyun, Vera Wang and her daughter Josephine Becker are seen attending the Men's Single Skating - Short Program on day four of the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic games at Milano Ice Skating Arena on February 10, 2026 in Milan, Italy. Lee Seo-hyun, Vera Wang and her daughter Josephine Becker attend Figure Skating on day four of the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic games at Milano Ice Skating Arena on February 10, 2026 in Milan, Italy.

Vera Wang watches figure skating at the 2026 Winter Olympics in Milan

Heart beating as judges watched

Wang also shared memories of her experience with compulsory figures — the figure eights and circles skaters must trace over during competitions.

Under the scrunitizing eyes of judges.

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"On the ice, right around you, and watch you tracing figures on a blade this thin. And you had to create these beautiful shapes on the ice."

Circles. Loops. Counters.

"And you have to go and tiptoe to the center to where you would start your figures," Wang said.

She recalled her heart beating and feeling like she was in a court of law as she was scrutinized by the judges.

She recalled holding up under the glare. For her compulsories, Wang said, she'd won gold medals.

'Wisp of an ice ballerina'

Wang suggested no one alive knows about her skating career because her coaches have passed away. But some of her feats have been documented.

On March 3, 1962, the New York Times published a story that opened as follows:

"Vera Wang, a 12-year-old wisp of an ice ballerina, won the junior ladies singles title in the Middle Atlantic figure skating championships last night. The tiny youngster, whose daily routine includes an hour and fifteen minutes of skating practice before school, triumphed over eleven rivals at the Iceland rink atop Madison Square Garden."

The story also noted Wang was born in New York, the daughter of parents who immigrated from China after World War II. And that she wore a big smile after assuming the lead at those Middle Atlantic figure skating championships in the compulsory school figures.

She and Stuart competed twice at the U.S. Championships, for the final time in Philadelphia in 1968.

"I'm not an Olympian, by I tried to be," Wang said as her interview on the Milan Magic podcast came to a close. "My closing sentence is that I never made it, but my clothes did."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Vera Wang faced figure skating judges before fashion critics

Nearly 60 years ago, Vera Wang was a figure skater not a fashion icon

MILAN –Vera Wangis best known as an iconic fashion designer. But she's at the2026 Winter Olympicsbecause of her love...
Winter Olympics TV schedule today: How to watch every event on Thursday

The 2026 Milano Cortina Winter Olympics are off and running with 16 sports taking over 25 different venues. Here's a look at the TV schedule for Thursday, Feb. 19 and how to watch all the action. The games are exclusively airing across NBC's suite of networks with many events airing live on its streaming service, Peacock, which you cansign up for here.

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USA TODAY Sports has a team of more than a dozen journalists on the ground in Italy to bring you behind the scenes with Team USA and keep you up to date with every medal win, big moment and triumphant finish. Get ourChasing Gold newsletterin your inbox every morning andjoin our WhatsApp channelto get the latest updates right in your texts.

All times Eastern and accurate as of Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026, at 2:02 p.m.

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Feb. 19 Winter Olympics TV Schedule

  • 1:30 AM - ALPINE SKIING (REPLAY) Women's Slalom: Run 1 USA NETWORK

  • 2:00 AM - ALPINE SKIING (REPLAY) (Medal Event) Women's Slalom: Run 2 Final USA NETWORK

  • 2:45 AM - SNOWBOARDING (REPLAY) (Medal Event) Men's Slopestyle Final USA NETWORK

  • 3:50 AM - SKI MOUNTAINEERING (LIVE) Women's, Men's Sprint: Heats USA NETWORK, PEACOCK

  • 5:00 AM - FREESTYLE SKIING (LIVE) (Medal Event) Men's Aerials Final USA NETWORK, PEACOCK

  • 6:55 AM - SKI MOUNTAINEERING (LIVE) (Medal Event) Women's, Men's Sprint: Finals USA NETWORK, PEACOCK

  • 8:20 AM - NORDIC COMBINED (LIVE) (Medal Event) Team Sprint/Large Hill: 2x7.5km USA NETWORK

  • 8:45 AM - FREESTYLE SKIING (REPLAY) Men's Halfpipe Qualification USA NETWORK

  • 10:30 AM - SPEED SKATING (LIVE) (Medal Event) Men's 1500m USA NETWORK, PEACOCK

  • 12:00 PM - FREESTYLE SKIING (REPLAY) (Medal Event) Men's Aerials Final NBC

  • 12:00 PM - ICE HOCKEY (LIVE) Switzerland vs. Sweden (Women's Bronze) USA NETWORK, PEACOCK

  • 12:30 PM - SPEED SKATING (REPLAY) (Medal Event) Men's 1500m NBC

  • 1:00 PM - FIGURE SKATING (LIVE) (Medal Event) Women's Free Skate NBC, PEACOCK

  • 1:10 PM - ICE HOCKEY (LIVE) USA vs. Canada (Women's Gold) USA NETWORK, PEACOCK

  • 4:00 AM - FREESTYLE SKIING (REPLAY) Women's Halfpipe Qualification USA NETWORK

  • 5:00 PM - CURLING: Best of Curling (Feb. 19) CNBC

  • 5:30 PM - NORDIC COMBINED (REPLAY) (Medal Event) Team Sprint/Large Hill: 2x7.5km USA NETWORK

  • 6:30 PM - FREESTYLE SKIING (REPLAY) Men's Halfpipe Qualification USA NETWORK

  • 8:00 PM - PRIMETIME IN MILAN (REPLAY) Figure Skating, Speed Skating, Freestyle Skiing, and more NBC, PEACOCK

  • 8:00 PM - CURLING (REPLAY) Men's semifinal USA NETWORK

  • 9:30 PM - CURLING (REPLAY) Switzerland vs. USA (Women's Round Robin) USA NETWORK,

  • 11:35 PM - OLYMPIC LATE NIGHT (REPLAY) Freestyle Skiing, Ski Mountaineering, and more NBC, PEACOCK

Feb. 19 Winter Olympics Streaming Schedule

Sign up for Peacock here

  • 3:05 AM - CURLING (LIVE) China vs. Germany (Men's Round Robin) PEACOCK

  • 3:05 AM - CURLING (LIVE) Italy vs. Switzerland (Men's Round Robin) PEACOCK

  • 3:05 AM - CURLING (LIVE) Norway vs. Canada (Men's Round Robin) PEACOCK

  • 3:05 AM - CURLING (LIVE) Sweden vs. Czechia (Men's Round Robin) PEACOCK

  • 4:00 AM - NORDIC COMBINED (LIVE) Team Sprint/Large Hill: Large Hill PEACOCK

  • 4:30 AM - FREESTYLE SKIING (LIVE) Men's Halfpipe Qualification PEACOCK

  • 8:00 AM - GOLD ZONE: DAY 13 (LIVE) Digital Exclusive PEACOCK

  • 8:00 AM - BOBSLED (LIVE) Two-Woman Bobsled: Training PEACOCK

  • 8:00 AM - NORDIC COMBINED (LIVE) (Medal Event) Team Sprint/Large Hill: 2x7.5km PEACOCK

  • 8:05 AM - CURLING (LIVE) Canada vs. South Korea (Women's Round Robin) PEACOCK

  • 8:05 AM - CURLING (LIVE) Great Britain vs. Italy (Women's Round Robin) PEACOCK

  • 8:05 AM - CURLING (LIVE) Japan vs. China (Women's Round Robin) PEACOCK

  • 8:05 AM - CURLING (LIVE) Switzerland vs. USA (Women's Round Robin) PEACOCK

  • 8:40 AM - ICE HOCKEY (LIVE) Switzerland vs. Sweden (Women's Bronze) PEACOCK

  • 1:05 PM - CURLING (LIVE) Men's Semifinal PEACOCK

  • 1:05 PM - CURLING (LIVE) Men's Semifinal PEACOCK

  • 1:30 PM - FREESTYLE SKIING (LIVE) Women's Halfpipe Qualification PEACOCK

Meet Team USA 2026:Get to know the athletes behind the games

More 2026 Winter Olympics

See the full Milano Cortina Games schedule

See the 2026 Medal Count Here

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Winter Olympics TV schedule today: How to watch every event on Thursday

Winter Olympics TV schedule today: How to watch every event on Thursday

The 2026 Milano Cortina Winter Olympics are off and running with 16 sports taking over 25 different venues. Here...
Time to get control of court storming before something ugly happens

Hey look, everyone. We're hand-wringing again!

USA TODAY Sports

Those mean coaches and players, fresh offa high-intensity gamewhere their very financial livelihood is dependent, are bullying the poor, misunderstoodclowns from the standsjust trying to post their latest TikTok and chase social cred, that's all.

Or as we like to say in these most wonderful United States, storming the (insert your playing surface).

Here's what I call it: a world of no rules.

Not to mention reckless, dangerous and a false sense of security.

Yet with all of that, and even afteranother dolt from the standsshoved a phone in the face of Nebraska coach Fred Hoiberg seconds after a loss to rival Iowa, and screamed at him; even after Hoiberg tried to knock the phone from said dolt, missed and his swing connected with an Iowa staffer in the handshake line, we refuse to end this nonsense with clear and unambiguous rules.

Save the cash:Kansas State is embarrassing itself not to protect basketball, but help football

Bracketology:Who is rising in latest March Madness predictions

If you storm the court (or field) before players and officials have exited, you'll be arrested and lose ticket privileges forever. Period.

Instead, university presidents have decided to fine each other. The ACC fined North Carolina $50,000 earlier this month when its fansstormed the courtafter beating rival Duke, and the Big Ten will no doubt fine Iowa for its latest breach of rules.

The same North Carolina that is currently fueling its football NIL to the tune of $20 million. That 50K might be a bridge too far, baby.

But as the NCAA (also, collection of university presidents) has shown decade after decade, having rules and enforcing them are two distinctly different things.

This isn't a matter of want, it's a mater of will.

Know why the NFL doesn't have problems with field storming? Because the most successful sport in the history of the planet doesn't put up with it.

There's a police presence, and there are rules. There's no gray area about what happens when you enter the field of play at an NFL stadium.

You'll spend the next few hours in the local lockup, for starters. And just might get a shoulder pad to the solar plexus by one of 100-plus players on the field before the cops toss you in the back of a wagon.

College sports has decided to fine the universities, not the actual perpetrators. College sports has decided to fine each other, and move more fungible money between schools within the conference, instead of targeting the offenders.

I'm shocked, absolutely shocked, something much worse hasn't happened on one of the many court and field stormings. Because the law of averages says it will, and when it does, college sports will do what it does best.

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Feign disbelief, and reactively make sweeping changes at the horror of it all.

Here's a novel idea: Try proactive steps to eliminate the problem. Not a dopey fine, or an announcement over the PA system.

This isn't about the "tradition" of storming the field, or running on the court at a buzzer-beater. This is a few hundred students on the field with phones lifted high, recording for prosperity.

Or Instagram. Whichever comes first.

This isn't about eliminating what makes college sports special, or the purity of college sports over homogenized professional sports. No one is taking away your precious look-at-me moment.

Just making you wait three minutes so players and officials can exit the joint. Hell, we'll throw a countdown clock with a horn into the equation, so everyone can run on the field or floor and get stupid at the same time.

TikTok to your heart's content, everybody.

Or we can keep doing dumb, and the next incident won't be so simple and eventually forgettable.

The next incident might be much closer to what happened three years ago, when Alabama wideout Jermaine Burton took a swing at a coed who ran by and yelled something at him after Tennessee beat the Tide in overtime.

Some player or coach somewhere will directly connect at some point, and when the clown holding the phone hits the deck and is seriously injured, we'll scream and yell about it for weeks, post about it on social media and demand change.

When we knew the answer all along.

There are rules, and there are consequences for those who don't follow rules. Despite what you may have heard, that's not a foreign concept.

Coaches ask players to compete like a pack of wild dogs on the court and field, expending every ounce of energy like you're livelihood depended on it. Because now, in the new era of NIL, it does.

But don't mind clowns with their phones, picking at the fresh wound during your lowest moment of the week or year.

They're just kids, and it's tradition.

There are no rules.

Matt Hayesis the senior national college football writer for USA TODAY Network. Follow him on X at@MattHayesCFB.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:College basketball court stormings don't need to stop, just wait a minute

Time to get control of court storming before something ugly happens

Hey look, everyone. We're hand-wringing again! Those mean coaches and players, fresh offa high-intensity...

 

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