Kyle Busch's NASCAR rival noticed troubling sign on private jet before his death

Kyle Busch wasn't himself before passing, according to Brad Keselowski (Image: Getty)

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Brad Keselowski could tell that Kyle Busch was unwell before the NASCAR legend tragically passed away, and was never able to bury the hatchet with his former rival.

Buschdied at 41 on Thursday, after suffering from a severe case of pneumonia that rapidly progressed into sepsis. Busch was scheduled to race in the Coca-Cola 600 in Charlotte, but the Cup Series event ended up being centered on tributes to the NASCAR icon. Keselowski and Busch shared a heated rivalry over several decades, and they were famously not friends despite mutual respect. Keselowski hoped to one day move past the racing battles, but Busch sadly passed after dealing with illness.

Keselowski revealed that he flew to Dover Motor Speedway with Busch last week, but admitted that the late NASCAR driver wasn't himself. "I was flying to Dover last week with Kyle," Keselowski said. "It was probably more by chance than anything else. Kyle is normally a fairly gregarious person, very outgoing - and he wasn't. He sat down one row behind me and next to me and fell asleep right away and I could tell he wasn't feeling well. "I didn't really think that much of it, to be honest. And that was pretty much the last time I saw him. We were in a race and you get in a race and you don't really see each other. So I saw him on the racetrack." It comes afterBusch's wife made a major confession about their marriage after counseling.

Keselowski also revealed toPeoplehe had "visions" about being with Busch later in his career. Keselowski wondered what it would be like once they were both in the NASCAR Hall of Fame and attending events together, and assumed their rivalry would be a thing of the past.

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"I guess I had visions before his death of... actually, I thought about this multiple times: What's it going to be like when we're both in the Hall of Fame, and we're doing some kind of ceremony together, whatever that might be? Will the hatchet be buried? I think so," he added.

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"And will we actually be able to share a laugh about it? I guess in my mind, I hope so, and now obviously not. The hard part is the closure was supposed to be when we were retired and when we were done racing together, and I don't think that's just for me, by the way.

"I think that's for a lot of people. And to not get that is tough. The loss of Kyle Busch is much greater than how it affects me, and so I don't wish to belittle that."

Keselowski has 70 total NASCAR wins, including 36 in the Cup Series. Busch has 234 victories across NASCAR, with 63 Cup Series victories (9th all-time).

It comes afterBusch's worrying confession to a fan is revealed after he posed for a picture the day before his death.

Kyle Busch's NASCAR rival noticed troubling sign on private jet before his death

Kyle Busch wasn't himself before passing, according to Brad Keselowski (Image: Getty) Brad Keselowski could tell that Kyle Bu...
CBS Under Fire as NFL Fans Demand Boycott

CBSis facing boycott calls after endingStephen Colbert’s late-night showthis week. Some viewers now want fans to avoid CBS sports, thoughNFLsupporters appear to be split on that idea. The backlash quickly spread across social media after Colbert’s final episode aired.

RealityTea CBS Under Fire as NFL Fans Demand Boycott

NFL fans call for the boycott of CBS after Stephen Colbert’s Late Show finale

The controversy started after CBS canceled Stephen Colbert’s late-night program, which reportedly had been losing around $40 million annually. The network’s decision triggered strong reactions online, with celebrities, TV viewers, and some football fans calling for a boycott of CBS programming.

Late-night host Jimmy Kimmel publicly backed the criticism during his own show on ABC. Kimmel told viewers, “On behalf of everyone at our show, we want to say to everyone at your show: It has been a pleasure to work alongside you.” Kimmel then hoped that those who watch his show would also tune in to CBS for the final time. “Don’t ever watch it again,” he said (viaThe Spun).

The calls for a boycott soon moved beyond entertainment. Since CBS broadcasts major sports properties, including NFL games, the NCAA Tournament, and The Masters, some users argued that sports fans should also stop watching the network this fall. One social media user wrote, “Boycott CBS, Paramount, and any Ellison product.” Another added, “Thank you, Stephen Colbert. No reason to watch CBS anymore.”

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One fanwrote, “It’s easy to support the boycott since the only show I watched on CBS was The Late Show (until NFL season starts).” Another user said that they will not watch NFL games broadcast on CBS, adding that they’ll “stick to another network” for the games.

Still, many football viewers admitted the NFL may be too powerful for any real boycott to work. One fan summed up that divide by writing, “I’m down with boycotting CBS… but there is no way on this green Earth I’m giving up the NFL!!”

Originally reported by Rishabh Shandilya onMandatory.

The postCBS Under Fire as NFL Fans Demand Boycottappeared first onReality Tea.

CBS Under Fire as NFL Fans Demand Boycott

CBSis facing boycott calls after endingStephen Colbert’s late-night showthis week. Some viewers now want fans to avoid CBS sports, thou...
Kyziridis in line for Greece debut after first call-up

Hearts winger Alexandros Kyziridis has been rewarded for an impressive debut season at Hearts with a first Greece call-up.

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The 25-year-old contributed six goals and 11 assists in 42 appearances across all competitions for Derek McInnes' side, who were pipped to the league title by Celtic on the final day.

Kyziridis will now aim for an international debut after being included by Greece boss Ivan Jovanovic for friendlies with Sweden and Italy next month.

Kyziridis in line for Greece debut after first call-up

Hearts winger Alexandros Kyziridis has been rewarded for an impressive debut season at Hearts with a first Greece call-up. Advert...
Charles Barkley rails against TV 'clowns' over Victor Wembanyama takes

Charles Barkley did little to hide his frustration with “clowns on TV” who’ve created a narrative that the Oklahoma City Thunder are playing “dirty” against San Antonio Spurs star Victor Wembanyama.

The Mirror Charles Barkley asserted that the Thunder are not playing dirty against Victor Wembanyama

Throughout the Western Conference Finals, fans and pundits alike have argued that theThunder— namely center Isaiah Hartenstein — are bending the rules while guardingWembanyama. Following hishistoric 41-point outburst in Game 1, Oklahoma City defenders have begun grabbing, pushing, and pressuring the Frenchman in an effort to slow him down in the paint.

The physical style of play has largely gone unchecked by the referees, prompting many around the NBA to question the officiating. NBC Sports’ Reggie Miller noted during a broadcast: “[Hartenstein is] using all of his body weight. He’s grabbing him, pushing him, and constantly trying to wear him down.”

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Bill Simmons similarly called out the officials for not blowing the whistle, writing on X: “I thought Hartenstein couldn’t play in this series. But if they’re letting him grab and hit Wemby on every possession, then he should play all 48 minutes.”

On Saturday’s edition of ‘Inside the NBA,’ Barkley couldn’t help but poke fun at the overall discourse surrounding Wembanyama and the Thunder’s defense against him.

“I think we need to all pray for Wemby, because he can’t play too many minutes, they’re gonna kill him out there,” he said.

Once Kenny Smith questioned if his colleague was joking, Barkley replied: “Man I am damn sure joking, because you guys — these people — man they pissing me off. I’m watching the whole game, they ain’t playing dirty.

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Victor Wembanyama drives to the basket

“These are some of the softest fouls I've ever seen in my life. You've got these clowns on TV talking about, 'Oh, they're going to hurt poor Wemby.' I was like, ‘Hurt him? You're kidding, man.’ It drives me crazy watching these shows."

Barkley expressed a similar sentiment following the Thunder’s 122-113 victory over the Spurs in Game 2 of the series, adding: “All of you at home and on TV saying they were too physical with Wemby need to stop. I’ve had kisses harder than those contacts.

“Sure, he was bodying him up, but it wasn’t anything excessive. No hard shots, no dirty fouls. If you think that’s physical, then you’re overreacting.”

Wembanyama, to his credit, is hardly letting the Thunder’s divisive approach throw him off his game.

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In Game 4, the 22-year-old scored a game-high 33 points — eight of which came at the free-throw line — along with eight rebounds, five assists, and three blocks en route to propelling the Spurs to a 103-82 win that tied up the series at two apiece.

Assessing his performance during a postgame press conference, Wembanyama told reporters: “We all have high standards, and I know I have a lot of responsibilities, but I’m here for it.

“Yeah, it was better today. It wasn’t perfect. But, you know, all of us, I’m talking about the whole organization, so we’re going to have to do things that we didn’t sign up for.”

Charles Barkley rails against TV 'clowns' over Victor Wembanyama takes

Charles Barkley did little to hide his frustration with “clowns on TV” who’ve created a narrative that the Oklahoma City Thunder are pl...
Ravens face a difficult rest disadvantage in their 2026 NFL schedule

The NFL released the regular-season schedules for all 32 teams two weeks ago, and one of the biggest topics of discussion among fans, pundits, and experts is the lack of rest for some teams compared to others.

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Rest differential is a real thing, according to NFL analystArif HasanandWarren Sharp.Hasan describes his version as the "sum net rest days vs. opponents across all 17 games." Hasan calculates it by adding up the difference in rest days between each team and its opponent for all games. A high positive number means the team has more recovery and preparation time than the teams it faces.

Sharp uses net rest edge to general rest advantage, and notes the unfavorable historical nature of the 2026 schedule for some teams.

A rest edge in the NFL is the number of extra days a team has to rest and prepare for their game over their opponent.

An example of rest edge: if theDolphinshave a full 7-day bye week ahead of their game vs. the Bills, and the Bills play on Monday Night Football and are on a short week, the Dolphins have a rest edge of +8 days before their game against the Bills. Conversely, the Bills have a rest edge of -8 days.

Based on Hasan's version, only the Steelers,Rams, Colts, Dolphins, Saints, Jets,Raiders,Eagles, and Chargers will play against 2026 opponents on less rest than theRavens.

On the positive end of the schedule spectrum, the NFL team with the highest net rest differential in Hasan's version is theChicago Bearsat +15, a total of 15 extra days compared to their opponents. The Bears, along with theBuffalo Bills(+14) and Dallas Cowboys (+11.5), have the highest net rest differentials in the league since 2002. The Bears, Cowboys, Bills, and 12 other teams won't face a single team off a bye week in 2026.

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Warren Sharp Rest Disparity

In Sharp's version, Baltimore has a -3 in rest differential, with 11 other teams getting less rest.

Warren Sharp Rest Disparity

Baltimore opens the season on September 13 against theIndianapolis Coltsbefore hosting theNew Orleans Saintsin Week 2. One of the most unique games on the schedule arrives in Week 3 when the Ravens face the Dallas Cowboys in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, marking another major international showcase for the franchise.

Baltimore's 2026 slate again looks brutal, featuring matchups against playoff contenders such as the Buffalo Bills, Cincinnati Bengals, Chargers, and Pittsburgh Steelers.

The Ravens close the regular season with two massive AFC North battles against Pittsburgh in Weeks 15 and 18, potentially setting the stage for another dramatic division finish.

This article originally appeared on Ravens Wire:NFL scheduling metrics expose Ravens uphill battle in 2026

Ravens face a difficult rest disadvantage in their 2026 NFL schedule

The NFL released the regular-season schedules for all 32 teams two weeks ago, and one of the biggest topics of discussion among fans, p...
2027 Summer Scouting Report: Chris Peal, CB, Syracuse

The 2027 summer scouting report series rolls on, as we stay in the secondary and feature Syracuse cornerback Chris Peal. Peal originally committed to Georgia, where he would play two seasons sparingly, before transferring to play for the Orange last season.

USA TODAY

What does his summer scouting report look like? Let's talk about it.

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  • Height: 6'1"

  • Weight: 200 lbs

  • Recruiting rank: Four-star recruit, no. 25 cornerback nationally

  • Hometown: Charlotte, North Carolina

  • Games watched: Georgia Tech, Notre Dame, Boston College

Chris Peal might be one of the strongest zone defenders in the 2027 NFL Draft. His natural feel for his assignment, paired with great instincts to collapse on his man, is second to none. Peal is as reliable a tackler as you will find, as seen by his seven tackles against Georgia Tech. Ideal frame for the position with stellar top-end speed. You will rarely see Peal get beaten on the deep ball. Rangy cornerback who jams well in press coverage, but uses his length to disrupt passes.

59 targets in one season? Not bad. Zero interceptions across 59 targets, not ideal. While Peal jams well, he tends to play off a bit too much, allowing his defender to run wild after the catch. Got picked on quite a bit against Notre Dame. Only one season of tape leaves questions about his evaluation as a top cornerback prospect in the class. This season will be huge for Peal if he wants to elevate his stock to being near the top of the group.

This article originally appeared on Vikings Wire:2027 Summer Scouting Report on Syracuse CB Chris Peal

2027 Summer Scouting Report: Chris Peal, CB, Syracuse

The 2027 summer scouting report series rolls on, as we stay in the secondary and feature Syracuse cornerback Chris Peal. Peal originall...
Big Ten stole the SEC's playbook for CFP. That's bad for a 16-team field

TheBig Tenholds the cards, and it’s showing theSECits hand.

USA TODAY

The numbers are 12 or 24.

"We've had zero conversation about 16 (playoff teams)," Big Ten commissioner Tony Petittisaid at the conference’s spring meetings in California.

That’s the line in the sand.

If the SEC wants to expand theCollege Football Playoff, then the number is 24, a number set by Petitti.

Or, the playoff can stay at 12 teams, a format the Big Ten has dominated in its brief existence.

Petitti’s hardball stance amounts to a move ripped from the Greg Sankey playbook.

Big Ten steals SEC's power-move playbook

You’ll remembera few years ago, Sankey held the best cards in playoff expansion talks. The SEC's commissioner wasn’t afraid to use them.

When other conference commissioners supported an eight-team playoff that included six automatic bids for conference champions, Sankey erected a firewall.

Sankey laid out three options:

1. Status quo of a four-team playoff, which the SEC dominated.

2. An eight-team playoff with no automatic bids and only at-large selections.

3. A 12-team playoff that’d include a mix of automatic and at-large bids.

The eight-team playoff, with six AQs, died on the vine because the SEC vehemently opposed it.

After some squabbling, Option 3 emerged as the winner.

Now, the shoe has switched feet, and the Big Ten is setting the terms for the playoff’s size.

The SEC must choose between a format the Big Ten rules (12) or an expansion model the Big Ten suggested (24), instead of the format SEC headquarters prefers (16, including 11 at-large bids).

So much for theSEC-B1G buddy groupthe conferences announced two years ago, in a pledge to team up to solve problems together.

Petitti, a former MLB Network executive, took the reins of the Big Ten in 2023. He swiftly learned college athletics is a get-mine business and no place for friendship bracelets.

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A 24-team College Football Playoff? No thanks

I’m opposed to a 24-team bracket. It would turn an already long playoff into a five-round affair and bulldoze the playoff’s exclusivity, by opening access to 8-4 teams.

Most importantly, it would devalue the greatest regular season in all of sports.

Petitti likes to point to MLB’s playoff expansion — it went from eight to 10 to ultimately 12 teams — as a model for the CFP.

He’s comparing apples to oranges. It’s absurd to compare a sport with a 162-game regular season and a full complement of games each day to a sport with a 12-game regular season that turns each fall Saturday into appointment viewing.

College basketballserves as a better comparisonfor what Petitti attempts to do to college football.

In a rare act of teamwork,Sankey and Petitti helped muscle through March Madness expansion to 76 teams.College basketball’s regular season is low-stakes filler. At 76 teams, a power-conference team might need only to finish barely above .500 to earn tournament selection. The college basketball diehards watch throughout a monthslong regular season, but most folks wander in when March arrives, as the postseason nears.

Hey, that works for college basketball, which is a tournament sport. College football is distinctly not a tournament sport. It’s always been more of a rivalry-Saturday kind of a sport, where every outcome matters.

Will SEC cave to Big Ten demands?

Although I object Petitti’s vision for the playoff, I understand why he’s not motivated to meet in the middle at 16. He’s paid to represent the Big Ten, and a 16-team bracket would be a greater benefit to the SEC, based on recent history.

Plus, a mega-sized playoff like the 24-teamer the Big Ten supports would allow Fox, its media rights partner, a chance at getting a piece of the playoff pie.

ESPN, the SEC’s media partner and CFP rights holder, prefers a playoff of no more than 16.

With Petitti’s line in the sand drawn, next week’s SEC spring meetings will test Sankey’s power and mettle. They’ll also offer a peek at what size playoff the conference’s presidents and chancellors prefer. Those campus administrators are the quiet but powerful brokers in these negotiations, more so than coaches or athletic directors.

Consider the SEC a company where Sankey functions as CEO serving at the pleasure of the presidents and chancellors, who operate as the company’s board of directors.

Georgia president Jere Morehead, an influential voice among the SEC's presidents and chancellors,told The Athletica 24-team playoff would be "a mistake." Morehead added he thinks the SEC's university brass will follow Sankey's guidance.

Can Sankey persuade the SEC’s presidents and chancellors to stay at 12 teams, if 16 isn’t possible? At 12 teams,the SEC doesn't face a playoff access problem. It received more bids to the 12-team bracket in two years than any other conference. Playoff performance has become the SEC’s issue, a problem that’s not inherently solved by expansion.

A 24-team playoff likely would end conference championship games. If Sankey could convince university administrators the SEC championship game is a sacred cash cow worth saving, that might extend the life of the 12-team playoff.

Don’t expect a solution at the SEC meetings, but they’ll be a bellwether of the conference’s latest playoff mood.

The Big Ten discarded the 16-team option. The SEC has six months to decide which card to choose from the Big Ten's hand: 12 or 24.

Blake Toppmeyeris the USA TODAY Network's senior national college football columnist. Email him atBToppmeyer@gannett.comand follow him on X@btoppmeyer.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:SEC's College Football Playoff plans for 16 teams boxed out by Big Ten

Big Ten stole the SEC's playbook for CFP. That's bad for a 16-team field

TheBig Tenholds the cards, and it’s showing theSECits hand. The numbers are 12 or 24. "We've had zero conversation about...
F1 messed up the big race day and it might rain on their Canadian parade

When it feels appropriate, and certainly when it helps their immediate argument,the Smugs among uswill say something along the lines of, “Well, they don’t do it that way in Europe.”

USA TODAY

Ah, Europe, where ice cubes are doled out like gem stones. Where gas is priced in liters in order to lessen the shock of paying 8-plus bucks a gallon to fill that toaster you call a car. Just kidding … it's actuallylitres.

America’s Europhiles, over time, have let their infatuation wander intothe sporting world, and roughly a generation ago, you began hearing cohorts, passersby and maybe even friends (dear Lord!) join conversations about the next morning’s big “football” game (oops …match) in Manchester.

The famed street course at Monaco will not be part of the background Sunday during the biggest race day of the year.

Soon thereafter, their Euro sporting eyes began wandering from the pitches to the paddocks, and you needn’t go far to overhear chatter about that morning’s Formula One race in Germany, England, Spain, etc. Even in the early-Sunday waiting room we call a NASCAR media center, a few of the typists and talkers would gather around a laptop to watch the live feed from Silverstone or Monza.

I never heard any of them say, “We’re better and smarter than you,” but vibes, you know? And this was long before Netflix brought us the hit docuseries — “Drive to Survive” — that made household names of so many current F1 racers, each more handsome than the next, which didn’t hurt the cause.

The whole McLaren, Red Bull, Max and Lewis theatrics were suddenly conversation fodder for some who, five minutes ago, didn’t know a pastrami sub from a Rubens Barrichello.

Suddenly, casual onlookers were new Formula One fans and feeling quite happy with themselves. Some, wearing this new aura as they would an Edinburgh bonnet, took the added pleasure of looking down their noses at North America’s motorsport offerings, particularly NASCAR, of course.

“My oh my, the technology Ferrari and Mercedes are bringing to the grid this season is otherworldly. And just a fortnight ago, I believe we witnessed a pass for the lead …”

Kidding again, of course. It wasn’t a pass. It was anovertaking.

Deep breath, now let’s move along because, as sometimes happens, I say all that to say this: Even your beloved European and British intelligentsia can screw it up.

And while it’s not as big a blunder as some of their historical and even modern doozies, it does make you wonder.

Why did F1 swap the Monaco and Canada dates?

What, exactly, were they thinking when they moved their Monaco Grand Prix off the fourth weekend of May and totally monkey-wrenched the natural flow of this coming Sunday — the Sunday circled by race fans all over, but particularly North America, which has become a humming ATM machine for the F1 movers and shakers.

F1 has a nearly 60-year history in Canada, but its U.S. footprint has come and gone over the decades. It was usually just one visit, often none, then one again, and now THREE — Austin, Miami and, of course, Las Vegas.

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The three races are spread about from early-May (Miami) to mid-late October (Austin) to pre-Thanksgiving weekend (Vegas). Canada was traditionally run the first or second week of June, but has now swapped dates with the gem of F1 playgrounds, Monaco.

Why do this? Unless you included “carbon footprint” and/or “net zero” among your explanations, you haven’t been paying attention to that side of the Atlantic. They’re aiming to streamline the season and keep segments of the schedule relegated, as much as possible, to specific continents. You burn less jet fuel that way.

After Miami in early May, the next scheduled race is now Canada in late May. Back to back in North America fits the new narrative. But no, that uber-conscious F1 crowd didn’t spend the ensuing three weeks hunkered down in a Plattsburgh KOA, turning wrenches under the birch trees by day and swapping Nurburgring war stories by night.

Nope, they went back to Europe. And not by sailboat.

And a few weeks later they loaded the cargo planes again for a return to the New World, before heading home to prep for, yes, the Monaco Grand Prix two weeks later.

Will it rain on our Sunday parade of racing at Indy, Charlotte?

The upshot for us is a truncated day of revs this coming Sunday. For nearly this entire century, and for 20 straight years through last season, Monaco fell on the Sunday morning preceding all thepomp and circumstance of Indianapolis, which eventually would deliver 200 hectic laps before a late-afternoon lull leading into NASCAR’s 600-miler in Charlotte.

F1 has erased the wiggle room this year. Indy’s green flag is 12:45 p.m., F1’s Canadian GP starts at 4, and Charlotte starts turning laps at 6.

If all goes well, Indy will end a little before Canada, which will probably end around 5:30 but certainly no later than 6, given F1’s two-hour time limit. Then it's the Charlotte marathon.

Also, if all goes well, it’ll be a minor climatic miracle. While rain won’t halt an F1 race, it certainly can ruin things on the big ovals at Indy and Charlotte. And by the looks of things, it just might.

On the bright side, if an Indy rain delay bleeds into or completely blankets the Canadian GP time window, hopefully it’ll convince the lords of F1, who have become infatuated with their U.S. attention, to go back to the Monaco-Indy-Charlotte routine.

To assuage a guilty conscience, they can always buy some offsets and plant a few elms.

—Email Ken Willis at ken.willis@news-jrnl.com

This article originally appeared on The Daytona Beach News-Journal:NASCAR, Indy 500 get new Canadian F1 partner for busy Sunday race day

F1 messed up the big race day and it might rain on their Canadian parade

When it feels appropriate, and certainly when it helps their immediate argument,the Smugs among uswill say something along the lines of...
Borthwick delays call on resting Itoje until final England squad announced in June

England’s head coach, Steve Borthwick, has confirmed he may rest some senior players including his captain, Maro Itoje, for all or part of his squad’s summer Nations Championship games. A final decision will not be taken until next month but, barring an injury crisis, it seems probable England will be under fresh leadership on the field for at least one of their July Tests.

The Guardian

Rather than a traditional tour to a single country, the new tournament will require Borthwick and his squad to play internationals on three different continents on successive weekends, starting against South Africa in Johannesburg on 4 July and finishing in Santiago del Estero in Argentina on 18 July.

Related:The Breakdown | Champ’s relegation playoff proved jeopardy resonates more than a closed shop

Sandwiched in between is a fixture against Fiji at Everton’s Hill Dickinson Stadium on 11 July and Borthwick acknowledges he has been having discussions with several players, Itoje included, about how best to manage their schedule to the satisfaction of all parties.

For now, according to Borthwick, the conversation with Itoje is still ongoing with no firm decision to be taken until the summer squad is finalised on 22 June. “Myself and Phil Morrow [England’s head of performance] met with Maro and had a discussion about what’s right for him,” said Borthwick. “This last year has been a big year and a challenging year for a number of different reasons.

“I’ll make decisions when [the time] comes to announce the squad. Maro was in camp yesterday, and, as agreed, went home last night. Ben Spencer also came in yesterday and went home last night. We treat players individually and that’s what was right for those players.”

The best-laid plans could yet need tweaking if second-row injuries start piling up over the season’s closing weeks but it does not require a massive crystal ball to foresee Leicester’s Ollie Chessum leading England in at least one of their July Tests. Back in 2002 England chose to rest most of their key men and went on to win the World Cup the following year; it could easily be that history is partly repeated.

Borthwick, meanwhile, has defended his decision to pick the former South Africa Under-20 centre Benhard Janse van Rensburg, not yet technically available to represent England, totrain with the national squadin Bagshot this week. The Rugby Football Union had to seek special dispensation from World Rugby to pick the 29-year-old, who played 21 minutes as a replacement for South Africa’s Under-20 side back in 2016. Borthwick, however, believes there is nothing wrong with omitting English-reared players like Ollie Lawrence and Max Ojomoh in favour of someone still serving his residency qualification period.

Billy Vunipola has "made peace" with the fact he may never play for England again as he prepares for Montpellier's Challenge Cup Final against Ulster on Friday night.Under Rugby Football Union eligibility rules players who compete outside of the Gallagher PREM are prohibited from playing for the national team. Vunipola's last cap for England came at the 2023 World Cup and he moved to France in the summer of 2024 from Saracens.The 33-year-old said: "I made my decision knowing that was the rule and I made peace with it. I look at someone like your Jack Willis who is on fire at the moment, I know he has been talked about a lot. He is probably a different case to me. I think it could be case-by-case but then you are opening up the floodgates. The rules are the rules, if they decide to change it, they change it but I think there is enough quality in England to be successful and they have been."There has been a lot of discussion around England selection this week after South African-born Benhard Janse van Rensburg, who qualifies through residency, is part of Steve Borthwick's training camp before the Nations Championship. The centre has been selected over players like Ollie Lawrence and Max Ojomoh, something Danny Care has disagreed with.Vunipola also qualified for England through residency but he moved to the country when he was 11. He added: "This is a tough question because I grew up in England. I will be political - it is the rules. He is qualified and he is good enough to be selected. However, I would say there are good players in that position as Care put it. It is not like they are struggling at centre."Vunipola has been watching England as a fan and wishes the team would play with the same "spirit and attitude" they did against France in the Six Nations for every game.He added: "I want them to express themselves and have a bit of freedom to be that team that played against France because that is the English team that I know. I think that would take them forward and make them more successful than they are now."Sarah Rendell

“The players welcomed him and all the new guys into the squad really warmly,” said Borthwick. “The World Rugby eligibility rules are really clear. I think he’s a very good player who has committed to playing his rugby here. He’s been brilliant around the squad and I’m delighted to be able to select him in the squad this week.”

Regardless of who makes the final tour party there is pressure on Borthwick and his squad to bounce back from a below-par Six Nations campaign in which they lost four of their five games. The management have highlighted the need for improved discipline and a better conversion rate in the opposing 22 but otherwise the full findings of the RFU’s post-tournament review have not been divulged.

Borthwick is also looking forward to Courtney Lawes and Joe Marchant being back in the selection frame, with both players set to be available again having opted to return from France. One player who will definitely not be on the field this summer, however, is the Harlequins prop Fin Baxter who has undergone another foot operation and will miss the July Tests.

Borthwick delays call on resting Itoje until final England squad announced in June

England’s head coach, Steve Borthwick, has confirmed he may rest some senior players including his captain, Maro Itoje, for all or part...
Derrick Henry praises rookie Adam Randall's work ethic

One of the biggest advantages for young running backs entering theRavensorganization is the opportunity to learn directly from Derrick Henry every day. And based on Henry's comments during OTA media availability, rookie Adam Randall appears to be making a strong early impression.

USA TODAY

Henry talked about Randall's physical traits, but what stood out most was the praise for the rookie's mentality and approach to work. That's usually the fastest way for young players to earn respect in a veteran locker room.

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The Ravens don't need rookies trying to do too much in May. Coaches mainly want consistency, effort, and a willingness to learn. Speaking to reporters during OTAs, Henry said:

“I think he's a heck of a player, and since he's [arrived] here, he’s just been working, keeping his head down, working each and every day, wanting to learn and just wanting to get better. And that's all you want as a rookie. And I'm always going to be here to help him in any way I can.”

That mentorship could become extremely valuable for Randall moving forward. There may not be a better player for a young running back to learn from than Derrick Henry.

This article originally appeared on Ravens Wire:Derrick Henry on rookie Adam Randall 'He's a heck of a player'

Derrick Henry praises rookie Adam Randall's work ethic

One of the biggest advantages for young running backs entering theRavensorganization is the opportunity to learn directly from Derrick ...
Win probabilities for every Colts game on 2026 NFL schedule

On paper, anyway, theIndianapolis Coltshave one of the easier schedules in football for this 2026 NFL season.

USA TODAY

For starters, theColtswill play just four playoff teams from the 2025 season. Based on their opponents' projected win totals, the Colts' strength of scheduleranks ninthin the NFL.

ESPN's analytics have the Colts with the sixth-easiest schedule in the league.

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However, will that translate to wins? Perhaps not enough, with ESPN's projected win total for the Colts sitting at 8.5.

Mike Clay recentlywent game-by-game, sharing the win-probability projections for the Colts. In only seven of these matchups is the Colts' win probability greater than 50%.

These probabilities also highlight the very difficult start to the season that the Colts face.

Colts' 2026 win probabilities for each game

  • Week 1: vs. Baltimore: 39%

  • Week 2: at Kansas City: 31%

  • Week 3: vs. Houston: 49%

  • Week 4: at Washington (London): 58%

  • Week 5: at Pittsburgh: 40%

  • Week 6: vs. Tennessee: 76%

  • Week 7: at Minnesota: 48%

  • Week 8: at Jacksonville: 38%

  • Week 9: vs. Dallas: 43%

  • Week 10: vs. Miami: 87%

  • Week 11: at Houston: 34%

  • Week 12: vs. New York Giants: 60%

  • Week 13: BYE

  • Week 14: at Philadelphia: 26%

  • Week 15: at Tennessee: 63%

  • Week 16: vs. Cincinnati: 47%

  • Week 17: at Cleveland: 57%

  • Week 18: vs. Jacksonville: 53%

This article originally appeared on Colts Wire:2026 NFL schedule: Colts' game-by-game win probabilities

Win probabilities for every Colts game on 2026 NFL schedule

On paper, anyway, theIndianapolis Coltshave one of the easier schedules in football for this 2026 NFL season. For starters, theCo...
Seahawks-Rams, Packers-Bears, Bills-Broncos highlight NFL's Christmas Day slate in 2026

The NFL has loaded up its Christmas

Yahoo Sports

For the third year in a row, Netflix will be the platform of choice for Christmas Day, with the streaming service airing two high-profile NFL games. The first will be a big matchup between the Green Bay Packers and the Chicago Bears. As a Christmas gift to NFL fans everywhere, Green Bay is heading to Chicago for the second matchup of the season between the division rivals.

The other matchup on Netflix is similarly exciting, with the Buffalo Bills traveling to face the Denver Broncos. It’ll be the first time the two teams meet since the 2026 AFC divisional round, which ended in controversy when a suspected catch by wide receiver Brandin Cooks wasruled an interceptionby Denver. The Broncos ended up winning 33-30 in overtime.

Find NFL tickets on Gametime|More NFL team schedules

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The other game on the holiday will also be a doozy, with the Seattle Seahawks hosting the Los Angeles Rams in a game that will be broadcast on Fox. The Christmas Day special will be the first meeting of the season between the two NFC West rivals; just two weeks later, they’ll meet again in L.A. in a regular-season finale.

Christmas Day falls on a Friday in 2026, giving NFL fans the unusual treat of getting three games on Friday evening. Prime will alsobroadcasta Christmas Eve game, between the Houston Texans and Philadelphia Eagles, as part of its Thursday Night Football slate.

All but one of these teams (the Seahawks) will also play as part ofa busy Thanksgiving weekend. ThePackers will facethe Rams in the first Thanksgiving Eve NFL game; theBears will go on the roadto face the Detroit Lions on Thanksgiving Day, followed by Buffalo hosting the Kansas City Chiefs. Denver will then play the Pittsburgh Steelers on Black Friday.

Play 2026 Soccer Pick 'Em with FOX One and make your picks for the world's biggest soccer tournament

With the NFLreleasing its full scheduleon Thursday, two of the Christmas Day games — the Packers-Bears and Seahawks-Rams matchups — are officially set to besome of the most anticipatedof the entire season. Only 225 more sleeps until Christmas Day.

Seahawks-Rams, Packers-Bears, Bills-Broncos highlight NFL's Christmas Day slate in 2026

The NFL has loaded up its Christmas For the third year in a row, Netflix will be the platform of choice for Christmas Day, with th...
PGA Championship golfer overcomes tough penalty over 60-second mistake

Follow along forcomplete coverage and highlights of the first roundof the PGA Championship.

USA TODAY

Garrick Higgo sat in the scoring tent after his first PGA Championship round in four years was over and made one final plea to tournament officials to rectify the embarrassing mistake he made to start his day.

Higgo, a South African and two-time winner on the PGA Tour, had been penalized two strokes for being late to his first-round tee time on Thursday, May 14 at Aronimink Golf Course.Higgo's group was scheduled to play the first hole at 7:18 a.m. ET. The ESPN broadcast later showed him arriving at the tee box at 7:19 a.m. He eventually carded a par that became a double-bogey 6 on his scorecard once the PGA of America announced the penalty.

"Really inexplicable," said ESPN golf commentator David Duval.

The more remarkable part might be what happened from there. Despite losing two strokes before he ever took one, Higgo finished his first round at this PGA Championship only two shots off the lead when he entered the clubhouse. The experience included Higgo's last-ditch pitch for some leniency under the premise that he was just "one second" late.

LIVE UPDATES:PGA Championship leaderboard, scores, Thursday tee times

"It is a rule and I obviously broke the rule, but it's unfortunate," Higgo told ESPN after signing his scorecard for a 1-under 69. "… One second is tough to define, but I think this should maybe be a minute's grace. There's a bunch of times on Tour we tee off 15 seconds after our tee time, just starters being a little off time or I've definitely had a few times where I've had to say to the starter it's already a minute past our time."

Higgo was on the putting green near the first tee box just before his tee time, but he was not within the area defined as the starting point at his starting time. He was penalized under Rule 5.3a. It defines the starting point as "the rope, gallery stakes, green bike fencing and/or blue stakes, blue dots or blue lines."

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The penalty for violating the rule is disqualification unless a player arrives no more than five minutes late. Higgo was able to begin his first round at the PGA Championship due to that exception.

Higgo said he arrived later than usual to the tee box because the weather was cold for his morning start. He "was trying to stay as warm as possible coming from the range," he said. Higgo also watched as ESPN showed his final practice putt from the putting green and admitted he was "running a little bit" to get to the nearby first hole. Higgo later revealed during a post-round news conference his caddie was yelling for him to come

Before Higgo got to the tee box, a rules official alerted him about the penalty for his tardiness.

"He tells me I got a two-shot penalty straight away. It was a little unnecessary, but it's fine. It is what it is," Higgo said. "My caddie was on the tee box. I had my putter in my hand. Obviously I didn't have my watch on me. I didn't have my phone with me. I'm already in the clouds a little bit as it is, so it just is what it is. I don't know what else to do."

Higgo managed the error well, with two birdies on the front nine and two more over his final five holes. He had just one bogey on his scorecard otherwise.

The 27-year-old left-hander is a two-time PGA Tour winner aftercapturing the Corales Puntacana Championship in April 2025and entered this week ranked No. 85 in the Official World Golf Ranking.

"I think it shows a lot of mental strength the way I kept fighting," Higgo said. "It wasn't going to affect my swing or my putting."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Garrick Higgo overcomes tardiness penalty at PGA Championship

PGA Championship golfer overcomes tough penalty over 60-second mistake

Follow along forcomplete coverage and highlights of the first roundof the PGA Championship. Garrick Higgo sat in the scoring tent ...
All eyes on Wemby for Game 5 of Spurs-Timberwolves series, after his elbow merited Game 4 ejection

SAN ANTONIO (AP) — San Antonio'sVictor Wembanyama is playingin Game 5 of the Spurs' Western Conference semifinal series against the Minnesota Timberwolves, after getting ejected early in Game 4 for throwing an elbow.

Associated Press San Antonio Spurs forward Victor Wembanyama (1), right, scores against Minnesota Timberwolves center Rudy Gobert (27) during the first half of Game 4 of an NBA basketball second-round playoffs series, Sunday, May 10, 2026, in Minneapolis. (AP Photo/Abbie Parr) Minnesota Timberwolves guard Ayo Dosunmu, left, and San Antonio Spurs forward Victor Wembanyama reach for a rebound during the first half of Game 4 of an NBA basketball second-round playoffs series, Sunday, May 10, 2026, in Minneapolis. (AP Photo/Abbie Parr) Minnesota Timberwolves forward Julius Randle (30) shoots over San Antonio Spurs forward Victor Wembanyama, second from right, during the first half of Game 4 of an NBA basketball second-round playoffs series in Minneapolis, Sunday, May 10, 2026. (AP Photo/Abbie Parr) San Antonio Spurs forward Victor Wembanyama (1) reacts after he was ejected for a flagrant foul during the first half of Game 4 of an NBA basketball second-round playoffs series against the Minnesota Timberwolves in Minneapolis, Sunday, May 10, 2026. (AP Photo/Abbie Parr)

Spurs Timberwolves Basketball

The Spurs are obviously relieved about that. And if Wembanyama is angry about missing most of Game 4, then even better, Spurs guard Devin Vassell said Tuesday at shootaround.

“I know he was upset not being able to play that game," Vassell said at a shootaround attended by Spurs President Gregg Popovich, Spurs legend Manu Ginobili and former Spurs assistant Brett Brown, among others. "So, I know that he’s going to be ready to go. That’s what we need. We need that upset Vic who’s ready to attack the game for sure.”

It could be easily argued that Tuesday's game — Game 5, playoff series, tied 2-2, with the winner moving one win from a trip to the Western Conference finals — is the biggest of Wembanyama's NBA career.

Vassell wants to see a fiery Wembanyama — within reason, of course.

“We’ve seen it before. We’ve seen when Vic gets upset," Vassell said. "I mean, we just need him to calm his emotions, make sure that he doesn’t let his emotions take over because at the end of the day like I said, he can’t get any flagrants, he can’t get anything like that. So, Vic knows what he's got to do and he’ll be ready.”

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Wembanyama was ejected from theSpurs-Timberwolves game on Sunday nightbecause of the elbow, which he threw early in the second quarter after getting tangled with Minnesota's Naz Reid and Jaden McDaniels while grabbing a rebound. Wembanyama swung his arms and his elbow struck Reid in the face.

Officials looked at the play and upgraded the foul to a Flagrant 2, which comes with an automatic ejection. The NBA, as it always does in those situations, further reviewed the play after the game and decided Monday that the ejection was sufficient. It could have fined or even suspended Wembanyama for Game 5 and beyond if it felt that was warranted.

“I don’t think we even thought about it much at all," Timberwolves guard Mike Conley Jr. told reporters at Minnesota's shootaround session Tuesday. "I think once the ruling came down, it was just like, we expected that and just moved forward. It's one of those things. We don’t want guys to miss games. We want to play against the best. We don't want to have guys missing games like that."

Wembanyama's elbow isn't the Spurs' biggest issue right now. The ankles and knees of two of his teammates are potentially problematic, however.

The Spurs added Dylan Harper to their injury list a few hours before Game 5 on Thursday with left knee soreness. He's listed as questionable, as is point guard De'Aaron Fox — who is dealing with what the Spurs described as right ankle soreness.

AP NBA:https://apnews.com/hub/NBA

All eyes on Wemby for Game 5 of Spurs-Timberwolves series, after his elbow merited Game 4 ejection

SAN ANTONIO (AP) — San Antonio'sVictor Wembanyama is playingin Game 5 of the Spurs' Western Conference semifinal series against...
Predicting the Baltimore Ravens prime-time games in 2026

Jesse Minter will experience several firsts in Year 1 as head coach, and he's days away from his first exciting NFL schedule reveal.Baltimore's 2026 opponentsare set. Their schedule will be one of the league's most demanding. They will face the gauntlet of juggernauts in the NFC South and AFC South and the second-place finishers in the AFC West, NFC East, and AFC East.

USA TODAY

The official schedule, including dates and times, will be revealed on Thursday night, and we're predicting who theRavenswill face in primetime.

Home Opponents

Lamar Jackson #8 of the Baltimore Ravens in action during the game against the Cincinnati Bengals at M&T Bank Stadium on November 27, 2025 in Baltimore, Maryland.

Cincinnati Bengals,Cleveland Browns, Pittsburgh Steelers,Jacksonville Jaguars,Tennessee Titans,New Orleans Saints,Tampa Bay Buccaneers, and the Los Angeles Chargers.

Away Opponents

Cincinnati Bengals, Cleveland Browns, Pittsburgh Steelers, Atlanta Falcons,Indianapolis Colts,Houston Texans,Carolina Panthers,Buffalo Bills, Dallas Cowboys.

Predicting the Prime Time matchups:

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1. vs. Steelers

The AFC North is defined by this matchup, and Baltimore and Pittsburgh will certainly play a primetime game.

2. @ Bengals

Joe Burrow has complained about primetime matchups against the Ravens and could get the NFL to bless the explosive Bengals with a night game at home.

3. @ Cowboys

Jerry Jones has the NFL's most popular team, and a Monday night matchup at home against Lamar Jackson would feel like a family for years.

4. @ Bills

Josh Allen and Lamar Jackson have a special rivalry, and a game at the new state-of-the-art stadium would be magical.

5. vs. Chargers

While it's no longer the Harbaugh Bowl, Jesse Minter was Jim Harbaugh's defensive coordinator, and there are plenty of key storylines to watch.

This article originally appeared on Ravens Wire:Baltimore Ravens expected to land major primetime spotlight in 2026

Predicting the Baltimore Ravens prime-time games in 2026

Jesse Minter will experience several firsts in Year 1 as head coach, and he's days away from his first exciting NFL schedule reveal...
Best photos of IndyCar, NASCAR driver Katherine Legge

Katherine Legge is an IndyCar Series driver and a NASCAR driver. On the Sunday of Memorial Day weekend, she will attempt to be both. Legge is going to try and race in both the Indianapolis 500 and Coca-Cola 600.

USA TODAY

Legge will be the first woman to try and drive the 1,100 miles in one day. Five drivers have ever attempted to run both the Indy 500 and the Coca-Cola 600 on the same day. Legge will join John Andretti, Robby Gordon, Tony Stewart, Kurt Busch and Kyle Larson on the list of drivers who have tried “The Double.”

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“It’s an exciting time,”Legge told USA TODAY Sports.“It’s another groundbreaking thing that I can showcase to the world really that, if you set your mind to things, you can do anything, and you can do things that maybe you never even dreamt of before.”

Legge will drive the No. 11 Chevrolet in the Indy 500, then fly to Charlotte and get behind the wheel of the No. 78 Chevrolet.

Katherine Legge

Katherine Legge

Katherine Legge

Katherine Legge

Katherine Legge

Katherine Legge

Katherine Legge

Katherine Legge

Katherine Legge

IndyCar Series driver Katherine Legge during Carb Day final practice for the Indianapolis 500 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.

Katherine Legge

Dale Coyne Racing with RWR driver Katherine Legge (51) takes off her helmet.

Katherine Legge

IndyCar Series driver Katherine Legge during the Indianapolis 500 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.

Katherine Legge

The Panoz DeltaWing Racing DWC13 driven by Katherine Legge, Sean Rayhall, Andy Meyrick and Andreas Wirth (0) during the Rolex 24 at Daytona International Speedway.

Katherine Legge

Katherine Legge, driver of the #32 e.l.f. Cosmetics Chevrolet, waits on the grid during practice for the NASCAR Xfinity Series Tennessee Lottery 250 at Nashville Superspeedway on May 31, 2025 in Lebanon, Tennessee.

Katherine Legge

Billie Jean King and Katherine Legge attend a celebration of tennis legend Billie Jean King's star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame hosted by PEOPLE + e.l.f. Cosmetics at The Aster on April 07, 2025 in Los Angeles, California.

Katherine Legge

Katherine Legge, driver of the #78 e.l.f. Chevrolet, waves to fans as he walks onstage during driver intros prior to the NASCAR Cup Series Go Bowling at The Glen at Watkins Glen International on May 10, 2026.

Katherine Legge

Katherine Legge, driver of the #78 e.l.f. Cosmetics Chevrolet, drives during qualifying for the NASCAR Cup Series Viva Mexico 250 at Autodromo Hermanos Rodriguez.

This article originally appeared on The List Wire:Katherine Legge attempting Indy 500, Coca-600 double

Best photos of IndyCar, NASCAR driver Katherine Legge

Katherine Legge is an IndyCar Series driver and a NASCAR driver. On the Sunday of Memorial Day weekend, she will attempt to be both. Le...

 

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