New Photo - Caitlin Clark visibly emotional after leaving Indiana Fever win over Connecticut Sun with injury

Caitlin Clark visibly emotional after leaving Indiana Fever win over Connecticut Sun with injury Matias Grez, CNNJuly 16, 2025 at 5:30 PM Caitlin Clark was forced to sit out in the final minute after suffering an apparent groin injury.

- - - Caitlin Clark visibly emotional after leaving Indiana Fever win over Connecticut Sun with injury

Matias Grez, CNNJuly 16, 2025 at 5:30 PM

Caitlin Clark was forced to sit out in the final minute after suffering an apparent groin injury. - David Butler II/Imagn Images/Reuters

Caitlin Clark was visibly emotional after leaving the court with another injury inside the final minute of the Indiana Fever's 85-77 win over the Connecticut Sun on Tuesday.

In only her fourth game back following a five-game absence due to a groin injury, the 23-year-old appeared to suffer a similar issue again.

After providing Kelsey Mitchell with a bounce pass assist for an easy layup, Clark began walking gingerly back up the court while holding the inside of her right leg, before hitting her head against the cushioned back stanchion of the basket in frustration.

Clark appeared to be holding back tears as she made her way to the bench, covering her head with a towel.

Fever head coach Stephanie White told reporters after the game that Clark "just felt a little something in her groin."

"We'll get it evaluated and see what happens from there," she added.

Clark's previous absence was due to a left groin injury, and it appeared to be the right side that was bothering her on Tuesday.

Clark was holding the inside of her right leg after making a bounce pass. - David Butler II/Imagn Images/Reuters

Before this season, Clark had never missed a game in her college or WNBA career but has now sat out a total of 10 games already this season – nine regular season contests and the Commissioner's Cup final.

It was a tough shooting night for Clark, who finished with 14 points on 4-of-14 shooting, including going 1-of-7 from three. But she scored nine of her 14 in the fourth quarter to help the Fever close out the game, while also finishing with eight rebounds and seven assists.

The Fever have now won three straight to improve to 12-10 but are 5-5 without Clark this season – including the Commissioner's Cup final – with the second leg of a back-to-back coming against the New York Liberty on Wednesday.

Clark is averaging 16.5 points, 5.0 rebounds, 8.8 assists and 1.6 steals per game this season.

The 2024 Rookie of the Year has also been named a captain for Saturday's All-Star Game, while earlier on Tuesday it was announced she would take part in Friday's three-point contest, though it remains to be seen if this latest injury scare will keep her out of both events.

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Caitlin Clark visibly emotional after leaving Indiana Fever win over Connecticut Sun with injury

Caitlin Clark visibly emotional after leaving Indiana Fever win over Connecticut Sun with injury Matias Grez, CNNJuly ...
New Photo - NFL standoff: Why 30 of 32 second-round picks remain unsigned

NFL standoff: Why 30 of 32 secondround picks remain unsigned Jeff EisenbergJuly 17, 2025 at 2:37 AM Shortly after this year's NFL Draft, the Houston Texans signed secondround pick Jayden Higgins to a rookie contract.

- - - NFL standoff: Why 30 of 32 second-round picks remain unsigned

Jeff EisenbergJuly 17, 2025 at 2:37 AM

Shortly after this year's NFL Draft, the Houston Texans signed second-round pick Jayden Higgins to a rookie contract.

It was the kind of routine move that ordinarily might go unnoticed, except in this case it came with a twist that few around the league saw coming.

The Texans awarded Higgins a fully guaranteed contract, the first-ever for an NFL draft pick selected in the second round or later. The former Iowa State wide receiver will bank $11.7 million over the next four years even if he sustains a career-threatening injury or the Texans sour on him and release him.

Higgins' historic contract has triggered a league-wide standoff. Agents for other second-round picks are pushing for fully guaranteed deals — or at least for more guaranteed money than previous players in their draft slot have secured. NFL teams have been reluctant to set an unfavorable precedent by making such concessions.

As rookies begin to report to NFL training camps this week, 30 of the 32 players taken in the second round in April remain unsigned. One exception is Higgins, the second pick in the second round. The other is Carson Schwesinger, the player selected one spot ahead of him. Perhaps aware that their leverage had eroded, the Cleveland Browns gave Schwesinger a fully guaranteed rookie contract the day after Higgins signed his deal.

The question now is whether the prized second-round picks selected after Schwesinger and Higgins will have the stomach to stand united and fight for similar deals.

Los Angeles Chargers' second-round pick Tre Harris became the first training camp absentee earlier this week when he did not report with the rest of the team's rookies. An NFLPA spokesperson told Yahoo Sports that the union is "monitoring this situation closely" in hopes that the players selected in the second round can take advantage of a rare opportunity to overturn a long-established precedent.

"We work alongside the players and their agents to help them secure the best deal possible, while acknowledging that our members can organize as they see fit for the collective benefit of their financial futures," the NFLPA spokesperson said.

Rookie holdouts were once an annual staple of the buildup to the NFL regular season. In 2007, No. 1 overall pick JaMarcus Russell did not sign until early September when the Raiders caved to his demands by offering a six-year, $68 million contract. That holdout was brief compared to a 2009 standoff between receiver Michael Crabtree and the San Francisco 49ers that stretched four games into the regular season. Or a 2002 impasse between Bryant McKinnie and the Minnesota Vikings that lasted into November.

Sagas like those became far more rare 14 years ago when the NFL grew tired of unproven draft picks earning salaries that rivaled those of perennial all-pros. The 2011 collective bargaining agreement introduced a rookie wage scale that established a hard ceiling for rookie contracts and rigid financial guidelines for each draft slot. All rookie contracts are four years in length, though teams have the right to exercise an option after the third year of the deal to add a fifth year for first-round picks.

How much guaranteed money a draft pick receives is one of the few remaining negotiable terms in NFL rookie contracts. It wasn't until 2022 that every first-round pick managed to negotiate a fully guaranteed contract. Last year, second-round guarantees ranged from 95.7% for No. 33 overall pick Keon Coleman of the Buffalo Bills to 52.4% for No. 64 overall pick Renardo Green of the San Francisco 49ers.

The last 2024 second-round pick to secure any guaranteed money in the fourth year of his rookie deal was cornerback Max Melton of the Arizona Cardinals. The 43rd pick in the 2024 draft would still receive $50,000 from the Cardinals in 2027 even if the team opts to release him before then.

Tyler Shough is expected to compete for the starting quarterback job in New Orleans, and yet he remains one of 30 second-round picks still unsigned. (Derick E. Hingle/Getty Images) (Derick E. Hingle via Getty Images)

Last year, all second-round picks signed in time for training camp. This year, all second-round picks participated in OTAs and minicamps, but it remains to be seen how many will show up to training camps — every team will have begun camp by July 23 — without a signed contract.

Two key figures in the standoff could be quarterback Tyler Shough of the New Orleans Saints and running back Quinshon Judkins of the Cleveland Browns. Shough, the No. 40 overall pick in this year's draft, is the Saints' potential starting quarterback as a rookie, giving him ample leverage to fight for a fully guaranteed deal. Judkins, the No. 36 pick in this year's draft, was arrested Saturday on a domestic violence charge, reducing his bargaining power in contract negotiations with the Browns.

While the money at stake isn't especially high for NFL teams worth billions of dollars, the consequences for current and future second-round picks are significant. The average career length for an NFL player is barely three years. Even second-round picks can't count on sticking with their original team for the entirety of their four-year rookie contracts.

Overthecap.com studied how long second-round picks drafted from 2015-2022 remained with the team that selected them. Nearly 97% lasted at least two seasons with their original team, but only about 84% stuck around three-plus seasons and only about 62% made it through four or more. Those numbers show why fully guaranteed money in the third and fourth year of rookie deals is a point of contention for second-round picks seeking greater financial security and NFL teams hesitant to give away money.

Whereas NFL veterans who hold out for a new deal are subject to fines for every day of training camp that they miss, rookies actually have more leverage. NFL teams can't punish them the same way because they haven't signed a contract. Plus, the importance of training camp and preseason games is greater for rookies who need time to adjust to the NFL, meaning teams have extra motivation to get would-be contributors into camp as soon as possible.

What happens next? A lot could depend on negotiations between Shough and the Saints.

If the Saints want to avoid their potential Week 1 starting quarterback arriving late to training camp and missing valuable preseason reps, then they might need to fully guarantee his rookie contract. That could give everyone drafted before pick No. 40 further opportunity to demand the same, while those selected after Shough would likely benefit from a cascading guarantee rate.

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NFL standoff: Why 30 of 32 second-round picks remain unsigned

NFL standoff: Why 30 of 32 secondround picks remain unsigned Jeff EisenbergJuly 17, 2025 at 2:37 AM Shortly after this...
New Photo - Golf's major season ends too soon

Golf's major season ends too soon Jay BusbeeJuly 16, 2025 at 9:47 PM There's nothing quite like the Open Championship — or the British Open, if you're Americacentric — on the golf calendar.

- - - Golf's major season ends too soon

Jay BusbeeJuly 16, 2025 at 9:47 PM

There's nothing quite like the Open Championship — or the British Open, if you're America-centric — on the golf calendar. It's a weeklong exercise in coffee golf, awakening in the small hours of the morning (or staying up late, if you're on the West Coast) to watch the world's best fight through howling wind, sideways rain and brown British food while you sprawl out on the couch half-awake. It's glorious, and the only downside is that it marks the end of major-championship golf for almost nine full months.

One hundred and one days. That's it. That's how long it will be from the moment that Jack Nicklaus hit his ceremonial tee shot to begin this year's Masters to the moment the final putt drops on Sunday to herald the end of the Open Championship. One hundred and one days. Fourteen weeks. Barely three months. Doesn't seem quite right, does it?

Golf's major season is a flurry of some of the finest drama and narrative the sports world can conjure — the majesty of the Masters, the chaos of the PGA Championship, the brawn of the U.S. Open, the elegance of the Open Championship — that vanishes just as you've settled into its rhythms.

In baseball, 101 days from Opening Day doesn't even get you to the All-Star break. In the NFL, the 101st day after this year's initial regular-season game falls the day before Week 15. It's not a perfect juxtaposition, since golf does have other events outside of the majors, of course. The Ryder Cup every two years, the Olympics every four years, the Players and FedEx Cup playoffs every year — each has its merits, each is memorable in its own way, but none of them quite match up to the majors on the scale of historic weight.

Golf's most apples-to-apples comparison is with tennis, which — coincidentally enough — also has four majors: Wimbledon, plus the Australian, French and U.S. Opens. (The golf equivalents: Australian Open = PGA Championship, French Open = Open Championship, Wimbledon = The Masters, U.S. Open = U.S. Open.) However, unlike golf, tennis' Grand Slam events stretch over eight months, from mid-January to September.

The majors' compact schedule means it's difficult to appreciate the historical resonance of a career-defining win. Players don't get a Super Bowl champion parade; they get on a plane and head to their next tournament. Days after he won the U.S. Open, J.J. Spaun played in the Travelers Championship. (He finished T14.) Rory McIlroy took a couple weeks off but still seems shellshocked in the wake of his seismic Masters win. In the months since his PGA win, Scottie Scheffler has … placed in the top seven of every tournament he's played, winning one. OK, bad example there.

The point is, golf's calendar doesn't allow much of a slow build of anticipation. It's the sports equivalent of bingeing all episodes of a TV show at once … and then waiting through a long, cold winter for the next go-round. The tennis model would be nice, allowing for golf to extend its major season from winter all the way through late summer, from an American perspective. Nice, but also unrealistic.

The problem is, there's not really much of an option to alter the golf calendar without doing something truly drastic — or, alternately, pushing around the PGA Championship. Granted, it's been done before; over the course of its 107 contests, the PGA has been played in nine different months — February, May, June, July, August, September, October, November and December.

But thanks to football's massive footprint and block-out-the-sun shadow, those last four months are off the table. The Masters owns April. The U.S. and British Opens have claimed June and July. The PGA moved from August back in 2019 because May is far more hospitable for far more courses than August, and because the PGA got tired of relocating for the Olympics every few years.

A move back to February, combined with something exotic — match play, perhaps? — is interesting to contemplate, but the longest of long shots to consider. Alternately, the PGA could move back to August and potentially go international … but again, that requires the PGA to shoulder the burden of extending golf's calendar while the other three majors sit comfortably ensconced in their long-claimed months.

So the reality is, now and for the foreseeable future, we have just four days of major championship golf remaining in the season. Yes, the Ryder Cup and the playoffs await, but there's just one more chance this year for a player to claim, or cement, his legacy. Put the coffee on, you won't want to miss this one … because it's a long time until the azaleas bloom again.

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Golf's major season ends too soon

Golf's major season ends too soon Jay BusbeeJuly 16, 2025 at 9:47 PM There's nothing quite like the Open Champ...
New Photo - Bill Belichick refutes Patriots owner Robert Kraft's assertion that it was a 'big risk' to hire coach

Bill Belichick refutes Patriots owner Robert Kraft's assertion that it was a 'big risk' to hire coach Chris CwikJuly 16, 2025 at 11:27 PM For 24 years, Bill Belichick and New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft had a fruitful relationship.

- - - Bill Belichick refutes Patriots owner Robert Kraft's assertion that it was a 'big risk' to hire coach

Chris CwikJuly 16, 2025 at 11:27 PM

For 24 years, Bill Belichick and New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft had a fruitful relationship. Everything seemed rosy in New England when Belichick led the team to six Super Bowl titles.

But following Belichick's firing after the 2023 NFL season, the relationship between Belichick and Kraft has experienced quite a few ups and downs.

The latest development on that front came Wednesday, as Belichick felt compelled to respond to a statement made by Kraft while he appeared on a podcast with Julian Edelman and Rob Gronkowski.

During an appearance on the "Dudes on Dudes" podcast, Kraft was asked about his best move as Patriots owner. He said it was hiring Belichick, which was considered a "big risk" at the time.

"Getting Bill Belichick to come to the Patriots," Kraft said. "I gave up a No. 1 draft pick [for a] coach who had only won a little over 40 percent of his games in 1999. It was a big risk and I got hammered in the Boston media, but I think we did OK."

That apparently didn't sit well with Belichick, who told ESPN's Don Van Natta Jr. on Wednesday that it was actually the coach who assumed the risks when he decided to go to the Patriots.

"As I told Robert multiple times through the years, I took a big risk by taking the New England Patriots head coaching job," Belichick told ESPN in response to questions. "I already had an opportunity to be the head coach of the New York Jets, but the ownership situation was unstable."

Belichick was hired by the Patriots a day after accepting a head coaching job with the New York Jets. As Belichick told Van Natta, the Jets' ownership situation was uncertain after previous owner Leon Hess died in 1999. The team was managed by his estate between 1999 and 2000 before Woody Johnson purchased it.

Prior to joining the Patriots, Belichick said he was "warned" by previous Patriots coaches that things would need to change in New England if the team wanted to win.

"I had been warned by multiple previous Patriots coaches, as well as other members of other NFL organizations and the media, that the New England job was going to come with many internal obstacles," Belichick said. "I made it clear that we would have to change the way the team was managed to regain the previously attained success."

Belichick was essentially given full control of the Patriots' roster, and it resulted in an unprecedented run of success. He put up a 302-165 record with the Patriots, winning six Super Bowls and cementing himself as one of the greatest coaches of all time.

After going 4-13 in 2023, Belichick was fired by the team. He spent the 2024 NFL season out of a job before joining the North Carolina Tar Heels for the 2025 season.

Belichick hasn't coached a single game with North Carolina yet, but has already made headlines thanks to his relationship with girlfriend Jordon Hudson.

Since leaving the Patriots, Belichick and Kraft's relationship has come under scrutiny. The two have appeared friendly with each other publicly, but it would appear there's some animosity over how things ended. Notably, the coach's new book, "The Art of Winning," does not mention Kraft. He's not even listed in the acknowledgements.

Wednesday's comments offer more proof that Belichick still harbors some friction over the situation, or at least believes he deserves more credit for turning the Patriots into one of the NFL's premier franchises.

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Bill Belichick refutes Patriots owner Robert Kraft's assertion that it was a 'big risk' to hire coach

Bill Belichick refutes Patriots owner Robert Kraft's assertion that it was a 'big risk' to hire coach Chri...
New Photo - MLB All-Star winners and losers: Dramatic mini HR derby spices up festivities

MLB AllStar winners and losers: Dramatic mini HR derby spices up festivities Gabe Lacques, USA TODAY July 16, 2025 at 4:09 PM ATLANTA – If you're the sort who enjoys plotting the demise of baseball – and, in a grander sense, Western Civilization – then it all was neatly summed up by one moment in th...

- - - MLB All-Star winners and losers: Dramatic mini HR derby spices up festivities

Gabe Lacques, USA TODAY July 16, 2025 at 4:09 PM

ATLANTA – If you're the sort who enjoys plotting the demise of baseball – and, in a grander sense, Western Civilization – then it all was neatly summed up by one moment in the wee hours at Truist Park.

A line drive striking the faux brick just to the right of a FanDuel advertisement, a crucial moment in a home-run hitting contest intended to pump life in a once culturally-dominant Midsummer Classic that now claws for viability in the attention economy.

A little heavy, eh?

Well, that's sort of how it felt when this 95th All-Star Game went to extra innings and was decided for the first time by a swing-off, which replaced the mega-roster to ensure there'd be plenty of pitchers for extra innings, which replaced How The Game Once Was, at least until it ended in a tie before a befuddled Bud Selig in 2002.

Yet the game always seems to win, thanks in large part to the stars in the arena that seem to produce spectacular feats, regardless of format. On this night, it was Kyle Schwarber's three homers in three swings that stood up for a National League "victory" after American Leaguer Jonathan Aranda's bullet line drive hit brick and not seats. When Aranda followed with a harmless pop fly that sent the NL into a bobbing mass of celebration down the first base line, they were 7-6 victors (4-3 on penalty swings).

Somehow, it all worked out. That could be a theme for an All-Star week that was at times grim and sweaty and confusing and at others fresh and fun. With that, the winners and losers from All-Star Week in the A (or at least Cobb County):

WinnersTiebreaker swing-off

NL players celebrate during the tiebreaker.

The various buttons MLB pushes in the Rob Manfred era often serve two purposes: Teeth-gnashing followed by pragmatic acceptance.

It was fascinating to discover that everyone from casuals in your contacts list to superstars on the field had no idea – "I honestly had no clue this was a thing," says Giants pitcher Logan Webb – what was to come. Yet the swing-off – the derby after the Derby, if you will – has been on the books since 2022.

They just hadn't had to break the glass yet in case of emergency, and Tuesday that emergency was Robert Suarez and Edwin Diaz blowing a two-run ninth-inning NL lead.

While extra-inning baseball has its charms, there can be a certain death march element to it. And in an All-Star Game, it honestly comes down to leftover pitchers trying to get out batters who hadn't yet hopped a private jet to their final All-Star break destinations.

Nah, we weren't exactly "robbed" of drama not seeing Shane Smith and Hunter Goodman clash in the bottom of the 11th, just one scenario had managers not had the freedom to burn all their pitchers before game's end. And while roughly half the 41,702 in attendance had departed, those that remained were plenty engaged by the oohs and ahhs of the swing-off.

Kyle Schwarber

The baddest dude on the first-place Philadelphia Phillies is seemingly universally respected in the game, and his ability to take three batting practice pitches and put them all in the seats – with a result literally on the line – goes to his superior skill and ability to focus.

That man is a free agent at the end of the year, and his late-night power show, even coming in a fake game, nicely illustrated why he'll be paid superstar money, and not DH money.

Players who like playing baseball

If the swing-off exposed anything to the casual fan, it's that the All-Star starters – typically the game's biggest superstars – have long beaten a hasty path to the airport by game's end. Hey, they got places to be and money to burn and it is their break time.

That's why teams lock in their three swing-off participants ahead of time, knowing who will be around in a 10th inning – and no, it almost surely won't be Aaron Judge and Shohei Ohtani.

But anytime he's on the roster, Mets slugger Pete Alonso counts himself in. The two-time Home Run Derby champion is both an avid competitor and a ball enthusiast.

And there's something of a difference between dudes who both love baseball and are very good at it, and those for whom the latter is the only qualifier.

That's not to say the players that begged off this All-Star Game – ultimately more than 80 were named to the rosters – don't love it. Rest is important and unpublicized injuries are very real.

But it never hurts to have stars who want to be here.

"It's an honor for me," says Alonso. "Certain guys, if they're banged up, it's situational. But I'm healthy and I'm appreciative and it's a great event. For me, it's a no-brainer to come."

Cal Raleigh

Sometimes, a player will have his star-is-born year and back it up at an All-Star Game expected to serve as his platform – think Judge in 2017.

Raleigh roared into the break with an AL record 38 first-half homers, the curiosity of being a switch-hitting catcher outslugging Judge and the best nickname in the game – and backed all of it up.

His Home Run Derby championship was both a compelling tale and a remarkable feat, and gives the game a legitimate star in a Pacific Northwest outpost that too often gets ignored.

Dino Ebel

He might be the greatest batting-practice pitcher of all time, or at least the most decorated. Ebel has been the soft tosser for two Home Run Derby champions – Vladimir Guerrero Sr. in 2007 and Teoscar Hernández in 2024 – and as the clock neared midnight Tuesday he climbed halfway up the Truist Park mound and tossed cookies to Stowers and Schwarber.

Four of the six pitches ended up in the seats.

"Put a 'W' next to Dino's name in the paper," says Dodgers and NL manager Dave Roberts, whom Ebel serves as third base coach. "Well, there's no more papers anymore, but Dino should get the win. Absolutely."

That's only the half of it. Sunday night, Ebel's son Brady was drafted 32nd overall by Milwaukee, and he has another lad, Trey, who is a well-regarded prospect for the 2026 draft. Let's just say mid-July has been very good to the Ebel clan.

LosersThe MLB draft

It remains Manfred's pet project, and the optics are good holding it in conjunction with All-Star Week. Enough space fillers wearing overpriced Fanatics gear are willing to fill up the couple hundred chairs to create a well-crafted television show. And sliding the draft into the most desirable television slot in the sport – supplanting Sunday Night Baseball for a night – will ensure its ratings will be sufficient even if the in-person product resembles a Potemkin Village.

Yet it's an undeniable setback that exactly zero prospects showed up all dressed up for the show and ready to grip and grin with Manfred. They certainly have their reasons, be it advisors who prefer they not forfeit leverage with drafting teams, to the greater uncertainty involved with baseball's draft compared to its NFL and NBA cohorts.

No one wants to get stuck in a green room for a couple hours, especially an 18-year-old whose reps might be haggling over bonus pool money right up to the moment they'd be picked.

Manfred is perhaps the only baseball official who wants to drag the process into mid-July, putting scouting departments, front offices, college coaches and, of course, the players in flux deep into the summer when the whole thing could be done in early June.

Pat McAfee, or whoever decided to loop him into the festivities

That was weird.

What's usually a pretty rote process – the pregame All-Star press conference where starting pitchers and lineups are announced got a startling charge when McAfee, ESPN's sleeveless ambassador to the Coveted Young Demographic, was on stage to moderate the session.

It's tough to fake baseball, and while McAfee did all right, the entire presser was simply bizarre. It helped that Paul Skenes' presence enabled McAfee to lean into his Yinzer shtick, yet couldn't save him from mispronouncing Ketel Marte.

And an inquiry from a reporter on baseball's unexplained decision to move the game back to Atlanta after onerous voting laws were passed – and Roberts' general abdication of stances on social issues important to Dodgers fans – resulted in McAfee trying to parry the whole exchange.

He was also tapped to intro the participants in that night's Home Run Derby, which is among ESPN's most important broadcasts all year. The whole thing smacked of the erstwhile Worldwide Leader signing all its inventory over to McAfee, and MLB eagerly (desperately?) hoping to cash in some of that cultural currency.

The Phillies

Hey, they're on the clock for the next All-Star Week and the pressure is mounting. The game comes less than two weeks after the country's Semiquincentennial, and there may not be enough red, white and blue to out-America all the Midsummer Classics that came before it.

Also, Kyle Schwarber is a free agent. As this 95th game showed, some things you just can't let get away.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: MLB All-Star winners and losers: Tiebreaker is cool, MLB draft is lame

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MLB All-Star winners and losers: Dramatic mini HR derby spices up festivities

MLB AllStar winners and losers: Dramatic mini HR derby spices up festivities Gabe Lacques, USA TODAY July 16, 2025 at ...
New Photo - A tropical system poses serious flood risk to Florida and the Gulf Coast

A tropical system poses serious flood risk to Florida and the Gulf Coast CNN Meteorologist Briana WaxmanJuly 16, 2025 at 10:23 PM There's growing concern for another significant rain and flooding event this week, this time along the Gulf Coast, from what could become the Atlantic basin's next tropic...

- - - A tropical system poses serious flood risk to Florida and the Gulf Coast

CNN Meteorologist Briana WaxmanJuly 16, 2025 at 10:23 PM

There's growing concern for another significant rain and flooding event this week, this time along the Gulf Coast, from what could become the Atlantic basin's next tropical system.

The potential storm's flood threat is just the latest in what has been a summer full of deadly and devastating floods.

The would-be storm was a broad area of showers and thunderstorms over the Florida Panhandle Wednesday morning. It will drift west into the Gulf by Thursday, where it has a medium chance of becoming a tropical depression, according to the National Hurricane Center.

A tropical system could form later this week in the area shaded in orange above. - NOAA

If it can muster a more defined center of circulation and strengthen further it would become Tropical Storm Dexter, the fourth named storm of the Atlantic hurricane season — a mark typically reached around mid-August.

If it does form, it would do so just off the Gulf Coast — a reminder that storms are more likely to form in the warm, shallow water closer to land in July. Warm water acts like fuel for storms to form and strengthen and ocean surface temperatures are well above average where the system is expected to track.

Conditions aren't looking favorable for a strong storm right now because this system will likely not have much time to mature over water and will also have to overcome hostile upper-level winds that can rip apart storms.

But a few reputable forecast models are predicting a more organized system, potentially a tropical storm, in the Gulf by late week. The outcome could hinge on the system's track. If it dips further south and spends more time over the Gulf, it could become stronger if it can withstand the upper-level winds on its journey.

Even if it isn't named, this system will bring tropical downpours to Florida and parts of the Gulf Coast over the next several days. This surge of moist tropical air helped drench Daytona Beach with 2.25 inches of rain on Tuesday, breaking its previous daily record of 2 inches set on July 15, 1935.

There's a Level 1 of 4 risk of flooding rain along the Gulf Coast from Florida to Louisiana Wednesday as the system taps into rich tropical moisture and enhances rainfall rates and the flood potential. Heavy storms are likely in the afternoon and evening but some of the most intense could occur just off the coast. Rainfall totals could range between 1 to 3 inches.

But the most serious flood threat will come Thursday and into the weekend as the system drifts west into parts of the north-central Gulf Coast, including Alabama, Mississippi and southeast Louisiana. Heavy rain could be long-lasting once it begins, possibly as soon as Wednesday night.

Flash flooding is the main concern, especially if rain bands repeatedly track over the same areas which could happen if the system moves slowly and lingers.

A Level 2 of 4 threat for flooding rain is in place Thursday for southeastern Louisiana, including New Orleans and parts of coastal Alabama and Mississippi. By Friday, the threat increases to a Level 3 of 4 for parts of Louisiana including Baton Rouge over fears that heavy rain could linger. Several inches of rain are possible in the worst-case scenarios.

It's clear that heavy rain and flooding will threaten much of the north-central Gulf Coast, but exactly where and how much remain in question. It will all depend on how strong the system becomes, where it tracks and how fast it moves – questions that will become sorted in the next couple of days.

This story has been with additional information.

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A tropical system poses serious flood risk to Florida and the Gulf Coast

A tropical system poses serious flood risk to Florida and the Gulf Coast CNN Meteorologist Briana WaxmanJuly 16, 2025 ...
New Photo - Exclusive-US considered charging Minnesota judges, lawyers in immigration crackdown, sources say

ExclusiveUS considered charging Minnesota judges, lawyers in immigration crackdown, sources say Sarah N. LynchJuly 16, 2025 at 5:15 PM By Sarah N. Lynch WASHINGTON (Reuters) The U.S.

- - - Exclusive-US considered charging Minnesota judges, lawyers in immigration crackdown, sources say

Sarah N. LynchJuly 16, 2025 at 5:15 PM

By Sarah N. Lynch

WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The U.S. Justice Department explored bringing criminal charges against Minnesota judges and defense lawyers who discussed requesting virtual court hearings to protect defendants from being arrested by federal immigration officers, according to five people familiar with the matter.

In February, FBI agents in Minneapolis opened a preliminary inquiry into whether local judges and defense attorneys obstructed immigration enforcement by requesting virtual hearings, and the concept was also pitched to law enforcement officials in Minneapolis and Washington, D.C., said the people, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal Justice Department deliberations.

Reuters could not determine whether the probe is ongoing. To date, no judge or lawyer in Minnesota has been charged over the episode.

Two of the people familiar with the discussions said FBI and Justice Department leadership in Washington supported the probe.

A Justice Department spokesperson declined to comment.

The probe was launched shortly after Emil Bove, the former Acting Deputy Attorney General who has since been nominated by President Donald Trump to serve as an appellate judge for the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit, ordered prosecutors in a January 21 memo to pursue potential criminal cases against "state and local actors" for impeding immigration enforcement.

The Senate Judiciary Committee is slated to vote on Bove's nomination on Thursday, with Democrats expected to oppose it.

The Trump administration has taken aggressive steps against the legal system when its policies have been blocked, lashing out at judges over rulings it disagrees with and seeking to punish law firms and legal organizations that have challenged its policies.

"They've been intimidating law firms and lawyers from the beginning," said Bennett Gershman, a former state prosecutor who teaches law at Pace University. "This is just ... part of the campaign to terrorize, intimidate, frighten people from speaking out."

The Minneapolis probe followed comments made in an email chat maintained by Minnesota defense lawyers on February 6 discussing requesting virtual court hearings for defendants who were living in the U.S. illegally to reduce the risk that Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers would apprehend them at court, the five people told Reuters.

Fox News reported about the existence of the email chat in March, about a month after the Justice Department started its inquiry.

The DOJ probe that the chat helped spark has not been previously reported.

In the email chain, one defense attorney said judges in the Third Judicial District in Minnesota "proactively" reached out to public defenders and prosecutors to encourage them to request Zoom court hearings on any cases with immigration issues, and that such requests would be granted "liberally," according to an excerpt of the chat verified to Reuters by an attorney who saw the email messages.

In late April, the Justice Department charged Hannah Dugan, a local elected judge in Milwaukee, for trying to help a migrant evade immigration authorities when he appeared in her courtroom for a hearing. The indictment also alleges she told the defendant's attorney he could "appear by Zoom" for his future court appearances.

Dugan has pleaded not guilty to the charges.

The Justice Department previously tried to charge a local Massachusetts judge in Trump's first term for helping a state court defendant evade arrest by ICE by allowing him to leave through a rear door.

The case was later dropped during the Biden administration.

Virtual hearings became commonplace in courtrooms across America during the COVID pandemic, and still remain a popular option in some states - including Minnesota.

Chris Wellborn, a recent former president of the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, said that scheduling virtual appearances for clients is a "routine and established procedure" that can help defendants who are balancing multiple jobs or facing child care duties.

"This situation underscores a recurring challenge: the misinterpretation of the vital role a criminal defense attorney plays in upholding constitutional obligations," he said.

"It is a fundamental duty of all defense lawyers to provide comprehensive advice to their clients regarding all available legal options and pathways."

(Reporting by Sarah N. Lynch in Washington; additional reporting by Ned Parker in New York; Editing by Scott Malone and Shri Navaratnam)

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