Emily Blunt’s Gothic Tutu Minidress Keeps Balletcore Alive and Well

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Harper's Bazaar "A Night With Runway" Gala Reception For 20th Century Studios' "The Devil Wears Prada 2" At The National Gallery

Black has always suitedEmily Bluntwell. In the originalThe Devil Wears Prada, one of her best looks occurs when her character, also named Emily,attends a charity benefitin a black slip dress with sequined embroidery along the bust and spaghetti-strap sleeves. In this particular scene, her character is notably suffering from a bad cold, but yet she still looks totally fabulous.

On Wednesday evening, Blunt decided to turn to one of her strongest shades again, as she attended a gala reception called “A Night With Runway” in London, following the European premiere ofThe Devil Wears Prada 2. For the occasion, the actor wore a stylish look with a bit of an edge that would’ve certainly made her on-screen character proud.

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“A Night With Runway” For "The Devil Wears Prada 2" - Photocall

Courtesy of Dior, and pulled from the house’sSpring/Summer 2026 couture collectionby Jonathan Anderson, Blunt’s minidress put a gothic spin onballetcore. Layered over a black tank, the delicate design consisted of a lacy, long-sleeve top with a frilly jabot-like detail, while the skirt morphed into a dramatic tutu, which flared out in a fan shape.

Model walking down runway in a black dress with floral accents.

Blunt’s stylist, Jessica Paster, kept the ensemble monochromatic, pairing the dress with inky Wolford tights and platform sandal heels with ankle straps, courtesy of Jimmy Choo. Finally, the look was accessorized with silver jewelry from Monica Vinader.

The Devil Wears Prada 2 photocall

Throughout the press tour forThe Devil Wears Prada 2, Blunt has pulled out statement after statement, from asculptural Schiaparelli gownto abright-red Balenciaga dressand more. Clearly, her work’s not finished yet.

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Emily Blunt’s Gothic Tutu Minidress Keeps Balletcore Alive and Well

"Hearst Magazines and AOL may earn commission or revenue on some items through these links." Black has always suitedEmi...
The 'Clueless' Sequel TV Series Is 'No Longer in Development' at Peacock

Hollywood is still deep in the throes of ’90s nostalgia, as evidenced by thecurrentslew ofturn-of-the-millenniumprojectsstudios are eager to remix or reboot into prequels, sequels, and spin-offs. The 1995 fan-favorite filmCluelesswas initially set for a sequel TV series on Peacock, with star Alicia Silverstone meant to reprise her original, iconic role as Cher Horowitz—but the show has since fallen out of development.

Elle stacey dash as dionne davenport and alicia silverstone as cher horowitz in the 1995 movie clueless

This wasn’t Peacock’s first attempt at revisitingClueless. PerDeadline, a reboot series focusing on Stacey Dash’s Dionne Davenport, Cher’s best friend, originally went into development before eventually failing to solidify.

Here’s everything we knew about the progress of theCluelessreboot, before Peacock updated fans about the fate of the show.

Who was developing the show?

CBS Studios and Universal Television planned to develop Cher’s latest saga for Peacock. Josh Schwartz and Stephanie Savage ofGossip Girlfame were slated to write and executive produce alongsideDollfacecreator (andFreakier Fridaywriter) Jordan Weiss. The 1995 film’s writer-director Amy Heckerling and producer Robert Lawrence also signed on as executive producers.

What did Silverstone say about the series?

In June 2025, Alicia Silverstone, Elisa Donovan, Breckin Meyer, Amy Heckerling, as well as costume designer Mona May and casting director Marcia Ross celebrated the film’s 30th anniversary at a screening and panel at the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures in Los Angeles. At the time, Silverstone said there was “nothing” she could reveal about the TV sequel in an interview withPeopleat the event, but Heckerling admitted she was “thrilled to death” it was happening. Silverstone was also asked if she ever thought she would ever play Cher again.

She replied, “I didn’t. And then I did it for the Super Bowl, yeah, and it was so much fun. We did it really at the Super Bowl.” The star was referring to her ad for Rakuten that aired during the big game:

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In August 2025, Silverstone shared more about the project in an interview onToday, saying, “I’m really excited about it. I think we’re going to try really hard. The goal is to make it honor what everyone loves aboutCluelessand Cher. So we want to honor that, but also bring something fresh and new to it. I’m confident that we’ll be able to do that, but we’re in baby stages right now.”

Who else was in theCluelesssequel series?

Peacock revealed no news about theCluelesssequel series cast aside from Silverstone. In 2023, Silverstone toldThe Hollywood Reporterthat “whenCluelesscame out, [my life] really shifted. I had been the girl fromCrush, then I was the Aerosmith chick, and then, after that, I was Cher.” And as the Peacock announcement suggests, she never really stopped being Cher.

Why isn’t the series being developed anymore?

On April 23, 2026,Deadlinerevealed that the “CluelessTV series with Silverstone attached to star and executive produce is no longer in development at Peacock.” There’s still a chance it could happen, though—theDeadlinereport noted that “CBS Studios and Paramount remain high on the project and the IP, and it is expected to create strong interest when it is taken out to market.”

This story will be updated.

Additional reporting by Starr Bowenbank.

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The 'Clueless' Sequel TV Series Is 'No Longer in Development' at Peacock

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2026 NFL Draft: The Best Scheme Fits in the First Round

In theNFL, when it comes to player/team success, the fit is the thing.

Athlon Sports

Even the most scheme-transcendent players need a system in which they can thrive, and for the 98% of players whoaren'ttotally scheme-transcendent at any position, coaching and conceptual assistance is mandatory for optimal success.

Every NFL team goes into the draft believing that the prospects they're looking to pick have what it takes to win in the schemes they prefer, but there's a reason even the first round of the draft is a total crapshoot — there's no guarantee that the people in charge of this matchmaking are being honest with themselves (Hello, 2026 Los Angeles Rams).

But in the following seven instances, it would appear that the teams got it right about the fit, based on tape, metrics, and what the teams themselves have professed regarding their identities in 2026 and beyond.

David Bailey, Edge, New York Jets

Last season, the Jets ranked31st in Defensive DVOA— only theDallas Cowboyswere worse — and a primary reason for that was a pass rush that didn't get home nearly as often as new head coach Aaron Glenn would have liked. The 2025 Jets had just 26 sacks — only theSan Francisco 49ershad a lower total — andGang Green's pressure rate of 15.1%was the league's lowest. This despite a blitz rate of 25.8%.

Glenn and the Jets desperately needed a new edge presence, and they certainly got that with the second overall pick in the person of Texas Tech's David Bailey. Let's put this in perspective: In 2025, the entire Jets edge rotation had 15 sacks and 112 total pressures. In2025, Bailey had 15 sacks and 81 total pressures... all by himself.

Moreover, Bailey was the best speed-rusher in the 2026 draft class, and that shows up in how many quick pressures he put together. Perhaps no edge disruptor in the NCAA overall, regardless of draft class, was more effective at getting to the quarterback on short drops. Both the tape and the metrics tell the story. Bailey can kick inside on certain pass defense snaps to add versatility — he did so 44 times last season — but in Glenn's defense, he will be the alpha edge defender every NFL defense needs.

"Well, just first-step quickness, and that's obvious when you watch the tape," Glenn said of Bailey's attributes. "The way he's able to beat tackles around the edge, but don't take him for a guy that can just rush with speed around the edge. There are several long-armed power things that he's done within his game that allow him to be able to show that he can rush for power. We're going to try to unlock everything that he can do. Obviously, we have some really good coaches that are going to be able to help him. Man, we're really excited about that player."

It's pretty easy to see why.

Mansoor Delane, CB, Kansas City Chiefs

Like every play-caller, Chiefs defensive coordinator Steve Spagnuolo has specific schematic concepts on which he leans, and in Spags' case, the primary idea is press coverage. Spagnuolo became the architect of the Chiefs' defense in 2019, and in every season since, no team has called more snaps in which at least one of their cornerbacks were in press coverage. Last season, for example, Kansas City had no cornerbacks in press on just 13% of their snaps. TheChicago Bearshad the NFL's second-lowest rate... at 24%.

Moreover, the Chiefs played man coverage on 172 snaps last season, but the results weren't exactly perfect — in man, they allowed 95 completions on 172 attempts for 1,075 yards, 10 touchdowns, four interceptions, 19 pass breakups, and an opponent passer rating of 83.8.

So, when the Chiefs traded up with theCleveland Brownsfrom the ninth overall pick to the sixth, and selectedLSUcornerback Mansoor Delane with that sixth overall pick, it made all the sense in the world. Kansas City traded Trent McDuffie to theLos Angeles Ramsthis offseason, and then lost cornerback Jaylen Watson to those same Rams in free agency. Spags needed at least one more press cornerback for his roster, and it would help if the guy could play some man as well.

Delane can play press just fine, as the tape and metrics indicate.

And when in man coverage last season, Delane allowed seven completions on 16 targets for 35 yards, no touchdowns, one interception, four pass breakups, and an opponent passer rating of...

Zero-point-zero.

This is as perfect a scheme fit as you'll find in this draft, and it puts the Chiefs on track for a defensive rebirth in the wake of those cornerback departures.

Sonny Styles, LB/Edge, Washington Commanders

Had the Chiefs not leapfrogged the Commanders, who had the seventh overall pick, for Mansoor Delane, might Delane have been Washington's selection? We do know that the Commanders' cornerback situation was not great in 2025, and at this point, the team has done precious little to improve it.

But in takingOhio State's Sonny Styles with that pick, one can only imagine how happy head coach and defensive shot-caller Dan Quinn must be. Not only does the 6-foot-5, 245-pound Styles have a skill set that has him on track to be the next Fred Warner when blowing up run fits and succeeding in coverage, but he also has a ton of under-utilized pass rush juice that can be unleashed at the next level.

Styles told me as much when I asked him at the scouting combine for his favorite plays throughout his collegiate career.

“One of my favorite plays from ’24, got a chance to rush the edge against Texas, [and] got a strip sack.” Styles said. “I would show that play just to show, despite me not rushing the passer this past year, there is some upside there. Obviously with the way our team was this year, that wasn’t my role. But just to be able to show there was some upside there.”

You could say that — on just 78 pass-rushing snaps in the 2024 season, Styles had six sacks and 19 pressures. And it took just 64 pass-rushing reps in the 2025 season for Styles to two sacks and 15 pressures.

Quinn's Commanders have a history with these kinds of two-level players. In 2024, they gave linebacker Frankie Luvu a three-year, $31 million contract with $14,625 million guaranteed to be the 'backer who could also succeed as a disruptor at the line of scrimmage. Last season, Luvu had three sacks and 26 pressures in 228 pass-rushing snaps, and he played off-ball linebacker on 42% of his snaps, with the remainder on the edge.

It's also worth mentioning that from 2021 through 2023, Quinn was the Dallas Cowboys' defensive coordinator, and he benefited quite a bit from the presence of oneMicah Parsons, another two-level game-wrecker.

Styles can roll into the nation's capital as a force multiplier linebacker, but don't be surprised if Quinn and defensive coordinator Daronte Jones start to put Styles nearer to the line of scrimmage sooner than later. Styles can tie the first two levels of a defense together as well as anybody in this class — and I would include Arvell Reese, Styles' Ohio State teammate, and a New York Giant with the fifth overall pick.

Caleb Downs, DB, Dallas Cowboys

As we've already mentioned, the Cowboys had the NFL's worst defense last season, and that was the case in terms of metrics both traditional and advanced. In response,Jerry Jonesmercifully fired defensive coordinator Matt Eberflus, and replaced him with Christian Parker, who served as thePhiladelphia Eagles' passing game coordinator and defensive backs coach in 2024 and 2025.

Coming from Vic Fangio's defense has he does, you can expect Parker to implement more light boxes with match coverage principles underneath, and also to put a premium on versatile defensive backs. Parker had Cooper DeJean as his "joker" in that regard, and when Dallas traded up with theMiami Dolphinsto go up from the 12th to the 11th overall pick to select Caleb Downs, that became monstrously evident.

Downs played far more deep safety for his team in 2025 than DeJean did — 54% of his snaps to 1% for DeJean — but the traits are similar in that both players can serve as overhang/box/slot enforcers for whom positional versatility is the key to their success.

Downs told me as muchwhen I interviewed him for the Athlon NFL Draft Preview magazine cover story.

"At the end of the day, if I’m in all these different positions, and doing different things at different positions, the quarterback is having to think about that every play," Downs said. “‘Okay, he’s the boundary safety this play, close to the line of scrimmage this play. He’s in the post this play. He’s dropped down 10 yards over the apex in the middle of the field. He could run the alley on this play. He could play the post. He could do all these different things. He’s at nickel this play. He could blitz. He could play coverage. He could play zone. What are they?’

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“They’re having to go through that every play. And I feel like that’s something that makes DBs special, but also coaches have to be able to move the chess pieces around and be able to do that at a high level."

Downs has what it takes to bring Parker's defensive visions to life, and this is ahugeget for the Cowboys.

Rueben Bain Jr., Edge, Tampa Bay Buccaneers

If it feels like Todd Bowles has been unhappy with his pass-rushers since he became the Buccaneers' head coach in 2022, it's because he has been — and for good reason. In 2025, Tampa Bay's edge defenders totaled 17 sacks, and their prominent guys on the outside, Yaya Diaby and Anthony Nelson, were more good players than complete disruptors.

Enter Miami's Rueben Bain Jr. with the 15th overall pick. Last season for the Hurricanes, Bain had 12 sacks and 83 total pressures, and he just about decapitatedFernando Mendozain the College Football Playoff National Championship. Not that Bain was given any grace from evaluators following his remarkable season; right after that is when the complaints about his arm length (30 7/8 inches, first percentile among edge defenders since 1999) began.

What the naysayers are missing is that Bain has the ability to get inside a blocker's reach, and from there, he turns into peak Joe Frazier or Mike Tyson in that he will beat you up with his speed-to-power moves to the quarterback.

It was a comparison that Bucs general manager Jason Licht made on his own after the pick was made.

"I think one of his assets is his low center of gravity, and his power, his strength and his urgency," Licht said. "Mike Tyson has short arms too. He tries to win every rep and he usually does."

Licht also believes that Bain's presence will help everybody else on the defensive line.

"Well, I think [when] you add a player like Rueben, and he does what we think he can do, it opens a lot of things up. It makes everyone along the defensive line better when you can have two edge presences. The protections don't slide as much, you have to decide where to slide them, [and] it opens things up. Potentially now [with] David Walker, we have an arsenal [at edge rusher] right now that we feel is a very good rotation. With 'Quan' [free-agent acquisition] Al-Quadin Muhammad, and we still have 'Nelly' [Anthony Nelson], and all that. You can't have too many [edge-rushers]. I say that every year, but then it just doesn't work out that we can draft one at a premium, but now we did. Hopefully, we can reap the rewards here."

Given Bowles' predilection for creative blitzes and deployments, it also matters that Bain kicked inside on 5% of his snaps last year, and you could see that rate increase with his new team.

Bain believes that it's a perfect match.

"I feel like I fit in just fine, because Coach Bowles is an aggressive, defensive, like-minded coach and I'm an aggressive, defensive, like-minded player," he said. "So, I feel like it's two and two put together. It's going to be [really] simple, and [really] smooth. Now, it's just about me learning plays, earning the trust of my teammates and learning what I can do to help the team."

When Bowles was the Buccaneers' defensive coordinator in 2020, and the franchise won its secondSuper Bowlat the end of that season, the pass-rushing alpha dog was Shaquil Barrett, the 6-foot-1, 251-pound edge man who measured in at the 2014 scouting combine with 32 1/4-inch arms, which was 36th percentile for edge defenders. Not quite as short as Bain's, but the point is that Barrett had 12 sacks and 98 total pressures in that season (including a sack and 10 pressures in the Bucs' 31-9 demolition of theKansas City Chiefsin Super Bowl LV), so Bowles already has a history of bringing out the best in a particular kind of player.

The Bucs just had to wait for the right guy to come around again, and they got him.

Keylan Rutledge, OG, Houston Texans

Just as Todd Bowles has been trying to put together his ideal pass-rush plan for years, theHouston Texanshave struggled to put a functional offensive line on the field for a while now. Offseason moves gave the Texans guard Wyatt Teller and right tackle Braden Smith to work with left tackle Aireontae Ersery, center Jake Andrews, and right guard Ed Ingram, but the team obviously felt that there was a final tough of whoop-ass needed in the front five, which is why they took Georgia Tech guard Keylan Rutledge with the 26th overall pick after trading up with theBuffalo Billsfrom their original 28th slot.

It's unknown where Rutledge will line up at this point, but as far as the whoop-ass quotient, it's all over his tape. In 2025 for the Yellow Jackets, Rutledge allowed no sacks and six pressures in 440 pass-blocking reps, and his run-blocking at multiple levels was something to behold. At 6-foot-4 and 316 pounds, Rutledge has a combination of agility and finishing power that any offensive line coach would love.

Texans offensive line coach Cole Popovich should be especially happy that Rutledge did so much of his work in man/gap schemes — he did so on 312 of his run blocks, as opposed to 41 in inside zone, and 67 in outside zone. In 2025, only the Los Angeles Rams had more gap-scheme runs (224) than the Texans' 191.

General manager Nick Caserio wasn't ready to commit to where Rutledge might play; any of the three interior spots could be up for grabs. Caserio was just enthusiastic to get the guy everybody in the building wanted.

"I would say the things that stand out about him — toughness, violence, physicality, his playing style, his intelligence," Caserio said. "Basically, the guy wants to step on your throat on every play, which I would say sort of embodies what our football team is about, and the way we play. Intense, violent, physical. We're going to run the football this year. It was an area that we felt like we wanted to and needed to improve on during the offseason. Hopefully we've done that. I would say ‘Big Red’ [Rutledge] is hopefully a part of that. Where is he going to play? Who the hell knows? We'll figure out who the best five guys are, and put the group out there that we think is going to help us the most, understanding that we'll probably need eight to ten guys on the offensive line here at some point."

Well, the one they just got should quickly multiply the success rate.

Jadarian Price, RB, Seattle Seahawks

The defending champs had their own primary need coming into the draft, and that was for a tone-setting running back following Super Bowl MVP Kenneth Walker's departure to Kansas City in free agency. Seahawks general manager John Schneider, who said pre-draft that he had no issue trading out of the first round and the 32nd overall pick to get more than the four selections his team has, changed his mind whenNotre Dameback Jadarian Price was on the board.

"Man... instant acceleration, vision, cutback ability, but his ability to work it back, not just completely bouncing all the time," Schneider said of Price. "Just kind of kick it back inside. And then, his contact balance... He has home run speed. He has a lot of explosive runs. He'd returned three kickoffs for touchdowns in his career. Two this [past] year. That's such a unique feel; that instant acceleration."

Head coach Mike Macdonald got a bit more specific when asked how Price would fit in new offensive coordinator Brian Fleury's offense, which will be influenced to a point by Fleury's time with Kyle Shanahan and the San Francisco 49ers from 2019-2025.

"Well, we're going to run wide zone, and he's going to run wide zone, and we're going to run some gap scheme," Macdonald said. "He's going to run some of that too, and then the pass game he can come alive, too. I think that's part of our offense in general, that we can take another step in including our halfbacks in the pass game. Then, he's a great special teams player as well. The kick return stuff, we'll see how it shakes out in other phases, but he's going to come in and compete with the rest of the guys. Let's go rock and roll."

Schneider and Macdonald are credible enough,but when I recently spoke with another Notre Dame running back by the name of Jeremiyah Love(who went third overall to theArizona Cardinals), Love wouldn't stop talking about how good Price is, and how great he can be.

"I tell everybody that JD can do everything I can do," Love said. "I think the reason that JD isn’t viewed in the light I am is because, you know, I’ve had the spotlight at Notre Dame. I’ve been the main premier back, and I feel like JD could have gone anywhere else in the country and been the main premier back. He’s a great running back. And he has some tools in his bag that I don’t have.

"I think JD’s feet are faster than mine. He’s a little bit more explosive than me from his first step. He can break more tackles than me, too. So, JD has a lot that he’ll be able to use at the next level, and bring to a team so that they can have success. JD’s got the same work ethic, you know? I’ve been in a room with JD for three years. So I know him outside the game and inside the game.

"He’s a great person, and he’s also a good football player. Whichever team is blessed to get JD, I mean, they’ll basically get me in another form. Because if you put him in the right positions, and you allow him to be himself, he’s going to be great. That’s what I would say to NFL teams. And that’s what I’ve told them every time they ask me about JD. Because it’s the truth. I’ve been around him. I got to see him work. And then we’ve also been coached by some great coaches."

The Seahawks may be strapped with just three remaining picks, but based on unanimous evaluation, they seem to have nailed the first one.

This story was originally published byAthlon Sportson Apr 24, 2026, where it first appeared in theNFLsection. Add Athlon Sports as aPreferred Source by clicking here.

2026 NFL Draft: The Best Scheme Fits in the First Round

In theNFL, when it comes to player/team success, the fit is the thing. Even the most scheme-transcendent players need a system in ...
PSG leads Lens by just 4 points as race for French league title heats up

PARIS (AP) — The suspense remains intense in Ligue 1, where Paris Saint-Germain is not as dominant as on the European stage at this crucial final stretch.

Associated Press PSG's Lucas Beraldo heads the ball during the French League One soccer match between Paris Saint-Germain and Nantes in Paris, France, Wednesday, April 22, 2026. (AP Photo/Michel Euler) Lens fans celebrate after a League One soccer match between Lens and Toulouse in Lens, France, Friday, April 17, 2026. (AP Photo/Jean-Francois Badias) PSG's Ibrahim Mbaye, center, and Nantes' Deiver Machado challenge for the ball during the French League One soccer match between Paris Saint-Germain and Nantes in Paris, France, Wednesday, April 22, 2026. (AP Photo/Michel Euler) Lens players celebrate after a League One soccer match between Lens and Toulouse in Lens, France, Friday, April 17, 2026. (AP Photo/Jean-Francois Badias) PSG's Desire Doue controls the ball past Nantes' Mohamed Kaba during the French League One soccer match between Paris Saint-Germain and Nantes in Paris, France, Wednesday, April 22, 2026. (AP Photo/Michel Euler)

France League One Soccer

The reigning French championsdefeated Nantes 3-0at the Parc des Princes midweek but they had suffered a fifth loss in the French league last weekend — compared to two all last season — with a2-1 home defeat against Lyon.

With five Ligue 1 matches left to play, they have just a four-point lead over second-place Lens ahead of Saturday's trip to Angers.

Luis Enrique's team has to travel to Lens in May, after the leaguepostponed their game on April 11due to PSG’s involvement in the Champions League. And with PSG's busy schedule due to the Champions League, the Ligue 1 title is far from being decided.

“You wanted a more open and competitive league? You’ve got it,” Enrique said. “Lens is having a very good season, and it will be difficult all the way to the final match.”

Lens travels to Brest on Friday.

Key matchups

Although the duel in the title race is taking the spotlight, the battle for the Champions League places is just as close.

Seven-time champion Lyon leads fourth-place Lille on goal difference with the top three gaining direct entry to the Champions League and the side in fourth entering qualifying. Lyon hosts struggling Auxerre on Saturday while Lille travels to Paris FC on Sunday.

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Although its hopes of qualifying for the Champions League have been dented by a10th loss this season,Marseille remains hopeful, lagging just two points behind Lyon ahead of hosting Nice at the Vélodrome stadium on Sunday.

Fifth-place Rennes is also in the mix, one point above Marseille, and takes on Nantes.

Rennes has been transformed undercoach Franck Haise— who was won six of eight games since taking charge.

Players to watch

Afonso Moreira: The 21-year-old Portugal forward had his best performance of the season against PSG, according to his coach Paulo Fonseca, and was outstanding either breaking from the left flank or holding up the ball. He also combined well with Brazil forward Endrick in what could be a crucial partnership in the remaining games.

Dominik Greif: The imposing Slovakian has been brilliant in goal for Lyon this season and saved a penalty against PSG, following a standout performance in the previous game.

Esteban Lepaul: He was without a club a few years ago when Lyon released him and is now Ligue 1's top scorer with 17 goals for high-flying Rennes. Lepaul shoots with every precision and has a gift for finding space.

Ilan Kebbal: The Algeria midfielder is Paris FC's top scorer with nine goals and his outstanding recent form has been at the heart of the club's inspired turnaround under coachAntoine Kombouaré.

Out of action

PSG will be without Vitinha after the Portugal midfielder limped off with a right foot injury during the loss to Lyon. PSG said Vitinha is sidelined by an inflammation in his heel following a knock sustained during the match.

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

PSG leads Lens by just 4 points as race for French league title heats up

PARIS (AP) — The suspense remains intense in Ligue 1, where Paris Saint-Germain is not as dominant as on the European stage at this cru...
Boxing-De La Hoya, Ali's grandson warn US lawmakers against boxing law overhaul

April 22 (Reuters) - Former boxing champion Oscar De La Hoya appeared before the U.S. Senate on Tuesday and argued against a potential transformation of the current system governed by the Muhammad Ali Boxing Reform Act that, ‌since 2000, has aimed to protect fighters from exploitative practices.

Reuters Boxing promoter and former boxing champion Oscar de la Hoya attends a U.S. Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee hearing on federal boxing laws, on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., U.S., April 22, 2026. REUTERS/Nathan Howard Boxing promoter and former boxing champion Oscar de la Hoya attends a U.S. Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee hearing on federal boxing laws, on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., U.S., April 22, 2026. REUTERS/Nathan Howard

U.S. Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee hearing on federal boxing laws, in Washington

The hearing -- titled "Return to Your Corners: Have Federal Boxing Laws ‌Gone the Distance or Slipped the Jab?" -- was held a month after the U.S. House of Representatives passed the Muhammad Ali American Boxing Revival Act which, ​if it becomes law, would allow for the creation of a single entity to combine promotion, rankings, titles and sanctioning under one roof.

"This is a fundamental shift in power that, if enacted, would put corporate profits first and fighters second," De La Hoya told the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation. "We should be clear about who benefits from this."

Thirty years ago, Congress set federal boxing standards by ‌passing the Professional Boxing Safety Act. Four years ⁠later, Congress tightened those standards by enacting the Muhammad Ali Boxing Reform Act. Together known as the Ali Act, the federal framework for professional boxing was designed to address conflicts of interest in the ⁠boxing market and strengthen boxers’ bargaining power.

Last month the House passed the Revival Act to make it easier for boxing to be organized in the same manner as other professional sports leagues.

'FIGHTERS WILL HAVE FEWER CHOICES'

De La Hoya told the hearing that, like him, many fighters enter ​the ​sport young, trusting and without resources, and that once they are locked ​into the wrong deal, it is very difficult ‌to get out. That is, he argued, exactly why the Reform Act exists.

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"Fighters deserve real protection and real opportunity — not to have to fight the system as well," said De La Hoya. "If this bill passes, fighters will have fewer choices, less leverage, and less control over their careers. And when that happens, it will not be the sport that failed them. It will be us."

Nico Ali Walsh, a professional boxer and grandson of former world heavyweight champion Muhammad Ali, also argued to preserve the current Reform Act.

Walsh told the ‌hearing the Reform Act was built on a simple principle: the people ​controlling fighters should not also control the entire marketplace those fighters depend on.

"That ​separation exists to prevent conflicts of interest and exploitation," said ​Walsh. "The new Muhammad Ali Boxing Revival Act would undermine that principle.

"If this bill is passed in ‌its current form, it should not have my grandfather's ​name on it, as it would ​betray the principles his Act was created to protect."

WWE President and TKO Group board member Nick Khan spoke in support of the Revival Act, which would allow for the creation of a new, centralized, alternative professional boxing system called Unified Boxing ​Organizations.

"The existing Act, as it currently stands, would ‌remain in place," said Khan. "This is an added option. It creates the framework for Unified Boxing Organizations, otherwise ​known as UBOs, that can do what major sports do — promote competition, develop talent, and enforce consistent standards ​under one roof."

(Reporting by Frank Pingue in TorontoEditing by Toby Davis)

Boxing-De La Hoya, Ali's grandson warn US lawmakers against boxing law overhaul

April 22 (Reuters) - Former boxing champion Oscar De La Hoya appeared before the U.S. Senate on Tuesday and argued against a potential ...
Racing Driver Kylie Marie Walton and Co-Driver Janey Lee's Vehicle Burst into Flames — Now Lee's Husband Is Sharing a Health Update

Two race car drivers are recovering after an incident during a live rehearsal left them hospitalized

People Janey Lee and Kylie Marie WaltonCredit: Kylie Marie Walton/instagram

NEED TO KNOW

  • Janey Lee became engulfed in flames after her seatbelt jammed while driving with Kylie Marie Walton, Lee’s husband said

  • “Thank you everyone for your continued love and support!” Lee said in an update

Professional race car drivers Kylie Marie Walton and Janey Lee are recovering weeks after their vehicle caught fire during a live event, leaving them both seriously injured.

In a jointInstagram poston March 26, Lee’s husband Eric made a video to combat “bad information out there” and confirm that the co-drivers were involved in an accident on Tuesday, March 24, at approximately 11 a.m. while pre-running the San Felipe 250, held near San Felipe, Baja Calif.

“The car caught fire under Janey’s seat, but her seatbelt was not released,” he said, beginning to break down and cry. “At that point, she was fully engulfed in flames.”

He added that “Kylie saved Janey’s life” by helping her release the seatbelt despite the chaotic circumstances.

Eric also credited the ladies’ helmets, gloves and other protective gear for preventing the situation from being worse than what it was. Still, Lee suffered “extensive” burns to her legs, as well as burns to her shoulders, “that will also require some grafting.”

“She’s a trooper, and she’s in good spirits,” Eric said of his wife.

Walton also suffered burns to her hands, he said in the video. “The girls are tough,” he continued. “They really are.”

Becoming emotional once again, Eric then thanked everyone present for “getting the girls outta there quickly.”

His video was one of nearly a dozen updates that he, Lee and Walton have shared.

On April 9, Road 2 Recovery, a non-profit that raises money for professionally licensed athletes after they sustain a career-ending injury, said in anInstagramupdate: “Both [Lee and Walton] are facing a long and challenging recovery from their burn injuries, requiring ongoing medical care, patience, and resilience.”

The post included a photo of Lee lying in a hospital bed, almost fully covered in bandages with a brace on one of her legs. The following image showed Walton at home resting with her hands wrapped in gauze.

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By April 14, Lee had spent 20 days in theBurn Unit ICU.

Walton has also kept her supporters aware of her situation.

“I just wanted to take a moment to check in and say thank you from the bottom of my heart for the ongoing prayers, messages, and support,” she captioned an April 20Instagram video. “It truly means more to me than I can explain.”

The clip showed her getting help changing her bandages and sterilizing her wounds.

“I had a doctor’s appointment last week and was able to see Janey while I was there. It meant so much to check in on her and see how she’s doing in her recovery too,” Walton wrote, adding that she would provide another update later this week.

On Wednesday, April 22, Lee told her followers that she’s finally been able to start walking again with assistance from her nurses.

“It’s been easier to get out of bed with each day that passes and I’m no longer needing additional rescue pain meds to do so. Bless!” she wrote, along witha videoof her progress.

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Lee added that she was working on introducing movement and “coordination foot work” without her walker after multiple surgeries.

“Hospital hopscotch goes HARD my girl 🙌😮‍💨 I love you I’m so proud of you 👏🏼 keep it up,” Walton commented.

“Thank you everyone for your continued love and support!” Lee said. “It truly means the world to me and helps me push through the toughest of times. I love you all!”

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Racing Driver Kylie Marie Walton and Co-Driver Janey Lee's Vehicle Burst into Flames — Now Lee's Husband Is Sharing a Health Update

Two race car drivers are recovering after an incident during a live rehearsal left them hospitalized NEED TO KNOW ...
NFL draft: Biggest questions of the first round, including if Alabama QB Ty Simpson will be picked

The No. 1 pick of the NFL Draft is written in stone — but it could be a rollercoaster ride past that.

NBC Universal Image: Ty Simpson of the Alabama Crimson Tide throws a pass during the Alabama Crimson Tide versus Indiana Hoosiers College Football Playoff Quarterfinal (Brian Rothmuller / Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

The first round of this year’s draft appears more wide open than in recent years, thanks to a slew of dynamics, including a lack of top-tier quarterback prospects, a concentration of premium players across non-premium positions, and relative depth at key positions that will have teams debating whether to take a risk early or to sit back see who falls to them at a later round. Add that to the normal twists and turns of the draft, and Thursday could be must-see TV for any NFL fan.

“There are schemes that are hard to predict, there are grading systems that are all different,” James Laurinaitis, the longtime NFL veteran and current linebackers coach at Ohio State, told NBC News. “That’s why it’s one of the best dramas on television, right?”

Here are five questions that will help to shape how Thursday’s first round shakes out.

Will Ty Simpson get drafted in the first round?

The worst kept secret this draft is the first overall pick: it’s all but guaranteed the Las Vegas Raiders are going to select Indiana quarterback Francisco Mendoza. But one of the biggest questions is whether another signal-caller will hear his name called on Thursday.

There have only been two drafts in the last 20 years where only one quarterback has gone in the first round — 2022, when the Pittsburgh Steelers picked Kenny Pickett, and 2013, when the Buffalo Bills picked E.J. Manuel. This year, the only real candidate to join Mendoza is Alabama’s Ty Simpson. And the jury is still out.

Simpson is a one-year starter who took the college football world by storm in the first half of the season. But his play tailed off in the back half, exemplified by a poor showing against Eastern Illinois where he threw two picks. It appears Simpson was dealing witha ton of injuries down the stretch, which can help temper some doubts about his abilities. But his stature and lack of starting experience still looms large for teams debating whether to take a risk on him with such a high pick.

Connor Rogers, an NBC Sports NFL Draft Analyst, said Simpson is the “classic case of a day two developmental quarterback” and a “a good athlete” who “he sees and throws the middle of the field pretty well.” He compared Simpson’s ceiling to that of Denver Broncos quarterback Bo Nix, a “solid starting quarterback.”

“But I’m saying the high-end outcome, you’re drafting him hoping he hits in that way, and that, to me, is a top-45 pick, not a top-20 pick,” he said. “And there’s a large difference because when you stake your claim on a quarterback in the top 20 and it doesn’t work, you’re fired. When you do it in the top-45, there’s usually a little room for error.”

Many mock drafts still put Simpson in the back end of the first round, some projecting a trade similar to the one that allowed the Giants to get Jaxson Dart last season. That could make sense for a team that believes in him, especially if the price is similar to what the New York gave up last year and if they want tosecure a fifth-year optionfor Simpson’s services. But Simpson is far from a lock to go in the first round, and since he’ll be at the draft, there’s a risk he’ll be the latest prospect to have to sit there andwatch his draft slidein person.

What type of elite edge rusher do teams want?

Edge rusher is one of this draft’s deepest positions, both at the top and into the middle rounds. But the top prospects at the position don’t have much in common.

Ohio State’s Arvell Reese was one of the most exciting players in college football last season, and he’s one of the most intriguing prospects in the draft. Many analysts believe he should transition from linebacker to edge rusher, and are salivating over the fact he had eight sacks and 27 pressures on just 119 pass rush snaps last season, according to Pro Football Focus. But while his future NFL journey is being compared to the one all-pro Micah Parsons took, the ghosts of football’s past are littered with players who failed to convert and couldn’t shake the devastating “tweener” tag.

Image: Arvell Reese of Ohio State during the 2026 NFL Scouting Combine at Lucas Oil Stadium (Cooper Neill / Getty Images)

Texas Tech’s David Bailey doesn’t need much projection — he was one of the most productive pass rushers in college football last season with 15 sacks and another 43 hurries, and dominated the 40-yard-dash and broad jump at the combine. But at 250 pounds, he’s on the lighter side for pass rushers, something that could be an issue for certain teams and certain schemes.

Then there’s Rueben Bain Jr., one of the seven edge prospects since 1999 to have sub-31-inch’ arms,according to MockDraftable.com. Bain was neck-and-neck with Bailey as far as his production as a pass rusher with 12 sacks and 68 hurries last season. But his arm length has been a constant topic of discussion as analysts question whether teams would be willing to spend such high draft capital on such a physical outlier.

When asked how he evaluates these top edge rushers amid these limitations, Rogers said he asks himself “how do those questions affect their game” and whether the player has “complete limitations,” but said that for these three players, that’s not really the case.

For Bain, his “ability to deconstruct blockers with strong hands and then bend around the corner kind of somewhat really limits that concern about his arm length.”

For Bailey, Rogers highlighted his relative lack of bend but added that “he has such good feet and speed that he has tackles so far off balance with his quick steps and all his moves that he really doesn’t need to bend around the corner too often to get after the quarterback.”

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And for Reese, his potential position shift, he’s “such a gifted off-ball linebacker with pass rush tools, that if there’s a world that it just doesn’t work for him as an edge pass-rusher, he could still be an all-pro off-ball linebacker.”

More from NFL draft

How high will the elite players at non-elite positions go?

Usually the top picks in the draft are dominated with the sport’s premiere positions — quarterback, offensive tackle and edge rusher primarily — the ones thatcommand the most money on the open market. But in a vacuum, most draft analysts agree that the best players in this draft class are at positions that aren’t nearly as valuable to teams.

Notre Dame running back Jeremiyah Love, Ohio State safety Caleb Downs and Ohio State linebacker Sonny Styles are consistently at the top of most big boards. And offensive guard Olaivavega Ioane also comes up regularly as one of the draft’s top players, too. But teams don’t typically spend valuable picks on these positions, in part because it’s much cheaper to find worthwhile starters in free agency (or in the case of running backs, their shelf life is so limited that many teams don’t like to build around a marquee running back).

“Jeremiah Love would be a superstar running back prospect in any draft. Caleb Downs would be as high end of a safety prospect as you’re going to see in basically any draft. Styles is pretty dang close. I don’t think he’s perfect, but he’s really, really close in terms of being that,” Rogers said, adding that he also sees Arvell Reese as a blue-chip prospect.

That’s why teams picking at the top half of the draft have an interesting choice: Should they pick the players they have graded the highest, or take risks on more premiere positions like quarterback, or look past some of the question marks surrounding the top edge rushers?

What do teams do with outliers?

The questions about Bain’s arm length raises another important, broader question, about how teams want to handle players who have something in their profile that makes them an outlier.

For players like Bain, LSU cornerback Mansoor Delane and Utah tackle Spencer Fano, it’s what to make of their very small arms. Delane’s 30-inch arms are in the 8th percentile of cornerbacks in MockDraftable’s prospect database and Fano’s 32 ⅛’ arms are in the 3rd percentile, while Bain’s is in the 1st percentile of edge rushers (the database uses NFL Combine measurements, although pro day measurements can differ slightly).

Arm length isn’t viewed as integral to the cornerback position to the trenches, so Delane’s arms haven’t kept him from being seen as one of the top in the draft. But the discussion around Fano has been similar to the one with Bain, and it is one reason why analysts differ about how to rank him on big boards.

Other players are battling with questions about their size, like USC wide receiver Makai Lemon and Clemson cornerback Avieon Terrell. Lemon’s small wingspan and relatively small stature has likely kept him from rising higher in the process, but he’s still considered a consensus first-rounder and players at his size have found success at the NFL level. But size (and a lack of pre-draft athletic testing) could be a bigger issue for Terrell, who has appeared in fewer and fewer first-round mock drafts in recent weeks.

Miami edge rusher Akheem Mesidor’s profile contains a different outlier — his age. A sixth-year senior, Mesidor will be 25 when he takes his first professional snap. And while he took his game to new heights last season as a pass-rush machine, some teams will balk at his age considering the wear and tear football puts on the body.

But it may not keep him out of the first round. John Spytek, the Raiders’ general manager, gave a nuanced answer when asked during the NFL combine whether age detracts from a prospect’s profile.

“Our analytics department gets mad at me anytime we put a guy up there that’’s a little bit older, in his sixth year and whatever,”he said, “But we’re just looking for good football players, and there’s a million things we consider as part of the process. “

What about players that didn’t play last season?

Evaluating prospects is hard enough — but in two key cases, teams are being asked to weigh how to stack players who played little-to-no football last season against those who did.

It’s not the kiss of death — a handful of future first-rounders opted out of the 2020 pandemic season. But it’s harder in the case of injury, especially when that injury prevents a player from going through pre-draft workouts.

Tennessee cornerback Jermod McCoy didn’t play at all last season after tearing his ACL, but after skipping the combine, was able to run during his pro day. According tolongtime draft analyst Todd McShay, who is now with The Ringer, McCoy’s 40-yard-dash and jumps were among the best in the class, a showing that will likely help solidify his spot in the first round. But what the teams found during their medical checks, and whether they have concerns the injury could linger, will go a long way to deciding where McCoy ends up.

The story is more complicated for Florida defensive tackle Caleb Banks, who played just three games last season while battling a foot injury and thenbroke his footthe day before he participated in the combine.

How teams view these medical issues will be important, as, when healthy, they are some of the most talented players in the draft.

NFL draft: Biggest questions of the first round, including if Alabama QB Ty Simpson will be picked

The No. 1 pick of the NFL Draft is written in stone — but it could be a rollercoaster ride past that. The first round of this yea...

 

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