Who are the best coaches in the College Football Playoff? We ranked them all

Meet the most elite club in college coaching.

Two head coaches in this year'sCollege Football Playoff, Georgia's Kirby Smart and Ohio State's Ryan Day, have combined for three national championships, and a third has reached the championship game in Alabama's Kalen DeBoer.

Two more previously made the playoff in Indiana's Curt Cignetti and Oregon's Dan Lanning. Texas Tech coach Joey McGuire has delivered the best regular season in program history and Texas A&M coach Mike Elko led the Aggies to their most success in the regular season in decades.

And that's not to mention Miami's Mario Cristobal, Oklahoma's Brent Venables and two Group of Five prodigies soon set for the Power Four inJames Madison's Bob Chesney and Tulane's Jon Sumrall.

The long list of accomplishments found among this group can make ranking the playoff coaches a fool's errand. But let's give it a shot, helped by the fact we can slot a coaching neophyte into last place:

1. Kirby Smart, Georgia

Smart won national championships in 2021 and 2022, snapping Alabama's stranglehold on the SEC, and has since claimed the past two SEC crowns. He's taken over for Nick Saban as the face of college coaching and will have Georgia among the best programs in the Bowl Subdivision for as long as he remains in Athens.

Georgia football coach Kirby Smart looks on during the first half of his team's game against Texas at Sanford Stadium.

2. Ryan Day, Ohio State

Day delivered last season amid major scrutiny and has Ohio State surging, a loss in the Big Ten championship game notwithstanding. He's gone 79-11 since taking over full time in 2019 and has yet to lose more than two games in a season.

3. Curt Cignetti, Indiana

Cignetti has taken college football by storm in transforming the Hoosiers into a national powerhouse. Following a stunning playoff berth in his debut, Indiana is this year's top seed after capturing the program's first Big Ten championship since 1967.

4. Dan Lanning, Oregon

Nearly every school in the country would love to have Lanning, who seems very content after solidifying Oregon's place among the elite programs in the Power Four. He's 46-7 overall over four years and has gone 17-1 in Big Ten play with one conference championship since theDucksjoined the league in 2024.

5. Kalen DeBoer, Alabama

DeBoer's tenure in Tuscaloosa hasn't quite popped, though he took on one of the most daunting challenges in FBS history by replacing Saban with the Crimson Tide. But he's won everywhere: DeBoer went 67-3 at Sioux Falls, won nine games in his lone full season at Fresno State, led Washington to the championship game in 2023 and has Alabama back in the playoff this year.

6. Mike Elko, Texas A&M

Elko had A&M on the verge of an appearance in the SEC championship game before a loss to Texas on Black Friday. That disappointment aside, he's been able to tap into the program's immense potential after going 16-9 in two years at Duke and being named the 2022 ACC coach of year.

7. Mario Cristobal, Miami

Cristobal held Miami together amid a midseason swoon to make this the finest coaching job of his career. He's now posted a pair of 10-win seasons with the Hurricanes after doing the same over four years at Oregon. Before that, Cristobal worked a borderline miracle by posting two winning seasons at Florida International.

8. Brent Venables, Oklahoma

Venables has had a choppy four-year run at Oklahoma, alternating losing seasons with double-digit wins during the program's transition to the SEC. But he delivered this season thanks to leading a defense that carried theSoonersto key wins against Tennessee and Alabama. As a coordinator, he was a playoff superstar during Clemson's run under Dabo Swinney. That Venables lands here speaks to the depth in this year's playoff class.

9. Joey McGuire, Texas Tech

Texas Tech had just one winning finish in the six seasons before hiring McGuire away from his assistant job Baylor after the 2021 season. Following 23 wins in his first three years, McGuire has piloted a seriously talented (and expensive) roster to a program-record 12 wins, Tech's first outright conference championship since 1955 and the No. 4 seed in this year's tournament.

10. Jon Sumrall, Tulane

Sumrall gets the nod as the top Group of Five coach in the field after going 43-11 over his four years at Troy and Tulane. The future Florida coach has won three conference championships in his four seasons. His SEC ties should make him a good fit in Gainesville.

11. Bob Chesney, James Madison

Chesney took over for Cignetti and took James Madison to another level. The Dukes are in the top 10 for scoring margin, rushing offense and total defense. Set for UCLA after the Dukes' season ends, he's won at every stop of his career but has just two years of FBS experience.

12. Pete Golding, Mississippi

Golding will step in for LSU-bound Lane Kiffin for this playoff run and will be the permanent replacement moving forward. While he knows the SEC from his stints at Alabama and with the Rebels, Golding has never been a head coach on any level.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:College Football Playoff coaches ranked ahead of CFP start

Who are the best coaches in the College Football Playoff? We ranked them all

Meet the most elite club in college coaching. Two head coaches in this year'sCollege Football Playoff, Georg...
Immigration raids could threaten the rise of youth sports

While at least 55% of youth ages 6-17 appear to be playing sports, a potential threat to the rising rate hovers over it, according to Aspen Institute'sNational State of Play 2025 report.

The percentage, according to the latest available data, pushes youth sports participation toward the 63% target set through theHealthy People 2030program administered by the government andchampioned by Aspen's Project Play.

However, as Aspen writes in its 2025 report of trends across the landscape, government raids of parks where immigrant children play, as well as other developments, have created an environment that suggests a reshaping of youth sports. Perhaps it even threatens the target goal of 63%.

"People will have different views about immigration and enforcement actions – and that's understandable," Oregon Youth Soccer Association executive director Simon Date wrote to parents this fall. "But wherever you stand on the politics, we stand unapologetically with kids not being scared to be at our events. Every child deserves to play soccer without fear, and that will always be our north star."

The OYSA had announced thatas many as 16 teams withdrew from competition in Portlandafter people reported Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) activity in community parks.

Overall, the Aspen Institute concludes, through assessment of government and industry data and its national sports parent survey, American youth sports has effectively recovered from the COVID 19 pandemic, with participation rates continuing to rebound.

But the cost of youth sports has risen 46% since 2019, and significant access gaps remain among youth from upper- and lower-income households.

Youth Sports Business Report predicts that by 2030 only two distinct tiers of sports offerings will be available for families as the growing influence of private equity continues to affect sports families.

Here are highlights of the Aspen report, which was provided to USA TODAY Sports before its release this week, and what youth and adolescent athletes and their parents can learn from it.

YOUTH SPORTS SURVIVAL GUIDE:Pre-order Coach Steve's upcoming book for young athletes and their parents

Latino youth sports participation is up, with a caveat

Sixty-five percent of Latino youth ages 6-17 tried sports at least one day in 2024 over the previous 12 months – a higher rate than Black and white youth, according to data from the Sports & Fitness Industry Association (SFIA).

Participation among Latina girls rose from 39.5% in 2019 to 48.4% in 2024, according to"Unlocking the growing power of Latino fans,"research published by the McKinsey Institute for Economic Mobility. The report attributes this rise to organizations such as ELLA Sports Foundation, Girls on the Run, Sports 4 Life and the Women's Sports Foundation that have launched programs targeting underrepresented groups.

Latino youth still regularly play sports at lower rates than white youth based on SFIA's core participation statistic. Research by McKinsey and the U.S. Soccer Federation also found that Latino and Black children are three times more likely than white children to stop playing soccer because they feel unwelcome.

Aspen raises the issue of whether current immigration raids will have an adverse effect on Latino sports participation rates that appear in future analysis.

"It's affecting our community-based (sports) programs and parks programs. It's not a surprise," said Renata Simril, president & CEO of LA84 Foundation, which ensures children have access to sports.

The State of Play report also cites 2025 media accounts in New York, California and Oregon that document fears due to immigration raids. According toa story posted at Today.comin July, Youman Wilder, the founder of Harlem Baseball Hitting Academy, said a group of ICE agents approached members of his team while they were practicing in a park.

"I heard them saying, 'Where are you from? Where are your parents from?'" Wilder toldMSNBC's Nicolle Wallace. "And I just stepped in and said this is very inappropriate to ask these kids anything ... I'm just going to have them implement their Fifth Amendment right, and not say anything to you.' "

The Aspen Institute' Project Play has developed aChildren's Bill of Rights in Sportswith a working group of human rights and sports policy experts. It offers eight rights recognizing that all youth should have the opportunity to develop as people in safe and healthy environment through sports.

The first principle: "To play sports. Organizations should make every effort to accommodate children's interests to participate, and to help them play with peers from diverse backgrounds."

Municipalities in Tacoma, Washington; Akron, Ohio; Alexandria, Virginia; Perris, California; and Chapel Hill, North Carolina endorsed the Bill of Rights in 2025.

Casual organized sports play is a hot trend

About 55.4% of youth ages 6-17 were playing sports as of 2023, according to the federal government. Seventeen states and the District of Columbia were within a percentage point of or greater than the 63% mark.

Also, 6% more children ages 6-17 played a team sport at least once in 2024 compared to 2023, according to SFIA data.

"The rebound in participation since the pandemic is a credit to all who have innovated to improve access to quality sport programs," said Tom Farrey, executive director of Aspen's Sports & Society Program. "But we're going to need leadership to ensure that as more money flows into the space, the needs of children – all children – are prioritized in the development of policies, practices and partnerships shaping what is still a disjointed landscape."

Teenagers ages 13-17 continued toregularly play sports at lower rates, with their participation dropping by 3% in 2024.

Girls and boys play rises; non-traditional sports are thriving

Boys 6-17 regularly played sports in 2024, marking a 2% increase over one year, but boys participation has resided at 42% or lower for nine straight years. Girls participation, while still trailing boys, increased for the third straight year (to 37%).

Coach Steve:Why are boys' sports on the decline? A former NBA star looks at solutions

From 2019 to 2024, according to the State of Play report, flag football was the only team sport tracked by SFIA that experienced growth in regular participation among kids ages 6-17. However, Tennis and golf increased as individual sports through separate data shared with Aspen.

Flag football was up 14% while baseball was down 19%, tackle football down 7%, soccer down 3% and basketball was down 2%.

Among youth ages 13-17, tackle (6.4% participation) is still much more popular than flag (2.8%).

Flag's growth, according to Aspen, is largely attributed to the NFL, which has invested more in the sport as some parents delayed or walked away from tackle due to the risk of brain injuries and shifting U.S. demographics.

The NFL has also campaigned to bring flag football to high schools for girls, and 28 states either sanction girls' high school flag or are in stages of pilot programs.

"There are so many young boys and young girls, you look at them the first time that they go out there to a practice, and then by the end of the season, it's almost like they're a totally different little kid," former Notre Dame and NFL cornerback Bobby Taylor, an important figure in developing programs for the sport,told USA TODAY Sports in 2024. "You see that progression."

Volleyball participation is growing faster than any other high school boys sport (a 13% increase in 2024-25,according to National Federation and State High School Associations.) Volleyball is nearing the top 10 of the most-played boys high school sports, while over the past six years, nine states have added varsity boys volleyball: Oregon, Kentucky, Indiana, Utah, Colorado, Michigan, Minnesota, South Carolina and Missouri.

Meanwhile, the number of children ages 6-12 who played another wildly popular sport – pickleball – at least once in the past year doubled over a two-year period, getting to 2.2 million in 2024.

Teenagers 13-17 increased their pickleball participation by 157% over two years.

More Coach Steve:Why pickleball is the perfect sport for everyone

Youth sports still cost too much, and it's cutting families out of the picture

The average U.S. sports family spent $1,016 on their child's primary sport in 2024, a 46% increase since 2019,according to Aspen's parent surveyin partnership with Utah State University and Louisiana Tech University.

According to Aspen, that's twice the rate of price inflation in the U.S. economy during the same period. Baseball ($1,113) was the most expensive of the three most popular sports, costing more on average than soccer ($910) and basketball ($876).

The Aspen parent study came beforePresident Trump's tariffs and the federal government shutdown, and the organization says both could impact the economy and how families view their child's sports costs.According to ESPN, $6.27 billion worth of sporting goods imported into the U.S. came from China, accounting for 61% of these imports.

Sports & Fitness Industry Association CEO Todd Smith told ESPN that tariffs may slow sports participation and physical activity for households earning less than $25,000 a year.

Thirteen years ago, 35.5% of kids ages 6-17 in homes with incomes under $25,000 regularly played sports vs. 49.1% who played from homes earning $100,000 or more. In 2024, the gap was 20.2 percentage points, according to SFIA data.

Mega-facilities (and mega-bucks) are becoming a permanent fixture

Aspen's sports parent survey found that children from homes earning $100,000 or more are two times more likely to play travel sports than those in homes making under $50,000.

Project Play's youth surveys in communities across the country show more children saying that what they dislike most about sports is that it's too expensive, while, perhaps increasingly, they are feeling they can't let down their parents.

"When kids or adults get emotional talking about their sports career almost always has something to do with their parents," Linda Martindale, a boys high school basketball and mental fitness coach in the Boston area who also hosts theGameChangerspodcast, recently told USA TODAY Sports. "It's amazing how kids say, 'I feel bad when I didn't get to play or I didn't perform, I feel bad for my parents.' It's like, 'Wait, what?' And a lot of times they say, 'Well, my parents put so much into my playing career.' "

Commercial real estate and local economic development officials continue to capitalize on youth sports. This year, Ocoee, Florida approved development of a159-acre youth sports and hotel complex(called The Dynasty project) valued at up to $1 billion.

While Project Play pushes for 63% participation by 2030, Youth Sports Business Report predicts that by that year, only two tiers of sports offerings will be available for families – premium destination experiences like Dynasty and community-based recreational programs.

"The middle market of regional tournament facilities faces the greatest disruption risk,"Youth Sports Business Report writes.

More coaches are getting trained

A cohort of partners, including Little League International, the Positive Coaching Alliance, the U.S. Soccer Foundation and many others, has trained 1 million youth coaches in evidence-based youth development practices. The milestone was reached in 2025.

The Million Coaches Challengealso offerscoaching strategiesanda vision for making youth-centered coaching the standard nationwide.

Aspen created a 63X30 roundtable of 20 organizations that trained more than 263,000 coaches and administrators in 2025.

However, according to Aspen, coaches who were trained at least once in the previous 12 months dropped over a five-year period. For instance, in 2024, 26% of coaches had recent training in general safety and injury prevention, down from 34% in 2019.

The U.S. Tennis Association, Aspen says, has taken an unprecedented step for a National Governing Body (NGB) of sport, withUSTA Coaching. It provides anyone who delivers tennis (parents, volunteers, high school coaches, staff pros, directors of tennis and certified professionals) access to resources and benefits such as liability insurance, telehealth, equipment discounts, coaching tools and a peer community.

Parents are much more about playing time than winning

According to Aspen's parent survey, themost important coaching philosophy to parents(out of a choice of 10) was "supporting athletes in being healthy and fit." "Winning games or competitions" was No. 8, but "distributing playing time in a fair manner" was No. 2.

Among parents with kids ages 6-10, only 23% say equal playing time is the right policy for their child's age and competitive level. That's nearly the same rate as parents of children ages 11-14 (19%) and 15-18 (17%).

About half of all surveyed sports parents believe every child on a team should receive some playing time.

NIL and AI are influencing the youth sports landscape

Forty-four states and Washington, D.C., allow name, image and likeness (NIL) agreements for high school students. There are even signs that NIL, in some cases, is changing the non-scholastic sports experience for middle schoolers (and younge)r.

The New York Times, for example,profiled an eighth-grade football player in Washington D.C.who signed sponsorship deals with a local fashion brand and hired an agent for future deals. "The goal is for him to reach a million dollars his freshman year of high school," his mom said.

Elliot Hopkins, director of student services for the National Federation of State High School Associations (NFHS),told USA TODAY Sports in Mayhe doesn't see the system as sustainable. Hopkins played on the defensive line at Wake Forest from 1975 to 1979.

"You just can't keep doing this long term, because what happens is you and I are teammates and you get a bigger deal than I am, but I'm blocking for you," he says. "I'm like, 'What the heck? You wouldn't be getting any money if I didn't block for you. I need more money so you can do your job,' and the whole locker room becomes frazzled, and then no one trusts each other, no one wants to work for each other. They're out for themselves."

Meanwhile, artificial intelligence-powered video analysis, wearable sensors and analytics platforms potentially offer youth sports families a more personalized and engaging experience.

According to the State of Play Report, AI-powered platforms can analyze individual player performance and biometric data to create customized training programs and provide coaches with statistics to evaluate players that were previously unavailable. The advanced training, safety and administrative tools could help injury prevention.

But, according to Aspen, AI also carries concerns about costs, data privacy, balancing technology with personal coaching, and time commitment for younger children.

One New York soccer club offers parents the option of paying $300 annually for their child's analytics.

"Reluctantly, the ecosystem has forced us to start younger and younger to stay in the game,"FC Westchester President George Gjokaj told NBC News."I'd prefer to let them just have fun and support them without taking it too seriously at that young an age."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Immigration raids could threaten the rise of youth sports

Immigration raids could threaten the rise of youth sports

While at least 55% of youth ages 6-17 appear to be playing sports, a potential threat to the rising rate hovers over it, ...
The NBA Cup is in its third year. Is it actually working?

On Tuesday night, for the third time, there will be a new NBA Cup champion.

TheSan Antonio Spurswill take on theNew York Knickson Tuesday, Dec. 16 in Las Vegas to culminate the third playing of the event. But, now that it has become a staple of the NBA calendar, is it actually working?

By many metrics, theNBA Cuphas been a resounding success.

More than 40 million viewers tuned in for group stage games, a 90% year-over-year increase. It was the most-watched group stage in the Cup's three seasons. Headed into the quarterfinals, the international audience for NBA Cup games had also jumped, by 10%. Factoring in the high-profileSpurs-Thunder semifinal matchupover the weekend, that number is presumably even higher.

"It's growing," Hall of Fame guard and current Amazon Prime analyst Steve Nash told USA TODAY Sports in a phone interview. "The importance to the players and coaches is growing. That is, I think, the genesis of the success we're going to see as it continues to grow."

Those gains are evident through the league's social channels, too.

Through the quarterfinals, content from NBA Cup games garnered 2.6 billion views across the NBA's social and digital platforms, a 38% growth from last season. Content from NBA Cup days, on average, yielded 24% more views than non-Cup days.

Oct. 26: The Dallas Mavericks' Cooper Flagg dunks the ball past the Toronto Raptors' Sandro Mamukelashvili at the American Airlines Center. Oct. 26: The Washington Wizards' Cam Whitmore dunks the ball against the Charlotte Hornets at Capital One Arena. <p style=Oct. 26: The Brooklyn Nets' Michael Porter Jr. dunks in front of the San Antonio Spurs' Victor Wembanyama at Frost Bank Center.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> Oct. 25: The Denver Nuggets' Christian Braun dunks the ball against the Phoenix Suns' Grayson Allen at Ball Arena. Oct. 24: The Memphis Grizzlies' Jaren Jackson Jr. dunks against the Miami Heat at FedExForum. Oct. 24: The Miami Heat's Bam Adebayo dunks over the Memphis Grizzlies' Jaren Jackson Jr. at FedExForum. Oct. 22: The New York Knicks' OG Anunoby goes up for a reverse dunk against the Cleveland Cavaliers at Madison Square Garden. Oct. 22: The Utah Jazz's Lauri Markkanen dunks against the Los Angeles Clippers at Delta Center.

Dribble into this collection of dunk photos as NBA stars posterize opponents

The event has infused an element of competition that would otherwise be lacking during a stretch of the calendar when fans might be distracted bycollege footballand theNFL.

And for the players, it's no surprise that the financial incentive to win carries weight.

Each player on the NBA Cup championship team Tuesday night will claim an additional $530,933.

"When I see the court, I'm like, it's just time to win the money," Timberwolves forward Jaden McDaniels said Nov. 7,according to the Star Tribune. "We ain't been to Vegas one time. At least come in first, second, or third, we get a little bit of money. So, whichever one we come in, I'm cool — we get a little wire transfer."

It's not just the players; the NBA Cup is also making the league money. Marketing partnerships have increased successively each season of the event, and the number of partners this year, 14, is double what it was during the inaugural playing in 2023.

It has also helped that, this year, premier NBA Cup games have been packaged on a new broadcast partner that has drawn positive reviews. In its first full season broadcasting NBA games, Amazon Prime has been a solid addition to the portfolio. Alongside Nash, former players like Dirk Nowitzki, Blake Griffin, Dwyane Wade and John Wall (among others) have treated pre- and post-game content as opportunities to educate fans about the inner workings of the game. Rejecting hot take and debate culture, the Amazon broadcasts have become appointment viewing.

Yet, there's still work to be done.

Although audience, engagement and attendance are all up since the introduction of the event, the league will continue to monitor ways it can improve the NBA Cup, and might incorporate changes in the coming season to maximize reach and profit.

"It's not perfect," Nash continued. "Change is difficult. Trying to build something new is never straightforward, so there's going to be bumps in the road. But, overall, I see how it's gaining importance — from players and coaches, but how that all trickles down to the fans, too."

NBA CUP:Championship game picks, predictions, odds for Spurs vs. Knicks

'Change the courts, please'

To market the tournament, the NBA contracted artist Victor Solomon the past two seasons to designcustom alternate courts for each teamto be used during Cup games. This is not new; the league also used alternate courts in the first iteration of the event in 2023, which was then known as the NBA In-Season Tournament. But the alternate floors, at best, have drawn mixed reviews.

Safety concerns emerged this season, afterLos Angeles Lakersguards Luka Dončić and Austin Reaves complained about the surface at Crypto.com Arena being slick.

"Change the courts, please,"Dončić told reporters Nov. 25after the Lakers beat the Clippers on their alternate NBA Cup floor. "It's just slippery. It's dangerous."

Dončić's concerns reached the Lakers front office, which elevated the matter. Eventually, prior to the team's following home NBA Cup game, Wednesday, Dec. 11 against the Spurs, the alternate court had been returned to the vendor for repairs,according to ESPN. The Lakersplayed on their primary floor instead. The move, ESPN reported, was made out of an abundance of caution.

The night prior, during an NBA Cup East Quarterfinal game against the Miami Heat, theOrlando Magicalso played on their primary court, though that was because their NBA Cup court was damaged while held in storage.

Fans are engaging with the NBA Cup because of the product atop the floor, not the paint on it. If anything, the unconventional — if not dizzying — colors and designs can detract from the viewing experience.

This season, the most controversial court was Minnesota's, which drew widespread disapproval Nov. 7, when the Timberwolves first played on it, against the Utah Jazz.

The court was overwhelmingly fluorescent, almost like a giant green screen. It was so bright that, when cameras zoomed in on players' faces during the broadcast,they were underlitin a hazy, green glow.

"It's an honor to step on an NBA court," Jazz coach Will Hardy said after the game, "no matter how ugly that court is."

This is a case where subtlety might make more sense. The NBA should distinguish its NBA Cup courts to further heighten the stakes of the event, but it can do so in a more understated way. Perhaps, the league could incorporate a smaller decal or image of the NBA Cup trophy, or signage similar to the popular NBA Finals text that used to be visible near midcourt during the championship series.

The NBA Cup spawns questions about dense scheduling

John Hollinger of the Athletic conjecturedin a recent articlethat the NBA Cup's schedule has imposed further strain on the bodies of NBA players. The 2025-26 season has seen various soft-tissue injuries to some of the game's biggest stars like Wembanyama and Giannis Antetokounmpo. Hollinger hypothesized that road travel for Cup games might in part be contributing to early fatigue.

NBA chief communications officer Mike Bass pushed back against that claim ina statement posted Thursday, Dec. 11 on social media. In the message, Bass cited data and said "The Cup has objectively not led to a denser league-wide schedule in the early part of the season."

Injuries across the NBA are almost certainly multi-factorial, from the steady increasing of pace and average velocity across the league this season, to the extension of the basketball calendar with EuroBasket and international competition. There simply isn't enough data to determine the impact of the NBA Cup on injuries.

Spreading travel days over a longer period, however, would be an easy step to ease any potential exhaustion players might be feeling.

Where does the NBA Cup go from here?

Players, by and large, thrive on competition. Initially, back in the inaugural year of the event, there was some confusion about the merits of the tournament.

"It's weird, because the energy, you can tell is like something is happening," then-Bucks playerDamian Lillard said in November 2023during a post-game interview. "But it's new so I'm not really sure what the hell is going on. It seems like a moment — the court, the uniforms, TV game and all that, but I don't think nobody really knows what's going on. We just trying to get to Vegas."

As players have had more experience in Cup games, however, that sentiment has largely faded.

The quality of matchups and storylines, however, will determine the success of the NBA Cup. The West semifinal upset on Saturday, Dec. 12, when the Spurs toppled the Oklahoma City Thunder in Wembanyama's return from a 12-game, calf-strain absence flashed the potential of what the Cup can be: the established power, the defending NBA champion Thunder were challenged by upstarts. Some of the game's brightest stars — Wembanyama and reigning NBA Most Valuable Player Shai Gilgeous-Alexander — had to will their teams.

If the Cup can become a playoff-lite, a precursor to the drama of May and June, the event will thrive.

The buy-in has already started. Sustaining it will be imperative.

"As competitors, we want to win every game," Wembanyama told reporters Dec. 15. "And this one brings something new to the table, so we want to win it even more."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:NBA Cup: Has in-season tournament been a resounding success?

The NBA Cup is in its third year. Is it actually working?

On Tuesday night, for the third time, there will be a new NBA Cup champion. TheSan Antonio Spurswill take on the...

Last weekend, parts of the Northeast hadtheir first measurable snow of the season. But five years ago, a snowstorm smashed a pair of all-time records.

On Dec. 16, 2020, five years ago today, a snowstorm hammered the Northeast, leaving 6 to 12 inches of snow along the Interstate 95 corridor from Philadelphia to New York City and Boston.

Named Winter Storm Gail by The Weather Channel, it was certainly impactful to millions in the Northeast.

But its headline was the epic early-season dumping of feet of snow in the interior Northeast, from central Pennsylvania into central New York, Vermont and New Hampshire.

Binghamton, New York, picked up 40 inches of snow, most of it in just 24 hours from Dec. 16-17. That topped their all-time snowstorm record that had just been set over three years ago in mid-March 2017. It was more than double their average snowfall for the entire month of December (18.1 inches), and fell at the rate ofup to 5 inches per hour.

That dumping of snow buried vehicles andcollapsed the air-supported domeof the Greater Binghamton Sports Complex.

But they weren't alone.

Williamsport, Pennsylvania, also smashed its snowstorm record with 24.7 inches falling in 24 hours. That's about 70% of their seasonal average (35.4 inches) in 24 hours.

While Gail did have significant impacts to travel, this impressive snow brought some joy to both kids and kids at heart less than 10 days before Christmas during the COVID pandemic.

AP Photo/Craig Ruttle

Jonathan Erdman is a senior meteorologist at weather.com and has been covering national and international weather since 1996. Extreme and bizarre weather are his favorite topics. Reach out to him onBluesky,X (formerly Twitter)andFacebook.

On This Date: A Record Snowstorm In Two Northeast Cities During A Pandemic

Last weekend, parts of the Northeast hadtheir first measurable snow of the season. But five years ago, a snowstorm smashed a pair of all-t...
President Donald Trump speaks with members of the press at the White House, Sept. 15, 2025. Harrison Koeppel / Official White House Photo via Flickr / United States Government Work

(The Center Square) – A national conservative nonprofit will launch a new television advertisement advocating for President Donald Trump's efforts to reduce healthcare costs through price transparency, arguing that patients need clearer information about medical care costs.

Save Our States, a grassroots organization focused on federalism and regulatory reform, announced the ad will begin airing on Tuesday. The spot highlights Trump-era policies aimed at requiring hospitals and insurers to disclose prices in advance, allowing consumers to compare costs and plan expenses.

The ad launch follows the group's recent "Show Us Your Prices" campaign, which calls on policymakers to expand healthcare cost transparency requirements.

The campaign argues that hidden pricing has contributed to rising costs for families and small businesses while protecting hospitals and insurers from competition.

The 30-second ad frames price transparency as a nonpartisan consumer issue. It criticizes hospitals and insurance companies for keeping prices hidden and urges immediate action to empower patients with clearer cost information before receiving care.

"Donald Trump is fighting to make healthcare affordable again," the ad says. "Hospitals and insurance companies have kept prices hidden, charging anything they want. They win, you lose. Profits go up, patients get left behind. They won't put America first. But President Trump will. Americans need price transparency now. More choices, more power, lower costs."

Save Our States says the campaign builds onexecutive actionstaken during the Trump administration that required hospitals to publicly post prices and insurers to provide advanced explanations of benefits. Supporters argue officials enforced these rules unevenly and should strengthen them.

Andrew Bremberg, who served as assistant to the president and director of the Domestic Policy Council during the first Trump administration, said transparency reforms could deliver near-term relief if fully implemented.

"Americans are being crushed by hidden healthcare costs, and the fastest way to deliver relief is to implement real price transparency now," Bremberg said. "When patients can see the actual price of care upfront, you unleash competition so prices fall and families can finally plan and budget with confidence."

Bremberg said reforms like requiring advanced notice of what insurance covers and what patients will owe out of pocket would help restore accountability in the healthcare system.

"Americans shouldn't have to wait years to feel a policy's impact," he said. "That's why swift implementation of reforms like the Advanced Explanation of Benefits is so critical."

Healthcare price transparency has gained bipartisan attention in recent years as costs continue to outpace wages. Advocates argue that without transparent pricing, patients cannot shop for care or avoid unexpected bills, especially for routine procedures.

Healthcare industry critics say opaque pricing benefits large institutions while leaving families vulnerable to surprise post-treatment charges. Transparency supporters argue that market pressure would push providers to lower prices once consumers have upfront access to costs.

The Save Our States ad directs viewers to a website supporting expanded transparency requirements and praising Trump's approach to healthcare affordability. The group says the campaign focuses on immediate policy changes rather than long-term restructuring of the healthcare system.

Group launches campaign backing health-care price transparency push

(The Center Square) – A national conservative nonprofit will launch a new television advertisement advocating for President Donald Trump...

 

ALPHA MAG © 2015 | Distributed By My Blogger Themes | Designed By Templateism.com